SINCE 1889 For $45 an hour KU students can cruise around town in style. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRIDAY, NOV. 1, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 50 (USPS 650-640) TROPHY Cooler Details page 3. Committee fails to agree on budget United Press International WASHINGTON — The House-Senate conference committee on balancing the budget broke apart in disagreement yesterday, bringing the government closer to a fiscal crisis that could force default and the sale of Social Security assets to pay the elderly. "We've agreed to disagree," said conference chairman Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore. "There is no conference agreement." The Senate's measure to balance the federal budget is attached to a bill to increase the national debt ceiling. Without the increase, the government cannot meet its obligation to Social Security beneficiaries today unless it sells trust fund assets. House leaders said they would try to push a short-term extension of the debt ceiling through the House today to tide the government over for about a week and give Congress more time to work on the balanced-budget measure. But there was no assurance the short-term debt hike would pass either the House or Senate. But there also was no assurance of what steps Congress would take to keep the government from defaulting on its obligations. "I don't think there are irreconcilable differences," Packwood told reporters after the abrupt breakup of the conference. The Treasury said it would begin selling Social Security assets at midnight tonight to cover recipients' November checks. Rep. James Jones, D-Oklah., said several retired persons' groups had filed suit late yesterday to prevent the Treasury from using the sale of Social Security assets for anything other than benefit checks. If the suits were upheld, the effect would likely be to bring the government to the brink of overall default, rather than allowing it to last until Nov. 14, as officials had stated. Earlier, House Republican leaders demanded a quick House vote on the Senate's balanced-budget measure so the Treasury could avoid having to sell Social Security assets. But Democrats countered with their own balanced-budget plan, and no votes were taken by the conference. House Democratic confeeers said their balanced budget alternative would begin budget cutting sooner than the Senate's, except poverty programs from automatic cuts and provide for an escape clause in case of a recession. Assistant House Democratic leader Thomas Foley, D-Wash., denied the Democratic alternative was drafted for political purposes. "If this is adopted, we hope it would be successful in addressing the deficit," he said at a news conference. The sale of Social Security assets would result in a loss of interest to the fund of about $10 million initially. Treasury officials said. Assistant Secretary Secretary Bruce Thompson Jr. said the lost interest could not be paid back without separate legislative action. In addition, without a debt ceiling hike by Nov. 14, the government would have to shut down, administration officials said. Detroit accused of KU's mistake By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff The cancellation of contracted basketball games is a frequent occurrence and has been done by many universities, including one university involved in a breach of contract suit against the University of Kansas, Gary Hunter, KU's assistant athletic director, said yesterday. A Michigan judge decided Tuesday that KU must honor its contract to play a scheduled basketball game with the University of Detroit if it also schedles a game with the University of Louisville in Louisville, Ky. Hunter said KU officials had submitted information to the judge, Susan D. Borman of Wayne County Circuit Court in Detroit, indicating that the University of Detroit cancelled a scheduled basketball game with the University of Missouri-Columbia during the 1982-83 season. "Detroit's cancellation of its game at Missouri caused the cancellation of Missouri's 'Show Me Classic' tournament that year," he said, "Detroit paid a forfeiture fee to Missouri, just like we offered to pay Detroit. "That information was admitted into evidence by the judge and still she ruled in Detroit's favor." Hunter said the information about the cancellation of the Detroit-Missouri game was supplied to KU by Missouri officials. "We elected to play in another tournament rather than hold our tournament," he said. Bob Brendel, assistant sports information director at Missouri, confirmed that Detroit's action caused the cancellation of the tournament. Mark Engel, Detroit's sports information director, said that Detroit's action couldn't be compared with KU's cancellation of its game at Detroit because the Detroit-Missouri game was canceled "by mutual consent." Brad Kinsman, Detroit's athletic director, testified that if the cancellation hadn't been agreeable to Missouri, then Detroit would have played at Missouri, Engel said. Hunter disputed the statement that the Detroit-Missouri game was canceled by mutual consent. "Basically, it was a unilateral decision on the part of Detroit officials to cancel their game with Missouri because they had too many road games," he said. "That was testified by Mr. Kinsman. "Missouri probably wasn't too happy about the cancellation. The only difference is that Missouri just decided not to sue Detroit." "I just think it's ridiculous," he said. "I notified the guy in April that we had a chance to play a nationally televised game. It's not like I contacted him in October when he wouldn't have time to set up another game." er to hold me in basketball coach Head men's basketball coach Larry Brown said he was disappointed by Detroit's suit. Brown said KU received requests last season from two universities to reschedule games. Larry White, assistant athletic director and sports information director at SMU, said schools agreed to change schedules when their opponents had opportunities to play nationally televised games or nationally ranked teams. Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Tex., canceled a basketball game with KU last year, he said, because it had a chance to schedule a game with North Carolina State University in Raleigh. "Usually schools work out some kind of compromise," he said. "I can't say it happens frequently. Does it happen three or four times a year? No. Does it happen once in several years?" Yes." Joe Gottfried, athletic director at the University of South Alabama in Mobile agreed. "At times we all get in situations like this," he said. "They come up frequently." Gottfried said he had asked KU officials to schedule a game at South Alabama last season because the University of Oklahoma in Norman, Okla., had canceled a game it was supposed to play at Mobile. "Oklahoma bought out of its contract with us," he said. "We needed to find a good replacement, and so we asked Kansas to help us." The breach of contract suit against See DETROIT, p. 5, col. 3 Committee may seek Tacha's replacement By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff The executive vice chancellor asked the University Faculty Executive Committee yesterday to recommend members for a search committee in the event that Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, is confirmed to a judgeship in the U.S. 18th Court Circuit of Appeals. The other Kansans nominated were Martin K. Dickinson, 47, a former dean of the KU School of Law who is a professor of law and in private practice in Lawrence, U.S. District Judge Richard Rogers, 63, Topeka, and Jerry Elliot, 48, a Wichita attorney. In a letter from Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, to Sidney Shapiro, chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, and Arno Knapper, presiding officer of the University Council, FacEx was asked to choose eight faculty members to serve on the search committee. Tacha, 39, had been one of four people nominated in July by Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., and Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., to fill the vacant seat on the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers Kansas, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Oklahoma and New Mexico. Bryan Graves/KANSAN would be up for review because this is her fifth year as vice chancellor for academic affairs. Cobb said in the letter that he planned to appoint a committee of about 12 voting members. He said he would seek nominations from the University Council and SenEx. Tacha learned Wednesday of her presidential nomination for the position in a phone call from President Reagan. To be appointed as judge, Tacha first must be approved by the U.S. Senate. The final committee, he said, would consist of four faculty members, one of whom should be informed about the needs of University libraries. In the letter, Cobb said that if Tacha were not offered or did not accept the judgeship, the committee would serve as a review committee. Under University policy, Tacha I Christen Weggemann, 3, daughter of Chris and Ann Weggemann, 3718 Westland Place, ate a cookie after her long truck-or treating venture last night through Olive Hall. See related story, page 6. Research proposals discussed Halloween handful Michael Foubert, graduate student representative to SenEx, said that he was concerned that allowing University research to be classified would have an negative effect on graduate and undergraduate students involved in University programs. At its weekly meeting yesterday, SenEx discussed possible effects the proposed changes in KU's classified research policy would have on graduate research students. "We're not saying that it's bad," he said of classified research. "We're just saying that the potential exists where there could be some adverse impact." Proposed changes in KU's classified research policy could adversely affect graduate and undergraduate students, the graduate student representative to the University Senate Executive Committee said yesterday. By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff Foubert said that the expected increase of research projects would mean teachers would spend more time on research that students could not participate in, and less time in the classroom. "It may be good for the University as a whole," he said. "It may not be good for the graduate students in that department. If there's more and more faculty involved in research, then there's less and less for teaching." He said that if a professor had to give up a few courses to do research, then students in those classes would be affected. "Either those two courses are picked up by another faculty member who is already overburdened, or by a professor who is not as distinguished." he said. The proposed changes in classifying research would allow the procedures used in some research to be withheld from public inspection for up to three years. Some parts of the research could be classified permanently. Under current University policy, research may be classified for up to one year only, with no permanent classification. Foubert said, however, that what was a benefit to the entire University might not be a benefit to graduate students. The research would have to fit the University's qualifications, be of benefit to researchers and benefit the University as a whole. Schools respond to new alcohol law Sidney Shapiro, SenEx chairman, said a research project would have to pass three tests before the University would engage in it. By Bob Tinsley When residents of University housing returned to campus this fall, they learned that a new housing office policy prohibited possession or consumption of 3.2 percent beer in University housing. The policy was just one way of responding to a state law that made it illegal for persons born on or after July 1, 1966, to possess or consume 3.2 percent beer. Bob Felde, assistant director of housing at Kansas State University, said yesterday that K-State's alcohol policy hadn't changed, and he wasn't sure whether it would. The legislation provoked a variety of responses from other Kansas Board of Regents schools. Of the Kansan staff The seven Board of Regents schools are KU, K/State, Wichita State University, Emporia State University, Pittsburg State University, Fort Hays State University and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina. Certain corridors in K-State residence halls traditionally have been "drv." he said. "Basically, our policy has been that if someone is of legal age, they can possess or consume 3.2 beer in the residence halls." Felde said. "I think they felt it would be easier to change the policy a few years down the line when everything turns to 21." he said. Because the Board of Regents gave authority for residents to have such beverages on campus, Felde said K-State's Association of University Residence Halls would be responsible for changing the alcohol policy if it became an issue. "The general feeling on the task force was that by saying that some people can drink and other people can't, there were going to be problems." Blossom said. Randy Alexander, director of housing at Wichita State, said officials Drew Blossom, president of KU's Association of University Residence Halls and member of a task force that created the current KU policy, said the task force realized this and decided to prohibit alcohol altogether. Under the terms of the state law, after July 1, 1987, it will be illegal for persons under 21 years of age to consume or possess alcoholic beverages in the state. there initially had considered prohibiting 3.2 beer in residence halls, but a campus alcohol awareness committee member proposed something else. Wichita State students who are of legal drinking age are issued cards that allow them to consume such beverages in their residence hall rooms. Each student must attend an alcohol awareness meeting to receive a card. The card helps hall staff members to determine whether a resident is of age to drink, Alexander said. "We didn't want to restrict persons who can legally drink," he said, "but at the same time, we didn't want to make it hard on our staff." See LAWS, p. 5, col. 5 Official says revenue estimate may shift United Press International TOPEKA — Revenue Secretary Harley Duncan yesterday said he expected state fiscal experts would revise downward by "a reasonably significant number" the state's general fund revenue estimate for the coming year. The state's consensus revenue estimating group — which meets in March and November — will meet again Nov. 8, said Duncan, a member of the group. Duncan would not be pinned down on the amount of the revision, only allowing that "a reasonably significant number" is more than $5 million. In four of the last six times the group has met since November 1982, it has revised the estimate downward with the weakening Kansas economy. Only in March of 1984 and 1985 did the group fail to make a revision. A revenue secretary noted actual receipts for fiscal year 1985 fell $20 million short of that estimate. At that time, he said, sales tax and individual income tax receipts were $40 million below expected revenues. That was offset somewhat by higher than expected corporate income tax receipts. Duncan has expressed concern for some time about the continued "softness" of sales and individual income taxes — two of the major cash sources for the state general fund. Now he said he detected some weakening in the corporate income tax area that boded ill for the future. He said most corporation quarterly reports were revealing weakened profits. Actual end-of-month receipts for October, released by Duncan, did not look too bad, with receipts running $4.8 million or 3.8 percent, ahead of the October estimate. However, it again was a case of the corporate income tax making up for shortfall by sales and individual income taxes. Corporate income tax receipts for the month, at $11.48 million, were $5.98 million higher than the estimated $5.5 million. Duncan said that was due to a $3.5 million assessment on one firm as the result of a field audit, and a couple of payments from other firms that were delayed from previous months. However, individual income tax receipts, at nearly $1.62 million, were $1.68 million below the estimated $53.3 million. 2 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 News Briefs New Craxi coalition expects support vote ROME — President Francesco Cossiga rejected Prime Minister Bettino Craxi's two-week-old resignation yesterday and directed Craxi's five-party coalition to go before Parliament for a speedy confidence vote to end a crisis sparked by the Achille Lauro blacking. Craxi scheduled addresses in both houses of Parliament for Monday after Cossiga told him to move quickly to resurrect his coalition government. The confidence vote, which political observers said was certain to support the government, will follow his parliamentary appearance. Radon likely indoors ATLANTA — High levels of indoor radon gas may be present in as many as 2 million homes built over uranium, granite or phosphate deposits in the United States, increasing the risk of lung cancer, federal health officials said yesterday. Dr. Matthew Zack of the national Centers for Disease Control said the estimate of the danger posed by the radioactive gas was a preliminary one. Once inside a home, the radon builds up in the air — particularly in poorly ventilated houses — and particles of the gas "can deliver a substantial dose of radiation to the bronchial epithelium," health officials said. Man faces 75 years REDWOOD CITY, Calif. — A former mill worker was convicted yesterday of abducting a young hitchhiker at knifepoint and holding her for seven years as his sex slave. Cameron Hooker was convicted on 10 of 11 felony charges; one count of kidnapping, six counts of rape and three counts of sex-related acts. He was acquitted on one rape count. The 31-year-old Hooker, who faces up to 75 years in prison, appeared stoic as the verdict was announced. Judge Clarence Knight set bail at $5 million. Sentencing is set for Nov. 22. From Kansan wires. U.S. trade deficit is highest United Press International WASHINGTON — U.S. trade losses swelled to $15.5 billion during September, the highest monthly shortfall on record, the government reported yesterday. Following two consecutive months in which trade losses eased somewhat, the red ink on the September trade ledgers brought the accumulated trade deficit for 1985 to $106.6 billion — $11 billion more than the total for the first nine months of 1984. The previous monthly record deficit was $13.7 billion, set in July 1984 Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldridge attributed the September increase to underreporting of figures in previous months. "Paperflow caught up with us and exacerbated the figures for September," Baldrige said in a speech to the National Press Club. The Commerce Department also said yesterday that the index of leading indicators, the government's barometer of economic trends, went up a tiny 0.1 percent in September, the fifth consecutive monthly signal of improvement. Baldrige said in a statement that the "modest rise" in the index pointed to "continued economic growth in 1986." The index has been inching along with only slight increases for most of the year. January's 1.3 percent increase was the only rise exceeding t percent in a year and a half. "Key leading indicators directly related to forthcoming production are pointing upward," he said. The department's Bureau of Economic Analysis said five of the 11 individual indicators for September would contribute to a stronger economy later this year, led by an expansion of the money supply. Also positive were the length of the average work week, contracts and orders for factory equipment, building permits and a rise in raw materials prices, the bureau said. Another five indicators contributed negatively to the index, led by a decline in the average of 500 common stock prices, the formation of new businesses, new orders for consumer goods and a decline in outstanding credit. Claims for unemployment benefits also were negative. One indicator, the pace of change in the business demand for goods, was unimpaired. Trade losses in manufactured goods, including items facing some of the heaviest competition from foreign makers—cars and textiles — accounted for most of the $12.2 billion September deficit. So far this year, the trade deficit for manufactured goods has ballooned to $80.9 billion, 17 percent ahead of the same period last year. The trade deficit, this year threats to soar far above last year's record $123.3 billion, has sparked a drive in Congress for protectionist legislation and moved the Reagan administration to wage a war on unfair trade practices by some of the United States' closest allies. On Wednesday, Assistant Treasury Secretary David Mulford said the administration had targeted France and Italy in its efforts to move against countries with strong export subsidies. Reagan arms plan due out todav WASHINGTON - President Reagan announced yesterday that he was making a new nuclear weapons limitation proposal to the Soviet Union and would ask that the current round of negotiations in Geneva be extended to consider it. The Associated Press Reagan said the U.S. offer called for "deep cuts" in offensive weapons, research on defensive systems and "no cheating." In a nationally televised statement, Reagan said the latest Soviet offer "unfortunately fell considerably short" in certain areas. But, he said, there were also positive "seeds" for an agreement. He said he had built on them with the new U.S. offer. But the president said he would divulge no further details. He said the American proposal would be offered in Geneva today. He called both sides' proposals "milestones" in the quest for reductions of nuclear weapons. "I believe progress is indeed possible if the Soviet leadership is willing to match our own commitment to a better relationship." Reagan said. Just before his announcement, Reagan told four Soviet journalists in an interview that he would accept some of the figures proposed by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who called last month for a reduction of about 50 percent in missiles and bombers carrying nuclear warheads. "It is my hope that our new proposal would enable both our nations to start moving away from ever larger arsenals," the president said. The Soviet proposal, in a letter to Reagan from Gorbachev last month, and the U.S. response are designed to make headway in the slow-moving negotiations before the two leaders meet at the summit in the Swiss city Nov. 19-20. said. "First you've got to eliminate the suspicions and paranoia between us." The new U.S. proposal also was sent directly to Gorbachev and is "part of a process of interaction that we hope will lead somewhere," Secretary of State George Shrutz said later at a news conference. He called the U.S. proposal serious and detailed. "Arms control is a result." Reagan But he also stressed U.S. concerns over human rights and regional conflicts and declined to place halting the nuclear arms race at the top of the agenda. Weinberger calls 'Star Wars' sacred United Press International — except the "Star Wars" anti-missile research program, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said yesterday. WASHINGTON — No weapon is so vital to America's defense that it cannot be bargained away at arms talks Department wanted agreements that produced verifiable reductions in arms and said past agreements had been lacking. Weinberger, testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, also denied that the Pentagon was against arms control agreements. He argued instead that the Defense On the "Star Wars" issue, Weinberger said, "There is no arms system so cherished that we would not be delighted to give it up" in an agreement, provided the deal would achieve "major reductions down to parity on both sides and be thoroughly verifiable. "But we would not trade away and we would not negotiate away strategic defense. It is too high a Pressed later, Weinberger said, "No I would not want to give away the strategic defense under any circumstances." priority for the president. It is too much a chance for history, to change the only ability we have . . . to safeguard the peace, which is in effect a mutual suicide pact. And the president will not do that." U. S. and Soviet arms negotiators seeking to curb superpower nuclear arsenals. President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative, called "Star Wars" for its reliance on as yet undeveloped high-tech weaponry, is a major source of conflict between Reagan has refused to consider limits on "Star Wars" research as part of a new arms pact, although he has said he would like to discuss an agreement on worldwide sharing of such technology when he meets Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev next month. But, he said, "We have found that arms control agreements of the past have not" produced reductions8 been verifiable or stopped violations. Juan hits with force on coasts The Associated Press PENSACOLA, Fla. — Erratic Tropical Storm Juan returned to the Gulf of Mexico and spun briefly up to near hurricane strength yesterday, then headed inland over rain-soaked Alabama and Florida after causing more than $1 billion damage in Louisiana. But the storm weakened again after it rolled ashore near Gulf Shores, Ala., southeast of Mobile, near the Florida border, and moved toward the northeast at 15 to 20 mph on a path that would take it across southeastern Alabama and into Georgia, the National Weather Service said. No damage or flooding was reported in Gulf Shores or in nearby Foley when the storm's center passed over. "We've had thunderstorms with more wind," said Police police dispatcher Walter Hemmert, Gale warnings were posted from Port Arthur, Texas, to Fort Myers, Fla., and tornado warnings were issued for parts of Alabama, Georgia and Florida. Thunderstorms spread across the region and tides reached 4 to 6 feet above normal along the coast of northwestern Florida. Late in the morning, Juan carried squalls up to 70 mph, with gusts to near hurricane force, mostly over the open water. But during the afternoon, its highest sustained winds were estimated at 50 to 160 mph, mainly over the water. At 5 p.m. EST, Juan's broad center was near latitude 31.2 north, longitude 86.9 west, near Brewery, Ala., or 55 miles north-northeast of Pensacola. Florida Gov. Bob Graham cut short a trip to Washington and urged coastal residents to be ready to evacuate, as they did ahead of Hurricane Elena during the Labor Day weekend. However, no evacuations were ordered because officials did not want motorists jamming roads while tornadoes were forecast. Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace declared a state of emergency and the Emergency Management Agency opened shelters in coastal cities. Big Bob's "Used" CARPET DORM ROOMS, APARTMENTS, WHATEVER THE JOB — WHY BUY NEW, WHEN YOU'VE GOT BIG BOB! BRING IN THIS AD FOR AN ADDITIONAL 10% SAVINGS! • Save up to 80% off new. • Yet so many rolls look "like new." • Every roll twice-cleaned and professionally sanitized. • Hundreds of styles, a rainbow of colors. • FREE doormat just for stopping by. 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He was ordered by Douglas County Associate District Judge Mike Malone to undergo an evaluation at Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, 336 Stuart St., and 1000 N. Georgia Avenue of community service work as part of the terms of the two-year probation. Friauf was arrested Aug. 25 in the 2100 block of Harvard Road on a charge of lewd and lascivious behavior. That charge was later downgraded to indecent exposure. Cobb's trial deferred Municipal Court Judge George Catt approved the diversionary agreement, which requires Friauf to pay a $10 fee, perform 10 hours of community service and continue counseling. WICHTA — A bench trial for former Miss Kansas Lynn Cobb on a misdemeanor charge of carrying an open container of beer was postponed yesterday to Dec. 20. Developer sentenced The trial was postponed because several college students who were set to testify had scheduling conflicts, a spokesman in Sedgwick County District Judge Paul Clark's office said. Malone also ordered Clark to have no contact with his former partner, Mike Hickman, unless the meetings were arranged by their attorneys. Charges of gambling, permitting premises to be used for gambling, possession of a gambling device and operating an open saloon have been filed against Burgess W. Rensell, 446 Maine St., the operator of the gambling facility in Douglas County District Attorney Jim Florel said Wednesday. Cobb, Wichita senior, was charged with carrying an open container of beer in May after wreaking her car in an accident in which she broke her neck and an ankle. Cobb, the 1984 Miss Kansas, is expected to recover completely from her injuries. Raid nets 4 charges Fliory said the charges stemmed from incidents that occurred Oct. 17 at an alleged gambling operation in New York City, where the alleged operation that day The complaint was filed Tuesday, and a summons was served to Rennels that evening. Flory said. Weather Today will be cloudy, windy and cooler. Highs will be around 50 and the chance of rain is 20 percent. Winds will be northerly at 15 to 25 mph and gusty. Tonight will be mostly cloudy, with winds in the low to mid 30s. Tomorrow will be partly sunny, with highs around 50. From staff and wire reports Research engineer named Regents prof By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff Edmund Miller, a leading research engineer, on Wednesday was appointed Regents distinguished professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Kansas by Chancellor Gene A. Budig. He will join the faculty in mid-November. Miller said yesterday that he chose the position at the University over jobs in San Diego and Santa Barbara, Calif. "I had offers as far-flung as Pennsylvania, California and the Midwest," he said. "But Kansas made an attractive offer and I was very comfortable with the people." "I particularly liked the team spirit I felt. A lot of universities have individuals working, but not a lot of cooperation. I felt there was collaboration, not only on campus but also in Lawrence, when I visited." James Rowland, chairman of electrical and computer engineering, said he hoped the new Regents professor would attract companies to northeastern Kansas. Any Regents professor is involved in activities to be a magnet to bring economic interests to the University, he said. "When we have the expertise at KU, we hope companies will situate close by and take advantage of a strong program," he said. Rowland said the details of Miller's Don Daughter, associate chairman of electrical and computer engineering, said that formal contacts were made in late June but that he would meet Mel Miller before that and had noted his interest in the University. professorship were to be decided when Miller arrived. Miller has worked at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, Calif., a federal research laboratory, since 1971. He has increasingly moved into managing positions the last seven years. Miller said that although he had worked hard to stay active in research, he had resigned as division leader last April to revitalize his research work. "To move after 15 years can be traumatic, but it can also offer new opportunities," Miller said. "It can be a time to reset your clock. And you can be stimulated by the newness." Miller said he had no strong feelings about whether he would rather teach graduate students or undergraduates. "It's more challenging to teach undergraduates," he said. Miller's research has focused on computational electromagnetics and innovative education techniques. The University's interest in those areas contributed to his decision to accept the position. "The University has a fairly long history of association with applications of electromagnetics to solve common problems," he said. Miller has analyzed the electromagnetic fields interfering with the operation of radar and radio antennae mounted on airplanes, ships and spacecraft. The university seems willing to go in new directions by introducing new techniques in education by using computer graphics," he said. "It also seems to want to bring technology to the local community. Miller received his bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from Michigan Technological University, Houghton, in 1957 and his doctoral degree in electrical engineering from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in 1965. 1968. THE BEST IN CAR WORLD Diane Forbes is one of the chauffeurs for Corporate Coach, a Lawrence Imousine service operated by her husband, Bob Forbes. Limo service offers luxury to clients By Susie Bishop Of the Kansan staff For those who wish to travel in high style, a stretch limousine can be waiting at the door for a few pretty pennies. Be it a trip to Kansas City International Airport, or a night on the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Mo., Corporate Coach, operated from Mel Amigos, a restaurant at 2600 Iowa St.; offers a door-to-door limo service, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. "You can do some serious bar hopping in a limo," Bob Forbes, owner of Corporate Coach, said yesterday. The three stretch limos, which come with a uniformed chauffeur, stereo, television and bar, are hired about 10 times a month. he said. Forbes said that because a wall separated the driver and the passenger, drinking alcoholic beverages during the limo ride was perfectly legal. Forbes, general manager of Mel Amigos, said the bulk of his business, which he started in May, came from taking travelers to and from KCI. "We started out just as a limo service." Forbes said. "After we began, we realized that Lawrence needed a shuttle service to KCL." The two airport vehicles, a four-door Cadillac and a six-passenger limo, make 60-75 trips to the airport each month. Forbes said that because of the increasing pace of the business, it wasn't unusual to make seven runs to the airport each day. Customers may choose from the black, the white or the silver-blue limo depending on the occasion, he said. "We get a lot of special requests for weddings," Forbes said. The most popular of the stretch limos is the classic black. The stretch limos rent for $45 a hour, and the airport shuttles rent from $15 to $37,50 a person, depending on the size of the group. Holidavs increase the number of times the cars Whether for a ride to the airport, a formal dance, a wedding, a birthday or to party on the Plaza, students, travelers and businessmen all use Corporate Coach's services. are rented, Forbes said. Many times people hire limos as a surprise. "People look so surprised when a limo pulls up at the door." he said. So far, the record for the longest time a stretch limo was used is eight hours, Forbes said. The youngest person to hire a limo was a college freshman. "Once the high school proms start, we should see some younger passengers." Forbes said. Forbes, his wife, Diane, and two others act as chauffeurs for the limo service. A blue blazer and grey slacks constitute the chauffeur's uniform for pow. At the first of the year, Forbes said, the business will expand to include another stretch limo and new uniforms. Drivers will then be clothed in the classic chauffeur's uniform — grey and black suits, boots and cap. "It'll be just like in the movies," Forbes said. When KLZR, a Lawrence radio station, ran a promotion for the Sting concert last summer, Corporate Coach provided the transportation. Burge live concert series pays off, SUA says Rv Jill White Of the Kansan staff Student Union Activities' attempt to schedule more live band concerts and to expose local talent was worth the risk, the director of SUA Special Events said yesterday. "The overwhelming response makes us believe we can bring in some really great bands in the future," Traxler said. "Last year I thought this market was about ready to break out and explode, and if it hasn't already done that, I think it's at least on a roll." before show time. The Violent Femmes' concert for tonight sold out Monday night. The Ballroom has a maximum capacity of 1,200 people. "We've been working harder to persuade a lot of these bands to play in Lawrence," said Steve Traxler, the director. "SUA is not putting out more money, it's taking more risks." This semester, the organization has booked other bands, such as the Clique, Valentine and the Very Wealthy, BCR and the Fanatix, for its Burge Bandstand Dance Concert series. They also scheduled the Romantics, who will play Nov. 9 in Hoch Auditorium. Traxlier, who became director of SUA Special Events in July, said he had set several goals for the SUA series that included expanding the reputation of Lawrence as a marketplace where emerging bands as well as established bands could perform. Those risks, he said, raid off. The concert of the Los Angeles band, X, on Sept. 21 in the Kansas Union Ballroom was sold one hour "There are a lot of bands out there that aren't on the level of Hoch Auditorium and have few performance opportunities," he said. "We developed the Burge Bandstand series to promote those local bands." He said the Burge Bandstand series had been so successful that SUA planned to double the number of concerts in Burge next year. John Heeney, vice president of SUA, said he was pleased with the success of the special events series. "We, as a board, wanted to bring in 'smaller shows to allow people to be more visible.'" Heeney said that SUA did have to allocate more money for the Burge Union concerts in order to increase the number of performances. The concerts at Burge are free. "Obviously, we're paying for these talents." Taxler said. KU to see parade on Saturday By a Kansan reporter For the first time in about 20 years, the Homecoming Day parade won't run through campus on a Friday afternoon. Instead, jubilant Jayhawks will march down Massachusetts Street for the 1985 Homecoming Day parade at 9:30 a.m. Saturday Nov. 9. More people should be able to participate in this year's parade because of the change in day and location. John Feverly, junior class president, said Wednesday. "The University wouldn't stop classes for the parade, or let us have it before 1:30 p.m. on Friday." Fevbury said. "We ought to have more students there because we also had more advertising and did more promotions for the parade." Changing the parade to Saturday makes it easier for alumni, Lawrence businessmen and school children to attend the parade, he said. The parade route will be from Seventh and Massachusetts Streets to South Park, 12th and Massachusetts Streets. Mice invade Strong Hall By a Kansan reporter Administrators in Strong Hall are playing the cat in a game of cat and mouse. A recent invasion of a few mice has caused concern, alarm and action by employees in the administrative offices on the second floor of Strong. Phil Endacott, associate director of housekeeping, said, "Various buildings around the campus occasionally have a mouse or two. We have an outside contractor who takes care of that." Marian Orzulak, secretary for University General Council, said she was sitting at her desk recently when she spotted a furry creature. "It just came out of the Regents Room and went behind the bookcase," she said. "I immediately put my feet up and said, 'There's a mouse.'" Barbara Johnson, secretary for business affairs, said she had seen a mouse in Strong Hall's administrative offices — well, almost. "I have seen its tail," she said. "I didn't actually see the mouse." Johnson said action had already been taken to solve the minuscule problem. She said traps had been placed that would capture the mice. BORDER BANDIDO SUNDAY SPECIAL 1 TEXAS BURRITO ONLY $1.79 1528 W. 23rd 842-8861 Across from Post Office. BORDER BANDIDO SUNDAY SPECIAL 1 TEXAS BURRITO ONLY $1.79 1528 W. 23rd 842-8861 Across from Post Office. Spend Homecoming in Paradise ZBT'S “BAHAMA MAMA” Coming Soon Nov. 9 NATURAL WAY 820 MASS. NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING UNIQUE GIFTS & EXOTIC JEWELRY SUNDAY HOURS 12-5 Silk Cotton Wool Spend Homecoming in Paradise ZBT'S "BAHAMA MAMA" Coming Soon Nov. 9 NATURAL WAY 820 MASS. NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING UNIQUE GIFTS & EXOTIC JEWELRY SUNDAY HOURS 12-5 Silk Cotton Wool 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, Nov. 1; 1985 A tentative step Students $ ^{+} $ do most of their talking about campus issues with the people they live with. Therefore, the Student Senate bill that adds more seats to the Senate according to living groups will make it easier for the Senate to know what really concerns students. The Senate passed a bill last month that would add four off-campus seats, including a nontraditional student seat, and one residence hall seat. The action would add only five seats to the 66 now in the Senate. But, any increase in representation on the Senate is admirable, particularly if it also increases student interest in the work of their representatives. It could. Students with complaints or recommendations about Student Senate now have to track down their representatives in the largely impersonal expanse of the various schools, or worse, in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. But if the senator lived in the same hall, or better, on the same floor, he or she would be more easily accessible to the constituents. The Board of Regents will ask the Kansas Legislature to put that money in reach by April, and the Legislature should agree. The tentative step by the Senate to increase living group representation deserves at least tentative support. It's a good start toward addressing the apparent lack of student interest in its representative body. Like Tantalus eyeing a grape, the University of Kansas sees more than $800,000 just out of its reach. A tantalizing excess By law, the excess belongs to the state. But KU could easily use this money to pay for more teachers, office staff and other support. If KU cannot use the $330,000, it will be forced to shortchange its students. And just think of what the University could do with $900,000. The problem: KU has taken in more money than it was authorized to spend in fiscal 1986. About $330,000 came from increased revenue from tuition and student fees generated by this year's record enrollment. The rest is carry-over from last year's budget. The state's fiscal crisis, marked by projections of But the universities themselves will have to trumpet their own worth more loudly. Like it or not, they may need to compete avidly with two-year colleges for state funds. Kansas' fiscal crisis is tough on everyone, but KU should not be punished for growing. It deserves this money so it can continue to provide leadership for the state. revenue shortfalls of $20 million or more, suggests that the excess revenue perhaps will be contested more than ever in the next legislative session. Recent Legislatures sometimes have approved additional money to KU and sometimes have not. Kansas needs long-range thinking in the midst of immediate fiscal problems. A better economy promises the surest relief, and state universities can help to develop the economy if they have money for it. Philippines worries Washington is increasingly worried about growing unrest in the Philippines. And with good reason. The Pentagon considers them vital to U.S. defense and the balance of power in the Pacific, especially in light of the Soviet buildup of its base at Cam Ranh Bai in Vietnam. But revolution could occur sooner than that. Marcos is rumored to be ill. Some reports say he could die within six months. President Ferdinand Marcos has cracked down on rising anti-government sentiment with more repression, fanning the flames of unrest. The Pentagon predicts that communist rebels could seize power within three to five years if current trends continue. If communists take over, the United States stands to lose its two largest overseas military bases, Subic Bay Naval Base and Clark Air Base. On the surface, the United States appears to have two choices in the Philippines: intervene militarily to prop up a falling dictator or bail out. But there is an alternative. A strong democratic tradition — suppressed since 1972 when Marcos imposed martial law — continues in the United Nationalist Democratic Organization. The eight-party alliance won one-third of the seats in the National Assembly in 1984. True reforms and a return to stability could result if the United States supports this democratic opposition and exerts pressure on Marcos to hold legitimate local and national elections in 1986 and 1987. Economic inequity and military brutality, not communist fervor, have swelled the rebels' ranks. Vietnam, Cuba and Nicaragua have shown that the choice between an authoritarian dictator and a Marxist regime is no choice. They also have shown that it's impossible to dam a popular surge for reform. But that surge for reform could be directed toward democracy if the Reagan administration acts now. Rob Karwath Editor John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager news adviser Duncan Calhoun Business manager Brett McCabe Retail sales Sue Johnson Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser The Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall. - LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. - Letters to the Editor should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photocopied. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 6045, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, $2 for six months and $7 for eight months. Also, they cost $18 for six months and $3 a year. Student subscriptions cost $3 and are paid through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER: Send changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Staufer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA, 60045. STAR WARS THE SUMMIT ©1905 MUNNEY SAMSON Mailbox Victor's simplicity Once again Victor Goodpasture, voice of KU's right-wing community, has defiled the editorial page of the Kansei. According to him, the clergy, Congress, the media and academia, as well as other "lef-wing" groups are Sovi apologist who also support a "communitist dictatorship" in Nicaragua. It takes many minds indeed to accept such accusations. Victor we have found that mind. Is a government that is elected by its own people in internationally monitored, open elections a "communist dictatorship"? But then Victor never mentions these countries in his fanatical ravings because they are U.S. Is a nation with over 60 percent of its production economy in the private sector and that trusts its own citizens support enough to arm them against a possible U.S. invasion a "communist dictatorship?" I think not. Could the U.S. backed right-wing military/oligarchy dictatorships of Guatemala, Chile or El Salvador be willing enough to arm them? No way. It is fanatical zealots such as Victor, regardless of their economic orientation, that threaten democracy. Not tiny countries trying to improvise a new chance for their citizens. The zealots can't see their actions and policies in terms of how they affect people, they only see "us" and "them," and we must rule at any cost. So the neo-conservatives can continue to live in their sheltered, wealthy distorted world filled with their militaristic, happy thoughts of leading the world to their twisted ideas of democracy. His pro-capitalist psychosis transcends any consideration for human beings. He only sees Soviet allies or U.S. allies, and anyone who isn't a U.S. ally must be eliminated. This is his puffful excuse for attempted democracy. can be much more realistic and open-minded and deal with the realities that we've created rather than the illusions of fanatics. allies. As long as they remain so, it doesn't bother Victor or his neo-conservative cronies that these governments practice the worst repression and human rights violations in our hemisphere. They can also continue to call anyone who doesn't accept democracy on U.S. terms communist, but I hope the rest of them Ron Stubbs Shawnee Mission senior Narrow arguments The Guest Shot by Kirstin Myers (Oct. 29 Kansan) is obviously one-sided and narrow-minded. Several of Myers' points concerning South Africa and her accusations against President Reagan must be clarified. Above all, divestment is controversial. As history proves, economic sanctions and divestment fail to generate their desired results. Realistically, divestment will result in the loss of employment for many black South Africans. The simple solution is investment. Only with economic power can the blacks obtain social changes. Furthermore, how can Myers call life in the Soviet Union a "picnic compared to being black in South Africa?" In South Africa, there are no slave labor camps, no concentration camps and no bread lines. Also, if life is so bad for blacks, why do thousands of blacks from neighboring countries immigrate to South Africa for jobs? Moving on to her accusations against our president's domestic policy, we must realize how complicated the issues of civil rights and affirmative action are. Affirmative action has made progress, but we must not allow it to produce reverse discrimination. Today, equality is assured throughout our country. Therefore, President Reagan is attempting to assure that civil rights apply to all races — not just blacks. Finally, what does Ed Rollings' desire to seek congressional aid for the South African government have to do with anything? This does not mean that he is a racist, nor can it in any way reflect on President Reagan's beliefs or policy. Clearly, the basis used in the formulation of her opinion is nonexistent at best. Thus, Myers' puzzelment is understandable because she is the "uninformed bigot." Mark Gillem Kansas City, Kan., sophomore Stephen Wade Topeka freshman 'Vicious Vic'surveys the stands OK, let's admit it. The last two KC football games haven't been very exciting. We clobbered those Mildcats, and the Oklahoma State game was pretty slow until the last two minutes. So you're thinking about not attending the Colorado game next Saturday? And why not? Because you think you can win the game? Hold on, just one second. You just don't know where to look. The action is not on the giriron but in the stands. Sure you do. That's where the real show is. Take Mad Mike, for example. The man's a walking one-man show. It takes a lot of energy to run around banging a drum and trying to lead 40,000-plus people in one harmonious chant. I know what you're thinking. You're saying, "Hey Vic. I don't pay 11 bucks for a ticket and five bucks for parking just to watch people in the stands." Victor Goodpasture Staff columnist For this reason alone, I offer my services to be his faithful assistant. I figure if "Vengeful Vicor" or "Vicious Vicer" ever hit the scene, I'd be able to get into games free. I'd probably have to start working at the JV games first, then slowly work my way up. He ran to where the band sat, while band members screamed "Pass the Chicken!" From that perch, he was led the students in several cheers. The Famous Chicken also put on a show for the crowd at the OSU game. In an effort to distract the Cowboys, he unveiled a poster of a scantily clad young maiden. It had the opposite effect — I missed OSU's touchdown. I had a quick conversation with him as he headed back toward the field. "I have a confession to make." I said. "I like Colonel Sanders." "Oh no," he replied. "Eat at Fish 'n Chips." My favorite in the stand pastime is "girl passing." Simply defined, girl passing is where students grab a female and start passing ber up into the stands, using their hands above their heads — all amid shouts of "Over the top!" As the girl nears the top, though, she usually starts going back down again. As a cup combat veteran, I've been thinking about trying out for quarterback next year. I can really put a spin on that cup. And what would a KU football game be without cup fights? While the Jayhawks were stomping the Mildcats into the ground, a big cup fight broke out in the student section. Both sides reported many casualties. So much for my extended conversation with the Famous Chicken. Sure, it's a silly waste of time, but so is consuming large amounts of alcohol and then vomiting half of your insides. I have a little advice for those who do wish to consume alcohol during the game. Drink it on the other side of the stadium where the alumni and VIPs sit. For some reason it's OK to drink it over there. Then there's the KU band, the cheerleaders, the little anklebetes selling watered-down Cokes, and the little of ladies cursing the Jayhawks to victory. And to top it all off, there's the infinite rowdiness of the KU students messiness of the KU students. Finally, if by some chance you plan to bypass the action in the stands to participate in a replay along a mini-TV. That way, if you miss a big play, you can see the instant replay. As for next Saturday, I see the final score as Colorado 17, Kansas 27, KU fans 28. Coach Gotfried, please forgive me. I just call 'em as I see 'em. Yippie vs. yuppie: a battle of ideals The Abbie Hoffman-Jerry Rubin travelling show recently made a stop at Johnson County Community College. The 1960s activists have been touring the country, debating which is the best approach for bringing about social change in the 1980s; being politically active or accumulating wealth. The yipie versus the yupie. The activist versus the businessman. During the 1960s Hoffman and Rubin were members of the Youth International Party, whose members were called yippies. Besides participating in sit-ins and other acts of civil disobedience, the two took part in the violent clash between Vietnam War protesters and Chicago police during the 1968 Democratic National Convention. The ensuing trial, known as the Chicago Seven trial, made Rubin and Hoffman household names. Since then, Hoffman has continued his activism, founding several citizen action groups and writing several books. Rubin, who is credited with coining the term yuppie, has become a businessman. Neither participant won the debate, but the audience of 300 people saw some free entertainment. Flashing his American Express card, Rubin argued that "money is power" — that the only way to effect social change is to make money because money buys influence. Hoffman doubted the political potential of the young urban professionals and instead put his faith in the philosophy of activism — government by, of and for the people. People have a duty to not only voice their opinions but to actively fight against authority structures, he said. Dwight Hunter Staff columnist Rubin couldn't win the debate with his yuppie approach, nor could Hoffman with his activist approach. Even though their approaches differed, they came out supporting the same goal — to work for a better America. TERRY SCHUMANN But although Rubin's position appeals to many young people, it can cheapen values and ideals. The biggest problem with his position is one of integrity. Can yuppies maintain their belief in the idealism of the 1960s while increasing their base of support through the accumulation of wealth? Can they choose between a high-paying career without forsaking their old ideals? Hoffman has continued to fight, pushing citizen action groups to oppose corporate policies that threaten But in our society, money is a god and a source of power. And if money is a constant goal of the yuppies, it will also risk their careers to defend ideals. There are no simple answers to these questions. However, Rubin thinks youthful idealism doesn't have to be exchanged for stuffy conservatism to be successful. power. But these are little victories the environment and endorse nuclear power. the ones are little vehicles: The yuppies, although they may have trouble with integrity and the more of a chance to significantly change things than followers of Hoffman's approach. Hoffman's activism only can fight specific issues, while Rubin's position can bring fundamental change in corporations and governments without specificity on issues. Petty debates over which approach for social change is better may have some entertainment value. However, these debates between Hoffman add Rubin make no sense, especially if ripples continue to combine with activism and root activists continue to stand up for causes that directly affect them. Hoffman and Rubin should each speak without the pretense of a debate. Each should speak their piece, then allow people to choose their own approach for a better America. Friday, Nov. 1. 1985 University Daily Kansan From Page One 5 Man gets sentence for death of infant By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff A 21-year-old Lawrence man was sentenced yesterday by Douglas County Associate District Judge Mike Malone to consecutive prison terms of five to 20 years for voluntary crime and two to 10 years for felony child abuse. Genaro Ray Lewis, 820 Indiana St., was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and felony child abuse Oct. 2 after he pleaded no contest to charges filed in connection with the Aug. 10 death of 21-month-old Duane Beers and in the June 30 abuse of 3-year-old Brian Williams. "Mr. Lewis, you are a sick and dangerous person," Malone said. "Your victims are children who have no way to defend themselves and no way to testify against you. This court has absolutely no reservations in ordering the maximum sentence." The minimum sentence for voluntary manslaughter is three to five years, and the maximum is five to 20 years. The minimum sentence for felony child abuse is two to three years, and the maximum is five to 10 years. Malone put Lewis in the custody of the Kansas secretary of corrections. Lewis pleaded no contest to the charges on Oct. 2 in Douglas County District Court after a plea-bargaining agreement was reached with Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, the previous day. On Sept. 27, Flory increased the original charge of voluntary manslaughter to first-degree murder and added two counts of felony chilling after his incarceration with the death of Beers and one in an incident involving Williams. As part of the plea bargaining agreement, Flory dropped the child abuse charge in connection with the death of Beers and replaced the first-degree murder charge with voluntary manslaughter. He also agreed not to ask the court for an increased sentence under the habitual criminal act in connection with a 1983 felony theft conviction against Lewis in Johnson County. In court yesterday, Flory asked the judge to sentence Lewis to the maximum prison terms allowed by law. "I believe the key language of the "charges speak for themselves,""尔萨词, and musics convicted of willfulness, feloniously and unlawfully killing a human being. "But a photograph can tell a story better than a thousand words, and the photo of Duane Beers lying on that multi-colored sheet was worth more than a thousand words in this case." Flory said later that the picture was taken by investigators shortly after the victim's death in his home, where Lewis had been babysitting. KU might cause other schools to be cautious when scheduling games with Detroit, said Gottfried, who is a brother of KU head football coach Mike Gottfried. Detroit Continued from p. 1 "If I scheduled a game with that school, I'd put the buyout clause very high up in the contract," he said. Hunter said KU Athletic Department officials still hadn't received a copy of Judge Borman's ruling and wouldn't make any decision about an appeal until they did. KU has three options in dealing with the case. Hunter said. "Our first option is to appeal the judge's ruling," he said. "Second, we can contact another school to see if "We'll have to make a decision by the middle of next week, because we've got NBC and Louisville patiently waited." they'd be willing to reschedule so that we could play both Detroit and Louisville. Our third option is to play neither Detroit nor Louisville. Jack Tennant, assistant athletic director at the University of Louisville, said he hoped a KU-Louisville game still could be arranged for this year. "I'm still keeping my fingers crossed," he said. "I think a game between KU and Louisville would be just a great game. Previously, residents had been able to consume such beverages in TV lounges and corridors, he said. Continued from p. 1 Laws "For this year and probably the next year there will be a significant number of people who can legally drink, so we wanted to take another approach," he said. Eventually, Wichita State, too, may have to prohibit such beverages at residence halls, he said. Ken Stoner, KU director of student housing, said he learned at a conference of Big Eight Conference housing directors last week that only Colorado, Kansas State and Iowa State universities still allowed some form of drinking in residence halls. Dennis Orr, coordinator of residential life at Emporia State University, said that whether Emporia State had been chosen to KU's had not been determined yet. "A lot of what happens next year depends on how students handle the responsibility of being able to drink, for instance, or not of legal age handle it." Orr said. Emporia State students who are of legal age may have and consume 3.2 percent beer in their residence hall rooms, he said. Officials at Fort Hays State and Pittsburg State were not available to comment on their schools' policies. Lawsuit against Stephan may be re-opened The Associated Press TOPEKA — Still mapping her strategy, Marge Phelps said yesterday that she was considering writing a "demand letter" to Attorney General Robert T. Stephan to give him one more chance to settle a sexual harassment complaint lodged against him by a former employee. Phelps said she was considering possible tactics in the face of a demand by her client, Marcia Tomson, to re-open a sexual harassment lawsuit filed against Stephan in December 1982 and settled in March in a secret out-of-court agreement that included a $24,000 cash payment. Neil Woerman, spokesman for the Republican attorney general, had no comment on the possibility of such a letter, saying only "we will not get into an ongoing dialogue with Ms. Phelps." He said Stephan stood by his earlier statements regarding the lawsuit. "I'm thinking of sending a demand letter, stating (Tomson's) claim and letting him respond," Ms. Phelps said in a telephone interview. "I don't know for sure. I'm not sure we want to settle again after what's happened." What has happened is that one of Stephan's close friends, former state Sen. Bob Stopey of Topeka, revealed some of the details of the settlement including his role in collecting half of the $24,000 cash payment from a group of prominent Kansas businessmen. In the process, Stephan and Storey denigrated the lawsuit, and Stephan said he had no knowledge of the law. He denied the lawsuit seven months ago. In that suit, Tomson sought $750,000 in damages and accused Stephan of making sexist advances and alleged that two other employees had animosity toward her that eventually resulted in her firing. Tomson worked for Stephan three years before she was fired in 1982. She now lives in San Diego, Calif. The two staff members named in the suit, Betty Johnson and Robert Alderson, left the attorney general's office. Phelps' other option in re-opening the case is to refile the sexual harassment lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Topeka, which she said was very possible. A TELL THE TOWN—CALL THE KANSAN 864-4358 Join the Lunch Bunch At the Veranda Restaurant, for a great meal at a great price. K We guarantee service so speedy that you'll have time for a relaxing lunch in a friendly atmosphere, without falling behind in your busy schedule. $3.95 + tax A Complete Meal Homestyle Soup Specialty Sandwich With French Fries, Coleslaw or Fruit Cup Beverage Holiday Inn *Laurence* *Lawnestown Hotel* 200 McDonald Drive 841-707-77 OR Elaborate 30 Item Soup and Salad Bar Chef's Daily Market Beverage VERBANDA Monday Thru Friday 11:00 to 2:00 P.M. PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY HOURS Mon.-Thurs. 11a.m.-2a.m. Fri & Sat. 11a.m.-3a.m. Sunday 11a.m.-1a.m. ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 $1 OFF NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hill Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY SUANOVEMBERCALENDAROFEVENTS NOVEMBER T7 Champions Club. 6:30 p.m., Trailroom Birdy F8 SUA Fine Arts present "Good-night Mr. Poor", a one man dramatic presentation, 7:00 p.m. Anderson Auditorium. Tickets are $1.50/2.00. The Breakfast Club Fire and Ice S9 SUA Special Events presents "The Romantics", 8:30 p.m. Hebrew Auditorium. Tickets are $11.00/$12.00. The Breakfast Club Fire and Ice F1 SUA Special Events presents "The Valentines Familes", 8:00 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Tickets are $7.00/$8.00. The Terminator Repulsion S2 The Terminator Repulsion S3 Seeing Red M4 Strat-0-Matic Baseball, 7:00 p.m., Parlor C Seeing Red T5 Strategy Games, 6:30 p.m., Trailroom Double Indemnity W6 Dungeons and Dragons Club, 6:30 p.m., Trailroom Sail Club, 7:00 p.m., Parlor A Birdy T7 Champions Club, 6:30 p.m., Trailroom La Dolce Vita F2 Ghost Busters S23 Ghost Busters Strange Behavior T28 Champions Club, 6:30 p.m., Trailroom F29 S24 The Gift M25 Strat-0-Matic Baseball, 7:00 p.m., Parlor C S30 S26 Strategy Games, 6:30 p.m., Trailroom W27 Dungeons and Dragons Club, 6:30 p.m., Trailroom T19 Strategy Games, 6:30 p.m., Trailroom The Best Years of Our Lives W20 Deadline for the Aspen Ski Trip Dungeons and Dragons Club, 6:30 p.m., Trailroom Sail Club, 7:00 p.m., Parlor A The Red Shoes For more information, please contact the Student Union Activities office at 864-347/7 T7 T7 F8 F8 S9 T 14 F 15 S 16 6 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 Area merchants welcome trick-or-treaters into stores By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff Miniature clowns, cats, witches, warlocks, Cabbage Patch Kids, Strawberry Shortcakes and even Gumby invaded downtown Lawrence last night when merchants opened their stores to trick-or-treaters. The Downtown Lawrence Association promoted the idea of giving away treats because Halloween fell on Thursday this year, said Diane Wagner, an elaborately costumed cat handing out candy at Pendragon, 846 Massachusetts St. Most stores downtown stay open until 8:30 p.m. each Thursday. Wagner said she thought the idea was accepted readily because Halloween had become dangerous. "Everyone in town knows the store people aren't going to mess with the food," she said. Pam Lackey, an employee at Scot's Ltd., 919 Massachusetts St., said the evening might be good for business in the long run, although few people were shopping last night. "It's crowded with short people," she said. "I think it's good PR for the whole city of Lawrence. And it promotes downtown." Workers in most of the stores said that last night's sales did not increase, but F.W. Woolworth Co., 911 Massachusetts sts. was an exception. "the merchants have been in more than kids," said Dan Abing, Woolworth manager. "They keep running out of candy." Dolores Beers, who was working at Little Women-Little Men, 823 Massachusetts St., said she kept sending a clerk for more candy. Most businesses had a constant stream of costumed kids followed by weary, but smiling, parents. Crystal Hackathorn, 13, 1033 Wellington Road, and some friends felt safe trick-or-treating alone downtown. "You don't have to worry about people putting things in the apples," Crystal said. Four witnesses who testified for the University of Kansas Alumni Association at a hearing yesterday in Topeka on the property tax status of the association said it was a true association regardless of its membership. Hearing held on tax ruling By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff In a 3-2 vote last month, the State Board of Tax Appeals denied the Alumni Association property tax exemption in Douglas County. The majority opinion said that the association wasn't a true association because its membership wasn't restricted to alumna, and therefore didn't meet statutory requirements. The opinion also said that the association's building wasn't used only by alumni and only for alumni activities. activities. New evidence and legal arguments were presented at yesterday's hearing to show that the Alumni Association should be granted a tax break as stated by the 1985 Legislature, which said that alumni associations wouldn't be required to pay property tax. 11 the Alumni Association is denied property-tax-exempt status in Douglas County, it would be required to pay nearly $65,000 in taxes for 1984 in addition to regular property taxes beginning this year. The first half of the $65,000 has been paid under protest. The second half has not been paid yet. Jean Sagan, associate general counsel for the Kansas Board of Regents, testified in support of the Alumni Association and received permission to submit a brief on behalf of the Regents. That brief must be submitted by Nov. 20. Sagan said yesterday after the hearing that she disagreed with the tax board's decision that a true minority was present. "It is more important to define an alumni association by its function — banding together with a common interest to support the school — rather than by whether all its members are actual alumni," Sagan said. Another witness, Richard von Ende, KU executive secretary, said yesterday after the hearing that he presented evidence that almost all alumni associations in the state provided opportunities for those who weren't alumni to support the university. "Alumni should include friends of the University," von Ende said. "We also indicated that a lot of purely educational activities take place within the building." Also testifying were Fred Williams, executive director of the Alumni Association, and Kevin Carroll, general manager of the Alumni Association. The board granted the second hearing after Brad Smoot, a Lawrence attorney representing the Alumni Association, filed a motion Oct. 18 for a rehearing. Smoot said he expected a decision in late December or early January. On Campus The Society of Automotive Engineers will meet at 10:30 a.m. today in 3032 Learned Hall. “Chariots of Fire” will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. *Women in Law will sponsor a seminar, "Alternative Legal Careers* The Biology Club will meet at 4 p.m. today in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. What can you do with a law degree?" from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. tomorrow at Green Hall. The cost for the seminar is $6 and includes a soup and salad lunch and a wine and cheese reception in the evening. Registration is from 8:30 to 9 a.m. tomorrow. The Strat-o-matic Baseball Club will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Parlor C of the Kansas Union. The Chrysalis Coalition will meet at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. ■ KU Sword & Shield will meet at 8 p.m. Monday in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. 超現価監査照護用 103132456789 yello sub DELIVERS 841-3268 WRITING A TERM PAPER? Attend the Research Paper Workshop FREE! 13 JUNY 2015 SAC CENTER FOR AGRICULTURE Tuesday, Nov.5 7-9 p.m. 308 Dyche Presented by the Student Assistance Center and the Reference Dept. of Watton Library Start Your Weekend At The Coast! D.J. 4 Pool Tables Dance Floor Foosball Air-Conditioned West Coast Saloon open 2-midnight Fridays 2222 Iowa on open 10:30-midnight Saturdays 841-BREW BURTALO BOB'S Smokehouse SMOKEY JOE SANDWICH SPECIAL Chopped ends of BBQ beef, ham, turkey and pork baked in a mild BBQ sauce. Served hot on a bakery fresh bun with tatar curl fries and pickles. LOG $3.50 Extra Large Sandwich WHEEL $2.75 Large Sandwich --- THE TASTE THAT WON THE WEST NO COUPONS ACCEPTED WITH THIS OFFER 719 MASSACHUSETTS OFFER GOOD TILL NOV Formerly Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse—Same nice people—Same management Free Concert Tickets! Listen to KZR106 for details Listen to for details on how to win tickets to see R.E.M.,Nov.6 "You Can Get There From Here" Winners receive 2 tickets to the show, luxurious chartered bus ride, Domino's pizza, and Coca-Cola. Also Win Tickets To Supertramp, Nov.5 Listen to HZR106 for details on how to win. CHECKERS PIZZA KU GAME DAY SPECIAL "Win or Lose Party!" KU vs. Oklahoma SPECIAL 16" 2-TOPPING PIZZA $4.99 Dine In Only $1.50 Pitchers 11 a.m.-Midnight SUNDAY SPECIAL $6.99 Includes 14” 2-item pizza 4 soft drinks necessary other No coupon necessary Not good with any other offer $1.00 $1.50 OFF or OFF Any small pizza Any medium pizza $2.00 OFF Any large pizza One coupon per order. Includes delivery. Expires in 2 weeks. FREE SOFT DRINKS 2 free soft drinks with the purchase of a small pizza or 4 soft drinks with the purchase of a large pizza. One coupon per order. Includes delivery. Expires in 2 weeks. Bring in your KUID and we'll take Bring in your KUID and we'll take $1 off a small, $2 off a medium or $3 off a large pizza! Not good with any other offer. Dine In Only 2214 Yale Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. 841-8010 Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area 7 MOTORS Violent Femmes, a band from Milwaukee, is scheduled to play to a sellout crowd of 1,200 tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The band members are, from left, Victor DeLorenzo, Ganon Gano and Brian Ritchie. 1.200 to see Femmes tonight By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff One band — but a myriad of sounds That's the easiest way to describe the music of the Violent Femmes. Most people label the band "progressive," but the Femmes cover more territory than that. "Our music is more organic," bassist Brian Ritchie said Wednesday in a telephone interview from St. Louis. "We don't sit down and decide to change our form of music. Blues, jazz, gospel, Arabic music and funk. Whatever music it is, someone in the band loves it." The Violent Femmes are scheduled to invade the Kansas Union Ballroom at 8 p.m. today to play to a salloub crowd of about 1,200 in a concert sponsored by Student Union Activities. The band's members — lea vocalist Gordon Gano, bassist Brian Ritchie and drummer Vincent Delorenzo — are covering the Midwest campus circuit. They will play the second sellout concert in SUA Special Events Standing Room Only series, which began with another progressive band, X. The show has been sold out since Monday evening. The Violent Femmes thrive on different types of music to produce their They blend their own brand of blues in the song "Sweet Misery Blues." The hard, pulsating "To The Kill" shows a more rock-oriented facet of the band. They update gospel music in "Jesus Walking on the Water" and "It's Gonna Rain." Ritchie said, "We don't limit what we listen to, so why should we limit what we play? Instead of limiting what we play, we blend different styles of music, and it's more interesting." own brand of freestyle rock. That variety shows up in their two albums, "Violent Femmes" and "Hallowed Ground." Reduce the group's components to bare bones, and one wonders how it creates moods like the melancholy ambiance of the song "Hallowed Ground." Gordon Gano's voice has the presence of Mick Jagger, especially on "Blister in the Sun" and ballads including "I Know It's True, But I'm Sorry To Say" and "Good Feeling." Gano reminds listeners of Jim Morrison in the prose recitation before "Hallowed Ground" and the soliloquy that precedes the onslaught of "Add It Up." But don't get the idea that the Femmes' instrumentation plays second fiddle to Gano's vocals. Without Ritchie's tight, thumping bass and Delorenzo's innovative percussion. the moods couldn't be set. "Please Do Not Go" is a perfect example of how they set the atmosphere for Gano's pleading character. KJHK-FM program director Alan Kloster said yesterday, "The Violent Femmes are probably one of the most requested bands we have. We get at least four to six requests a day, mostly for their first album. That's a lot." When the Violent Femmes, from Milwaukee, started playing together in 1981, they would play on the streets because they couldn't get jobs in nightclubs. "That's how we arrived at our acoustical approach." Ritchie said. The group added The Horns of Dilemma, a brass backup group led by Peter Balkstriere on saxophone, for their second album, providing a seasoning to the Femmes' music that already had been spiced up by their increased use of keyboards, banjo and autoharp. Bitchie said the fuller sound would be evident when they play music from their new album, tentatively titled "The Blind Leading the Naked." The album, to be released in January, was produced by Talking Heads keyboard player Jerry Harrison. Ritchie said the band had enjoyed playing the Midwest. --- 5 HOURS ONLY EXCLUDING SALE ITEMS AND CURRON OFFERS 20% OFF RECEIVE 20% OFF Anything You Can Get In The Bag! SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3RD 12 noon to 5 p.m. Downtown ference Association At Participating Downtown Merchants Brown Bag Sale Look in Sunday's Journal-World for your brown bag sale 5 HOURS ONLY EXCLUDING SALE ITEMS AND COUPON OFFERS 20% OFF RECEIVE 20% OFF Anything You Can Get In The Bag! SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3RD 12 noon to 5 p.m. At Participating Downtown Merchants Downtown Lawrence Association Sunday Combination Dinners! New combination dinners served every Sunday—Choose Sweet & Sour Shrimp, Treasure Chicken, or Beef with Snow Peas. Includes soup appetizer, entree, fried rice, dessert, and hot tea. All for only $3.95 per person Sun. only Royal Peking Restaurant 店飯都京 Tues.-Sat. Lunch 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Dinner 4:30 p.m.-10 p.m. Sun. 12 p.m.-9:30 p.m. 841-4599 closed Mondays exp. 11.30-85 2 free CRAB RANGOON appetizers with purchase of any dinner entree $1.10 value Washington D.C. Royal Peking Restaurant 店飯都京 On the Record A 22-year-old student reported to KU police Monday that a camera lens valued at $500 was taken from his camera bag at Stauffer-Flint Hall. KU police said yesterday. A 39-year-old woman told Lawrence police Monday afternoon that an amber necklace and a pair of gold earrings, together valued at $1,950, and video equipment and miscellaneous items valued at $350 were taken from her home in the 200 block of Pine Drive, police said. A 18-year-old woman told Lawrence police Monday evening that cassette tape valued at $176 and a brown vinyl tape case valued at $30 were taken from her apartment in the 1200 block of Kentucky Street, police said. INSIDE MINTH AT MISSISSIPPI CENTER COMPLETE PERM SERVICE $35.00 (INCLUDES HAIRCUT) FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUPON COMPLETE PERM SERVICE 835.00 QUALITY AUDIO-THE BEST PRICE! JUST HAIR II MODERN HAIRDESIGN STUDIO 842-4414 708 W.NINTH CO-OC-11 53816x2 NOW YOU CAN AFFORD THE BEST! 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Refried beans, guacamole salad and tortilla chips. reg. $3.69 NOW $2.69 Coupon Good After 5 p.m. / Expires Nov. 30 8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 Candidates debate purpose of Senate By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff The first debate between the two coalitions in this year's Student Senate elections centered on returning Senate to the students. Chrysalis and Common Sense coalitions gave their philosophies on running student government last night in an informal debate sponsored by Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas in the International Room of the Kansas Union. About 30 people attended. The two coalitions agreed on some issues, such as publishing professor evaluations. They also agreed that bickering in Senate could be solved by focusing on issues rather than personalities. "The main difference is that Common Sense is researched." said David Epstein, presidential candidate for Common Sense. "We are not offering vague proposals." Milton Scott, presidential candidate for Chrysalis, said that the main difference was in focus. "They are for continuing the Senate process," he said. "We are 'looking to change the emphasis back to students.'" each coalition chose its name. Each coalition answered each question from the audience. One of the first people to speak asked how Epstein said, "We feel it is only common sense to start addressing student concerns. It is common sense to be what Student Senate was, and that was to serve the students." Ruth Lichtwardt, vice presidential candidate for Chrysalis, said that chrysalis meant a state of being or growth. "All of us are growing and changing," she said. "Students should come first, but you can't lump students into one big group. In the last few minutes, Craig Miller, president of GLSOK, told each coalition to ask one question of the other candidates. Scott and Lichtwardt asked, "Do you think that starting your campaign back in the spring semester has hurt your effectiveness in Senate?" Epstein and Brown then asked, "What is Chrysalis going to be doing besides growing? What are students getting?" Amy Brown, vice presidential candidate for Common Sense, said no. Research takes time, she said, and because of the preparation that went into the Common Sense platform, they could put their ideas into action the day after the elections. Lichtwardt's answer: "Our ears." Senate committee chairman to visit KU By a Kansan reporter Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, is scheduled to speak at eBird and duffruit Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Carol Prentice, administrative assistant in academic affairs, said yesterday that the topic of Lugar's address was not known but that it would deal with current issues. "He might change it the day before," Prentice said. Lugar will speak as part of the Pearson Lecture Series, founded by former Sen. James B. Pearson of Kansas to bring prominent public officials to the University. Congress on American foreign policy, and his committee was the first in four years to pass a comprehensive foreign assistance bill out of the Senate. Lagar is a native of Indiana and has been chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee since 1984. He has tried to form a new consensus in Lugar spent three years in the Navy as an intelligence briefing officer for Adm. Arleigh Burke, then chief of naval operations. In 1960, Lugar returned to Indianapolis to work with his brother on the family's farm and food machinery company. He was mayor of Indianapolis from 1967 to 1975 and was elected to the Senate in 1978. In the Senate he has worked to establish loan guarantees for the Chrysler Corp. and the city of New York. He has introduced legislation to encourage home building for firsttime buyers and to ban future grain embargoes by the United States. KU vs. OKLAHOMA Live Broadcast NZR 106 1 p.m. Saturday Sponsored By Bum Steer Bar B Q Laird Noller Ford KU Bookstores Mister Guy Sunflower Cablevision Zercher Photo Ed Marilings 鱼 狗 鹉 蛇 Snakes Iguanas Tarantulas Snakes Iguanas Tarantulas 29 Gallon Salt Tank Set-Up $149.00 Little Pal Pet Shop 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Mall Lawrence, Ks. 749-3767 good thru 11/9/85 --- HAMMOTH AND SNAKE The Look DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE BAG SALE SUNDAY NOV. 3 12-5 p.m. 20% OFF ALL HATS AND CAPS (we don't care if they fit in the bag) STETSON, DOBBS, ETC. ALL LADIES HATS INCLUDED The one you after, the one that separates you from the crowd is here at The Etc. Shop. We carry several lines of the finest quality hats in a choice of styles that you must see to appreciate, wide-brim Fedora's, Dress hats, Safari's Costume hats and many more. A The Etc. Shop Vintage Formal Wear & Classic Clothing 732 Massachusetts 913-843-0611 Mon.-Sat. 11:5:30 Thur. Till 8 p.m. Sun. 12:5 20% savings in addition to those made possible by a special buy on DOBBS "DYNASTY" 1985 fur felts. Some of these fine fines whitely would retail for over $80 will sell for less than, $40 this day only. Selection and sizes and sizes limited on this group. If you are buying a gift, bring in a hat or cap that fits and we will measure it. All sales are final. No special orders or layaways. Sizes 6/7/8 to 8 are available in our "boutique" Look Fead. **AMERICAN** MasterCard YSA V54 CASH Herk Harvey's CARNIVAL OF SOULS 7, 9 AND 11 PM FRI & SAT NOV 1 and 2 DYCHE HALL $ 1.75 ADM. NAPA UFS presentation SPECIAL HALLOWEEN SCREENING PIZZA Shoppe PIZZA SATBIR WITH TE FRIENDS! 842-0600 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center WE DELIVER! PIZZA SHOPPE PIZZA BATEN WITH 12 FINISHING 842-0600 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center WE DELIVER! DELIVERY SPECIAL! 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UDK Exp. 11-14-85 Alpha Chi Omega Fraternity 100 Years 1885 1985 Alpha Chi Centennial Celebration November 1st & 2nd, 1985 Alpha Chi Omega Fraternity 100 Years 1885 1985 Educated Angels 20 Anniversary Alpha Chi Centennial Celebration November 1st & 2nd, 1985 Alpha Chi Omega Fraternity 1885 1985 100 Years PHI PS1 ANIMAL HOUSE '85 HOW DO YOU GET HOT,CHEESY, CUSTOM-MADE PIZZA TO YOUR DOOR IN 30 MINUTES OR LESS? DOMINO'S PIZZA Call Domino's Pizza. One call from you sets Domino's Pizza in motion. From that moment on, we do everything possible to make sure that your hot custom-made pizza is delivered to your door in less than 30 minutes. Weekend Special --- DOMINO'S PIZZA Get a *16* custom-made Domino's Pizza with one topping and four bottles of Coke for only $8.99 Limited delivery area. One offer per order. Expires: February 15, 1986 Name Address 16005/DPE-001 Address 16003-0F-E-001 $599 Special DOMINO'S PIZZA Get a 12" custommade Domino's Pizza with one topping and two bottles of Coke for only $5.99. Name Limited Delivery area. One offer per order. Expires: February 15, 1986 Lawrence 841-7900 1445 West 23rd Street 841-8002 832 Iowa Street 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Mon-Thurs. 11 a.m.-4 a.m. Fri & Sat. 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Sun. One call does it all! One call does it all! DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERS FREE. Sherry Coke Good at listed locations. Our drivers carry less than $10.00. Limited delivery area 电话 Enjoy Coke Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 9 Flexibility is lure of correspondence work By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff Jeff Taylor, a KU senior last fall, dropped out of school to take a job as a reporter for the Kansas City Times. He was six hours short of graduating. Taylor now plans to complete his bachelor's degree by taking two correspondence courses through the University. "Correspondence makes sense," Taylor said yesterday. "When you work as a reporter, you can't expect to get out of the newsroom at 6:30 every night. So, it's difficult to go to chases every morning or every night." "If you work, you can't afford not to take advantage of continuing education. It's flexible, so it's the obvious choice." The department of continuing education offers about 110 correspondence courses, said Jo Lutz, coordinator of student services. The courses, which entail assignments completed at home and sent to instructors to be graded, are representative of most schools in the University, including journalism, business, education and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Lutz said. Members of each department design the courses their departments will offer, she said. The author of the course usually teaches it by mail until he is confident that the assignments are designed properly. When the instructor no longer wants to teach the course, he offers it to another instructor in the department. ferred are lower-level classes, Lutz said, they run from the 100 to the 600 level and attract a variety of students. Although most of the courses of- "there were 1,000 enrollments last year," Lutz said. "They are not just KU students. In fact, most of them are not KU students." KU is the only one of the seven Board of Regents schools sanctioned by the Kansas Board of Regents to other correspondence courses, she said, so students from other Kansas schools take KU correspondence courses. Lutz said students at KU and other Regents schools took correspondence courses because they were changing schools and needed prerequisite skills. In some cases, some classes. Others take correspondence courses because they can't enroll on campus in classes they need, she said. She said other students, such as Taylor, had jobs, so they earned their last three to six hours of credit by correspondence. Lutz said Kansas residents and out-of-state residents who weren't college students also took correspondence courses. Tony Housh, Silver Lake sophomore, has completed two correspondence courses, English 101 and Political Science 110. Housh said he took the English course when he was a junior in high school because he couldn't picture it through a grammar courses in college. Students have nine months to complete correspondence courses and may extend this time by three months. But Housh said he finished his English course in three months. Lutz said she guessed that the average time to complete a course was nine months. Nationally, she said, only half of those who enroll complete correspondence courses. But the average number of those completing courses through KU is higher than the national average because the course design has been remodeled over the past three years. "It's the same material," Lutz said, "but we've streamlined most of the writing. People are completing it and time and are getting better grades." On Tuesday, Housh said, he completed his political science course, which he began nearly a year ago. He said the 15 lessons he had to complete involved writing two to three essays for each lesson "They critiqued my papers," he said. "They tell you what is good and what needs to be explained, instead of just grading you on a test." Housh said that sitting down and starting on the first lesson was the most difficult part about taking a correspondence course. But, he said, once he got started it was better than sitting through class. "Most lower-level classes you skip a lot and don't go to anyway," he said. The courses cost $40 for each credit hour, not including the cost of materials, Lutz said. It costs $15 more for a three-month extension. TRADE IN TIME? PENET Fender If you've been thinking of a new guitar or amplifier, now is the time to trade up to a brand-new PEAVEY! PULLIAM'S MUSIC HOUSE has a large selection of new amps, guitars, and accessories -- and we want your trade-in! Stop by today and check us out -- find out why your best buy is a new PEAVEY from PULLIAM'S MUSIC HOUSE! OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 7. PULLIAM'S MUSIC HOUSE 2601 Iowa 843-3007 SUA FILMS SCHWARZENEGGER THE TERMINATOR An ORION PICTURES Release © 1984 CINEMA 84, A GREENBAG BROTHERS PARTNERSHIP. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Fri. & Sat., Nov. 1 & 2 3:30 p.m., 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m. $1.50 Woodruff Aud. sex and suspense!" ROMAN POLANSKI'S REPULSION "An Absolute Knockout Of A Movie!" —Bosley Crowther. New York Times CATHERINE DENEUVE Grousphy by ROMAN POLANSKI and GERMAID BRACH Produced by EUGENE GUTONSKI Directed by ROMAN POLANSKI A REVIAL FILMS INTERNATIONAL PRESENTATION MIDNIGHT MOVIE! Fri. & Sat., Nov. 1 & 2 $2 Woodruff Aud. --- "Lion In The Hay" AΔΠ November 1, 1985 AΔΠ Barn Party Drinking Myth of the Week Drinking Myth of the Week GETTING DRUNK IS FUNNY. Maybe in the old Charlie Chaplin movies...but not in real life. Drunkenness is no funnier than any other illness or incapacity. The Student Assistance Center Students save 10% on Kansan Classifieds!! It's Our Annual Foolish Ghoulish Sale! FOLLOW THE PUMPKINS TO SAVINGS! The Far Side Cards- Buy 3 and get 1 FREE! Cordoroy or Oxford Caps $7.95 20% Off-KU Sweaters Stationery KU Gift Items Paperback Books 1/2 Off Jayhawk Bookstore "At The Top of Naismith Hill" THE FINAL Farewell to Summer Sale 25%OFF Store Wide—25% Off Everything—Your choice (Excluding Sale Items) Choose from: (Rain Checks available on certain items) KU Jackets Shoes Sweats Socks Caps T-Shirts Warm-ups Sports Bags Shorts Tennis Balls Racketballs & Accessories THURSDAY—FRIDAY—SATURDAY ONLY 1601 W.23rd in the Southern Hills Malls 740 2880 749-2630 SOUTHERN HILLS SPORTINGOODS 6 10 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 Senator says time is wasted United Press International WASHINGTON — The Senate has spent six weeks in do-not-quorum calls and 2½ weeks in drawn-out votes since the start of the session, Sen. David Pryor, D-Ark., said yesterday. Pryor said that as of last Friday, the Senate had consumed 247 hours on quorum calls, or 23 percent of the time it was in session, and 100 hours on roll call votes, adding another 9 percent. "These figures are astonishing," Pryor said. "It seems to me that we should consider changes in the Senate rules and attempt to be more efficient." Quorums, the number of people necessary to transact business, are used to keep the Senate in session to bridge action on bills or speeches. The rules stipulate that roll call votes last 15 minutes, but Pryor said that more than 36 of the 100 hours spent on balloting exceeded that amount because the Senate was "waiting on members to come to the floor." Pryor said the average length of a roll call vote has been 23.6 minutes. Thirteen have lasted longer than half an hour and one went on for 61 minutes. "Part of the problem, quite frankly, is because of the attempt of the leadership, on both sides of the aisle, to accommodate the schedules of individual senators," Pryor said. "I suppose some of this is necessary. "But when the efforts to accommodate members reaches the point where the legislative train runs off the track and we can't do our work, I believe it's time to look at the rules and see what changes can be made." Pryor said. He said that of the 258 roll call votes taken, only 6 came on Monday and 31 on Friday, and while 26 occured before noon, 74 were after 6 p.m. "This means that fully 30 percent of the votes in the Senate were in the evening." Pryor said. Pryer's research also bore out that the Senate is a nocturnal creature that is most prolific on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. "We should probably declare Mondays and Fridays national holidays since significant, substantive business rarely occurs on these days," he said. "And, more and more, it seems that most of the work of the Senate occurs after 6 p.m." Farm bill debated in Senate United Press International WASHINGTON -- Republican leaders circulated a new farm package yesterday, but Sen. James Exon, D-Neb., said that the package would abandon small farms and that it would block action with a Bristolter. The new GOP proposal, a variation of one narrowly defeated Wednesday, made the rounds of Republicans and Democrats as State Sen. Robert Dole, Senate majority leader, hunted hard for a winning combination. Exon, a ranking farm state senator, said the new Republican proposal was even worse than the one defeated Wednesday, which would have provided a one-year freeze on crop subsidies and would have allowed authorization to reduce subsidies 5 percent a year in each of the following three years. The new Republican proposal incorporates the one-year freeze and the 5 percent cuts, but provides wheat growers with a variable program and incorporates "lock, stock and barrel" the money-saving provisions included in a Democratic alternative. The bill the Senate Agriculture Committee sent to the Senate floor would freeze subsidies for four years. Republicans, surprised and elated by the narrowness of their initial defeat, sought a combination that would provide a major. Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., said the Senate had taken "a major step toward achieving a farm bill agreement this year." The narrowness of the defeat, 51-48, encouraged the Republicans, leading Lugar to say that the close vote paved the way for "a major compromise. Many thought we could only get 30 votes." Busy with off-the-floor negotiations, the Republicans refused to permit any move on the floor by Democrats. Dole said the GOP would offer its alternative first — "We're the majority." But Exon said, "If we think they have the votes for the bill they have out there, we're going to fillhuster. We're ready to go. We want to delay action as long as possible." Exon charged that Dole was trying to split wheat state senators from corn state senators and was holding out new concessions to cotton and rice state senators. But Exon said Democrats, opposing the Dole-Lugar plan, had not budged. NRA,ACLU oppose plan to file names United Press International WASHINGTON — The National Rifle Association has joined the American Civil Liberties Union in an unusual alliance opposing a Justice Department plan to place the names of white-collar crime suspects and their associates in the FBT's super crime computer. In a letter to Attorney General Edwin Meese, the NRA said it had serious questions about the plan to list white collar suspects that have not been convicted of any crime in the FBI's National Crime Information Center. The NRA joined the ACLU in opposing the proposal, which is being studied by the government. The two groups rarely see eye to eye on legal issues, especially on gun control efforts. In letters to Meese, the NRA, the American Bankers Association and the Securities Industry Association raised questions about the government's plan to expand the NCIC, which currently lists information about those convicted of crimes. The letters were made available Wednesday to United Press International by congressional sources. The FBI's NCIC was set up in 1967 as a central depository for criminal justice information. It currently contains 17 million records about convicted individuals and is available to 64,000 criminal justice agencies. The Justice Department revealed recently it is working on a plan to place the names of people who are suspected of committing white collar crimes, but have not been convicted, in the files. It also would include associates of those suspected of committing a crime. Becerros MEXIKAN Sunday Special Becerros MEXICAN 2515 W. 6th 841-1323 $3.25 As always, our chips and salsa are Free! 1.00 Margaritas all day Cincinnati means freedom and fun. And the Spree is the easiest way to get started. It's easy on you, with push button starting, no shifting and low maintenance. And it's easy and low maintenance. And it's lowest价搜 scooter you can buy! So get the fun started! Get the Spree! Spree Spree The 1986 HOURS Tuesday-Friday 10 to 6 Saturday 10 to 4 Closed Sunday & Monday Chic thrills! HORIZONS HONDA WE KNOW WHY YOU RIDE HONDA 1548 E. 22" STREET LAWRENCE, RANSAF 60644 843-3333 HONDA Keep in mind— Start your weekend aglow with flowers to go! Late registration will not be accepted. Potential rushees must register on Nov.6 or 7 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Centennial Room Kansas Union Funshine Daisies ESPRIT DE CORP? YOUR BOOT HAS ARRIVED! annie...THE...boot...in yummy saddle leather with tweedy knit sock effect & non-skid sole. $64.95 FLOWERS ROBINSON'S $3 a bunch cash & carry Flower Shoppe 1101 Massachusetts 841-0800 on.the.flower.shop. 837 MASSACHUSETTS The Friday Night FREE MOVIE! "Chariots of Fire" at ECM (1204 Oread, 1 blk, N of K. Union at 7:30 pm Fri., Nov.1 comprehensive health associates * free pregnancy tests * pupillary abortion services * alternative courting * gynaecology * contraception Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400] COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA 9212177 (215) 829-6000 Drift, For Cars American Flavors 图2-12 American Fyers Ft. $50 7:20 7:00 9:35 Ball & Belt. $100 7:20 10:00 VARSITY SEPTEMBER 14, 2023 THE LIVE AND DIE LA Fri. $9.00 Daily 7:30 9:00 Sat. & Sun. $2.50 $2.50 463-1057 HILLCREST 2 TWO AND ONE TELEPHONE 822-9000 HILLCREST 1 CHARLES BRISONN DEATH WEST 3 SCANNON Date: Thursday, September 26th Time: 8:30 AM - 2:45 PM HILFIGES HILFIGERS BAY/BROOKLYN JAGGED EDGE R Daily *4:45 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun. 12:30 L STATE AND IOWA HISTORY REPORTS THE REAL FACTORY BROS. RENO WILLIAMS The New York Times HILLGREST 3 712.460.0044 1815.391.8400 SIEVER BULLET Daily 9:30 GODZILLA 1985 ALL NEW! Fri. 10:30 Daily 7:25 CINEMA 2 CINEMATOGRAPHY AND TELEVISION 8 TELEPHONE: 0123-4567-8901 POPULARITY Fri. *4:55 Daily 7:20 9:25 Sat. & Sun. *2:50 *4:55 SISSY SPACER a true story Fri, 14.95 Daily 7:00-9:30 MARIE *Bargain Show FINAL PERFORMANCE FRIDAY & SAT SUNDAY (2:30 p.m. "Fine acting enlightens Lim's sharp wordplay, puns and double entendres. The play is entertaining." Chuck Twardy J-W Arts Editor CHAMBERS Lawrence Community Theatre presents the world premiere of CHAMBERS: A RECREATION IN FOUR PARTS by Paul Stephen Lim. October 24, 25, 26 and November 1, 2 (1 p.m.) and 3 (2:30 p.m.) Tickets $8, Neistat Giffenst $4, $1n, pp2-2on (T18-SMOO) Lawrence Community Theatre... 15th & New Hampshire Suggested for mature audience MASS. STREET DELL 1924 MASSACHUSETTS "4 p.m. to close daily" 1. Traditional Burger $1.99 WE WANT YOU TO TRY OUR ALL NEW DELI BURGERS with lettuce and tomato Swiss & Bacon Burger $2.35 Swiss cheese and trusche bacon Big Blue Burger $2.35 blue cheese and sauteed mushrooms WHAT A DEAL Traditional Burger Basket and 12oz. soft drink s1.49 50£ COUPON 50£ 07 50¢ OFF 4p.m. to close daily FIFTY CENTS OFF ALL NEW DELI BURGERS 50¢ OFF 50q OFF 4 p.m. to close daily OFF OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30,1985 OFF 50¢ OFF - All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef * Select a fresh baked dum bell donn onion kooler or whole wheat * Served with potato chips kooler dill spear and any small soak drink Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 Nation/World University Daily Kansan 11 Duarte helps Duran recover from ordeal United Press International WASHINGTON - Salvadoran President Jose Napoleon Duarte, with his daughter at his side, gave a moving account yesterday of efforts to bring his daughter back litterally to the family's 44-day kidnapping ordeal. "The they tried to destroy the link between her and me, but they did not succeed." Duarte told the National Press Club as his 35-year-old daughter, lnes Guadalupe Duarte Duran, looked on. Duarte and his daughter later spent 30 minutes in the Oval Office with President Reagan for a visit intended to show support for Duarte, who has been criticized for negotiating with leftist guerrillas for the release of his daughter one week ago. But White House spokesman Larry Speakes sidestepped questions on whether Duarte had contradicted the U.S. policy of not negotiating with terrorists. "That's not for us to make a judgment on." Speakes said. Speakes said Reagan expressed joy over the release and told Duarte he had signed a human rights certification clearing the way for the first installment of up to $22 million in U.S. counter-terrorism aid. Duarte, in his speech, defended the negotiations as an act of humanism and cited an outpouring of support for his decision to swap "I did not negotiate personally with the guerrillas on this case without the support of my people." he said. "It is the nation that made the decision. It was the will of the people." Duarte also said the leftist Nicaraguan government had supported the Salvadoran guerrillas and was its center and headquarters. He said the leftist government had a "great responsibility concerning the problems of El Salvador." "They always consulted to Managua to see what Managua had to say about it," he said during weeks of negotiations with leftist guerrillas. Miriam Hooker, press secretary for the Nicaraguan Embassy in Washington, rejected the charge, saying, "This is absolutely false and Duarte knows it. Duran sat on the dais and listened intently to her father's speech "The real terrorists in El Salvador are the ones who murdered the Archbishop Arnulfo Romero and the American nuns." Duarte said he was shielding her from press questions. "I just want to forget a little," Duran told a reporter sitting next to her. Duran has said she was treated well during her capability, but she and a friend, who was kidnapped with her, had to walk two nights and half a day with blistered feet at point where she was released. Duarte said a psychologist was helping his daughter and her family recover from her ordeal and the so-called Stockholm Syndrome, in which kidnap victims become sympathetic to their captors. "I think she is working very well," Duarte said. "She is back, little by little, to normal." "The psychologist told me that there is a moment in which she has to make decisions. And one of the decisions, for example, was whether she wanted to come with me or not. "And last night I asked her whether she wanted to come today to this meeting . . . which obviously would bring to her memories and problems and she said, 'Yes, I'll take the chance.'" Duarte said. Duarte and his daughter, accompanied by U.S. Ambassador Korr, flew to the United States aboard a U.S. Air Force plane Wednesday, and the Salvadoran leader planned to go on to Europe. Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! Any way you want it, you can get it NOW, at... 1618 West 23rd Street S Select from a variety of siesta- delicious sandwiches, topped with your favorite vegetables and spices, and then finely baked, lightly-baked white or wheat Sub Roll For large appetites, we've got a 12" sub. More moderate dinners can enjoy the 6" size, and we've included a kid- small Sub for our customers under 10. For most folks our sandwich is a compel- ent, nutritious, palet-learning meal, but there's a wide variety of "stuff" to help you eat. Sliced meats, fried potatoes, baked beans, chips and chili, plus soft drinks, milk or coffee. Try us today! We're open from 11 am until 2 am daily. am Any way you want it...you got it! AT SUB & STUFF SANDWICH SHOP.. "Poe Is Coming November 8" U.S. wants success, says Shultz WASHINGTON — Secretary of State George Shultz said yesterday that the United States is hoping for a whole range of accords to come from the Geneva summit, ranging from greatly expanded cultural exchanges to arms control agreements. United Press International bachev, said that in addition to discussing how to stop regional conflicts, the United States wanted to have "a more constructive relationship" with the Soviet Union. Shultz told a news conference that intensive preparations have been under way on these topics since he first met Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze in Helsinki three months ago. Reiterating a principal American topic for discussion at next month's summit meeting between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, Shultz said, "We want countries to stop expanding their influence by the use of armed intervention and subversion." Shultz, who leaves tomorrow for a pre-summit meeting in Moscow with Shevardnadze and Gor- The United States, he said, hoped that the Reagan-Gorbachev meeting Nov. 19-20 in Geneva, Switzerland, would mark "a hopeful new phase" in superpower relations. been some problems in the way of agreement on those issues, but did not explain what they were. "We want to reduce the risk of nuclear war through drastic cuts in nuclear arsenals," Shultz said. "We want to promote and defend human rights everywhere. We insist that the Helsinki accords (on human rights) and other international commitments be observed." In his talks with Shevardnadze and other Soviet officials, Shultz said he had explored an expanded "people-to-people" program that would include many more cultural exchanges. He said there have "We can have a more constructive relationship with the Soviet Union in which we are better able to resolve outstanding issues, but only if the Soviets also want it," Shultz said. "The meetings in Geneva can and, we hope, will mark a new phase in this process. He said the administration was not playing a "propaganda game" in advance of the summit and he decried the number of leaks coming out of the administration about the U.S. arms control proposals. "We seek to establish better communications between our societies to reduce the danger of miscalculation and misunderstanding. That is why we are proposing dramatic increases in people-to-people exchanges." Botha's party loses 1 seat, more ground The Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — White-supremacist parties on South Africa's far right said yesterday that their broad gains in five midterm elections proved there is a surge in white opposition to sharing power with blacks The governing National Party of President P.W. Botha, campaigning on a platform of gradual race reform, won four of the five Parliament seats at stake in Wednesday's voting but lost ground everywhere to the far right. Two ultraconservative parties slashed the Nationalists' past majority in four districts and took a seat away from Botha's party in the Orange Free State for the first time since 1953. The National Party, in power since 1948, has a huge margin in Parliament, and parliamentary control was not an issue. Leaders of the far-right Conservative Party and the Reformed National Party said voters showed anger over government failure to quell 14 months of bloody rioting over apartheid as well as dissatisfaction with the economy and the government's approach to race reforms. Pro-government and liberal newspapers noted that the five districts were largely blue-collar and rural and said the far right had never been in a more favorable position than in Wednesday's vote. The far right's victorious candidate, Louis Stoßberg of the Reformed National Party, had made an issue of a couple in his town of Sosolburg who married this year after the National Party repealed laws barring interracial sex and marriage. PICAFLIC VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 29rd. Sp. 105 Lawrence, Kaitlyn 8444 (913) 842-8177 www.videoeventcenters.com --- KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 Hungry? Head for Harry's! Dive into Harry's SHRIMP BASKET: 8 ounces of shrimp, cocktail sauce & Curly Q fries. Or, take on HARRY'S JUMBO: 10 oz. burger with Curly Q fries. 106 N. Park(formerly Campus Hideaway) 749-5246 HARRY BEAR'S BEST IN THE WORLD INVESTMENT MARKET Alternative Legal Careers Conference "What Can You Do With a Law Degree?" Nov.2 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Green Hall Cost: $5 (includes lunch and post-conference reception) This conference will provide a chance to meet people with legal backgrounds who apply their knowledge in a variety of interest areas. Register now in the Commons of Green Hall or at the door the day of the conference. Sponsored by Women in Law --- In essence, the Model D provides no loss of system functionality-induced an increase of functionality - in a package that requires 28% less desk space than most competitive systems - all at a price of just $1495. The base Model D includes a clean high resolution monitor, 256K, 2 disk drives, parallel and serial ports and a clock/calendar. The keyboard addresses IBM-user complaints with typewriter layout and extra large return and shift keys. The system comes with a full 1 year warranty. Add to this qualifying Edge's capabilities in design, service, and Model D may be the premier IBM compatible PC on the market. Computer Outlet, 804 New Hampshire, Lawrence is the first dealer of the Model D in Kansas. Bill Kilough of Computer Outlet says that, "Price and Performance will make this the hottest selling micro in 1985." TONIGHT violent femmes 8:00 P.M. 11 SOLD OUT D OUT!!! KANSAS UNION BALLROOM LISTEN TO KJHK ALL DAY TODAY FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN TICKETS! The Model D is more than the equivalent of a $3000 IBM PC. It provides integrated support for both RGB color and high resolution monochrome displays. In addition, graphics support is provided for the more popular business programs on the standard hi-res monochrome monitor. This is a feature not provided for on IBM's text only monochrome system. The user can also expand the system to its full 640K memory capacity by simply adding chips to the system. The lower cost memory expansion while conserving valuable expansion slots; the Model D has four slots, all available to the user. GANTON, MA- In a move designed to break through the price barrier of the IBM compatible PC world, Leading Edge Hardware Products Inc. has announced the introduction of the Model D PC. Leading Edge Model D: High Power, Low Price PRESENTED BY SUA SPECIAL EVENTS AND KJHK. The Leading Edge Model D PC-compatible computer will sell at $1495, offer four slots, up to 640K memory, double floppy drives, graphics capability built in and monochrome or RGB monitor output on the system board. Minsky's PIZZA WIN a LARGE Minsky's PIZZA! Have Your Name in Lights Announced on 106 KLZR! PICK THE WINNERS of these BIG 8 GAMES Oklahoma State___ vs. Colorado Missouri ___ vs. Iowa State Nebraska ___ vs. Kansas State Tiebreaker: Pick the Score of Tiebreaker: Pick the Score of Kansas ___ vs. Oklahoma Name ___ Phone DEADLINE: Nov. 2 by 1 p.m. A WINNER EVERY WEEK! Your Entry Entitles You to $2 OFF a LARGE Pizza or $1 OFF a MEDIUM Pizza * Good at the time of registration * Good on delivery—842-0154 Don't Forget— - We have FREE DAY DELIVERY! - Reserve our "PARTY ROOM" for your party. for your party! Minsky's PIZZA 2228 Iowa 842-0154 12 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 Suspect called 'Ms. Rambo' United Press International SPRINGFIELD, Pa. - A woman charged with spraying a shopping mall with semi-automatic gunfire, killing two people and wounding eight, was described yesterday as a mental patient who frequented the stores where she was known as "Ms. Rambe." Sylvia Seegrist, 24, who was charged with the killings, also stabbed a counselor in the back at an outpatient clinic during the summer of 1981 while applying for readmission to the clinic, officials said. "While we were screening her for readmission, out of the blue she attacked one of our counselors," said Eileen Joseph, director of Tri-County Fountain Center in Landsdowne. The counselor was not seriously injured but did press charges. Joseph said clinic employees were upset that Seegrist was admitted to a rehabilitation program instead of being jailed. "I believe the criminal justice system failed her, and the mental health system failed her," Joseph said. "This was tragic all around." Richard Zensen, manager of a Springfield Mall drug store, said Seegirt was a regular customer who he described as "very tough." Zensen said he would occasionally pass her in an aisle and jokingly say, "Oh, hello, Ms. Rambo." She'd give me a dirty look, like a demon possessed. Zensen said he last saw Seegrist a week earlier when she was refused a refill for an outdated tranquilizer prescription. "Well, she was furious," he recalled. Seegrist, clad in green combat fatigues, Wednesday opened fire with a 22-caliber semi-automatic rifle "at anybody and everybody who was in her path," at the suburban Philadelphia mall, said Police Chief George Hill. Pollice said they could deduce no motive for the attack in which a 2-year-old boy and a 64-year-old man were killed. Eight others were wounded, including a man who remained in stable but critical condition. A hospital spokeswoman identified the dead boy as Recife Cosmen of New Castle, Del., and the man as Augusto Ferrara of Philadelphia. Britain decides to keep Greek art United Press International LONDON — Britain has formally rejected a Greek governmental request for the return of the priceless Elgin Marbles, removed from the Athens Acropolis in the early 1800s, an agent spokesman said yesterday. The spokesman said the decision meant that the magnificent 5th-century marble frieze that once adorned the Parthenon would remain in the British Museum, where the sculptures grace the walls of a separate display room. A year ago, Greece approached Britain through the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization in a bid to negotiate the return of the marbles taken from Greece by Lord Eligin, a British diplomat, in 1812. "We formally rejected the request yesterday in a letter through UNESCO, and the marbles will remain in the British Museum for the time being" the spokesman said. He would to disclose the contents of the reply. Greece had requested the return of the treasures as "sacred" monuments embodying the spirit of the ancient Athenian democracy. Neil Kinnock, the British Labor Party leader who had advocated returning the marbles to Greece, once said, "The Parthenon without the marbles is like a smile with a missing tooth." The Greek government did not immediately comment on the report. The Greek government has pledged to build a special museum near the foot of the Acropolis to house the remaining sculptures from the Parthenon and the Elgin Marbles if they are returned. WASHINGTON — One of the largest studies of its kind has found no link between breast cancer and birth control pills, which are the second most widely used form of contraception in the United States, researchers reported yesterday. United Press International Pill-cancer link denounced Scientists found that oral contraceptive use neither increased nor decreased the risk of breast cancer, regardless of how old the women were when they started taking the pill, how long they used it, the amount of the hormone progesterone in the pill and whether they took the pill before having their first child. The results contradicted the results of 1983 studies that found increased risk of breast cancer up to age 37 among women who started using the pill early and among those who used it before their first pregnancy. "I have substantial personal confidence that the results in this study correctly describe oral contraceptive use as having no effect on the incidence of breast cancer in this country," said Bruce Stadel, a medical instructor at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. "We feel reasonably confident that those earlier reports do not warrant further concern," he said. However, he said, the issue would have to be studied further. There is concern that the pill contributes to cell changes which may lead to cervical cancer, he said, and study is under way to determine this. The breast cancer group was part of a larger study which also found that the pill reduced the risk of endometrial, uterine and ovarian cancer by 50 percent or more. Those results were reported in 1983. published in the Nov. 2 issue of the Lancet, a British medical journal, compared 2,088 women age 20-44 diagnosed with breast cancer between 1880 and 1892 to 2,065 women of similar ages who did not have breast cancer. The breast cancer study, to be The institute, a branch of the National Institutes of Health, conducted the study with researchers from the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. Other researchers said that caution was still in order because of the diversity of studies, some of which support the latest report, and others that support the 1983 reports. "There is a danger of accepting comfortable results on OC's and breast cancer before we can be certain that there is no effect," the editorial said. Sidney Wolfe, director of the Public Health Citizen Research Group, called Stadel's statement "outrageous in that it dismissed the results of two other studies." However, many prominent physicians have said the benefits of the pill outweigh the risks of pregnancy. Pi Kappa Alpha 1985 Fireman's Ball Youthful Energy! Prize-Winning Talent! "... (one of the) best of a young generation of American quartets ..." Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 10, 1985 Crafton-Preyer Theatre Murphy Hall Krista Bennion, violin Robert Rinehart, violin Ah Ling Neu, viola Ramon Bolipata, cello Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982 VISA/MasterCard Accepted Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association THE RIDGE STRING QUARTET Half price for KU Students Youthful Energy! Prize-Winning Talent! "... (one of the) best of a young generation of American quartets ..." Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 10, 1985 Crafton-Preyer Theatre Murphy Hall Krista Bennion, violin Robert Rinehart, violin Ah Ling Neu, viola Ramon Bolipata, cello Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982 VISA/MasterCard Accepted Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association THE RIDGE STRING QUARTET Half price for KU Students The University of Kansas Theatre Presents William Shakespeare's Mirthful and Merry Comedy TWELFTH NIGHT November 7, 8, 9, & 14, 15, 16, 1985 HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS! Half price for KU Students The University of Kansas Theatre Presents William Shakespeare's Mirthful and Merry Comedy TWELFTH NIGHT 8:00 p.m. Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982 VISA/MasterCard Accepted Twelfth Night is KU's entry in the 913/864 American College Theatre Festival Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fund MASS. STREET DELL 1941 MASSACHUSETTS BURGERS (served 4:00 pm to close) Traditional Burger $1.99 with lettuce and tomato MASS. STREET DELL 1941 MASSACHUSETTS Big Blue Burger $2.35 blue cheese and sauteed mushrooms swiss cheese and ranch style bacon $2.35 Swiss & Bacon Burger - All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef * Select a fresh baked deli bun onion, kaiser or whole wheat * Served with potato chips kosher dill spear and any small soft drink Former Chief Middle East Correspondent For U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT. Former Vice President of Chase Manhattan Bank. A Lecture By John Law HOW MANY MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT?" Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 7:30 p.m. "Arab Israeli Conflict: Alderson Auditorium Kansas Union Sponsored by School of Journalism, Political Science Department, and the Saudi Students Club. MBA AT RICE UNIVERSITY Discover Rice University's Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Administration-visit with our representative who will be on campus on Monday, November 4,1985 9:00 a.m.to 11:00 a.m. To arrange an interview, contact: UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT CENTER-864-3624 I am unable to visit with your representative but would you please send me an application and a brochure about Rice University's Jones Graduate School City State Zip College Degree date Rice University, Jones Graduate School of Administration P.O. Box 1892 Houston Texas 77251 (713) 527-4918 Rice University is an equal opportunity/affirmative action institution. The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents the sensational Concert Series Presents the sensational Ballet Eddy Toussaint de Montreal in its first, major American tour 8:00 p.m. Friday, November 1, 1985 Hoch Auditorium Program Missa Creole (1980), Souvenance (1982), Cantates (1978) and Concerto En Mouvement (1984) Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office/All seats reserved/Public: $12.50 & $10.50; KU and K-12 Students: $6.25 & $5.25; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $11.50 & $9.50/VISA/MasterCard accepted/For reservations, call 913/864-3982 Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Sawarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association. The Artful 21 K Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 Sports University Daily Kansan 13 News Briefs Swim teams hosting Big 8 Invitational The Kansas men's and women's swim teams open their seasons this afternoon when they host the Olympic national in the Robbins Natatorium. Basketball sold out Kent Weiser, manager, said yesterday that the 15,122 seats in Allen Field House were sold out for the 16-team schedule. If you don't have season tickets to Kansas men's basketball games, then television could be the only way to see home games this season. The diving competition begins at 2 p.m., and the swimming starts at 6 p.m. Iowa State, Missouri, Nebraska, Drury and Southwest Missouri State will compete in the two-day meet. Swimming events are scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. and 3 p.m tomorrow, and diving will start at 12:30 p.m. The schedule does not include a possible game with Louisville, but Weiser said if the Cardinals were added, the current season ticket holders would have the first opportunity to purchase the tickets. The Kansas volleyball team, with a record of 14-9 and 2-4 in the Big Eight Conference, will take on Oklahoma tonight in Norman, KS. The Jayhawks will be looking for their third consecutive conference victory. This will be the first meeting of the two teams this season. Hawks in Norman "We tried to give everybody plenty of warning that we might sell out." Weiser said. Kansas finished 2-2 in the Oral Roberts University Tournament last week. "They looked pretty good in practice, yesterday." KU head coach Frankie Albitz said yesterday of her team. She said players suffered several nagging injuries, including an injury to hitter Catalina Suarez's knee, which kept her out of a match against Tulsa last week. The Missouri Valley Olympic Weightlifting Championships will be from noon to 5 p.m. tomorrow at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Lifting contest set The contest is open to the public. Contestants can register beginning at 10 a.m. at the sports pavilion. The entry fee is $5. $3 the championships will include a snatch lift and the knick and jerk. Winners in each division must be members of the United States Weightlifting Federation to be recognized by the Missouri Valley. Non-members still may lift in the championships, but may not be declared winners. Lifters who want to become members of the USFW can register tomorrow for $12. Also scheduled for Sunday are quarterfinals in men's Independent and Residential Rec-A, and action in men's Greek Rec-A. Sunday promises to be the busiest day yet for the Recreation Services intramural football tournament, with first/round play scheduled for men's and women's Greek and Independent Trophy teams. Tourney continues In men's Independent Rec-A games yesterday, BA beat Dogs 24-0. Fleetsters beat Wardukes 16-6. Yogi's Bears destroyed Barbershop Gang 3-0. Road Warriors shut out toxic Shockers 14-0. Juju defeated Seahawks 38-7. Machine beat Headhunters machine beat Headhunters 24-0. In men's Greek Rec. Ac1, Men shut In Phk Kappa IPS 13-0. In Residential Rec.-A, Elgins defeated Ellsworth 14-7. Soccer clubs to play Both the Kansas men's and women's soccer club teams will be in action this weekend. The women's team, which has a 3-4 record, will play Rocksturm at 10 a.m. tomorrow and Benedictine at 11 a.m. Sunday. Both games will be played at the soccer fields, 23rd and Iowa Streets. The men's team will host Central Missouri State at 1 p.m. tomorrow in Memorial Stadium. Rose gets millions CINCINNATI — Pete Rose became the highest-paid manager in the history of baseball Thursday by signing a $1 million a year contract to continue as player-manager of the Cincinnati Reds for the next three years. From Kansan wire reports 'Hawks to face OU's second-string QB By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff When Kansas upset Oklahoma 28-11 last year, the Sooners were without their starting quarterback. When the Jayhawks face Oklahoma tomorrow in Norman, the eighthranked Sooners will again be without their starting quarterback, but this time it could help their wishbone offense. By Frank Hansel Freshman Jamelle Holieway will start for Oklahoma, 4-1 overall and 2-0 in the Big Eight, when they play Kansas, S-3 and 1-2, at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Norman. Holieway is replacing the injured Troy Aikman, who broke his ankle in the Sooners' 27-14 loss to Miami. Aikman replaced Danny Bradley against Kansas last year and had a miserable afternoon in Lawrence. He completed only two of 14 passes for 0 eight yards. One of his three interceptions was returned 63 yards for a touchdown by free safety Wayne Ziehler. Oklahoma Game nine, Nov. 2 Lawrence Aikman, a better passer than runner, established himself as the Sooners' quarterback in their winkle offence. Oklahoma was 3-1 under Aikman, but in three of those games he failed to score, more than 14 points. Alkman's replacements, freshmen Holieway and a Eric Mitchell, led Oklahoma to a 59-14 win over Iowa State last week, and the offense gained 542 yards of offense. "They are both suited for the Holley ran for 76 yards and completed a 77-yard touchdown pass to Derrick Shepard against Iowa State. Mitchell relieved Holley and ran for 109 yards two touchdowns in four games, Alkman run for only 191 yards. Switzer said the Sooners could still throw the ball if necessary. wishbone offense," head coach Barry Switzer said yesterday. "That's why we recruited them." Kansas head coach Mike Gottfried said the two freshman quarterbacks fit the Oklahoma offense like a glove, and the Jayhawks would have to concern themselves with stopping the wishbone attack. "Their offense and ours are completely opposite, but if you make a mistake on either one it can cost you," Gott fried said. Oklahoma will also have running back Spencer Tillman back in uniform. Tillman started in the backfield before pulling his hamstring in the second quarter of the opening game against Minnesota. He carried nine times for 73 yards in just over a quarter. "He has practiced this week and is a still a little rusty." Switzer said. "But, he will probably play some against Kansas." Gottfried said Casillas had the same impact on defense as Oklahoma State's Leslie O'Neal. The Oklahoma defense will also be stronger this week with the return of All-America nose tackle Tony Casillas, who suffered a strained knee in the first quarter against Texas on Oct. 12. "We can't let that affect our offense," Gottfried said. "We've got to take the pressure off by mixing up our offense and keep the defense guessing." The Kansas offense could have more pressure if tailback Lynn Williams doesn't play, Williams, the Jayhawks' best running threat, is still suffering a sore neck and shoulders. Williams has rushed for 327 yards since he was reinstated five games ago. Mike Rogers is the Jayhawks leading rusher with 366 yards in eight games. Gottfried said he wouldn't know until game time whether Williams would play. Center Paul Oswald is still recovering from a knee injury, and this week he will be replaced by a trio of centers, John Loncar, who started last week, Jay Allen and Pete Popovich. Gottfried was undecided on who would start. "This week we're going to try and keep fresh legs in the game at all times," Gottfried said. Wolf, Center beat top team By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff Kansas tennis players Mike Wolf and Michael Center yesterday defeated the No.1 doubles team in the country at the Volvo All-American Tournament in Los Angeles. Wolf and Center defeated Richard Matuszewski and Brandon Walters of Clemson 6-4, 7-6. The team from Clemson won the National Indoor Championships last year, and was needed at the tournament in Los Angeles. "They beat the best team in the country," Scott Perelman, head tennis coach, said last night from Los Angeles. "They took 'em down. It was a big night for the 'Hawks. This will put us on the map." 'They beat the best team in the country. They took 'em down. It was a big night for the 'Hawks. This will put us on the map.' - Scott Perelman KU tennis coach "This is the biggest win Wolf and Center have ever had." Earlier in the day, Wolf drew the No.1 single seed and lost. It was the second year in a row that Wolf had drawn the No.1 seed "We're going to go out and get one now." Wolf lost his first round singles match to Jim Grabb of Stanford 6-3, 3-6, 3-6. "Last year Wolf also drew the No. 1 seed," Perelman said. "I'd like to say it's bad luck." The loss was the first of the year for Wolf, who had won the Jayhawk Invitational and the Intercollegiate Indoor qualifier earlier this season. Women drop Rec-A football After that loss, Perelman said. Perealm said that in the third set, Wolf held three-all points in the first two games Grabb served. In collegiate tennis, games are won at four points. "It was a good match," Perelman said. "Wolf had numerous opportunities to win." By Harlen Makemson Of the Kansan sports staff The women are vanishing. It's not an episode of the Twilight Zone, but a fact of life for Recreation Services' football competition, according to Johnny Johnson, graduate assistant in charge of team sports for Recreation Services. "Women's Rec-A football has almost disappeared," Johnson said Wednesday. "For the last three years it's been dropping." The number of teams participating in intramural football this year dropped to 118, compared to 126 last year. However, the men's divisions have remained constant, while women's Rec-A football competition has vanished altogether, at least for this semester. There are three levels of competition in intramurals. Trophy league is the highest level of competition, followed by a junior league and a youth league. The lack of interest also has spread to softball, in which there were no women's Ree-A teams, and also to some Greek women's football teams, which aren't involved in this year's tournament. Elizabeth Morr, president of Alpha Phi sorority, 1602 High Drive, said she hoped her house could enter the basketball competition next semester, but the members have been too many other activities to enter the football tournament. "We didn't have enough people to really support it." Morr said. "We haven't done any other team sports yet." Julie Stein, president of Sigma Kappa sorority, 1325 West Campus Road, said her house did not play football because of the time taken by philanthropies, but did participate in softball and planned to take part in volleyball. "We set up our schedule, and there are other things we won't get to participate in," Stein said. "We like to keep our schedule open." Stein also said her house was unaware of the procedure when games during softball season were rescheduled. "No one knew we needed to call," Stein said. "No one was contacted about the schedule." Johnson said that a lot of confusion about scheduling could be avoided if teams followed a simple rule — call if in doubt. "Teams are to assume that games are on unless they call us." Johnson said. He said any rain outs and changes in scheduling would be posted on the Rec-Info line, 864-3546, by 3 p.m. If there is a rain out, the schedules are moved back a day during tournament play but are not made up during the regular season because of tight scheduling and because it is not important in determining a champion. "The regular season is just practice since everyone makes the tournament," Johnson said. Given that women's Rec-A participation is dropping in other sports as well as football, Johnson said, there could be a more optimistic way to look at the trend. "It could be that women want to play on a more competitive level than Rec-A." Johnson said. Reagan praises Royals' spirit United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan congratulated the Kansas City Royals Thursday for winning the World Series in dramatic come-from-behind fashion, saying, "You proved to America what a never-say-diespirit can do." At A White House ceremony in the Rose Garden, Reagan shook hands The Royals came from 3-1 game deficits in both the American League Championship Series and the World Championship of baseball last Sunday. with members of the team and said, "You kept America in suspense for seven full games and rallied" to bring the world title to Kansas City. Royals' cap and warmup jacket, as well as a baseball bat that a smiling Reagan waved and said, "I can't wait to get up to Capitol Hill." Kansas City manager Dick Howesen presented the president with a Several hundred people, including Vice President George Bush, members of Congress and 20 local elementary schoolchildren, clapped for the Royals as they lined up in the Rose Garden. | | Carothers | Conboy | Lazzarino | Graves | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas at Oklahoma | Oklahoma 24-17 | Oklahoma 28-17 | Oklahoma 31-21 | Oklahoma 24-21 | | Nebraska at Kansas State | Nebraska 41-7 | Nebraska 42-10 | Nebraska 59-7 | Nebraska 48-10 | | Missouri at Iowa State | Iowa State 4-3 | Iowa State 24-21 | Iowa State 28-10 | Iowa State 21-14 | | Oklahoma State at Colorado | Oklahoma State 24-21 | Oklahoma State 27-25 | Oklahoma State 21-17 | Oklahoma State 28-3 | | Florida at Auburn | Auburn 30-21 | Florida 23-20 | Auburn 28-21 | Auburn 28-21 | | Miami at Florida State | Florida State 17-10 | Miami 31-30 | Florida State 21-20 | Miami 21-10 | | Navy at Notre Dame | Notre Dame 35-21 | Notre Dame 26-13 | Notre Dame 31-10 | Notre Dame 22-21 | | Iowa at Ohio State | Ohio State 28-26 | Ohio State 22-21 | Ohio State 28-27 | Iowa 28-24 | | Arizona State at California | California 19-16 | Arizona State 27-21 | Arizona State 21-10 | Arizona State 14-10 | | Stanford at Washington | Washington 20-14 | Washington 28-14 | Washington 28-17 | Washington 41-21 | | Passon Totals | 40-28-2—.588 | 44-24-2—.647 | 49-19-2—.721 | 42-26-2—.618 | The predictors are James Carothers, associate professor of English; Bill Conboy, professor of communication studies; Chris Lazzerino, Kansan sports editor; and Bryan Grives, Kansas photo editor. ROBERT BURNS Ultimate catch Bryan Graves/KANSAN Rob Neyer, Lenexa sophomore, catches a Frisbee in a game of Ultimate Frisbee in the field behind Oliver Hall yesterday afternoon. The cross country competition will be full of challenges for both the men and women at the Big Eight conference championships tomorrow in Columbia, Mo. Defending champion Iowa State and a full slate of tough competition present what could be the biggest test yet for the Kansas men's team. Harriers will face top Big 8 runners By Heather Fritz and Matt Tidwell Of the Kansan sports staff The women's team will head into the meet without one of its best runners, freshman Melissa Satterfield, who broke her foot at the Southwest Missouri State Invitational on Oct. 12. "Missouri's hilly course is one of the toughest I've seen in the Midwest," he said. "The competition also will be intense, as last year's champion, Yobes Ondike (of Iowa State), is back." Men's head coach Bob Timmons said Wednesday that the stiff competition and rough terrain of the Rockies make things hard on the Jayhawks. Iowa State worl the conference championship last year, and Timmons considers the Cyclones the team to beat this year. Kansas finish hoped to improve on last year's seventh place conference finish. This time around, the Jayhawk's hopes for a strong finish rest on the shoulders of senior Ben Welch, the most consistent Kansas performer this season. The women have been hit with other injuries as well. Suzanne McKay is out with an ear infection that kept her from practicing for almost three weeks. Kim Sheridan strained a hamstring last week, but is ready to run in Columbia. Welch led the team to a win over Missouri and Wichita State with a first place finish two weeks ago at Rim Rock Farm north of Lawrence. He also logged a fourth place finish at the Jayhawk Invitational and a 29th place finish at the OSU Jamboree. "As a team, we're looking to break into the top four," Welch said. "Individually, I'd like to finish in the top ten." Women's head coach Cliff Rovelo had predicted that with good runs, both Satterfield and Shauna Hatcher would finish in the top 20 individually. With those two, the team had Rovello said that everyone who is running has been running well. But he also said that it wouldn't be enough to help the Jayhawks in the meet. "I'm really pleased with what they're doing individually," he said. "But put it all together and what comes out is we're still going to be down at the bottom of the conference." The loss of Satterfield and McKay leaves the team entering only six runners in the meet instead of seven. The loss of Mason and the rest of the team is still optimistic. Rovelo said that Nebraska and Iowa State should be the top two teams, followed by Kansas State and Oklahoma State. After the first four, he said, the competition drops. Colorado, Missouri, Oklahoma and Kansas will bring up the rear of the conference. Rovoleta has said that the emphasis at Kansas is placed on track rather than cross country, and that most of the cross country team members originally ran shorter distances. Three of the six runners competing tomorrow — Trisha Mangan, Rachel Albright and Angie Helmer — are half-milers, he said. "I wish we had more distance runners, but that's our team," he said. "If you've got a good cross country team, half-milers aren't going to make the team." One bright spot, though, is the team's potential. Rovelto said that the conference is comprised mostly of juniors, so that in two years there will be all new talent. "Two years from now, they should be able to run with anybody," he said. 14 University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 Classified Ads The University Daily CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 8.25 16-20 2.90 4.25 6.00 9.30 21-25 3.20 4.75 6.75 10.35 For every 5 words add... 504 754 1,05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. Classified Display $4.40 ee column high Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and on more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No reserves allowed in Classified Displays. No overbrowsing in classified display ads. POLICIES to The University Iyengar Kantan - All advertisements will be required to pay in advance FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Almost both of them are in company all classified ad mailed to The University Taily Kansas. - Classified display ads do not count towards this offer. * Sample of all mail order items must be submitted - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only - only * No responsibility is assumed for more than one in introduction of any advertisement - Words set in ALE CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words * Deadline is 4 m. - 2 working days prior to Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Those ads can be placed in person or by calling the Business office at 843-4538 - Tearstents not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. Scholarship Halls are Tues., Nov. 5 7-8:30 p.m. ANNOUNCEMENTS ARAB ISHAE CONFLICT. How many minutes to midnight? By John Law, 7:30 p.m. Wed. Nov. 4:15 a.m. Sunday. Hillel House 940 Miss. with Dr. Richard Nelson CORRECTION: the BLINZ is not to be confused with PRINCE. Prince is a rock star from Minden, Germany. The BLINZ is a chocolate cheese. This important distinction is brought to you by the LJCL Blinz Branch which will be held Nov 5 from 10 at 2 a.m. & Highland. Ticket costs are $75 per person. The Hulley Hotel office or at the door. LC43 98363. - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified Hillel Workshop on Understanding Suicide - No refunds on cancellation or pre-paid classics * Welcome to the store and a $4 service charge. * Wind box ads - please and a $4 service charge. great places to live. * 4 women and 4 men school halls (30 per hall) * friendly atmosphere * less expensive because of shared responsibilities * self-motivation close to campus Spring Semester Openings Anyone may apply. Applications available in 123 Strong Hall. For more info call The Hillel Office 864-3948 The Secret's Out! available in 123 Strong Hall Deadline for applications 11/8 THE FAR SIDE **Rent' 12%** T. C. V. $8.38 am *Sun* Suity' 8% **147** 127, 842-7537, Sat. 9:36 am - 6:00 Sun 147 127, 842-7537, Sat. 9:36 am - 6:00 Sun RESEARCH PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP. Learn about: defining a topic; using the library; taking notes; and organizing/writing the paper. Tuesday, November. November 14, 2015 Dyche Hall FREE! Presented by the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-404-064. Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $14.99, 1447 W. 147 W. 23rd GU503. Mon Sat 8am Sun 9am SKI COLORADO over Thanksgiving! Rent a cowboy boots, tub, hot tub, pool to boast 182-752-7927 RUGBY- if interested contact Rick or Doug. 842-9777 ENTERTAINMENT Use Kansan Classified. 100 Weekend Special NIGHT LIFE Mobile DJ Dance Music. A mixture of New Rock and the classics presented over a 400 watt sound system. When it's time to dance, call NIGHT LIFE 798-4713. THE KANSAS UNION JAYBOWL an hour lane rental Don't pay by the person pay by the hour— unlimited bowlers! Level 1 Call 864-3545 By GARY LARSON © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate 11-1 The Great Nerd Drive of '76 DUE TO MONOUS COMPANY REWARNING THE LACK OF HOLF- PLEER INFORMATION IN THE PRACTICE. WE WON'T WE NOW CONTAIN WITH FURTHER VALIDABLE EXERCISE TIPS ... PLACE OF US HERE AT PLATON COLLEGE REALLY CARE WHOEVER YOUR BODY, TREK, WHERE NO IDEA. PROFESSIONAL CONQUERING IS ALWAYS A PLUS IN SERIOUS AMOROSIS GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO GO COACH PENCHED OOF! OOF! OOF! FOR RENT Attractive a bedroom condominium for rent. 13/4, bathway, CA, PA, range refrigerator, dwm, DW hookups, paid cable TV, swimming pool Walking distance to KU. Available de. 1. Leaves Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at BERKELEY FLATS. Vacancies available now and at semester. Plan ahead, lease now for next year. 843.2116. Apartment available next to Union. Start Jan- ing Jan. 21, Cannon W. 844-835]. Evenings, 10:30 a.m. (1933 of) HEART CFGOLD BAND AT J.WATSON'S 21 FRIDAY NOV.1st 5:30 WE BE ROCKIN'! Amazon Saleuse - 1g bedroom, gas & water paid. Available Nov. 15. Call p.m. #81-89479. cooperative living lovers your expenses while expanding your mind. Room available at Rainbow House for $10/month. Call 843-7942 at 5 p.m. for an application to be furnished part of our thriving community. Cosy, carpeted apartment near campus at Missouri university. December 1. 749-6166 Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 842-1483. $200 OFF FIRST MONTH RENT. One & two bedrooms available beginning at $300/month. All apartments have CA, gas heat, DW, DF refrigerator. Energy efficient on bus route. Cb 84-18474. campus. Uptimes paid C叫号+enth0 Female roommate needed for household duties in campus. Uptimes paid C叫号+enth0 BLOOM COUNTY Sublane 3 bedroom furnished apartment; Tanglewood Apartment close to campus. Call (212) 641-5000 for more information. SECOND CHANCE TO SUBLEASE! Very nice 2 BR triplex in NW area; Close to campus, newly painted, off-street parking, DW, CA, WD hookups. Pets welcome. $255. After 4:30 and before 6:30. Farmed rooms from $168 with some utilities. Two bikes, from Kansas Union. No pets. Air conditioning. Sublease 2 bedroom apartment on KU bus route Free phone mutilation, free cable, off-street phone. Sublease 2 HR for spring; very close to campus Furnished. 328, 641-3250 or 644-8988 for Mr. Wu. Sublease, own bedroom in nice duplex near campus. Airspace almost 167 m², plus utilities. 842-3328 Sublease 1 bedroom furnished apartment at Sundance Apartments. On bus route B41-8451 or 8525. Jayhawker Towers Tired of your living situation? Get comfortable before winter his best Hillaps Alice, has available bathrobes and towels. Hillaps App. both can be furnished or unfurnished and have bathrobes, dishwasher, disposal, central air, and shower head. Hillaps App. Emery Bed Call: 841-3900 or 842-3731 (local call) 1 bedrooms饭 from $199 some utilities paid 2 bedrooms饭 from $299 some utilities paid ON CAMPUS 2-Br. Apts. for KU students for KU students 1 bedroom apts. from $199 some utilities paid Near downtown and the University. No pets please - For 2,3 or 4 persons - All Utilities Paid - Individual Contract Option - Limited Access Doors Available - Air Conditioned - Swimming Pool - On Run Line - On Bus Line - Free Cable TV - Laundry Facilities LONG RESTS BETWEEN EXERCISES AND NOT CONVARESE TO HEALTHY CARDIO VASCULAR ARTERY WHATEVER. WANE UP! HUMMING JUNKS! GET DOWN! HEY! CONGEL PEACHES ZZZ - Furnished or Unfurnished Now leasing for spring Solid wood drawer chest from $85. The Furniture Barn, 111 W. 6th, Lawrence. FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED FOR SALE New shipment of reclines just arrived, on sale now. Starting at $99. The Furniture Bureau 1811 W. 843-4993 Bedroom Suites starting at $199. The Furniture Barn 1811 W. 6th St. 3 Pc. sectional with a recliner in each end only reest the Christmas Wash with 90 day financing the Furniture Barn 1811 W. 6th St. 6th, Lawrence Sofa, Lavenet and Chair $199 The Furniture 3 p. Ecly American Living Room group 4499 Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 8th, Lawrence. bv Berke Breathed Cinema Boxes Players, Penthouse, etc. Max. $49.95 $12.95 $17.95 $22.95 1st Tue-Feb. 1st, Sat. & Sun 10-5, 11- New Hampshire 08' Off on sell press bedding. Hurry! White linen. 18' W 68 in. 92% ac. piece. The Furniture Rent, 181 W 68 ht. CLEAR™ Optically clear plastic window. Mylar or Polyethylene $^{92}$ $^{94}$ or $^{100}$ wide, Bluemont Energy. Basketball cards and sports postage. Buy, sell and Trade. J D's Basketball cards. Open 10:48 M-S T. F. Payrer, Lovett Price/Brand New $200 and its yours. 843-3320, Ask for Mark Brass, Wood & Glass 5 p. dcite $888. The Furniture Barn. 1811-W. 60th. Lawrence. Brand new never used queen size waterbed, harbor house 8908 741 6686 7 Honda CB750K. Asking $600, excellent condition, low mileage, call anytime. 843-2074 GOOD RESPECTIVE IS ALWAYS A MOTT FOR POWER, HEURDACS INSTRUCTION. LAZINESS IS A NO-WO. I SNIP GET GAIN! BLUBBER BUTY!! HAR! HAR! HAR! HAR! HAR! Entire living room suite! All 6 pcs only. $299. This room is all upholstered in longwearing fabric. This is all upholstered in longwearing fabric. Complete set with love seat, loveseat, chair, ottoman, coffee table, top coffee table, lamp table, end table only. $299. EZI payments starting at $14.28. Open office and conference rooms. guidance, 735 New Hampshire. Outlets in KS. Guller for call "609 Gibson SG w/original tail, excellent coverage, excellent sound, 8490. Call 794-2449 www.guller.com" GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U$1 repair). Also delinquency tax property Call 1-800-687-6089 IBM-PCXT compatible computer Only $790 Call 842-7638, ask for Charlie Heffley-Capard HP-41CV with card reader, brand new, $290. $290. 1-273-3734 Prince Classic tennis racket. Very good condition. Best offer. Call Jill 884-9794 KWALITY COMMCS—Cornic Books, Science Picture Books, and simulation games 1111 843-725-2900 www.kwality.com Petch Cavalier bicycle 21" frame, Avocetaddle, Blackburn rack, toe clips, water bottle; $250 or trade for good 35 mm SLR. Call Walt. 842-2954 evenings. PIONEER CASSETTE DIE, Model CT6R &equiv, excellent condition. Call Mark at 749-2851 evenings. Philip Glass album -EINSTEIN ON THE *WARTH*-bear new -half price. $41.221. Recinlers, recinliers, recinliers! We have vinyl, bercuron or velvet recinliers. These are all brand new, most are still in the box, available in a rainbow color. You can pick one up at 65.69. Try one out at Midwest Furniture and Waterbed Liquidators, 738 New Hampshire, where every day it is like going to an auction! QUALITY used carpet, twice cleaned and professionally sanitized. Big bob's, 841-HOBS. Recinners, recinners, recinners! We have vinyl, hercules or velvet recinners. These are all brand new. Sierling Bracelet; mint condition, cups oncert classical style, $35 or best offer. Call 843-462-88 new, most are still in the box, available in a rainbow of colors. Have 24 man-size restrooms for only $16. They are at Midwest Furniture and Waterford Liquor Supply, where every day is like going to an auction! Tired of looking everywhere for QUALITY TRUES in a good price? We have to have more! A IMPORT PLUS, all major brands are on our everyday low prices (com- pared to the regular prices) and are available out! 160 W. 23rd (Bside Pizza店) 789-547-5171 WATERBED QQUENCE, Queen includes Pediatric WATERBED QQUENCE, Queen includes Pediatric 4 mo. age. Will take half price or best offer 4 mo. age. Will take half price or best offer Western Civilization Notes: On sale on Sale! Makes sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class. 3) In the field of geography. 4) Analysis of Western Civilization; available now at Town, Criet. The Jayhawk Bookstore, and online. Collector Sack, Mint and used. Canada, U.S. Europe and more. Open 10-5, Sat. Sun, onii 8-11 9:30am. Mail to: Collectors@mint.com AUTO SALES 1986 Ford, 302 Engine, some rust, otherwise very good condition; 650 cash. Call 843-3552. good condition; good health. Can you tell? 1971 Impala 4-dr, 4-pi, pb, blue runs well, body in good shape. 6050 common. $700, $120.00 6030 Mercury rare great. 800 or best offer. Call (800) 724-7433. 193 AMC Pace light body damage, engine good condition 050 or skirt left 94-6257 or 81-8347- 5967 Fall XI 1/9 convertible hard top 40.0, milometer 36/70 mm, Amplified 15Kg Call after d 3 p. 814 - 6830 1976 Ford Mustang, new stereo, new tires, look great, call Youney. 841 - 1832. 1976 Monte Carlo, V. 4, A/M, FUM, Cruise, Great shape, £300, 800 or 318-800 or 418K (ACK) for 16 717 Chevy Impala auto, Cruise, new tire, 1978 Backreg ImpalA auto, New paint, 841, 7956 1987 Buck Century, alr. PS, tilt, cruise, stereo, newly tuned, excellent, one owner, 3001-845-6409 * PONITIA Phoenix JL * Automatic, AiR. Stereo, FWD and most MPG. Best Offer: 842-483-6409 76 Chevette, AT, engine good, almost new radial tires. Must sell $40, or best offer $63,879 after 18.78 **78 VW Scirocco - great car inside, AM/FM/carbon equitable, new radials, $150, call** **1805 392 XD NISSAN TDG** Red like new. Low mileage. T-Top. Loaded. Good price. 841-1392. 725 Datum B210 Gas saver, runs well, A/C, radio, nire, ires. call 843-2894 12 to mount 5. LOST/FOUND HELP WANTED features. Call 843-3125. LOST, LOCK on campus, possibly in Union or Watson library. 8 or 9 keys with key chain *Melinda's key*. If found, 844-6204 FOUND— small grey/white kitten w/siamese Administrative Assistant, 1 time, 1.5 p.m.; M-F. Good Communication Skills in person or phone. Required for Job Done with Experience in IT and Information Technology at Alask, IDS Financial Services, 105 Vermont, 943-1200. HOUSEKEEPER-Responsible woman needed for Tundries and Thursdays. Must have own kitchen, stove, oven, cooking and transporting a fifth grade girl to and from dance classes. Negotiable. Call 864-7014. SALES & MARKETING CAREER EARN MONEY ON ALL THE MAGAZINES SOLD ON CAMPUS. NEED PEOPLE TO POST INFORMATION. GOOD PROFIT, WBC, BPC, 82128 HARDY, ORDENLAND PARK, KS 602949 Child care center needs full-time, part-time teachers. Call for appt. 749-0205 Career opportunity in the expanding retail automobile business involving sales, leasing, marketing, inventory & personnel management. We're looking for an aggressive individual who wants to move up in our organization. Excellent income with full benefit program. Apply to Dale Willey, Dale Willey Pontiac-Cadillac, 2840 Iowa, Lawrence, KS. Need Extra Cash or Christmas Spending Money? Earn $40 to per hour. Commission Paid! Paint Cabs $30 to per hour. Commission Paid! Fiat Plane Delivery Drivers. See Tom, Herb or Bob For More Information. 1445 W. 21st St. Now bring Maa, Street Dell and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Food service position, pay rate $7.5 per hour plus approximately 6 cents, job offered at Appliance ATM in Smokehouse above smokehouse. Part-time housekeeping position, 10-20 hours, M/F. Mature, dependable, applicant. Must be available over breaks. Call Backingham Palace 462-8248 GOOD drivers. If you have your own (presently delivering for a Law firm) vehicle, please contact me and signs that scratch see what’s available are too much. Bill after 4 You be glad you did Help wanted: waitresses and kitchen positions, part-time or full-time available. Apply in person at Country Forks restaurant, 1500 W. 804-0672, by mail or email. Please be encouraged by us. You should enjoy creative childcare, be willing to relocate: EAST for a 8-12 month commitment for great salary, benefits and working conditions. HOME for warm, loving families preserved by us for you to choose from. HELPING HAVEN, INC 35 8TH STREET KANU-AFN = in seeking a broadcast aid, to perform electronic maintenance on broadcast and recording equipment, assist in purchasing parts and supplies, staff research, maintenance and training. ASSIGNED by the Assistant Director for Operations and Engineering. Qualifications: a demonstrated ability to communicate clearly, and keep accurate records and files. One or two years previous work in employment with these organizations will be assigned The University of Kansas Budget Office has two position openings for continuous half–time student assistants with possible full-time employment positions. The position will assist with the process of budget and accounting transfers for the University's budgets. Position openings will count and have an opportunity to work within the University's financial environment. This position will have counting and have an opportunity to work within the University's financial environment. The second position is secretarial and clerical in nature. It requires good typing ability and computer skills. Position requires a soft software. Both positions require senior or graduate status and good written and oral skills. Applicants must be available month for half–time appointments. Closing dates are November 15, 1988. Position start dates are December 6, 1988. Application number is 804-336. Applications available in 319 Strong Hail Equal Opportunity Employer. Travel Field Opportunity. Gain valuable experience. Travel Field Opportunity. Gain valuable marketing experience while earning money. Campus representative needed immediately for spring break trip to Florida. Call Brad Nelson at (800) 257-3141. Female Aide A.M. 7:30-12:50 P.M. 10:12 weekends also 748-0208 MISCELLANEOUS FREE=.free mix, 8 mo., spayed, shows. Very cute, friendly. Must place ASPA, 842-1510 PERSONAL Connie, Save Scottudale for the two of us: Turtle Herder. Girls in red 79 Mustang looking for girls in black white 69 Mustang looking for plates "69 STANG" cook 2018 cook, ask Mason JIK-One year today. Don't give up on me or even Still cure驾4 love. Love, CMS. JUAN - Happy I and 21 I can’t wait to celebrate with you, PB and G- here we come! Te ques Laura - Beware of ketchup bottles and folding paper that data gamma in the night. Deven. PATCH - Who know you are. I want to meet Weave. Beware Laura. Lailo. blond wishes to meet white bunny he saw at Naismith Halloween party, Please respond. Sammy Bri, Walking Underwear and the Dead Birds sure are a class act- attacking the umma and the skin. let the little things get in the way. Love, Lisa Witty, attractive female, 20, seeks intelligent; sincere male, 18-25, rebel and into politics. Send photo please. Box 3333, Lawrence. Julie Good thing your not a horse! I Love You, Jim. BUS. PERSONAL $10-$380 Weekly /Up Mail Circular?' quote! Sincerely interested rich self-addressed envelope: Success, PO Box 470CEG, Woodstock, II, 69069 118 Undergraduate positions available in the LA&S COLLEGE ASSEMBLY. Make your voice heard. Filing deadline Nov. 8. Nomination forms available in 210-8. Strong (No petition needed). Aerobics w/ Style Gay and Guys—fun, good workouts. Four times weekly—M-W, R_evenings and Saturday mornings. Teri-841-6237 or Ardi-842-0087. AT DRAGONFLY DANCEWEAR we have baggies, footwear, and body paint. We also bear ballet slippers (for men and women). point shoes, dance skirts, colorful toothed boots. Located inside Penthouse 80 and Manor. MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Union's recording of the day, its entries & supers. COMPARE. McQueen Compare how much larger diamonds look in *In TruBilliant* "earrings.* NATURAL WAY Ordinary Diamond Earrings also available. * TruBrilliantts feature Secur-Lok brilliant and look larger. - Matching diamond pendant. - TruBrilliant earrings are more McQueen - Matching diamond pendants also available. - TruBritliants feature Secure-Lock. * They push-to-lock-on, unscrew-to-remove. NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING Quality Jewelers Since 1950 809 Mosochusats 843-5432 A 820 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS 65044 (913) 841-010^ SKT CULTUR RISING! Skateboards & Accessories QUALITY STUFF ONLY A Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization passport. Apply for course of study, course of fine arts, Swello Studio, T6-1611) COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced obetration abortion; quality medical care; confidence assured. Greater area. Call for appointment. 913-858-1400 Do your Halloween Party right! Call Knoll Welding at 814-6146 for Helium and Balloons. Haircuts $7, perm $9 at Channels. Contact Chris Monat Sat at 814-6146 walk on airplane. Health Insurance for Students, Short-Term and long term plans available. Call Dutton Insurance. Do your computer need an attitude adjustment? Computer Repair. Alpine Optima Computer. Bent '17* Color T V $29.89 a month. Curtis $34.99 a month. Mon - Sat 5:00-9:00, Sun- 9:00-11:00, Sam 10:00-12:00 Modeling and theater portfolio - showing now- ing drawings, calls for information, Swee Studios 799-1613 Swee Studios Jayhawk. Go Hawaiian to the 1865 Homecoming Theme. Go Hawaiian with the best, Paradise Found shirts and pants from The Etc Shop. Tz2 9:45-11:30 pm M-Sat. Tile 4 pm. Thurs. 12-5 Sundays New from California: Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Friend brochure: 316-542-7843, PO Box 382, Wichita, KS on Monday, Rancho Kauai KU representatives needed. 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 printed imprinted specialties plus speed and reliable delivery. You design it or it is designed by 220. Wl (Belmont Gibbon's) b/n 43-490 REWARD Free Trip to Daytona plus Commission money, WANTED: Organized group or individual to promote the 1 Spring Break Trip to Daytona. Interact; call 1-800-453-9047 immediately! Bent'14. Color T V 82.98 $8 on each. Smith's TV 142W. Wizard 83-7571. Sat 9:30-9:49. Sun 1-5:17. Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, servers and caps, Shirtart by Swella Sunday. Get up at 10:00. Be there in 11.00. It’s hard to easy get to a church. Rev. Marsha Wardle minister 841-1477. Constructive worship for people of all background. Check out this Sunday program. Visit the Barnes & Noble lectors’ items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Hampton. Bargain. Buy, sell, or style new clothes. WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from 75%, or summing in South Padraí Island and Daytona Beach from 89%. Harry, counsel Tours for more information toll free (400-821-981) or contact a Sunshine Representation for your winter break count. counts on Sunshine HEY SINGLES Share your college activities with a compatible companion. Our unique program allows you to learn more meet masters eligible adults in an afternoon than months barcades or singles games. For more information, visit www.heysingles.com. Bike Sale 10% off all Bianchi Models Touring Bicycle Rentals in Massachusetts Bicycles Snowflake Park Massachusetts LOOK OUT LAWRENCE! THE KU KONNECHE found a system of dating, which works COMPUTER DATING with a personable touch; THE KU KONNECHE has it!! It find out about a woman's life in the world. It stamped envelope to the KU KONNECHE P.O. BOX 1358 Lawrence, KS 6944. MATH TUTOR: Bob Meers holds an M. A. math from K.U. Ubers, 102, 116, and 123 were among his mentors. He was also a nationally in 1975 and often tutors elementary school students. **WEDDINGS:** Video/Audio Movies 424-5233 SERVICES OFFERED Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716. STADIUM BARBER SHOP. 1033 Massachusetts, downtown. All natructs. No appointment. (866) 527-4828. BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 943-4821 Sewing-Suits to party dresses, custom-made- you will receive. Experienced seamsweilers will pick-up and deliver. Call Lort, leave a message 0171-8276-0725 **THEME & THESIS OUTLINED** enhanced with library RE-SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising. Victor Clark. #42-8240. Tutor, English as a Second Language, pre- dicated by an autocorrect transcript preparation. By appointment. 60 per hour. TYPING 1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing. Judy, 843-7954 24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes. Fax. Email. High quality. Fastest and fastest service. 841-5066. A3 professional typing. Term papers. Thesis. A14 presentation. Term papers. IBM Selsemil APT registration. 94-3246. AAA TYPING/832-1942. Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs. Law Review article typed by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in by 8 n.m. out by 10 m.n. same day. A DIFFERENT Service. Tape THANSCRIPT ON a specially Experienced, Jennifer Shafer Service. A. LSMIT TYPING SERVICE Experienced microflood after 5 a.m. All day, Sat. after 11 a.m. All day, Sat. ATTENTION MEADWBBRG CAPTURED BY APA for importation. Call Paik 58467. A.2. Wordpressening/Typeing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850. If you can't buy it...bargain. Don't do without the things you really want simply because of today's high prices. Don't do without the items available in stores are listed at lower prices. Don't do without sometimes you can even buy bargains if they are so many items in classified are sold by them. Don't do without = do in with classified. Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 15 Classified Ads Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard secretary Smith-Corona, cia许 Call Nanyce AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Procession/Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates 749-1118 Call Terry for your typing needs; letters, term papers, law papers, dissertations, etc. Sharp X2360 with memory. 842-4754 or 843-2971, 6 p.m. 11 p.m. DEFENDABLE, professional, experienced. JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service. TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape 898-8877. DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/ P typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter student papers up to 30 papers. Mommy's Montessori paper, 842-378 9 p.m. before 9 p.m. Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone 842 3210 after 3:30. Barr. TRIO Wordprocessing CONSCIENTIOUS CONSIDERING WORDPROCESSING Will accept rush calls. Call 842-911-3111 experience. Phone 842 3210 after 5:36; Barb QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected Call 842-7244. TYPING PLUS assistance with composition editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses dissertations, papers, letters, applications resume. HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254. EXPERIENCED TYPEF. Term papers, thesis IBM Correcting Specifics will correct spelling literals. TOP-NOTCHprofessional word processing manuscripts, resume, theses, letter quality print fonts. THE WORLDDICTORS. Why pay for typing when you can buy word processing? 843-3472 WANTED tassel player/ Vococalist for working band perusing tassel music. 4hrs. Bachelor's, 8g. Sept. impressions only. Brad 784-765-6100. Female roommate wanted to share 2 Bd App. W4C, A/C/HN. Newly remodeled, furnish a new bedroom, including two rooms or 1/3伙itions. CALL, 842-333. Learn or Laura. No weekends please. HOUSEMATE(S) for great house. Close to KU 949-838-2601 Looking for female resident to occupy room at Naihuma Hall for the second semester. Rooms may be limited, so don't wait any longer Call Diappe, M1-4777. **Male Housemate. Large two bedroom apartment.** **Bathroom. Utilities included. On Hue Roote. 789-376-796** **Utilities plus $1.5 rent.** Responsible male roommate needs for spring semester. Meadowbrook, two bedroom apt, very quiet. overstimulating room for mice, furnished house neighborhood. B150 plus 1/2 units (new) house with private kitchen. Roommate needed immediately to share a nice duplex at Traillridge with fireplace, etc. Have own bedroom (unfurnished). $140 (negotiable) plus 1/3 utilities. 841-3922 Two Female couriers for beautiful, renovated 4 Bldm house, separate bedrooms, 1026 Ohio, 1175$200 mo. plus utilities. Call Julie or Marci at 749-1969. Wanted. 2 Volent Feminine tickets 842-6444 days Wanted: non-smoking, female to submit apart ment. $132.50 / _ utilities. Call 841-4385 between 6:30/ p.m. Go For It! Enter the supernatural world of CONE·A·COPIA The Magical Ice Cream Dream Machine! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1814 West 23rd (next to Command Performance) --plus... SUA FILMS "FINE, TOUGH ...MOVING! The film is less about dogma, than about American idealism. It's social history of a high order." — Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times "A REVELATION! ‘SEEING RED’ is fascinating…a story told with warmth and humor. IT'S A PART OF AMERICA YOU SHOULD MEET.’ — Judith Cress, WDR-TV ATRIUMPH! These aging radicals are the best advertisement for the spirit of survival. —Richard Carlson, TIME ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE SEEING FROM THE MAKERS OF UNION MAIDS' STORIES OF AMERICAN COMMUNISTS A film by JULIA REICHERT and JAMES KLEIN Sunday, Nov. 3 at 2 p.m. Monday, Nov. 4 at 7:30 p.m. "Union Maids" $2 Woodruff Aud. Reception & Discussion with film maker JAMES KLEIN after Sunday's screening Chancellor Gene A. Budig yesterday in a 1½-page letter declined an invitation from four campus groups to speak at an anti-apartheid rally Monday. Budig will not speak at campus rally By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff in a letter written Wednesday, the KU Committee on South Africa, Black Student Union, Blacks Against Apartheid and KU Democrats invited Budig to speak about apartheid, divestment and racism on campus at the rally at noon Monday in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. "Racism in any form is not acceptable on this campus or in the larger society," he said in the letter "Apartheid is morally repugnant; I share with you and many others the desire to see an end to those practices which subjugate people." about the end of oppression and racism in South Africa." Budig said in the letter that he appreciated the groups' commitment to issues such as racism, which were important to the nation. Aaron Lucas, Chattanooga. Tenn. senior, representing Blacks Against Apartheid, Black Student Union and KU Democrats, and Dwayne Fuhlhage, Tonganoxie senior, representing the KU Committee on South Africa, refused to comment yesterday on Budig's reply because they had not discussed it with members of the groups. The letter also said that Budig wanted to ensure that the University provided a setting in which diverse views could be expressed. "I believe that I can do more to fight racism by articulating your rights to rally and to debate and to organize than I can by entering into a discussion in which my personal point of view is the issue. . . It is my role as Chancellor to make sure that you and those who disagree with you can express opinions freely and openly on the most effective way to bring The letter said that many people shared an abnormity of apartheid but disagreed on the most effective strategies for ending it. Lucas and Mark Parker, Lawrence resident and a member of the committee, signed the letter inviting Budig to speak at the rally. "While I may have a personal point of view about one or the other of these strategies I do not believe that it is proper for me, as Chancellor, to champion one strategy above another," the letter said. "To do so would be to use my position and my office in an inappropriate manner." Professors' new bat built to aid hitters By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff A new baseball bat designed by two Kansas State University professors could be a big hit with players. The bat gives the hitter increased power and control, one of the professors said yesterday. Two Kansas State University professors have developed a method of regulating an aluminium bat's "sweet spot," the area of optimal effect for hitting the ball, by changing the weight distribution within the bat. One of the bat's inventors, Larry Noble, K-State professor of physical education, said that after laboratory testing, the two professors had developed algorithms to determine the relation between the location of the sweet spot and the distribution of mass. "This will enable the hitter to choose a bat to best suit his objectives and his swing," he said. Noble said that the location of the sweet spot could be a built-in feature of a bat. When hitters select a new bat but they have to use trial and error to find a bat with a sweet spot in the location they prefer, he said. The spot can vary several inches in size and location depending on the distribution of the inloading of a hollow aluminum bat. "Manufacturers could inform the hitter where the 'sweet-spot' is with a ring," he said. "I think hitters will prefer it over the helter-skelter way of determining it now. We can remove some of the mystery of hitting." Noble said a bat with a marked sweet spot could help a hitter in a midseason slump. If the hitter becomes weaker, he could easily switch to a bat with a sweet spot closer to his hands. The professors also discovered that the sweet spot was enlarged when it was moved away from the hands, Noble said. Players in many levels, from recreational leagues to college baseball, would benefit. Noble said. He said he started researching hitting mechanics five years ago. John Eck, professor of physics, now at the University of Toledo in Ohio, joined Noble in the research two years ago when both taught at K-State. Theories of the mechanics of tennis and golf — but not of baseball bats — have been patented, Noble said. The image shows a person wearing a large, feathered hat and a white ruff around their neck. They are seated in front of a table or desk, holding an open book or document. The background is indistinct, but it appears to be an interior space with a window or door. The overall mood of the image is one of quiet contemplation or study. Scareclerk Chad DeShazo/KANSAN Elaine Ekland, a payroll clerk at Carruth-O'Leary Hall, goes about her work while dressed as the scarecrow from "The Wizard of Oz." All the members of the University payroll staff dressed in costume yesterday to celebrate Hallowen. Indians extol natural healing By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff "Ho vunga. ho vunga. ho vung yung." MANHATTAN — "The earth is our mother. We must take care of her." The chant and a smudge ceremony began a lecture by Sun Bear, medicine chief of the Bear Tribe Medicine Society, and his helper, Wabun, at Manhattan Middle School. Sun Bear and Wabun spoke Wednesday night about the power of the earth's energy to heal itself and to heal people. Victor Mayer They will conduct a workshop tonight through Sunday in Council Grove. The workshop will teach aspects of American Indian culture, such as herbal medicine, the medicine wheel, sweat lodges and vision quests. Wabun said the purpose of the workshop was to learn how to get rid of negativity and how to live in harmony with nature. Before the chant Wednesday, Wabun performed a ceremonial smudge by burning sagebrush in a large shell and offering the smoke in four directions and to the earth. She said smudging was "cleaning out the energy field with smoke." After the chant and smudging, Wabun said to the crowd packed into the school's auditorium, she and Sun Bear liked to begin their lectures unconventionally to help people prepare themselves to accept new ideas. He said the foods people ate and their actions were leading them to degenerate to quickly. Because of this, Sun Bear said, he is going to set up "healing centers" that will use native methods, such as herbs, raw foods and sweat lodges, to "heal and rejuvenate." The ideas in the lecture, "Path of Power," revolved around the need for each person to become attuned to the earth's energy and power to heal. A sweat lodge is built from willows and covered with a tarp, he said. Hot rocks are set in a hole in the middle of the lodge, and water is poured on them to fill the lodge with steam. "People are getting sick too often and getting old,too soon," Sun Bear said. Mike Horton/KANSAN He said the steam cleansed the body and rid it of negativity. MANHATTAN — Sun Bear, medicine chief of the Bear Tribe Medicine Society, talked with audience members after his speech Wednesday on Indian healing arts. Wabun said the medicine wheel was another native healing ceremony. She said the medicine wheel was a circle of rocks that became a powerful center of energy during the ceremony. Although there used to be about 20,000 medicine wheels in North America, Sun Bear said, they have decreased to about 300. He said his visions led him to bring back the medicine wheel. Sun Bear's visions also led him to found the Bear Tribe, a multiractic community based in eastern Washington that shares his love of the earth. KU sorority to celebrate anniversary By a Kansan reporter A KU sorority is celebrating the centennial of its founding this weekend. The women of Alpha Chi Omega, 1500 Sigma Nu Place, plan a weekend of events to commemorate the sorority's founding at DePauw University, Greencastle, Ind., on Oct. 15, 1885. "We all so excited," Michele Engel, Omaha junior and sorority public relations director, said yesterday. "This is the biggest social event our house has ever put on." KU's chapter of the sorority, Phi. was founded Sept. 17, 1914, Engel said. The celebration begins with a reception at the Alpha Chi Omega house from 7 to 10 p.m. Many of the house's alumnae and several KU officials are expected to attend. A breakfast will be tomorrow morning at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Drive. At noon Saturday, a luncheon will be at the Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave. Fifty-year member pins will be presented to 18 women during the luncheon. Ruth Winsor, a KU alumna who was national president of Alpha Chi Omega from 1399 to 1943, will present the pins, Engel said. "A lot of the ladies who are coming haven't been back to KU since they graduated, and they're really excited," she said. College of Liberal Arts & Sciences wants UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY —Self-nominations are required. —Filing deadline—4:30 p.m., Fri., Nov. 8. Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the Undergraduate Services Office. 210 Strong Hall. Election will be held Nov. 20-21 with Student Senate Election. AIILA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. FRIDAY NIGHT EVERY NIGHT Our popular Friday night Shrimp Peel has been expanded to five days a week. Complimentary hot, spiced and iced shrimp. Now available Monday through Friday from 4:30 - 6:30 p.m. (Better come early for this one) Holiday Inn "Lawrence's Hometown Hotel" 200 McDonald Drive 841-7077 Rum Tree Restaurant Club 16 University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 1, 1985 WOLF CARE Wolfe's 61st Anniversary SALE ENDS SATURDAY Sat. Hours: 8:30-5:30 35 mm 10 SEP 2019 WEEK Kodacutome 64 3+1 Applications for the new wave BONUS BACK PC $265 After Rebate PERSONAL SERVICE Buy a 4 pack of Kodachrome 64 135-24 at Wolfe's Low Price of $12.57. Get $2 rebate from Kodak. Your final cost is less than $2.65 per roll. Wolfe's Sales Staff can help you make your selection, compare products, and instruct in operation and/or installation. Canon FEDERAL PROJECTOR LENS CANON SURESHOT $12399 Compact autofocus 35mm with built-in flash, timer, built-in lens cover and pre-focus Motorized film advance. Akva 35mm $5999 Case Included rewind and auto-loading Includes Canon USA Inc one-year limited warranty/registration card Tele-wide lens set $39.99 ANSCO 1080 Compare at $99 Compact 35mm with motor film advance and rewind plus automatic exposure Flash turns on automatically when needed. Simple zone focus for quick easy picture making Canon AE-1 PROGRAM CANON LENS ED 50mm f/1.8 LENS MADE IN JAPAN CANON AE-1 Program with f1.8 CANON AE-1 $21999 Program with f1.8 $29999 Program automatic exposure, manual exposure to 1/1000, dedicated flashes (optional) set shutter and lens opening. Accessories include (optional): motors and winders, lenses, viewing screens. Includes Canon U.S.A. Inc. one-year limited warranty/registration cards. This 100 200mm i4 15 Osawa Mark II zoom brings your subject four times closer than a normal. Great for portrait or studio settings. Your power setting is ideal for portraits. AE-1P with 28-70mm f2.8 Pro Zoom TELEPHOTO ZOOM LENS $6999 After Sale Price $149.99 TRADE- INS TRADE- INS 'Your old camera, lens, entailer are valuable trade-ins at Wolfe's. NO. 98524 Car Zone Parking 14:35 T THE ONLY AUTOFOCUS WITH ZEISS LENSES YASHICA T-AF including case The Better the Lens the Better the Picture Famous West German Zeiss optics appear only on the best cameras, micro scopes, binoculars and other optics. The Yashica Autofocus is so easy to use that anyone can enjoy the superb picture quality of Zeiss lenses $5999 Close-up and Telephoto lens set Vivitar INTERCORE CAMERA 3700 $6999 SAVE $30 COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY $50 to $100 HIGH POWER DEDICATED Virtu 3700 is automatic to 60", has bounce, thyrsis, covers up to 28mm with diffusion panel (included). Dedicated modules for most popular 35mm reflexes. Off United Airlines ticks with Kodak CarouselPur purchase (Details in store) KODAK CAROUSELS 4600 Autofocus $25999 PRO PRO SALE! CAMERA BAGS MERA Remote control, autofocus, gravity slide feed up to 140 slides per tray Price includes choice of 3' , 4' or 5' lens. ENTIRE KODAK PROJECTOR STOCK ON SALE Style 400 Everyday price $29.99 $2249 $2999 Style 410 Everybody price $59.99 $3999 Style 420 Everyday price $59.99 $4499 1/2PRICE Special Purchase DIC With $37499 Factory Retail $757.95 OMEGA C-760XL DICHROIC ENLARGER With 50mm l 2.8 lens and carrier Print color or black and white with this deluxe quality Dichroic enamel 35mm, accept carriers for other sizes up to 6x7 on 120 LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED Our 30 day price Guarantee means that if you buy from Wolfe's and within 30 days find the identical item for less at any other local stocking dealer. Wolfe's will gladly refund the difference upon verification of the lowest price when you present your original sales ticket. To pay for your inconvenience, Wolfe's will refund an additional 10% of the price difference. 1 VIVIENDE TRIPODS Slik U102 *Non twit* tubular legs, speed release leg locks, elevator (shown) Slik U112 As above plus sturdy leg braces $4999 $5999 Org Retail $99 95 PRO TRIPODS 1310, usually $29.99 $1999 1350, usually $44.90 $3499 1360, usually $49.99 $3999 1370, usually $69.99 $5999 --- HIGH SPEED ZOOM $16999 70-210mm f3.8 PRO $9999 $70 LESS THAN COMPARABLE LENSES SPECIAL PURCHASE 28-80mm f3.5 Mitacon Fast lens for indoor sports, theater, and concerts. Brighter viewing for faster focus in daytime. Follow action of children and sports easily with one-touch zoom and focus. 18-50mm F3.5-5.6 ED VR Compact wide to telephoto zoom. Perfect for vacation and family pictures. Macro to 1:3 for flowers, copy work, hobbies. SUNPAK NUM 222 PHOTOLAB $4999 SUNPAK 222 Compact bounce flash with automatic to 36' and thriorizer. Include tele call for up to 50' auto. Power ratio control for variable manual flash $2999 PROMATIC 1100 SAMSUNG Compact automatic flash with 13' range. Excellent for home flash, easy to carry everywhere. SIGMA ZOOM TELEPHOTO $11999 Limited Supply Promatic 665 $1999 Manual flash YOUR CHOICE 70-210mm f4.5 75-250mm f4-5 SIGMA $34.99 Skender design 110 camera fits shirt pocket Motor film advance, sensa- lite electronic flash turns on automatically when you need it. Telephoto lens for distant scenes, candids Other 110 cameras from $19.99 Both Sigma zooms are compact lenses with one-touch control for zoom and focus. Both have macro close up ability. CORNER STATE Wolfe's CAMERA & VIDEO 638 Kansas Avenue • Phone 913-235-1386 Topeka, Kansas 68601-1437 STORE HOURS Thursday 8:30 to 8:00 Other:Wednesday 8:30 to 5:30 Closed Sunday Week Ahead New calendar appearing today will be weekly feature. See page 7. SINCE 1889 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, NOV. 4,1985,VOL. 96,NO. 51 (USPS 650-640) Sunny Day Sunny Details page 3. Soviet soldier in a quandary over defection The Associated Press HELSINKI, Finland — The Soviet soldier who has sought refuge in the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, met the Soviet ambassador yesterday in the presence of American diplomats and a U.S. Marine guard, the U.S. State Department said. Meanwhile, the staff of the U.S. Embassy was staying inside the building after an American was mistreated by Soviet and Afghan troops. The British U.S. diplomats in Islamabad, Pakistan, who insisted on anonymity, The Soviet soldier entered the U.S. Embassy gates Friday as another person was leaving, U.S. officials said. U. S. officials said the man, identified only as a 19-year-old Soviet private, had been on guard duty at Radio Kabul near the embassy. He seemed confused, saying at first that he wanted to go home and was tired of the war. The soldier met Soviet Ambassador Fikryat A. Tabev at 3 p.m. in the U.S. Embassy in the presence of Edward Hurwitz, U.S. charge d'affairs. "The meeting was held at the soldier's request," said a statement distributed to reporters traveling with Secretary of State George P. Shultz. "The upshot of the meeting was that the Soviet soldier has asked for more time to think over any decision he may take. A second meeting has been set for tomorrow (Monday) morning at the U.S. Embassy," the statement said. In Washington, the chairman of a House subcommittee that oversees embassy operations said the Soviet ambassador offered the soldier "the equivalent of amnesty" but the meeting proved inconclusive. Rep. Dan Mica, D-Fla., said he was told during a briefing with the State Department yesterday morning that the "Soviet ambassador indicated a willingness to let the soldier return to the Soviet Union without facing any charges, if he chose to do so." State Department officials said protests were lodged with Soviet and Afghan authorities in Kabul and with Soviet officials in Washington and Moscow over the "intimidation" attempt. American diplomats in Islamabad said power to the U.S. Embassy in the Afghan capital was cut Saturday and security forces were shining searchlights across the building at night. The American staff is staying inside the embassy after one person was "not treated gently" by Soviet and Afghan troops while trying to leave the compound, said an American source, speaking on condition he not be identified. It was the second known time a Soviet soldier entered the Kabul compound. In 1980, Pvt. Alexander Kruglov spent several days there, but after an interview with the Soviet ambassador in the presence of U.S. officials, he decided to go back. He reportedly was promised he could leave the army without punishment and resume his education. Riunite removed from liquor stores By Abbie Jones Special to the Kansan Lawrence liquor retailers are removing cases of Riunite wines from their shelves after Riunite's importer ordered a voluntary recall Friday of about 400,000 cases that contain a toxic chemical. But officials said the chemical, which is an ingredient in antifreeze, was not harmful in small amounts, such as would be found in the wine Riunite's importer, Villa Banti, announced that it was voluntarily recalling the cases of Riunite that contained diethylene glycol, a sweetening agent, John Lamb, director of the Kansas Alcohol Beverage Control, said Friday. it's such a minute amount that it's probably not any kind of health risk." Lamb said. "They are pulling it because they don't know." Low levels of the chemical were found in four kinds of Riunitie wines, but spokesmen for Riunitie's importer have said the chemical had not caused any health problems, Steve Rain, purchasing agent at Sunflower Sales Co., Topeka, said Saturday. "It's not a health hazard but we are taking steps to get the product off the shelves." Rain said. Ross Schimmels, sales manager at Sunflower, estimated that several hundred cases of the contaminated wine probably had reached Sunflower's warehouse, which distributes to retailers in northeastern Kansas. Lawrence, Topeka, Emporia and Leavenworth retailers receive their wine from Sunflower. Rain said the official number of contaminated cases would not be available until today. One Lawrence liquor store employee, who asked not to be identified, said he had removed eight cases of the tainted wine and had given one customer a refund. An employee at Green's Fine Wines, 800 W. 23rd St., said he had pulled about two or three cases of Rumine from the shelves, but had given only one customer a refund. A clerk at Patterson Liquor, 846 Illinois St., said 15 bottles of the wine were removed from the shelves, but no customers had returned bottles. Lamb said, "Anyone who has any bottle with the numbers on it should take them back for an exchange or a refund." Code numbers appear on the labels of the wine and on the foil covering the cork of Riunitie Spumante. Rain said the contaminated wines were: See WINE, p. 5, col. 1 ■ Ruitei bianco, 750 ml., code 1124/RE. MARTIN Alan Hagman/KANSAN Amber, a bellv dancer, draws undivided attention from a sallout crowd as she opens for the Violent Femmes Violent Femmes concert rocks KU Alan Hagman/KANSAM Lead: singer Gordon Gano shows the crowd down with his lyrics to the ballad "I Know It's True. But I'm Sorry to Say." Gano is a member of the Violent Femmes, who performed in the Kansas Union Ballroom Friday night. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff There aren't many places where a belly dancer performs, 1,000 people dance together, some of them get squished and the theme from "Batman" is played. But that hedgepodge happened Friday night at the Kansas Union Ballroom, where the Violent Femmes played a soldout concert to about 1,200 people. The Ballroom's sterile atmosphere, compounded by the frigid blasts from the room's cooling system, didn't seem conducive to a concert. Even the erotic dancing of Amber, a belly dancer who danced before the Femmes played, couldn't push the mercury up much. But the Femmes and the crowd were undaunted. They were determined to have a good time. Lead singer Gordon Gano, bass player Brian Ritchie and drummer Victor DeLorenzo took the stage at 8:45 p.m. and proceeded to warm up the cold ballroom with their fluctuating style of rock. After slinging his guitar over his shoulder, Gano blew on his hands and said, "It's kind of nippy in here." It wasn't for long. The band opened with "Country Death Song" and continued to feel out the crowd with songs Monday Morning from their moody second album, "Hallowed Ground." After playing "I Hear the Rain," "Hallowed Ground" and "Sweet Misery Blues," the band knew what the crowd wanted: some hard slamming music. A whole lot of shaking started going on as the Femmes jumped into the vibrant "Prove My Love." On that note, the dancing started. The line of lights above the band shook from the crowd's movement. The balance of the crowd, which filled about two-thirds of the Ballroom, had pushed tightly against the stage. But with the band's switch from blues to rock, the people wanted some room. So those in the middle of the mass began to push their way around as they tried to dance. The band continued its hard-driving onslaught with the next song, "Gone Daddy Gone." By then, people were being flung above the crowd, the middle of which popped around like popcorn in a popper. The crowd began to rush the stage, and for a few moments, there was some danger of it collapsing. The band stopped playing for a few minutes while some security staff pushed the stage back to its original position. See CONCERT. p. 5. col. 3 Reagan orders check of secret plan leak From Kansan wires WASHINGTON — President Reagan, demanding "appropriate action" against the leak of classified information, ordered an investigation yesterday into the unauthorized disclosure of a secret CIA plan to undermine and topple the Libyan regime of Col. Moammar Khadafy. paun to thwart Libyan support for terrorism and subversion and lure Khadab into a situation that would give his opponents in the Libyan military a chance to seize power or provide one of his U.S.-backed neighbors with justification for a military response. The White House, in an unusual step, announced the investigation of disclosures published yesterday by the Washington Post. The newspaper also reported "initial resistance" from the two top members of the Senate Intelligence Committee — Sens. David Durenberger, R-Minn., and Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. — who wrote Reagan that the covert operation might conflict with an executive order signed by Reagan which prohibits direct or The Post reported that Reagan, with the support of Secretary of State George Shultz and CIA Director William Casey, authorized a covert indirect U.S. involvement in assassination plots. Senior administration officials have reaffirmed that policy and are said to have told Congress that any operation to undermine Khadafy could be carried out consistent with the law. A narrow majority of the members of both the House and Senate intelligence panels supported the president's decision, the newspaper said. Both Reagan and former president Carter labeled Khadafy an international terrorist. Insisting the administration would have no substantive comment on "alleged intelligence activity." Hart refused to say what appropriate action might entail or whether the investigation would include the use of lie detector tests on people with access to the classified documents. Hart, who at first had refused to comment on the report in yesterday's editions of the Washington Post, said the president ordered the investigation "in an effort to determine who is responsible for (the) disclosure and to take appropriate action." White House spokesman Bill Hart said Reagan in general "is very concerned over the unauthorized disclosure of intelligence and classified information." More job opportunities greet graduating students By Abbie Jones Special to the Kansan While graduation in May seems a long way off, seniors and graduate students are already busy selling themselves to visiting interviewers from private businesses and huge corporations. National surveys indicate job prospects for graduating seniors are up 8 to 20 percent this year, and starting salaries are expected to rise by 3 to 5 percent. KU placement officials won't forecast job openings, but Vernon Geissler, placement director, said recently that both starting salaries and the number of recruiters from visiting companies had risen by about 5 percent. "We have a good image across the nation," Geisler said. "This year should be a little better than last year." A 1985 Michigan State University Placement Services study says that the national average starting salary for a person with a bachelor's degree is $29,470. Electrical engineering graduates topped the chart at $28,086, and human ecology majors were last on the list of academic majors at $14,827. ■ Lois Clark, assistant dean of architecture and urban design, said the job market was excellent for students who had completed the five-year program. Here is how placement officials at seven KU schools and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences see job prospects for this year's graduating class: The school accepts only one in eight students who apply, so the quality of students within the school is high. Clark said. After the five-year program, students typically work for three years in the field under a licensed professional and then take a licensing exam to become a licensed architect or architectural engineer. The Kansas City area is the top spot for the school's students because the city is in a "building boom," she said. A starting draftsman may earn from $14,000 to $15,000 a year while he works under a professional, and an architectural engineer may earn $18,000 to $22,000 during that period. - Fred Madaus, placement director for business, said the job market for business graduates was increasing slowly. The early 1980s recession forced businesses to cut back on staff, but now more people are being hired, he said. "We think recruiting is moving up slowly," Madaus said. "They don't want to overstaff like they did in the '70s." About 190 companies recruited at the University during the 1984-85 school year, a 28 percent increase from 1983-84, and 85 companies participated in this year's Business "The competition is fierce," he said. A business school report, released this summer, indicated that last year's graduates with bachelor's degrees in accounting had an average starting salary of $20,064 and graduates with a general business degree had an average starting salary of $18,060. Ninety-two percent of business school graduates responded to the business school survey. Career Fair, a 27 percent increase from 1984, Madda said. the competition. Henry estimated that 15-20 percent of librarians students who interview for management positions would get called back for second interviews. James Henry, assistant director of the placement center who specializes in liberal arts placement, said computer science jobs were available but other positions for liberal arts graduates were tougher to find. The average starting salary for a general Terry Glenn, assistant director of the placement center who specializes in education placement, said demand for math, physical science and special education teachers was growing. Most students in those areas take other jobs for higher salaries, he said. Some go into medical school, business, industry or research. management position is about $12,000 to $16,000, $15,000 to $20,000 for a sales position; and $15,000 to $50,000 for restaurant management. Henry said. "KU has not put out many math graduates." Glenn said. Students who do choose a career in teaching face less competition and have a better chance of finding jobs, he said. The starting salary for a graduate with a --- See OUTLOOK, p. 5, col 1 2 University Daily Kansan Nation/World --- Monday. Nov. 4, 1985 News Briefs Second victim found in debris from blast MARION, S.D. — Rescuers sifting through tons of feed corn and debris yesterday recovered the body of a second man killed in a fiery explosion that ripped through a grain elevator and injured five others. Whale follows tapes Authorities said the blast shattered the grain elevator Saturday night and hurled tons of corn and concrete into a nearby office building. This was a change in the charge from murder to the lesser charge. PITTSBURG, Calif. — Humphrey the wrong-way whale, following taped sounds of other whales, picked up his pace yesterday and moved downstream. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration used a radio transponder to play "whale sound" tapes under water. Hal Alabaster of NOAA said Humphrey moved from Antioch to Pittsburgh and reached the "fartest downstream" since he entered the Sacramento River 23 days ago. AUCKLAND, New Zealand — Two French secret agents pleaded guilty today to manslaughter in the July 10 sinking of the Greenpeace flagship Rainbow Warrior. Agents plead guiltv Maj. Alain Mafart and Capt. Dominique Prieur pleaded guilty to the charges of manslaughter and wilful damage in the sinking of the ship in which a Greenpeace photographer, Fernando Pereira, was killed. Invention given aid WASHINGTON — A bill before Congress would grant a patent to Joseph Westley Newman for a "revolutionary energy machine" that the inventor from the Mississippi backwoods says will eliminate utility bills forever. Newman contends the machine he has been working on for 20 years produces more energy than it consumes, a concept that for years has been rejected as impossible by the giants of science. Guatemalan elections end military rule GUATEMALA CITY — More than 70 percent of Guatemala's voters turned out yesterday for largely problem-free elections marking the end of military rule that began 31 years ago with a CIA-backed coup. From Kansan wires. United Press International The centrist Union for a National Center and the Christian Democratic Party both charged that military officers in the countryside were pressuring voters to vote for the far-right Movement of National Liberation. The Union for a National Center also accused the Christian Democrats, their main rivals, of illegal election tactics in Guatemala City. But Arturo Herbruger Asturias, president of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, said voting Between 70 and 80 percent of the 2.75 million registered voters cast ballots, Herbruger said. A festive atmosphere marked many polling places, with merchants running food stands and voters casting ballots for president, vice president, 100 Assembly members and mavors. "took place in an absolutely calm manner without any major incidents." Preliminary results were not expected until tonight. Lugar, who was in Antigua with U.S. Ambassador Alberto Martinez Piedra, said the voting was "moving very smoothly. It appears to me it is working like clockwork." Observation teams from 14 countries, the United Nations and the Organization of American States were on hand for the election. Among the groups was a U.S. delegation led by Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and Rep. Charles Roemer, D-La. Later, in Guatemala, he suggested U.S. military aid be resumed promptly because of the apparent fair voting. "Guatemala will come back into the picture (of military aid)," Lugar predicted after he returned to Guatemala City from observing the voting in the countryside. Delegation member Sen. Mitch McConnell, RKy., a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the United States had "a big stake in these elections" since Guatemala was the "linchpin of Central America." "We hope they (the civilian government) will be more inclined in our direction . . . " McConnel said. Guatemala has maintained a neutral position toward conflicts in Central America. The leading candidate was Vinicio Cerezo or the center-left Christian Democratic party, a longtime critic of military rule. Eight candidates were vying for the presidency. If no one wins a majority in yesterday's elections, a run off between the two top finishers is scheduled for Dec. 8. Three other candidates were given a chance of winning, including Jorge Serrano Elias of the center-right Democratic Party of National Cooperation; Jorge Carpio Nicole, a newspaper publisher who founded the center-right Union of the National Center party, and Mario Sandoval Alarcon of the far-right National Liberation Movement party. U.S. proposes ceiling on strategic weapons The Associated Press HELSINKI, Finland — The United States has proposed a ceiling on American and Soviet strategic bombers and a freeze on nuclear missiles in Europe as part of a new arms control accord with Moscow, a senior U.S. official said yesterday. 'Star Wars' system explained p. 8. Other key elements of the package now before Soviet negotiators in Geneva include a ceiling of 3,000 on long-range nuclear warheads and no limits on submarine-launched cruise missiles. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said there was "compromise" in President Reagan's proposal to overcome what he described as "hookers" — snakes — in the plan Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbache submitted five weeks ago. For instance, the ceiling of 3,000 on intercontinental ballistic missile warheads is 500 higher than the initial U.S. position in the Geneva negotiations. It would allow the Soviets to retain more of their land-based missile arsenal, the heart of Soviet nuclear strength. Gorbachev called for a 3,600-wardhead limit on strategic ground missiles, bombers and nuclear submarines. The U.S. official said that if the Soviets accepted the American package deal, there would be no mobile Soviet strategic missiles or any new heavy intercontinental ballistic missiles added to the superpowers' arsenals. But the outlook for an early agreement appears dim. Secretary of State George P. Shultz, who is expected to discuss prospects for an accord during two days of talks in Moscow beginning Monday, told reporters the two sides remained "quite a distance apart." The main stumbling block is a Soviet demand for a "total ban" on all arms in space. The senior official said Moscow's definition encompassed all U.S. attempts "to counter objects in space." It is aimed at stopping Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative, which envisages using futuristic technology in space to intercept and destroy attacking missiles. The ceiling on heavy bombers proposed by Reagan is 350, the official said. They could carry up to 1,500 air-launched cruise missiles. By U.S. count, the Soviets now have 375 Backfires, Bisons and Bears. The United States has 263 B-52s. American and Soviet intermediate-range missiles in Europe, meanwhile, would be frozen at 140 under the U.S. proposal. This would require a reduction of 103 Soviet SS-20 missiles and no reductions by the United States in the Pershing 2 and cruise missiles deployed among NATO allies. Agents look for ambushers From Kansan wires MEXICO CITY — Hundreds of federal narcotics agents and army troops swept through southern Veracruz state yesterday, searching for more than 50 drug traffickers who ambushed and killed 21 policemen raiding a marihuana ranch. Friday's ambush marked the biggest attack by narcotics traffickers since federal agents stepped up antidrug operations in recent years. Among the slain officers was Alfredo Malaga Vazquez, chief of the Veracruz State Police. Authorities said they were investigating possible links between the ambush and the escape from prison of Jose Contreras Zubias, a top Mexican drug trafficker. Contreras Zubias was being held along with several other narcotics dealers in connection with the February kidnap-murder of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena Salazar in Mexico. Two policemen managed to escape the ambush and made their way by 9 a.m. Saturday to Acayucan, about 24 miles from the shooting site, where they told their story to authorities, said Veracruz state spokesman Arturo Reyes Isidoro. Conterras Zubias escaped from prison guards in the border city of Tijuana a week ago, authorities said. The Mexico City newspaper Excelsior identified the survivors as Isidore Chontal and Moises Gonzalez, and said 20 of those killed were Federal Judicial Police agents. The state government said the agents discovered the marijuana sometime earlier and were ambushed when they returned in the pre-dawn hours Friday to cart it away. PLO pressured to drop terror From Kansan wires Hussein said he expected some answers soon from Arafat about whether the PLO would abandon terrorist tactics to ensure progress toward Middle East peace. WASHINGTON — Jordan's King Hussein, calling recent Middle East violence a terrible backset for the Palestine Liberation Organization, said yesterday he told Yasser Arafat, PLO Chairman, that the peace process was in danger unless they put their act together. Also concerning the peace effort, a senior U.S. official said yesterday that intense, discreet contacts were going on with Israel, Jordan and Egypt to remove the last obstacles to Arab-Iraeli peace talks. Hussein, who has taken the lead in trying to keep the faltering peace process alive, also said he expected the PLO to acknowledge Israel's right to exist if an international Middle East peace conference became a reality. Hussein, a guest on NBC's "Meet the Press," said he was hitick by the PLO as the legitimate representative of the Palestinian people in proposed peace talks with Israel. But during their meeting last week in Amman, Jordan's capital, Hussein said he demanded steps by Arafat to improve his organization's image. Under discussion were ways to involve the Palestinians in talks, and the type of international forum for direct negotiations between Israel, Jordan and the Palestinians, said the official, who spoke on the condition that he not be identified. Hussein reacted bitterly to a recent Senate decision barring the sale of $1.9 billion in sophisticated armaments to Jordan until Hussein begins direct and meaningful peace negotiations with Israel. "We will be looking to the Soviet Union and others for a way to determine in our own minds where we go from here if Washington, after 28 years of a relationship with our military, has decided to put an end to it," the Jordanian ruler said. 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Nov. 15 The Outhouse Lawrence, KS Tuesday BRIAN BRAIN Parody Hall Kansas City, MO Nov. 19 Wednesday THE REPLACEMENTS Parody Hall Kansas City, MO Nov. 20 Saturday TOXIC REASONS The Outhouse Lawrence, KS Nov. 23 Tuesday CIRCLE JERKS University of Kansas Dec. 3 Kansas Union Ballroom Tickets available at all outlets > Campus/Area Monday, Nov. 4, 1985 University Daily Kansan 3 News Briefs OUI charges result from 1-car accident A 27-year-old Valley Falls man injured in a one-car accident yesterday morning was arrested on charges of operating a vehicle while under the influence and for possession of drug paraphernalia. Lawrence police said yesterday. The man, who said he did not recall anything after about 10:30 Saturday night — including the accident, was driving north on an expressway when he was about 12:30 a.m. Sunday, when the accident occurred, police said. He was issued a notice to appear on charges of OUI, no license plates and no proof of insurance, which is required. County jail lasted on $150 bond. He ran into a telephone pole, owned by KPL Gas Service Co., after driving onto the median because he did not make the slight bend in the road, police said. He was treated and released yesterday from Lawrence Memorial Hospital for cuts and seratches, a nursing supervisor said. Lawrence police reported 22 isolated incidents involving pumps thrown through front and rear windshields Hallowen night. A police spokesman said that from the reports it appeared that many of the pumpskins were thrown from moving cars. His preliminary hearing will be at 4 p.m. Nov. 12 in Lawrence Municipal Court. Pumpkin crimes rise "It used to be tee-peeing houses with toilet paper, and rotten eggs. now it's a bit more serious with the pumpkins," he said. 3 debate teams place Three KU debate teams placed at the North Texas State University Debate Tournament in Denton, Texas, making the University of Kansas the only school to have three teams place. Two teams in the senior division tied for third place. The team of Steve Ellis, Wichita junior, and Andrea Richard, Laramie, Wyo. sophomore, tied with Barry Pickens, Winfield freshman, and Pat Whalen, San Antonio, Texas, freshman. Ellis was named first place speaker and Richard was named fourth place speaker in the senior division. In the junior division, the team of Dave Macdonald, Fargo, N.D. freshman, and Peter Canistra, Houston freshman, placed third. Macdonald was named the fourth place speaker in the junior division. Minority aid offered The National Research Council has established a fellowship that will benefit 50 minority graduate students. The Ford Foundation Doctoral Fellowship for Minorities program will offer 40 three-year predoctoral fellowships and 10 one-year dissertation fellowships to American Indians, Alaska Natives, black Americans, Mexican Americans and Puerto Ricans. The deadline for the competition is Nov. 15. Applications may be obtained from the Fellowship Office, National Research Council, 2101 Constitution Ave., Washington, D.C., 20418. Weather Today will be sunny with a high in the mid-60s. Winds will be light and variable. Tonight will be clear with a low in the mid-30s. Pharmacy interns see ups, downs of job By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff Of the Kansan staff From staff and wire reports EUDORA — Michael Larmer, Lawrence senior, knew this was the real world where no mistakes were allowed. Kathy Davidson, Linwood, brought her most cherished possession to Byrne's Pharmacy on Friday - her 2-week-old daughter, Lindsay. She put down the baby carrier on the counter as Larmer, an intern from the School of Pharmacy, fetched the antibiotic prescription that was to cure Lindsay's eye infection. Larner gave Davidson instructions on how to drop the solution on the inside of the baby's lower eyelid. Davidson listened attentively. "Make sure the tip of the tube is kept clean to avoid another infection." Larmer said. Friday was Larmer's last day at Stan Byrne's pharmacy, 101 W. 10th St. Larmer said the six weeks at the pharmacy had taught him how to honor the customers' trust, how to counsel — and also when not to give advice. Working is different from what I had in mind in school," he said. "I guess I was a bit idealistic. I thought I was going to counsel everybody on everything. But people don't always want that." always wish the "The school can only train you so far. You get book smart studying at KU, but you don't learn how to work with people. "I am more comfortable talking to people now. But you don't ever stop learning." how. Larmer said the internship confirmed his desire to go into retail pharmacy. But he has become more aware of the drawbacks of being a smalltown pharmacist and the worries of a store owner. "You get calls in the middle of the night from people who need medicine for their sick children," he said, "and you have to deliver it to them. "But you also get a lot of respect for that. Pharmacists are ranked second after the clergy in how the public perceives them ethically." Andy and Jeremy Cooper, 9 and 11 years old, entered the pharmacy to buy chocolate and a necklace for their mother's birthday. Larmer helped them select their gifts and asked them whether they had tummy aches from eating too much Halloween candy. and this idea of going out and changing the world," Larmer said. "But this job is also to replace watch batteries. The customer is always right and you have to give people what they expect." Larmer gift-wrapped the boxes and found out what the Cooper brothers had done in school that day. His discoveries hadn't disillusioned him. Larmer said he was "having a ball" even though there were no great excitement in real life. Pharmacy students go on the internship program for a semester when they are fifth-year seniors. Seven students are interns this semester and 24 will start next semester, said Tom Hitchcock, assistant to the dean of pharmacy. Hitchcock, who coordinates the internship program, said it had been changed this semester to include three internship periods instead of two. In the past, students chose to intern at either a hospital or a retail pharmacy before going to the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan., to study clinical pharmacy. Now students are required to be exposed to both. The internship periods have been shortened from eight to six weeks. "Some students were afraid to do retail under the old program," Larner said. "Some don't feel comfortable talking to people about bodily functions. But I think it's good they get a taste of what it is like in retail. And maybe some change their minds." Larmer's field instructor, Stan Byrne, who owns the pharmacy, said Larmer was learning the daily routines of counseling customers on prescriptions, working with physicians and preparing accurate dosages. Byrne said his training as field instructor consisted of 20 years in retail pharmacy. He has participated in the internship program since 1973. KU paper is named 1 of 4 best By a Kansan reporter DALLAS - The University Daily Kansan was recognized as one of the country's four best college newspapers Saturday at a college media convention. The Kansas won the national Newspaper Pacemaker Award, given annually by the Associated Collegiate Press and the American Newspaper Publishers Association. The award was presented at the College Media Advisers-Associated Collegiate Press Convention. This is the fourth time the Kansan has won a national Pacemaker. The Kansan won its last national Pacemaker in 1981. The Kansan was one of 16 regional winners from four-year colleges and universities competing for the four national Pacemakers. The three other national winners were the Daily Collegian, Pennsylvania State University, University Park; the Daily Beacon, University of Tennessee, Knoxville; and the Daily Texan, University of Texas at Austin. Matt DeGalan was the editor of the Kansan last spring. He now works as a reporter for the Kansas City Star. "This is clearly one of the most prestigious awards for student newspapers," said Susanne Shaw, Kansan general manager and news adviser. "It's a significant achievement because it is an award judged by professionals." Regional winners of the award are judged each year by a panel of five editors from a newspaper in the host city of the convention. John Cranfill, assistant managing editor of the Dallas Morning News and chairman of this year's judging committee, said the regional winners were selected earlier in the year. The winners of the regional contest went on to be judged in the national competition. The Kansan was one of four winners in the Midwest region. Seven issues of the newspaper from the 1985 spring semester were judged for the national award. "The papers were judged on the total package," Cranfill said. "We looked at features, reader services and how well the paper served the college community." Cranfill said the judges were pleased with the general appearance of the Kansan. "the packaging and consistency was very good," he said. The judges also liked the scope of news cyrane. Crannif said. "It was easy to look at, not heavy," he said. John Lechliter/KANSAN Precarious perch silhouetted by the rushing water beneath the dam on the Kaw River, took advantage of yesterday's near-perfect weather. KU schedules film festival for March Rv Mike Snider A film festival next year at the University of Kansas will offer students an opportunity to have their work viewed by nationally known filmmakers and performers. Of the Kansan staff The film festival, in honor of Kansas' 125th birthday, will be at KU, March 28-29. "They can present their attitudes with creativity and we'll make it an in-house birthday celebration," Marj Dusaj, one of the festival organizers, said Friday. "It will be a chance for KU students to make films, get some feedback and make contacts." Dusay, who plays Myrna Clegg on the television soap opera "Capitol" and is a member of the Kansas Film Commission, and Jerry Jones, Kansas Film commission coordinator, were on campus Friday to meet with KU officials about the festival. Dusay got the idea for the festival when she seminars so we can have some question-and answer type things, so if I'm really going to go out to New York, Hollywood or Chicago, what do you do first?" "she said. "People said. 'Can you bring out people for Dusay got the idea for the festival when she visited KU last year, she said. She said she would recruit skilled people to come to KU for the festival. "I'm going to gather people related to the television academy, personal friends of mine, writers, directors, producers, editors, casting people and performers who will be judging the films on a specific criteria," she said. "Then I'll invite several of these people in to present the awards, to be able to have some question and answer sessions and some seminars." and have to attend the first day of the festival will consist of judging the films submitted by Kansas grade school, high school and college students. The second day is scheduled for seminars and conferences. Jones said. Dusay said that while the chance to meet film-makers was invaluable for students who hoped to succeed in the entertainment business, it was also fun for their advisers. "A lot of these people love to teach and share this information," she said. "Once you've gone through that program out there called Hollywood, Broadway or New York, you know it's difficult information to obtain and you don't mind sharing it at all." The seminars will be learning experiences for students, Dusay said. "You don't just want someone to say, 'That's terrific.'" she said. "You want to know why it's terrific, how it is terrific, how you can make it more terrific." "By letting students show their interest, I think that's one way to get producer's interest," she said. "Then they'll get to,gether and live happily ever after in Oz." If film producers in California know that Kansas possesses interest in and skilled personnel for making movies, they will be more likely to consider Kansas as a production site. Dusay said Jones said the film commission actively pursued companies to come to Kansas and make movies. Once the company is here, the commission assists them in any way they can. BORDER BANDIDO MONDAY MANIA! ALL YOU CAN EAT TACOS $2.99 Make your own at our taco and salad bar 1528 W. 23rd 842-8861 Across from post office 10¢ DRAWS 25¢ DRINKS Tuesday Night GAMMONS SNOW CITY 23rd & Ousdahl Southern Hills Mall MISS STREET DELI MASSACHUSETTS Homemade CHOCOLATE, CHERRY, LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake No coupons accepted with this offer. 95¢ reg $1.50 Offer good through Nov. 30 10¢ DRAWS 25¢ DRINKS Tuesday Night GAMMONS SNOWIES 23rd & Ousdahl Southern Hills Mall MASS STREET DELI OAK MASSACHUSETTS Homemade CHOCOLATE, CHERRY, LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake 95¢ Offer good through 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion shM Monday, Nov. 4, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Moral blackmail In the latest round in its crusade to end abortion, the White House has aimed straight for the pocketbook. The Reagan administration last week gave its support to a congressional amendment that would halt federal funds for any group giving pregnant women advice about abortion. But authority for the federal family planning program runs out on Nov. 15. Anti-abortion groups are urging Congress to end or severely cut the program. Under current rules, family planning clinics that receive federal aid must offer abortion counseling and referral services to pregnant women who ask about their options. The White House wants to go a step further and grant federal money only to groups that refuse to advise clients about abortion, except in cases where the mother's life is threatened. This move smacks of moral blackmail. Planned Parenthood and 4,000 health clinics last year received $142.5 million from the federal family planning program. Without government financing, they won't be able to provide any family planning services. Those services don't merely include abortion. These clinics give advice on contraception, adoption and medical and stress disorders related to pregnancy. Supporters of the amendment say they want to put a "wall of separation" between family planning and abortion. They contend that many agencies, ones closer to the Reagan administration's moral stance, would be glad to offer family planning services if they weren't required to advise clients on the option of abortion. The current rules unfairly restrict those family planning agencies that refuse to offer abortion counseling. Glass art But the proposed amendment would just as unfairly restrict agencies, such as Planned Parenthood, that argue it is impossible to operate a medically ethical program without telling pregnant women about their full range of options, including abortion. The Philip Glass Ensemble was certainly not the usual Concert Series fare. Women who want abortions cannot pay for them with federal money. But pregnant women who want to know all their medical options and who often cannot afford to consult a private physician should not be forced to choose in ignorance. Glass' music at the Oct. 23 concert appealed more to those who are accustomed to the driving rhythms of rock music than to those who prefer the stately melodies of Mozart. The University is the ideal place to offer the music of the future to the music audiences of the future. The Series, and its companion, the Chamber Music Series, are flexible enough to accommodate the lovers of Mozart as well as the fans of Glass. Jackie Davis, director of the Concert Series, deserves a round of applause for risking possible disharmony by bringing Glass to campus. The decision was a clear sign that the Series could respond to the wishes of students and not just to the musical tastes of the traditional supporters of the arts. Students requested that Glass appear and they attended in greater numbers than usual for a Concert Series performance. But he's wrong to lay the blame only at the door of the Soviet Union. Cooling the hot spots Reagan is right about the danger of regional conflicts. The daily violence in some parts of the world threatens to draw the superpowers into their vortex. President Reagan managed to sidetep arms control in his deft speech before the United Nations on Oct. 24. Instead of trading repeated volleys over Star Wars or arms reductions, Reagan chose to aim at Soviet meddling in some of the world's hotspots. Arms control is not enough, Reagan said, if the Soviets won't halt their use of force and subversion around the globe. He pointed to Soviet intervention in Afghanistan, Cambodia, Ethiopia, Nicaragua and Angola as examples of the regional conflicts that endanger U.S.-Soviet relations. misdeeds. Moscow and its proxy, Vietnam, have resorted to direct military intervention to expand Soviet influence in Afghanistan and Cambodia. But Reagan ignores other, more dangerous, conflicts that cannot be blamed on the Soviets. The Middle East, for example, remains the most violent, unstable region in the world. Yet the conflict is fuelled by local antagonisms and by the flood of arms into area, which the United States feeds as much as the Soviets. Worse, Reagan's fingerpointing at Nicaragua glosses over U.S. culpability. His call for the withdrawal of foreign troops neatly avoids the millions in aid that goes to the U.S.-backed contras. As Reagan and Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev approach their November summit, it's important that all the sources of friction between them are tossed up for discussion. But none will be resolved if each keeps jockeying to claim the moral high ground. Rob Karwath Editor John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Duncan Calhoun Business manager Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR** should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. **GUEST SHOTS** should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The The Kanaan reserves the right to edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanaan newsroom, 11Staffer/Fini Hall. The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-644) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 6045, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, for six months and $22 per year. Elsewhere, they cost $18 for six months and $3 a year. Student subscription cost $3 and are paid through the student activity fee. HARRISON send address changes to the University Daily Kaman, 118 Stuaffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan, 60454 LAYING IT ON A LITTLE THICK, AREN'T WE, MR. GORBACHEV?... The fascination of dangerous games Will shattered bones and sinnes get a message across? Tragedy ended the life of a 19-year-old KU sophomore last week. He lost his job to a stabbing. PENGUIN The object of the game, popular in the Lawrence area, is to stand on a train trestle and jump off when the train comes, testing how close one can get to the train without getting hit. But will this discourage other trainers from running in front of fast-moving trains? The sad fact is that in time it probably won't. There are always those who want to play the dangerous games and be Young adventurers will always find dangerous games, such as training or Russian roulette. For many, savoring the full flavor of the thrill of life involves flirtation with death. Evan Walter Staff columnist bold and adventurous, defying what the "cowards" say. And there are those, the majority, who prefer not to take deadly risks. Although they might be in ae of the bravery of those who dare, those who avoid foolish risks obviously have life expectancy in their favor. But their words of caution have little effect on the others. Calling the darers' sport dangerous and stupid won't prevent them from pursuing life-threatening games. Darers don't accept dangerous challenges because they muggle them as safe. They enjoy the risk. that安全They enjoy Darens throughout history have captured romantic hearts. The movie industry realized from the start that cautious people on the screen don't sell. Men fighting incredible odds do. The great movie heroes — Indiana Jones, Rambo and nearly any John Wayne character — don't act in ways most people would consider wise. Unfortunately, in real life these types don't always win. When playing games involving a great risk of death, many die. Those who live to talk about it either perpetuate the glorification of danger or learn from the others' mistakes. Before last week's incident, training was an opportunity for the adventurous to live as dangerously as many of the famous daredevils. But last week, the dangers of training became realized. Despite what campaigns against risky activities have said, the players aren't evil. They aren't acting against their will. They aren't acting sumid. Those few, the risk-takers, will continue finding games that are dangerous despite what others have said. The only hope is that many will take a warning from last week's incident. Nobody wants to die, and seeing someone have a greater effect than any words. It would be a nice dream if last Sunday's accident was the last of its kind. But somewhere along the line newcomers will enter the scene and forget the consequences of dangerous games. Verbatim The ethics of life and death Medical ethics have changed over the past 15 to 20 years in response to changes in medical technology. Advanced technology permits doctors to choose who receives the benefits of the improved medical care. Kathy Flanders, staff columnist, interviewed Robert P. Hudson, M.D., on the ethical questions raised by the new medical practices. Hudson teaches HPMD 911, Current Social and Ethical Problems of Medicine, at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Ivan V. Golovin What is your definition of medical ethics? HUDSON: Ethics try to guide moral behavior. Morals are what you believe, and ethics are the way you go about putting them into practice. HUDSON: It revolves around what you think is the quality of life. In a case such as an 87-year-old with cancer throughout his body, you can predict the quality of life. With a premature infant, it's impossible to predic. If there's a question, we err on the side of life. HUDSON: It has revolutionized them. Up until 15 to 20 years ago, death came when it came. Babies came when they came and they died regardless of what we did. The core question has shifted from can we do something to ought we do something? A transplant is a good example. It's a very expensive procedure. In the Stanford University program, you are put in as a candidate, go in to be tested and wait without a guarantee of a donor. And you have to put up $125,000 before being admitted to the uprogram. How has technology changed medical ethics? What do you think about saving a baby but compromising its quality of life We're talking about a form of treatment which is currently rationed. It's not a question of if we're going to ration health care, but how many can put up the necessary money. HUDISON: Economics are the most pressing general problem we have to confront. It's not can we do it, but are we willing to pay? Robert P. Hudson, M.D. How do economics enter into the field of ethics? The money it takes for one heart transplant can run an outpatient clinic in San Francisco with 35,000 visits a year.' Do you think society is going to continue paying for expensive transplants? HUDSON: Transplants are the dramatic part, but the real cost is in the care of the elderly. Where I worry is if society is willing to pay for quality care. By the year 2030, 55 million people will be over the age of 65. The most rapidly growing segment of our population is that segment over the age of 85. We pay 12 percent of our gross national product for health care now. How much more is the public burden? We contribute negatively to society? I'm concerned that there will be subtle pressures on individuals to withdraw from society's protection. There will be an increase in rational suicide and it will be encouraged. Attitudes will change to make it more acceptable because of economic pressures. It's been done over and over again in history and we find a moral justification for it. The quality of life for someone over the age of 75 isn't very good anyway. HUDSON: Whenever you invoke economics, you always get into the field of ethics. There's only so much money to go around, so how to spend it fairly is an ethical question. So economics figure largely into medical ethics? The money it takes for one heart transplant can run an outpatient clinic in San Francisco with 35,000 visits a year. We have to decide how to spend the money. There's a town now. Chase is the word for it. HUDSON: Manipulation of What technological advances do you see in the future that will effect medical ethics? genetic material gives a great promise for people suffering from genetic diseases such as Down's Syndrome. They will be able to change all the genetic defects in the cells except for the reproductive cells. Another is cloning — they are making an exact copy of mammals in the laboratory. So there is no reason it can't work in human beings. Sex selection is already practically here. They can give the parents the sex gender of a baby by taking a paternity test, be up to 100 percent before long. As a first child, a boy is usually chosen. The worry is that people will ask for that two times out of three. Then there will be an imbalance between men and women. There are many technical advances that are near perfection that have profound ethical implications. Should you be able to abort just because you want the opposite sex child? Tests can be taken early enough now to give your opportunity to abort if you can get a medical doctor to do it. How do you think medical ethics affect life today? I use the term myth in an anthropological sense — as a collective belief of a group, even if it's not supported by actions. We can't have a war and believe in the sanctity of life. We have to believe it, even if we don't act as if we did HUDSON: The problem is pressure on our belief in the sanctity of life. If you allow it to diminish because you don't want to take care of old people, you've diminished it in general. The question is how to use technology wisely enough to preserve that belief, even if it is a myth that life is sacred. Mailbox Personifestly absurd The inside back cover of the spring timetable uses the term "Freshersons." Such an abination weasels into the language when misguided people confuse freedom of choice and equality of opportunity with license to butcher the language. There are indeed sexist terms in the language, but a campaign to change "man" words to "person" words is lexicographically and sexually ridiculous. John B. Bremner Women rightfully striving for equal rights do harm to their cause by such tours de farce. Hupersons should person the sheepsparts to epersoncipate us from all personner of personipulation of our parent tongue, the language of our foreparents. JOHN B. BREMNER Stauffer professor of journalism The thrill of danger Some young adults seek danger. Some young adults seek danger. This is true in all lands, from the cliff divers of South America and Madagascar to climbers of America and Europe, to the drag racers, chicken players and trainers of Kansas. It's just a part of being human, to get the adrenaline pumping once in a while. When we have constructed a society so safe that life does not provide any thrills, we must seek them out, and when others refuse to do it for us, That some die should come as no surprise. That is part of the definition of danger. When the risk has been eliminated, so has the thrill. Any attempt to make a sport "safe" lessens the sport in the eyes of the individuals who need to play it. Therefore, if the trains slow to a crawl on those crossings, adventurous people will find another game just as dangerous, pitting their skill against some other force, with their lives in the balance. Such an ordinance would not be at all effective when there are so many places to seek danger. It would simplify in another outlet for pent-up burden. Though I have resisted the impulse to go training, I think we would be better off if society were not so safe that we should have to resort to these means to find danger. I'll never willingly cash in one scrap of freedom for safety. Roy Dillinger Wilmore junior - Monday, Nov. 4, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Wine Continued from p. Riunite bianco, 750 ml., code 1124/124, 1.5 liter, code 3321/8R. Riunite Lambrusco, 750 ml., code 1124/RE. ■ Riunite Spumante, 750 ml., code 813/RE. About 3,500 cases of Riunitine wite that contain the chemical also were discovered in Hays by State Distributors Inc., distributors to north central and western Kansas, Kurt Baird, general sales manager of State Distributors, said Friday. "We just happened to have the containers that had the affected wine," Baird said. "We don't know how much additional inventory is out there. We think most of it is in our warehouse." The Food and Drug Administration and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms prohibit any levels of diethylene glycol to be put in wines sold in the United States, but Japan and certain European countries use the additive for sweetening, Lamb said. Riumite officials discovered about 7 to 10 parts per million of the chemical in its wine, Lamb said, as a result of an investigation that began when potentially dangerous levels were discovered in Austrian wines a few months ago. Lamb said the appearance of the chemical was due to a technical malfunction and was not intentional. Only 5 percent of Riunitan products that come to the United States was affected, be said. "Until government regulators allow a certain level, or it's determined that it's OK, they are going to recall it," he said. "They're going to be on the safe side." "You don't want to see such a nice band end up with a Mexico City situation," Ritchie said to the crowd. Continued from p.1 Concert For the next 1½ hours, the Femmes, along with Peter Balestrieri on saxophone and Sigmund Skopek III on keyboards, blended many styles of music into one likely, compatible show. They played something old: the droning "Confessions" from the group's self-titled first album. Then came something new: the song "Faith" during which Gano became James Brown and the crowd became arm-raising, singing revivalists. something borrowed were the introductions to "Into the Black" and "Whiter Shade of Pale" and the theme from "Batman." The band provided its own something blue — the twangy "Please Do Not Go." All evening, the crowd screamed for the Femmes' ace in the hole, "Add It Up." Finally, about 10 p.m. the group dealt it. Subdued energy from the beginning of the song exploded as Ritchie attacked his bass, Delorenzo thrashed at his snare and Gano provided twang with his guitar and voice. Chris Admussen, Clayton, Mo., senior, said, "I think the crowd's calling out for one song, 'Add It Up,' was a little immature and unfair to the band. "Of the shows I've seen in a long time, their show had the best sound quality." The crowd brought the band back twice for encores, and the band responded with "Blister in the Sun" and "Kiss Off." If the band appeared unorganized during their set, they weren't. They don't use a playlist. Instead, they decide what they're going to play on stage. "Usually you see these pieces of paper that are tapped onto the monitor," Brian Ritchie said before the show. "It says stuff like 'Teen Sex God' followed by 'Drive My Car.' Then there's 'Kill the Teacher' or whatever." But the Femmes don't like to deliver a programmed show for their audiences, he said. Not having a playlist allows the band to adapt their music to the mood of the crowd. This laid-back yet concerned view of performing gives the band a flexible stage routine, allowing them to have more fun and goof around during the show, band members say. At one point, DeLorenzo played keyboards and Ritchie took over the drumming chores. "When we play music we try and have fun up there," Delorenzo said after the show. "It helps us forget about things that could be going wrong in our everyday lives. "When we get out there we're out to present what we consider good music and art — not to condescend to the audience. I think a lot of bands just want to party or they just want to be gloomy. "Like you either see these guys who are gnashing their teeth through the whole show or they're crying and whimpering or stuff like that." Outlook bachelor's degree in education is about $15,000 to $16,000. Glenn said. Continued from p.1 But teachers willing to live in rural western Kansas will likely earn more because the per capita income is higher, he said. Julie Webster, placement director for engineering, said engineering positions were slowly increasing after the drop during the early 1890s recession. The average starting salary for a student with a bachelor's degree in engineering ranges from $21,000 to $30,000. Webster said. - Stan Shumway, chairman of the department of music and dance, said half of his department's graduates went on to receive "The market has always been pretty good for music teachers," he said. "They can all be employed as long as they are not particular about geographical locations." Lee Mann, chairman of the department of design, said industrial and interior design degrees equipped students to work for companies with a salary determined by the quality of the students' portfolios. graduate degrees in music or music education. Visual communications majors have an outstanding record of getting jobs, Mann said. Students who concentrate in crafts typically get master's degrees to teach at the university level. Phillip Blackhurst, chairman of the department of art, said a small percentage of students attended graduate school. Others worked as sculptors, painters, cabinet makers, or in museums, galleries, and other fields related to their major. Salaries are too difficult to determine for an area as diverse as art, he said. Dana Leibengood, associate dean of journalism, said journalism students who were willing to work in any location had a better chance to find a job than graduates who were not flexible. Last year's spring graduates were placed in 18 states, including Kansas. One went as far as Cairo, Egypt. Journalism majors typically enter the job market in reporting, advertising sales or management positions, or as broadcast anchors, he said. Starting salaries range from $12,000 to $28,000. ■ Gene Martin, associate dean of pharmacy, said, "We could probably place our entire class right now." The demand for pharmacy students is up because the population of elderly people who need medical care is increasing, Martin said. Popular areas for pharmaceutical jobs are the southwestern states and the Kansas City area, he said. But students from KU and the University of Missouri-Kansas City compete for placement, making jobs in this area more difficult to find. Students who can afford the cost of living in the Sandelt will earn higher salaries, he said. An independent pharmacist may earn a starting salary of about $23,000 a year, and a pharmacist who begins with a corporate chain may earn $30,000-$35,000, he said. - Edith Black, assistant dean of social welfare, said rural communities desperately needed social workers. Students with social welfare degrees can work in court service, with families, or in such agencies as the Council on Aging. To be hired as a social worker the student has to take a licensing exam, she said. The starting salary for a beginning level social worker who works for the state of Kansas is $16,800 a year, she said. A TRIUMPH! These aging radicals are the best advertisement for the spirit of survival. —Richard Corliss, TIME “A REVELATION! ‘SEEING RED’ is fascinating…a story told with warmth and humor. It’s a part of America you should meet.” —Judith Crist, WOR-TV “EXTREMELY COMPELLING! ‘SEEING RED’ quickly shatters all the cloak and dagger clichés.” —Kathleen Carroll, N.Y. Daily News “A MAJOR ACT OF POLITICAL DEMYSTIFICATION.” —J. Hoberman, Village Voice ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE SEEING FROM THE MAKERS OF ‘UNION MAIDS’ RED STORIES OF AMERICAN COMMUNISTS A film by JULIA REICHERT and JAMES KLEIN MUSIC BY BURNICE REAGON AND PETE SELGER Tonight ! 7:30 SUA FILMS ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE SEEING $2 Woodruff Aud. COMPLETE 1 INFORMATION DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER Serving Lawrence & KU Since 1973 Complete service and parts sales for most foreign cars. *WV* *VOLVO* *SUBARU* *MG* *DATSUN* *MAZDA* *TOYOTA* *HONDA* FULL LINE OF IMPORT CAR PARTS BOSCH Automotive Parts VISA GLOBAL CARD MASTERING Youthful Energy! Prize-Winning Talent!" (one of the) best of a young generation of American quartets... Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 10, 1985 Crafton-Preyer Theatre Murphy Hall Krista Bennion, violin Robert Rinehart, violin Ah Ling Neu, viola Ramon Bolipata, cello Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982 VISA/MasterCard Accepted Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association THE RIDGE STRING QUARTET Half price for KU Students THE RIDGE STRING QUARTET 1 HOW MANY MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT?" "Arab Israeli Conflict: Former Vice President of Chase Manhattan Bank. A Lecture By John Law Former Chief Middle East Correspondent For U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT. Sponsored by School of Journalism, Political Science Department, and the Saudi Students Club. Alderson Auditorium Kansas Union Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 7:30 p.m. CAR STEREO THE CITY OF BOSTON ENGINEERING CENTRE 444000 GREAT DEALS! GREAT SELECTION! Car Stereo Sale $99 3 days only SOUNDS GREAT CAR STEREO Good only through Nov. 6, 1985 25th & Iowa 1 Block West of Kief's Gramophone Shop 842-1438 6 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Monday, Nov. 4. 1985 WILLIAM J. BURGESS AND SOPHIE M. CHAPLIN Centennial celebration Alan Hagman/KANSAN Catherine Bennett Anderson, left, the oldest living KU Alphi Chi Omega alumna at age 86, chats with Ruth Miller Winsor and Lucille Evans Oxandale at a luncheon at the Adams Alumni Center. The three women graduated in 1922. The sorority celebrated its 100th anniversary over the weekend. Halloween visitors swipe man's coffin By a Kansan reporter Trick-or-treaters passing by 3109 Ranger Ave. received a trick when they saw a picture of the St. Louis Cardinals baseball team in a coffin or a Halloween display Robert Peppard up Thursday in front of his home. "Trick or treat" is the motto of Halloween. But for one Lawrence man, that motto went awry Friday. "We're not really sports fans, but we have some relatives in St. Louis, and we thought we'd send them a picture of the coffin telling them we were thinking about them," he said yesterday. But People, owner of Everything But Ice, 616 Vermont St., woke up tricked when he found the coffin missing the next morning, he said. People said he had placed the coffin, worth about $300, in the back of his pickup truck after he took the display down Thursday night. Sometimes between 12:30 a.m. and 7 a.m. Friday, the coffin was stolen. He reported the theft to the Lawrence Police Department on Sunday. "I'm not really that angry, and I'm not so old that I don't see the prankishness in it," he said. "It was stolen and I'd like to have it back. "Someone took it as a praak, just in case we set it up as a praak. I'd be tucked in for the day." He said he regularly sold coffins to customers who used them as pranks or as gun cabinets. One customer bought a coffin to use as a motorcycle trailer, he said. On Campus The Strat-o-matic Baseball Club will meet at 7 p.m. today in Parlor C of the Kansas Union. ■ Amnesty International will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Wheat Room of the Union. KU Sword & Shield will meet at 8 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Union. The KU Men's Soccer Club will practice at 4 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The KU Women's Soccer Club will practice at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. A Biblical seminar, "The Bible today: A basic overview" will be at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Students taking pharmacology courses at the University of Kansas Medical Center next year may be able to spend more time at home, according to the chairman of the department of pharmacology, toxicology and therapeutics. Pharmacy courses may be on disks By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff The department, which uses a computer-assisted teaching system (CATS), is planning to make courses available on computer disks next year for students to buy at the Med Center bookstore, Edward Walaszek, chairman of the department, said last week. Computer-aided instruction has been used at the Med Center for the past 12 years to teach pharmacology to about 200 medical students, 120 nursing students, 36 graduate students and 30-150 practicing physicians each year. Although 32 computers are available for students to use between 8 a.m. and 3 a.m. daily, Walaszek said, many students want to use the programs on their home computers. He said that about 30 students had telephone modems to connect with the main computer but that only three telephone lines were available. So everyone wants to use it at 8 in the morning and they can't," Walaszek said. "Not many can get into an open line." He said other universities that used the CATS had made disks available to students through a library. However, he said his department would rather sell the disks. "You know how students are," he said. "They put their coffee on it, the mayonnaise on their sandwich. . . "If they buy it, they might be more careful about putting the coffee stains and the mayonnaise on the table." Walaszek said the program at the Med Center was the world's largest computer-based independent study program. The CATS teaches about 100 pharmacology courses, he said, although not all of them have been taken. The lessons vary from 20 to 45 minutes and are divided into four types: self-study, case histories, laboratory exercises and review questions. The department has almost abolished lectures. "I don't teach lectures," Walaszek said. "Students come in to lectures and just fail asleep because they can't do it." Walaszek said the pharmacology department gave a few lectures on material that would grab her interest. Joy Diamond, Overland Park nurs student, said most students skipped the lectures and learned the material from the computer or from textbooks. She said the computer aided instruction was a welcome change from reading books. "Because right there in front of you are a lot of programs that apply to a hospital setting," she Walzsak said the CATS was an effective way to teach. According to a study by the National Library of Medicine, the number of "A" and "B" cases decreased significantly among students who used the CATS. However, computer aided instruction didn't seem to help students who were unmotivated and likely to fail in other courses. "I wish it could help them, but so far it's been unable to." "They're losers," Walaszek said. "They don't want to be helped anyway, at least not by the time Wang came." said. "There are clinical situations." Besides pharmacology, computers have been used for $4\frac{1}{2}$ years to help teach anatomy, said Stanley Nelson, professor and chairman of the department of anatomy. He said the physiology and biochemistry departments also had a few computer programs. Other universities have adopted the CATS, however. Walaszek said he couldn't predict whether CATS would be established in other departments. "Sometimes you have to drag them screaming into the 20th century," he said. School leaders will learn about asbestos More than 65 domestic and foreign schools are members of the CATS Consortium, which was started at the Med Center in 1974 to share the philosophy and teaching materials of CATS, Walaszek said. By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff Asbestos awareness will be stressed to Kansas school administrators at a KU National Asbestos Training Center conference Nov. 12-13 at the Wichita Hilton Imp-Airport. Sandra Hick, program manager, said yesterday that the conference would teach school administrators how to address asbestos problems. Hick said the conference would inform school board members, school administrators, maintenance supervisors and asbestos abatement coordinators how to assess and solve asbestos problems in their buildings The KU National Asbestos Training Center was established in October 1984. Through the Environmental Protection Agency, Congress gave KU and schools in Boston and Atlanta money to finance asbestos centers. KU's center is run by the division of continuing education. Wallace May, associate dean of the division of continuing education, said participants in the conference would be informed of the hazards of asbestos. Asbestos, a known carcinogen, was once a common insulator for buildings. Since its hazards have become known, school administrators have increased efforts to remove it from classrooms. Hick said asbestos removal still was going on in many schools. She said that in certain cases the asbestos could stay but that it had to be sealed. Part of the conference, Hick said, would deal with how to seal and map the asbestos so it could be dealt with properly in the future. Hick said some of the speakers at the conference would be from state agencies that were responsible for asbestos issues. A representative of the state attorney general's office also was supposed to attend to discuss legal questions concerning the removal of asbestos. Wolfgang Brandner, asbestos director for the regional EPA office in Kansas City, Mo. was one of the experts scheduled to attend. Brandner, who spoke at the KU center's conference in Iowa, said he planned to give a comprehensive study on asbestos problem in Kansas schools. He said 76 percent of the secondary schools in Kansas inspected by the EPA since 1983 were in violation of the asbestos-in-schools rule. The asbestos-in-schools rule requires secondary schools to post warnings if asbestos is present in a form that poses health hazards. Brandner said he also would inform school officials on where to look for asbestos. He said asbestos was not only in insulation but in some sound-proofing material and even in Hicks said the conference came about after a meeting last spring of EPA Region 7 officials. Region 7 consists of school officials from Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska and Missouri KU's center also will be the host of a regional safety training session Dec. 2-5 in Arizona. would train persons involved in the removal of asbestos. He said architects, school administrators and contractors would attend the two day conference. He said the training session would include detailed presentations on asbestos health effects and worker safety precautions. Participants would learn how to use respirators and other safety gear and how to monitor air quality at job sites. May said the December session R REEFER MADNESS! The Original Smoke Dream NOW IN 1/2" VIDEO! 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PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY HOURS Mon-Thurs - 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri & Sat - 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Sunday - 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 Expires 12-31-85 $1 OFF any 2 pizzas or $2 OFF any 3 pizzas ANY PIZZA ORDERED NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ EASY AS 1-2-3 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS HOMECOMING 1985 Saturday, November 9 PICNIC 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m., Saturday, November 9 Tent southeast of Memorial Stadium Adults $5.50 Children 12 & under $3.50 For advance tickets, call 864-4760. New day! New time! New place! 9:30 a.m., Saturday, November 9 Massachusetts Street Theme: HAWKS GO HAWAIIAN! PARADE [Illustration of two cartoon characters with furry bodies, wearing patterned jackets and holding coffee cups.] Penguin CONCERT: The Romantics JAYHAWKS vs. COLORADO BUFFALOES 8:30 p.m., Saturday, November 5 Hoch Auditorium General public $12.50 Students with KU ID $11.00 For tickets, call 864.3477 or CATS outlets. 1:30 p.m., Saturday, November 9 for advance tickets, call 864-3141. 9 For more information on any of these events, call the KU Alumni Association, 864-4760. Monday, Nov. 4, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 Week Ahead at KU ailed by the office of University relations. Published as a public service by the Kansan. Today Fall debate tournament. Octaform rounds. i. in, Kansas Union. Quarter-, semi- and final seasons. Microcomputer workshop. "HELP" -- error control. 8 a.m., Microcomputer房, Computer Lab. Microcomputer workshop "Communications" Japanese film "A Rural Life" Japanese film "Gunzoko," 10 p.m., Spencer Schaefer Center, 386 Broadway **Physics and astronomy collabrum:** "Become Astronomer," by William H. Curtis, 4:30 Planetary Science Institute, Tucson, Artic 4:30 Hallmark Symposium. Elton Robinson, New York art展 6.p.m. art museum - SUA Films, "Seeing Red" and "Union Maiden." 7:30 p. m., Woodruff Auditorium, Union. Workshop by director Julia Reichert. Call 864-9772 Curator's Choice, Jay Gallery, art museum dieu zeit, 7:30 a.m. Spencer galleries; by reservation (914) 256-3820 or visit curator@jaygallery.com Physics and astronomy program. *Halley's* *Compton* from 41,000 Feet. *7:30*, a.m. **Abbott** New York, NY. Michael Quinter Tylquist, Benefit National Association of Jazz Education. p 86 n. 1. Tomorrow Art lecture and slides, "Japanese Quilts," *Yuki Watanabe* at Patchwork Guest Journals U.S. Tokyo 1:30 p.m. art museum auditorium. Tokyo 1:45 p.m. art museum auditorium. College assembly, 4 p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Union. **Women's Resource Center workshop.** "The Child Within the Woman." 7 p.m., international. - SUA Film, "Double Indemnity" 7:30 p.m. * WSOF Anderson, Union. - Lingasia colony. "On the Acquisition of Bombay!" Ronald H. Gonzalez 7.9 p.m. 207 Blake Hall - International Theatre. La Compagnie Beauclaré a p.m. Sawdorb Rectory Hall, Mur- glas. Open Monday-Friday. Wednesday Affirmative Action workshop "Human Relation Skills, Part II" 8:30 a.m., International Room Pashahnehik registration wishing Women wishing Pashahnehik registration 10 a.m. to p.m. Same hours 7-15 register 10 a.m. to p.m. Same hours 8-12 register 9 a.m. to p.m. Tribune) or Forum. "Controversial Issues in Nutrition," Marie Cross, human development and family life. 11:45 a.m., Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. 1904 Oreand Ave. African Studies. "Afar-American Socially Con- ciousness." Gerald Early, Eggland Noon, New York. *SUA film. "Birdy." 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Audioium. April 11th. Also Tutorial Middle East affairs lecture. "Arab-Iraeli Conflict: How Many Minutes to Midnight?" John Law, editor, Middle East Focus, Sponsored by Saud Students Club, School of Journalism and Mass Communications 7:30 p.m., Addison Auditorium, Union Art lecture. "Sugendge: Mountain Religion in Japan." Kyoto Earhart, Western Michigan University Press. Visiting aristes series, Pineiro Nagy, classical guitar. 8 p.m., Swankboro Receal Hall, Murphy Thursdav Kansas Asphalt Paving Conference. All day!Join Microcomputer workshop "Introduction to LOTUS" a m., Microcomputer Room, Com- fessional office - Luncheon and style show. University Women's Club, Noon, Kansas Room, Union Microcomputer workshop, "Intermediate LOCAL" p.m., Microcomputer Room, Commer Club Latin American Solidary meeting. "Video La Insurrectione 6" at 8 p.m. e公演ical Enseñanza La Insurrectione 6" at 8 p.m. e公演ical Enseñanza Middle East affairs lecture. "United States Aid to Israel and its Effects on Israel Policy in the Middle East," in *Audience in the Publisher* 7 p.m., Adelson Auditorium, Union Volleyball, KU-Eastern Illinois University, 801 W. 36th St. p, m, n. "3:30 Night" @ p, m. Crain-Prover- ture, Murphy Hall. Also Friday and Satura- ny Friday Woodyd Auditrium, Union. Also 7 and 9:30 p.m. Same times Saturday. Airspace colliquum, "Future Transport Aircraft," Alten Mullay, Boffle Co. 3: 108 p., p. 1138. - SUA film. "The Breakfast Club." 3:30 p.m., party: 6:30 p.m. Adams Alumun Under * one-meas on show* "Goodnight Guess" Scott Kane's dramatic interpretation of Edgar Aalton's night. 7 p., Alderson Auditorium, Neis. Mens' basketball KU-Czech national team 7:38 p.m. Elem Field House. Admission to season games is $10. Class of 1980 reunion. Silver anniversary dinner party: 6:30 p.m. Adams Alumni Center Valehay, KU University of Oklahoma 8 p.m. Allen Fletch House. observatory Hall. p.m. Tombaugh Observatory, 500 Lindley Hall. p.m. Tombaugh's Comet. If sky is clear, 10 p.m. Tombaugh Observatory, 500 Lindley Hall. Abbott School. - SUA film, "Fire and Ice," Midnight, woodrudd and union, Union. Also Saturday. Saturday Open house. *School of Architecture and Urban* *Design*, m. Maryin Hall, Tours of the building by the architect. *The Museum of Nature History workshop* "Birds in *The Auburns.*" Again, 8 p.m., d. n.Y.库儿曼 Library, 40 W. 59th St. Also: 1:30 p.m. Sunday Homecoming parade: 9:30 a.m., downtown Art museum open house. 10 a.m. until football game starts. Lawrence Art museum open house, 10 a.m. until football All University homecoming picnic. 11 a.m. under the southeast southwest entrance to make reservations - Football. KU-University of Colorado. 1:30 p.m. Homecoming activities, Memorial Stadium. "Museum of Natural History workshop." "The Coming In." Ages 8+. Adults 7. 6 pm. AM films, "Kalaku?" and "Shintō": Nature, Gods and Humanity; "The Last Man": Gods, Auditorium, 1:15 a.m. Pm; Nov 11 am. at KCCC. Sunday - SUA concert. The Romantics. 8:30 p.m., Hoch Auditorium. - woodstock University, woodyart University, woodstock university, carnegie foundation - RUA films. Various short features. 2 p.m. Auditorium, Union. Another step toward establishing a non-Western culture requirement in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was taken Wednesday when guidelines for the selection of courses were sent to academic departments, an associate dean of the college said Friday. By John Williams Of the Kansan staff Chae-Jin Lee, the associate dean, said department chairmen and program directors received a memorandum from the non-Western culture committee that defined non-Western culture courses. Departments were asked to submit, before Jan. 31, proposals of courses that might satisfy the requirement. The purpose of a non-Western culture course requirement is to acquaint students with the culture, its history and Western people," the memoirman said. Conduits that could be included in the requirement would cover Asian, Pacific island, Middle Eastern, African and Native American cultures. At least 75 percent of the course work must include non-Western elements to be considered, Lee said. New KU requirement nears The non-Western culture requirement is one of many changes the College will put into effect by fall 1987 for students seeking bachelor of science degrees. The changes are a result of several national reports that said students across the nation were not receiving an adequate liberal arts education and that math and English skills were below normal. culture requirement is a farsighted one," Lee said. "I think the plan will be looked upon highly by other colleges and universities." He said one of the most attractive aspects of the program would be that a course could be taken anytime before graduation and could be offered from the 100 through 699 levels. This differs from proposed changes in the math and English requirements, which require early on admission to those classes until requirements are fulfilled. "The students can take it anytime, which means it's more flexible than other requirements," Lee said. "The plan for the non-Western Advanced foreign languages, beyond the fourth semester, involving literature and culture of non-English speakers, should be considered by the committee, he said. both a non-Western culture requirement and a humanity or social science requirement, the course would not fulfill both requirements, he said. But if the course were offered as Departments and programs also were encouraged by the committee to propose new non-Western culture classes — especially ones that either emphasize cross-cultural comparisons or are interdisciplinary, such as a course being offered next spring on Siberia. The courses, which will be selected by the committee during the spring semester, will not add to the existing 124 hours students need to graduate. Instead, they will be added into miscellaneous hours students take, Lee said. No ceiling was placed on the number of courses the departments could submit to the committee, Lee said. On the Record A family pet allegedly was poisoned between 6:30 p.m. Thursday and 7 a.m. Friday in the 1300 block of Maple Street. Police said that a substance was added to the dog's water and that it appeared to be anti-freeze. The water will be chemically analyzed by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. Police may have a suspect and he could be charged with cruelty to an animal. Two pairs of Cadillac wheel covers, valued at $100 each, were stolen from two cars between midnight Friday and 7 a.m. Saturday in the 800 block of Murrow Court and the 900 block of Wellington Court, Lawrence police said yesterday. Police have no suspects. A washing machine, valued at $430, was stolen between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. Friday from a business in the 2200 block of Delaware Street, police said. An AM/FM cassette car stereo, valued at $275, was stolen between 4 p.m. Thursday and 4 a.m. Friday from a car parked in the 1900 block of Heatherwood Drive, police said. The next Week Ahead will appear Nov. 11 and cover through Nov. 17. The deadline for submitting tries for next week's calendar has passed. Entries for the Nov. 18-25 Week Ahead must be submitted to the office of University relations by 5 p.m. Wednesday. Holidays and semester breaks may alter the schedule. An asterisk indicates an admission charge for an event. When workers aren't there business doesn't work Each year cancer strikes 120,000 people in our work force, and causes our economy to lose more than $10 billion in earnings. Earnings that American workers might still be generating if they had known the simple facts on how to protect themselves from cancer. Protect your employees, your company, and yourself. call your local unit of the American Cancer Society and ask for their free pamphlet, "Helping Your Employees to Protect Themselves Against Cancer." Start your company on a policy of good health today! AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY This space contributed as a public service. Resumes You can cross the line first with a typeset resume. National Electronic Type will help you choose the typestyle and offer advice on a format that will professionally present your message. net 279 37 national electronic type, inc. Home of Award-Winning Title 932 Massachusetts - Lawrence, Kansas 66044 We are only 5 minutes from campus at 932 Massachusetts, Lawrence or call Mary at (913) 843-7446. Spring scheduling problems? Dropped a class and want to make up credits? Want to make good use of your Christmas break? Independent Study is a state-wide service, mandated by the Kansas Board of Regents to serve the correspondence study needs of Kansas. As a unit of the University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education, Independent Study offers approved college courses similar to those taught in residence. Stop by the Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex C, located directly north of the Kansas Union. Use Independent Study! Independent Study is flexible, convenient, and personalized. You can enroll at any time, set your own pace, and study at home. Be in a class by yourself! Use your Head — and Independent Study! For more information call Independent Study at 864-4440. INSIDE MINTH AT MISSISSIPPI CENTER SHAMPOO AND HAIRCUT $9.00 FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUPON EXPIRES 11-30-85 11-30-85 Get Something Going! Kansan Classifieds 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 TUESDAY DIME DRAWS 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Wed. Special: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0541 BUFFALO BOB'S Smokehouse SMOKEY JOE SANDWICH SPECIAL Chopped ends of BBQ beef, ham, turkey and pork baked in a mild BBQ sauce. Served hot on a bakery fresh bun with tater curl fries and pickles. WHEEL LOG $2.75 Large Sandwich Large Sandwich $3.50 Extra Large Sandwich ♬ THE TASTE THAT WON THE WEST --- 719 MASSACHUSETTS OFFER GOOD TILL NOV. 30 Formerly Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse—Same nice people—Same management 8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Monday, Nov. 4, 1985 'Star Wars' defense may be complicated United Press International WASHINGTON — Scientists working on President Reagan's controversial "Star Wars" defense shield are leaning toward a complex system of thousands of space satellites to probe the universe. In United States, it was reported yesterday. The New York Times said the Pentagon's Strategic Defense Initiative Organization discussed the results of a yearlong study and concluded "the preferred missile defense design is more intricate and immense than previously suggested." According to the report, the design has seven distinct layers which would provide "redundant" or complementary weapons systems in three broad phases. It would use groups of lasers and door directors to attack ground-based targets that fire high-speech projectiles and ground-based rocket interceptors. The plan to furnish "a nearly perfect nationwide shield" is to be presented to the Senate Armed Services Committee this week, the newspaper said. Government officials said the Pentagon was not committed to any system as yet and John Gardner, systems director of the SDI Organization, said five companies would continue to work on a design with "a considerable increase in effort." The plan has two layers of boost-phase defenses — directed-energy weapons and kinetic-energy weapons - designed to attack nuclear weapons soon after their liftoff. Another similar two layers would attack weapons in mid-course. A fifth layer would consist of small pellets and aerosols to destroy decoys so the missiles themselves would be easier targets. And the final two defensive layers would consist of two kinds of ground-based rocket interceptions to attack incoming missiles in their terminal phase, the Times said. The study suggests that each of the seven layers would permit as many as 20 percent of the missiles to slip through. But Gardner said it was hoped the cumulative effect, as the final tiers destroyed those missiles the first tiers missed, would provide a very high level of protection for U.S. territory. Alternative schemes using four, five and six layers of defenses also have been considered. Court to review case on affirmative action United Press International WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court begins its review of affirmative action this week in the face of a Reagan administration campaign to wipe out all forms of racial preference in the workplace. The justices will hear arguments Wednesday in a case from Jackson, Mich., which has a contract clause giving black public school teachers special protection during layoffs. The federal government has asked the court to nullify the clause, which it considers a form of reverse discrimination. The plan casts aside the constitutional principle of "equal treatment for all persons regardless of race," the Justice Department said in legal briefs. "The history of the 14th Amendment does not support the constitutionality of measures discriminating against whites." The Jackson plan, adopted by the school board and approved by the teachers' union, is being challenged by eight white teachers who were laid off in a budget crunch. Seven have been rehired and one left town, but they are trying to recover lost wages. The court's ruling will reach beyond Jackson to at least 12 school districts with almost identical layoff plans. It also could extend to communities that have adopted racial preferences in hiring aimed at increasing the ranks of minority workers. National Education Association attorney Robert Chanin said racial preferences were necessary to ensure schools had a diverse faculty. "Merely equal treatment is not going to do it," he said. "You're not going to overcome years of discrimination just by saying we're not going to discriminate anymore." The conservative Mid-America Legal Foundation said it hoped the court would use the case to settle confusion over "how far an employer can go in discriminating against somebody else" to protect members of a minority group. Marcos may call January election MANILA, Philippines — President Ferdinand Marcos, acting after weeks of pressure from the United States and months of demands by opposition leaders, announced plans today to call an early presidential election in January. United Press International In a television interview broadcast in the Philippines and the United States, Marcos invited members of the U.S. Congress to observe a demonstration by former President would "determine the future of democracy here." Marcos, 68, said he would call a caucus of his ruling New Society Party to discuss the plan before Nov. 11, then submit to the Assembly a proposal apparently designed to sidestep constitutional requirements that he resign in the event of an early, or snap, election. Marcos, first elected in 1965, will seek another six-year term. In recent weeks, Marcos has been under pressure from the United States to implement political, economic and military reforms in the face of a growing communist insurgency seen as a threat to his government and U.S. air and naval bases north of Manila. "He finally succumbed to American pressure," said opposition member of Parliament Homobono Adaza after Marcos' announcement. Cecilia Munoz Palma, a Parliament member and head of the National Unification Committee, said a convention of all opposition parties would be held this month to choose a single candidate to run against Marcos. About a dozen candidates are seeking the nomination. Adaza said the choice would be either Corazon Aquino, 52, the immensely popular widow of slain opposition leader Benigno Aquino, or former Sen. Salvador Díaz, the country's largest coalition of opposition parties. Marcos' term will not expire until 1987. But, asked during an interview on the ABC News program "This Week With David Brinkley" whether he might hold an earlier election, Marcos replied. "I understand the opposition has been asking for an election. "In answer to their request, I announce that I am ready to call a snap election, perhaps earlier than eight months, perhaps in three months or less than that, if all these childish claims to popularity on both sides have to be settled," he said. A statement issued later by the presidential palace said Marcos planned to call the vote in January, "primarily to resolve fundamental issues which have been raised and which may affect the effectivity of the institutions of government, including the armed forces." Jose Concepcion, a businessman who heads a national citizens' election watchdog group, said the elections "will determine the future of democracy here." Ban on riot coverage draws criticism From Kansan wires JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Opposition politicians, newspapers and trade unions yesterday condemned the government ban on television, radio and photographic coverage of rioting in South African cities. Alex Boreaine, a spokesman for the liberal opposition Progressive Federal Party, said the government had brought down an "iron curtain" on news reporting and called it a blatant violation of press freedom. "The blinding of the television camera and the gagging of radiomen is a flagrant violation of press freedom." Boraina said. "These steps give unlimited license to the security forces to abuse their already too extensive powers," said Sheena Duncan, the head of the anti-apartheid Black Sash movement. Also yesterday, jailed black leader Nelson Mandela underwent successful prostate gland surgery at a hospital in Cape Town and was in stable condition, his doctors said. Plan for balanced budget still locked in Congress The Department of Prisons issued a statement on behalf of three urologists who conducted the surgery on Mandela at the Volksk hospital (People's Hospital), saying Mandela's inflamed prostate gland was removed "and no complications are expected." WASHINGTON — Congress begins this week where it left off last week — stymied by sharp differences between House and Senate versions of a plan to force a balanced federal budget by the end of the decade. The Senate resumes work today on omnibus legislation setting farm policy. The House, after considering routine matters today and tomorrow, will begin work at midweek on legislation authorizing hundreds of new water projects. The Associated Press Arguments over the budget proposals have delayed final action on legislation needed to raise the government's borrowing authority, the national debt limit, to more than $2 trillion. The budget plans are being considered as an amendment to the debt legislation. Congress' failure to raise the debt limit has forced the Treasury Department to dip into Social Security trust funds. Family lawyer Ismail Ayob said the 67-year-old Mandela, widely regarded by blacks as the most important black leader in South Africa, entered the hospital yesterday morning from Pollsmoor Prison for the operation Officials of the Treasury Department have said the move to shift money from the trust funds would provide enough money for the government to continue operating until Nov. 14. Both Houses of Congress have passed stopgap measures to ease the credit crunch until Wednesday and avoid the loss of interest on the trust bonds. Three weeks of negotiations between the House and Senate to draft a compromise on the balanced budget plan collapsed last Thursday. Mandela was jailed for life in 1964 for plotting sabotage for the armed wing of the African National Congress, a black civil rights group which was outlawed in 1960 and began a guerrilla movement to overthrow the white-led government a year later. International campaigns have repeatedly called on the government to release him unconditionally, but President P.W. Botha has said Mandela would be treed only if he renounced violence as a method for political change. Mandela replied in February that he would not accept conditional release. The media blackout was published in Saturday's government gazette, giving it the force of law. It remains in effect as long as the state of emergency declared July 21 remains in effect. The gazette said, "It is an offense under the emergency regulations to take a recording (sound or visual) of any riot situation." Maximum penalties in terms of the wide emergency powers are a fine of $7,000, 10 years in prison or both. The Black Media Workers of South Africa, a trade union for black journalists, condemned the ban and called for reporters and editors "to stand up to the government" and ignore the measures taken by Journalists said the ban meant complete state control of the flow of news from the segregated townships. Police said five people were arrested overnight in township violence with no reports of serious incidents. The country's main newspapers all condemned the government action. CORPORATE COACH 841-LIMO Chauffeur Driven LIMOUSINES For Any Occasion. 24 HOURS a DAY • 7 DAYS a WEEK We're Open Again! Stop In for the best food in town! Vista RESTAURANTS 1527 W. 6th/Lawrence Sat - Thurs 10:30 am - 11 pm Fri - Sat 10:30 am - 1 am TALK TO THE COACH Hawk Talk with Mike Gottfried Mondays at 6:07 p.m. Call 1-800-332-0090 KU KZR 106 MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Come watch the game with Harry! FREE DRINK with any sandwich purchase when you ask for the Monday Night Football Special! HARRY BEARS 106 N. Park 749-5246 MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Come watch the game with Harry! FREE DRINK with any sandwich purchase when you ask for the Monday Night Football Special! 106 N. Park 749-5246 "Poe Is Coming November 8" MICHAEL MORRIS HIS LIFE Ku PIZZA Shoppe and pub Westridge Shopping Center 6th & Kasold WE DELIVER! 842-0600 MONDAY NIGHT football MONDAYS ONLY! King Size Pizza 37 oppings and 32 oz Pepsi Menton Monday Night Football Special when ordering and receive extra mozzarella FREE! MASS. STREET DELL MAASSACHUSETTS "4 p.m. to close daily" WE WANT YOU TO TRY OUR ALL NEW DELI BURGERS Traditional Burger $1.99 with lettuce and tomato Swiss & Bacon Burger $2.35 wine cheese and ranch style bacon Big Blue Burger $2.35 blue cheese and sauteed mushrooms WHAT A DEAL— Traditional Burger Basket and 12oz, soft drink Milk 50¢ COUPON 50¢ OFF OFF FIFTY CENTS 4p.m. to close daily OFF 4 p.m. to close daily ALL NEW DELI BURGERS 50¢ OFF 50¢ OFF OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30, 1985 * All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef * Select a fresh baked deli bun onion keeper or whole wheat * Served with potato chips, kaiser dill spear and any email soft drink Sports Mondav. Nov. 4, 1985 University Daily Kansan 9 News Briefs Prep all-american to sign with 'Hawks The Kansas women's basketball team has a verbal commitment from Lisa Braddy, the top KU recruit, to sign a letter of intent to play for the Jahawks, assistant coach Mike Prusinski and Mike Prusinski said yesterday. Braddy, a 5-foot-10 guard for St. Theresa's Academy in Kansas City, Mo., was a two-time Street and Smith basketball magazine high school All-American. She is her school's all-time leading scorer. Braddy was recruited by more than 200 schools, but had narrowed her choice to Kansas or Louisiana Tech. The Kansas team will visit St. Theresa's Academy Saturday for an intrasquid scrimmage. The team held a scrimmage Saturday at Allen Field House with the white team defeating the blue team 6:04. Vickie Adkins led the white team with 22 points, followed by Evette Ott with 20 points. Kelly Jennings scored 20 points for the blue team, and Lisa Dougherty scored 16. Sooners beat Kansas The KU volleyball team lost Friday to Oklahoma University 8-15, 17-15, 4-15, 5-15 in Norman, Okla. The Jayhawks' Big Eight Conference record is now 2-5. "We're running a fast offense now, and it really helped the outside hitters," KU coach Frankie Albite said yesterday. Albizt said the team had not played well in the last three matches. Friday the team again had trouble with the net block. She said the faster offense almost doubled the hitting percentage of the KU hitters. "We weren't playing as a team at all," Albitz said. The Sooners are second to Nebraska in the conference. Kansas will face OU again at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Mason gymnasium. The Kansas university's soccer club boosted its record to 5-4 this weekend with victories over Rockwall College and Benedic-Colege. Soccer team wins The women defeated Rockhurst, 1-0 Saturday on a score by Frank Renner. Yesterday they beat Boston 4-3 taking a 3-0 first half lead. The men's club had a match scheduled, but its opponent, Central Missouri State, pulled out. The men will host a tournament next weekend at the fields at 23rd and Iowa Streets. No free agents in KC KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Royals, baseball's new world champions, have set in place a new long-range operational policy and will not attempt to sign any free agents in the future, the American League club announced Saturday. From Kansan wire reports. KU swimmers take top spot in Invitational By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas women's swim team didn't quite get its revenge -- that opportunity will come next spring -- but the Jayhawks got the next best thing. The women won the Big Eight Invitational swim meet Saturday at the Robinson Natatorium and in the process defeated Nebraska, the team that ended Kansas' 10-year hold on the Big Eight Championship last season. "I think we are a contender for the Big Eight title, but we have to prove ourselves," KU coach Gary Kempf said yesterday. "I think we took a big The Jayhawks finished the two-day meet with 885 points. Nebraska was second with 741, followed by Iowa State with 507 and Missouri with 301 points. The Jayhawks can get their full revenge next spring when the Cornhuskers hold the Big Eight Championships in Lincoln, Neb. step in that direction by beating Nebraska so convincingly." The Kansas men's swim team finished third in the invitation. The Cornhuskers won the meet with 744 points, followed by Iowa State, 580.5 Kansas, 411.5, Missouri 305, Southwest Missouri State, 237.5 and Drury 167.5. Kempf said Grant Seavall and Glenn Trammel were the two top men performers for Kansas. Trammel finished second in the 100 backstroke, fourth in the 200 backstroke, sixth in the 200 Individual Medeley, and was an intergal part of the relay teams. formance, especially because we finished fourth in the conference last year," Kempf said. "I was hoping we could have been closer to Iowa State (second place). We had a couple of relay teams disqualified, and that hurt us." consistency," Kempf said. "Every time he was in the water he did a good job for us." The KU women took advantage of the relays in its win. The Jayhawks won five relays and had teams finish second in two others. Kempf said the 200 and 400 freestyle times were probably the top two times in the country this year. "I was pleased with the men's per Seavall tied for second in the 100 butterfly and finished fifth in the 50 freestyle. Kansas won the 202 freestyle relay in 1 minute 36.51 seconds, and the Jayhawks captured the 400 freestyle relay in 3:36.66. "I was most pleased with Grant's "Those are very fast times for this time of the year," Kempf said. "I'm not surprised by them because we have some real sprinters on the relay teams." In addition to the women's relay results, Kempf said he was pleased with the performances of Tammy Sparr, Spry, LL Duncan and Bee Reici Drumm. Kansas swept the top three spots in the 50 freestyle. Pease won the event in 24.11. Spry was second and Duncan finished third. Pease notched two other individual wins — the 100 and 200 breaststroke. Duncan won the 100 backstroke and was second in the 100 freestyle. Ream was second in the 100 and 200 breaststroke, finishing behind Pease in both races. Spry won the 100 and 200 freestyle. KU bowlers place high in tourney Kansas travels to Dallas Satdurday for a meet with Texas A&M. By Heather Fritz By Heather Fletch Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas men finished third and the women finished fourth out of 12 teams at the Mid-States Bowling Championships Saturday at Royal Crest Lanes in Lawrence. The men finished with 14,888 pins, behind first place Wichita State with 15,498 and Nebraska with 15,155. Central Missouri State came in fourth with 14,861 pins. Wichita State also won the women's competition with 15,242. West Texas State was second with 15,062. Kansas State was third with 13,846 and Kansas finished fourth with 13,467. KU coach Mike Fine said this event had been rated as one of the toughest in the country. "Overall we bowled fairly consistently." Fine said yesterday. "Anytime we can get four girls averaging over 160, we are doing OK." Lisa Lynn Hollon led the women with a 179 average, which was the seventh highest in the tournament. On the men's side, KU's top bowler, Wes Walcott, led the team again with a 196 average. His score was good enough for fifth place overall on the all-tournament team. First place went to Rick Scott of Nebraska with a 203 average. The competition was a round-robin in which each team bowled against the other 11 teams. After every four games there was a placement round in which teams bowled by rank. "We were really happy to have our men finish in third place and in front of Central Missouri State." Fine said. "They're a good team. For us to finish in front of them is significant. We knew going in that the women's battle would be between Wichita State and West Texas State." In match play, the KU men finished 10-5 and the KU women were 11-4. The men lost three times to Central Missouri State and once each to Wichita State and Kansas State. The women lost twice each to Wichita State and Kansas State. Fine said the team had always considered its conference, the Kansas-Nebraska Bowling Conference, to be one of the toughest. That claim was backed up as the top three men's teams and three of the top four women's teams in this tournament were from the conference. In men's Independent Trophy competition, Biggest Bill's Buddies shut out Athletes in Action 7-0 Penthouse defeated Oread Dwellers 21-0, Minerva's Lions beat Village Square 28-0, Ode English slipped past Sky 19-13, Unknown stopped KU Band 27-7, Raiders stomped Peloponnesianes 42-0, and Bums and Mad Hatter both won by forfeit. Other NFL scores p. 10. However, with 14 seconds left in the game, Zendejas kicked a 38-yard goal to lift the Oilers to a 23-20 victory over the Chiefs. Oilers kick Chiefs to 5th straight loss HOUSTON — Kickers live in a world where there are no fine lines — only heroes and goats. Just ask the Houston Oilers' Tony Zeddejas. United Press International The loss was the fifth straight for Kansas City. 3-6. "In a close game like this, a misses kick can be crucial." Zendeias said In the first half of yesterday's game against the Kansas City Chiefs, the first-year kicker agonized over a missed 39-yard field goal and extra point. Four women's Greek Trophy squads were victorious. Sigma Nu 21-0, Pi Kappa Alpha over Phi Kappa Sfi 28-0, Ducks 1 defeating Sigma Chi 28-0, Delta chi crushing Phil Delta Theta 28-0, Kappa Sigma over ATO by the same score of 28-0, and AKL over TKE by forfeit. Men's and women's Greek and Independent trophy competition also began yesterday, with 21 teams coming away with victories. Zendela' jick also lifted the Oliers into a first-place logjam in the AFC Central at 4-5 with Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Cincinnati. Greeks set for final In men's Greek Trophy play, it was Sig Eg spuezbing by Beta A-2 14-13, Delta Tau Delta shutting up Phi Kappa Theta 3-0, Fij I beating Two Greek Rec-A football teams, Men and Sheepherders, will square off today in the championship game of the men's Greek Rec-A tournament at the fields on 23rd and Iowa Streets. By Harlen Makemson Of the Kansan sports staff The Men advanced to the finals by beating Triangle 24-6 yesterday, while Shepherders shut out Fiji 2 13-0. Hawks 10 AISIS STONERS 43 NORTMAN, Okla - Kansas fullback Arnold Fields attempts to rush past Oklahoma's David Vickers and Brian Bosworth early in the third quarter of Suzy MastKANSAN Saturday's game. The Sooners beat the Jayhawks 48-6. Kansas dropped to 5-4 overall and 1-3 in the Big Eight with the loss. 'Hawks take beating from wishbone By Chris Lazzarino Sports Editor NORMAN, Okla. — The Oklahoma Sooners, trusting in their freshmanwished wishbone offense, made a wish for Saturday's game. That wish. Don't let the Jayhawks, who were trusting in their pro-style passing offense, leave Norman with a win. Kansas stunned Oklahoma last year in Lawrence, and the Sooners didn't plan on being stunned two years in a row. Well, the wishbone worked and the Sooners' wishes more than came true. This season, the Jayhawks were the ones who went home stunned, battered and bruised after being soundly beaten 48-6, dropping their record to 5-4 overall and 1-3 in the conference. field, racking up 525 yards of offense. Holley led all rushers with 162 yards on 19 carries, and completed four of six passes for 82 yards and one touchdown. In fact, Holieway's rushing yardage was just 13 yards shy of Kansas' team-total 175 yards. For the Sooners, now 5-1 overall and 3-0 in the conference, revenge was particularly sweet because they beat the Jayhawks with a substitute quarterback — Holley is filling in for sophomore Troy Alkman, who was the quarterback who had to fill in for the injured Danny Bradley when the Sooners played in Lawrence last year. Alkman was injured in the Sooners' Oct. 19 game against Miami. Kansas quarterback Mike Norseth spent the afternoon running from big, fast and mean red jersies. He was sacked seven times and could manage only 98 yards passing with In short, nothing went right for Norseth, who went into the game with an average of 320.1 yards of total offense a game, which was first in the Big Eight and third in the NCAA. If he wasn't being chased out of the pocket by All-America lineman Tony Casillas, he was being chased by All-Big Eight linebacker Brian Bosworth, who racked up three quarterback sacks and nine unassisted tackles. no touchdowns and two interceptions, both of which resulted in touchdown drives for Oklahoma. If he wasn't being chased, he was probably already on the ground, under a sea of red. The punishment came to an end for Norseth late in the third quarter when he hit his elbow on Bosworth's helmet — right after throwing his second interception. After the game, Kansas head coach Mike Gottfried was, to say the least, impressed with Oklahoma. "I've lined up against a lot of defensive teams, but never a better one than Oklahoma." Gottfried said. "They have everything — size, musc, cle, speed and coaching. What else is there?" Kansas tailback Lynn Williams; whose playing status was questionable because of sore neck and should-ers, started the game, but didn't finish it. Williams suffered a knee injury in the second quarter and was forced to sit out the rest of the game. Also suffering a knee injury was Kansas strong safety Marvin Mattox, who may be out for the season. "We are really a beat-up football team," Gottfried said. "I've never had a队夹anged up. We were thin coming in. Then Norseth hurt his hand in the third quarter, and we lost Williams. When Williams went out, there went our running game. Mattox is out for the year, I think." Tennis stars lose in all-american tournev By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff KU tennis players Mike Wolf and Michael Center lost their second round doubles match Friday in the Volvo All-American tournament in Los Angeles. The women's team split dual matches with Indiana and Iowa over the weekend. Kansas lost to Indiana 2-7 but beat Iowa 5-4. Wolf and Center beaten 6-4, 6-4 by Jorge Lozano and Luke Jenne of Southern California. The Kansas team had beaten the top seeded team in the first round Thursday in what KU coach Scott Perelman called the greatest win. "They knocked off the No. 1 team in the country," he said yesterday. "Now they feel capable of winning a major tournament together. They're both fired up about coming home and working hard." In consolation singles play, Wolf defeated Fernando Perez of Louisiana State in three sets, then in the quarterfinals beat Dani Leal of Pepperdine 3-6,7-6, 6-4. In the semifinals, Wolf lost to Richard Matuszewski of Clemson 5-7, 2-6. Matuszewski was half of the top-seeded doubles team that Wolf and Center beat. Perelman said Jim Grabb, who "Mike had never beaten Leal before." Perelman said. "He's really starting to do things and beat people he didn't beat before." The women's matches both took place in Iowa City, Iowa. Against Indiana, Christine Parr won her No. 2 singles match, and Parr and Barb Inman won their No. 1 doubles match. Cyclone runner creates whirlwind at meet beat Wolf in singles in the first round. Perez, Leal and Matuszewski were all Americans. By Heather Fritz and Tidwell Of the Kansan sports staff Iowa State cross country standout Yobes Ondieki left all other Big Eight conference runners, including the Kansas men's cross country team, in a 'cloud of dust' for the third straight year at the Big Eight cross country championships in Columbia, Mo. The Kansas men placed seventh in the event with 162 points, while Colorado won the championship with 48. points. Jayhawk senior Ben Welch was the top finisher for Kansas, logging a time of 33 minutes 19.6 seconds and placing 28th overall. Ondieki's winning time was 31:03.7. The Kansas women's team, hampered by injuries, finished eight with 209 points. Nebraska won the title with 61 points, followed by Iowa State with 66, Kansas State with 84, Oklahoma State with 86 and Colorado with 153. a time of 33:30.9; Gerald Harder, 32nd in 33:44.9; Matt Bell, 33rd in 33:52.3; Lawrence Thomas, 39th in 34:44.0; Kyle Roste, 43rd in 35:04. and Mike Spielman, 44th in 35:10.9. The individual women's title went to Oklahoma State's Christine McMiken, who finished in 17:04.7. Kansas' top runner was Shaula Hatcher, who came in 33rd, in 19:02. Finishing after Welch for Kansas were Craig Watchee, 30 overall with "That wasn't a true indication of what she can do," said women's coach Cliff R洛elo. "It was what I expected except for Shaula." Hatcher was followed by Kim Sheridan, 36th, in 19:12; Rachel Albright, 45th in 20:27; Trish Allaire, 47th in 21:00; Trisla Mangan, 48th in 21:15 and Angie Helmer, 49th in 23:16. The women were missing Melissa Satterfield and Suzanne McKay, who Rovello said would have been the team's second and fourth runners. Satterfield has a broken foot, and McKay has been out with an ear infection. 10 ARO PACIFIC MORALES SINCE 1936 DEL PACIFIC MORALES SINCE 1936 DEL PACIFIC MORALES SINCE 1936 DEL PACIFIC MORALES SINCE 1936 University Daily Kansan Sports M [] [] II V 12 F Monday, Nov. 4, 1985 Payton paces Bears to 16-10 win to stay unbeaten GREEN BAY, Wis. — Walter Payton rushed for 192 yards yesterday, including a 27-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter, and helped the Chicago Bears remain the NFL's top defense馆 over the Green Bay Packers. Trailing 10-7 in the fourth quarter, Chicago moved within a point when left tackle McMichael sacked center defense and zone for a 7-yard loss and a safety. Chicago improved to 9-0 while the Packers dropped to 3-6. After the safety, Dennis McKinnon returned Joe Prokop's free kick 16 yards to the Packers' 49. After Payton carried for 5 yards, McMahon hit tight end Tim Wrightman for 17 yards down to the 27. On the next play, Payton raced into the end zone for the winning score. Chicago improved to 9-0 while the Payton passed the 14,000-yard career rushing mark, moving to 14.333. The game featured a lot of bad blood from a Monday night meeting of these teams two weeks ago. In that game, Chicago used 300-pound defensive tackle William "The Refrigerator" Perry in the offensive backfield several times and passed with a big lead late in the contest. Scores of the rest of yesterday's NL games follow. Tonight, St. Louis Park can win by 2-0. Giants 22, Bucs 20 Eric Schubert kicked five field goals in his first NFL game and Joe Morris recorded his second straight more than 100-yard rushing game, lifting the New York Giants at a 22-20 victory over the winless Tampa Bay Buccaneers in East Rutherford, N.J. The Giants, who trailed 13-6 at halftime, improved to 8-3 while dropping the NLF's only winless team to 12-5. The Giants led five of their games at halftime. Schubert was perfect on field-goal attempts of 24, 36, 24, 41 and 33 yards. He was signed Friday because Giants coach Bill Parcells thought Ali Haji-Sheik's injured hamstring was not healed and Jess Atkinson, waived Monday, was claimed by St. Louis. Schubert, who kicked for the Giants in preseason, had been coaching at Lakeland High School in Wanaque, N.J., when Parcells called. Redskins 44, Falcons 10 In Atlanta, quarterback Joe NFL Roundup Theismann ran 11 yards for one touchdown and threw 34 yards to Art Monk for another during a 28-point second-quarter outburst that helped the Washington Redskins to a 44-10 victory over the Atlanta Falcons. With the score tied 3-3 going into the second quarter, Washington, 5-4, erupted for touchdowns on four consecutive possessions. Keith Griffin put the Redskins ahead at 3:09 with a 5-yard scoring run two plays after George Rogers rambled for 34 yards. Theismann got his TD at 6:41, Rogers went over from the 1 at 11:18, and the Theismann-to-Monk tally occurred at 13:42, giving Washington a 31-3 halftime lead. Steelers 10. Brown's 9 Gary Anderson booted a 29-yard field goal with nine seconds left to lift the Steelers to a 10-9 victory over the Cleveland Browns in Pittsburgh. The Steelers' triumph, coupled with victories by Houston and Cincinnati, brings the four teams in the West to Central into a 4-8 tie for first place. The Browns have never won in Three Rivers Stadium since it was opened in 1970. Anderson's winning kick capped a 10-play, 73-yard drive by the Steelers in the final four minutes. The Browns' Frank Minnifield was called for a 30-yard pass interference penalty on the first play of the march. The Steelers ran the clock down to 11 seconds before Anderson booted his 12th field goal of the season. Vikings 16, Lions 13 In Minneapolis, Jan Stenuer, who missed a 37-yard field goal with 4:12 left, booted a 28-yarder at time exe- cted. Minnesota won the 6-4, a 16-3 victory over the Detroit Lions. Darrin Nelson returned a punt 21 yards with 1:54 left to move Minnesota to the Lions"36. Two plays later, Nelson spurted loose for a 23-yard gain to the 12, setting up Stenerud's third field goal of the game which gave both teams a 5-4 record. Nelson finished with a career-high 122 yards on 25 carries. William Frizzell intercepted Minnesota's Tommy Kramer with 1:04 left in the third quarter at the Vik The Minnesota defense stopped james Jones on the on back 10-back pass. ings' 28 to set up Eddie Murray's 29-yard field goal, which tied the score 13-13. Stenerud booted two field goals in the first half to give the Vikings a 6-3 lead. The Vikings took a 13-3 lead early in the third quarter. Backup quarterback Wade Wilson relieved Kramer for three plays, firing a 19-yard pass to Leo Lewis to reach the Lions' 21. Kramer, who left when offensive lineman Curtis Rouse accidently stepped on his instep, connected with Steve Jordan for 20 yards. Ted Brown scored from 1 yard to give the Vikings a 10-point lead with 9:23 left in the quarter. In Foboxor, Mass., Steve Grogan hit Greg Hawthorne off a flea-flicker for a fourth-quarter touchdown and ran 1 yard for the winning score to rally the New England Patriots to a 17-13 victory over the reeling Miami Dolphins. New England trailed 13-3 entering the final quarter, but Brogian twice moved his team 80 yards as the Knicks won their fourth consecutive game. With 4th-and-1 at Miami's 28, Grogan handed off to Mosi Tatupu who flipped the ball back to the 11-year veteran. Grogan then connected with Haworthon on a 28-yard scoring toss, drawing the Patriots within 13-10. On New England's next possession, Grogan finished the 10-play drive by rolling to his right and running untouched into the end zone. Dan Fouts threw for 284 yards and two touchdown passes — both to Wes Chandler, helping the San Diego Chargers 30. Broncos 10 The touchdown passes to Chandler of 19 and 8 yards sandwiched around the first of three Bob Thomas field goals from the Chargers to a 17-0 first-half lead. Rich Karlis missed two field goals and Gerald Wilhite fumbled in the San Diego end zone to stall the Broncos' comeback attempts. Denver fell to 6-3 while the Chargers improved to 4-5. Chargers to a 30-10 upset of the Denver Broncos in San Diego. Gary Anderson's 16-yard touchdown run boosted San Diego to a 24-3 lead in the third quarter after Willisthie's fumble. After Billy Ray Smith intercepted Denver $^\circ$ 10 Elbow at the Broncos' 15, the Chargers lost 3 yards and had to settle for a 35-yard field goal by Thomas and a 27-3 lead. Seahawks 33. Raiders 3 In Seattle, Byron Walker raced 56 yards with a blocked field goal and Terry Taylor returned an interception 75 yards for a score to highlight Seattle's second quarter that carried the Seahawks over the Los Angeles Raiders. Dave Krieg started the second-period scoring barrage with a 27-yard touchdown pass to Curt Warner for the Seahawks, 5-4. The victory was Seattle's first against a team above. 500 this season. The Raiders, 6-3, had their six-game winning streak broken, losing for the first time since Marc Wilson was in injured quarterback Jim Plinket. The Seattle victory, coupled with Denver's loss to San Diego, moved the Seahawks to within one game of the Broncos and Raiders, the AFC West co-leaders. Rams 28. Saints 10 tight end Tony Hunter had his best day as a pro, lifting the Los Angeles Rams to a 28-10 triumph over the New Orleans Saints. Dieter Brock threw for 256 yards and two touchdowns in Anaheim and Jets 35, Colts 17 Ken O'Brien threw a career-high three touchdown passes and Freeman McNeil rushed for 149 yards on 26 carries in Indianapolis to lead the New York Jets to a 35-17 victory over Indianapolis. Cornerback Kerry Glenn recovered two fumbles and intercepted a pass as the Jet defense, ranked first in the American Football Conference, shut down the Colts. New York had five sacks and pressured Indianapolis quarterbacks throughout the game. 49ers 24. Eagles 13 32 passes for 255 yards and one touchdown in San Francisco to lead the San Francisco 49ers to a 24-13 triumph over the Philadelphia Eagles. Matt Cavanna, starting for the injured Joe Montana, completed 20 of San Francisco, 5-4, moved ahead 21-3 with the opening possession of the second half when Wendell Tylier yards for his second touchdown. Bengals 23. Bills 17 The Bengals, 4-5, trailed 10-6 at halftime, but controlled the ball in the second half behind the running of James Brooks and Larry KINNEBrew. Boomer Esiason threw two downpasses in Orchard Park, no propelling the Cincinnati Benga 23-17 victory over the Buffalo Bills. A 22-yard touchdown pass from Esiason to tight end M.L. Harris. Sports Almanac American Conference East Cleveland 4 5 0 444 150 132 Cincinnati 4 5 0 444 260 278 Pittsburgh 4 5 0 444 183 153 Houston 4 5 0 444 162 183 N.Y. Jets | W | L | T | Pct. | PF | PA | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New England | 6 | 3 | 0 | .667 | 17 | 14 | | Miami | 5 | 4 | 0 | .556 | 230 | 194 | | Indianaapolis | 6 | 3 | 0 | .353 | 172 | 168 | | Los Angeles | 6 | 3 | 0 | .353 | 172 | 168 | NFI LA Raiders 6 3 0 .667 196 187 Denver 3 6 0 .667 219 181 Denver 5 4 0 .556 211 202 Seattle 5 4 0 .556 221 204 Kansas City 4 6 0 .667 314 203 W L. W. T. Pct. PF PA Dallas 6 2 0 129 NY Giants 6 2 0 167 Washington 5 4 0 556 Philadelphia 5 4 0 158 Philadelphia 5 4 0 444 National Conference East WRITING A TERM PAPER? Attend the Research Paper Workshop FREE! 52 Lovinghearts.org MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Come watch the game with Harry! FREE DRINK with any sandwich purchase FREE! when you ask for the Monday Night Football Special! HARRY BEAR'S CHA PICOT CO. BOYLLE Tuesday, Nov. 5 7-9 p.m. 308 Dyche Presented by the Student Assistance Center and the Reference Dept. of Watson Library. O STL STRONG MILITARY CENTER - - - - - fields the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187 Specials A This Week's Specials Monday Dbl. Hamburger $2.50 Chips 16 oz. Drink Wednesdav Hotdogs Nachos w/Cheese 16 Oz. Drink Hoagie 16 oz. Drink THE KANSAS UNION HAWK'S NEST Mexican Plate Spanish Rice Burrito Taco 16 oz. Drink $2.70 Hot Beef Sandwich Mashed Potatoes Gravy 16 oz. Drink Wednesday 9-3:30 Level 2 $1.80 Thursday Friday The Leading Edge Model D PC-compatible computer will sell at $1495, offer four slots, up to 640K memory, double floppy drives, graphics capability built in and monochrome or RGB monitor output on the system board. N GANTON, MA—In a move assigned to break through the price barrier of the IBM compatible PC world, Leading Edge Hardware Products Inc. has announced the introduction of the Model D PC. Leading Edge Model D: High Power. Low Price The Model D is more than the equivalent of a $3000 IBM PC. It provides integrated support for both RGB color and high resolution monochrome displays. In addition, graphics support is provided for the more popular business programs on the standard hi-res monochrome monitor. This is a feature not provided for on IBM's text only monochrome system. The user can also expand the system to its full 640K memory capacity by simply adding chips to the system board. This allows lower cost memory expansion while conserving valuable expansion slots; the Model D has four slots, all available to the user. In essence, the Model D vides no loss of system functionality-induced an increase of functionality - in a package that requires 28% less desk space than most competitive systems - all at a price of just $1495. In essence; the Model D pro- The base Model D includes a clean high resolution monitor, 256K, 2 diak drives, parallel and serial ports on a clock/calendar. The keyboard addresses IBM-user complaints with typewriter layout and extra large return and shift keys. The system comes with a full Leading Edge's reputation for quality support and service, and Model D may be the premier IBM compatible PC on the market. Computer Outlet, 804 New Hampshire, Lawrence, is the first dealer of the Model D in Kansas. Bill Killough of Computer Outlet and Performance will make this the hotest selling micro in 1985." DRESS FOR SUCCESS BS only $7995* R. JOHNS *Offer expires Nov. 30,1985 K. JOHN'S most popular traditional COLLEGE styles, the Ladies' Flair and the Men's Legend, are now $79.95 in Valadium. $™ - Four week delivery * Over 50 curriculums * Lifetime warranty * Satisfaction guaranteed layhawk Bookstore "At the top of Naismith Hill" R., JOHNS, LTD. come in & see us. 704 Mass. THE GRUNDER MAN 704 Mass. Downtown we also deliver 843-7398 Central Yesterday's results L.A Rams 8 1 4 891 121 127 San Francisco 8 1 0 556 129 167 New Orleans 3 6 0 333 173 235 Atlanta 1 8 0 111 171 254 NY Giants 22, Tampa Bay 20 Washington 44, Atlanta 10 Ohio State 39, Cincinnati 23, Buffalo 17 Pittsburgh 11, Cleveland 9 Tennessee 6, Houston 25, Kansas City 20 New England 17, Miami 13 Cleveland 28, San Francisco 22, Seattle 33, La Raiders 32 LA Rambs 28, New Orleans 10 Boston 25, Oakland 10 San Francisco 24, Philadelphia 13 Toon's game 7 American Flyers COMMONWEALTH THEATRES AMERICAN MUSEUM FRI. 5:00 Daily 7:20 9:35 SAT. 4, Sun. 8, Mon. 10 A wonderful surprise. 123 MORNING WELL, Pine Hill "A wonderful surprise." GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONES CHARLES BRADSON DEATH WISH 3 THE FILM BY MARY MAYER VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1053 Daily '5:00 7:30 9:30 Sat. & Sun.'2:45 LIVE DIE LA Aug 16 - Sep 28 2023 1 JAGGED EDGE HILLCREST 2 917.458.8040 TEL PHONE # 8040 --- 100 JAGGED EDGE IN THE NEW ENTERTAINMENT BUILDING RENO WILLIAMS The Adventure Begins HILLCREST 3 512 AND 1024 GODZILLA Daily *4:45 7:20 9:30 Sat. & Sun. *2:30 CINEMA 1 JUST AND IMPRIME TELEFONO KARLISCH GIZZILLA STEPHEN KING'S 1985 ALL NEW! POP SILVER BULLET CINEMA 2 1137 AND 1994 B SISSY SPACEK MARIE a true story Fri. *4:55. Daily 7:20 9:25 Sat. & Sun. *2:50 *4:55 *Bargain Show QUALITY AUDIO—THE BEST PRICE! C. D. PLAYER SALE YAMAHA $295 *State of the Art C.D.* *3-Beam laser pickup*. *3-way music search--play*. *Multi-function indicators*. $398 LUXMAN - Separate analog & digital power supply. - Copper film capacitors. - Convertible DL converters. - Sharpen-starcoil ground patterns. + GREAT DEALS ON ALL FLOOR MODEL DEMOS $295 to $1600 All Models On Sale TERMS: We provide you with new factory warranty. All our items are new and come with condition and will be completely checked by our service center. We are not responsible for any other services, but all purchases may be purchased at the day following delivery. We are sure to make a new demonstration appointment. Thank you. KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO-VIDEO shop 1 Monday, Nov. 4, 1985 University Daily Kansan Classified Ads 11 KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 The University Daily Words | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 2 Weeks ---|---|---|---|--- 0-15 | 2.60 | 3.75 | 5.25 | 8.25 16-20 | 2.90 | 4.25 | 6.00 | 9.30 21-25 | 3.20 | 4.75 | 7.00 | 10.30 For every 5 words add: | 30# | 50# | 75# | 1.05 CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 o'm Tuesday Friday 4 o'm Wednesday Monday 4 o'm Thursday Friday 4 o'm Friday Wednesday 4 o'm Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues allowed in classified display advertisements except for logos. Classified Display ... $4.40 see column high POLICIES - Words set in ALL.CAPS count as 2 words. - Words set in BOLD.FACE count as 3 words. - Drawing in A.4 m = 2 working days prior - Words set in HOLD! A FACE DOES IT WHEN! * Deadline is 4 p.m. - 2 working days prior to - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established - advertising * Blind ads - please add a $4 service charge. - Bind box ads — pixie-net change • Check must ads — self-classified ads masked • District Daily Karsan correct insertion of any advertisement • No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in or simply by calling the Business office at 804-4358. - Teachers are not provided by Classroom or classified by grade. ANNOUNCEMENTS ARAH ISRAELI CONFLICT: How many minutes to midnight? Saturday, the 21st of March, p. Wednesday, 6 a.m., Kuwait Union Women's Club. PRE-REGISTRATION BLUES? Need help with exploring career options? Call the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center at 864-3523 for an appointment or drop off materials by Friday. RESEARCH PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP. Learn about: defining a topic; using the library; taking notes; and organizing/ writing the paper. Tuesday, November 5. 7-9 AM at Student Assistance Center, 120 Presents by the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 844-4064 Rent' 19% T. TV $2.98 a month Smarty's TV $7. 14 W. rent: 842.7537 Mon. Sat. 8-10:30 14 W. rent: 842.7537 Mon. Sat. 8-10:30 RekVCR with 2, movies, overnag 814.90 and 814.80, wrt 23rd.8453.91, Mon. 6, Sun. i-5, 5. SKI COLORADO over Thanksgiving! Rent a condo ski馆. include sauna, hot tub, pool; condo SKI COLORADO All inclusive package for $299 limited offer, cash or information/registra- tion fee VIDEGTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENKAMENTE SERIES SRIES, November 8-14, 2015 Exams: 40-Listening and Notetaking, FREE! Register to attend at the Student Assistance Center (SAC). The Secrets Out! - 4 women and 4 men halls (50 per hall) - friendly atmosphere - lexa expensive because of shared responsibilities - self governing close to campus Scholarship Halls are Spring Semester Openings Anyone may apply. Applications available in 123 Strong Hall Deadline for applications 11/8. NIGHT LIFE Mobile DJ Dance Music A mixture of modern dance and pop music, when it's time to dance, call the mobile system. ENTERTAINMENT THE FAR SIDE Board Meeting for members Wed., Nov. 6 6 p.m. Hillel House Hillel Deli Dinner Wed., Nov. 6 7 p.m. Hillel House 940 Mississippi $3 non-members $2 members Everyone Welcome! FOR RENT Apartment available next to Union. Starting Jan or imminent. Carmen S 844-431. Evening Jan 22 through Feb 5. Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at BERKELEY FLATS, Vacations available now and as semester. Plan ahead, lease now for next year. 843-2116. Attractive 2 bedroom condominium for reef. 13/baths, CA, FP, range, refrigerator, microwave, DW, WD hookups, paid cable TV, swimming pool. Walking distance to KU. Available 1. Leaf. Cayse, carpeted studio near campus at Missouri university; December 1, 749-6166 Available Sublease-1.1-g bedroom, gas & water paid Available Nov. 15. Call m.p.841-5797. Efficiency apartments and rooms for next to campus. Utilities paid. Bed 842-108-6. Cooperative living lovers your expenses while expanding your mind. Room available at Rainbow House for $110/month. Call 853-7978 (after 2 p.m.) to become part of our living environment. Furnished rooms from $10 with some utilities Two bikes from Kansas University. No pets By GARY LARSON Waiter! Waiter! What are these worms doing in my suit? Ha! Just Kidding. But seriously, folks... So I says to the guy, "Take my life...please." Welcome ladies and gentlemen...This is my first dead performance At the Comedians' Cemetery ... IF WEIGHTS AREN'T AVAILABLE, ALMOST ANYTHING NEPTY WILL SUFFICE! ON YOU ARE NOT SERIOUS. ON CAMPUS 2-Br. Apts. for KU students Jayhawker Towers - For 2, 3 or 4 persons - 10-Month Leases - All Utilities Paid - Individual Contract Option - Limited Access Doors Available - Swimming Pool - Air Conditioned - Laundry Facilities - Enclosed or Unlined 03 W 15th - Furnished or Unfurnished A GOOD TO WIND UP YOUR 30 MINUTES OF SPECIAL ROCK BOMB ROMANTIC AREROSIS IS TO SEND AN HOUR OR TWO AMURTONS A LITTLE IMMORTAL... $800 OFF FIRST MONTH'S RENT. One & two bedrooms available at beginning of $800/month. All apartments have CA, gas heat, DW, PF refrig. Energy efficient and on bus route. K4 647-4557 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Sublease: 2 bedroom apartment on KU bus route. Free phone installation, free cable, off-street phone. Rooms for rent. Special Nov. rate. Clean and quiet home. No drugs! Drug 749-7676. Mark. **BAND AND CHANCE TO SUMBERLEAVE:** Very nice 3 br triplen in NW area. Close to campus, newly painted, off-street parking, DW, CA, Wet, +10 day weekends. $25. After and weeks: #423. BLOOM COUNTY Sublease a 3 bedroom furnished apartment, Tanguevel Apartments, Cambridge CM1 1A826-2477, 814-821-2490 www.tanguevel.com Subluease, own bedroom in nice duplex near campus. Quiet, sit at atmosphere $167 plus mcom. Sublease 1 bedroom furnished apartment at Sundance apartments. On bus route C41 844-2510 or 795-868-3051. Sublase 2B5R, 28TH, Apt. D, dwauh/storage rn. energy efficient, baltic, west greec- ton FOR SALE 1 bedroom apts. from $199 some utilities paid. Near downtown and near schools. No pets please. Solid wood drawer chest from $88. The Furniture Barn. 1811 W. 6th, Lawrence. CROW! LET'S GET PHYSICAL, CLARBY COMIC'S READERS 0 Pc. sectional with a recliner in each end only The Routable Bar, LW1, WL8, WQ, Iawrangery 3 pc. Early American Living Room group $499 Pioneer Bare, 111 W. 11th Lawrence Bunked Complete $199. Furniture Barn. 1811 W. brown. Lawrence Sofa, Lovestead and Chair $199. The Furniture Barn 1811 W 60th St. Bedroom Suites starting at $199. The Furniture Barn 1831 W. 6th St. New shipment of recklers just arrived, on sale starting at 89p. The Furniture Store 1611 W. nth St. 50% Off on select bedding. Hurry! White linen. 30% Off on a piece. The Furniture Barn, 1 W 11th St. Boat the Christmas Rush with 90 hour financing-free. The Furniture Bury 1811 W. 6th St. 50% Off on selective bedding, Hurry! White lams. Baseball cards and sports nontainag. Buy, Sell and Trade 1 J's' Baseball cards. Open 10-4 M-S. Sportsbooks CARPET 350,000 square yards in a rainbow of col- ors and sizes. Big Bod's Use Carpets, 841-1080. Brass, Wood & Glass. 5 p. discite $380. The Furniture Barn. 1811 W. 81th. Lawrence. CD Player. Lowest Price/Brand New. $200 and its yours. 883-3326, Ask for Mark. Cinema Books, Playbys, Playbys etc. max.Male Nursery School - Tue-Fri, Sat & Sun 10-5-11 New Hampshire CLEAR! '60° clear window plastic. Mylar or Polyethylene, '60° or '100° bluntened Emuency. For Sale - Technology Quartz Turntable 125h, Jihny 100lA Speaker 160w pair, MXR Alarm 180w, Kenwood Tower 100, Sony Cassette Deck 100, Call 842-6605 Ensure living room suite! All 6 pcs only £29. The factory select kitchen is perfect for any living space, and can be customized with the tessin fabric. Complete set with sofa, loveseat, bed, chairs and table. Top coffee table, lamp table, lamp table only £29.99. GOVENMENT HOMES from $1(u(IURase). Also delinquent tax property. Call 1-855-687-6807 Hewlett-Packard HP-41CV with card reader, brand new, $280. 988-1-273-3744 E2M terminate starting at $43.80. Open over their data port, connect to the guarantors, 738 New Hampshire Inks in Ks and CT. KWALITY COMICS--Comic Books, Science Fiction and simulation games. 111 Hrs. 644-7299 Gulail for sale: @"Gibson SG G/w original tail marker, great Great action, excellent con- trol, $49. Cahl. IBM-PC71 compatible computer. Only $799! Call 849-7628, ask for Charlie. Phone answering machine, sunlamp, jewelry, jewel sweaters, desk study, lamps, twin bedspread, blanket. Honda Scooter 200 Aerod-80 Red. Miles like new. Includes helmet. Great for campus transport. Prince Glassic tennis racket. Very good condition. Near offer. Call Jill 864-9774 Philip Glass alumina-INSTEIN ON THE BEACH+brand new-half price. 841-216. Recinners, recinners, recinners. We have vinyl, herculon or velvet recinners. These are all brand new, most are still in the box, available in a rainbow of colors. Have 24 man size recinners for only $195. See our website www. Waterbed Liquidators, 728 New Hampshire, where every day is like going to an auction! by Berke Breathed Sterling Bracelet; mint condition, cuff on wrist, classical style, $35 or best offer. Call 842-602-9801. Recinners, reciners, recinners! We have vinyl, hercules or velvet recinners. These are all brand new, most are still in the box, available in a rainbow of colors. We have 24 man recinners for only £35 each. We also have Waterbed Liquidators, 728 New Hampshire, where every day is like going to an auction! AT THE SAME TIME, WORK OFF TINY POST-NEOPHERIC TENSION WITH A UNITY, BRIKS WILD K! MASTER! PICK IT UP! PUT THE FELLOW ON METAL! WHAT DO YOU NOT DO? ONE DOO-HOO BURGER-MEENY GREASE! AND THEN REWARD YOURSELF WITH A CUCUMBER SALAD AND PACOACH YOGURT. YOU RECEIVE IT, MY HEART THE MOST COMPATIBLE American PC/XT Computer from $95. Full year warranty. Authorized Dealer, Distributor, Think Mirco, Inc. 843-525-Bus $95, Lawrence, KS 60044. Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sense to use them. 1) As study Guide. 2) For class practice. 3) In the book. 4) Analysis of Western Civilization 'available now at Town Court, The Jayhawk Bookstore,' and more. Tried of looking everywhere for QUALITY TIRES & WHEELS at reasonable price? Well, you don't have to anyone! At IMPORT PLUS, all major retailers offer free delivery or parallele with MAIL-ORDER). Come in and check us out *161* 800 W.23rd (Bespine Pizza Hut) 749-5437. WATERBED: Queen, includes: Pedaled, waistless mattress, 5 year warranty, My cost $470, will take hair价 or best offer-$822-3299 AUTO SALES Collector Stereo, Mint and used. Canada, U.S. Europe and more. Open 10–S, Sat, Sun only. 81N New Hampshire, Booth 28 (Second Room). OLYMPUS OM-16 with 90-120 mm Europe and more. Open 10- New Hampshire, Bounce 28 (Second Room). OLYMPUS OM-18 with 80-210 zoom $200. O.B.O. 419-0964. 175 mercury Monarch 4-door door a/c /c 75,000 miles .$1,000. Call 843-1223 after 6 p.m. 1972 Mercury. Runs great. $500 or best offer. Call 841-6288 after 4 p.m. 26/30 mpg, Asking $1800 call after 6 p.m. 841-8430 1976 Ford Mustang, new stereo, new tires, look great, call Youen, 841-1823 1894 BMW 318, Low mileage, all electric, custom interior. Beautiful. Call 749-8543. 106 PONTIAI Phoenix LJ, Automatic, AIH, Stereo, FWD and great MPG. Best Offer 824 1977 Chevy Impala auto, Cruise, new tires, 1978 Backreg Alpine, new paint. 841-7595 Is it True You Can Buy Jeep for 444 through the today's facts? call (323) 724-1424, Exxon 234 78 VW Scirocco - great car inside/out. AM/FM cassette/equalizer, new radials, $1500, call Late '82 Calce GT Liftback, AT overtive, AC, cass, radio, cruise, PB, PS, low hills, exc. cord, no flaws, alloys, new prey and exhaust. Need to, market $600 B01 841 1269. 749-547 day 31 LOST/FOUND Found: Small young, breeds, beige and black tabby cat with yellow-green eyes and white collars Found… Texas Instruments calculator, Oct 31st in parking lot at Compustate. Ask for LOST, KEY: on campus, on parkside in Union or chain of schools. Call it Melissa's Keya. Call it found, 864-600-7223 HELP WANTED Babysitter wanted for 3 children in our home Prefer daily from 9:12, will consider 2 or 3 children. Child care center feeds full-time, part-time teachers. Call for appt. 749-0235. EARN MONKEY ON ALL THE MAGAZINES SOLD ON MUNK. NEED PEOPLE TO POST INFORMATION. GOOD PROFIT. WRITE, BPC. 62128 HARD. OVERLAND PARK, KS 66214 HOUSEKEEPER - Responsible woman needed for Tuesday and wednesday. Must have own oven, stove, refrigerator, microwave, cooking and transporting a fifth grade girl to and from dance classes after school. Negotiable. Good drivers? - Pymriel Pizza is looking for a few HOD drivers. If you have your own car, are presently deliveries or of Laverne pizza at Pymrel Pizza, you can sign and sigh that scratch the top of your car, come who's seeing fun AND MAKING MONEY. They're Brad Bill after 4. You'll be glad you did. Help wanted: waitresses and kitchen positions, help with kitchen available. Apply in person County Council. join "NANNY NETWORK" of over 250 placed by us. You should enjoy creative childcare, be comfortable with computer use and condition for great salary, benefits and working conditions. Round trip air transportation provided. A minimum of four nights is required to choose from IHFELING HAND INC, III Ship Rd. Willem, CT 96897 (800) 834-1742 NO FEIE RESEARCH AID NEEDED for data collection in Topeka with children with severe disabilities. Also data entry and summary in Lawrence. Must be currently enrolled, have reliable transportation, and have a record of attendance. Prefer someone with behavioral observation and/or data entry experience. Send resume to Lynda Powell, AAS138 Behavioral Science, KSW 6449 by Nov. 8 EOAAA Part-time housekeeping position. 15-20 hours, M/F; Mature, dependable applicants. Must be available over breaks. Call Buckingham Palace 843-6284. KANU-FM is seeking a broadcast engineering aid, to perform electronic maintenance on broadcast equipment, install and support parts and supplies, staff research, maintenance of decr. records and other duties as required by the company. cast and recording equipment, assist in purchasing parts and supplies, staff research, maintenance and training. You will be assigned by the Assistant Director for Operations and Engineering. Qualifications: a demonstrated knowledge of audio recording technology communicate clearly, and keep accurate records and files. One or two years previous work in office. communicate clearly, and keep accurate records and files. One or two years previous work in elec- tric design was required until filled. Send resume or call Beshir until filled. Send resume to KAUAN- FM Broadcasting Hall 60445, 804-4330 Travel Field Opportunity. Gain valuable marketing experience while earning money. Campus representative model immediate for spring break trip to Florida. Call Brabent Salmon The University of Kansas Budget Office has two position openings for continuous half-time student assistants with possible full-time employment. The position requires an understanding of positions will assist with the process of budget and accounting transfers for the University's budgets. Position holders must have a background in counting and have an opportunity to work within the University's financial environment. This position requires a minimum of seven years of experience and a clinical or in性 education. It requires good typing ability and proficiency with word processing and spreadsheeting. You should have graduate status and good written and oral communications skills. $400.00 to $400.00 per month for four weeks beginning 15, 185. Position start dates are flexible. For information call Jana Hunt, Budget Office 664-3198. Applications available in 519 www.unk.edu/careers. Travel Field, Opportunity, Gain valuable Blade, twin blondees to meet white bum bee on Naismith Halloween party. Please respond. Witty, attractive female, 28, seeks intelligent, singe male, 18-25, rebel and into politics. Send YOU ARE NOT ALONE, Lebaian gaye peer counselors. For referral call 811-2438 or 864-3891. Sponsored by Headquarters & GLOSK. Funded by Student Senate. Female Adult A.M. 7:30-12:00. P.M. 10-12. Technophile #470,0288. MISCELLANEOUS Witty, attractive female, 20, seeks intelligent, sincere male, 18-26, rebel and intentive. Send resume to U.S.A., Attn: J. H. McKenzie. FREE! - Shelby mts 8, mo; sunday, shabs. Very cute. friendly. Must place ASP. 842-1510 Gir is in red '79 Masking looker for black convertible Masking with plate "WATNG" convertible Masking with plate "WATNG" PERSONAL Laura • Beware of ketchup bottles and folding paper that della gamma in the night. Devon Della Gammas who write on paper towels end up working in the restaurant. WORD OF THE WEEK PATCH. Who you know or are. I want to meet, Where, When. Respond here. LORI H. I LOVE YOU! Brought to you by: Caspar's friends at General Dynamics. summy Rn, Walk Underwear and the Dead Bird nests are a class attacking the snop and the stump. Cockaigne (kah cane) n. An imaginary land of easy and luxurious living. BUS. PERSONAL 116 Undergraduate positions available in the LAE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY. Make your voice heard. Filing deadline Nov. 8. Nomination forms available in 210 - I Strong (No petition needed) Aerobics/Style. Gals and Guys—fun, good. Four times weekly—M,W,R evenings and Saturday morning. Teri-841-6237 or Ardi-842-0987. COMPHERENZIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advance outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater area call for appointment. 486-1600. Health Insurance for Students Short-term and longer term insurance available Call Dutton Insurance. Lui 641-3529 Rent-19" Color T V $28.00 a month Curtis 50" Color T V 42.937.787 Man - Nat 9-30 9am; Wm 10-30am portals to the computer, a support attitude adjustment Computer Repair AlphaOmega Computer Jayhawk, Go Hawaiian is the 1858 Homecoming Theme. Go Hawaiian with the best, Paradise Found shirts and pants from The Etc. Shop. 72 Massachusetts Department of Public Safety 11-30 pm M-T. Match 12-5 Sunday. Modelling and research partnership—shooting new business in the research field Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and prices on apparel. You can价优! Design your it and our talented artists. 2201 W. 52th (Behind Gibson's) 841-4349. MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 of.the day's entrees & soups A SKT CULTUR RISING! Skateboards & Accessories QUALITY STUFF ONLY UPTOWN BICYCLES 1337 Mass. 749-0636 CORPORATE CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK New from California. Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure. 316-284-7542. PO Box 3022, Wichita. 67210. See in Munday & Monday! REWARD Free Trip to DAYTON plus Commission Money WANTED: Organized group or individual to promote the 1 Jump Break Trip to Dayton. If informed, call 400-453-9847 immediately! Rent*18.9% Color T.V. $42.88 m. smitty's Vivo 147 W.23rd, 845-7571. Sat 9:30-9:49; Sun 1-5 Say on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, jerseys and capres. Shirt by Swells Tensands of & R Albums. Or else also. Tensands of & R Albums. Or else also. New Albums 11. New Albums 11. Buy, Sell, Sell, Sell. WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from 75, or sunning at South Padre Island and Daytona Beach from 891; hurry,伞 Sunsuit Tours for more information toll free 1-800-321-5011 or contact a Sunsuits representative on winter. Break count on sunshade! Bike Sale 10% off all Bianchi Models Touring, Sport, Racing and All Terrain Bicycles DON'T MISS THE LAWRENCE DEUT OF SST RECORDING ARTSISTS THE MEAT PUPPETS. SAT. NOV. 9 AT THE OUTHOUSE (4 MI. E OF MASN ON 15h) HEY SINGLES Share your college activities with a compatible companion. Our unique VIDEO INFO TOUCHON system symbolizes almost months of barbecues or singles games. For more information HARPER LAWYER CARLISON INFO THE KU KONNECTION HAS OUT LAWRENCE! THE KU KONNECTION CONDUCTS a system of dating which works. COMPUTER DATING with a personable touch. THE KU KONNECTION has it!! It'll find out about us by simply asking the THE KU KONNECTION P.O. Box 3054 Lawrence, KS 80044 MATH TUTOR - Bob Means holds an A in math from K.U. where 602, 102, 116 and 137 were among the top schools. He also attended a nationally in 1975 and often tutors elementary students. **WEDDINGS:** Video/Audio Movies: E82-905 SERVICES OFFERED Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716 MERGE CASES TREASURE OUTLAWED - enhanced with library RESEARCH organized through WORLD PROCESSING, editing, revising. Victor Kirk 843-724-9501 TYPING BIRTHRIGHT—Free Pregnancy Testing. Con- firmational Counseling 843-621-8911 RADIUM BABER SHOP 1033 Massachusetts, town of all intricacies, 404-829-5630. No appointment required. 1,100 pages. Job no too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing, Judy. 849-7945. 24-Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes, Essays and fast service. 811-500-6300. Best fast and fast service. 811-500-6300. A3 professional typing: Term papers, Theses, Resumes, Reports: Use IMSetter (84-2346) Requirement: 84-2346 p.m. out by to p.m. same day A DIFFERENT Service. Tape TRANSCRIP- TIONS a speciality. Experienced. Jeanette Shaf- Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard University, Sirina-Simon-Cora, pica type Call Nancy 861-123-4567 All Kinds of Typing; GOOD IMPRESSIONS Fast, affordable; spelling/punctuation errors cor- rected A-Z Wordpress/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-180. A. L. SMITT TYPING SERVICE-Experienced- papers, papers, resume, micellaneous 843-802-8571 Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term papers, law papers, dissertations, etc.Sharp X256 with memory. 842-4754 or 843-2671, p.m. 11 n m. AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing/Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics, Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates. 749-1118 DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced. JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service. TRANSCRIPT also; standard cassette tape. 843-8977. Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone 842-2310 after 5:30; Bark. ExactType - Quality for all your typing needs. Disk Storage. Reasonable. Call Mary, 843-7446 or email: dsserrell@mary.edu. RECORDY TYPING, Letters, theses, disserta- tions, application, Spelling corrected Call #824-7061 DISSERTATIONS / TIRESSES / LAW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphics, ONE-DAY Service available on shorter student papers (up to 30 pagen) Call Kathy, Mommys 'Typing', 843-8787 TRILOG Wordprocessing. CONSISTENTIOUS WORDprocessing. CONSISTENTIOUS WORDprocessing. Will accept rash texts. EXPERIENCE TYPESIT Tern terms, theses, experimentally correct spellling. Phase 89-954, Mrs. Wright TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications,umes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841 6254. TOP_NOTCH16professional word processing. manuscript documents, theses, texts, quality print products. WANTED THE WORDDOCTORS: Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? 843-3147. Bass Player* Vocalist for working band perusing the orchestra, conducting with Sargent & Serkus. Inquire on 709-642-1918 or sargentserkus.com. Bred, 769 127th St., New York, NY 10023. Female roomsate for second semester 2 room; male roomsate for third semester, pool, completely furnished. £145 plus 1/2 £100 per person. Female roommate wanted to share 2 Bd. Ap. WED, C.A./C.H. newly remodeled, furnished. Close to campus & Downtown, on bus route 315/ utilities 3/CA/LIT, 449-3835, Leann or Luca HOUSEMATE(S) for great house. Close to KU. 840-302-7500 Looking for female resident to occupy room at Naushtih Hall for the second semester. Rooms may be limited, so don't wait any longer. Call Diane, 841-4777. Male Roommate. Larged two bedroom apartment. You will have been given a roommate. On Hosts Road 748-727/18 Responsible male roommate for spring- summer. Meadowbrook, two bedroom apt., very clean. Roommate needed immediately to share a nice dairie at Traiturain with fireplace, etc. Have own bedroom (unfurnished). $140 (negotiable) plus 1/3 utilities. #81-2602 Two Female roommates for beautiful, renovated 4 Bdn Room, separate bedrooms, 1026 Ohio, $175-$200 mo. plus utilities. Call Julie or Marci at 749-1969. WANTED - 2 SEASON BASKETBALL TICKETS PRICE NEGOTIABLE. 842-8911 WANTED: Roommate for Spring semester. Wonderful 3 Bedroom Bedowntown Apt. Close to campus, Cable, A/C, Pool, $115 per month. We're nice, fun people. 842-825 WANTED: Roommate for spring semester. Wonderful 3 bedroom Meadowbrook apartment. Close to campus, A/C, pool, $115 month. We're nice, fun people. 842-3625. armored non-smoking, female to subunit apartment $132.50 / % utilities or 814-800-8680 Get Something Going! If you can't buy it . . . bargain. Don't do without the things you really want simply because of today's high prices. Sometimes you can find better items in stores are listed at lower prices in classified. Sometimes you can even buy a second hand item from many items in classified are sold by private parties. Don't if (without—do it with 0 Kansas Classifieds 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 12 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Monday, Nov. 4, 1985 Apartheid Groups plan rally for this afternoon By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Students against apartheid will rally at noon today in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall without Chancellor Gene A. Budig, who last week declined an invitation to speak. The rally, sponsored by the Black Student Union, KU Committee on South Africa and the Kansas Political Awareness Committee, will begin with a mock funeral march from the Chi Omega fountain to the lawn in front of Stauffer Flint. Speeches by students will follow the rally's theme, "Aparthid Hits Home." The KU Committee on South Africa, Blacks Against Apartheid, Black Student Union and KU Democrats sent a letter, which was written Wednesday, asking Budig to speak on racism on campus, apartheid and divestment. The letter was signed by Mark Parker, a Lawrence resident and a member of the committee, and Aaron Lucas, Chattanooga, Tenn., senior and a member of the other three groups. Several members of the groups sponsoring the rally said last week that they were disappointed that Budig refused to speak and that they disagreed with his reasons. Members of these groups said their reactions to Budig's letter, which declined the invitation on Thursday, were personal feelings, not group responses. Lucas said people in South Africa were dying because of racial violence and he wanted Budig to address that issue. "He says he's not taking a stand," Lucas said. "He's going to remain neutral. But by not taking a stand, he is taking a stand against divestment. "I appreciate the reply, but I'm disappointed he decided not to speak." Lucas said Budig told them in the letter that their efforts "to increase an understanding of the moral abhence of apartheid ... and to foster abortion on the earth to end apartheid like important contributions to vigorous open forum that is a university." end KU's participation in aparth end KU's participation in aparth by asking the Kansas University Endowment Association to help them do business in South Africa. "If what were doing is good, then why isn't he helping us?" Lucas said. The groups have been working to In his letter, Budig said, "There are people of equal good-will who share a common abhorrence of apartheid but who disagree as to the best, most effective and most efficient strategies for ending apartheid. "While I may have a personal point of view about one or the other of these strategies I do not believe that it is proper for me, as Chancellor, to champion one strategy above another. To do so would be in use position and my office in an inappropriate manner." "We didn't ask him to come out and take a stand. We wanted him to elaborate on more of his opinions. In maintaining a neutral position, he's taking a position against divestment." Dan Parkinson, Scott City graduate student and a member of the committee, said KU governing bodies, such as Student Senate and University Council, had voted for the Endowment Association's divestment. "I think that he has a responsibility to speak." Parkinson said of Budig. "Regardless of his own opinions, he should come out and face us. Jane Ungerman, Lawrence senior and a member of the KU Committee on South Africa, said yesterday that in an April 25 letter the chancellor took a stand against divestment. "As the chancellor, he has the ability to act as a mediator between us and the Endowment Association," Ungerman said. "We would like to see him do that." In his most recent letter, Budig said, "I believe that I can do more to fight racism by articulating your rights to rally and to debate and to organize than I can by entering into a discussion in which my personal point of view is the issue." Listeners donate $55,000 to station KANU reaches goal in fund drive When KANU, the University's FM public radio station, began its second annual fund-raising campaign, "Fall Fanfare," on Oct. 26, station officials helped raise $55,000 by midnight Saturday. By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff That goal was reached almost five hours early, Liz Caldwell, KANU development assistant, said yesterday. A final total was not available "We started Saturday morning with $14,800 in donations and reached our goal at 7:20 p.m.," she said. "We raised almost $14,000 Saturday, which, as the number is, the most we've ever collected in one day." "More people become involved with every fund drive we have," he said. Howard Hill, KANU station manager, said the successful drive resulted from a great effort by the staff. Until last year, KANU managed with only one fund drive a year — the "Campaign for Excellence," conducted every spring. Hill said the fall fund drive had become necessary because federal and state support continued to decrease earlier while operating costs continued to increase. Al Berman, KANU director of development, said private donations currently made up about one- third of the station's budget. "Several years ago, donations could be used for discretionary purposes, such as acquiring new programs," he said. "Now, the majority of what we receive in donations goes for day-to-day operating costs." Caldwell said a record $4,300 was pledged by listeners during "Jazz Scene," a show hosted by Dick Wright, associate professor of music history. Almost $2,400 was pledged by donors between 7:00 and 7:20 p.m. "I was stunned at how quickly the pledges came in," Caldwell said. ' Hill said special programming helped make the fund drive successful. "The motivating of people to pledge is a complex problem, and I'm not sure I know all there is to know about it," he said. "But the kind of programming you do can have the people respond to the kind of programs they like." "The Classical Top-40 Countdown," which was initiated during last year's "Fall Fanfare," was a popular part of the fund drive again this year, Hill said. Classical music fans voted for their three favorite musical compositions on ballots provided at the station, in the KANU program guide, in area newspapers and at Baskin-Robbins 31 Flavors Ice Cream stores in Lawrence. Topeka and the Kansas City area. Hill said people who turned in ballots received coupons for free "Schubert" cones or "Ives" cream cones from Baskin-Robbins. Dou Shay, owner of the two Lawrence Baskin-Robbins stores at 925 Iowa St. and 1524 W. 23rd St., said the Schubert and Ives cones actually were sheerbet and ice cream cones and were available in any flavor the coupon-holder wanted. Hill said the names of the cones referred to Austrian composer Franz Schubert and American composer Charles Edward Ives. Rachel Hunter, KANU fine arts director, said more than 1,500 votes were cast by classical music fans. She said Ludwig van Beethoven was the most popular composer on this year's Top-40 list despite a serious challenge from Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The appearance of several Mozart pieces on the Top-40 list indicated that the voters might have been influenced by the movie "Amadeus," Hunter said. "Beethoven's Fifth Symphony" was first on the classical hit parade, and his "Ninth Symphony," which was first last year, slipped one notch to second place this year. Ballet mixes new, old Hunter said one confused fan voted for "Ravel's Boloer," although the fan said he didn't know who wrote it. Elvis Presley's "Hound Dog" also received one vote. By Jill white Of the Kansan staff Of the Kansan staff The performance by the Ballet Eddy Toussaint de Montreal on Friday evening created excitement with its mixture of fluid motion, synchronized movement and contemporary and classical ballet. But conflicting responses arose from the 1,015 people who attended the performance in Hoch Auditorium. Some thought the choreography was "smashing," while others thought it "lacked something." "I'm finding some really wonderful moments in the pieces themselves," Linda Muir, visiting instructor in ballet, said during the second intermission. "But I think in the end something's lacking. It's almost too predictable in the timing." Muir also said she thought the dancers were "beautifully trained" but said Toussaint's choreography was stronger in the group movements than in the solo dances. "He's trying to be extremely contemporary but ends up doing classical ballet steps, whereas in the beginning he's exploring move-and-tail, referring to the piece, "Canantes," music by J.S. Bach. In "Cantates," male dancers wore long white skirts that billowed and flaired with each pirouette. The effect was complemented by the chanting music of Bach and reminiscent of monks shrouded in long robes in a monastery. Toussaint said he always had been fascinated with the religious implications in Bach's music and used rhythm to provoke the modern gesture. Jackie Davis, director of the Concert and Chamber Music series, said, "I thought they were an incredibly well-accomplished company — a breath of fresh air. "They danced beautifully, and the choreography was smashing." Muir said "Cantates" had a ballet finale that did not go with the rest of the piece. "Overall, the ballet is very good, but the choreography could make a clearer statement," she said. Toussaint said that in "Souvenance" he was following the music of Quebec composer Diane Juster with both the "purity of the line of ballet and emotional gestures" to create excitement. In addition to "Cantates" and "Souvenance," the ballet de Montreal performed "Missa Creole," music by Los Calchakis and "Concerto En Mouvement," music by Max Bruch. + Flocking together John Lechliter/KANSAN Two birds spent part of yesterday afternoon perched on one of the crosses atop St. John the Evangelist Church, 1229 Vermont St. SAVE $30.00 ON 14 K On all R. JOHNS, LTD. COLLEGE Class Rings when this ad accompanies your order. • 4 week delivery • Full lifetime warranty • Over 50 curriculums to choose from Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 "At the top of Naismith Hill" SAVE $30.00 ON 14 K On all R. JOHNS, LTD. COLLEGE Class Rings when this ad accompanies your order. • 4 week delivery • Full lifetime warranty • Over 50 curriculums to choose from Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 "At the top of Naismith Hill" Leon's Bug Barn Offering A COMPLETE LINE OF VW ACCESSORIES STOCK • CUSTOM • COMPETITION Parts • Sales • Service NOW AVAILABLE • Custom Painting and Body Work • Performance Engine Work on all air cooled Volkswagens Dealer for Pro-Tech Sand Rail Frames 1226 E. 23rd 749-2360 SAVE AT IMPORTS • DOMESTICS • EXTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. 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Second 841-1205 comprehensive health associates • free pregnancy tests • outpatient abortion services • alternative counseling • gynecology • contraception Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 PICAFLIC HOME VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd, Sp. 105 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913)842-8177 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY HOURS Mon - Thurs - 11 a.m - 2 a.m Fri & Sat - 11 a.m - 3 a.m Sunday - 11 a.m - 1 a.m $1 OFF ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 NAME ADDRESS DATE 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 Leon's Bug Barn Offering A COMPLETE LINE OF VW ACCESSORIES STOCK • CUSTOM • COMPETITION Parts • Sales • Service NOW AVAILABLE • Custom Painting and Body Work • Performance Engine Work on all air cooled Volkswagens Dealer for Pro-Tech Sand Rail Frames 1226 E. 23rd 749-2360 JUNKYARD'S JYM End of Semester Special Join Junkyard's Jym 8 Weeks only $35.00 Nov. 1-Jan. 1 Keep in mind— Potential rushees must register on Nov. 6 or 7 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. Centennial Room Kansas Union Late registration will not be accepted. PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY VISA PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY MasterCard Leon's Bug Barn Offering A COMPLETE LINE OF VW ACCESSORIES STOCK • CUSTOM • COMPETITION Parts • Sales • Service VW Beetle JUNKYARD'S JYM End of Semester Special Join Junkyard's Jym 8 Weeks only $35.00 Nov. 1-Jan. 1 535 Gateway Dr. 842-4966 1 SINCE 1889 Different strokes Golfer's game varied this year; now he looks for better days. See page 9. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, NOV. 5, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 52 (USPS 650-640) Mild Details page 3 NO, • APARTHEID • homelands • passbooks • starvation p • KUEA mmo in racist S.A Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, asks about 15 anti-apartheid protestors packed into the chancellor's suite in Strong Hall to leave. Five protesters who refused to leave were later arrested yesterday by KU police for criminal trespass and interfering with public business. Wilfredo I. Espina special to the VANSAN Protesters ask to meet Budig; 5 are arrested by Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff The five protesters asked to speak to Budig, who was at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. Five protesters were arrested yesterday in Strong Hall when they flooded Chancellor Gene A. Budig's suite and demanded to speak with him after an anti-apartheid rally. More than 100 other protesters demonstrated outside the suite after a 12-hour rally in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. The protesters arrested were Jane Ungerman, Lawrence senior and a member of the KU Committee on South Africa; Ruth Lichtwardt, Lawrence junior and vice presidential candidate for the Chrysalis Coalition; Michael Maher, Roeland Park junior; and Lisa Rasor, Topeka soohomore. A spokesman for the Douglas County district attorney's office said formal charges against the protesters had not been filed yesterday. A positive identification of the fifth protester was not available, and KU police would not release the name. THE NEW YORK MILITARY POLICE DEPARTMENT The protesters were arrested for criminal trespass and interference with conduct of public business in a public place, said James Denney, KU police director. At the rally, almost an hour before the arrests, Ungerman had said, "We've been asking for dialogue with the Kansas University Endowment Association. What they've decided to do instead of talking with us is to arrest us." The four who identified themselves received summons to appear Nov. 12 in Douglas County District Court, and one who accused protest refused to identify himself. Michael Maher, Reeland Park junior, is escorted from Strong Hall to a KU police car. Maher and four other student anti-apartheid protesters demanded to speak with Chancellor Gene A. Budig yesterday and refused to leave the chancellor's suite when asked by KU police. "The demonstrators allowed us to do our job without force," Denney said. "They went peacefully." About 15 KU police officers, including detectives, assisted with arrests in Strong. Budig, in a statement released after he returned from the Med Center, said disruption would not be tolerated at the University and was in "diametric opposition to what a university stands for." "Those who disrupt the activities Action urged at anti-apartheid rally See ARREST, p. 6, col.1 By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Words against apartheid are good, but action is essential, the president of the Black Student Union said yesterday at an anti-apartheid rally in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. "If you say, 'Yes, I agree apartheid is wrong,' I applaud you, but that is not enough," said Eddie Watson, Black Student Union president and Kansas City, Kan., junior. "If we all agree apartheid is immoral, we should move in ways to eliminate the system. I can only hope and pray that you will leave here as soon as that you found an act to eliminate racial segregation in South Africa." And the actions of about 100 protesters resulted in the arrests of five protesters in the chancellor's suite yesterday, after the protesters moved from the area of their rally to Strong Hall to speak with Chancellor Gene A. Budig, who was at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. Another speaker, Jane Ungerman, Lawrence senior and a member of the KU Committee on South Africa, said the committee's meeting with the Kansas University Endowment Association in the fall turned into a lecture about what the association did. Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, said he could only think of one trustee on the board also sat on the board of a corporation doing business in South Africa "The issue was divestment, and we wanted dialogue," she said. "KUEA is still hiding behind the prudent investment law." "They don't want anyone to tell them what they should do with their money. Some members of the board of trustees of the Endowment Association are on boards of other corporations that do business in South Africa. They're protecting their own interests." Seymour also that this trustee had an inactive status, which meant that he was on an advisory board and did not have voting power. "In some cases, we may not know what boards our trustees are on," Sevmour said. The association's stand on divestment has not changed because of the recent protests, Seymour said, and investment advisers think that investments in South Africa still are prudent despite the turmoil in the country now. Nana Ngobese, a black Durban, South Africa, graduate student, who has been at KU student four years, said, "I'm proud to be a KU student and for being able to stand up today and face the administration of KU. 'You can either get your money out of South Africa, or you will suffer in the future. If apartheid is not taken care of today, it will slowly slip back into the backyard of America. You'd wish you had done something about it sooner. "You grow up with your parents in your houses. Children in South Africa don't know their parents, because they go and work for years for companies." Lennie Wesley, Wichita junior, said that a university taught things such as physics and biology, but didn't teach brotherly love. "It's teaching more about personal wealth." he said Budig was asked to speak at the rally, but declined in a letter stating that he did not support by making sure that the University remained an open forum for debate. If the University refuses to listen to what its students say, he said, the students have to keep on struggling. Top KGB defector jumps sides again United Press International Appearing at a news conference at the Soviet Embassy, Yurchenko — ranked by U.S. officials as the No. 5 officer of the Soviet intelligence agency — said his team's internals "of interest" regimen included a dinner with CIA Director William Casey, but that he was drugged at the time and hardly recognized the American spymaster. WASHINGTON — Vitaly Urychenko, a KGB agent once in charge of Soviet spying in the U.S., said yesterday he was kidnapped in Rome, spirited to the United States and pled with drugs for three months before slipping away from a CIA "safe house" and escaping to the Russian Embassy. The State Department flatly denied that Yurchenko had been detained by force and said he would not be allowed to leave the country until U.S. officials were convinced his desire to return to the Soviet Union was genuine. Yurchenko said he had been held outside Washington until Nov. 2 when, "due to the momentary lapse of attention on the part of the person watching me, I was able to get to my cellphone and come to the Soviet Embassy." The bizarre turn of events, the latest in a year of spying scandals and defections that have strained East-West relations, came two years ago when Gorbachev summit set to ease tensions between the superpowers. At the State Department, spokesman Charles Redmond read a brief statement that said Yurchenko had defected "of his own The KGB agent said his "main torturer" was a CIA official with the code name "Charlie," who he identified as Colin Thompson — "a psychologically sick person." One of his guards, he said, was a "fat, silent, stupid non-emotional person only following orders. I thought I was among crazy persons." Yurchenko — who appeared to relish his encounter with Washington reporters — said that after harsh treatment and repeated druggings, his captors "realized they could not break me. volition" at the U.S. Embassy in Rome on Aug. 1, "requested asylum in the United States and signed a statement to that effect, and asylum was granted. "At no time was Mr. Yurchenko held or coerced by improper, illegal or unethical means," Redman said. He said Yurchenko had cooperated with the CIA since arriving in the United States Aug. 2. . . . Perhaps the fact that we're going to have a summit saved me." Sen. David Durenburger, R-Minn., chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said Casey assured him yesterday afternoon that none of the KGB office's charges was true. Redman said Acting Secretary of State John Whitehead had rejected a formal Soviet protest over the matter and the demand that Yurchenko be allowed to return to the Soviet Union. He said Yurchenko was 'ready' to uriletry until "the United States government is, in fact, assured that this action is genuinely of his own choice." Gammons won't go cheaply New father ponders sale of nightclub By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Earlier this year. Kirsch opened another private club, Baby Boomers, which was built into an existing area of Gammons. One of Lawrence's most popular private clubs, Gammons, is on the market for $350,000, the club's owner and his real estate agent said yesterday. Kirsch expressed concern that making public the Mike Kirsch, owner of Gammons, 1601 W. 23rd St., last said night. "I'm not aggressively try to sell it. My wife just had a baby and she's interested in me getting out of the private club business." Kirsch said that he wasn't in a rush to sell the club but that he eventually wanted to leave the private club business and return to selling real estate. "Technically, in 1986, when I opened Gammons, it would have been for sale for the right price," he said. "Basically, anything is for sale if someone is willing to pay the right price." fact that the club was for sale would generate discontent among Gammons employees. "It isn't a fire sale," he said. "We've been putting out feelings for a couple of months now and I'm not real anxious to sell. I may be around for two years. I am not walking away." Gammons has been the most popular club in Lawrence for five years; he said, and anyone who purchases the club would be unwise to alter it. Kirsch said if he sold Gammons, customers or employees probably would notice no difference in the club's management, decor or names. "We've been committed to the most state-of-the-art club in Lawrence," Kirsch said. "I don't see any changes down the road for Gammons." Some potential buyers have expressed interest, he said. Mike McGrew, a Lawrence real estate agent negotiating the sale of the club, said, "They've had a few contacts from in and out of town and we're working with a lot of different people at this point." McGrew Real Estate Inc., 1505 Kasold Drive, is handling the sale. Kirsch said that putting Gammons on the market didn't mean that he urgently needed to sell the club. "That's not the case with Gammons. We're a thriving business," he said. "It's just that the owner's wife is putting the pressure on him to find a more family-oriented occupation." One bad aspect about getting out of the private club business at this time, he said, was that he would miss out on the opportunity to sell liquor by the drink in open clubs. "I hate to lose my opportunity to participate in an open market where every person in Lawrence is a potential customer on any given night," he said. "That could bust the nightclub business wide open." Kirsch said he was confident that when voters got to vote for liquor by the drink aex t year, counties with large populations, such as Douglas, Johnson, Shawnee and Sedgwick, would vote to drop private club memberships. Early enrolling helps athletes By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff KU officials say a University policy allowing varsity athletes to enroll early helps alleviate class conflicts with practices. But some students say the policy is unfair. Seniors' pre-enrollment for next semester began yesterday. The policy allowed some varsity athletes to enroll in the new program on night. Pre-enrollment ends Nov 22. More than 200 varsity athletes enrolled from 7 to 9 p.m. yesterday at the Enrollment Center, 111 Strong Hall. "I think that's a trite unfair." Michael Podrebarac, Emporia freshman, said yesterday of the policy. Podrebarac said student-athletes should not be treated any differently from other students. "I don't think they are any more important than people who have to support themselves with jobs," he said. "I think that's grossly unfair." David Burklund, Junction City freshman, also said he objected to the early enrollment of varsity athletes. "I don't think that is very right that they should have a special status over us because they play sports," he said. Kim Campbell, Lee's Summit, Mo., sophomore, said that if the athletes had conflicts between classes and practices, they should solve them on their own. See ENROLL. p. 5, col. 1 tive educational services, said the early enrollment would ensure that classes and practices would not become a conflict for varsity athletes. "They need to be able to enroll in classes that meet primarily in the morning," he said. Richard Lee, director for suppor Gary Thompson, director of student records and educational services; said that last night's special enrollment was not the first time that Lee said many athletes had been kept out of classes they needed because by the time they enrolled, the early sections had been filled. He said he hoped that by enrolling early, that would not happen. Kansan accepting top staff applications The University Daily Kansan is accepting applications for spring semester editor and business manager. Applications are due by 5 p.m. Nov 19. They are available in the Kansas business office, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall; the journalism dean's office, 200 Stauffer Flint; and the Student Senate office, B-105 Kansas Union. Applicants will meet Nov. 22 with the Kansas Board, the governing body of the newspaper. The editor and business manager will be chosen afterward. I will do it. Applications for other news and business staff positions are due by 5 p.m. Nov. 23 in 200 Stauffer-Flint. 1 2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1985 News Briefs Bus skids off bridge; 15 killed in accident CATANIA — A bus traveling on a rain-slick highway near Catania skidded off a bridge and plunged 100 feet into a dry riverbed, yesterday, killing 15 people and seriously injuring six. police said FENTON, Mo. — The 2,800 members of United Auto Workers union Local 110 struck Chrysler's No. 2 plant yesterday in a dispute with the automaker over a local contract. Some victims remained trapped inside the vehicle for more than three hours, in part because no one immediately reported the crash along the deserted stretch of highway. OPEC officials yesterday refuted a statement by an influential Arab oil minister that the cartel's 13 member nations are free to sell their oil at any price. Norway, which is not an OPEC member, warned such a free-for-all would unleash "an unprecedented oil price crash." UAW workers strike Oil production rises In Nicosia, Cyprus, the authoritative Middle East Economic Survey said production by members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries surged by 2 million barrels to 17.3 million barrels a day in October. The strike is the second at the plant in less than a month. Whale nears ocean SAN FRANCISCO — After a morning of playful splashing near the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge in San Francisco Bay, Humphrey the wawayward whale swam two miles closer to the Pacific Ocean yesterday but was still six miles from oen water. Earlier, Alh夹al Abaster of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said the 45-ton whale no longer was responding to taped whale sounds that had led him to the bay. From Kansan wires. Delays tap into Social Security WASHINGTON — Congress's balanced budget dispute and the resulting delay in raising the debt ceiling will cost the Social Security trust fund $38 million in interest in the next 10 days, a Treasury swookman said yesterday. United Press International The Treasury dipped into the trust fund Friday for $1 billion so it could meet government obligations. That action was needed because Congress had failed to increase the government's borrowing authority to $2 trillion due to a dispute over a balanced budget rider attached to the debt bill. Treasury says the money it got from Social Security is enough to last through Nov. 14. "We will lose roughly $33 million between Nov. 1 and Nov. 14 (in the Social Security trust fund)." Kim Hoggard, Treasury spokeswoman, said. "And we will need special legislation to put it back." Both the House and Senate versions of the balanced budget amendment appear likely to contain the legislation to make the trust funds whole again. House aides said the maneuver would not actually cost the government money because it would be a shift of money from one pocket, the general fund, to another, the Social Security trust fund. The Senate, which initially approved a balanced budget measure last month, began debate this week on changes and agreed to a mechanism for monitoring the debt if the country appeared headed for a recession. The Senate also reiterated its support for the concept of a minimum corporate tax, calling on the Finance and Ways and Means Committees to write a bill that imposes any income from such a category in a rehearsal date. Also included among the Senate's planned modifications is a plan designed to require some budget cuts this year, rather than waiting until next year, because critics charged the original "Gramm-Rudman" bill was designed to ease reelection bids for incumbent Republicans next fall. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, a sponsor of the minimum tax amendment, said, "People of this country are outraged at the fact that so many companies are making so much money and not paying any tax. The balanced budget plan passed by the House allows a deficit of no more than $161 billion in the fiscal year that just started, a number certain to require budget cuts quickly. The House also protected many social programs from cuts as well as with the Senate to exempt Social Security. Treasury officials insist they must have an increase in the federal debt limit by Nov. 14 to continue to pay bills, though House aides said that date was flexible depending on the flow of receipts to the Treasury. Bombs hit 2 Belgian banks United Press International BRUSSELS, Belgium — Suspected communist terrorists yesterday bombed the offices of two leading Belgian banks and slightly wounded a security guard in the latest in a yearlong wave of attacks on businesses and NATO targets. The Combatant Communist Cells claimed responsibility for the bombings of the main office of the Bruxelles Lambert Bank in Brussels and a branch of the Societe Lambert Bank, a leading bank, in Chacoerlo, 40 miles south of the capital. Police sources said the first attack occurred just before 3 a.m. in Brussels when a van packed with explosives blew up outside the Bruxelles Lambert Bank. The Charleroi bombing marked the first daylight assault staged by the CCC, which has carried out a total of 22 attacks on various NATO, commercial and political targets since October 1884. Its most spectacular strike was an attack on NATO oil pipelines in December. The office was extensively damaged, but no one was injured. A tape recorder inside the van had broadcast a warning to clear the area before the vehicle exploded, police said. Ferdinandan Nothomb, Justice Minister Jean Gol and police officials. Prime Minister Wilfried Martens broke off talks on forming a new government following Oct. 13 elections to discuss the attacks with Interior Minister Charles- Eight hours after the Brussels attack, an attache case containing about 10 pounds of TNT exploded in the Charleroi office of the Societe Generale de Banque. Police said the attache case had been chained to a staircase. Authorities, who had been warned of the explosion, had barely completed the evacuation of about 30 customers in the building and the office's 500 employees when the blast occurred. Two persons working in the basement were not alerted, but escaped injury. Guatamalan president elected GUATEMALA CITY — Moderate Vinicio Cerezo claimed victory yesterday in Guatemala's presidential election and asked the second-place candidate to withdraw from a scheduled run-off in the interest of national unity. United Press International pete in the run-off, scheduled for Dec. $\beta$. The runner-up in Sunday's balloting, Jorge Carpio, a millionaire newspaper publisher who heads the center-right Union for a Democratic Center, did not immediately respond to Cerezo's request. But in a television interview, he pleaded to com- Under Guatemalan election law, a run-off between the top two finishers is required if none of the candidates garnered more than 50 percent of the vote About 70 percent of Guatemala's 2.75 million registered voters turned out for the election, aimed at ending 31 years of military rule that began with a CIA-backed coup that toppled an elected president in 1954. With 39 percent of the votes tallied, Cerezo, a moderate Christian Democrat, had 260.348 votes, or 39 Strike ends for dissident percent, the official Supreme Electoral Tribunal said. Carpio received 136,626 votes, or 21 percent of the total. Jorge Serrano Elias, the center-right candidate of the Democratic Party of National Cooperation, was in third place, with 90,734 votes, or 14 percent, and Mario Sandoval Alarcon of the far-right Movement for National Liberation held fourth place, with 45,357 votes, or 7 percent, the tribunal reported. NEWTON, Mass. — Andrei Sakharov's family spoke with the Soviet dissident for the first time in six years yesterday, learning he was allowed to seek medical treatment outside the country. "The isolation of the Sakharovs is broken," said a jubilant Tatiana Yankelevich, the daughter of Sakharov's wife. United Press International The remaining votes were scattered among four other minor candidates. In a 24-minute transcontinental telephone call, the family learned the Nobel laureate ended his hunger strike Oct. 21 — after as long as 43 days — and his wife would be allowed to seek medical treatment in Italy and the United States "He now weighs 72 kilograms (158 pounds)," Yelena,Bonnor, Sakharov's wife, told her daughter and son-in-law. "His normal weight is 80 kilograms (176 pounds). He's gaining one kilo each day." Both Yankelevich and her husband, Efrem, said they believed the Nov. 19-20 summit between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev played a role in the Soviets' decision to allow Bonner access to her eye doctor in Italy and heart surgeons in Boston, where several hospitals have offered to perform a bypass operation. Soviet gets okay to go back home United Press International WASHINGTON — A Soviet Army private who sought refuge in the U.S. Embassy in Kabul because he was "unhappy with a soldier's life in Afghanistan" left the American compound yesterday to return home, the State Department said. The department said it released Aleksandr Vasilyevich Sukhanov only after Soviet Ambassador Fikryt Takeyev gave assurances that the 19-yearold soldier would give his wish to remain steadily mediately and would not be punished. Russian-speaking U.S. Embassy officials in Kabul made it clear to Sukhanov he could stay in the embassy as long as he desired and that every effort would be made to grant him political asylum in the United States if he wished, the department said. After four days of negotiations and two meetings with the Soviet ambassador in the presence of American embassy staff, Sukhanov signed a statement in Russian affirming that he had decided "freely, without constraint" to return home. Soviet and Afghan troops surrounded the embassy and shut off the electricity after Sukhanov, one of the more than 100,000 Soviet troops occupying Afghanistan, slipped into the compound Thursday and said, "I don't like this war. I want to go home." Meanwhile, a legal group told a federal appeals court that a Soviet seaman who twice jumped ship near New Orleans was "under duress" when he signed a statement saying he wanted to go home. The group is trying to ston the ship's departure. The Court is considering a request by the Ukrainian-American Bar Association to block Medvid's departure until he is re-interviewed by immigration officials. Andrew Fylypovych of the lawyers' group said government officials violated the law and Medvid's constitutional rights when they returned him to the Soviet freighter without following proper steps for dealing with potential asylum requests. EMILIO ESTEVEZ Two friends raised under one roof. Bryon saw the future coming. Mark never knew what hit him. THAT WAS THEN THIS IS NOW THAT WAS THEM. THIS IS NOW. SABARAH BAOCKO. MUSIC BY MARCUS DEREK. DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY, JUAN RAZ AND PRODUCERS EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS AJAN BEKIN AND MANDAN K. PHILIPS. SCREENPLAY BY EMULID ESTEZRA. BASED ON THE NOVEL BY S.E. HINTON. PRODUCED BY GARY R. LUNDBERG AND ANDY M. O'DWYN. DIRECTED BY CHRISTOPHER CAIN. A PERFORMANCE PICTURE. STARTS FRIDAY NOVEMBER 8TH AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU. 10c DRAWS 25c DRINKS BILL ENGVALL AND THIS NATIONAL CIRCUIT COMEDIAN HAS HAD OUTSTANDING RESPONSE THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY AND IS ONE OF OUR PERSONAL FAVORITES! THE SHOW WILL START EARLIER, AT 8:30 P.M. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE. GAMMONS SNOW GAMMONS SNOWIES Raby BOOMERS Baby BOOMERS 23rd & Ousdahl Southern Hills Mall Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 3 News Briefs Two students hurt in minor collision Two KU students suffered minor injuries in a two-car collision about 3:30 p.m. Sunday at 15th Street and Chelsea Place. Julie Abels, 20, Wichita junior, and Nicoletta Mattiola, 20, Prairie Village sophomore, were both treated and released in good condition from the hospital Sunday, a Lawrence Memorial Hospital spokesman said. Abels was issued a citation for failing to yield the right of way, police said. Lawrence police said Abels was traveling south on Chelsea Place and stopped at the stop sign. She saw no cross traffic and pulled out when Mattiola, traveling west on 15th Street, struck Abels' car. Mattiola's car stopped on the grass on the south side of 15th Street. Fall bazaar to open A drawing will be conducted for two round-trip Braniff Airline tickets to Chicago, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Ariz., Washington, D.C. and New York The bazaar will be from noon to 5 p.m. tomorrow and from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday in the lobby of Bell Memorial Hospital, 39th and Rainbow Boulevard, Kansas City, Kan. A fund-raising lunch will be from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Thursday. Proceeds from the bazaar will benefit the Jay-Care Day Care and Learning Center. La Compagnie Beauclair will perform "La Peur des Coups" and "La Paix chez Soi," both by Georges Courtine, and "Lain de Menage," by Jules Renard. A Parisian theater company will present three modern French plays at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall of Murphy Hall. Plays to be presented The three plays, which are performed in French, are being staged for the first time in the United States. The company performed Moliere's "Tartuffe" at the University of Kansas last year. Tickets, which are available at the Murphy Hall box office, cost $4 for KU students and $5 for the general public. All seats are general admission, and ticket reservations may be made by calling 804-3892. DCCA seeks students The Douglas County Council on Aging is seeking students who want to spend time with older people. The council's Adult Day Program needs volunteers to work from 1 to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. The volunteers will participate in group activities to lend encouragement and support to older people. Weather Steve Mingle/KANSAN Today will be windy and mild, with skies becoming mostly cloudy. Winds will be from the south at 15 to 25 mph. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with lows in the upper 30% to lower 40%. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy, with highs near 60. From staff and wire reports 1245 Narrow escape Jim Pitcharch, quarterback for the Sigma Phi Epsilon football team, the Men, avoids a tackle by a player for the Evans Scholarship Hall team, the Sheeperders, in the Rec-A intramural football championship. The Sheeperders won the contest 10-0 yesterday. Cable TV extended By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Some Douglas County residents on the outskirts of Lawrence won't have to say "I want my MTV" much longer. "This means we give a few more customers to serve, like Western Hills, the Riverside area and a few houses across from K-Mart that border our service area," Clark said." The company will begin designing and ordering materials to extend the service to the potential subscribers immediately, Clark said. But it may be spring before the work is complete because much of the cable installation wire must be buried underground. He said that the agreement would allow the company to add 50-100 new subscribers. In the last several years, some of the potential subscribers have requested the cable company to extend service to their homes. Sunflower Cablevision, 644 New Hampshire St., plans to extend its services into some unincorporated areas around Lawrence, Dave Clark, general manager of the company, said yesterday. The franchise agreement is required because of the passage of the Cable Communications Act of 1984 that sets ground rules for cities and counties to add cable services, Clark said. County counselor Chris McKenzie said the franchise agreement required Sunflower Cablevision to carry insurance protecting itself, the county and townships that they worked in from damages or accidents that could happen while the company had employees on the job. The Douglas County Commission yesterday approved a non-exclusive franchise agreement between the cable company and the county. The agreement expires in 10 years, McKenzie said. It is renewable and has a clause that allows the county and the company to discuss adjustments that might be made in the agreement. Policy opens Stouffer doors By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff Orlando Villalobos and his family arrived at the University of Kansas in September 1984 and moved into a one-bedroom apartment at Stouffer Place. Villalobos, Valencia, Venezuela, graduate student, said Sunday that his family had hoped to move into a two-bedroom apartment. So they joined other families on a list at the housing office and waited for a vacancy. Villalobos tried three times last year to get a larger apartment but was unsuccessful. All that changed a month ago when the family got the apartment they had been waiting for because of a new housing office policy. Until recently, the housing office kept two lists of families who wanted two-bedroom apartments. One list was for current Stouffer residents, and the other was for off-campus applicants. Preference was shown to the off-campus applicants in December and January, and May through August — the times when most of such apartments become available. The two lists now have been combined into one and apartments will be assigned to the earliest applicants. Housing officials hope the change will create a better opportunity for all. The Residential Programs Advisory Board approved the new policy last week. Ken stoner, director of student housing, said, "We'd really trapped a number of families with children into one-bedroom apartments, and I hope the change in the list will reduce that." The change was a welcome and timely one for the Villalobos' family. Villalobos and his wife, Lisabeth, are expecting another child. They now have a 6-year-old son, Daniel. Currently, 95 families are on the waiting list, and 30 of them currently live in one-bedroom apartments at Stouffer. The housing office estimates that about 30 two-bedroom units will be available between now and August. Stoner said. "Many people in Stouffer Place have been lucky because the policy has been changed." Vilhallob said. The backlog of families dates back to August 1984. Other families applied as recently as Thursday. Ruth Swain, Stouffer place manager, said it was unusual for a family to wait more than a year. "Usually, people who wait in Stouffer for that long are waiting for something in particular," Swain said. 'Joke' at KBI not taken lightly The Associated Press TOPEKA — Kay Houser, a friend of Kansas Attorney General Robert T. Stephan, said yesterday that she had jokingly suggested to the director of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation that he shoot Margie Phelps, attorney for a woman who accused Stephan of sexual harassment. Houser said she was "flabbergasted" that her statements found their way back to Phelps or that anyone would take them seriously. In a terse news release, Stephan called the notion that anyone might be a terrorist. Phelps revealed the threat in a letter she sent Stephan and reported to reporters. In the letter, Phelps said she had a sworn affidavit from a state employee who claimed to have heard Tom Kelly, KBI director, discuss whether to have the attorney shot. In addition, Phelps did not identify the state employee other than as someone she had known a long time. She said she felt the need to hide the state employee's identification to Besides witnessing the houser-Kelly conversation, the state employee also claimed to have overheard a conversation among Stephan's staff in his Judicial Center offices last week regarding whether the map of Phelps' telephones might produce valuable evidence against her. protect him from retribution. She offered copies of the affidavit only under the agreement that the name of the employee not be divulged. She explained that the employee did not witness the conversation in Stephan's office and did not know whether Stephan was present. She said the employee heard the conversation in another room and had presumed members of Stephan's staff were discussing the case and strategy. nor's Committee on Crime Prevention would somehow conspire to commit a murder is ludicrous beyond belief," Stephan said. "While this office has a responsibility to take appropriate action on any such charge, as we have, this situation has become absurd." Romy was not available for comment. Stephan simply said such accusations were beyond belief but said his office would look into the case. Pheips said the employee described it as a heated discussion over the sexual harassment lawsuit and a deposition from the alleged victim. In her letter, Phelps asked the Republican attorney general to conduct a full investigation and issue a complete report on the matter. "I want to make this a matter of public record because that's the only safe way to deal with Bob Stephan," Phelps said. "The notion that the director of the KBI and the chairman of the Gover- Phelps said the unidentified employee claims that Houser told Kelly she had dealt with Phelps and told her to arrange for him. He would be to arrange to have her shot. "Kelly then responded O.K. But remember, it was your idea and you said it, I didn't, the letter alleged. "Neither Houser nor Kelly spoke in a joking manner. Further, we have evidence from a very reliable and responsible party in affidavit form that plans are being formulated to unlawfully wiretap the Phelps telephones and to do physical harm or murder to Marge Phelps." KU Senate could meet every week Rights committee approves 7 bills By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Student senators will meet every week instead of every two weeks if the last four bills calling for a restructuring of Student Senate meetings pass the full Senate on Wednesday. The committee also passed a bill that would establish an advisory board for the KU chapter of Associated Students of Kansas, ASK is a student interest group that represents Kansas Board of Regents schools and Washburn University in the Kansas Legislature. The bills were among seven bills passed by the Student Senate Rights Committee last night in the last Rights Committee meeting this year. If the bill passes the full Seneca, the campus director's salary would be paid by the Senate, the director would be chosen by the advisory board, and KU's ASK board member would be a non-senator chosen by the Student Senate Executive Committee. Tim Boller, chairman of the Rights Committee and one of the authors of the bill, said ASK had been used as a "political football" for the last five years. "We really want to keep ASK politically neutral," Boller said. The purpose of the bill is to make campus ASK directors responsible to the campus rather than the state ASK organization, Boller said. The weekly-meeting bill was part D of a nine-page bill that was divided into seven sections by the Rights Committee last month. Committee members decided that the original bill was too large and complicated to debate as a whole. Section G requires that the student body president issue his goals to the standing committees by February and encourages the president and vice president to attend standing committee meetings. Sections A and B passed the full Senate last month. Section A defines the attendance policy for StudEx members. Section B clarifies the structure of standing committees. Section C, which would have combined the University Affairs and Cultural Affairs committees into a committee, failed in the Senate. The ASK bill is similar to bills that are coming before student governments in all the Regents schools and Washburn University. Boller said. The proposed advisory board would hire and fire the campus director, select delegates for ASK's Legislative Assembly, approve a budget and send it through the Student Senate Finance Committee and advise the campus director and Student Senate of important issues. The Regents schools are the University of Kansas, Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburgh State University, Wichita State University and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina. After Wednesday's Senate meeting, Senate standing committees will not meet again until January, when new committee members will be appointed by the Committee Board. RES SCHOOL SAC 812-435-3960 MEL AMIGO MEXICAN RESTAURANT WRITING A TERM PAPER? Attend the Research Paper Workshop FREE! Tuesday, Nov.5 7-9 p.m. 308 Dyche Presented by the Student Assistance Center and the Reference Dept. of Watson Library MEL AMIGOS MEXICAN RESTAURANT SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! OYSTER on ½ SHELL 50¢ each Fridays only 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina 2600 Iowa 843-4076 $1 MARGARITAS Wednesdays All Day $1 WELL DRINKS Saturdays All Day TUESDAY DIME DRAWS 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Wed. Special: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs... 843-0540 Homemade CHOCOLATE, CHERRY, LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake No coupons accepted with this offer. 95¢ reg $1.50 Offer good through Nov. 30 TUESDAY DIME DRAWS 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Wed. Special: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs ... 843-0540 the MASS STREET DELI OAK MASSACHUSETTS MASS STREET DELI 041 MASSACHUSETTS Homemade CHOCOLATE, CHERRY, LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake 95¢ OFFER good 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A fitting memorial After two years of designing, discussion and redesigning, a memorial to KU students killed or missing in Vietnam is finally a reality. namely a reality. A brief dedication ceremony at the site at the southeast corner of Memorial Drive and West Campus Road is planned for Veterans Day, Nov. 11. It's hoped that construction will begin soon after that. The project arose from differing ideas of students, faculty and the administration. The first two designs and sites proposed by a student committee were rejected by faculty and administration representatives before a consensus finally could be reached. But perhaps this is fitting for a memorial to veterans of a war that wracked this country and this campus. Perhaps it's right that work finally should begin this year, the 10th anniversary of the fall of Saigon and 15 years after anti-war anger literally set this campus aflae. The year the nation finally welcomed home Vietnam veterans with a ticker-tape parade. The memorial will be a tangible reminder that in the end it doesn't matter whether a war is won or lost, popular or unpopular, "moral" or "immoral" — the price is the same. The sacrifice made by the 60 KU students whose names will be carved in the limestone wall was the same as the sacrifice made by those who died in World Wars I and II, to whom Memorial Stadium and the Campanile are dedicated. The memorial also will recall questions that drew past students out of the classrooms and into the streets: What should this nation be willing to fight for? What should this nation ask its young people to die for? Such a reminder is needed as years pass. One Vietnam veteran who lectures to high school students has found that many can't find Vietnam on a map and don't know whether the United States fought with the North or South Vietnamese. The memorial — conceived of by KU students to honor KU students — will ensure that we on this campus don't forget. Ensuring academics win After two years of embarsment caused by 16 academic ineligibilities in the football program, the University of Kansas Athletic Corp. has mapped a plan to insure that athletes perform in class as well as they do in the playing arena. A KUAC committee has before it a "working document" spelling out changes the Athletic Department should make to insure that academic problems of the past two years on the football team don't haunt KU athletic. The report contains familiar vague promises. But it also talks specifics. One proposal establishes a KUAC committee that would review academic credentials of recruits. The committee would screen recruits and let coaches know which ones were borderline academic cases. With hope, marginal students would be passed over when it came time for handing out scholarships. A second proposal would prohibit athletes from adding or dropping courses without the approval of their advisers and Richard Lee, assistant athletic director in charge of support services. Any athlete who snubbed the process could lose his scholarship. A third proposal is orientation sessions for recruits before they start their years on the Hill. These would drill into recruits the expectations for their academic performances. For two years, the Athletic Department has said it wants to end eligibility problems. They blacken the University's name, athletically and academically. Specific proposals for solving the problems lie on the table. KUAC board members should move quickly to pare the working document down to the specifics, then enact it. Only with such specific suggestions will the University avoid a third year of embarrassment caused by academic problems of athletes. Farm Credit forecast The country's fourth largest lender screamed for help last week. The Farm Credit System reported that it lost $522.5 million in the third quarter and said it likely would lose at least $3 billion more through 1987. Financial problems of farmers, the system's borrowers, lie at the heart of the system's woes. Saving the Farm Credit System from collapse depends in the short run on alleviating problems of those farmers. That won't be best done with a federal bailout for the system, which would extend further the burdens of the deficit-taxed government. Only cutting the deficit — which would weaken the dollar and open foreign markets to U. S. farm goods - will brighten the financial forecast for farmers. In the long run, the Farm Credit System must abandon poor methods for determining loan eligibility. In the past, farmers have put up land as collateral. As a result, when times turn tough, the Farm Credit System is left with acres of low-value farmland when it desperately needs cash. The system should determine loan eligibility based on farmers' abilities to make money. That would allow the Farm Credit System to more accurately gauge loan risk. And the system wouldn't be in the position of screaming for financial help when that's what it's supposed to be dishing out. Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager John Hanaa Michael Totty Managing editor * Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Brett McCabe Sue Johnson *Retail sales* Campus sales Megan Burke Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. GUEST SHORTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The The Kanaan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanaan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Fint Hall. The University Daily Kansan (USP5 60-68) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-Flint Hall, Lawen, Kansei, 66445, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66444 in Douglas County, mail subscriptions cost $1 for six months and $2 a year. Elsewhere, they cost $1 for six months and $3 a year. Student subscriptions are free. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405 GENTLEMEN, WE'VE GOT TO PUT THE LIE TO THIS MYTH ABOUT RIVALRY BETWEEN THE SERVICES IN ORDER TO STALL THE MOVEMENT IN CONGRESS TO STREAMLINE THE MILITARY. I KNOW WHY YOU ARMY GUYS ARE UPSET! YOU'RE ALL OBSOLETE! IF ANY BRANCH SHOULD TAKE PRECEDENCE IT'S THE AIR FORCE! YOU'RE A BING! OF LITTLE GIRLS COMPARED TO THE MARINE CORPS! BOMBER JETS A group of three bomber jets flying in formation. Each jet is pilot with a steering wheel, headlights, and weaponry. The cockpit windows are tinted. The planes are flying at high altitude. 【空】 A man is lying on his back in a car, clutching his chest and looking up at the driver who is sitting behind him. The driver is shouting and pointing at the woman. She is falling down with her arms outstretched. "Have you ever gambled your money with cards?" Mike, a conductor on a freight train asked. "Gambling with your life is the biggest gamble there is." The deadly gamble of training Mike knows. In his 43 years of railroading, he has seen many deaths result when people play games with trains. He's seen it all - people who try to commit suicide by deliberately standing in front of the train, people who want to see how close they can get and jump out of the way at the last minute. "How can they know how close we are just by a pinpoint of light?" Mike asked. Brian Lucas died while training. Students who say they have gone training say they did it merely for the purpose, after the first time, the thriller is gone. "If they'd been with me and seen all the blood and guts I've seen, they wouldn't be talking like that," Mike said. Training is supposed to be fun, thrilling, and safe. Donald Lucas, Brian Lucas' father, said he wanted Union Pacific trains to slow at the training bridges. This would supposedly insure that nobody Kimberly Hurley Staff columnist Donald Lucas had better be ready for legal action. According to Mike, trains don't slow at crossings, marked or unmarked, unless a city ordinance has been passed. If they don't slow at crossings, they're not going to slow for pranksters. Train tracks are private property and are owned by the railroad. Only a railroad employee has the right to be on railroad property. Mike said he might "be a little funny about it," but he didn't think he had any right to be on railroad-owned property unless he was working. else died while training. Training is trespassing, and trespassing is illegal. If Union Pacific is expected to secure a trespasser's safety, then everyone might as well hold a spotlight for a burglar in their backyard. Parents try to sue the railroad, blaming the company for not making the tracks safe and blaming the railroaders for not stopping in time. "We can't stop that train outside of three-quarters of a mile," he said. The times they have been able to stop in time, have been few and were only because of luck. The victim's family doesn't realize that they aren't the only ones who have to cope with the trauma of the accident. According to Mike, many railroaders grieve and feel guilty for many years after witnessing accidents. "It haunts them till the day they die," he said. One crew member continually was haunted by an accident. Every time he rode the train over the place where the accident occurred, "he Mike chooses to handle his grief in a different way. "I just try to forget about it. It's better that way. "These kids don't know this stuff. It's no thrill, no fun and games for us." Students who argue in favor of training say it is a trend, almost a tradition. They say training is only dangerous when alcohol is involved. But it makes no sense whatsoever to risk a life playing a game, no matter how popular the game or how many people before have played it. It makes no sense to drink while playing dangerous games to heighten the thrill. If the thrill is from the danger, and they think there is no danger unless they are drunk, then there truly is no sober thrill. Students, or anyone, who want to feel the thrill of near danger have plenty of opportunities. Auto racing, skydiving and downhill skiing all provide thrill-seekers with an element of risk. Even if the railroad could be persuaded to slow the train at the two bridges, it will not stop the training. If students want to train, they will ultimately find other places, other bridges. Finally, it isn't Union Pacific's responsibility to protect those who want to play with the danger of a speeding freight train. It's easier for parents to teach their kids a little responsibility. Mike said, and not expect the railroads to patrol bridges and arrest a few out of many. Mike refuses to ride on the engine anymore. Instead, he rides on the caboose. He said he's just sick of watching thrill-seeking end in death. Labor faces bewildering middle age Middle age can be perplexing Those of us who have reached that ambiguous status know what it is to look in two directions. We look back on what we accomplished, but that is never fully satisfying. We are also constrained to look ahead, still challenged by the unfinished agenda of life. Institutions can be similarly challenged, and how they meet that challenge can tell the story of what their later years are going to be. The best available example of an institution in mid-century crisis is organized labor. When the old Congress for Industrial Organization was formed on Nov. 9, 1835, the air was electric with a new spirit of confrontation for justice in the big plants of the industrial heartland. Soon the issue was joined over the right of workers to strike and the fundamental role of labor in the process of production. In the half-century since, the AFLCIO and independent labor organizations have experienced some triumphs the old labor states only dreamed of at the time of the founding of the CIO. At one time in the 1950s, one factory worker in three was a member of a union. Those who saw the 1972 labor vote as an aberration explained it away as a reflection on the Democratic candidate, George McGovern. He presented a face to the electorate that year only a mother could love. By 1961, when President Kennedy was inaugurated, labor was powerful enough to see to it one of its own was appointed to the Supreme Court. He was Arthur Goldberg, former general counsel of the United Steel Workers. He later resigned to accept President Johnson's appointment as ambassador to the United Nations. Between the beginning of the 1960s and the early 1970s, it became apparent organized labor had reached its zenith. The telltale sign was that younger workers were paying their union dues while paying virtually no allegiance to union leadership or ideals. By 1972, many union leaders were embarrassed by the fact that their membership broke ranks and supported a Republican for president, Richard Nixon. Others peered more deeply behind the veil of labor and saw something more serious than the erosion of union discipline in presidential elections. They saw nothing less than the substantial decline of one of the most powerful movements this country has ever seen. Robert C. Maynard Oakland Tribune More important than those indicators of serious problems, a major shift was occurring in the American economy. All too often, labor leaders greeted our questions about it with a blank stare. BASILI TANZANIA That change, still a distant cloud on the horizon then, is a storm filled with problems today. It is the immense shift of the American economy from industrial production It was fascinating to cover national labor in the early 70s, as I did for a time. The leadership was getting older and the membership was getting younger. The leadership espoused traditional liberal values. The membership was becoming more conservative. The effect of that shift on labor union membership has been devastating. Since the mid-70s, members in the Steelworkers had dropped by half. The Garment Workers union has lost a third of its members, and about the same for the Rubber Workers. Meanwhile, the Service Workers union membership is up 50 percent and the Communications Workers have increased by about a third. The problem for labor at mid-century is that its growth unions are not growing nearly as rapidly as its industrial unions are deteriorating. All this occurs in a new climate of deregulation, international competition and advancing technology. Many of the problems labor faces today could not even have been guessed at when the old CIO was founded. How those problems are addressed today will determine what sort of old age organized labor will have. If labor has a plan for its revitalization, it is still very much an inside secret. Mailbox Legitimate fears While Khemiesa Chaieb's call for all parties in the various Middle Eastern disputes to recognize their common humanity cannot but be warmly applauded, his equating the Israeli right with Nazism perpetuates the sort of myth he seeks to avoid. The Israeli right is obsessed with the survival of its people - as are most players in the Middle East. Although some of them are personally racist (as are some members of any religious and ethnic group) their behavior is not based on deities of supremacy or on the goal of obtaining power. They are motivated by the fear that they will lose the security and personal dignity they have so painfully gained. A good history of the Jews will fill you in on the precarious, often despaired status of European Jews for most of the last 1,500 years; and an excellent history will fill you in on their similar treatment in the Arab lands. In fact, the undermocratic models proposed by Kabane and other Israel ultra-rightists derive not from Nazi Germany but from medieval Christian Europe and many current Moslem nations. Members of minority faiths are not full members of the nation's corporate body, with restrictions ranging from denial of access to otherwise public institutions to inability to own land and substantial property to outright expulsion. orange Those Sophardic Jews who support the Israeli right so strongly tend to be recent immigrants from these countries or their children, stung by personal memories of what it means to All such seemingly insoluble conflicts, whether in the Middle East or Northern Ireland or the Punjab, seem insoluble precisely because both sides have legitimate fears and just claims. not be a full citizen and desperate never to be second-class again. You or I may not like their tactics, but we can't deny their historical experience. I remember how, as a graduate student at Berkeley in the early '70s, I would listen to the students staffing the Israeli and Palestinian tables in Sproul Plaza. If I closed my eyes I often could not tell which side was speaking; we want our land, we want our security, we want our children to grow up with dignity. You have taken (or want to take) our land, you deny our security, you deny our children their dignity; what you charge us with is false Casting one side as the devil, or an Hitler (almost the same thing) doesn't help. Until each side is ready to listen to the fears of the other and to acknowledge what is just in the other's claims, there can be no hope for peace. Judith Roltman associate professor of mathematics Outstanding program Thanks to the Free China Club and the academic departments that worked hard to promote the program given Oct. 25 by the Youth Goodwill Mission, "An Adventure in Chinese Songs and Dances." The troupe presented an outstanding program. The beautifully costumed, energetic and talented young dancers made this a thoroughly enjoyable event. Marilyn Schroeder Lawrence resident Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Enroll Continued from p. 1 varsity athletes had been allowed to enroll as a group. Thompson said that all varsity athletes were allowed to enroll early, regardless of their class rank. Thompson said the office of academic affairs requested that the varsity athletes be allowed to enroll early. He said the early enrollment of the varsity athletes was comparable to VIP hotel and restaurant reservations. Some students said they understood the need for enrolling varsity athletes early said athletes could not attend afternoon classes because of conflicting practices. She said that although the policy did not bother her, she thought many students would be upset by it. Kari Craven. Mission Hills junior. Barbie Tinsley, Wichita senior, said she could understand the athletes' situation but she also would understand why some people were upset over the policy. "I know they've got it rough," she said. "But I'd be really furious if I couldn't get in a class because an athlete was in that class." Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the enrollment policy for varsity athletes_was an effort to prevent disrupting variety practices. The policy, he said, was open for discussion if someone disagreed with "I don't think any policies are final," Burchill said. "This could be reviewed at any time." Head men's basketball coach Larry Brown said the early enrollment would mean that the athletes could get into classes they needed. Because of afternoon classes, Brown said, half of his players arrived late to practice. He said he hoped enrolling early would prevent conflicts between classes and practices. The KU Men's Soccer Club will practice at 4 p.m. today and Thursday at the soccer fields at 23rd and 10th streets. The KU Women's Soccer Club will practice at 4:30 p.m. today and Thursday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. On Campus A Biblical seminar, "The Bible Today: A Basic Overview," will be at 4:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. The Strategy Games Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union. The KU Committee on South Africa will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. The Tau Sigma Student Dance Club will meet at 7 p.m. today in 242 Robinson Center. A workshop on understanding suicide will be presented by the B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation at 7 p.m. today at Hilnel, 940 Mississippi St. University Forum will feature a talk by Marie Cross, associate professor of human development, "Controversial Issues in Nutrition," at 11:45 a.m. tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. Reservations for the luncheon must be made by noon today. The German Club will sponsor a Kaffeestunde for all persons interested in speaking German at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 4047 Wesec Hall. On the Record An antique picture, valued at $3,000, was stolen on Oct. 15 or 16 from the second floor lobby of Lewis Hall, KU police said yesterday. Hall officials reported the theft Friday. Police have no suspects. A Wichita Eagle-Beacon newspaper box, valued at $300, was stolen between 1 a.m. and 4 a.m. Sunday at Ninth and Mississippi streets, Lawrence police said. A monopod, valued at $80, was stolen between 10 p.m. Saturday and 8 a.m. Sunday in the 2200 block of Harper Street, police said. Use Kansan Classified. KANSAS' FREEWAY SINGLES CLUB OFFERS A SMOOTH WAY TO GET YOUR LOVE LIFE IN GEAR Surely it's happened to you, and you've seen it happen to others. You're driving down the street at rush hour and in the lane next to you sits that person. The rest of the way down the street, you make darn sure that person doesn't leave your eyesight and you even try to navigate your way into a position where you can pull alongside that car at the next light. You exchange a few innocent glances and then . . . ZOOM . . . the person turns left never to be seen again. That's what happened to a California women who saw her "Prince Charming" disappear forever in a yellow Cadillac several years ago. That woman, Ruth Guillot, devied a solution she called the Freeway Singles Club, an organization whose single-bedroom numbered stickers on the backs of their cars signifying them as single and available. The process is simple enough. To join members pay annual dues. That entitles them to a numbered dealer that is attached to the rear window of the car. When a member is spotted by an interested member, the spotter jumps down the number and mails a letter with that number on the outside of the envelope to the Freeway Singles Club. The Club takes the number and matches it with the address of the person owning that number and mails the letter sent by the spotter. The Freewell Singles Club is now expanding throughout the United States. Each state is being licensed, many being purchased by former representatives of the Now a national organiza- tion to communicate with out the United States have the member numbe- viation on the decal. The way Singles Club of Kar on men other through each rock state abre- design for the Free- as is this. AT&T A person is trying to grab the roof of a car. To get things rolling in the Lawrence area we are offering regular $35 memberships for only $5 to the first 50 applicants. FSC KS250 PARKING TIME LIMITED For more information contact: Freeway Singles Club P.O. Box 3652 Wichita, KS 67201 (316) 264-3424 Cogburns Kansas University Representatives needed. 25c DRAWS every Tues. & Thurs. Look for Sounds Live on Wednesdays featuring the best in original live entertainment MASS. 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Nov. 15 The Outhouse Lawrence, KS Tuesday FISHBONE Nov. 12 Cogburns Lawrence, KS Tuesday BRIAN BRAIN / Parody Hall Nov. 19 Kansas City, MO Wednesday Nov. 19 THE REPLACEMENTS Parody Hall Kansas City, MO Nov. 20 Saturday TOXIC REASONS The Outhouse 98 Lawrence, KS Nov.23 Tuesday Dec. 3 CIRCLE JERKS University of Kansas Kansas Union Ballroom Tickets available at all outlets 6 University Daily Kansan From Page One Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1985 KU CHI DENETS MIDST HELD KU STUDENT IN TW Mark Mohler/KANSAN Anti-apartheid protesters carry a coffin down Jayhawk Boulevard. Arrest Continued from p. 1 of the University do not understand the basic purpose of an institution of higher learning." he said. The statement also said that Budig's representatives had met with members of the KU Committee and remained "willing to do so." The decision to arrest the protesters was made by a KU administrator, Denney said. He did not name the administrator. The demonstrators in the chancellor's suite were given at least two warnings, Denney said. Five remained after the warnings. "We were expecting nothing other than a peaceful rally," he said. "It was peaceful until they decided to come to Strong Hall." At the rally, Ungerman said, "I'm glad we have such a nice day. Maybe it's some kind of a sign, maybe that we're right." At the end of the rally promotion and action, which had been filled with clapping, shouting and cheering, Aaron Lucas, Chattanooga, Tenn., senior and a member of Blacks Against Apartheid and Black Student Union, told the crowd of about 150-200 students to join hands. Maher said, "People were choosing to ignore us. Something needed to be done to bring about an action. Being arrested accomplished that. "It demonstrated our willingness to sacrifice our personal liberties to accomplish goals." "We're going to march over to Strong Hall," Lucas said. "If the administration doesn't hear us over here, they'll hear us over there." Rasor said she stayed because no one would talk to the protesters. Some students were allowed into the chancellor's suite and unsuccessfully tried to make an appointment to speak with Budig. At a news conference after the arrests, Cobb said that it had not been hard for students to meet with administrators in the past about their concerns about apartheid and divestment. With drums beating and shouts of "Divest now" and "KU out of South Africa," students then invaded Strong to speak with Budig. Administrators had met with students during the summer and now a task force has been set up with members of the KU Committee on South Africa, which is scheduled to meet tomorrow to discuss apartheid and to analyze diversitie. with some of the protesters. Horowitz, a member of the task force, said the goal of the group was to find ways to address the issue of aparteid in South Africa on campus. "We've tried all regular channels and we're sick of being ignored," she said. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, and Frances Horwitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and service, spoke Mary Burger/Special to the KANSAN Kurtis Keyes, Chicago senior, points to a story on a campus anti-apartheid rally that appeared in yesterday's University Daily Kanes. Keyes, the emcee for yesterday's rally, said that the placement of the story on the last page of the Kanes indicated that interest in South Africa was low on campus. yello sub DELIVERS 841-3268 LA PEUR DES COUPS LA PAIX CHEZ SOI two dramas by Georges Courteline LE PAIN DE MENAGE Jules Renard spectacle realized by Claude Beauclair Swarthout Recital Hall University of Kansas Francoise Mojeret et Julien Combey Nov. 5,1985 8 p.m. WANT 842-0600 PIZZA? DELIVERED Tickets available at the Murphy Hall Box Office Public $5 Student $4 Sponsored by the international Performing Arts Committee French and Italian Department American Flyers Ft. Smile 5'000 2:00 9:35 S. Sunday 7'000 1:00 9:30 S. Sunday 7'000 1:00 9:30 1234567890 VARSITY DOWNTOWN 1928-1950 THE LIVE AND DIE THE LA VARSITY Fri. 15:00 Daily 9:40 Sat & Sun 12:30 - 6:00 HILLCREST 1106 AM 940-527-3800 CHARLES BRONSON DETHN WISH 3 CANNON Daily 10:00 - 7:30 9:30 Sck & Sun 2:45 1940年4月,中华人民共和国成立 HILLCREST 2 978-840-3044 TELEPHONE 840-8400 HILLCREST 2 JAGGED EDGE Daily 4:45 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun. 2-20 FOR THE WEDNESDAY INFESTIVAL BRUNO REMO WILLIAMS 545-621-3000 www.remowilliams.com HILLCREST 3 917 AND 1024 TELPHONE 867-2400 CINEMA 1 7351 AND IOWA TELEPHONE 842-6500 GOSUZA STEPHEN KINGS GODZILLA 1985 ALL NEW! Fri 10 a.m. Saturday 7/23 Sunday 7 a.m. Sunday 7/24 SILVER BULLET R Dalle 8:30 CINEMA 2 1430 W. MAIN ST. 867-835-8000 [Name] SISSY SPACEK MARIE O FILM TITLE Fri. 4-85 Daily 7:20-8:30 Saturday 7:30-8:30 Monday 8:30-9:30 comprehensive health associations comprehensive health associates * free pregnancy tests * outpatient abortion services * alternative counseling * psychotherapy * contraception Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 *Bargain Show BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320 SAVE AT IMPORTS + DOMESTICS EXTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 BUFFALO BOB'S Smokehouse SMOKEY JOE SANDWICH SPECIAL $3.50 Chopped ends of BBQ beef, ham, turkey and pork baked in a mild BBQ sauce. Served hot on a bakery fresh bun with tater curl fries and pickles. LOG $2.75 Large Sandwich WHEEL Extra Large Sandwich --- THE TASTE THAT WON THE WEST NO COUPONS ACCEPTED WITH THIS OFFER 719 MASSACHUSETTS OFFER GOOD TILL NOV.30 Formerly Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse—Same nice people—Same management A PAID ADVERTISEMENT A TRIBUTE TO THE OFT-PRAISED "LAZY DO-NOTHING" According to an editorial entitled "Sure Route to Criticism" in the October 27 Journal-World: "it is well for youngsters to learn early that if they want to be leaders they must be prepared for the criticism that will ensue (This criticism)...may be an outcrop of jealousy, but for some reason or other, people who work hard, take a stand on public issues, and make an effort to take leadership in worthy causes are almost certain to receive increased criticism from others." The editorial also describes Peter Ueberroth as "the wonder man who last year made a huge success out of the Summer Olympics in Los Angeles" and notes that he now is "simply trying to do...as baseball commissioner…what he thinks is right and proper." This piece ends with the following statement: "People who are willing to spend most of their lives sitting on their rears and doing nothing probably won't get much criticism. The others, who want to help lead the country to better things, and have a rewarding sense of accomplishment, are almost certain to have a barrage of criticism. isn't it better to have a criticized hero than an unmentioned do-nothie?" By holding that criticism of the influential and powerful "may be an outcropping of jealousy" while saluting Mr. Uebberroth for "simply trying to do...as baseball commissioner." . . what he thinks is right and proper," this editorialist manages to avoid commenting upon those common dissenters who are subjected to criticism for advocating what they sincerely consider to be "right and proper." While all too willing to excoriate every "unmentioned lazy do-nothing," this scribe fails even to mention that growing group of oft-praised lazy do-nothings who gain this designation through their frequently choosing to remain silent in the face of injustice. Although this century has seen many a venal businessman and corrupt politician fall before the investigative efforts of an inspired newspaper reporter, some think the Journal-World's unusual capacity to tolerate results from its having made such a choice. Some think this choice has resulted In the Journal-World's paying lip service to representative government even as it ignores the disproportionate power wielded by City Manager Buford Watson. Some think this choice has resulted in the Journal-World's applauding a shopping mall both downtown and outside of town even as it ignores the controversial circumstances surrounding the Town Center Venture Corporation's becoming the developer-of-record and its (TCVC's) now universally acknowledged inability to shoulder the assigned burden. Some think this choice has resulted in the Journal-World's glorifying the local high school and Kansas University even as it ignores the failure of either institution to devise a program designed to, increase the percentage of intrastate blacks being prepared for and entering college. This failure to create is the reason some KU officials, in the words of the October 24 University Dilly Kanan, "will be on the road to Lornan, Miss.; Madison, Wis.; and Las Vegas, N.M...looking to recruit black, Hispanic, and other minority students...and offer incentives to bring more minorities here." Some think this choice has resulted in the Journal-World's extolling the status quo while it ignores such offerings as, in the words of the October 20 Kansas City Star: A Carnegie Foundation report (which) recently criticized the higher education system primarily for not stimulating student creativity or encouraging a pioneer spirit...Henry A. Gligoux, Miami University of Ohio, associate professor of education, warns of the danger of the movement to link the outcomes of education solely to the needs of the business community. Schools, he argued last year in the Harvard Educational Review, are 'centers of critical literacy and civic courage rather than training sites for occupational positions in the corporate order'. Though he referred primarily to secondary education, the point is aligned with the Carnegie warning of unconcern toward public interest matters: the nuclear arms race, toxic wastes, integration, genetic engineering and violence. These issues beg for an active citizenry. Very simply they are moral issues. No amount of technological competence can handle them. It also requires those human dimensions—an informed conscience, a daring mind, a proficient rationality, compassion. While some Lawrencians may think an expanded airport terminal is better for the community than a public transportation system; baseball and soccer teams are of more educational value than a third-year latin class; the rabble responsible for those disruptions which periodically occur at—to name but two locations—14th and Ohio Streets and the Hillcrest Shopping Center are more important than the law-abiding neighborhood residents and entrepreneurs who are forced to endure these outbursts, perhaps only an oft-praised "lazy do-nothing" would repeatedly refuse to discuss such phenomena. A PAID ADVERTISEMENT William Dann 2702 W. 24th Street Terrace Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 Graphic artist shares ideas with students By Jill White Of the Kansan staff Breaking the norm and mixing contrasting elements of graphic design create a successful magazine spread, Elton Robinson, public affairs art director of Exxon Corp.'s stockholder magazine, said in a lecture last night that capped his third day at the University. Nearly 200 people attended the Hallmark Symposium Series lecture in the Spencer Museum Auditorium. Robinson also was on campus Saturday and Sunday to conduct a lecture for visiting lecturer Rick Cusick's class, VISC 436, Publication and Editorial Design. Robinson, who has worked for the Lamp, Exxon's stockholder magazine, for the past eight years, showed slides of his work from his early career with Horizon magazine to his current work. "It's fun to go against the grain a little and perhaps ask a fashion photographer to photograph sea shells, or send an artist to cover something that a photographer would cover." Robinson said. "I always try to make people look at one picture a little harder by comparing and contrasting it to what is on the other page." Robinson said he often accomplish ed the comparison/contrast effect by placing lifeless or colorless subjects in black and white photography next to color photographs of more colorful subjects. Robinson was not always interested in graphic design. His first interest, which he said began as a seventh grader, was industrial design. In 1955, he received a bachelor's degree in industrial design at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He switched areas in visual communication and studied with Paul Rand and Bradbury Thompson, typography and graphic design instructors at Yale University, New Haven, Conn. He received a master's degree in graphic arts in 1957. Thomas Allen, Hallmark professor of illustration, said Robinson was a successful art director and was "highly respected in the design profession." "His use of image and type is outstanding." Allen said. "He's one of the best partly because his choice of artists is very good. He uses artists who bring something of themselves to their work." Robinson's first job was with Horizon as an assistant art director. He worked next as a free-lance art director for Art in America magazine. After working as the art director for Holiday magazine he joined Time Inc. and was the art director of Fortune and People magazines and art director of special projects for Life magazine. In 1977, Robinson became the public affairs director for the Lamp. He also designs Exxon's annual reports. Cusick said the two workshops conducted by Robinson were interesting because they were "truly working workshops." "The idea was to use two different approaches in design that looked complementary because of the typography and structure," Cusick "A lot of times students get an assignment for a workshop in advance and then the artist just comes and critiques it," Cusick said. "But Robinson wanted to be in on the formative stages of the project." Cusick said students designed two magazine spreads, using themselves as the subject matter. One spread was supposed to summarize a week in their lives and the other was a self-portrait. said. "I thought it was very successful. "It is a wonderful experience for students and very beneficial for talk to these people like Robinson." Duane Michals, Teresa Fasolino, John McConnell and Elton Robinson may not be household names to most KU students. But students in visual communications have become familiar with these nationally and internationally known illustrators and graphic designers. By Jill White Of the Kansan staff Symposium benefits students Jerry Moore, associate dean of fine arts, said, "It has greatly enhanced our program." But had Hallmark Cards Inc. not agreed in 1983 to finance the $90,000-a-year Hallmark Symposium Series to expose design students to leaders in visual communications, students may not have had the opportunity to meet those expert artists. The Hallmark series sponsors seven speakers and four workshops every semester, bringing in such people as photographer Michals, illustrator Fasolo, artist designer McConnell and art director Robinson. "Students get a picture of what it is like out there and where their talents might be utilized." "Being here in the middle of America and away from the city where all the communication and publishing companies are, it seemed even more necessary to have input from professionals all over the world," said Thomas Allen, KU's Hallmark professor of illustration. Hallmark first helped visual communications at the University by financing a visiting professor of illustration in 1980, Moore said. He said KU conducted a national search for an il- instrutor and hired John Collier, an illustrator from Pawling, N.Y., at that time. - mink they needed help," said Collier, who now operates a studio at his home, 2309 Willow Creek Lane. "They didn't have much of a program and having exposure to someone who's working in the field is really good. All the little things you need to know to get a job, top talk, 'you just can't know unless you're in the field.' In 1982 Collier was replaced by Allen, who had been chairman of design at Syracuse University, Syracuse. Allen said he taught a course at Syracuse in which he scheduled well-known designers to lecture to students. He established a similar course at KU, VISC 520, Hallmark Symposium Series. Moore said that in spring 1983, an evaluation committee suggested changes for KU's visual communications that included additional faculty, enlarging darkroom space and typesetting equipment. Besides bringing in artists, the Hallmark Symposium Series also sponsors two workshops a semester. Elton Robinson conducted a workshop Saturday and Sunday. Bob Parker, an illustrator from West Cornwall, Conn., will conduct a workshop next week. The director of CBS, conducted a workshop last fall. Allen said. "They not only get to hear these people, they get to have first hand workshop experience with these people. It's invaluable. "It gives students contact with people out there who might give them a job some day. It's a connection they can use." Kansas and Japan will discuss trade The Associated Press TOPEKA - In an effort to shed light on the trade relationship between the United States and Japan, a trade conference will be held Friday, Nov. 15 in Wichita, Gov. John Carl announced yesterday. Carlin said Nobu Matsumaga, ambassador of Japan, would be a special guest at the conference, which is billed as "Kansas-Japan Agricultural Trade: Current Prospects, Future Potential." Both Matsumaga and Carlin will be keynote speakers at the luncheon. This marks the first time Kansas has been selected. The conference, sponsored by the Kansas Board of Agriculture and the Japan Economic Institute of America Inc., is designed to offer insights into the complex world of the job that is scheduled to last the entire day. The Japan Economic Institute has held 16 other trade conferences and each time has invited a state to discuss significant issues related to trade with that nation. "This conference should be of special interest because of growing importance and attention to trade relations between the United States and Japan." Carlin said in prepared remarks. The schedule calls for a number of experts from the Japanese and American governments, and from the private sector, to take active roles in the conference. Those tentatively expected to address the conference include: Ll. Gov. Tom Docking; William Barnds, president of the Japan Economic Institute; Kazuya Kodama, president of the Mitsui Grain Co.; Phillip Holloway, an official of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Foreign Agricultural Service; Adrian Polansky, a Belleville farmer; Hiroshi Usui, of the Japan Agricultural Co-ops; and Peter Stettler, executive vice president of Garnac Grain in Overland Park. Copies • Reductions • Enlargements • Fliers • Self Service • Collating • Folding • Binding • Business Cards • Letterheads • Brochures • Transparency • Passport Photos A NATIONWIDE NETWORK OF ELECTRONIC PRINTSHOPS. KU zoologist praises state's heritage kinko's Kansans who enjoy travel must grow a thick skin to endure the insults that smug Easterners and those oh-so-sophisticated Californians use to slander our home on the range. Joseph Collins, a zoologist at the Museum of Natural History, said yesterday that "Natural Kansas" described the land, water, weather and creatures of the past and present that compose the state's natural heritage. A KU zoologist grew tired of all the ribbing. so he helped to write a book extolling the heritage all Kansans share, but so many ignore. By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff "Kansas is, because of its position in the U.S. and because of its physical features, a very tranquile state," Collins said. "And because it has very "The array of temperatures we have recorded here is just stunning." have recorded here is just stunning. And Much More! 2024 W.23RD The mercury topped out at 121 degrees at Fredonia and at Alton in July 1936. A bitter 40 degrees below zero was recorded at Lebanon in February 1905. "Yeah, you Californians and New Yorkers, take a look at that monster on the plains," he said, pointing to a stunning photograph of a tornado featured in the book. submitted photographs for the book. Collins said selecting photos from more than 5,000 he received was the most difficult part of compiling "Natural Kansas." He took 21 of the 107 photos that appear in the book. Anyone with an eye to the sky or an ear for the ever-present Kansas wind may be impressed by the awesome power of nature in the state. Collins said the chapter on weather was one he found particularly interesting. Readers who open "Natural Kansas" expecting to find pheasant or carp among the wildlife included in the book will have to look elsewhere. The two species were introduced into the state and therefore are not part of its natural heritage. Kansas, he said, has its own native counterpart to the pheasant — the prairie chicken. "Sure we're the Land of Oz, but Dorothy wanted to come back to the Land of Oz really bad," he said. "She saw the big city and didn't like it." Obviously, he considers himself a Kansan now, clear through to the heels of his Western boots. He said many of his fellow Kansans suffered from an inferiority complex about a home they ought to be praising. few people in comparison to other groups, a lot of its natural heritage intact. "This book celebrates that hostage, and that's what I want to it." Collins said Kansas was a place where someone could go to watch fiery sunsets in complete solitude. Varying from the arid dune country of the southwest to the undulating loveliness of the Flint Hills in the east, his description of the state is a panorama of stark contrasts. Collins said Kansas once was home to the mountain lion, grizzly and black bears and the gray Wolf. Some species, such as the river otter, pronghorn antelope and elk were emerging once again, he said. Others, such as the mountain lion, could be resurrected, too, he said. The tornado photo was taken near Gove by Sheila Beougher, who was one of 27 Kansas photographers who 622 W.12TH 904 VERMONT Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE! Legal Services for Students - Advice on most legal matters - Preparation & review of legal documents - Preparation & review of legal - Neterization of local documents - Notization of legal documents - Many other services available 8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday 117 Burge (Satellite) Unit 864-5665 Call or drop by to make an appointment. $1.50 Woodruff Aud. 7:30 Tonight! Funded by student activity fee. Barbara Stanwyck Edward G. Robinson (Directed by Billy Wilder) DOUBLE INDEMNITY ★ Fred MacMurray MARISSA SMITH AND MICHAEL KENNEDY SUA FILMS "What I "Mystified" Like About You" "Rock You Up" ASPEN! Jan. 4-11. Five days of skiing with everything included for only $356. 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Hoch Auditorium Tickets on Sale Now at the SUA Box Office, all Cats Outlets, and through Dail-A-Tick $12.50 General Admission S12.50 General Admission $11.00 Student with valid KUID Produced by SUA Special Events and New West Presentations AMERICAN AID TO ISRAEL: Its Impact on Israeli Policy in the Middle East a lecture by Samir Abed-Rabbo, Ph.D in International Law author of American Aid to Israel, and The International Law and Question of Palestine 1986 7 p.m. Nov. 7,1985 Alderson Auditorium Kansas Union Laponsored by General Union of Palestinian Students 8 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1985 Focus on space, defense systems Negotiators examine new offers United Press International GENEVA, Switzerland — U.S. and Soviet arms negotiators began a detailed study yesterday of 11th-hour American proposals aimed at paving the way for more substantive arms control talks at the Nov. 19-20 Reagan-Gorbachev summit. The negotiators, focusing on space and defense weapons systems, met for four hours yesterday at the Soviet delegation offices. The group is handling the contentious issue of President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative, a space-based missile defense proposal popularly known as "Star Wars." The Soviets are demanding abandonment of the program and a ban on all arms in space as a condition for any cuts in existing nuclear arsenals. Separate groups studying intercontinental strategic nuclear weapons were scheduled to meet today, with a session on intermediate nuclear forces set for tomorrow. The current round of talks has begun after a final joint plenary meeting Thursday, 12 days before the summit in Geneva. U. S. delegation leader Max Kampelman formally presented Washington's new proposals last Friday, the last scheduled day of the current round of arms talks. The Soviets agreed to a Kampelman request to extend the talks through Thursday so U.S. negotiators could clarify the proposals before delegates return to their capitals for pre-summit briefings. Even before seeing the proposals, however, Soviet chief delegate Viktor Karpov said Moscow still would demand the scrapping of "Star Wars." "SDI is the main obstacle" to any agreement, he said. The arms talks began March 12, with Washington proposing one-third reductions in strategic nuclear arsenals and limits on medium-range weapons. In September, Soviet forces threw down 50 percent cuts in strategic arsenals on the condition that SDI is abandoned. Washington said that DIAP, apart the proposal was one-sided because it would permit Soviet, but not U.S. deployment of n missile systems In announcing the new U.S. proposals, Reagan said they would result in equally deep reductions but on a balanced basis. Reports from Washington said that besides calling for verifiable reductions in strategic weapons, the U.S. proposals would place a ceiling on medium-range nuclear arms. The United States says the reductions must be applied to comparable weapons systems to prevent either side from retaining an advantage, and proposes a ceiling of 140 each on medium-range missiles in Europe, the reports said. Poll favors family planning programs United Press International NEW YORK - Most adults surveyed said schools should be required to work with family planning clinics so teen-agers can get contraceptives and birth control information, the Planned Parenthood Federation of America said yesterday. The poll also found that most adults favored birth control messages on television to stem teenage pregnancies, which Planned Parenthood called a massive problem that pervades our society. Parents responding to the survey said they have improved at speaking to kids about sex but still have difficulty talking about birth control. They said help for parents should be provided by expanding Planned Parenthood programs, the survey found. The poll, conducted for Planned Parenthood by Louis Harris & Associates, interviewed 2,500 residents at home by telephone during August and September and measured public opinion about: solving the teen pregnancy problem the way television treats sexual matters, including messages about birth control; and support for international family planning programs. "By an overwhelming 2-1 majority, 67 percent of Americans favor laws requiring public schools to establish links with family planning clinics so that teenagers can learn about contraceptives and obtain them," said Humphrey Taylor, president of Louis Harris & Associates. People polled also believe that sexually active teenagers would become more aware of birth control if contraceptive messages were broadcast on television, the report said. "Fully 78 percent of the American public would like to see messages about birth control on TV, and 85 percent want sex education offered in the public schools," Taylor said. On other matters, the report found: A slight erosion in the level of support for legal abortion in the last year: 55 percent of adults oppose a constitutional ban on abortion, compared to 37 in favor, down slightly from 58 percent opposing a ban in June 1984 and 33 percent in favor. In July 1982, opposition to a ban on abortion was still higher, with 62 percent opposed and 31 percent in favor. 78 percent of the public favor the United States helping with birth control in developing nations. Sixty-eight percent said unchecked population growth is a major source of food shortages. The support was shown despite the controversy over whether the United States should continue to provide funding for family planning services in developing nations. Court will examine privacy rights case United Press International WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court agreed yesterday to study whether a law could dictate what could occur in American bedrooms, announcing it would decide whether a Georgia law against sodomy violated the constitutional right to privacy. The justices will hear arguments, probably early next year, in the case brought by Georgia challenging an 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision finding that the state law infringed upon "fundamental constitutional rights." The appeals court ordered a lower court to hold a trial on the question. Homosexual rights groups praised the court's decision to review the case. "We're pleased the court is hearing the case because the situation involves a gross interference in private behavior between consenting adults," said Ron Najman, a spokesman for the National Gay Task Force in New York. "We believe the Supreme Court will have no choice but to strike down the Georgia law." This is not the first time the court has taken up questions bearing on sexual conduct. The Supreme Court, in decision dates back to the 1890s, has found that a right to privacy exists in the Concept of Humanism applied it to such delicate areas of preconception, marriage and abortion. A decision in the Georgia case is expected by early next summer. In other actions, the court ■ Rued, in an unsigned opinion, that California can require an Indian tribe to collect a state tax on cigarettes sold to non-Indians. Agreed to decide whether a federal law that bans people who have been committed to mental hospitals from buying guns is constitutional. The sodomy case began in August 1982 when Michael Hardwick, a 29-year-old homosexual, was arrested and charged by the Atlanta police with committing sodomy with another consenting adult in the bedroom of his home. In Georgia, sodomy is punishable by up to 20 years in prison. After a court hearing, the district attorney decided not to present the case against Hardwick to a grand jury unless further evidence developed. However, Hardwick brought suit in federal court seeking to have the law declared unconstitutional on grounds that it violated his rights of privacy, due process, freedom of association and freedom of expression. The federal district court dismissed the case, citing a 1976 Supreme Court order concerning a similar sodomy law in Virginia. The appeals court hearing Hardwick's case ordered a trial be held, during which Georgia would have to show a compelling state interest for making sodomy illegal. France denies dealing in trial United Press International vironmental group died. PARIS — The government yesterday denied that a deal was struck to return two French secret service agents from New Zealand in exchange for their guilty pleas in the sinking of the Greenepeace flagship, French television said. The agents, Maj. Alain Mafart and Capt. Dominique Prieur, pleaded guilty earlier in the day in Auckland, New Zealand to manslaughter and sabotage in the July 10 sinking of the Rainbow Warrior. In exchange for the pleas, New Zealand authorities dropped murder charges, which carried a sentence of life imprisonment. A photographer aboard the flagship of the en- Auckland Judge Ronald Gilbert set sentencing for Nov. 22. Both agents face up to 14 years in prison, but the judge has the option of ordering them expelled from the country. The scandal over French involvement in the episode rocked the Socialist government of President Francois Mitterrand. French Defense Minister Charles Hernu resigned, and Adm. Pierre Lacoste, chief of the French secret service, was fired. French government spokesman Bernard Poulet said there was no official government reaction to the pleas by the agents. "We have no comment to make about whether there was any arrangement between the two governments or if the two people will be sent back," he said. But French television quoted an unnamed government spokesman as saying he had been shot in the head. French news reports have said France and New Zealand were negotiating a diplomatic deal in which the agents would enter guilty pleas in exchange for their return to France. Top New Zealand and French officials met in New York last month during ceremonies for the United Nations' 40th anniversary. Poulet said Defense Minister Paul Quiles telephoned the agents to wish them "good luck" moments before they entered their pleas. Poulet would not say whether Quiles told them how to plea. 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Sp. 105 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 842-8177 KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 MEL AMIGOS MEXICAN RESTAURANT “TACOS” Tuesdays & Thursdays $2 All you can Eat. 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina 2600 Iowa “50¢ MUNCHIES” includes: Burgers-Tacos Chill Sundays & Mondays after 5 p.m. Keep in mind— Potential rushees must register on Nov. 6 or 7 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. Centennial Room Kansas Union Late registration will not be accepted. PICAFLIC HOME VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd, Sp. 105 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 842-8177 KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 MEL AMIGOS MEXICAN RESTAURANT "TACOS" Tuesdays & Thursdays $2 All you can Eat. 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina 2600 Iowa "50¢ MUNCHIES" includes: Burgers-Tacos Chili Sundays & Mondays after 5 p.m. 843-4076 Keep in mind— Potential rushees must register on Nov. 6 or 7 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. Centennial Room Kansas Union Late registration will not be accepted. SMU SCHOOL OF LAW Dallas, Texas Jean Kyle Jury, Director of Admissions, will be on campus WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6 from 1-4 p.m. to talk to students about admission and financial assistance. All interested students should contact the University Placement Center, 223 Carruth-O'Leary Hall, to sign up for interviews. At Adventureland Video we're celebrating our 4th Anniversary. And we're giving you the gifts. JEEP 4X4 4 WHEEL ADVENTURELAND VIDEO'S FOURTH ANNIVERSARY HONDA ATV Sweepstakes 4 VCR's FREE TAPE RENTALS Come In and enter today. Drawing will be held thru Nov. 30 Winners will be notified on Dec. 17,1985 $4.00 Lifetime Memberships thru Nov. 9,1985 ADVENTURE LAND 925 IOWA HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 842-0526 SOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY 1920 JEEP 4X4 4 WHEEL COMMANCHE ADVENTURELAND VIDEO'S FOURTH ANNIVERSARY HONDA ATV Sweepstakes 4 VCR's FREE TAPE RENTALS VIDE CHRISTMAS & THANKSGIVING FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST NO EXTRA CHARGE! AIRLINE COUNTER PRICES Make your reservations at todays prices. CALL NOW! DON'T DELAY DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED On campus or downtown. Maupintour travel service K. D. Union/900 Mass. 749-0700 FINGER WIN a LARGE Minsky's PIZZA! Have Your Name in Lights Announced on 106 KL2N PICK THE WINNERS of these BIG 8 GAMES Iowa State ___ Kansas State ___ Oklahoma ___ vs. Nebraska vs. Oklahoma State ___ vs. Missouri Tiebreaker: Pick the Score of vs. Colorado. DEADLINE: Nov. 9 by 1 p.m. A WINNER EVERY WEEK! Your Entry Entitles You to $2 OFF a LARGE Pizza or $1 OFF a MEDIUM Pizza * Good at the time of registration * Good on delivery—842-0154 - We have FREE DAY DELIVERY! • Reserve our "PARTY ROOM" for your party! Minsky's PIZZA 2228 Iowa 842-0154 Sports Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1985 9 University Daily Kansan News Briefs Injury-plagued KU prepares for 'Buffs Kansas tailback Lynn Williams, who suffered a knee injury against Oklahoma last Saturday, is questionable for this week's game against Colorado Williams didn't practice yesterday, but he did do some light jogging around the practice field. Saturday's game against Colorado will begin at 1:30 p.m. in Memorial Stadium. Head coach Mike Gottfried said the Jayhawks still had a chance to get a bowl bid, but that they needed a good showing against Colorado. "We're still alive." Gottfried said. "But we must play well this week." Quarterback Mike Norseth was forced out of the Oklahoma game in the third quarter after hitting his elbow on the helmet of Oklahoma linebacker Brian Bosworth, but won't miss any more playing time because of the injury. He practiced yesterday and Gottfried said he would play Saturday. The Kansas basketball team will meet the Czechoslovakian National Team in an exhibition game 7:30 p.m. Friday in Allen Field House. Doug Vance, sports information director, said yesterday that Friday's game is included with an All-Sports ticket. All tickets are sold out for this season. Strong safety Marvin Mattox was forced out of the Oklahoma game with a twisted knee, and Gotfried said yesterday that he would be out for the year. Mattox was standing without crutches after the Oklahoma game and he thought his knee would be all right. 'Hawks meet Czechs From Kansan wire reports Golfer overcomes bleak fall season By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff KU golfer Chris Hutchens said yesterday that although his fall performance was not up to par, better days were ahead. "Coach (Ross Randall) has been working with my swing," Hutchens said. "I had a small alignment problem and now everything is starting to work into a natural swing. But I played better last summer." Although Hutchens said he was not really pleased with his performance this the fall season, which will end Nov. 13 in the Hal Sutton Invitational in New Orleans, La., his summer travel log could rival that of any touring professional. He played in many tournaments during the summer, including the North-South Amateur, Trans Mississippi and United States In the North-South Amateur, Hutchens was one of 32 qualifiers to reach the match play competition. He was defeated in the match play round by two-time All-American Billy Andrade of Wake Forest. Randall said school work was a main concern of Hutchins because the golf team probably traveled more than any other athletic team at Kansas. "I thought I played really well there, especially since I hadn't played competitive golf for nine months." Hutchels said. "Most of our tournaments are two or three days long, and they are in the middle of the week." Randall said. "So there are times when the golfers are away from the classroom." The Coffeeville Junior College transfer sat out KU's 1985 spring season to concentrate on his school work. Hutchens, who plans to graduate in Mav. also played in the Oklahoma "It was a disappointing performance because I had won the tournament before," Hutchens said. State tournament, an event he won in 1983. Last year, he was defeated in the quarterfinal of the match play by Oklahoma State's Kevin Wipple. He also finished as second low amateur in the Kansas Open, and qualified second among the Kansas City qualifiers for the United States Amateur. But he hasn't enjoyed that success this fall. "There is a lot of difference playing as an individual and playing for a team," Hutchens said. "When you're playing by yourself and you take a risk and lose, you're only penalizing yourself." "I didn't think I played that well, but I got everything I could out of my game to shoot the way I did," Hutchens said. "I made one mental mistake that kept me from finishing in the top five." "When you're playing for a team, every shot affects the team, so you tend not to gamble as much, just try to salvage a good score. I've always seemed to play better as an individual than as a part of a team. I'm not sure why that is, but it seems to be changing." Hutchens has been working on the mental part of his game, and he credits his progress to David Cook, KU's sports psychologist. Hutchens best showing was in his last tournament, the Tan Tara Invitational in Osage Beach, Mo. He finished in 12th place overall with two rounds of 74. Randall said Hutchens hadn't played great, but he still managed to shoot good scores. He is struggling with a couple of phases of his swing, Randall said. Suzv Mast/KANSAN "He has helped my mental side of my game in the sense that he has given me higher goals to shoot for," Hutchens said. GOLF Chris Hutchens, a member of the KU men's golf team, practiced putting recently at Alvamar Country Club, 1809 Crossgate. Hutchens is currently preparing for the Hal Sutton Invitational in New Orleans, La., Nov. 13. Local duck migration down There has been a 39 percent decline from last year in the population of ducks migrating through the Central flyway to the Kansas area, but Marvin Kraft of the Kansas Fish and Game Commission says he thinks duck hunting in Kansas is still above average. By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff The decline was due to successive drought seasons since 1980 in the Canadian provinces and the northern United States, Mike Cox, also of the Kansas Fish and Game Commission, said yesterday. To combat that decline, hunting season has been shortened and divided into three parts: Oct. 26-Nov. 3. Nov. 9-Dec. 8 and Dec. 28-Jan. 5. Also, bag limits, the legal amount allowed for each hunter, have been greatly reduced. But that wasn't the reason Kraft gave for the plentiful amount of ducks in Kansas this season. The winter conditions were available along the migratory path. There are four flyways — Atlantic, Mississippi, Central and Pacific — that ducks travel in their flights south. Ducks coming to Kansas travel through the Central flyway. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service annually conducts two surveys of waterfowl population — a breeding population survey and a production survey. The breeding survey is taken in May and June, and the production survey is taken in July. Through those studies, the service is able to make a fall flight forecast and predict the migration for each飞way. Based on the breeding surveys, the total duck population declined by 2 percent to half the 1955-1984 average. But as Kraft said, that doesn't mean that area hunters are seeing any fewer ducks. "In reality, the number of birds Kansas hunters will be exposed to is probably related to the kind of habitat we have in our state and north of our state, and the weather," he said. In women's Greek Trophy play yesterday, Kappa Kappa Gamma beat Alpha Omicron Pi 19-6, Chi Omega beat Gamma Phi Beta 34-0, and Delta Delta Delta defeated Pi Beta Phi in overtime. Sheepherders take Greek Rec-A title Gym 21-13, and KU's Finest defeated AFU 21-0. The Sheeparders captured the men's Greek Rec-A championship yesterday by defeating Men 10-0 in the intramural football tournament on 23rd and Iowa streets. Two teams were victorious in men's Greek Trophy competition. Phi Delta Theta 1 stopped Sig Ep 21-7, and Beta A-1 shut out Kappa Sigma 23-0. In today's finals of the men's Independent Rec-A tournament, Yogi's Bears will meet Road Warriors, and Elgins will meet KU's Finest in the men's Residential Rec-A championship. In action yesterday, Yogi's Bears slipped past BA 6-0, Road Warriors shut out Gene's FB Machine 13-0, Elgins defeated Hick's Today's play also will feature quarterfinal action in men's Independent and Greek Trophy competition. Saberhagen chosen MVP once again Since shutting out St. Louis to clinch the Series Oct. 27, Saberhagen's life has been a whirlwind of time spent with newborn son Drew, a trip to the White House, a little bit of travel and no rest. United Press International That's just about what Saberhagen would have to do to top his performance in the 1985 season. He won 20 games for the Royals, was the World Series MVP and became a father for the first time when his wife delivered in the midst of Series week. NEW YORK — Bret Saberhagen has already mapped out his challenge for next year. "I haven't been back to the ballpark since the last day," Saberhagen said yesterday in the ballroom of a New York City hotel. "Maybe next year, I can win 21 games, three games in the World Series and have twins," the 21-year-old Kansas City left-hander said yesterday after accepting Sport Magazine's Most Valuable Player Award. "It's definitely hit me," he said. "I think the parade is when it hit me the most. We had a parade in Kansas City, 300,000 people came...chanting 'We're No. 1,' all these bright faces smiling, people staying out all night just to savor the feeling. Kansas City has made a name for itself." But the memory of Royals Stadium, particularly on an October Sunday afternoon when Cardinal Andy Van Slyke made the last out of the season, is crystal clear. "It has all sunk in for me." Saberhagen said. And so has Bret Saberhagen, who makes no bones about his hopes that the Sport MVP is not the end of the accolades. The American League Cy Young Award will be announced next week. "I'm not really counting on it," said Saberhagen. "But I'm crossing my fingers, my toes, anything I can cross." This is the first year that the magazine's award is not serving as the official MVP award, which Commissioner Peter Uberroth's office took over. Saberhagen won that honor—along with a Chevrolet to donate to charity. No matter what he drives to get there, Saberhagen will be returning to Royals Stadium soon to begin contract negotiations. His one-year pact — complete with incentives for winning the Cy Young Award — is up. Because Saberhagen is entering only his third year, free agency is not an option, but arbitration is. "There could be problems," said Saberhagen. "But I like to think there won't be. I have a good relationship with the Royals. I wouldn't mind spending the rest of my career in Kansas City." Cards upset Cowboys 21-10 to end four-game losing streak United Press International ST. LOUIS — A 46-yard touchdown pass from Neil Lomax to Pat Tilley swowe the lehargic St. Louis offense last night and touched off a rally that brought the Cardinals a 21-10 upset victory over the Dallas Cowboys. The Cardinals overcame a disastrous final minute of the first half to score 14 points in the third quarter and break a four-game losing streak. Dallas slipped to 6-3 and fell into a first-place tie with the New York York Giants in the National Football Conference East while the Cardinals climbed to 4-5 and renewed their hopes of salvaging the season. The Cowboys grabbed a 10-0 halftime lead, with all 10 points coming in the final 56 seconds of the second quarter. But the Cardinals, who squandered good field position throughout the first half, suddenly sprang to life three minutes into the third quarter with the 46-yard throw from Lomax to Tilley. Dallas' scores came on an 8-yard toss from Danny White to Tony Hill at the end of a 93-yard march and on The Cardinals promptly marched 65 yards the next time they had the ball and went in front on an eightyard run by Earl Ferrell with 4:07 to play in the third quarter. Urged on by the first sellout crowd of the season at Busch Stadium, the Cardinals put the game away with 4:13 to go, marching 80 yards and scoring on a 9-yard throw from Lomax to J.T. Smith. a 19-yard field goal by Rafael Septiens with one round to play in the half The victory was the first for the Cardinals on a Monday night since 1977, when they beat the Cowboys 24-17 in St. Louis. It also was only the third time in their last 14 meetings that St. Louis beat Dallas. The Cardinals not only brought life to their sagging offense, which had averaged less than 10 points per game during its losing streak, but also took some pressure off coach Jim Hanifan. After playing most of the first half in Dallas' half of the field without gaining any points, the Cardinals suddenly found themselves trailing by 10 at the half. Speculation had increased in recent weeks that Hanifan might not last the season as St. Louis coach. Dallas took over at its own 7-yard-line with less than seven minutes remaining in the second quarter and scored a 32-yard throw from White to Hul. set in the half, the Cardinals botched the kickoff, which led to a Dallas field goal. Clyde Duncan tried to field the kickoff at his own 1, but succeeded only in batting the ball out of bounds. After Dallas scored with 56 seconds St. Louis eventually had to punt from inside its own 10, and after Dallas took over at the St. Louis 44, the Cowboys were the beneficiary of a 25-yard interference penalty called on Wayne Smith. Sports Almanac Big 8 Team Offense Car Veh. Vds. pp. gg Nebraska 502 220 364.0 Oklahoma 104 184 360.0 Colorado 498 221 277.8 Oklahoma St. 321 151 278.0 Kansas 321 151 278.0 Kansas 328 112 134.7 New State 339 754 134.7 Kansas St. 324 954 134.7 Att Cp Yds Yds抢 vpc Kansas 299 158 103 96 Missouri 251 168 107 96 Oklahoma St. 270 134 138 173.6 Oklahoma St. Alabama St. 210 97 129 129 Oklahoma 67 35 64 110.7 Alabama 84 35 64 110.7 Colorado 67 25 291 89 Playa Vds Yds Pt Bodekraba 823 3751 470.1 Oklimna 623 3761 494.7 Kanaa 625 3699 411.9 Misuurut 602 3692 419.6 Misuurut St. Pordorota 550 3612 328.5 Dale St. 550 3612 328.5 Saint Feree 550 3612 328.5 Saint Feree St. 550 3612 328.5 Carv Yds Yds pp Alabama 305 383 664 Alaska 281 160 124 Arizona 364 1551 1329 Bangalore 364 1140 1329 Bermuda 322 1250 1329 Brazil St. 322 1250 1329 Jewa State 363 1363 1704 Missouri 411 1109 1704 Nebraska 411 1109 1704 **Plays Yds Yds Pts** Oklahoma 358 1153 192.6 Nebraka 360 229 192.6 Colorado 533 2394 365.5 Oklahoma St 407 2114 365.5 Iowa St 407 2114 365.5 Kannas St 601 2901 362.5 Kansas 678 2397 362.5 Missouri 614 1140 362.5 Att Cp Vds Yds Vdp 153 171 778 129.7 Calahona 153 171 778 129.7 Nakamasa 163 79 1079 134.3 Miami State 163 79 1079 134.3 Colombia 226 120 1254 153.0 Oklahoma 226 120 1254 153.0 Kansas State 231 101 1262 157.7 Oklahoma 263 134 1527 157.8 Missouri 217 115 1535 191.9 Kansas 208 164 2125 236.4 | | Can Yds Avg Yds pp | | :--- | :--- | | Thomas, Oksla St | 163 101 135 | | Dubose, Moeb | 163 101 135 | | Wallace, Mo | 149 789 132.7 | | Milton, Neb | 81 149 5.6 117.9 | | Redmond, Neb | 81 149 5.6 117.9 | | Carr, Oksla | 87 163 4.2 72.6 | | Hatcher, Colo | 80 130 4.3 62.3 | | Wellington, Colo | 80 130 4.3 62.3 | | Perry, Oksla | 45 276 6.1 55.2 | | Brown, Colo | 53 225 6.1 46.4 | | Redgers, Iowa St | 92 267 3.5 41.3 | | McKenna, Colo | 30 187 3.5 41.3 | | William, Oslo | 74 245 3.5 35.0 | | Collins, Oslo | 21 177 3.4 24.4 | | Shinneke, Oslo | 17 172 3.4 24.4 | | Clayton, Oslo | 57 219 3.2 31.3 | | Thomas, Iowa St | 55 209 3.8 29.9 | | Stafford, Oslo | 14 112 3.8 29.9 | | Rogers, Kansas | 55 223 4.1 29.9 | | McKenna, Oslo | 14 112 4.1 29.9 | | Alkman, Oslo | 49 93 1.8 23.2 | | Marques, Oslo | 28 155 5.5 22.1 | | Timmons, Oksla St | 22 101 3.4 20.2 | Big 8 Individual Statistics Leading Passers Raiding Aikman, Okla All Air KK league 47 37 142 1352 Norseth, Kansas 288 169 3237 143 1180 K. Williams, Kansas 119 87 1328 143 1180 Turrer, Neb 37 14 350 2113 Pine, Nebraska 37 14 350 2113 Clayton, Neb 56 21 425 1352 Narresh, Kansas Yds Avg Yds pp 7854.1 754.0 9.11 Thomas, Okla$ 851.9 7.00 Thomas, Okla$ 819.9 5.04 Dubose, Neb 610.0 5.43 Adler, Moka 610.0 5.43 Moka, Okla$ 538.0 4.66 Expinza, Iowa$ 902.3 4.66 Wallace, Mo 789.0 5.61 Instructor, Ohio$ 768.9 6.12 Clayton, Neb 745.6 6.11 Miles, Neb 745.6 6.77 Settle, Moka 745.6 7.79 Ratliff, Nabat 912.4 6.04 Carr, Okla$ 363.4 4.28 Woodland, Calo$ 363.4 4.28 Perry, Okla$ 176.1 6.12 Brown, Moka 125.1 6.11 Mitchell, Moka 125.1 6.48 Rodgers, Okla$ 308.7 3.55 Turner, Neb 283.8 5.00 Williams, Oklahoma$ 283.8 5.00 Collina, Okla$ 172.8 6.22 S. Smith, Colo$ 237.0 3.50 Rocklin, Okla$ 237.0 3.59 Thomas, Okla$ 198.7 3.99 Seizu, Seizu 79 37 483 16 96.4 Expinza, IowaSt 197 88 1800 2 96.4 Hatcher, Colo 33 12 267 1 90.1 Rankin, OKlaSt 13 17 185 1 90.1 Gene Ct Vib Cm cp 84 Earid, Kansas 6 45 174.9 Holway, Kansas 6 45 174.9 Johnson, Mo 7 28 410.0 Wooda, Ma 7 28 355.0 Miller, Ma 7 28 355.0 Jackson, Iowa 7 20 159.0 2.9 Dillard, Ohio 7 17 688.0 2.9 Dillard, Ohio 7 17 688.0 2.9 Riley, Okla, St 6 16 221.0 3.7 Gant, Okla, St 6 16 221.0 3.7 Gant, Okla, St 6 16 221.0 3.7 Jackson, Okla, St 5 10 213.0 2.9 H. Shattaker, Neb 5 10 213.0 2.9 Neb, Okla, St 5 10 213.0 2.9 Wemer, Okla, St 6 11 141.0 1.8 Elder, Kans., St 6 11 141.0 1.8 Kans., Kans., St 6 11 141.0 1.8 Suffren, Iowa, St 6 10 138.0 1.7 Thomas, Okla, St 6 10 138.0 1.7 Penn State No.1 in coaches poll It was the first time Penn State was named No. 1 since its national championship season in 1982. NEW YORK — Penn State, a narrow winner in seven of its eight victories this season, convincingly claimed college football's No.1 ranking yesterday in voting by the UPI Board of Coaches. United Press International The Nittany Lions became the fourth N. 1 team this season by capturing 34 of 42 first-place votes and 600 points. A 16-12 victory Saturday over Boston College kept Penn State. undefeated and marked the seventh time this season it has won by less than seven points. That fact probably prevented the Nittany Lions from becoming a unanimous top choice and kept them off one coach's ballot entirely. Iowa, a unanimous choice the past two weeks and No. 1 the last five, sank to No. 6 after a 22-13 loss to Ohio State. Auburn and Oklahoma were the other No. 1 teams this year. Florida, a 14-10 winner over Auburn, raised its record to 7-0.1 The Gators, placed on NCAA probation for three years for 58 rules violations, are ineligible for UPT's Top 20. 1. Penn State (34) (8-4) 600 2 2. Nebraska (5) (7-1) 370 3 3. Ohio State (1) (7-1) 365 7 4. Force (1) (8-4) 363 7 5. Oklahoma (1) 415 8 6. Iowa (7-1) 396 7. Tennessee (Fla.) (7-1) 374 12 8. Baylor (7-1) 374 12 9. Michigan (6-1) 366 4 10. Arkansas (6-1) 364 3 11. Oklahoma State (6-1) 328 13 12. UCLA (6-1) 329 18 13. Alabama State (5-1) 179 18 14. Auburn (6-2) 123 5 15. Georgia (6-1) 56 17 16. Georgia State (6-2) 51 17 17. Tennessee (4-2) 25 18 18. Brigham Young (7-2) 34 16 19. Texas A&M (6-2) 16 20 First-place votes and records in parenthesis, total points (based on 15 points for first place, 14 for second place) Herzog edges Rose to take honor United Press International NEW YORK - Whitey Herzog of the St. Louis Cardinals, who took a team predicted to finish far down in the standings and led it to the pennant, yesterday was named National League Manager of the Year by the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Twenty-four members of the Herrz, whose team won more games (101) during the regular season than any other, edged Cincinnati's Pete Rose by one point because sports writer Charley Feeney of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette omitted the Pittsburgh on his ballot. BBWAA — two from each NL city — participated in the balloting and were asked to name three managers in order of preference. Points were awarded on a 5-3-1 basis and Herzog beat Rose 86-85. Herzog received 11 first-place, nine second-place and four third-place votes. Rose received 10 first-place, 11 second-place and two third-place votes. Last year, Cubs' winner, Jim Frey of the Chicago Cubs, was not mentioned. Tom Lasorda, winner of the BBWAAs first Manager of the Year Award in 1983, finished third with 39 points. Dave Johnson of the New York Mets was fourth with four points, and Bob Rodgers of the Montreal Expos was fifth with two points. Feeney voted for Herzog, Lasoria and Rodgers. Had he named Rose even as his third choice, the first year Cincinnati skipper have tied Herzog for the award. Ironically, the BBWAA employed the point system for the first time last year to try to avoid ties. In the first year of the award, each writer was asked to vote for only one manager. Most baseball writers did not give the Cardinals much chance of winning the NL East when spring training opened. (2) 10 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1985 Reagan grants a historic Soviet interview United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan, trying to assuage Kremlin anxieties, assured the Soviet people in a historic pre-summit interview yesterday that his “Star Wars” missile-defense system is not intended to threaten them with nuclear war. "I can assure you now we are not going to try to monopolize this, if such a weapon is developed, for a first-strike capability," Reagan said in an interview Thursday with four Soviet journalists that was published yesterday in Moscow. Despite full-page play of the interview in Moscow, Soviet censors denied Reagan the opportunity to state his unabridged case to the Soviet people on such matters as arms control, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and a postwar U.S. proposal for international control of atomic weapons In the interview, Reagan spoke in blunt terms about Soviet expansionism and sparred over arms control and foreign policy during the 42-minute interview. But Reagan also added confusion to one of the central issues at the summit — his dedication to the development of a futuristic defense against nuclear missiles — that sent aides scrambling to clarify his words. Larry Speakes, White House spokesman, insisted Reagan was setting terms only for sharing SDI technology, not for its deployment. In the absence of reductions in nuclear missiles, he said, deployment could proceed. Soviets distort Reagan interview United Press International MOSCOW — The Soviet media gave President Reagan unprecedented exposure in an interview with four Soviet journalists published yesterday, but deleted part of his answers and accused him of distorting Soviet policy. The interview was published on the fourth page of the government newspaper, Izvestia and was countered by a full page of criticism on the opposite page. There were no photographs. "Alongside general pronouncements in favor of peace and normalized relations with the Soviet Union, attempts were made in the interview to distort Soviet foreign policy," the official Tass news agency said in a summary of the Izvesta coverage. The interview, given to four senior Soviet journalists last Thursday in Washington, showed basic differences on most issues, including arms control, human rights and conflicts in other parts of the world. 'Evading answers to questions concerning Washington's course with regard to Nicaragua, southern Africa and the Middle East, the president tried to create the impression that tension in the Another White House spokesman, Edward Dijerjane, said Reagan was not implying that we do away with all missiles before SDI deployment and was merely emphasizing the ultimate goal was the elimination of offensive nuclear weapons. world is a consequence of the Soviet policy in different regions," Tass said. In the interview, Reagan condemned the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and repeated a vow made at the United Nations last month to support groups fighting Communist governments in the Third World. With that accomplished, Reagan said, the defensive shield would be needed in case some madman gets his "When we see other nations threatened from the outside by forces which would destroy their liberties and impose the rule of a minority by force of arms, we will help them resist that whenever we can," Reagan said. hands on some (nuclear weapons) and tries to blackmail other countries. in separate prepared answers to written questions. Reagan, who last week countered the latest Soviet arms offer, said the United States seeks a balanced, fair, verifiable agreement on reductions in nuclear arsenals. Formal agreement on reductions in nuclear emissions. "The United States has no tricks in its sleeve and we have no desire to threaten the Soviet Union in any way," he said. "Frankly, if the Soviet Union would take a comparable attitude, we would be able to make very rapid progress toward an agreement." Just 15 days away from the first superpower summit in six years, Reagan surveyed the landscape of U.S.-Soviet relations and expressed hope he and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbacher could find ways that they could prove by deed that there is no need for distrust between the nations. But the Reagan answers, like the Soviet questions, also underlined sharp differences in the four areas on the U.S. agenda for the summit; arms control, regional conflicts, bilateral relations and human rights. For example, Reagan asserted that the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and support for insurgency in Cambodia, Africa and elsewhere had created enormous tension in U.S.-Soviet relations over the years. When one interviewer likened Afghanistan to the U.S. invasion of Grenada, Reagan retorted: "The Soviet troops have been in Afghanistan for six years now, fighting all the time. We did what we were asked to do — the request of the government of Grenada — and came home." Release of the interview, the first in 24 years that an American president has granted to Soviet journalists, coincided with its publication in the Soviet government. He soon became even led to believe the interview would be carried Sunday. The interview had been planned since September. Shultz's Soviet trip paves road to talks United Press International MOSCOW — Secretary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze met yesterday for almost eight hours — their longest session yet — to pave the way for the super-power summit in Switzerland. Shultz, accompanied by National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane and arms control adviser Paul Nitze, is the first secretary of state to visit Moscow since Cyrus Vance in October 1978. He is to meet Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev today. There were smiles and pleasant chatter as Shultz and Sheardnade, each flanked by 10 aides, including several arms control specialists, sat down for the talks at the orate mansion used as a guest house by the Soviet Foreign Ministry. As the talks began, Shultz吟味ly remarked to Shewardadze, "You must have a lot of clout to have a place like this." When the Soviet's interpreter appeared to be puzzled by the word "clout," Shultz's interpreter explained the American expression. But the talks quickly turned serious and continued for almost eight hours — longer than any of the previous sessions between the two foreign ministers. U. S. and Soviet officials would not discuss the details of the negotiations, but Assistant Secretary of State Rozanne Ridgway told reporters that the sides covered all the items on the agenda. Besides arms control, the agenda that Shultz took to Moscow included human rights, regional conflicts and bilateral issues. Shultz and his party arrived from Helsinki, Finland, and were met at the airport by Shevardnadze and his wife. Shultz said that he and Sheard-nadze had conducted "candid and productive" talks on four previous occasions and added that this week's talks would be similar. United Press International Boston railroad strike strands 25,000 BOSTON — Trainmen, conductors and yardworkers of the Boston & Maine railroad staged a wildcat strike over safety concerns yesterday, stranding 25,000 commuters and prompting the railroad to seek a back-to-work court order. The Boston & Maine Corp., which runs the commuter rail lines for the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority to point west, north and south of Boston, called the wildcat strike illegal. While the railworkers are not considered public employees, who are barred from striking under state law, MBTA spokesman Bernard Cohen said they have a responsibility to the public. "They're not considered public employees, but we don't think they have a justification for the action they have taken," Cohen said. "There are other remedies besides leaving 25,000 commuters stranded, like negotiations." Cohen said the railroad and the MBTA have asked the federal court in Boston to issue a back-to-work order. About 700 workers walked off the job without notice at 4:30 a.m., idling all eight commuter lines feeding Boston's North and South stations. The central issue is safety procedures on a number of construction projects on lines in the Boston area, union spokesman Roger Lenfest said. "What they have been doing is indiscriminately getting contractors out on the track without the proper flag work," Lenfest said, referring to the system of signaling trains. "They have, been cutting corners in the extreme." Llenfest charged. "We have tried for several weeks now, even months, to negotiate these items in good faith and the company has taken a very belligerent attitude." MBTA officials were forced to cancel all evening rail service when the court failed to produce a back-to-work order by 3 p.m. Cohen said. The strike forced commuters to seek alternate transportation, including the use of private cars and makeshift bus services arranged by the MBTA. Members of the United Transportation Union Local 1331 set up picket lines at stations used to bring rail employees to work. Cohen said. "Those lines are not being crossed, and as a result we have no service." Cohen said. New evidence may overturn conviction United Press International in Jackson, Ga., to overturn the conviction. ATLANTA — Lawyers for Wayne Williams said yesterday that they will ask a court to overturn his conviction in the so-called Atlanta child murders based on evidence they claim was withheld by prosecutors. Lynn Whatley, an Atlanta lawyer who has represented Williams since April 1982, said he would file a petition next Monday asking a state court Whatley said he had obtained a 12-inch stack of documents that included statements two confidential informants gave that linked a Ku Klux Klan member to one of the murdered children. "The evidence is crucial. The evidence is exonerating." Whatley said. "It could have produced a different verdict if it had been disclosed." Whatley said the informants told police a Klan member threatened to kill 14-year-old Lubie Geter after the boy bumped his go-cart into the man's parked car. The incident allegedly occurred in late 1980, and Geter disappeared Jan. 3, 1981. His body was found one month later. and music promoter, was arrested in June 1980 as a suspect in 29 murders of young black males over 22 months in Atlanta. Williams, a would-be talent scout At the end of a nine-week trial in February 1982, Williams, then 22, was convicted of murdering Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, and Nathaniel Cater, 28. He was sentenced to two consecutive life sentences. Unwind at Becerros Relax on our patio Becerros MEXICAN Margarita 1.00 Wine .50 Draws .25 ALL DAY TUESDAY As always, our chips and salsa are Free! QUALITY AUDIO—THE BEST PRICE! 2515 W. 6th 841-1323 BECCHOS MEXKAN Bang&Olufsen of Denmark BANG & OLUFSEN TURNTABLE WITH ELECTRONICALLY CONTROLLED DRIVE $188 KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO - VIDEO shop 10 $188 UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY 843-5279 HP-IV计算器 BIN 0B 0B 0B 0B ] Free. Get HP's new $49* software module when you buy an HP-41. A deal that has no equal, for a calculator that has no equal. The HP-41 Advantage holds the most popular engineering, math and financial programs ever - user-accessible subroutines - it's menu driven Get the calculator engineers prefer. and get the HP-41 Advantage at the price you prefer Free. Offer ends 11-15-85 Suggested U.S. $79.00 in financial programs ever written for the HP-41. Plus: 22K pages of BOM hp HEWLETT PACKARD HP 41CV AND HP 41CX NOW ON SALE! HP 41CV-$176.95 REG.$225.00 HP 41CX-$259.00 REG.$325.00 S Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. "At the top of Naisht Hill" "Offering the Private Competitive Edge" 843-3826 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY HOURS Mon-Thurs - 11a.m. 2a.m. Fri & Sat - 11a.m. 3a.m. Sunday - 11a.m. 1a.m. $1 OFF ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY --- $1 OFF any 2 pizzas PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY HOURS Mon - Thurs - 11a.m - 2a.m Fri & Sat - 11a.m - 3a.m Sunday - 11a.m - 1a.m $2 OFF any 3 pizzas ANY PIZZA ORDERED Expires 12-31-85 NAME ___ ADDRESS ___ DATE ___ 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center 842-1212 EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1985 11 Classified Ads The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 8.25 16-20 3.20 4.25 6.00 9.30 21-25 3.20 4.75 6.75 10.35 For every 3 words add: 30¢ 50¢ 75¢ 1.05 AD DEADLINES Classified Display ... $4.40 www.houseleaks.com Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum height is an inch. No reserves allowed in classified display advertisements for larger displays. Monday Thursday 4 m.m. Tuesday Friday 4 m.m. Wednesday Monday 4 m.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 m.m. Friday Wednesday 4 m.m. classified display advertisements: <* class displayed display ads do not count towards me* * - Tearsthesis are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Those ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansai business office at 904-4358. POLICIES Classified display ads do not count towards monthly rate entitlement - Words set in ALL CAPS units are 2 words. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS to The University Daily Kannan • All advertisers will be required to pay in advance - Words set in ALL CAPS count 24 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count 3 words * I define 4 a.m. – 2 working days prior to mobilization - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only SERVICES OFFERED - Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to publication of advertising. E enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transp. provided, 841-7749. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716 SADIUM BAILER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts, all hairest. $6. No appointment - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising Delta Gammas who write on paper towels end up wearing cement shoes. Ancient Malo prawns BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing Confidential Counseling: 434-8211 - Blind box ads + please add c. $4 service charge. * Blind boxes must accompany all classified ads named paper that delta gamma in the night. Devon. PATCH. I know who you are. I want to meet you. - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement. - No refund on cancellation of non-airline classified. TEMPLATE & TEMPLATES OUTLINED ednshored with PROCESSING, editing, revising, Victor ENTERTAINMENT MISCELLANEOUS 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. 864-4350 PERSONAL FREE - Shelley mix 8, m moys, shotts. Very cute friends. Must place ASAP. 942-3100 NIGHT LIFE Mobile DJ Dance Music. A mixture of New Rock and the classics presented over a 400 watt sound system. When it's time to dance, call NIGHT LIFE 748-4713 Slib. For a happier 2nd I have just one thing to say, Chemistry be gone! BUS.PERSONAL $30 - $800 Weekly Up Mailing Circulars? qoatas! Sincerely interested rn solid address envelope. Success, Box 470CEG, Woodstock, I 60098. Witty, attractive female, 30, seeks intelligent, political, social science, political services. Photo please. Box 531, Lawrence University Daily Kansan 168 Undergraduate positions available in the LA&S COLLEGE ASSEMBLY. Make your voice heard. Filing deadline Nov 3. Nomination forms available at www.la&scollege.com. Position needed. More information call 844-722-1090. Aerobics w/Style. Gals and Guys-fun, good workouts. Four times weekly.-M.W,r Revenings and Saturday mornings. Teri-841-6237 or Ardi-841-0867 COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater health area. Call for appointment: 913-345-180 --- MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Union's recording of the day's entrees & soups. Creative, thinking singles, kindred spirits through LOVELINE, the directory for educated women in Chicago. K. 6904. Inc. one- membership $4.00. Harcourt $7, perm at Channels. Contact Chris Hareux 7, perm at Channels. H2 sportswear CUSTOM DESIGNS FOR LIVING SPORTS HOME We Make Ideas Come Alive 1023 Mass. 749-7471 Thousands of R & R album's #4 or less. Also collector items. Sat & Sun only 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Quintails B11 New Hamphire Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles Rent '17.唐 T:23V $82.98 m滑车+Smity 7TV 1447 W:23D B:5273 F:5310 M:9-30 S:9-10 Sun- I say it a shirt, custom silk screen printing; it jerseys and caps Shirtart by Swetl 749-1611 WINTEY BREAK skiing at Stearnback Springs and Vail from F8, or sailing at South Padre Island. See our Suncatchers Tours for more information to fill out a reservation. TODAY! When your winter break is over. Bike Sale 10% off all Buniack Models, Touring, Trucks and Mountain Bicycles Safeburft Moss Landing Terraced Bicycle Bv GARY LARSON ING © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate "If there's monsters moving in next door, Danny, you just ignore them. The more you believe in them, the more they'll try to get you." BLOOM COUNTY We get your computer's head on straight. Computer Repair Alpha Omega Computer Services Bent' 18° T. 'Color' 32° T. $29.88 a month Matex Maths 147 W. 32rd W. 247-58th Mast. Sat. 9-30 Sunday 6-7 Health insurance for Students. Short-term and long term plan available. Call Dutton Insurance, 426-981-5770. Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization timetable, I.D. and of course, fax. YUMPIES. SIMILAR PRESENTS- CARAMEL FISH THINGS. REPUBLICANIM, MAYBE KE CREAM. ALL THIS COUNTRY THE LEMON CANDY. BEAUTIFUL HONE FROM PRIME SUPFICIOUS OF BY BY TIME AND MEPI-MEPI-MEPI-WEEKEND, THINGS. FACURED, NOTHING. LEFT! Jayhawk, Go HaWaiian is the 1985 Homecoming Theme. Go HaWaiian with the best Paradise Point shirts and parts from The Etc. Shop. Ship. 7-14pm to 11-30pm. M/T 11th Thur. 12-5 Sundays MIND. HELP ME AMOLE...TOWARD YOU'S MAPE IS ONE AND I AWN'T STOPED A TREND YET... Ladybird Care TRENDS ULSX Modeling and theater portfolios--shooting now Beginner in professionals, call for information, or schedule CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK Need custom imprimed sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and prices on printed premium specialties plus speedy and reliable delivery. You design it or it goes to us! 201. W. 201. Belsom (Glasen) 813 - 844 1349 New from California. Free! Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure. 316-244-3742. PO Box 3622, Wilkitta. 7621. See ad in Monday's Kanagan KU Representation. REWARD-Free Trip to Daytona plus Commission money; WANTED: Organized group or individual to promote the 1 Spring Break Trip to Daytona. If inspired, call 1-800-453-9243 immediately! $5.00 off Regular $15.00 MATHY TUORF - Bob Means builds a M.A. in math from K.U., where 802, 102, 116, and 123 were among the top universities in Australia, and 74 were similarly in 1975 and often tutors elementary statistics - 25 per 40 minute session. Call 841-903-6200. DON'T MISS THE LAWRENCE DEBUT OF SST RECORDING ARTISTS THE MEAT PUPPETS. SAT. NOV. 9 AT THE OUTHOUSE (4 M.I. E OF MASS. ON 13th). EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HEY SINGLES Share your college activities with a companion. Our unique VIDEO IN-STUDIO program allows students to eligible adults in an afternoon than months of bar scenes or singles games. For more information, visit hey-singles.com. THE PERFECT DATE... In our private hot tub! AAA. TYPING/842-1942. Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs. Law review articles typed by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in by 6 p.m. out by 10 p.m. same day. GROWING SADLY...T GROWING... Ladyfair Tea TREASURE DIE TION has found a system of dating which works. COMPUTER DAYING with a personable touch. TION uses the company's website to buy simply sending $20 in an self-addressed envelope. TION CONNECTION P.O. BOX 508 Lawrence K 86044 TYPING A-2 professional typing. Term papers, Theses, Dissertations, recourses. Use an IBM SELICIT database. Includes FREE * Stereo * Cable TV or * Optional Movie Rental EUROPEAN SUNTANNING 25TH & IOWA + HOLIDAY PLAZA PHONE 841-6232 24-Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes, Assessments Best quality and fast service. 841-7606. 1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Affordable and affordable tutoring. Judy. 849-7945. DISSERTATIONS / THIEFS / LASW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter paper papers up to 30 papers. Mummy's Memory: 448-378-898 before 9 p.m. Please. by Berke Breathed Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard secretary S. Sirius-Corona, picta type. Call Nancy A DIFFERENT Service. Tape THANKS-CRIPTIONS a specialty Experienced, Jeanette Shaf. AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing/Typing Corrections, Proreadings, Graphics Wordstar Document upgrading, Free estimates 749-1118 All Kinds of Typing: GOOD IMPRESSIONS Past affirmations/Spelling mistakes/cursors error Kids Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, forms, or documents. Call 1-800-234-9767 or 845-783-9767, 9: 1 p.m. Use memory with memory 845-783-9767, 9: 1 p.m. DEPENDENT, professional, experienced JENETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service TRANSCRIPT also; standard cassette tape 843-8877 A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850. A l. SMITH TYPING SERVIENCE -Experienced A l. SMITH term papers, romances, michelanous A l. SMITH term papers THIS COULD BE A TREND! HOLD THE PRESSES! Kristen Lace TEXTBOOK LOAD PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 814-6254 Assertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone 862-2310 after 9:30. Bark Satype Type. Quality for all your typing needs. Disk Type. Call. Email. Call Mary. 843-7464 or 81-9224. QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, applications, Spelling corrected 641-724-714 TOP-NOTCH10 professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality print- ers. ExactType. Quality for all your typing needs. Disk 841-9244. Call Machine. 841-744-7440. 841-9244. Call Machine. BE WORDDOCTORS: Why pay for when typing you can have word procession? 843-3147. XPERIENCED TYPEP Tern paper; terms RM Correcting Selective. I will correct spelling. RM Correcting Selective. I will correct spelling. ANNOUNCEMENTS Hillel Workshop on Understanding Suicide ARAB ISNAELLI CONFLICT: How many minutes to midnight? Law: 7:00 p.m. Wed. No. 21367898502465 with Dr. Richard Nelson Tues., Nov. 5 7-8:30 p.m. Hillel House 940 Miss. SIL COLOMADO-All include package for $230 Limited offer, call now for information/ register@silcomodo.com VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL 2-Time Management, 2-3-Program for Exams, 4-00-Latening and Notetaking FREE! Register to attend at the Student Assistance Center For more info call The Hillet Office 864-3948 The Secrets Out! great places to live. * 4 womens and 4 mens schol Scholarship Halls are - friendly atmosphere - less expensive because o shared responsibilities * self governing * close to campus Spring Semester Openings Anyone may apply. Applications available in 123 Strong Hall. **Rent-19** *Color T.* $28.06 a month. Smiley's TV* 147 218 CARTOON. Sat. Mar. 5-10 at 11 a.m. MST. SKI COLORADO over Thanksgiving! Rent a con- do in Colorado, tub, tub, pool, bus to 1849-7972. Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $14.89. Sony's VCR, l447 W, b32d, b453W, Mon.-Sat. Sony's VCR, l447 W, b32d, b453W, Mon.-Sat. Deadline for applications 11/8 "Arab Israeli Conflict: HOW MANY MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT?" A lecture by John Law of Chase Manhattan Bank. Former Vice-President Former Chief Middle Alderson Auditorium Kansas Union 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 7:30 p.m. for U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT. School of 1904 Political Science Deptartment, and the Saudi Students Club. School of Journalism OREFRAME PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP. LEARN about: defining a topic; using the library; taking notes; and organizing/ writing the paper. Tuesday, November 5, 7- p.m., Down Anolium 308-Dyche Hall. FAREE: Julia Allomorland 308-Dyche Hall. Assistance Center, 121 Strug Hall, 844-4944 PRE-REGISTRATION BLUES? Need help with exploring career options? Call the Emily Taylor* Women's Resource Center at 643-523 for an app or visit www.teencare.com 9:14 a.m.-4 p.m. on Tuesday through Friday Apartment available next to Unite. Starting Jan or immediately Carving W 804-1423. Evening. Sunday, June 6th from 5pm to 9pm. FOR RENT Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 109 West Wing. One bedroom furnished, 3rd floor. $250 plus utilities. Lease through May. No dogs. price could be negotiable. You are tired of living in a dorm! Come and live at BENKELEY FLAT. Vacations available now and at semester. Plan ahead, lease now for next year. RS3-2116 Attractive 2 bedroom condominium for rent. 1.34 baths, CA. PF, range refrigerator, microwave, DW. WD bookings, paid cable TV, swimming pool, walking distance to Apt. 5. Available Dec. 1. Lease Cooperative living lovers your expenses while expanding your mind. Room available at Rainbow House, 750 South Columbia Road, Council 84-9798 after 5 p.m.; for an application to become part of our living environment. Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Phone 843-4185. Coyy. carpeted studio apartment user campus at Mineau available. December 1. 749-616 paid. Two bikis from Kansas Union. No pets. phone: 841-5500 Luxury townhouse, 3 bedrooms, 1/2 baths, garage, fireplace, deck, isolarium window. Five bedrooms. Bathroom. $800 FOIR FIRST MONTH'S RENT. ONE & two bedrooms available beginning at $80/month. All apartments have CA, gas heat, DW, FF refrig. Kitchen with on bus route. BK 443-8474 for details. Rooms for rent. Special Nov rate. Clean and quiet home. No calls' Call 749-2678. Mark Sublease 3 bedroom furnished apartment, Tungweed Apartments, close to campus Call (866) 247-1500 Sublease: 2 bedroom apartment on KU bus route. Free phone installation, free cable, off-street parking. Phone welcome $225. 841-4690 Sublease 1 bedroom furnished apartment at Sundance Apartments. On bus route B141-825 or 342-806. Sublease, own bedroom in nice dapier near cam- paign. Quit bedding; atmosphere $167. mo quote 822-345-9000. 1 bedroom apts. from $199 some utilities paid. Near downtown and the University. No pets please. Sublease 2BH, 21TH, Apt. D, laundry/storage room, bus route 81, west-bound west-location, bus route 119, water, bed, w42-517 and w43-610. FOR SALE 72 Pontie Grand Village 65K miles, seats six comfortably, $1000 or best offer; European 10-speed bicycle, $400 new, $755, Nikon FG Camera v-8mm Nikon, dedicated flash, $200. John at Baseball cards and sports notignal Buy, Sell and Trade 1.2 D. Baseball cards 10.6 M-85 D. Baseball cards CARPET 30,000 square yards in a rainbow colors. All styles and stiles. Big foot's Use Carpet Mats. CD Player. Lowest Price/Brand $200 and its yours. 82-3326. Ask for Mark. CLEAR! Optically clear window plastic. Mylar or Polyethene® 90" or 102" blunt. Bluestem Energy. Comic Books, Pictures, Penalties, et al. Comics. Open 11 Tues-Fri. Sat. & Sun 10-5. Bath 21-43. Canon AE-1 Prog. with Canon 1.8 lens, UV filter, Gamelope Excellent condition, #755, 784-794 GOVMENT HOMES from $1/U repair. Also call 800-657-6087. GEH Q739 for information. Guitar for sale. *80 Gibson SG w/original guitar and price varies. Great action, excellent concussion protection. Call (212) 569-7323. Handscooter 1094, Aero-80 Red - 800 miles. Like a bicycle, Handscooter has a rear handlebar. Call 911-325-2700 - evenings. Hewlett-Packard HP-41CV with card reader, brand new, $200. Phone: 1-273-5743 brand new, $200. Phone: 1-733-3734. Handles 800x200x200. Has 500MB of data. IBM-PCXT compatible computer. Only $459. Call 842-7638, ask for Charlie. KWALITY COMICS--Comic Books, Science Fiction Hole play and simulation games. 111 Hole play games. 111 Phillip. Glass album -EINSTEIN ON THE BEACH- brand new-ball price. 841-216. Stierling Sterling: mint condition, cubs on wrist classical style, $35 or best offer. Call 843-603-682 America, Inc. Computer from E&S. Full America, Inc. Authorized Distributor, ThinkMirc, Inc. Copyrighted by Sandberg Electronics Tried of finding everywhere for QUALITY TIRES & WHEELS is at reasonable prices? Well, you don't need to spend a ton of money on brands are at our everyday low prices (comparable with MAIL-ORDER). In come and check WATERBED Queen. includes. Pedestal waveless matress, 5 year warranty. My cost 840. Will take half price or best offer 480. Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class analysis. 3) For homework. Analysis of Western Civilization *available now at Town The, Jayhawk bookstore*, and University Of Oklahoma. Collector Starter. Mint and used. Caucasus, U.S. Eurogear and more. Open 10-6, Sat. Sun, only 819. Must have valid card. $45. OLYMPUS OM-18 with 90-210 zoom $200 B.O.B. 481-0646 AUTOSALES 1972 Mercury. Runs great-$500 or best offer. Call 811-429-3999. 1927 Mercury Monarch 4-door trans. trs. 75,000 miles $11,000. Call 843-1223 after 6 p.m. 1928 Fax T 1/9 convertible hard top. 60,400 miles. 26.30 mg Airtime. Asking $1500 Call after 6 p.m. 84-1838. 1979 Ford Mustang, new stereo, new tires, looks great on Call Yeaven. 841-1832 1977 Chevy, impala auto. Cruise, new tires. 1978 Buick Regal auto. New paint. 481-7555 PONTIA IPCAC LJ, Automatic, All Stores, FWD and great MPG Best Offer 482 1984 BMW 310i, Low mileage, all electric, custom interior. Beautiful. Call 749-284-82. 300 ZN XIS3N TANUBO: Red like new. Low mileage. T-Top. Loaded. Good price. 814-1392. 75 Datum B210 Gas saver, runs well, radio, radio new, tail call. B24-109 2 no to m. 5 78 Firefight brn 70k ml ac amft fass excellent cond 482-4875 VW SCREEN, -great car inside out, AM/FM tapee equalizer, new radios, 1905m -television. Late '82 Celica GT Liftback, AT overdrive, AC, cara. radio, cruise PB, P5.ows, mvc. exc., no flaws, alloy, new Pirelli and exhaust. Need to buy market $3600 031 441 028 749-7437 fax 749-7437 71 NOVA, Automatic, PS, PB, runs. $850 964/3202 LOST/FOUND Found: small young, brown, beige and black tabby cat with yellow eyes and white collar Found... Texas Instruments calculator. Obst 31st in passing to East of Computer Center. Ask for phone number. LOST KEYS on campus, possibly in Union or Watson library) or 1 or keys with key chain (unlikely). Babysitter wanted for 3 children in our home. Prefer daily from 9-12; will consider 2 or 3 day schedules. Own transportation Call 842-1092. Child care needs full time, part-time Child care center needs full-time, part-time teachers. Call for appt. 749-0956 part-time or full-time available. Apply in person at Country Forks Restaurant, 1500 W. 841-9727. Join our "NANNY NETWORK" of over 250 placed by You. You can肩负 creative childcare, be an educator or be a consultant for great salary, benefits and working conditions. Round trip air transportation provided. Transportation included to choose from. HELPING HANDS, III. 33 Kwh Rd. Willett, CT 08973 | 800 263-1424 | NO FEE KANU IM - FEN seeking a broadcast engineering technician to perform recording and recording equipment, assist in purchasing parts and supplies, staff research, maintenance and production. Assigned by the Assistant Director for Operations and Engineering. Qualifications: a demonstrated knowledge of electronics, the ability to write and compile technical specifications, and files. One or two years previous work in electronic maintenance preference. Position is open to applicants with a Bachelor's degree or.files. One or two years previous work in electronic maintenance preference. Position is open to applicants with a Bachelor's degree or.files. One or two years previous work in electronic maintenance preference. Position is open to applicants with a Bachelor's degree or.files. One or two years previous work in electronic maintenance preference. Position is open to applicants with a Bachelor's degree or.files. One or two years previous work in electronic maintenance preference. Position is open to applicants with a Bachelor's degree or HOUSEKEEPER - Responsible woman needed daily and weekly cleaning, general housekeeping, light cooking and transporting a fifth grade girl to and from dance classes after school. Negotiable. Mature time housekeeping position. 15-30hrs, M.F. Part-time, dependable applicants. Must be available over breaks. Call Buckingham Palace 842 6264 KANSAN RESEARCH AID NEEDED for data collection in Topeka with children with severe disabilities. Also data entry and summary in Lawrence. Must be currently enrolled, have reliable transportation, and be willing to record a record of attendance. Prefer someone with behavioral observation and/or data entry experience. Send resume Lynda Powell, AA13 807, Lawrence, CA. Resume KS 8449 by Nov. 4, EOE/AAI. Sales position 2 nights per week, 4 hours per night, delivering directly with customers. Hours 5:00-8:30 am/7:30-10:00 pm. Scholarship Hall Director (Milfer Hall) 3/4 time, graduate position for the Spring, 1988 semester. Responsibility for facilitating resident personal development through group-centered community engagement. Residential group living experience. Salary: $400 plus room and board. Applications in Office of Residential Programs, 123 Strong Hall Ground Floor. Application deadline November 15, 1985. AA/EOE The University of Kansas Budget Office has two faculty members in the School of Education assistants with possible full-time employment during the summer. The first of these two faculty members will be accountant transfers for the University's budgets. This person will gain a good exposure to fund management and accounting for the University's financial environment. This position requires a minimum of seven years of experience in the University's financial environment. It requires good typing ability and proficiency with word processing and spreadsheet software. Graduate student status and good written and oral communications skills. $400.00 to $400.00 per year. Position dates are November 15, 1985. Position start dates are flexible. For information call Jana Hinz, Budget Office, 363 E. 21st St., Sioux Falls, SD 57101. Sidleigh Hall Equal Opportunity Employer. Travel Field Opportunity. Gain valuable marketing experience while earning money. Campus representative needed immediate for spring break trip to Florida. Call Brad Nelson at (212) 587-0691. Female Aide A.M. 7:30-12:00 P.M. 10-12, weekends add 749-0288 WANTED Rass Player Vocalist for working band percussion, record contract. Styles: re. R & H, R&G. Reggae, Funk & Jazz. Call 415-798-3800. Female roommate for second semester, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, all amenities, car port, swimming pool, completely furnished. $185 plus 1/2 utilities. Nageable. 84-321 Gstaad. Female roommate wanted to share 2 Bd. Apt. WB.D, C/A/C/H. Newly remodeled, furnished. Close to campus & Downtown, on bus route #1335 Lounge at Bldg. #4-8338, Learn or Learn no weekends please. HOUSEMATE(S) for great house. Close to KU 845-739-6281 Looking for female resident to occupy room at Naskilh Hall for the second semester. Rooms may be limited, so don't wait any longer. Call Diane. 811-4777. Responsible male roommate for spring semester. Meadowbrook, two bedroom apt, very quiet. Roommate needed immediately to a nice mite drapes at Traillridge with fireplace, etc. Have own bedroom (unfurnished). $140 (negotiable) plus 1/2 utilities. 841-262 Two Female roommates for beautiful, renovated 4 Bdrm house, separate bedrooms. 1026 Ohi, $175-3200 mo plus utilities. Call Julie or Marci at 149-169. WANTED= 2-SEASON BASKETBALL TICKETS PRICE NEIGHBORABLE. #48-8811 WANTED: Roommate for Spring semester Wonderful 3 Bedroom Bedroom w/Acme. Close to campus, Cable, A/C, Pool, $115 per month. We're nice, fun people! 882-363 WANTED: Roommate for spring semester. Wonderful 3 bedroom Meadowbrook apartment. Close to campus, A/C; pool, $115 monthly. We’re nice, fun people. 82-8265. Write ad here Wanted: non-smoking, female to tuber apartment $125.00 / s; abilities B4-144-8488 **MEDICAL ASSISTANT** Phone Name_ Address Name: Classified Heading: to ___ Dates to run | | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1-18 words | $2.60 | $3.75 | $5.25 | $8.25 | | For every 5 words correct | $30^+ | $50^+ | $75^+ | $10.5 | | Total | | | | | Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Classified Display 1 col x 1 inch = $4.40 12 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1985 Calendar confusion solved Book store prints directory By John Williams Of the Kansan staff The quest for that perfect calendar is a difficult task with the wide selection offered by the Oread Book Shop. But a new calendar directory is available to help in the search. The "Calendar Shopper's Directory," compiled by Wendy Roberts, a calendar buyer for the book shop, lists more than 300 calendars that the bookstore sells now or will sell in about a month for Christmas. Bill Getz, supervisor of the book shop, said yesterday that the directory was compiled to inform customers of the calendars the book shop carries and as a reference while Roberts is on vacation for the next couple of weeks. The directory will come in handy because of the popularity of the calendars during the Christmas season, Getz said. The calendars are more popular this year than in other years. "Calendars have been a staple item for 10 to 12 years; they are popular from around August 1 through Christmas to April 15," he said. The calendar directory is indexed into 25 subject areas and includes the title, publisher, format and the price of each calendar. Subject categories are specific, such as American Indians, food and wine, Kansas and pinups, and generic, such as humor, sports or fine arts and design. Getz said Roberts probably spent about six hours putting the list into a computer. Compiling the list was a building process as she selected which titles to buy from the publishers. "She makes choices of which calendars to buy based on her judgment of what is current or popular." he said. "She has been doing this sort of thing for a few years so her judgment is fairly sound." Some of the calendars the book shop carries traditionally have been best sellers, such as the Sierra Club calendals. The Sierra Club calendals have sold well at the KU bookstores for about 10 years, Getz said. The Oread Book Shop carries poster, engagement, book, wall and page-a-day calendars, Getz said. The School of Architecture and Urban Design calendar is the most popular calendar at the book shop, he said. The long, skinny, wall calendar is published as a money making project for the school and costs about $1.50. Most calendars at the book shop are issued only once and are usually associated with movies and movie personalities, such as the Jerry Hall pin-up calendar. Others, such as the J.R.R. Tolkien and Far Side calendaries, are published two or three times and will disappear as popularity declines, he said. The male pin-up calendars also are popular with female buyers this year, he said. The book shop offers eight calendars that feature men, while only four are devoted to women. Getz said certain art calendars were popular every year. "People buy many of the art calendars as a source of prints at a cost that is significantly less than the cost of the prints sold separately," he said. Getz said that copies of the calendar directory would be available to any customer upon request and also could be sent by campus mail if people call asking for them. 100% Dirty work Mark Mohler/KANSAN A construction worker for R.D. Andersen, general contractor of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road, cuts stone to be used for the exterior walls of an addition to the center. The worker was cutting stones yesterday afternoon. Watkins lab receives chemical analyzer By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff The laboratory at Watkins Memorial Hospital recently received a new chemical analyzer that will combine the functions now performed by several machines, the laboratory supervisor said Friday. 'Most equipment here is 12 years old or more. These are very old machines.And you're tied to that machine for five or six minutes with that one test.' Anita Brown, lab supervisor, said the new machine would be used to automatically perform 13 different tests that now are done manually. The chemical analyzer tests blood for different chemical elements, such as glucose and cholesterol. - Anita Brown lab supervisor Watkins Memorial Hospital Although most of the tests already are done at Watkins, Brown said, the machines are old and a technician has to run each one. With the new analyzer, one person can do the work that now requires two or three people. "Most of the equipment here is 12 years old or more," she said. "These are very old machines." "You're tied to that machine for five or six minutes with that one With the old machines, each test must be analyzed individually Brown said. test," she said. "Then you put in the next one." Although the new analyzer runs only one type of test at a time, she said, it can test many samples in one run. "It should help us get reports out faster," Brown said. "And that's what it's all about." The machine will be ready for use in about a month. Before it is ready to analyze specimens from patients, it must pass quality tests. "You just don't say, 'All right, I know how to work the machine. Let's get with it,'" she said. "We have to make sure everything is working properly. And we have to run a quality control of about 20 tests on each one of the elements before we can even start to do patients." The quality control tests are being used to train the lab technicians on the new machine. Because Watkins is such a small lab, Brown said, all the technicians must be familiar with all the machines. She said that although she usually assigned technicians to a specific department, either chemistry, hematology or microbiology, they worked in all of them at some time. Ray Walters, assistant director of business at Watkins, said the new chemical analyzer was part of a new "We decided the lab was outdated in its equipment," he said. Walters said David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, had cleared the purchases. program to modernize the laboratory and the hospital in general. "We were urged by him to ungrade." Walters said. About $100,000 will be spent on machinery for the lab, he said. Walters said a part of each student's fees, apart from the student health fee, was earmarked for new equipment. "It's a thing that has to accumulate to become a significant size," he said. "It's been building up to the point that we can purchase needed equipment." The next addition to the lab, a blood cell counter, will arrive in six to eight weeks. Brown said. Watkins is accepting bids for the counter now. The blood cell counter will combine five hematology tests that now are performed separately and are time-consuming. Brown said. Representative mulls gubernatorial contest The Associated Press AUGUSTA — U.S. Rep. Bob Whit-taker, R-Kan., said yesterday the response of state party leaders to his decision to consider seeking the Republican nomination for governor in 1986 has been "very enthusiastic and very encouraging." The Associated Press reported over the weekend that Whittaker was contacting party officials to determine whether a gubernatorial campaign by him was viable in the wake of adverse publicity about Attorney General Robert T. Stephan, who has been regarded as the frontrunner for the GOP nomination. Whitaker said the report prompted calls from a dozen party people, two of whom the 5th District congressman described in an interview as being "in the top echelon." Three top-ranking Republican officials who asked not to be identified told the AP they believe Whittaker should run for governor and that he would have a good chance of winning the primary election next August. The troubles dogging Stephan has a result of a sexual harassment lawsuit, which was brought against him by a woman who formerly worked in his office, have caused several prominent Republicans to consider seeking the GOP nomination against Stephan — including Secretary of State Jack Brier, Senate President Bob Talkin, House Speaker Mike Hayden, Sen. Fred Kerr and Pittsburgh businessman Gene Bickell. In addition, some believe former Gov. Robert F. Bennett, who is a supporter of Stephan, might be persuaded to allow an investigation if Stephan were to withdraw. "I have not made any final decision," Whittaker said. "But, yes, I have been contacted by a number of key Republicans from around the state and I've followed that up and made some contacts on my own. I want to touch bases with as many of them as possible." The Only Apartments On The Hill 1603 W. 15th Right On Campus! ·Furnished or Unfurnished Rooms ·Secure B-Tower for KU Women ·Individual Leases ·FREE Cablevision ·All Utilities Paid ·On Bus Route ·As little as $119 a month Jayhawker Towers 843-4993 Goodnight, Mr. Poe A One Man Show written and performed by Scott Keely TICKETS ON SALE SUA Box Office Public $4 Students $3 With KU ID Keely renders Poe's material superbly. This is a serious, intelligent, well-spoken show worthy of attention. Minneapolis Tribune It is the evening of October 2, 1849. And Edgar Allan Poe is dying. Nov. 8th 7 p.m. Alderson Auditorium Avatar Brother, it's fun SINCE 1889 Berry brothers live out dream of playing on same team. See page 13. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, NOV 6,1985,VOL 96,NO.53 (USPS 650-640) A man playing a saxophone. Cooler Details page 3. Man has paid KU $60 of $257,000 owed By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff When Steve McMurry was paroled in December, he was ordered to begin repaying more than $257,000 that he was convicted of embezling from the KU on Wheels bus system. As of yesterday, McMurry had repaid only $60 to the University, according to the University comproller and Douglas County District Court records. Mc Murry, who had been director of the bus system since 1974, was arrested in September 1982 and charged in Douglas County District Court with five counts of felony theft of property. He was sentenced in July 1983 and ordered to pay $257.061.17 in restitution to the Univer- city. He also was sentenced to four concourse two to five-year jail terms and one two to five-year sentence, which was to run concurrently with the other four On Nov 23, 1984, a Douglas County district judge granted an appeal and modified McMurry's sentence, making all five jail terms run concurrently. Mc Murray was paroled Dec. 21, 1984, after serving 17 months in state prison. John Patterson, University comptroller, said yesterday that his office had received two payments from the district court totaling $60. "We've left it up to the courts to see what action should be taken," he said. "They are responsible for making sure that there is adequate reimbursement." pentheon Tim Bolzer, Lawrence senior and chairman of the Transportation Board, said the board originally recommended that McMurry be paroled. The board asked for McMurry's release because "he could not pay anything back if he was in jail." Boller said. Mec Murry, who now lives in Denver and works at an art gallery, said yesterday that he had encountered problems making the payments. "Given my background, making the payments is difficult." McMurray said. "The court never specified when the payments had to be made. There's a limited amount I can do. I realize my responsibilities, and I'll live up to them." McMurry would not say what his income was or when he would make his next payment on the debt. According to court records, McMurry's last payment was made Feb. 14. It was $20 last payment was made to Chuck Simmons, the chief counsel for the Kansas Department of Corrections, said that he agreed to a contract McMurry signed when he was paroled, he was to make monthly payments on the debt as directed by his parole officer. parole officer. In June, McMurry moved to Colorado and had his parole supervision transferred to a Colorado parole office in Fort Collins. "He is under supervision in Colorado, and I assume the money will be sent from there to the University," Simmons said. Paul Cooper, McMurray's parole officer in Fort Collins, said that McMurray had recently moved to the Denver area and was no longer under his supervision. "We told him to send the money to the University," he said. "We didn't want to touch the money." Van Wistman, McMurry's new parole officer in Lakewood, Colo., said he had not met with McMurry. He was scheduled to meet with McMurry today. Boller said he was waiting for the University's general counsel to take action. n we don't receive more compensation before his next parole review, we'll write a letter that will recommend that his parole be revoked," he said. According to Patterson, University officials were tipped off to the misuse of funds in 1982 when a check, made out to the Student Senate, which oversees the bus system, bounced. The check had been deposited into a University State Bank account apparently created by McMurry Halls darkened bv cable failure By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff Eleven campus buildings were without electricity for more than two hours yesterday because of a power cable that malfunctioned. KU officials said yesterday. The power outage caused some classes, tests and work routines to be altered or canceled in the powerless buildings. Robin Eversole, director of University relations, said Snow Hall, Lindley Hall, Marvin Hall, Hoch Auditorium, the Military Science Building and its annex, Summerfield Hall, Watkins Hospital, the Computer Center, the Haworth Hall addition, KANU-FM studios and the Art and Design Building were without power for two hours and 15 minutes. non Porter, associate director of facilities operations, said the power outage occurred about 12:30 p.m. yesterday. While facilities operations workers wrestled with the power outage, some students were glad about the loss of light. A power line feeding off the cross-campus tie line breaker, which connects the campus's two incoming power lines, shorted and the buildings relying on it for electricity were plunged into darkness. Carol Blubaugh, Lawrence senior, said her BUS 610, Financial Accounting III, test was canceled because there were no windows in the classroom to let in natural light. "Most of us rejoiced." she said. "Well, I did, anyway. I wasn't ready for the test." An official in the dean of business' office said that classes had gone on as usual but that some classes had been shifted to rooms with windows. Howard Hill, director of KANU EM., he station could 'read Howard Hill, director of RANU-FM, said the station couldn't broaden its coverage. He said the station had a small, 12-volt battery-operated generator that kept the telephones and a few other machines running for about two hours before the batteries ran out. Hill said the main concern at the station was that the data from their fund-raising effort last week would be lost in the computer. However, he said, the information was still there when the electricity was restored. Some classes, such as Ken Sprecklemeyer's ARCH 510 Computer-Aided Design Techniques were canceled because of the lack of light. Other activities in some of the buildings were carried on as usual despite the darkness. He said physicians and nurses continued to see patients with flashlights and in rooms with windows, although Jim Strobi, director of Watkins Hospital, said the power outage was an inconvenience, but physicians and administrators carried on their duties as well as they could in the dark. See POWER p. 5, col. 3 I Art prone Joe Steiner, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, gets a ground-level perspective in front of Hoch Auditorium for his drawing of part of Jayhawk Boulevard Alan Hagman/KANSAN Steiner was doing an assignment for his architectural graphics class yester day afternoon. Hard times hurt return on KUEA farms By Sandra Crider Special to the Kansan Wheat fields may not crop up on Jayhawk Boulevard, and cows may not graze on Daisy Hill, but the farm crisis still hits Mount Oread. Martin Henry, KUEA vice president for property management, said last week that good yields on this The Kansas University Endowment Association is one place where the downward trend in commodity prices has a direct effect. The Endowment Association owns 36,000 acres of farmland, most of it in southwestern Kansas. Returns on the association's agricultural investments were down about $35,000 from the previous year, according to the 1985 KUEA report for fiscal year 1985. Fiscal year 1986 started July 1. year's crops had helped counterbalance falling prices. "That isn't to say prices can't hurt our overall farm income," he said. "It was down moderately last year." "If I were to make a forecast, I'd say it will be down again this year." A survey released yesterday by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City indicates farmland values in Kansas fell an average of 20 percent in the past 12 months, equaling the record plunges during the Great Depression. Over the past four years, the selling price of an acre of good Kansas farmland fell from $770 to $446, a 42 percent drop. Ranchland sells now for an average $209 an acre, compared with $395 an acre four years ago. Ranchland values in the past year fell 25 percent on average and irrigated farmland now is worth 17 percent less than it was 12 months ago. Mark Drabbennott, an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank, said the most recent drops were steeper than ever before and could be expected to continue their pattern for at least the next two quarters, when many farm loan decisions are made. The survey indicates that farmland values continued to decline this summer. Farmland was down 6 percent, the same drop recorded for spring. Irrigated land fell more sharply, by 7.5 percent, compared with only 1 percent in spring. Ranchland values fell 10.5 percent this summer, compared with 7.5 percent in spring. The survey of 54 Kansas banks is done on a quarterly basis. Farmland values vary greatly, so the figures are averages. because farm loans are usually secured with land. As land values drop, the protection against default diminishes. Henry said the declining prices were not as critical for those who own and supply the operating capital as they were for the farmers. Banks, meanwhile, are hurting the Endowment Association's report for fiscal year 1985 indicates that agriculture investments accounted for less than 4 percent of KUEA's total investments, although last year's larger farm income was about 5 percent. The association had more than a 20 percent increase on total investments in fiscal 1985 compared with 1984. Meanwhile, farmers such as Robert Bacon, who farms 80 acres near Hutchinson for KUEA, are forced to be ultraconservative because the odds are stacked against them Bacon said he had not purchased any new machinery in the past two years. He said he and his family not only had to be cautious with their business but also had to tighten their personal budget because of low commodity prices. pri "I don't have as much money to spend after I pay my expenses," he said. "Sometimes I don't have any money to spend after I pay my expenses. "We shut off our water heater now whenever we aren't using it. "Our living standards have gone down a lot. I used to take my wife out to eat once in a while. Now I don't." Bacon is one of the farmers who share seed and fertilizer costs with the Endowment Association. See FARMLAND, p. 5, col. 1 Fall Student Senate elections lack competition By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Nearly half of candidates are unopposed Twenty-seven of the 66 candidates from the Chrysalis and Common Sense coalitions are running unopposed and will remain unopposed unless write-in candidates join the campaign. No one is running against nearly half of the senatorial candidates in this fall's Student Senate elections. In addition, the schools of business and journalism do not have enough candidates to fill the available Senate seats. The school of law and "Special" students have no candidates running. David Day, chairman of the Student Senate Elections Committee, said the Senate would have to appoint senators from the schools if no one ran for the seats in the Nov. 20-21 elections. Ruth Lichtward, vice presidential candidate for the Chrysalis Coalition, said yesterday. "It doesn't sit too well with me that someone can David Epstein, presidential candidate for the Common Sense Coalition, said, "It's going to be really difficult to motivate our candidates." Lichtwardt said she would encourage students to enter the race as write-in candidates. "I hope some people in the schools where people are running unopposed care enough to say, 'Hey, this shouldn't be.'" "Please, oppose our candidates," she said. "Just do something." get elected without ever finding out what the people want. Twenty-five of Common Sense's 48 candidates and two of Chrysalis' 18 candidates do not have opponents. Epstein said he was disappointed that so few candidates were running. He said he wanted his senators to get the chance to prove their worth. Steve Glicchir, senatorial candidate from the Common Sense Coalition for the School of Engineering, said he would campaign the same way he would if he were being strongly opposed. Five people are running for four engineering seats. Dennis Enslinger, senatorial candidate from the Chrysalis Coalition for the School of Fine Arts, said, "I know if I'm unopposed, I'll probably get a seat, but I still want to make people aware of what's going on in my school." Lichtwart said running Senate candidates unposed was comparable on a small scale to presidents in some countries running without opponents. The voters have no choice. aware of what's going on. He said that although senators were chosen to represent schools, he had not seen many of them addressing issues that concerned their schools. Two candidates are running for the two fine arts seats. The closed meeting, at 3:15 p.m. in the Regents Room, will be a continuation of informal meetings the students and administrators conducted this summer, David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday. Students did not run for several reasons, she said. Some students did not have time, some were uncomfortable with the Senate structure, some saw no reason for change and some were apathetic. Members of the KU Committee on South Africa and KU administrators will meet today in Strong Hall to discuss activities and concerns of students against apartheid. Protesters not charged yet p..8. She referred to a coalition that ran two years ago called Apathy — It Just Doesn't Matter. S. Africa discussion to resume Six independent candidates are running, but none are unopposed. The deadline for write-in candidates to file in the Student Senate office is Nov. 17. By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Epstein said he hoped students still would be interested in the elections because the presidential and vice presidential platforms were clearly different. "I have the sneaking suspicion that if that coalition ran now, they'd win," Lichtwardt said. Two Common Sense candidates are running against each other for the School of Social Welfare seat. Although students and administrators do not know exactly what direction the informal group will take, they have decided to continue to meet. Ambler said each member of the group probably had his own goals in mind. Specific group goals were not established. Ambier said Chancellor Gene A Budig appointed him, Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and service, and Del Shankel, professor of microbiology and biochemistry, to talk with students about such issues The group formed after a meeting Budig conducted with members of See FORCE, p. 5, col. 5 2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan News Briefs Pipeline explosions force Texans to flee MONT BELVIEU, Texas — A ruptured pipeline touched off three explosions and a raging fire at a gas storage area yesterday, forcing 2,000 residents of the southeast Texas town to flee their homes. Mormon leader dead Two men were listed as missing, said a spokesman for Chevron USA, which owns the Warren Petroleum storage area, about 30 miles east of Houston. SALT LAKE CITY — Spencer W. Kimball, the president and prophet of the Mormon church since 1973 and one of its most energetic leaders until age and infirmity curtailed his ministry, died late last night. He was 90. Kimbal died at his West Hotel Utah apartment of causes related to age, said church spokesman Don LeFvre. Verdict challenged ATLANTA - Civil rights lawyer William Kunstler contended yesterday that government investigators with evidence linking the Ku Klux Klan to the Atlanta child murders because they feared a "race riot" in the city. Kunstler said he would seek to overturn Wayne Williams' conviction in the case based on documents that include statements from two police informants that a Klansman threatened 14-year-old Lubie Geter, one of the victims. Lennon criticized LONDON — Former Beatle Paul McCartney said in a published article yesterday that his one-time partner John Lennon was a "maneuvering swine" who has been idolized as "Martin Luther Lennon" since he was murdered. Lennon, shot to death in December 1890 in New York, was no "holy saint," McCartney said in a serialized article in the weekly magazine Woman. McCartney said Lennon was insecure, jealous, suspicious, and sometimes paranoid about McCartney's songs. From Kansan wires. Defector free to return to Russia WASHINGTON — Former KGB defector Vitaly Turychenko, who says he was kidnapped and drugged by the CIA, is free to return to the Soviet Union, the State Department announced last night. United Press International Department officials decided to let Yurchenko return after interviewing him and deciding that he genuinely wanted to return home, as he declared Monday at a dramatic news conference at the Soviet Embassy. Yurchenko, who spent 55 minutes at the department, brushed past reporters as he left. If he was going home, he clasped his hands in a prizefighter's salute and said, "Yes, pome." In a prepared statement, State Department spokesman Charles Redman said, "As a result of that meeting, the United States government has decided that Mr. Yurchenko's decision to return to the Soviet Union was made of his own free will and that he is now free to leave the United States." In New Orleans, Ukrainian-Americans seeking asylum for a Soviet sailor who twice jumped ship into the Mississippi River staged a rally and hunger strike yesterday in lawsuits in their efforts to free him. They also threatened to gather a flotilla of small boats to slow the vessel, Marshal Konev, after it is loaded with grain and begins its journey downstream through New Orleans later this week if seaman Miroslav Medvid is still aboard. In Washington, a federal appeals court refused to block the ship, heeding State Department warnings that court interference could create an international incident. Gorbachev_head_toward_their meeting. The Ukrainian-American group said Medvid was dragged, beaten and threatened into signing the statement, and that the seaman was a victim of the "summit fever" in Washington, seeking to downplay international friction as President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Redman said the State Department interview with Yurchenko, which was attended by six American officials, including a medical doctor, lasted a half-hour. Four Soviet officials accompanied Yurchenko. The medical doctor, the statement said, found "no observable evidence" that Yurchenko "was under the influence of drugs which could affect his behavior or that he was not competent to make his own decision to return to the U.S.S.R." At the same time, two broadcast networks gave a possible reason for Yurchenko's demand to return to his homeland. Polish leader is expected to leave post Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Western diplomats said Jaruzelski, by deciding to step down as head of the government, was signaling the end of the Polish political crisis that led to the declaration of martial law and suppression of the free union movement in December 1981. From Kansan wires WARSAW, Poland — Prime Minister Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, who oversaw imposition of martial law that crushed the Solidarity union, is expected to step down today in favor of an economic technocrat, parliamentary sources said yesterday. Jaruzelski's formal resignation was expected to be tendered during the first session of Poland's new Parliament, which was elected October 13. Jaruzlski, 62, will be replaced as premier by Zbigniew Messner, deputy premier and a member of the party's ruling Politburo, the sources reported on condition of anonymity. They said the move also was designed to strengthen the party. Jaruzelski will keep his post as leader of the Communist Party and commander in chief of the armed forces, and also will probably take over the state presidency. The combined duties would continue to make Jaruzelski Poland's most powerful figure. Shultz cautious after talks From Kansan wires MOSCOW — Secretary of State George Shultz met with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev for about four hours yesterday to discuss the Geneva summit and said afterward that "deep differences" exist between the superpowers. Shultz said his talks with Gorbachev also touched on the drama unfolloiing over purported KGB defector Vitaly Yurchenko, who appeared at a news conference at the Soviet Embassy in Washington Monday saying he had been kidnapped in Rome by the CIA. "We had a very brief discussion of it at the end," Shultz said, without revealing what was said about the case. "The charges that he (Yurchenko) has made are totally false." "Perhaps there was some narrowing," Shultz teld reporters, saying there were "one or two things" the two sides agreed on. "But basically we have a lot of work to do." Shultz met with Gorbachev and Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze for a total of 14 hours during his two-day visit and departed last night for Iceland and the United States, where he will brief President Reagan on the discussions. The two days of meetings were described by Shultz as "frank and thorough." The official Tass news agency, reporting on the Gorbachev-Shultz meeting in the Kremlin, said the talks had “passed in a frank and businesslike atmosphere” — language indicating there were strong differences. "We have seen some positive developments," Shultz said afterward. "We also see that there are many serious differences between us, which I suppose only suggests the need for the (summit) meeting we anticipate." Besides arms control, Shultz singled out regional issues and human rights. During preparations for the summit, the first since 1979, the Soviets have focused attention on arms control issues. Democrats get landslide victories From Kansan wires Gerald L. Bailies was elected governor of Virginia yesterday, keying a historic Democratic sweep that gave the Old Dominion its first black and first woman in state offices. New Jersey Republican Gov. Thomas KeanROMed to re-election by a landslide in the other off-year contest. Neither governor's race was a close contest, leaving unchanged the Democrats' 34-16 domination of the nation's statehouses. Democrats touted in advance as evidence of recovery from President Reagan's 49-state re-election sweep a year ago. In Virginia, Ballies defeated Republican Wyatt B. Durrete to succeed outgoing Democratic Gov. Charles Robb in a race the Douglas Wilder, a black, was elected lieutenant governor and Mary Sue Terry was elected attorney general by a landslide. Kean, elected in New Jersey by the narrowest of margins four years ago, was leading in every county over Democrat Peter Shapiro. The governor was hoping for a victory with enough coattails to install a new Republican majority in the Jersey State Assembly, and thus bolster GOP claims of a nationwide political realignment. Mayoral elections were on the ballot in 450 cities across the nation. But only in Miami, where Mayor Maurice Ferre trailed narrowly in the early vote, was an incumbent in trouble. Houston Mayor Kathy Whitmeir took a slight lead in a tough reelection campaign in which AIDS was an issue. Democratic Mayors Ed Koch in New York and Richard Caligari in Pittsburgh swept to third terms. Cleveland's GOP Mayor George Voinovich won a new term, while the first black mayor of Charlotte, N.C., Democrat Harvey Gantt, was reelected, as well. Flooding devastates Virginias United Press International Floodwaters across Appalachia yesterday killed at least 19 people, and forced thousands to flee their homes, which in some areas were nearly submerged as the rainstorms dwindled to scattered showers. Up to ten inches of rain in Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland and Ohio pushed rivers, and streams out of their banks, flooding streets, stranding residents atop their homes and knocking out power. Rain continued yesterday evening, across much of New England, New York, western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio, while scattered showers lingered from the Virginia to New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania. The number of deaths caused by the weather rose to 19 late yesterday, with seven people presumed drowned in the Roanoke, Va., area, and four killed in flood related accidents in the Shenandoah Valley, to the north. Another six bodies were recovered, in West Virginia, one person died in, pennsylvania and a Maryland firefighter also is presumed dead. The Roanoke River rose to a record thirteen feet above flood stage Monday night after more than six inches of rain fell in 24 hours. "It was like a wild wall of water — all the way up over the gas pumps with cars floating in the middle." said Scott Kraft, of Roanoke, Va. Four others were killed in flood related accidents in the Shenandoah Valley. Near Mason's Cove, Va., searchers saved a shivering 4-year-old girl from a car in a rampaging stream. Two others in the car drowned. "It's a miracle," trooper R. M. McCoy said. "She washed two-tenths of a mile downstream and landed on an island. When we got here, she was cold, but they wound up releasing her from the hospital and she is home." Thousands of residents left their homes, officials said. "This is probably the worst flooding that has happened here in modern times," said Tommy Fuqua, fire and emergency coordinator for Roanoke County. Big Bob's "Used" CARPET DORM ROOMS, APARTMENTS, WHATEVER THE JOB — WHY BUY NEW, WHEN YOU'VE GOT BIG BOB! BRING IN THIS AD FOR AN ADDITIONAL 10% SAVINGS! • Save up to 80% off new. • Yet so many rolls look "like new." • Every roll twice-cleaned and professionally sanitized. • Hundreds of styles, a rainbow of colors. • FREE doormat just for stopping by. MasterCard VISA Open Sunday and Holidays Monday - Friday 9-7:30 Saturday and Sunday 10-5:30 BIG BOB'S USED CARPET SHOP LAWRENCE STORE NOW OPEN! 738 NEW HAMPSHIRE • (913) 841-BOBS Big Bob's "Used" CARPET DORM ROOMS, APARTMENTS, WHATEVER THE JOB — WHY BUY NEW, WHEN YOU'VE GOT BIG BOB! BRING IN THIS AD FOR AN ADDITIONAL 10% SAVINGS! MasterCard. VISA Open Sunday and Holidays Monday - Friday 9-7:30 Saturday and Sunday 10-5:30 Save up to 80% off new. Yet so many rolls look "like new." 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WACKY WEDNESDAY SPECIAL 16” PIZZA — 2 TOPPINGS 4 SOFT DRINKS $7.99 One coupon per order Dine In Carry Out Home Delivery 841-8010 2214 Yale Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11a.m.-2a.m. Friday & Saturday 11a.m.-3a.m. BIG BOB'S USED CARPET SHOP NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH CHECKERS PIZZA Bring A Friend to Lunch ONLY $4.25 7 Days a Week 10” 1 item pizza and ENDLESS SALAD BAR For 2 FREE SOFT DRINKS 2 free soft drinks with the purchase of a small pizza or 4 soft drinks with the purchase of a med or large pizza One coupon per order. Includes delivery. Expires in 2 wks. $1.00 OFF ANY SMALL PIZZA or ANY MEDIUM PIZZA $1.50 OFF ANY MEDIUM PIZZA $2.00 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA One coupon per order Expires in 2 wks. WACKY WEDNESDAY SPECIAL 16” PIZZA — 2 TOPPINGS 4 SOFT DRINKS $7.99 One coupon per order Home Delivery 841-8010 2214 Yale Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11a.m.-2a.m. Friday & Saturday 11a.m.-3a.m. Campus/Area Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 University Daily Kansan 3 News Briefs Alleged candy thief charged with assault A 20-year-old Lawrence man was arrested Monday after allegedly stealing a bag of candy, pulling a knife and fighting with two employees of Dillons food store, 1312 W. Sixth St., Lawrence police said yesterday. The man was arrested on two counts of aggravated assault, two counts of battery and one count of petty larceny. Police said store employees allegedly saw the man put the bag of candy, worth $1.99, into his pocket. Police say the store about 11:30 p.m. Monday. The two employees confronted the man outside the store and asked him to go back inside and return the candy. "voice said the man responded, "I don't have anything," then reached into his pocket and pulled out a knife. After being asked several times by the employees to put the knife away, the man put the knife back into his pocket, police said. The man then pushed the employees out of his way and tried to run, but the employees jumped him and held him to the ground, police said. His concert, part of the Visiting Artist Series sponsored by the department of music, is free to the public. Guitarist to perform Portuguese guitarist Pinoero Nagy will perform at p.m. today at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Nagy, an internationally known contemporary guitarist, is a titular professor at the Music Academy of Lisbon, Portugal, where he created the guitar course. He also studied with Emilio Pijol at the Lisbon Conservatory. Nominations taken He is a jury member of the International Guitar Competition, Fernando Sor, in Rome; director of the international music course at Estolio Coast in Portugal; and founder of the Estolio Coast Music Festival. The Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation is accepting scholarship nominations of outstanding sophomores who are preparing for public service careers. Sophomores with any major may be nominated. If selected, each student will receive as much as $5,000 a year for his junior and senior years and two years of graduate study. To be eligible, a student must be full-time sophomore working toward a bachelor's degree, have a "E" education, rank academically in the upper fourth of his class and be a U.S. citizen or U.S. national working toward a career in government. The deadline for nomination is Dec. 1. For more information, write the Truman Scholarship Review Committee, CN 6302, Princeton, N.J., 08541-63021. Weather Today will be partly cloudy, windy and cooler. The high will be in the mid-50s and winds will be out of the northwest at 15 to 25 mph diminishing by afternoon. Tonight will be mostly clear and cooler with a low in the low to mid-30s. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with a high in the mid-50s. From staff and wire reports Western Hills to begin annexation By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff The Lawrence City Commission voted 4-1 last night to begin procedures to annex the Western Hills subdivision. The Western Hills subdivision is a 120-acre tract of residentially developed land west of Monterey Way and north of 15th Street. The area is almost an island of unincorporated land that city staff thinks should be annexed. sound to Mayor Mike Amyx cast the vote against the annexation. The annexation ordinance will be on next week's commission agenda and may be adopted on its second reading. Before making the initial motion to bring a vote, Commissioner David Longhurst assured Western Hills residents that if the subdivision becomes a part of the city, he will consider their interests. Longhurst said to about 50 Western Hills residents at the meeting, "I pledge to be sensitive to your concerns and your needs and try to make everything as good for you as it is now and hopefully better." Before the vote, Commissioner Sandy Praeger said, "We're giving our assurances tonight that there are no plans, under why now, that any kind of special benefit districts are going to be forced upon the residents of Western Hills." Residents at the meeting said that they were worried about being assessed for city improvements. Some residents said they worried that charging them for the improvements would force them to leave the subdivision. Amyx said that when considering annexation of an area already developed, such as Western Hills, financial hardship on the city of Lawrence was a factor. The expansion of 15th Street already is making utility services to the west possible, Amyx said. The 15th Street expansion keeps Western Hills from blocking any further expansion by the city. "My particular feeling is that it does not present a financial burden to the city to leave the area as county and thus annexation should not occur." Amyx said after the vote. ALEXANDRA SCHWARTZ Tom Waller, Route 6, a resident of the subdivision, said the annexation was inevitable. "I think our major concern was to get the commission to be sensitive to the special assessments issue," he said. "Deep down that may have been our ultimate goal all along. That's just strictly speaking for myself." Limna Lubensky, Route 6, a Western Hills Neighborhood Association officer, said she did not agree. After the meeting, she said that although she thought the commissioners were speaking "in good faith," they were more concerned with progress than the individual's rights. Gordon Bower and Linda Lubensky, officers of the Western Hills Neighborhood Association, discuss their plan for persuading the Lawrence City Commission to vote against possible annexation of the Western Hills subdivision. About 50 Western Hills residents attended last night's City Commission meeting. Bryan Graves/KANSAN T-shirts are in demand Fame surprises Brown By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Head men's basketball coach Larry Brown is seeing his picture everywhere these days as a result of the pre-season publicity being generated about the Jayhawk basketball team. However, he's seen his portrait one place he didn't expect it — on the front of T-shirts commemorating last month's early morning KU men's basketball scrimmage. "I was kind of surprised," Brown said yesterday. "That's something that's hard to handle, having your face on a shirt. "How would you like your picture on people's fronts?" The front of each cotton T-shirt sports a picture of the coach, along with the words, "Late Night with Larry Brown." The back of each shirt carries the caption, "Starring the 1985-86 Kansas Basketball Team All Roads Lead to Dallas." Dallas will be the site of this season's National Collegiate Athletic Association basketball championship finals. thanks. The T-shirts were the brainchild of Larry Sinks, owner of Midwest Graphics, 308 E. 23rd St., who began producing them the week before the Oct. 15 scrimmage. "I got the idea after talking to several of my friends about the scrimmage," Sinks said. "Also, I watch David Letterman a lot, and it just seemed to tie in." He said he had sold almost 1,000 of the T-shirts so far. "We've received orders for the shirts from Minnesota, Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado and all over Kansas," Sinks said. "We've probably mail-ordered more than 100 of them." "I've had a lot of phone calls. People wanted to know how the scrim mage went, plus they wanted a shirt." Along with their orders, he said, many fans sent letters praising the basketball team and Brown. Athletic Director Monte Johnson said the T-shirts would become collector's items because the midnight scrummage had been a one-time event. Brown said he would have preferred not to have been singled out for such an honor, because the whole team really deserved to be recognized. "I really wanted the team's picture on the shirts, but that's against NCAA rules," he said. Group studies domestic violence By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff Relationships between people sometimes have moments of disagreement and discord. But sometimes, what might have begun as a simple lovers' quarrel can become violent. In recognition of this, the assistant director of residential programs has organized a task force to study violence in student relationships and how it may be prevented. "Domestic violence has been given a lot of attention in the media," Ruth Lee, the assistant director, said yesterday. "Only recently it has been given attention on college campuses." Sometimes the violence manifests itself as verbal abuse or a little pushing and shoving. "At the far end of the spectrum, every year we have some students who are in battering relationships where there are broken limbs," Lee said. "We work with a lot of students who have been raped, especially rate raped," she said. especially when the task force is to find out what is being done now about violent relationships, and coordinating and publicizing those efforts, she said. The task force also wants to develop programs for students that involve both prevention of violence and counseling. "We recognize that there is a need to work with University students in this because I happen to believe that students at a University are young enough and intelligent enough to change," she said. Lee's first concern is to develop these programs for residents of scholarship and residence halls, but anyone who is concerned is welcome to be involved, she said. "It's OK to be angry, but it's what you do with that anger that makes the difference," she said. One point of the programs is to teach participants how to manage their anger. Other topics include the rights and responsibilities of a relationship and how to build self-esteem. Lee said she hoped the programs could begin next semester The task force is growing and now has 36 members, she said. Twenty-three of them are residence hall staff members. Because staff members have close contact with students, they are often among the first to know when a student is involved in a violent relationship. Several campus and community organizations are represented on the task force, too. They include Douglas County Rape Victim Support Services, Womens' Transitional Care Services and the KU police department. Winter brings out animal behaviors By John Williams Of the Kansan staff As winter approaches, people are more like animals than they think they are, a psychology professor said yesterday. Douglas Denney, the professor; said that as winter approached and darkness dominated most of each day, some people became depressed. The culprit of winter depression can be found in the changes of the light-dark cycle. The light-dark cycle also causes other forms of seasonal behavior in mammals, such as hibernation, he said. "We tend to think humans are immune to such processes, but they are evolutionary remnants that stick with us." Denney said. The biological cause of depression can be traced to the pineal gland, which is inside the brain. The gland secretes an alkaloid called phenylalanine, especially during the night or under low levels of illumination, he said. Denney said although melatonin did not have an apparent function in man, it helped regulate seasonal behavior in animals. The key to depression does not seem to be the increased levels of melatonin, however. Instead it is found in the third step of a five-step process toward making it, he said. During the third step, an enzyme called serotonin is produced. Because the production of this enzyme is inhibited by activity along the optical track, the less light that is perceived by the eye, the more serotonin is changed into melatonin. "The change in the amount of melatonin is not that great, but the change in serotonin is, and that seems to be what causes depression," he said. Depression is more than feeling sad, Denney said. Most victims of depression feel as if they have been stripped of feelings. One common symptom is insomnia, or the inability to fall asleep. Depressed people also lose interest in sex and eating. They also suffer cognitive distortions, during which they feel worthless as human beings or as if the depression will never end, he said. "For most people who have episodic periods of depression, the periods are always time-limited," Denney said. But remembering that depression is only temporary is not always easy during times of depression, he said. Psychologists used to think that winter depression was related to a belief that winter was the equivalent to death in nature, and comparing the perfect childhood Christmas with current ones and thinking about the extra burdens of the Christmas season, he said. "I think there is a conspiracy between the psychological and biological explanations, and they are both probably to blame for winter depression," Denney said. Most winter depression sufferers find that spring provides a cure for the depression, he said. No one really knows how common winter depression is, Denney said, but it is debilitating in some cases. "Some people almost hibernate by staying in bed all of the time while other people may suffer such a minor depression that they don't even realize it," Denney said. Until about five years ago there was not even a name for the annual depression when Thomas Wehr and Norman Rosenthal, both of the National Institutes for Mental Health, began noticing that the effects of some depressions were seasonally related. SAD, which stands for Seasonal Affective Disorders, was the acronym they chose for the disorder. BORDER BANDIDO EAT WEDNESDAY SPECIAL ALL YOU CAN $3.49 - tacos - taco salad 5-9 p.m. - burritos - taco salad - tostada - enchiladas All you can eat from our wide selection: - refried beans chill 1528 W.23rd - refried beans Spanish rice 842-8861 - Spanish rice - chili conqueso - chili conqueso - salad bar Across from Post Office College of Liberal Arts & Sciences wants UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the Undergraduate Services Office,210 Strong Hall. —Self-nominations are required. —Filing deadline—4:30 p.m., Fri., Nov. 8. Election will be held Nov. 20-21 with Student Senate Election All LA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! Any way you want it, you can get it NOW, at... 1618 West 23rd Street S elect from a variety of slices delicious sandwiches, topped with your favorite vegetables and spices and freshly baked bread, freshly baked or wheat Sub-Ball. for when we have the kids. For large appetites, we've got a 12" sub. More moderate diners can enjoy the 6" size, and we've included a lid. sized Sub for our customers under 10. Sibble For our customers under 10 For most folks our sandwich is a com- plete, nutritious, palting meal prepared. For children we recommend round, round up your visit, including potato baked beans, chips and chili, plus soft drinks, milk or coffee. Iy us today! We're open from 11 am until 2 am daily, and by car or in car for near convenience. Any way you want it...you got it! AT SUB & STUFF SANDWICH SHOP.. 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985; THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tacha's nomination Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said last week that she felt conflicting emotions about the announcement of her nomination as judge for the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. She was honored, she said, by President Reagan's nomination, but saddened because she will have to leave the University of Kansas. Tacha, 39, would be the second woman appointed to the 10th Circuit bench if the U.S. Senate approves her nomination. Both Kansas senators have spoken well of her and say she deserves the nomination. Yet, she will be difficult to replace. Tacha played an important part in developing programs to enhance educational opportunities for students. She also has been called the driving force on KU's Core Curriculum Committee. These are qualities the replacement search committee must find in her successor. In the past, those who have worked with her say her effectiveness stems from her enthusiasm for her job, her concern about academic matters and her ability to listen. They also have said she knows when and how to make a quick, appropriate decision. Tacha's nomination reflects well upon the University, and she obviously should be congratulated. But at the same time, the KU community knows that she will be missed. Asylum inconsistencies The United States seems to have a double standard for deciding to whom it will grant asylum. The Soviet sailor who swam dived into the Mississippi River last week surfaced in a safe harbor. Although his true intentions are unknown, U.S. officials clearly would have let him stay had he chosen to. Meanwhile, 11, clergymen, nuns and lay workers are on trial in Arizona for providing sanctuary for Central American refugees fleeing death and torture. The government calls this "harboring illegal aliens." This seeming inconsistency can be clarified. U.S. practice is to grant asylum only to political, not economic, refugees. It's easy to distinguish between the two once a few of the government's definitions are understood. Political refugees come from communist countries such as the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia. Apparently many ballet dancers and tennis players are persecuted because their pirouettes and backhands are not ideologically correct. Economic refugees are from Central American countries Today, the Refugee Act of 1980 permits asylum if a person has a "well-founded fear of persecution." But immigration courts require proof that applicants actually have been threatened and aren't just nervous. with governments backed by the United States, such as El Salvador and Guatemala. These refugees come here simply to make more money. After all, someone can earn a much better living if he is alive. For example, Salvadoran death squares bursting into a woman's home to murder her brothers before her very eyes is not an explicit threat toward her personal safety. Sure, it might shake her up a bit, but that doesn't meet the government's standard. She, therefore, should be sent back home where she belongs. The inconsistency of holding the Soviet freighter while at the same time hounding the sanctuary activists makes perfect sense — when one understands that different standards are used for refugees from totalitarian governments than for refugees from terror in countries supported by the United States. A flicker of peace? Recent letters to the Kansan indicate that the conflict in the Middle East still generates a lot of heat, but not much light. So the flickering efforts of Jordan and Israel last week to move, however tentatively, toward peace talks have to be welcomed against the gloomy backdrop of the region's politics. Peres' offer before the United Nations to negotiate with Hussein over the future of West Bank Palestinians was for once free of the impossible preconditions that have usually characterized Israeli peace offers. The progress made by King Hussein of Jordan and Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres toward negotiations seems even brighter after last month's rash of terrorist and counter-terrorist violence. Hussein, for his part, has begun to apply pressure on the Palestine Liberation Organization to ease its equally impossible preconditions for talking to Israel. Israel has set one unwavering demand: It will not negotiate with the PLO as long as it fails to recognize Israel's right to exist. For the PLO's leader, Yasser Arafat, recognition is a trump card he doesn't want to play until he can gain some important concession from Israel in return. But Arafat's down to his last cards. He is undermined by those in his organization who still think terrorism can win a Palestinian homeland. And he confronted by the growing number of Israeli settlements on the West Bank. If he waits too long for the ideal concession, it may be too late. And he can turn out the light on Palestinian hopes for the West Bank and Mideast hopes for peace. Duncan Calhoun Business manager Rob Karwath Editor John Hanaa Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.** **GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The** The Kannan reserves the right to reedit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kannan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The University Daily Kansan (USFSP 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 60645, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60044. In Doughtes County, mail subscriptions cost $1 for six months and $2 a week. Mail two days a month to the student year. Student subscriptions cost $3 and are paid through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Staffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 68045 Rovals defeat media criticism How 'bout them ROYALS! You just can't seem to say enough good things about the Kansas City Royals. The Royals beat the odds and showed the naysayers on both coasts that the Midwest knows how to play ball St. Louis has a great ballclub, The Cards and the Royals made the perfect World Series: two teams from the heart of America - only 247 miles apart - who can play each other only in the World Series. The amazing comeback by the Royals, who at one time trailed three games to one, was made even sweeter by their 11-0 shutout in Game Seven. Their never-say-die attitude makes them world champions. That's totally irrelevant. What matters is that the Royals won the For a bit of ironic trivia, in the 1934 World Series, St. Louis beat Detroit in Game Seven — by the score of 11-0. However, the large Eastern and Western establishments didn't have many nice comments about the Royals. Their biggest complaint was that the team hadn't recorded bad enough for them to deserve to be in the World Series. Victor Goodpasture Staff columnist games that had to be won. They went down to the wire with the California Angels and the Toronto Blue Jays and when the dust had settled, the Royals stood triumphant. Here are are several comments from the peanut gallery who think that unless the Dodgers play the Yankees or the Yankees play the Mets, the Series isn't worth watching. League champions but they are the World Champions. Jim Murray of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "The proposition put forth here is that the Kansas City Royals are the best team in the American League. Believe that and I'll sell you a vegetable peeler. If City Royals are the best team in City Royals, be the best team in Bulgaria, a superpower." Alan Halberstadt of the Windsor Star in Ontario said, "You're (Kansas City residents) getting a rag for being too polite." I'll take five dozen of those vegetable peelers, Jim, because not only are the Royals American The sad part is that corporations no longer see the Series as a game, but as a way to make more money. Fans of the Royals and Cardinals, though, have not lost sight of what the Series is all about. A Sports Illustrated writer moaned, "Everybody's basically stuck in Kansas. The game's in Missouri but you're staying in Kansas." I admire those sports writers who endure pain and suffering just to get a decent story. Mark Purdy of the San Jose Mercury-News called Kansas City and St. Louis fans "wacko." The answer is simple. Lost television revenues, ABC complained that it couldn't attract as large a television audience with the Royals and the Cards as they could with teams from either coast. Lower ratings mean less money. The large corporations in turn don't reach as many potential customers. The media didn't call it the "Missouri River World Series." In fact, the national media have been rather silent since the Royals won, Kind of like when the Cubs didn't make it to the playoffs. They had come to see Brett and Company lose and were sorely disappointed. Why is there so much criticism of the Missouri River World Series? now they're trying to make excuses for the Royals' victory. "If Vince Coleman hadn't been injured, the Royals would have been history," they whine. "The Western Division of the American League is the easiest league in Major League baseball," they whimper. teams in the World Series, or the Super Bowl for that matter. In fact, the running joke now is that in the season couldn't possibly have been rigged, because Big Business just doesn't like seeing non-c coastal It doesn't matter what anyone says. Congratulations, Royals. You've done well. What does it take to convince these clowns? Congress finally grapples with deficit Congress has been long on talk and short on action when it comes to cutting federal spending. But last month, the Senate finally summoned up the courage to put its money where its mouth is. After eight days of debate, 75 senators voted to approve the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985, a sweeping reform of the budget process that promises a balanced budget by 1991. This ambition and long-awaited plan demonstrates that Congress is finally getting the message. The people are fed up with what the federal government has been doing with their hard-earned dollars. Every poll I've seen lately — and just about every constituent I've talked to — tells the same story: record-setting deficits are unacceptable. I agree. Slashing the federal deficit remains this country's number one domestic priority. Unless something is done, it will eat us alive. In my view, the Senate Deficit Control Act justifiably includes the word "emergency" in its title. That's why I called the Senate into work on Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 5 and 6. The news media labeled the weekend session extraordinary. I called it compulsory. The Deficit Control Act, coauthored by Sens. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, Warren Rudman, R-N-H., and Ernest Hollings, D-S-C., dramatically reforms Capitol'D Hill's budget process by imposing strict deficit limits each year for the next five years. These restraints will result in annual cuts of approximately $36 billion. If those deficits are exceeded, a tough set of new controls will go into effect that will stop the big spenders in their tracks. By 1991, the federal budget would be balanced, something that until now seemed almost impossible, what with annual deficits heading toward and beyond the $200 billion mark. Guest shot Sen. Robert Dole dent would have the authority to mop up red ink by reducing spending across the board, if Congress fails to live up to its budget responsibilities. In other words, members of Congress still may vote in funds for their favorite programs, but if it busts the budget, well, they'll be out of luck. If nothing else, the Senate vote on Gramm-Rudman-Hollings was a vote of realization — the realization that the deficit problem was number one, front and center, in the minds of the American public. And a realization that the problem was not going to be wished away. The Deficit Control Act is picking up steam, with President Reagan behind it all the way. You know this reform plan has broad support when the likes of Jesse Helms and Ted Kennedy vote together for the proposal. That's progress. Nevertheless, there's still a long way to go. There are other, additional actions Congress can and should take — long-term actions to insure that we don't let deficits run out of control. First, Congress could give the president enhanced authority to veto specific items in an appropriations bill — the so-called line-item veto. Earlier this year, the Senate debated this proposal, and although there was no consensus on the legitimacy of a filibuster prevented us from taking final action. Under the Senate plan, the presi- Second, the Congress should approve a Constitutional amendment requiring a balanced federal budget. While measures such as the Gramm- Rudman-Hollings plan should help us on the path of fiscal responsibility, its goals are finite—through 1991 Right now, however, our top priority should be to adopt the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings proposal. House and Senate conferees are now meeting on whether and how to go forward with this long-overdue disciplining measure. The Senate has already demonstrated its willingness to tackle the issue. Now it's up to the House of Representatives to prove it has the mettle to do likewise. Editor's note: This Guest Shot was taken from a press release mailed to the Kansan last week by Sen. Dole's office. U.S. TREASURY AUTO-TELLER HEE HEE HOHEE HA (GIGGLE) HO HEH HEH HEE HA! U.S. TREASURY AUTO-TELLER I DON'T KNOW—I JUST ASKED IT HOW MUCH MONEY WAS LEFT IN MY ACCOUNT AND NOW IT WON'T STOP LAUGHING... HEE HEE HOHEE HA (GIGGLE) NO HEE HEE HOHEE HA! UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Notes from a custody hearing In the groom of Cook County Juvenile Court, the doctors had testified for hours in great detail about how battered the baby was when it was brought to the County Hospital. They told of the facial bruises, the internal bleeding, the concussion, the broken arms and what appeared to burn marks all over its tiny body. Then Mom testified. Sometimes mumbling, sometimes crying, she sounded thoroughly confused. She said she didn't know how her baby's limbs and organs got so banged up. As for the skin wounds? She suggested it was the result of some sort of rash brought on by the bite of a bug in her bed. Through it all sat Calvin, the boyfriend who was baby-sitting when the child became, in the mother's words, kind of "droopy" and was taken to the hospital. Calvin said nothing, but occasionally he grinned. Finally, Grandma took the stand. As she made a remarkable display. TROJAN She said that she went to the hospital and took out a camera and photographed her grandchild's toe. So, they took the picture because they wanted evidence in case anybody accused them of having injured that toe. Mike Royko Chicago Tribune Ah, but did Grandma take pictures of the baby's battered back? No. And did Grandma take pictures of any of the baby's battered limbs or face? No. Or its injured neck? Forehead? Buttocks? Legs? No, only that one toe. And that's the way it has gone during several days of testimony at the hearing to decide who will have custody of this child. If you listen to the mother and grandmother, it's a great mystery as to how the child wound up looking, in the words of a doctor, like somebody tried to kill her. First, the public defender asked for a mistrial. That means that everything that has happened in their case and they'd have to start over again. She said her client couldn't get a fair hearing because of all the publicity that the case has generated. And I suppose we'll never really know, because the people who had the baby when she was injured — Mom, Grandma and Calvin — say they have no idea how it happened. Actually, the hearing wouldn't have been going on these past few days if it hadn't been for the publicity. By now, the baby would have been back home in the environment where it obviously got into such awful shape. But at least the baby is safe for the time being. Judge Ronald Davis has awarded temporary custody of the child to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, which will place it in a foster home until the next hearing. That hearing will be in two weeks. The delay was granted by the judge after the public defender, who is representing the mother, made a couple of complaints that I believe were about me and my columns. It will be interesting to see what kind of medical expert she comes up with and how he explains the mauling of that child. Then the public defender said she needed more time to prepare her case. She said that because of the publicity, she was having difficulty finding a doctor who, presumably, would find a sensible, rational and benign explanation for why this baby looked like it was worked over by Mr. T. Say, s Dr. Frankenstein still in practice? The public defender said she had recruited a medical expert, but that the publicly scared him away. So the judge gave her two weeks to round up another doctor. I'm not surprised she's having this problem. It will be a supreme challenge for any doctor to corroborate the theories of the mother. On different occasions, Mom has said the injuries were caused by (a) the hospital, (b) heredity, or (c) that bug bite. It was only after I wrote about the case that the judge ordered the immediate hearing, assuring the child of at least a temporary stay in a place where she'll be less accident-prone. But I suppose that means little to the public defender. In any case, the judge denied her request. In the matter of the proposed gun control ordinance, the stated purpose of which is suicide prevention, consider the following. Gun control not cheap Mailbox Such legislation will not be passed cheaply. If passed, it will be after being upheld in state and/or federal lawsuits. Opposition to the registration portion of the proposed ordinance is understandable, as such registration is already mandated by federal law. The bureaucracy necessary for the record keeping, enforcement, court and litigation costs to effect such a law will not be cheap. The revenue lost by local businesses will be considerable. Firearms costing $200 to $300 or more are the rule, not the exception, and they may be purchased in Kansas City or Topeka more cheaply than in Lawrence in my instances. Such a law — presuming it would work at all — would affect only suicides committed with guns. More specifically, it would affect only suicides committed with guns bought in retail outlets in Lawrence within three days of the suicide. I find it inconceivable that the tens or perhaps hundreds of thousands of dollars involved could not be spent in ways that would prevent many more suicides. After all, hot line volunteers and mental health counselors see many more potential suicides than do gun dealers. Robert T. Curry Director of Laboratories Physics and Astronomy 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985; THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tacha's nomination Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said last week that she felt conflicting emotions about the announcement of her nomination as judge for the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. She was honored, she said, by President Reagan's nomination, but saddened because she will have to leave the University of Kansas. Tacha, 39, would be the second woman appointed to the 10th Circuit bench if the U.S. Senate approves her nomination. Both Kansas senators have spoken well of her and say she deserves the nomination. Yet, she will be difficult to replace. Tacha played an important part in developing programs to enhance educational opportunities for students. She also has been called the driving force on KU's Core Curriculum Committee. These are qualities the replacement search committee must find in her successor. In the past, those who have worked with her say her effectiveness stems from her enthusiasm for her job, her concern about academic matters and her ability to listen. They also have said she knows when and how to make a quick, appropriate decision. Tacha's nomination reflects well upon the University, and she obviously should be congratulated. But at the same time, the KU community knows that she will be missed. Asvlum inconsistencies The United States seems to have a double standard for deciding to whom it will grant asylum. The Soviet sailor who swam dived into the Mississippi River last week surfaced in a safe harbor. Although his true intentions are unknown, U.S. officials clearly would have let him stay had he chosen to. Meanwhile, 11, clergymen, nuns and lay workers are on trial in Arizona for providing sanctuary for Central American refugees fleeing death and torture. The government calls this "harboring illegal aliens." This seeming inconsistency can be clarified. U.S. practice is to grant asylum only to political, not economic, refugees. It's easy to distinguish between the two—once a few of the government's definitions are understood. Political refugees come from communist countries such as the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia. Apparently many ballet dancers and tennis players are persecuted because their pirouettes and backhands are not ideologically correct. with governments backed by the United States, such as El Salvador and Guatemala. These refugees come here simply to make more money. After all, someone can earn a much better living if he is alive. Economic refugees are from Central American countries Today, the Refugee Act of 1980 permits asylum if a person has a "well-founded fear of persecution." But immigration courts require proof that applicants actually have been threatened and aren't just nervous. For example, Salvadoran death squirts bursting into a woman's home to murder her brothers before her very eyes is not an explicit threat toward her personal safety. Sure, it might shake her up a bit, that doesn't meet the government's standard. She, therefore, should be sent back home where she belongs. The inconsistency of holding the Soviet freighter while at the same time bounding the sanctuary activists makes perfect sense — when one understands that different standards are used for refugees from totalitarian governments than for refugees from terror in countries supported by the United States. Recent letters to the Kansan indicate that the conflict in the Middle East still generates a lot of heat, but not much light. A flicker of peace? So the flickering efforts of Jordan and Israel last week to move, however tentatively, toward peace talks have to be welcomed against the gloomy backdrop of the region's politics. Peres' offer before the United Nations to negotiate with Hussein over the future of West Bank Palestinians was for once free of the impossible preconditions that have usually characterized Israeli peace offers. The progress made by King Hussein of Jordan and Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres toward negotiations seems even brighter after last month's rash of terrorist and counter-terrorist violence. Hussein, for his part, has begun to apply pressure on the Palestine Liberation Organization to ease its equally impossible preconditions for talking to Israel. Israel has set one unwavering demand: It will not negotiate with the PLO as long as it fails to recognize Israel's right to exist. For the PLO's leader, Yasser Arafat, recognition is a trump card he doesn't want to play until he can gain some important concession from Israel in return. But Arafat's down to his last cards. He is undermined by those in his organization who still think terrorism can win a Palestinian homeland. And he confronted by the growing number of Israeli settlements on the West Bank. If he waits too long for the ideal concession, it may be too late. And he can turn out the light on Palestinian hopes for the West Bank and Mideast hopes for peace. Rob Karwath Editor Rob Karwath Editor John Hanna Managing editor Michael Totty Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Duncan Calhoun Business manage Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.** **GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The The Kanaan reserves the right to reject edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanaan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. The University Daily-Kanman (USP$ 630-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-Fittl Hall, Lawen, Kanan, 6045, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawen, Kanan, 6044. In Doughson County, mail subscriptions cost $1 for six months and $7 a year. Elsewhere they cost $1 for six months and $3 a year. Student subscriptions POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA, 86045. Royals defeat media criticism How 'bout them ROYALS! You just can't seem to say enough good things about the Kansas City Royals. The Royals beat the odds and showed the naysayers on both coasts that the Midwest knows how to play ball. St. Louis has a great ball club, The Cards and the Royals made the perfect World Series: two teams from the heart of America — only 247 miles apart — who can play each other only in the World Series. The amazing comeback by the Royals, who at one time trailed three games to one, was made sweeter by their 11-0 shutout in Game Seven. Their never-say-die attitude makes them world champions. For a bit of irician trivia, in the 1934 World Series, St. Louis beat Detroit in the 1958 National Championship. However, the large Eastern and Western establishments didn't have many nice comments about the Royals. Their biggest complaint was that the royals' regular-season record wasn't great enough to be a World Series. That's totally irrelevant. What matters is that the Royals won the teams in the World Series, or the Super Bowl for that matter. Victor Goodpasture Staff columnist The sad part is that corporations no longer see the Series as a game, but as a way to make more money. Fans of the Royals and Cardinals, though, have not lost sight of what the Series is all about. Here are are several comments from the peanut gallery who think that unless the Dodgers play the Yankees or the Yankees play the Mets, the Series isn't worth watching. games that had to be won. They went down to the wire with the California Angels and the Toronto Blue Jays and when the dust had settled, the Royals stood triumphant. Jim Murray of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "The proposition put forth here is that the Kansas City Royals are the best team in the American League. Believe that and I sell you a vegetable peeler. If you buy the Royals you are the best team in that league, Bulgaria is a superpower." I'll take five dozen of those vegetable peelers, Jim, because not only are the Royals American League champions but they are the World Champions. The media didn't call it the "Missouri River World Series." In fact, the national media have been rather silent since the Royals won. Kind of like when the Cubs didn't make it to the playoffs. They had come to see Brett and Company lose and were sorely disappointed. Alan Halberstadt of the Windsor Star in Ontario said, "You're (Kansas City residents) getting a rag for being too polite." A Sports Illustrated writer moaned, "Everybody's basically stuck in Kansas. The game's in Missouri but you're staying in Kansas." I admire those sports writers who endure pain and suffering just to get the job done. Mark Purdy of the San Jose Mercury-News called Kansas City and St. Louis fans "wacko." Now they're trying to make excuses for the Royals' victory. "If Vincent Coleman hadn't been injured, the Royals would have been history," they whine. "The Western Division of the American League is the easiest league in Major League baseball," they whimper. Why is there so much criticism of the Missouri River World Series? The answer is simple. Lost television revenues. ABC complained that it couldn't attract as large a television audience with the Royals and the Cards as they could with teams from either coast. Lower ratings mean less money. The large corporations in turn don't know how to respond. In fact, the running joke now is that the season couldn't possibly have been rigged, because Big Business just doesn't like seeing non-coastal It doesn't matter what anyone says. Congratulations, Royals. You've done well. What does it take to convince these clowns? Congress finally grapples with deficit Congress has been long on talk and short on action when it comes to cutting federal spending. But last month, the Senate finally summoned up the courage to put its money where its mouth is. After eight days of debate, 75 senators voted to approve the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985, a sweeping reform of the budget process promises a balanced budget by 1991. This ambitious and long-awaited plan demonstrates that Congress is finally getting the message. The people are fed up with what the federal government has been doing with their hard-earned dollars. Every poll I've seen lately — and just about every constituent I've talked to — tells the same story: record-setting deficits are unacceptable. I agree. Shaking the federal deficit remains this country's number one domestic priority. Unless something is done, it will eat us alive. In my view, the Senate Deficit Control Act justifiably includes the word "emergency" in its title. That's why I called the Senate into work on Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 5 and 6. The news media labeled the weekend session extraordinary. I called it compulsory. The Deficit Control Act, co-authored by Sens. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, Warren Rudman, R-N.H., and Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., dramatically reforms Capitol Hill's budget process by imposing strict deficit limits each year for the next five years. These restraints will result in annual cuts of approximately $36 billion. If those deficits are exceeded, a tough set of new controls will go into effect that will stop the big spenders in their tracks. By 1991, the federal budget would be balanced, with the new budget almost impossible, what with annual deficits heading toward and beyond the $200 billion mark. Guest shot Sen. Robert Dole dent would have the authority to mop up red ink by reducing spending across the board, if Congress fails to live up to its budget responsibilities. In other words, members of Congress still may vote in funds for their favorite programs, but if it busts the budget, well, they'll be out of luck. If nothing else, the Senate vote on Gramm-Rudman-Hollings was a vote of realization — the realization that the deficit problem was number one, front and center, in the minds of the American public. And a realization that the problem was not going to be wished away. Under the Senate plan, the presi- The Deficit Control Act is picking up steam, with President Reagan behind it all the way. You know this reform plan has broad support when he speaks about it and Ted Kennedy vote together for the proposal. That's progress. Nevertheless, there's still a long way to go. There are other, additional actions Congress can and should take — long-term actions to insure that we don't let deficits run out of control. First, Congress could give the president enhanced authority to veto specific items in an appropriations bill — the so-called line-item veto. Earlier this year, the Senate debated this proposal, and a majority favor of the legislation, a filibuster prevented us from taking final action. Second, the Congress should approve a Constitutional amendment requiring a balanced federal budget. While measures such as the Gramm- Rudman-Hollings plan should help us the path of fiscal responsibility, its goals are finite - through 1991. Right now, however, our top priority should be to adopt the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings proposal. House and Senate conferences are now meeting on whether and how to go forward with this long-overdue disciplining measure. The Senate has already demonstrated its willingness to tackle the issue. Now it's up to the House of Representatives to prove it has the mettle to do likewise. Editor's note: This Guest Shot was taken from a press release mailed to the Kansan last week by Sen. Dole's office. UNDERWATER U.S. TREASURY AUTO-TELLER I DON'T KNOW—I JUST ASKED IT HOW MUCH MONEY WAS LEFT IN MY ACCOUNT AND NOW IT WON'T STOP LAUGHING... HER HEE HOMEE HA (GIGgle) HO HEH HEH HEE HA! Notes from a custody hearing In the gloom of Cook County Juvenile Court, the doctors had testified for hours in great detail about how battered the baby was when it was brought to the County Hospital. They told of the facial bruises, the internal bleeding, the concussion, the broken arms and what appeared to burn marks all over its tiny body. Through it all sit, Calvin, the boyfriend who was baby-sitting when the child became, in the mother's words, kind of "droopy" and was taken to the hospital. Calvin said nothing, but occasionally he grinned. Then Mom testified. Sometimes mumbling, sometimes crying, she sounded thoroughly confused. She said she didn't know how her baby's limbs and organs got so banged up. As for the skin wounds? She suggested it was the result of some sort of rush brought on by the bite of a bug in her bed. Finally, Grandma took the stand. Ada made a remarkable disclosure. She said that she went to the hospital and took out a camera and photographed her grandchild's toe. So, they took the picture because they wanted evidence in case anybody accused them of having injured that toe. Ah, but did Grandma take pictures of the baby's battered back? Mike Royko Chicago Tribune No. And did Grandma take pictures of any of the baby's battered limbs or face? No only that one toe. No. Or its injured neck? Forehead? Buttocks? Legs? And that's the way it has gone during several days of testimony at the hearing to decide who will have custody of this child. If you listen to the mother and grandmother, it's a great mystery as to how the child wound up looking, in the words of a doctor, like somebody tried to kill her. And I suppose we'll never really know, because the people who had the baby when she was injured — Mom, Grandma and Calvin — say they have no idea how it happened. But at least the baby is safe for the time being. Judge Ronald Davis has awarded temporary custody of the child to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, which will place it in a foster home until the next hearing. That hearing will be in two weeks. The delay was granted by the judge after the public defender, who is representing the mother, made a couple of complaints that I believe were about me and my columns. First, the public defender asked for a mistrial. That means that everything that has happened in court would be tossed out and they'd have to start over again. She said her client couldn't get a fair hearing because of all the publicity that the case has generated. Actually, the hearing wouldn't have been going on these past few days if it hadn't been for the publicity. By now, the baby would have been back home in the environment where it obviously got into such awful shape. But I suppose that means little to the public defender. In any case, the judge denied her request. It was only after I wrote about the case that the judge ordered the immediate hearing, assuring the child of at least a temporary stay in a place where she'll be less accident-prone. Then the public defender said she needed more time to prepare her case. She said that because of the publicity, she was having difficulty finding a doctor who, presumably, would find a sensible, rational and benign explanation for why this baby looked like it was worked over by Mr. T. I'm not surprised she's having this problem. It will be a supreme challenge for any doctor to corroborate the theories of the mother. On different occasions, Mom has said the injuries were caused by (a) the hospital, (b) heredity, or (c) that bug bite. Say, is Dr. Frankenstein still in practice? It will be interesting to see what kind of medical expert she comes up with and how he explains the mauling of that child. The public defender said she had recruited a medical expert, but that the publicity scared him away. So the judge gave her two weeks to round up another doctor. In the matter of the proposed gun control ordinance, the stated purpose of which is suicide prevention, consider the following. Mailbox Gun control not cheap Such legislation will not be passed cheaply. If passed, it will be after being upheld in state and/or federal lawsuits. Opposition to the registration portion of the proposed ordinance is understandable, as such registration is already mandated by federal law. The bureaucracy necessary for the record keeping, enforcement, court and litigation costs to effect such a law will not be cheap. The revenue lost by local businesses will be considerable. Firearms costing $200 to $300 or more are the rule, not the exception, and they may be purchased in Kansas City or Topeka more cheaply than in Lawrence in many instances. Such a law — presuming it would work at all — would affect only suicides committed with guns. More specifically, it would affect only suicides committed with guns bought in retail outlets in Lawrence within three days of the suicide. I find it inconceivable that the tents or perhaps hundreds of thousands of dollars involved could not be spent in ways that would prevent many more suicides. After all, hot line volunteers and mental health counselors see many more potential suicides than do gun dealers. Robert T. Coury Director of Laboratories Physics and Astronomy Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Farmland Continued from p.1 Farmers provide the labor to plant and harvest the land. KUEA and the farmer then split the return on the crop. Bill Kimmel, one of four farm managers employed by the Endowment Association, said the low prices had a direct effect on KUEA and their farmers. "When commodity prices are below the price of production, something has to give," he said. Kimmel advises 113 of KUEA's farmers on which crops to plant, the best kind of fertilizer to use and whether to subscribe to government programs. Because of federal regulations, KUEA is unable to receive more than $50,000 from the government farm plan, he said. Kimmel tries to ensure that it goes to the association's farmers who need it most, he said. He advises most of their farmers to stay out of the government program. He said that the farm program was in the process of being rewritten and that the $50,000 limit could be changed. Lester Flory, Route 5, who farms 120 acres of wheat, milo and soybean for the Endowment Association, said that this year's crop was good but prices were not and that operating expenses were rising. rices for key crops such as wheat, soybeans, milo, corn and barley have gone down about 19 percent in the past two years while production costs have gone up 10-15 percent. United Press International supplied some information for this story. Power they couldn't do as through a job as they usually did. Continued from p. 1 Strobli said the power failure made him realize that the hospital's own back-up energy generator didn't work properly. "It normally gives us lights and electricity," he said, "but the generator didn't work for the first hour." He said facilities operations workers had to work on the generator until it began giving power. The generator provides electricity for only about one-fourth of the building William Pesek, operations manager of the Computer Center, said the two power supply sources to the center went down, so the system had to be operated manually. Pesek said he had received few complaints about the system being down because those buildings without electricity were the buildings that couldn't use their computers. When power was restored to the 11 buildings, all computer equipment began working normally, he said. Porter said that although the problem cable had been isolated and all power to campus had been restored, the cause of the malfunction and the exact location along the problem cable hadn't been discovered yet. it could have been caused by moisture in the cable, by a faulty cable or by a mechanical failure," he said. "Now we have to open up the cable and check it. It's just a process of elimination." He said electricity had been restored on campus about 2:45 p.m. Force Continued from p. 1 the KU Committee on South Africa in Anlil "It offers an opportunity for people to talk." Ambler said. "Divestiture is one aspect of the problem. There are other things people could do to realize their concerns." Topics discussed this summer included divestiture and bringing speakers on issues related to South Africa to campus. The group compiled a list of potential speakers to bring to the University of Kansas, Ambler said. Campus anti-aparthid protests have focused on investments of the Kansas University Endowment Association in U.S. companies that do business in South Africa. The Endowment Association is a private corporation that provides the University of Kansas with money for scholarships, fellowships and professorships. KU's role in the issue of divestment would be to ensure that the University provided an open forum for debate, Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said Monday. Student and faculty governing bodies, including Student Senate and the University Council, have voted in favor of divestment, said Dwayne Fuhlage, Tonganoxie senior and a member of the KU Committee on South Africa. "The Kansas University Endowment Association does have to answer to the University," Fuhhage said. "They are not a separate entity." Go For It! Enter the supernatural world of CONE·A·COPIA The Magical Ice Cream Dream Machine! 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VSM Travelers Express MONEY ORDERS Mastercard & Visa Accepted. 45¢ Only At Dillons Dillons FOOD STORES FROM OUR SEAFOOD SHOPPE Fresh Pacific SNAPPER Fillets Reg. $4.45 per lb. per lb. $2.49 AVAILABLE IN STORES WITH SEAFOOD SHOPPE ONLY NOW Keg Beer at Dillons everyday low prices 1740 Mass. 2108 W.27th 1312 W.6th Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 Campus newspaper faces forfeiture of Senate funds By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff In The Streets, a campus newspaper, will have to set up an editorial board or forfeit Student Senate money if a bill that passed the Student Senate University Affairs Committee last night passes the full Senate tonight. The bill directs In The Streets to create an advisory board within three months after the bill passes. The board should include a recognized faculty member from the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications. Charles Lawhorn, holdover senator and author of the bill, said Senate could not force In The Streets to have an editorial board, but it could take away Senate financing. The subject was brought up in a resolution that said the Senate objected to libel in University publications. Stephanie Quincy, engineering senator and author of the resolution, said the resolution was directed at In The Streets because of a remark in its last issue about the brother of a KU administrator. Amy Brown, vice chairman of the committee, said that In The Streets had promised to establish an advisory board when it first received 3.664 in Senate funds last semester Lawhorn objected to the resolution. "It's not a slam against one group, but a slam against all groups," he said. Lawnhorn asked for a recess to write a bill instead of the resolution that would keep the intent of the resolution but not affect other campus publications. STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOPS Via Videotape Friday, November 8 ALSTROM BELL SAC 1986-2005 FREE! 1:30 Time Management 2:30 Preparing for Exams 4:00 Listening and Notetaking to attend. register at the Student Assistance Center MET MOBILE AUDIO SYSTEMS CX142E METI MOBILE AUDIO SYSTEMS MOBILE AUDIO SYSTEMS CX142E ETR AM/FM tuner- receiver with auto-stop cassette deck, separate bass and treble controls, radio monitor and full electronic tuning system Reg. $159.95 Special Price $99.85 Lawrence 914 W. 23rd Custom (913) 842-5511 Radio The Finest In Car Stereo Sales and Repair LIFE LINE A One Man Show written and performed by Steel Kody Keely renders Joe's material superbly. This is a serious, intelligent well-spoken show worthy of attention. Minneapolis, Minnesota Goodnight Mr Poe [Image of a man with dark hair and a mustache, wearing a black jacket. The background is a plain white surface.] A One Main Show written and performed by Woll Keely Keely renders Fox's material superbly. This is a serious, intelligent, well spoken show worthy of attention. Minneapolis Tribune The German Club will sponsor a Kaffeefestue for all persons interested in speaking German at 4 p.m. today in 4047 Wescoe Hall. ■ University Forum will feature a talk by Marie Cross, associate professor of human development, on "Controversial Issues in Nutrition," at 11:45 a.m. today at Ecumenical Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. SUA TICKETS ON SALE SUA Box Office Public $4 Students $3 With KU ID S Thanks for all your time and effort with Rockchalk We can't lose if we "Play for Keeps" With KU ID FINE ARTS ♥ The DG's PIKES And, Edgar Allan Poe is dying. It is the evening of The Christian Science College Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in Danforth Chapel. October 2,1849 Avatar Nov. 8th 7 p.m. Alderson Auditorium On Campus The Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Trail Room of the Union. the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. **Canterbury House will sponsor an Episcopal worship service at noon tomorrow in Danforth Chapel.** Get into Visions or Get outa town. Ray Bans Carrera Porsche Carrera Serengety Driving Glasses Gargoyles (As seen in "The Terminator") Courreges Anne Klein VISIONS Mon.-Fri. 10-5:30;Sat. 10-3 GO VISIONS VISIONS On the Record A car parked behind Robinson Center was vandalized between 5 p.m. Friday and 12:30 p.m. Monday, KU police said yesterday. Damage was estimated at $400. Police said the damage, which included several dents and a cracked windshield, appeared to have been caused by someone jumping up and down on the hood and roof. WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY Pork Spare Ribs with coleslaw and spicy garlic bread $525 Also: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540 Wendy's Hot Biscuit Breakfasts NEW! Wendy's Hot Biscuit Breakfasts ONLY 99¢ Wendy's has two fresh, hot new choices for breakfast. Try our new Biscuit Sandwich, with your choice of bacon or sausage. Or a steaming platter of Biscuits & Gravy. Only 99¢!* Wake up to a hot Biscuit Breakfast, or anything else from our new Morning Menu: French Toast, Egg & Cheese Sandwich, Scrambled Egg Platter, or Fluffy Omelette Platter. All made fresh every morning, and served 6:30-10:30 a.m. ONLY 99¢ Choose Fresh. Choose Wendy's! LAWRENCE 523 W. 23rd Wendy's OLD PANHAMED HAMBURGERS. TOPEKA 2027 Fairlawn 3250 S. Topeka Ave. 2015 S. Topeka Ave. *Introductory price, not valid with other special offers. Expires Nov. 18, 1985* FREE ✓ 46 Point Check Up Service Clinic FREE Mazda 620 COUNTERDOWN 1 Wed. & Thurs., Nov. 12 & 13, 6-10 p.m. 124 520 2 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR CHECKS ✔ Lights ✔ Horn ✔ Windshield Wipers/Washers ✔ Mirrors ✔ Radio/Antenna ✔ Seat Belts ✔ Upholstery 3 BODY INSPECTION ✓ Damage ✓ Glass ✓ Hood and Trunk Latches. ✓ Window & Door Operation 4 UNDER HOOD CHECKS Battery & Cables Cooling System Fluid Levels Engine Filters Drive Belts ELECTRONIC TESTS [scope check] ✔ Ignition Point Dwell ✔ Ignition Timing ✔ Plug Wires ✔ Hot Idle RPM ✔ Ignition Points ✔ Distributor Cap ✔ Rotor ✔ Spark Plugs ✔ EFI Checker Test 5 6 UNDER CAR CHECKS $ \checkmark $ Shock Absorbers $ \checkmark $ Exhaust System $ \checkmark $ Steering Linkage $ \checkmark $ Tire Wear $ \checkmark $ Universal Joints & Seals $ \checkmark $ Rear Axle (Lube Level) $ \checkmark $ Brake Pads/Shoes $ \checkmark $ Wheel Cylinders (Visual) $ \checkmark $ Fluid Leaks $ \checkmark $ Springs ROAD TEST AND OPERATION (optional) ✓ General Engine Operation ✓ General Handling & Steering ✓ Brakes (including hand brake) ✓ Transmission Performance ✓ Clutch (if equipped) ✓ Tire Balance ✓ Speedometer ✓ Gauges ✓ Warning Lights ✓ Power Steering (if equipped) ✓ Air Conditioning (if equipped) To make an appointment, please call no later than Nov. 11 between the hours of 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and ask for Joyce. LairdNoller 1116 W.23rd 842-2191 TOYOTA SERVICE EXCELLENCE AWARD 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday WINNER TOYOTA SERVICE WINNER DEPT OF PATENTS AND SERVICE THE REAL STUFF THE RIGHT PRICE --- 8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Student protesters to be charged By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Five anti-apartheid protesters arrested yesterday in Chancellor Gene A. Budig's suite for criminal trespassing and interference of the conduct of business in a public place have not been formally charged yet, Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory said yesterday. "I expect to file charges tomorrow." Flory said. The five protesters were Edward Jackson, Topeka sophomore; Ruth Lightward, Lawrence junior and vice presidential candidate for Chrysalis Coalition; Michael Maher, Roeland Park junior; Lisa Rusar, Topeka sophomore; and Jane Ungerman, Lawrence senior. Of the five, everyone except Jackson is a member of the KU Committee on South Africa. After an anti-apartheid rally Monday in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall, more than 100 students invaded Strong Hill chanting "Divest now" and "KU out of South Africa." Protesters requested to speak with Budig, who was at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. The five protesters refused to leave the chancellor's suite in Strong after three warnings by KU police and then were arrested. Four of them received summonses to appear Nov. 12 in Douglas County District Court. Ungerman was taken to the Douglas County Judicial and Correction Center because she failed to identify herself at the time of her arrest. But Ungerman said she never was asked to identify herself. Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said, "As far as I know, she had an opportunity to identify herself and chose not to." About an hour later, Ungerman was released and also received a summons to appear Nov. 12 in district court, she said. She said the protesters' refusal to leave the suite was intended to make a statement that they wanted to talk with Budie. "We've been stonewalled all along." she said. The rally featured speakers from campus groups opposed to apartheid. About 1½ hours into the rally, Aaron Lucas, Chattanooga, Tenn., senior and a member of Black Student Union and Black Agents joined in their behalf, to cheering cowl to join hands and take their message to Strong Hall. Lucas said the march on Strong Hall had not been planned before the rally. PIZZA DELIVERED CHEAP & FAST 842-0600 THE GUERDER MAN open till 9 pm You want it? We got it! Come in and see us! The Grinder Man 704 Mass. 843 PIZZA Shoppe 842-0600 6th and Konaid Westridge Shopping Center WE DELIVER! DELIVERY SPECIAL! DELIVERY SPECIAL! Two Tapping King Size Pizza and 32 Oz. Pepsi- Bring A Friend! MEAL FOR 2 $7.95 plus tax Single Tapping Prince Size Pizza; 2 Salads and 2 Pepsis Additional Toppings Only 90' Each. DINE-IN CARRY-OUT LIMITED DELIVERY KU DINE-IN ONLY. $5.95 plus tax UDK Exp.11-14-8S UDK Exp.11-14-8S 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 here to listen and to talk with you. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING --- 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! Birthright 843-4821 - Advice on most legal matters - Preparation & review of legal documents - Notarization of legal documents - Many other services available 8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday 117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665 Call or drop by to make an appointment. OLEY Funded by student activity fee. ASPEN! Jan. 4-11. Five days of skiing with everything included for only $356. Sign-up now at the SUA Office in the Union. Deadline is Nov. 20, so hurry! Call 864-3477 for details. SUN TRAVEL Chicken—Royal Peking Style! Enjoy a delicious chicken dinner at Royal Peking Choose between two chicken entrees and enjoy an appetizer, soup fried rice, dessert and hot tea All for only $4.25 Luncheon Specials served Tuesday through Saturday 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m.___ Only $2.25 711 W. 23rd St. Malls Shopping Center Royal Peking Restaurant 店飯都京 Tues.-Sat. 841-4599 closed Mondays Sun. 12 p.m. 9:30 p.m. Tues. Sat. Lunch 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Dinner 4:30 p.m.-10 p.m BRITCHES CORNER (1) Britches Corner I am an avid reader of many books, including the works of John Green. Is Proud To Offer The Country's Hottest New Men's Sportwear Line. Tommy Hilfiger Fall '85 Collection Sports shirts now available, denim to arrive soon! 843 Massachusetts Open Sunday 12 to 5 H Join the Lunch Bunch At the Veranda Restaurant, for a great great price. We guarantee service so speedy that you'll have time for a relaxing lunch in a friendly atmosphere, without falling behind in your busy schedule. Specialty Sandwich With French Fries, Coleslaw or Fruit Cup $3.95 + tax A Complete Meal OR Holiday Inn *launner's Hometown Hotel** 200 M.Donald Drive 641.7077 Beverage Elaborate 30-Item Soup and Salad Bar Chef's Daily Market Beverage VEBANDA Monday Thru Friday 11:00 to 2:00 P.M. BUFFALO BOB'S Smokehouse SMOKEY JOE SANDWICH SPECIAL Chopped ends of BBQ beef, ham, turkey and pork baked in a mild BBQ sauce. Served hot on a bakery fresh bun with tater curl fries and pickles. WHEEL LOG $2.75 $3.50 Large Sandwich Extra Large Sandwich THE TASTE THAT WON THE WEST + --- NO COUPONS ACCEPTED WITH THIS OFFER 719 MASSACHUSETTS OFFERGOOD TILL NOV. 30 Formerly Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse—Same nice people—Same management Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 9 Ex-firefighter pleads no contest on charge By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff A former Lawrence firefighter pleaded no contest yesterday in Douglas County District Court to a charge of conspiracy to possess cocaine, according to District Attorney Jim Flory. Flory said Douglas County District Judge James Paddock accepted the plea yesterday morning and found the ex-firefighter, Tommy Teague, 1500 Lynch Court, guilty of the charge. Sentencing was scheduled for 3 p.m., Nov. 25. Teague, who was scheduled for a jury trial today, pleaded no contest to the charge as a part of a plea-bargaining agreement. Flory said. Teague originally was charged on July 23 with possession of cocaine, a class C felony, and possession of drug paraphernalia, a class A misdemeanor. On the original charges, Teague could have been sentenced to a minimum of three to five years and a maximum of 10 to 20 years on the felony charge and up to one year with a fine of up to $2,500 on the misdemeanor charge. Flory said he amended the charge to conspiracy to possess cocaine, a class E felony that carries a minimum of one to two years and a maximum of five years, and dropped the misdemeanor charge in exchange for the no contest plea. "In light of all the circumstances, I thought it was the proper deposition of the case." Flory said. Wes Norwood, a Lawrence attorney representing Teague, said he had asked Flory for a plea bargain at his client's request. "It was such a small amount of ocaine," Norwood said. "He had been with the fire department for 15 years and had no record of any kind. I thought he was deserving of a lesser charge." Norwood said Teague, who was arrested July 20 outside Just A Playhouse, a private club at 806 W. 24th St., allegedly possessed a small glass vial that contained one-fourth to one-eighth of a gram of cocaine. "I was trying to get it dropped to just a misdemeanor charge and he (Flory) offered me this," Norwood said. Norwood said he had been talking to Flory for several weeks about the lesser charges and accepted the agreement yesterday. He said he planned to ask the judge for leniency in the case. BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320 SAVE AT IMPORTS • DOMESTICS EXOTIC CARS Ralphis AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 WEDNESDAY 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Also: Spare Rib Special $5**25** the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs. 843-0540 The Jayhawk Coaching Staff Says Get On Board... OREAD EXPRESS OREAD EXPRESS OREAD EXPRESS ...The Oread Express! Support K.U. Basketball With Our Oread Express T-Shirts Youth $7.95 Adult $9.95 Expressly at: layhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. "At the top of Nalsmith Hill" 1420 Crescent Ave. at the top of the hill 'Offering the Private Competitive Edge' 843-3826 BANANA WE WANT YOU TO TRY OUR ALL NEW DELI BURGERS "4 p.m. to close daily" MASS. STREET DELL 101 MASSACHUSETTS Traditional Burger $1.99 Swiss & Bacon Burger $2.35 Big Blue Burger $2.35 A with lettuce and tomato swiss cheese and ranch style bacon blue cheese and sauteed mushrooms Traditional Burger Basket AT A DEAL— and 12oz. soft drink COUPON 504 50€ OFF 4p.m. to close daily OFF 4 p.m. to close Thursday Night Penny Draws $5 Cover All Night DELI BURGERS Mad Hatter MATTER Wednesday Night OFF OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30, 1985 OFF ground heat. - All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean ground beef * Select a braised baked dish buton ̄ burns, kale or savory cheese * Select a salad dressing small soft drink 1. 75 Well Drinks All Night SUA FILMS Birdy M - Nicolas Cage * Matthew Modine Thursday, Nov. 7 7:30 Woodruff Aud. JUNIORS--SENIORS- EARN OVER $1,000 A MONTH NOW WHILE YOU'RE IN SCHOOL! Engineers and technical students with a 3.30 G.P.A. and higher: See Lt. Sam Fishel about the rewarding experiences the Navy's Nuclear Propulsion Program can offer you. TIME: 9:00 - 4:30 DATE: 12 NOVEMBER DATE: 12 NOVEMBER PLACE: LEARNED HALL, ROOM-4010 CALL COLLECT (816) 374-2376 TO ARRANGE AN APPOINTMENT $2 PhotoWorld ONE-HOUR SERVICE 50%OFF Process & Print with this coupon From 110, 126, 35mm or Disc Color Print Film 149c vape pen cartridge $2.00 149c vape pen cartridge $2.00 149c vape pen cartridge $2.00 NOW $9.99 Limit one roll per coupon. Good At All Locations Not valid with other offices engine 11:19:85 PhotoWorld k11-0 PhotoWorld ONE HOUR SERVICE 30% OFF Photo Greeting Cards Photo Greeting Cards Good At All Locations Not valid with other offers Have your favorite photo made into a holiday greeting card? Quantity | Reservation Price | OFF 25 | $19.99 | $5.07 20 | $24.99 | $14.14 100 | $27.49 | $19.24 100 | $31.99 | $33.39 From 110, 128, 35mm and disc color print film. Envelopes included! Internegs, and copy negs. $3. No valid with other offers expires 11-11-05 9:14 AM CASSETTE WITH THIS COUPON PhotoWorld ONE HOUR SERVICE when we transfer your home movies, slides & photos onto Receive a Free Video Cassette tone movies, or Beta. Stop by any VHS or Beta. Stop by any PHOTOWORLD location for details. Good At All Locations Not valid with other offers Not valid with other offers expires 11-19-85 k11-6 PhotoWorld SOUTHERN HILLS SHOPPING CENTER 841-7205 Mon. - Sat, 8 a.m. 'til 9 p.m. Sundays 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! Kodak PAPER Ask about our video transfer service! DOUBLETREE'S HOLIDAY SHOPPER SPECIAL St. Jude's macys THE DOUBLETREE HOTEL ATCORPORATE WOODS IN KANSAS CITY RATE GOOD EVERY DAY 11/15-1/5 $46 Here's your chance to get an early start on your Holiday shopping. Ask for the "Shopper's Special" when you make reservations any day of the week and you'll receive a deluxe double room. Let us provide complimentary transportation to and from the sensational Oak Park and Metcalf South Malls, only minutes away. End your day with a swim in our indoor pool, relax in a soothing hot tub, and enjoy the exquisite cuisine in Restaurant '85. Offer is valid November 15, 1985, through January 5, 1986, and is subject to space availability. For reservations, call (800)528-0444 or dial direct (913)451-6100. The Doubletree Hotel at Corporate Woods, 10100 College Boulevard, Overland Park, Kansas (I-435 at U.S. 69). DOUBLETREE HOTEL KANSAS CITY 10 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 New club for faculty considered by Senate By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff Some University Senate members and faculty members are discussing the possibility of creating a club for faculty members. Sidney Shapiro, chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, said yesterday that KU faculty members were being polled to determine whether a faculty club was needed. The club, Shapiro said, would allow the more than 1,000 faculty members an opportunity to interact with one another. He said the club, which could serve a variety of purposes for its members, was being considered because many faculty members thought their needs were not being met through the Learned Club in the Adams Alumni Center and the Prairie Room in the Kansas Union. "I think it was based on the perception of some faculty that the Adams Alumni Center, that once was thought would be used by faculty, is not working out," he said. The Learned Club is a club for alumni and faculty. The Prairie Room is a formal dining room for faculty. Shapiro said SenEx appointed a committee to look into the possibility of creating a club for faculty members. members Dave Shulenburger, associate dean of business and a committee member, said questionnaires had been mailed to all faculty members asking their opinions on the need for a faculty club. He said the questionnaire asked faculty members whether their needs were being met by either the Learned Club or the Prairie Room. The questionnaire requests that faculty members check off what needs they thought the club should serve. Sandy Wick, SenEx administrative assistant, said that of the 1,200 questionnaires sent out last week, more than 200 had been received so far. Kevin Carroll, general manager of the Alumni Center, said that about 400 faculty members were Learned Club members. He said all faculty members were allowed to join the club Robert Friau, a member of the Faculty Executive Committee, said he had been a member of a KU faculty club that existed in the 1950s. He said it provided faculty members a place to get together. He said a place was needed where faculty from different areas of the University could get together and exchange thoughts. Carroll said to join the Learned club, however, a faculty member would first have to join the Alumni Association. A Learned Club membership costs $25 a year for Douglas County residents and $15 for non-residents. Joining the Alumni Association costs $25 a year. Godfather's #1 PIZZA PURSUIT Ridiculous facts concerning pizza and its origins... Pizza was actually invented in 1832 when the wife of Luigi Pizziano accidentally sat on a large ball of bread dough left to rise on a chair. The resulting pancake had such an interesting, saucer-like shape that she spread it with tomat sauce, tossed on some cheese, and popped it into her stone oven. Later, when pizza had become a Pizziano family staple, Luigi's wife took to throwing it at him, frisbee style, when he didn't come home on time. The first pizza delivery! ? 1985. SAA Try our BIG DEAL Lunch Buffet Only $3.49 Pizza...Salad...and Ice Tea All you care to eat of our famous Godfather's Pizza® fresh salad tacos, and refreshing ice tea. It's a BIG DEAL! Try it and seel. Hours: 11:30 - 1:30 weekdays Mon., Tues., Wed., only thru November "What I Like About You" "Mystified" "Rock You Up" "She's Got Everything" The ROMANTICS!! THIS SATURDAY Homecoming Night Nov. 9, 8:30 P.M. Hoch Auditorium Tickets on Sale Now at The SUA Box Office, all CATS Outlets, and through Dial-A-Tick $12.50 General Admission $11.00 Student with valid KUID Produced by SUA Special Events and New West Presentations Women get slave labor at auction By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Last night, 27 slaves were sold on campus. But the slave auction wasn't a violation of the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery. Nothing illegal was going on. "This seemed like something fun and harmless," said Tammy Jones, resident director of Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall, where 27 members of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, 2000 Stewart Ave., made $353 by auctioning themselves for money. About 50 residents of the hall sat in the North Corbin lobby, yelling bids at the auctioneer, who drew boxer shorts from a laundry basket. The owner of the shorts came forward and was auctioned off to the highest bidder, who got to keep the shorts. Chris Seferyn, Olathe freshman, said the money raised would be used to pay for a party and other pledge- class projects. Kirwin Reifschneider, Hays freshman, who sold for the highest bid of $17, was embarrassed by the auctioning — but flattered. "We'll be slaves for one day this week and then get our underwear back. We use it for collateral." "Eight of us got together and bought five guys," said Diane Schalon, Wichita freshman." "This is fun." Reifschneider said. "I won't mind working because it will be fun and you can to know the girls." "This is a good way to meet girls" said Todd Duchild, St. Louis sophomore, who, along with his red briefs, went for $27. Schalon said her group spent more than $70 on their slaves. Reifschneider said he didn't know the girls who bought him. Some of the girls bidding were little sisters of the fraternity, however. "We're going to make them make us dinner, do our laundry, vacuum, clean floors, drive us to class and wash dishes," she said. Shawn Hunter, Prairie Village senior, said his fraternity, Sigma Kli 1439 Tennessee St., had sold slaves for three years. The slave auction raised money in October during Derby Days, the fraternity's annual fund-raising event. Hunter said the money raised from the auction was donated to Wallace Village, a home for mentally handicapped children in Broomfield. Colo. Kevin Moore, Tula freshman and social chairman of the pledge class, said he got the idea for selling slaves from Benedictine College, Atchison, where he was a student. This is the first year the fraternity has auctioned slaves. "We made $1,600 this year, which is more than we ever have." Hunter, said "We went to 11 sororities and a group of our little sisters, and auctioned off about three groups of two or three people. The top slave pair went for $105." "This goes over really well," Moore said. "Some houses make them mow the lawn, wash cars, do phone duty, and some are waiters," Hunter said. "Sometimes the house moms get in on the purchase." Hunter said some of the slaves had to work hard. Ameri Israel: A Its Impact on Israeli Policy in the Middle East a lecture by Samir Abed-Rabbo PhD. In International Law author of American Aid to Israel, and The International Law and Question of Palestine 1986 "The American taxpayer is paying for Israel's living standard, for its wars, for its conquests, and for those settlements which are going up throughout the occupied Arab territories by giving $10 billion a year to Israel." -Abed-Rabbo, The International Law and Question of Palestine 1986 1986 el's sts, up by 1986 6 5 Tomorrow Nov. 7 7 p.m. Alderson Auditorium Kansas Union Sponsored by the General Union of Palestinian Students Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 11 Students to invest senior funds By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff The 1985 Senior Class Gift Fund has agreed to let the KU Investment Fund, a student campus group, handle its gift money. The KU Investment Fund, a group of students who started the fund to gain experience handling the members' money, has formed the Income Management Group, John McGannon, Mission Hills graduate student and head of the income group, said Sunday. The Income Management Group was formed in September to manage funds of KU student groups seeking annual returns on their investments. The Investment Fund and the Income Management Group are dealt with in different ways, McGannon said. Students put money in the Investment fund for the risks. "Right now we've got a stock or two that's down," he said, "but we're expecting it to turn around. "Most people are not in it for the money. They nut in $100 and have some fun with their money." The Income Management Group, however, will be conservative with money from other groups it manages, he said. That money will be invested in such things as certificates of deposit to guarantee a return. McGannon said. Dan Lowe, Olathe graduate student and president of the Class of 1985, said yesterday that the class officers wanted someone else to invest the class's money. said. "I think they've got a lot of experience and know what they're doing." "They're capable of handling money," Lowe The class is forming a fund for an annual award to be given to a KU benefactor, Lowe said. The Senior Class Gift Fund Committee will raise money and hand it over to the Income Management Group. The class's goal is to raise $5,000 for the Income Management Group to invest, he said. The interest will be used to pay for the annual award. McGannon said he hoped other classes after the Class of 1885 would want their money managed by the group. The group handles the funds at no charge. The group's 55 members have experience managing their own money, totaling about $5,500 McGannon said. Families offer homes for the holidays By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff At least 30 foreign students will find a home away from home this Thanksgiving break when they participate in the KU Homestay Program. The program, which has found homes for foreign students during the break for more than 10 years, is sponsored by the office of foreign student services. Students stay with families in Lawrence and other cities in Kansas. The only cost to the students is transportation. "This is a good way to help these students see inside American homes." Rosale Thessen, White Water, said yesterday. "It just makes it so much more fun for these students to be in America." Theisen and her husband, Edgar, have been hosts to foreign students on their farm for more than 10 years. They help coordinate host families in their area through churches and by contacting people that they think would be interested in the program. "The Lord just opened up our door," she said. "We saw a need for homes for children." Patricia Willer, assistant director of foreign student services, said about 40 students had signed up to stay in homes Nov. 27-Dec. 1. They will be matched up with families after filling out an application and interviewing with Willer. Thirty homes have been volunteered, and Willer said more were needed. Participants will stay in city and farm homes in several cities, including the Kansas City area, Wichita, Topeka and El Dorado. "Students can only participate in the program once," Willer said. "We don't have enough families to host all of the students." Willer said host families usually were interested in the cultural aspect of the program. Thiessen said, "We don't have the finances to travel abroad, so this is the next best thing to traveling. We've really pursued this program over the years. We've seen what it's like for students and for us. It's worth it." Students think the program is worth it, too. "I'm really looking forward to it," said Robert Karkafi, Dyblos, Lebanon, freshman. "The most important thing to me is knowing how families here live. It's part of my education." Karkafi said he wanted to learn about American customs from his host family, as well as share customs from his country. Willer said most families would share the custom of Thanksgiving by serving a traditional meal. "The families are not trying to pro- suffer from culture shock and they don't have any concept of this side of American life. They can see our country in an altogether different way." Thiessen's family has hosted students from Japan, Ecuador, Mexico and Iraq. They usually host two students during one stay. Thiessen said she encouraged families not to entertain the students. "They should let the student see family life as it is," she said. "They need to be introduced to American families. Too many foreign students ZBCT's BAHAMA MAMA IS GOMING ... ZBCT'S BAHAMA AVIRE SAT. NOV. 9th OPEN PARTY 1625 EDGEFILL "Students get very lonely." Thiessen said. vide hotel accommodations," Willer said. "The students will share in the cooking, family outings and even doing dishes. Some want to see how families discipline their children." But it's tough to test yourself and find out what you can do just by taking quizzes and finals. Many young men and women say they are going to college for the challenge. This semester, try something impossible. Unlike strictly academic subjects, Army ROTC will teach you to think on your feet. To make important decisions quickly. And it will help you to develop your confidence and stamina. One semester at a time. Add Army ROTC to your program and you'll automatically challenge both your physical and mental skills. In short, you can prepare yourself to handle the impossible, on campus or off. For full details call: PROFESSOR OF MILITARY SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE 952640 PHONE (913) 864-3311 ARMY ROTC. LEARN WHAT IT TAKEST TO LEAD. State of the Art DENON QUALITY AUDIO—THE BEST PRICE State of the Art DENON CD Player Sale KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO-VIDEO shop TRANSACTION UNIT TRANSACTION KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO - VIDEO shop "Arab Israeli Conflict: HOW MANY MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT?" A Lecture By John Law Former Vice President of Chase Manhattan Bank. Foriner Chief Middle East Correspondent For U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT. Alderson Auditorium Kansas Union Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 7:30 p.m. Sponsored by School of Journalism, Political Science Department, and the Saudi Students Club. We've Got Colorado Buffaloed! Shop Our Large Selection Of Football Jerseys, And Show Your Support! Featuring: Support! Featuring: - Authentic K.U. Jersey's - Jayhawk Jerseys in White or Gray - "Sleep Shirt" Jerseyse in Natural Nylon or Cotton Polyester Blends Priced From $10.95 to $29.95 Jayhawk Bookstore 1620 Crickett Rd. Lawrence, KC 66034-4 (913)843-5828 "At the top of Nathanith Hill" Islamic Center of Lawrence presents "Evils of Communism" by: A. AHMEDULLAH Former Minister of Interior of Afghanistan Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 7 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Everybody is Welcome! REFRESHMENTS ARE PROVIDED For more information call 841-9768 $1495 COMPLETE High-Res Monitor, 256K, 2 Drives, Graphics Capability Enhanced Keyboard, Clock/Calendar, MS-DOS, 1 YR Warranty AND Batteries INCLUDED THE WINNER LEADING EDGE MODEL "D" "PC EDITOR'S CHOICE-Among the bargain-priced PC-compatibles tested, Leading Edge Model D is the clear winner. That's not surprising--it's the newest machine tested and was designed around lessons that were learned from some of the others. It combines all the features that you could possibly want as standard equipment with a price that you'd expect to pay for a stripped IBM machine." PC Magazine—Oct., 1985 "Leading Edge is a registered trademark" COMPUTER OUTLET Your computer connection at 843-PLUG * 804 N.H. 12 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 KBI told to investigate 'joke' The Associated Press TOPEKA — Although he considers it "ridiculous," Attorney General Robert T. Stephan has directed a Kansas Bureau of Investigation agent to investigate a conversation last Friday between Kay Houser and Director James D. Directed in which they jokingly discussed shooting a Tooeka attorney. Kay Houser, a friend of Stephan's and chairman of the Governor's Committee on Crime Prevention, said Monday she jokingly suggested to Kelly that he shoot Margie Phelps, attorney for a woman who accused Stephan of sexual harassment. Neil Woerman, spokesman for Stephan, said yesterday that a KBI agent would look into the complaint filed by Phelps. "I would not term it an investigation," Woerman said, noting that an agent will take statements from Houser and Kelly. Woerman added that he doubts much will come of the inquest. "It's all just ridiculous," Woerman said, "But we're looking at it." He said the results of the inquiry would not necessarily be released and he did not know if Pheps would be notified of any findings. In addition, Woerman did not think the investigation would include interviews of all potential witnesses or all members of the crime prevention panel, which was meeting at the same time the remark was made. In a prepared statement Monday, Stephan said it was "absurd" to think Houser or Kelly might want to kill Phelps. Kelly was not available for comment. Stephan said the accusations, which included threats of wiresap on the Phelps' telephones, are "beyond belief" but said his office would look into the case. Report says electric bills cheaper From Kansan wires TOPEKA — Kansas consumers paid an average 6 percent less for electricity during the third quarter of this year compared to what their counterparts paid nationally, the Kansas Corporation Commission reported yesterday. The KCC's survey of electric charges for the four main private utilities — Kansas Gas and Electric Co., KPL Gas Service, Kansas City Power and Light Co. and Centel Corp. — indicated that their customers paid an average $59.20 for 750 kilowatt hours of electricity during the July-August-September quarter. That compared with an average $62.80 paid by the customers of 60 utilities nationally, the KCC said. However, it could be the last such favorable report for Kansans. Rate increases for some of the utilities as a result of construction of the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant didn't take effect until after this survey period. A commission statement said putting into effect the summer electric rates — under which the price per kilowatt hour increases with higher usage — caused the average price for 750 kwh from Kansas' four main utilities to increase 7 percent over the second quarter. But KCC said moderate heat this summer meant an overall 3 percent reduction from what Kansasans paid last year. Kansas Gas and Electric Co. charged its customers the least for 750 kwh of electricity during the third quarter, $55.22. Then came KPL Gas Service at $55.46, KCPL at $58.65 and Centel at $67.47. Midwest Energy, a cooperative with the most customers other than the big four, charged $55.95 for 750 kwh in the latest quarter surveyed. The KCC issued an order Sept. 26 allowing KG&E to raise its rates 28.3 percent, KCPL 14.4 percent and Kansas Electric Power Cooperative 33 percent because of the costs associated with construction of the $3.1 billion nuclear plant near Burlington. THE PERFECT DATE ... $5.00 Off Regular $15.00 ALEXANDRA HUGHES AND STEPHEN ROSNER In Our Private Hot Tub. Includes FREE • Stereo • Cable TV or • Optional Movie Rental EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25th & Iowa • Holidav Plaza 841-6232 A HOMECOMING '85 THE ROMANTICS! PARADE 9:30 a.m. Mass. St. PICNIC 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Tent South of Memorial Stadium GAME Jayhawks vs. Colorado Buffaloes 1:30 p.m. CONCERT The Romantics with Donnie and the Rock 8:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Tickets $ 12.50/$ 11.00 with KUID Available at the SUA Box Office and all Cats Outlets Produced by SUA Special Events and New West Presentations. For more info call the KU Alumni Center 864-4760 A KU HOMECOMING PARTY — ALL DAY LONG! Cornucopia RESTAURANT Salad Bar and Dinner Special! $3.75 Salad Bar or ONE COUPON PER PERSON $2.00 off any Dinner! Dinner includes soup, unlimited trips to our salad bar, meats, and vegetables, and home-made bread, all at the a la carte price. Cornucopia RESTAURANT Salad Bar and Dinner Special! Expires 11-15-85 ONE COUPON PER PERSON $3.75 Salad Bar or $2.00 off any Dinner! Dinner includes soup, unlimited trips to our salad bar, fresh fruit and vegetables, and home-made bread, all at the a la carte price. • Try Our Great Desserts • Homemade Bread • Breakfast Served Anytime HOURS Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-10 p.m. 1801 Mass. 842-9637 Cornucopia RESTAURANT Fruit Cereal Vegetable VISA MISTER GUY GUY Announces Their Famous Moonlight Madness Sale!! Yes. The One You Have Been Waiting For!! One Night Only Wed. Nov. 6th 6-10:30 p.m. For Men dress shirts a selected group including Gitman Bros. New Haven & Jeff Banks values to $59.50 values to $59.50 Wed. night only 1/2 off sport shirts values to $45 ed. night only 1/2 off sweaters patterns & stripes selected group $ _{1/2} $ price crew neck sweaters a selected group Wed. night only 1/2 off wools $29.50 cords 19.50 slacks a selected group of wools & flannels values to $72.50 Wed. night only $29.50 slacks slacks a selected group of corduroys Wed. night only $19.50 For Women sweaters values to $115 Wed. night only 1/2 off skirts including wools and corduroys Wed. night only $ _{1/2} $ off vests from Polo by Ralph Lauren corduroys & wools $19 blouses values to $64 a selected group Wed. night only $10 wool slacks values to $64 Wed. night only 1/2 off corduroy slacks values to $54 Wed. night only $19.50 hours m-t-w-f-sat 9:30-6 p.m. th-9:30-8:30 p.m. sun-noon-5 p.m. MISTER GUY 920 mass 842-2700 281 Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Sports University Daily Kansan 13 News Briefs Williams remains questionable for CU Head football coach Mike Gottfried put the Jayhawks through a two hour and forty-five minute practice yesterday at Memorial Stadium. "It was a longer practice than usual," Gottfried said yesterday, "but we are trying to get some training." I'oned out before Saturday. The Jayhawks will host to Colorado at 1:30 p.m. Saturday in Memorial Stadium, Kansas is 5-4 overall and 1-3 in the Big Eight. Colorado is 5-3 overall and 2-2 in the Big Eight. Gottfried said the status of tailback Lymn Williams was unchanged, meaning he is questionable for Saturday. Free safety Wayne Ziegler, who re-injured his knee Oct. 19 against Kansas State, will not be ready to play against the Buffalooes. Rec-A tournev ends Both Yogi's Bears and KU's Finest shut out their opponents yesterday and took championships in the Recreation Services Rec-A intramural football tournament. Yogi's Bears stopped Road Warriors 10-4 to capture the men's Independent Rec-A championship, while KU's Finest defeated Elgins 13-0 in the Residential Rec-A final. In men's Independent Trophy play yesterday, Mad Hatter shut out Raiders 14-0, Biggest Bill's Buddies defeated Penthouse 16-4, Minervas Lions defeated Olde English 13-7, and Unknowns defeated Bums 21-0. Four teams earned their way to the semi-finals in men's Greek Trophy play, with Delta Chi defeating Beta A-1-15.7, Phi Delta Theta 1 defeating Delta Tau Delta 17.7, AKL defeating Fiji 1 13-10, and Ducks 1 shutting out Pi Kappa Alba 14-0. Today's action features the championship game in women's independent Trophy, and semifinal games in men's and women's Greek Trophy and men's Independent Trophy competition. From Kansan wire reports. Berry brothers living a dream Rv Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff Playing major college football is only a fantasy for most players. Playing major college football with your brother is a dream realized by even fewer people. But for Tony and Derek Berry, the dream has come true. "It's always been our dream to play college football on the same team." Tony said yesterday. "It's been fun and exciting playing with Derek." The Berry brothers are defensive backs for the Jayhawks, Tony, a junior, started the first five games at left cornerback and has since split time with freshman Danny Crossman, Derek, a sophomore, has served as a back-up safety. With injuries to Wayne Ziegler and Marvin Mattox, Derek has been moved to second-team free safety behind Travis Hardy. The Berrys had their dream of playing on the same football team put on hold in high school. They only played two games together at Assumption High School in East St. Louis, Ill., because of an ankle injury to Derek. The injury occurred after two games in Derek's sophomore season. His broken right ankle required surgery, which also sidelined him during his junior year. Derek returned his senior year, but Tony had graduated and was playing football for Kansas. 'It's always been our dream to play college football on the same team. It's been fun and exciting playing with Derek.' "Since we didn't get to play together in high school, it was our ambition to play on the same team in college," Derek said. With Tony already at Kansas, Derek, who was named to the Blue Chip and Catholic All-American high school teams as defensive back, said he could be a center. He wanted to play football at Kansas. For Tony, the decision was not that easy. Tony was heavily recruited out of high school. Every school, except Kansas, wanted him as a wide receiver, even though he was named on five high school All-America teams as a defensive back. He was Defensive back Tony Berry stretched during yesterday's practice at Memorial Stadium. Tony and his brother Derek, also a defensive back for the Javahawks, had a dream come true by playing on the same college team. — Tony Berry KU defensive back KANSAS 3 also named to all conference and all state teams as a wide receiver. He narrowed the schools to six, Notre Dame, Iowa State, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan State and Minnesota, but he said he was leaning toward the Fighting Irish. "During my junior year in high school, all I could think about was Notre Dame, Notre Dame." Tony said. "Coming from a Catholic high school, I had all but decided to go to Notre Dame." Tony said he changed his mind after talking to the Kansas coaches and Bobby Johnson. Johnson, a former Kansas receiver and now a wide receiver for the New York Giants, was the Assumption High School quarterback during Tony's sophomore season. "He told me I would have a chance to play as a freshman, and that was something I wanted to do," Tony said. In addition to football, the Berrys also played on the basketball and baseball teams at Assumption. "It seems we've always been together," Tony said. "We were both forwards in basketball, and he was a guard, was a catcher on our baseball team." Tony and Derek could be reuilted on a basketball team this winter. Both said they were planning on trying out for the Kansas junior varsity team, played last season and averaged three points a game in a reserve role. Tony also runs track for Kansas, a sport he wasn't introduced to until he graduated. "We did not have a track team at Assumption," Tony said. "But one day I was running 40-yard dashes when a train coach (Steve Kueffer) saw me and asked if I would like to try out for the track team." Now Tony anchors the 4x100 relay along with running several individual sprints during both the indoor and outdoor track seasons. field and off. They are roommates, and both said they complement each other. "We understand each other." Derek said. "We enjoy the same things and we like each other's sense of humor." The Berrys are together on the The thing they both would like is to play in the defensive backfield at the same time, but for now they both said they had acceptd their roles on the team. "I come in on short yardage situations, because I've been known as an aggressive hitter." Derek said. "Tony is more of a disciplined player and is real good in man-to-man defenses and you and the two young guys we're working with at the defensive backfield at the same time." Chiefs battle injuries, losses United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo -- The Kansas City Chiefs are losing players as well as games. The Chiffs, who have lost five consecutive games to fall to sole possession of last place in the AFC West, have lost two of their most productive players to injuries and heard some bad news yesterday about another injury. The Chiefs put wide receiver Henry Marshall and defensive end Art Stall on the injured reserve list and replaced them on the roster with free agents, wide receiver Michael Holston and offensive lineman Rob Marshall, who was on second to the team in receiving with 24 catches for 436 yards, suffered a shoulder separation last Sunday. Still, a four-time Pro Bowl pick who had four sacks and two fumble recoveries this season, suffered a knee strain in last week's 23-20 loss to the Houston Oilers. Still underwent arthroscopic surgery on his left knee yesterday but doctors did not find any tears in the ligaments or cartilage. He will wear a splint on his left leg for four weeks and it is doubtful Still will return to the active roster this season. Club physicians also said that starting offensive guard Brad Budde would be out for at least another four weeks because of a strain in the rotator cuff of his right shoulder. Budde had missed the previous two games with the injury but the Chiefs plan to keep him on the active roster. "I wish we knew two weeks ago what we know now." Kansas City head coach John Mackovic said of the Budde injury. "We thought in two weeks time he'd start to respond (to treatment). But he doesn't feel appreciably better. "If we put him out (on the injured list) now, he'd be out six weeks total. He could feel fine in 10 WORDS." Holston played four seasons with the Houston Oilers before being cut last summer. He has 68 career catches for 1,035 yards and four touchdowns. He had his best game ever when he gained 128 yards against Pittsburgh in 1984. Coincidentally, the Chiefs host the Steelers Sunday. "He told me he caught seven passes against Pittsburgh last year," Mackovic said. "We'll have to put some of those plays in this week." "He was a productive receiver in this league and we felt he could come in and play quickly in one week." Horford's status uncertain United Press International WASHINGTON - American University officials yesterday denied reports that Tito Horford, the highly recruited freshman player dismissed from the Louisiana State University basketball team, was transferring to American. The 7-foot-1 standout center, who was born in the Dominican Republic and played high school basketball in Houston, was dismissed from the LSU squad Sunday after he missed a practice and failed to show up for a scrimmage. "As far as we're concerned, he is still a member of the Louisiana State University basketball program," said Ray Murphy, the assistant athletic director at American. "We can't even talk to him unless the NCAA allows us to . . . and they haven't." The Baton Rouge, La., Morning Advocate and a Houston television station, both quoting unnamed sources Monday, reported that Horford was in Washington and considering a transfer to American, a Division I school playing in the Colonial Athletic Association. But Murphy said: "We know ab-solutely nothing about him either coming to American or being in Washington." A friend of Horford's, 6-4 guard Manuel Nadal, plays for American. Edmond Tapscott, American's head coach who recruited Horford last summer before he signed with LSU, said Monday neither he nor Nadal had talked to Horford. Tapscott was out of town yesterday and not available for comment. Horford's whereabouts yesterday were unknown. "The last thing we heard was that Horford left LSU, destination Knoxville. Cornwell, an American spokesman. "That's still as much as we know." Under NCAA rules, Horford, 19, could not play intercollegiate basket. ball for 18 months after transferring to another campus, Cornwell said. There also have been rumors that Horford would skip college entirely and play professionally in Europe. "He would have to wait so long to play basketball here that I have sincere doubts the man will ever play college basketball." Cornwell said. Bob Gallagher, Horford's high school coach at Marian Christian Academy, said yesterday that he also thinks Horford will turn pro, possibly playing in Italy. "You're talking about $150,000," said Gallagher. "You go play until March and then you come home. If you play in Europe one year, you're a free agent in the National Basketball Association." Hortorf initially enrolled at the University of Houston and signed a letter of intent to play there, but the NCAA ruled him ineligible because of recruiting violations and because Gallagher signed the letter as his guardian. Astros hire Card coach United Press International HOUSTON — Hal Lanier, third base coach of the National League champion St. Louis Cardinals and a former major league infielder, was named manager of the Houston Astros yesterday. Lanier replaces Bob Lillis, who was fired at the end of the season. It is Lanier's first managerial job in the major leagues. Lillis, now a coach with the San Francisco Giants, took the Houston job in 1982. During his tenure, the Astros' best finish was a tie for second place in 1984. Lillis was fired after guiding the Astros to an 83-79 record and a tie for third place in the National League Division with the San Diego Padres. "With hard work and the determination of the players, it's going to be an exciting year," said Lanier, 42, who signed a two-year deal to become the ninth manager in the history of the franchise. Lanier beat out Chicago White Sox third base Coach Jim Leyland and former managers Rilly Eardner, Joe Torre and Dawrist Bristol for the job. "I think the fans of Houston will see a different brand of baseball," Lanier said. "I'm a very aggressive manager, I think you'll see more running. I like to put people in motion and have the defense make mistakes. I like this ballclub, what I've seen of it. It's very strong up the middle." JUNE 2018 Got it! Jon Gregor, Leavenworth freshman, stopped a shot from one of his teammates during the men's soccer club practice yesterday at 23rd and Iowa streets. 15 14 University Daily Kansan 1. CHINA KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 The University Daily Classified Ads CLASSIFIED RATES CLASSED RATES Words 1-Date 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 8.25 16-20 2.90 4.25 6.00 9.30 11-25 3.20 4.75 6.75 10.35 for every 5 words add: 30¢ 50¢ 75¢ 1.05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Monday 4 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Classified Display...$4.40 per column inch Clasified display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than a minimum width in each row. No rearrangement allowed in clasified display advertisements except for logos. Logo size cannot exceed 24 inches. Furniture can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Those ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the banking business at 800-415-4558. - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words. * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words. * Deadline is 4 a.m. - 2 wdw word吸附 for 4 - *I earned rate discount* *Samples of all mail order items must be submitted* - Tearstuffs are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. POLICIES - Deadline is 4 p.m. — 2 working days prior to publication. * Attain rates based on consecutive day increment. Classified display advertisements * Classified display ads do not count towards monthly named rate discount Sample When you just need to talk to someone, you can call or drop by Headquarters We're at 1419 Massachusetts. Our number is 841-2345. It's free, confidential, and secure. CLOSE - Above rates based on consecutive day inquiries - Complaint is assumed for more than one day - Samples of at least other items prior to publication of advertising ANNOUNCEMENTS Free trip to Fort Lauderdale or Daytona for Spring Sports Tournament, representative call. until credit has been established *Yearbooks are not provided for classified or - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established - Friend box ads—purchase and a $2 service charge • Checks must be company all.classified ads mailed great places to live. * 4 womens and 4 mens schol halls (50 on hall) - friendly atmosphere - low maintenance costs The Secret's Out! PHE - REGISTRATION BLUES? Need help with career options? Call the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center at 643-852 for an aide. Visit womensresourcecenter.org or call 212-4-8. t.m. Thursday through Friday. - correct insertion of any advertisement * No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising. Scholarship Halls are - less expensive because of shared responsibilities Deadline for applications 11/8. close to campus available in 123 Strong Hall Directions: NW, 115 E, W 1160 Spring Semester Openings Anyone may apply. Applications COLORADO-All inclusive package for $239 Limited offer; call toll-free or inform registration The Islamic Center of Lawrence invites you to attend an interesting lecture by a famous and well known author, whose book will give a speach titled "Evil of Communism." Time: 7:00 p.m., Friday, Nov. 8, 1838. Place: Jayhawk Room, Kamaus Union, K.U. Lawrence. Everybody is welcome. Refreshments are proudly served. VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT SERIES-SRIVER, November 8; Exame, 60- Listening and Notetaking FREET Register to attend at the Student Assistance Center. SKI COLORADO over Thanksgiving! Refit a condo decorated, includes sauna, hot tub, pool and patio. Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $14.99. Smith's TV Club 1447 W. 21st, 843-7831. Mon., Sat. Bent' 19. T* Color T V. $28.0 per month. Smarty's TV. 14 W. Rd. 845-7311. Mon - Sat: 9:00 to 7:30. FOR RENT Apartment available next to Union Starting Jan or immediately. Carmen W. 804-4131. Evenings HURRY Berkley FLATS 843-2116 11th & Mississippi - Over 40 New Units - Great Location! Walk Anwhere - Laundry Facilities Only A Few Lett Leasing Office 1123 Indiana THE FAR SIDE - Cable T.V. - On KU Bus Route Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 West 7th. One bedroom furnished, 3rd floor. $225 plus utilities. Lease through price, prices could be negotiable. 843-323-1430, 843-323-1433 By GARY LARSON Excuse me, sir, but did you drop this on the way out? PLENTY O' PIANOS © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate Stupid clerks BLOOM COUNTY ON FINE, YOUR GETTORHOSE! HAT TIME! FINE! FINE! FINE! FINE! LIFESTYLE SECTION GO, HOW'S START OL' STORY COMIN'? THAT THAT Lifestyle SENTIMENT Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at BERKELEY FLATS. Vacations available now and at semester. Plan ahead, lease now for next year. 843-2116. Cooperative living lovers your expenses while expending your mind. Room available at Rainbow House for $110/month. Call 843-7304 after 5 p.m. to become part of our thriving community. Attractive a 8 bedroom condominium for rest. 1.34, baths, CA, PF, range refrigerator, microwave, DHW, hikooook, paid cable TV, swimming pool. Available. Available. Available. Available. Dec. 1. Lease required. $795. 749-589-609 Available Sublease- 1.6g, bedroom, gas & water paid Available November 15. *Call p.m.'s* 841-9797. Cary, carpeted apartment near campus at Missouri available December 1. 740-8166 WELL GOOD! THAT'S REAL! GOOD! Juggle Section Jayhawker Towers - For 2,3 or 4 persons - Individual Contract Option - 10-Month Leases * 10 Million Paid - 10-Month Leases - Limited Access Doors - Air Conditioned - Swimming Poo - Free Cable TV - On Bus Line - Laundry Facilities - Furnished or Unfurnished Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus: Utilities paid. Call 842-4185. Now leasing for spring 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Furnished rooms from $100 with some utilities paid. Two bills: from Kansas USA. No pets. Luxury townhouse, 2 bedrooms, 1/2 baths, garage/fireplace, deck, solararium window. Five bedroom apartment with balcony. $200 OFF FIRST MONTH RENT. ONE & two bedrooms available beginning at $300/month. All apartments have CA, gas heat, DW, FF refreree, and clean on bare road. Call 843-7547 for details Rooms for rent on the hill 1/10 mile from Union 895 and 812. Call 841-6495. Rooms for rent, Special Nov. rate, Clean and no quiet. No food. Call 749-7622. Mark. SUNFLOWER HOWER. Spring opening, reserve new 30 students, private rooms, close to campus. Sublease: 2 bedroom apartment on KU bus route. Free phone installation, free cable, off-street parking. sublease bedroom furnished apartment, Call office 748-215 or Jim/Lim 841-8238 *** Sublease 1 bedroom furnished apartment at Sunrise Apartments on bus route 641 - 3559 and 8752. Sublasse, own bedroom in nice duplex near cam- pus. Quit, study atmosphere 1420 m² plus 300 m². Sublase 82R, BHR, Apt, Hdw, laundry/raucher, energy efficient, baltic, great west loot 1 bedroom apts. from $199 some utilities paid. downlow and uplower, no perplexes. No please enter. BUS.PERSONAL $10-$60 Weekly U/Mailing Circulars? No quotes! Sincerely interested ruth self-adhered envelope: Success, PO Box 740CEG, Woodstock, IL 60098. A SKT CULTUR RISING! Skateboards & Accessories QUALITY STUFF ONLY A Acrestion w/Style Gate and Goyen. 10pm-7pm. Gallery on Saturday mornings 1:41-814-6237 or saturday morning 9:30-11am. UPTOWN BICYCLES 1337 Mass. 749-0636 116 Undergraduate positions available in the LA&S COLLEGE ASSEMBLY. Make your voice heard. Filed deadline Nov. 8. Nomination forms online at www.laas.edu (online needed). More information call 844-4088. TELEPHONE MENU HOT LINE 364-4567 by Berke Breathed of the day's entrees & soups. LOOK OUT LAWRENCE! THE KU KONNECHE has found a system of dating which works. He has dated with a personable touch the KU KONNECHE and out about us by simply sending $20 in a blank stamped envelope to THE KU KONNECHE P.O. BOX 1582 Lawrence, RSA 69844 new • forming singing singles. Kind kindred agariza singers. Write "Motivation" on a CD cover. Singles: Write "P.O. Box 100357, Lawrence, N.J." NATURAL WAY NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING 803 Massachusetts Lorraine, KS 50044 (913) 841-1010 GAD. I HATE PERSONS. NINE SECONDS. Lifetime Action COMPREHENSIVE. HEALTH. ASSOCIATE- early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care; confidentially assured. Greater area. Call for appointment. 913-345-140 MATH TUTOR - Bob Mora holds an A in math in the county of Bristol, 102 and 123 were among the counties where he taught. She is usually in 1975 and uses oftentimes, elementary language for an 40 minute session. Call 643-8923. WEDDINGS CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO Dinetee, Dinetees, Dinetees! We have over 50 dinetes to choose from. 6 factory set select sets with a waistband type tableau. 4 chairs made of burgundy upholstery and four cushions. All five pieces only $6. Hurry to Midwest Furniture & Waterbed Liquidators. 789-842 2254. Outlets in KS. and Mn. growing. Haireux $7, permi $80 at Channels. Contact Chris Mat-Sat at 847-739-1957. Walk-ins welcome. Health Insurance for Students. Short-term and long term plans available. Call Dutton Insurance, 123-456-7890. Rent’19 Color T V $28 / a month * Curtis Matheen * 4 Wrd 21f 424 5737 Mon - Sat - 9:30 * 6 Wrd 21f 424 5737 Mon - Sat - 9:30 instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization certificate and course of course, fin. portraits, Svila Studios Studio 109. We get your computer's heads on straight. Computer Repair - Alphabet Computer Services. Jayhawks, Go HaWaiian is the 1985 Homecoming Theme. Go HaWaiian with the best, Paradise found shirts and pants from The Etc. Shop, T32. The store is 11:40 - 11:50 pm M-Till. 8 pm Thur. 12-5 Sundays Mismatched mattresses. National bedding manufacturer contacted us to liquidate several loads of mismatched close-up or discontinued mattresses in the building. The twin sets only 82 each piece. Open to the public every day. Midwest Furniture and Watered Liquorators, 739 New Hampshire 842-254. Outlets in McQueen COMPARE. Compare how much larger diamonds look diamonds look in T Riffles' eyes Diamonds Pictured are Same Size Ordinary Diamond Earrings - *TruBrilliant earrings are more* - brilliant and look larger. - Matching diamond pendants also available - also available. - TruBriliants feature Secur-Lok - They push-to-lock-on, unscrew- McQueen Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cup, etc. for an upcoming event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and price on printed imprinted specialties plus speedy and reliable delivery. You design it or it them. (201. W 210. Jlh-Gibson) *811-439-819* New from California. Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure, 316-264-3742, PO Box 3625, Wichita, 672b). See in Monday's Kanaan, KU Represen- tation. REWARD-Free Trip to Dionysia plus Commission Money. WANTED: Organized group or individual to promote the 1 Spring Break Trip to Dayima. If interested, call 1-400-453-9074 immediately! Thousands of a & B albums. 28 lbs. less. Absorb than those at the store. New Hampshire, Bell, Soil, and Crestwood. 11 New Hampshire; Bell, Soil, and Crestwood. WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from 75, or sailing at South Padre Island and Daytona Beach from 899; hurry,urchase Suncheck Tour for more information toll free (1-800-321-901) or contact a Suncheck Representative to find your winter break schedule on Suncheck. Bike Sale 15% off all Biannual Models Touring, Sport Hacing and All Terrain Bicycles PERSONAL Bunny driver: You are the only star in my galaxy. I love you ! Princess Liza Breat. C. (you) SLT: Beating the nice person I can be, I decided not to print your name and phone.) But, word of mouth works wonders. You're a pilot. Thank for the ride. Join the Tiffany club. The Delta Gamma who writes paper towers and updips their books, and the Mafro prove. White male, 25, pope completion, duel personality, skinny and not too bright, sees winnery blonde with great looks, great body, family connections, classy wardrobe and fantastical personality. Must be uncritical. Send sincere replies only to Sidney, A. Kim, 118 Stauffer-Fluirk Hall of University. Witty, attractive female, 30, seeks intelligent witty man, 18-50, rebel and into politics. Send resume to: HR@BerkshireHospital.com YOU ARE NOT ALONE! Liamigan lays the pillow. You are not alone. Sponsored by HIGHBURG & COMPANY. Funded by HIGHBURG & COMPANY. CB-1. Just the mention of your name, brings a smile to your face. Your adjective, *lady* joys to my life. Just the sight of your smile, *poke* love in my heart. And just the thought of our friendship. *dies* a work in my soul. BABY I want to m-m-m-mary you! Happy MARIZA MARIZA MARIZA LOLI H. I LOVE YOU! DON'T MISS THE LAWRENCE DEUTS OF SAT- RECORDING ARTISTS THE MEAT PUPPETS. SAT NOV. 9 AT THE OUTHOUSE (4 MLI E OF MASS, ON 15h). NIGHT LIFE Mobile DJ Dance Music. A mixture of New Rock and the classics presented over a 400 watt sound system. When it's time to dance, call NIGHT LIFE 789-4713 Dance to live future music cJ. Jayhawk Olderine Dance to live future music cJ. Jayhawk Olderine Make your next part uniquely 841-496 ENTERTAINMENT LOST/FOUND Found-Bracket, Computer Center Auditorium describe at Computer Center Information Found: Small young, brown, beige and black tabley cat with yellow-green eyes and white collar Found- Texas Instruments calculator, Oct. 31st in parking lot at East Computer Center. Ask for RSVP. Found: black kitchen bldg and Michigan Sunday Call Mary at 864-3730 or 749-0423. Liont - Keys attached to cushion curve, friday behind Spence Museum. Call 843-9830 or 848-4690. BabySisters wanted for 3 children in our home. Prefer daily from 9-12; will consider 2 or 3 day executive Committee. Must be KU graduate student with several years experience at KU preferred. 50% graduate assistantship. Salary $550 per position. 1-year position beginning 2016; Application position begins 1. Application deadline: May 31. Child care. center needs full-time, part-time teachers. Call for anot. 749-0295 Executive Coordinator, KU Graduate Student Council. Applicant should be knowledgeable of campus, academic programs, and University requirements for coordination of programs developed in GSRC. is November 11, b. p.m. Submit resume and names of three references to Roshan Parris; Graduate Student Council; Box 1; Kansas Union University of Kansas 66045 849-491. HOUSEKEEPER-Responsible woman needed to cook and clean up own transportation, good housekeeping, cooking and transporting a fifth grade girl to and from dance classes after school. Negotiable. Help Wanted - Pyramid Pizza is looking for a few GOOD drivers. If you have your own car, are presently delivering for a Lawrence pizza shop or another service and sign that scratch the top of your car, see who's having fun AND MAKING MONEY. Call 800-754-3232. Be Brad or Bill after 4. You'll be glad you did Join our "NANNY NETWORK" of over 250 covered by us. You should enjoy creative childcare, be a 12 month commitment for great salary, be a 12 month commitment for great salary, be a 12 month commitment. Round trip air transportation provided. Warm, loving families prescreened by us for your needs. Rd. Wilkinson Rd. Wilkinson Rd. Wilkinson Rd. Wilkinson Rd. CT Wiltton CT 6997 0314 8344-1742 NO FEE KANU - MF is seeking a broadcast engineering aid, to perform electronic maintenance on broadcast and recording equipment, assist in purchasement of broadcast equipment, demonstrate knowledge of dept records and other duties as assigned by the Assistant Director for Operations and technicians, and demonstrated knowledge of electronics, the ability to communicate clearly, and keep accurate records and files. One or two years previous work in electromechanical knowledge of electronics, the ability to until filled. Send resume or call Bettie Meyers—chairperson of Search committee. KANU - MF Broadcasting Hall 60045 0644-4530 *main model needed Under for Undercover* Evergreen High School needs at Undercover for annual show 21 W. 8th Street. Apply in person. Thurs. the 7th, Fr. the 8th and Mon. the 11th between 2 and 4 p.m. Norge Village part-time laundry attendant DETALY TAMMY part-time position in the Center for Biomedical and Sciences. Basic duties include acting as a computer person for students following courses of studies in health fields; processing recommendations for health facilities; managing and coordinating preparing confidential files on approximately 180 students annually for evaluation by the Health Committee; meeting and coordinating assisting in analysis of certain medical school statistics; assisting in analysis of certain medical school statistics; assisting in work independently with initiative. Flexible hours. Student/tourist. Dedicate for application only. Work with students to work interdependently be interested in long-term employment. Resumes required. Contact Cherri Baskey. 1607 Strong, 205-419-3830. 12:30-14:00 MW& 8:30-12:30 TU RESEARCH AID NEEDED for data collection in Topeka with children with severe disabilities. Also data entry and summary in Lawrence. Must be available on time, available afternoon hours and have a good record of attendance. Prefer someone with behavioral observation and/or data entry experience. Send resume Lynda Powell, AA138 Department of Health, Lawrence, KS 80496 by Nov. 4, EOE/A. Scholarship Hall Director (Miller Hall) 3/4-time, graduate position for the Spring, 1986 semester. Responsibility for facilitating resident personal development through group-centered community engagement. Residential group living experience. Salary: $490/mo plus room and board. Applications in Office of Presidential Affairs, 125 Strong Hall, University of Alabama at Birmingham, designated deadline November 15, 1985. AA/EOE The University of Kansas Budget Office has two position openings for continuous half-time student assistants with possible full-time employment positions with the process of budget and accounting transfers for the University's budget and accounting transfer to the university counting and have an opportunity to work within the University's financial environment. This position requires a good typing ability and proficiency with word processing and spreadsheet software. The second position is secretarial and clerical in nature. It requires good typing ability and proficiency with word processing and spreadsheet software. The graduate student status and good written and oral communications skills. $400.00 to $400.00 per position. The position will be offered in November 15, 1985. Position start dates are flexible. For information call Jane Hinn, Budget Office at 315 Strong Hall, Elkton Opportunity Center in 315 Strong Hall. Work-Study. Clerk Typist position available for work in the Department of Organizations and Activities 825 Kansas Union. Application deadline: Friday, November 16, 2015. Applications available in 403 Kansas Female Aide ALE A. M. 7:30-12:00 P.M. 10-12, weekends also 749-6288 MISCELLANEOUS FREE-TEE mix, 8 mo. paused, shoots. Very cute. friendly. Mist place ASAP. 923-1300 T.YPING Wednesday, Nov. 6. 1985 curate and affordable typing, Judy, #82-7945, 24-Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes, dissertation papers, Close to campus. Best AAA TYPING/84-1944 Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs, Law review articles typed by LC legal secretary. Generally, if in b 6 p.m. out by 10 p.m. same day A. professional typing. Tern papers. Theses. B. dissertations. Memoirs, etc. Using IBM Selectric Software. A DIPPERFENT Service. Taps TRANSCRIPT specifically Experienced, Joanne Shaffer THE WOODDOCTORS: Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? 843-3147. A.L. SMITH TYPING SERVICIE - Experienced term paper writers, recruits, micellaneous writers A-Z Wordprocessing-Typeing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850 Absolutely LETTER, PERFECT Word processing, typing and bookkeeping. IBM-OS/6.5, M.-P.Same day service available. 844 Illinois. 843-6188.Acquire, affordable typing for former Harvard secretary. Smith-Corona, pica type. Call Nancy 841-1219 AlphaOmega Computer Services. Word Processing, Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics. Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates 749-1118 Call Terry for your typing needs; letters, term papers,纸笔, paper documents, etc.Sharp X395 with memory, 843-4754 or 843-3671, 6 p.m. 11 p.m. Dissertations, Theses. Term Papers. Over 15 year experience. Phone 842-2310 after 5:30. Barb. ExactType. Quality for all your typing needs. Dusk. Excellent. Call Mary. 843-7466 or 841-9244 DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced. JEANETTE. SHAFFER - Typing. Service. TRANSCRIPT afo; standard cassette tape. 843-8877. PROFESSIONAL tytpet with 15 years experience, is accurate in calling Capp Iggy after 5 hours. No phone calls needed. DISTRIBUTIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter student papers, up to 30 p.m. Booking: Mommy's Typing, 842-3787 before 9 p.m. Please QUALITY TYPING, Letters, these, dissection, application. Spelling Corrected B02-8274-19 EXPERIENCE TYPED TYPEB. Term papers, theses. IBM Correcting Selective 1 will correct spelling errors. TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, edging, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254 TRIO Wordprocessing CONSCIENTIOUS RELABLE CONVENIANT Will accept rubb r TOP-NOTCH2professional work processing, manuscripts, resumes, letters, quality print- ing materials. SERVICES OFFERED Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716 PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICES. COMP OFFICE HOURS. CALL TOLL FREE a vices available. Call toll free anytim e days. BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-8421. STADIUM BARBER SHOP. 1023 Massachusetts, downtown. All haircuts. $6. No appointment. THEME & THENIS OUTLINED-enhanced with library RE-SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising Victor Clark. 832-8340 Enjoy the many conveniences of a newly remodeled room. It features a living/dining area, a must see美容室. Only Diane #423-355. WANTED female roommate for second semester $*+1,* 1/ utilities 749-2848 after 5:30. Ask for Rae female roommate needed for 2nd semester Split- level townhouse $12/month plus low utilities. p. A man see i.e. emulates only Flame 432-350 p female room for second semester 2 p male room for second semester 2 pool, completely furnished $185 plus 1/2 utilities. Negotiable 432-612 Stacy Female roommate wanted to share 2 Bd. App, W&D, C.A. H-C., Newly remedied, furnished. Close to campus & Downtown, on bus route $135 with 97th casual CD, 842-3538, lear or Lauren HOUSEMATE(S): for great home. Close to KU. 843-5787 Responsible male roommate needed *for* spring semester. Bedroombrook, two bedrooms aply. very comfortable. Female roommate for $150 semester, 2 bedroom furnished house $180 plus 1/2 utility. Roommate need immediately to share a nirecup at Trailingue with fireplace, etc. Have bedroom furnished (unfurnished). $140 (negotiable) plus 17% utilities. #81-2602 WANTED - 3 SEASON BASKETBALL TICKETS PRICE NEGotiable. 842-9111 Two Female roommates for beautiful, renovated home in Westchester. Plus a suite plus utilities. Call Julie Mallorca 760-281-5490 or julie.mallorca@villagehouse.com WANTED: Roommate for Spring semester. Wonderful 3 Bedroom BedroomAwak树. Close to campus. Cable, A/C, Pool. $115 per Month. We’re nice, fun people. #42-8253 WANTED: Roommate for spring semester. Wonderful 3 bedroom Meadowbrook apartment. Close to campus, A/C, pool, $113 room. We’re nice, fun people. #422-265. Wanted: non-smoking, female to sixty apartement, $125.00 x 2; utilities: Call 841-688 between 6:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. on Tuesdays. Convertitives needed for KU Homecoming parade to carry VIRY parade sari parade @ the 9 a.m. @ the 10 a.m. INDEPENDENT LOS ANGELES PRODUCER LOOKING FOR FINISHED MOTION PICTURE SCREENPLAYS. Established producer with major studio relationships is looking for finished, feature-length production with a cover letter describing story, phone number and address to: Kelly Neal 7101 Ranchite Avenue, Van Nuyz, CA 91406. All material not will be returned with letter of explanation. FOR SALE 3 Pc sectional with a recliner in each end only $699 The Furniture Barn 181 W. 6th Lawrence. The dress drawer basket 182 The Furniture Barn. Barn, 1811 W. eth. Lawrence 2 pc. Early American Living group 4490 3 pc. p. 12. Early American Lives room group 4899 Furniture Barm. 1011 W. 6th, Lawrence Furniture Barn. 1811 W. 100 ft. Lawrence Bunkbeds Killiney $199 Furniture Barn. 1811 W. 100 ft. Bunk beds Compleito $199. Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 6th, Lawrence Sofa, Lovestead and Chair 199. The Furniture Barn 1831 W 60th St. Get Something Going! Don't save it . . . sell it. Saving an id item doesn't do anyone good. You gain nothing. Neither does the person who may want such an item. Don't save it. Give it to a friend or ask your friendly Ad-Forer in help in writing an effective, fast-acting, classified ad, and get going today. Kansas Classifieds 119 Stanford-Flint Hall 864-4388 [ ] Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 University Daily Kansan 15 new shipment of recliners just arrived, on starting at 11am. The Pursuit barn, 11th sf Classified Ads Bedroom Suites starting at $190. The Furniture Barn 1811 W 6th St. Beat the Christmas Rush with 90 Day financing. The Furniture Rush: M1W, W1Q$ Barns BAR, barns BAR! W e h e r ! Barns BAR! 50% Off on select furniture. While in store 80% Off at 444 $ a week. The Furniture Barn, Barns BAR. 72 Pontiac Grand Ville 6k miles, seats six comfortably, $1000 or best offer. European 10-speed bicycle, $400 one, $175. Nikon FG Camera, $400 immediate, digital flash, $200. John at 82-306. Baseball card and sports nostalgia Buy, Sell Baseball card and Baseball card. open 10 to M.S. M38 W. 21st Street Brass, Wood & Glass. 5 pc. diamond $388. The Fur- iture Barn. 1811 W. 6th. Lawrence. CD Player. Lowest Price/Brand New. $200 and its yours. 842-3038. Ask for Mark. CARPET 350,000 square yards in a rainbow of coli and sizes and sizes. Big Bob's U Carpets, 841-BOBS. CLEAR Polyurethane clear window plastic Myur or Polyleneherm "30" or 100° blue. Blunten瓷器 Canon AE-1, prog with Canon 1.8 lens, UV Filter, condition charge, condition $7,759 - 7454 or $836 - 7078 per month Comic Books, Poetries, Penthouses, et al. Comics Open 10:15 Tue. Fri. & Sat. 10:5-10:5 Mid-Month Sale Fender Jazzer guitar $175/ben gift. Beginner's drum set, some hardware, make offer. #40-6238 Fender Jazzer guitar $175/ben gift. Beginner's drum set, some hardware, make offer. #40-6238 100A Speaker $190/pair, MXR Equalizer $100, Knox Tower 100, Sony Cassette Deck $100 GOVENMENT HOMES from $1 (U$urement). Also call 'Property' call $1-800-687-687 EST GHZ47 for information. Gibson Les Paul, deluxe model, and Peavey bass guitar. $190 each; $200 each; pair DOI, COA Call, Scott 841 121. Guitar for sale! Gibson SG w/original tailor made guitar. Great action, excellent condition. $450. Honda scooter 1984, Aero 60 Red - 400 miles. Like the Honda Scooter. Great for campus transportation. Call 911 or 212-532-4744. Honda C7-10Caster (1981). Great for campus easy to operate 30250 beat Mark 846-6251. IBM-PC79 compatible computer. Only $459. Cah. 842-7628, ask for Charlie. IBM PC Jr. 128K monitor, parallel port, internal hard drive. Reqs: Master's degree and best. Quick. Best. Reqs: Bachelor's degree. KWALLET COMICS—Comic Books, Science Fiction Hole play and simulation games 1111 phone answerer machine, sunlamp, jewelry, ski sweaters, desk study table, twin bedspread Sterling Bracelet; mint condition, cords on wrist or an additional band. THE MOST COMPATIBLE American PC/XT Computer from $99. Full year warranty. New Compatible PC/XT Computer, Ino, 483-533 Box 395, Lawrence, KS 60044 Tired of looking everywhere for QUALITY TIRES & WHEELS at reasonable prices! Well, you don't have to go to the store to buy brands are at our everyday low prices paralleled with MAIL-ORDER. In come and check us out! 1600 W 23rd (Beeside Pizza Hut) 749-5478 1600 W 23rd (Beeside Pizza Hut) 749-5478 Unique items for the die-hard individual! Most interesting prices. Prices for the pauper in your pocket, styles of the wealthy pass! ABOVE WAXMAN MARKET WATERBED: Queen, includes. Pedestal, waveless mattress, 5 year warranty. My cost $470. 4 mo. age. Will take hall price or best offer. 842-3329. Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Makeen sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class presentation. 3) For review of analysis. Analysis of Western Civilization' available now in the Jayawah Booksstore, and Oread Bookstore. Collectors Stamp, Mint and used, Canada, U.S. Collector's Edition, 2015 (28 second Room). New Hampshire, Beech 26 (2nd Room). OLYMPUS OM-10 with 00-210 zoom $200. O.B.O. 841-0964 1972 Mercury, Runs great. 505 or best offer. Call 841-6288 after 4 p.m. AUTO SALES 71 NOVA, Automatic, PS, PB, runs. $850. 864-3202 75 Datum B120 Gas saver, reliable, runs wet; 6 Cradio, new radio, call 843-2881 12 noon to 5 12:00 PM. 1972 Chevy Impala auto. Cruise, new tires. 1978 Buck Regal auto. New paint. 841-7595 19500 miles - $4,000 call: 862-1222 arrear 77 TAX 1.7 x 10 convertible top, 64,000 miles TAX 3.4 x 10 convertible top, 64,000 miles after a $99 fax or bp. m4; b48-8430 1959 Ford Mustang, new sticker, new tires, looks great, call Mustang, 843-1832 **844 BMW 310. Low mileage, all electric, custom interior. Beautiful. Call 219-894-9844** 175 mercury Monarch 4-door auto trans. a/c 75,000 miles .$1,000. Garage 841-1232 2 o.p.m. PONTIAC Phoenix LJ Automatic, Ait, Stereo FWD and great MPG Best Offer 842 Electric 1985 300 XZ NISSAN TURBO Red like new. Low mileage. LT Loaded. Good price. 841-1392 78 Firebli brn 70 km ii ae amfm cass. excellent cond. 843-485 Alamea Rome, 179 GTV Coupe. Limited edition, every extra 25k miles. Silver in core, serious in lightness. $3,600. Late 72 Calicon GT Liftback, AT overdrive, AC cabin, cruise radio, PB. PS, low miles, exc. cond., below, new Firebird and exhaust. Need to sell quick, below $650 MBOG #814-824 W9-749 5437 dap Men & Women's BOWLING TOURNAMENT Sunday, Nov. 17 1 p.m. Entries: sign up and pay the day of the tournament at the Jaybowl Entry Fee: $3 Jaybowl, Kansas Union No Tap 9 Pin Strike Tournament: 3 games, knock down 9 pins it counts as a strike ment. 3 games, everyone gets a strike in 3rd, 6th, and 9th frames Enter 1 or huh! For further information call KU Recreation Services at 864-3546. Awards: T-shirts to 1st & 2nd place (men and women) --comprehensive health associates * free pregnancy plan * outpatient abortion services * alternative counseling * gynecology * contraception KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 844.672.09 Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 MISS STREET DELI 041 MASSACHUSETTS Homemade CHOCOLATE,CHERRY LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake 95¢ reg $1.50 No coupons accepted with this offer. Offer good through Nov.30 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY $1 OFF ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ HOURS Mon.-Thurs. - 11 a.m.-2a.m. Fri & Sat. - 11 a.m.-3a.m. Sunday - 11 a.m.-1 a.m. 842-1212 EASY AS 1-2-3 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center --- PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY $1 OFF any 2 pizzas or $2 OFF any 3 pizzas ANY PIZZA ORDERED Expires 12-31-85 HOURS Mon - Thurs . 11 a.m. 2 a.m. Fri & Sat . 11 a.m. 3 a.m. Sunday . 11 a.m. 1 a.m. NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA TOWING VEHICLE See Us Before It's Too Late LairdNoller 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday TOYOTA 1116 W.23rd 842-2191 SERVICE EXCELLENCE AWARD WINNER $15.00 *Inspect Brake Pads and/or Shoes. Inspect Brake Pads and/or shoes, Rotors/Drums, Parking Brake and Adjust *Replace Points and Condenser (if equipped) *Set Eating to Lowest Minor Engine Tune-up $29.05 $ Brake Inspection Set engine to manufacturer's spec. *Adk" parte & labor parte* *Replace Spark Plugs *Replace Fuel Filter **** --- *Inspect all hoses & fittings, check $39.95 * * --- Master cylinder, Calipers/Wheel cylinders, add Brake fluid **** Fuel injected cars slightly higher VISA MasterCard *Includes up to 6 qts. of Prem. Oil *Toyota Brand oil filter *Add Parts and Labor extra Includes all Japanese Imports Excludes Rotary Engine $14.95 ** Oil & Filter Change COUPON Supplement Insights Only Please present coupon at time of write-up Winterization Special *Add 1 Gallon of On the corner of 23rd & Nalsmith Toyota Vehicles only *Permanent Type Anti-Freeze *Check Bells on valve *Check Condition of Water Pump *Add 'l' parts & labor extra LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOT RENTAL PARTS AND SERVICE THE REAL STUFF THE RIGHT PRICE Bar-B-Que the Buffaloes! PRE-HOMECOMING RALLY & BONFIRE Tonight! Potter Pavilion Campanile Hill 7 p.m. Featuring: - KU Pep Band * Cheerleaders * Mascots 16 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 30 30 30 Buck Nite at Rustys RUSTY'S Monday-Thursday Rent 2 Movies and Video Player Only $5.00 or 2 Movies for $2.00 24 Hour Rental FRI -SUN $3 Tape Rental (2 for $5) $6 Video Player Rental FOOD CENTERS. LAWRENCE. KS. - Southside 23rd & La. OPEN 24 hours - Westridge 6th & Kasold OPEN 24 hours Northside 608 N. 2nd 7 am - 10 pm Oon, - Sat, 8 am - 10 pm Sun. S IGA DISCOUNT IGA DISCOUNT Prices good thru November 12 Sandwich MELONS FRESH 70% LEAN GROUND BEEF 5 LB. CHUB LB. (1) .89 NEW CROP CALIFORNIA NAVEL 12 ORANGES FOR $1 IGA 93% LEAN WHOLE BONELESS HAM 139 LB. 5-9 LB. AVG. JENO'S CRISP'n TASTY PIZZA JENOX CRISP'n TASTY PIZZA RISP'n FASTY PIZZA JENO'S PIZZA 10 OZ. 79 100% MUSHROOMS MEDIUM WHITE MUSH- ROOMS LB. .99 LONE PINE FARMS PORK PATTIES IGA FLOU ENRICHED BLEACHED IGA FLOUR ENRICHED BLEACHED IGA FLOUR ENRICHED BLEACHED ROME, MCINTOSH, CORTLAND, JONATHAN, RED DELICIOUS, GOLD DELICIOUS, WINE SAPS APPLE- RAMA 5 LB. BAG .99 IGA 5 LB.BAG FLOUR BUY ONE AT.87 GET ONE HAND A Eggs ONE DOZEN Eggs ONE DOZEN FLOUR FREE BUY ONE AT .87 GET ONE B. 149 TAB Sugar Free Lose Weight Calorie Caffeine Free Brite Caffeine Diet Juice PiBB 2 PiBB Weld4 Sunkist Sunkist cherry Coke TAB, SPRITE, DIET SPRITE, MR. PIPP, WELCH'S GRAPE, WELCH'S STRAWBERRY, SUNKIST, DIET SUNKIST, CHERRY COKE .99 2 LTR. BTL. GRADE A Eggs GM D0/LR GRADE "A" JUMBO EGGS DOZ. .79 GRADE "A" JUMBO EGGS DOZ. .79 GRADE "A" JUMBO EGGS DOZ. .79 IGA PAUL HOT BROWN BEANS NET WT 15 OZ A400 IGA CHILI WITH BEANS NET WT 15 OZ A400 IGA PINTO BEANS NET WT 15 OZ A400 IGA RED BEANS NET WT 15 OZ A400 IGA RED, DARK RED, PINTO, CHILI, AND GIANT NORTHERN BEANS 4 $1 15½ OZ. TO 16 OZ. CANS IGA DELI HOT BROWN BEANS NET WT. 15 OZ. 450g IGA CHILI WITH BEANS NET WT. 15 OZ. 450g IGA PINTO BEANS NET WT. 15 OZ. 450g IGA RED BEANS NET WT. 15 OZ. 450g IGA RED, DARK RED, PINTO, CHILI, AND GIANT NORTHERN BEANS IGA RED, DARK RED, PINTO, CHILI, AND GIANT NORTHERN BEANS 4 $1 15½ OZ. TO 16 OZ. CANS 4 $1 15 1/2 OZ. TO 16 OZ. CANS First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A MAN THROUGH A FIRE. THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. ... Sneak at Sneak at A dog carefully A dog carefully p Playe Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge The players had filed the University Sept. 19 were declared ineligible plying with the satisfactory rule. The National Collegia Association established t By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staf Two football play arguments at a hearin that the College of La Sciences interprete satisfactory progress give them any chance ble to play this season show. The court document players' response to the motion for dismissal of t on Oct. 8. The Universi for a change of venue asking that the case b Douglas County. According to docum- tailback Lynn Wi- linebacker Dane Griff County District Court the players also say that he has been accused of terpest the rule, the Col- rong criteria to det- status. Gary Hunter, assistant said no final decision had be Athletic Department office ploring their options. Faced with a Michigan prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with it Louisville unless it also play the University of Detroit, play neither, an Athletic De said yesterday. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanel Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff "However, it appears now playing either Detroit or Los By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Officia Student Senate elections was scheduled. The letter, written by Hinman's at The Student Senate Es- Committee last night appro- same Senate seat distribute rejected last week. StudEx The 20th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Univ They are used in figuring the U-sity's budget. StudEx rejected the seat dictation the first time because numbers were based on enrol in University schools on O rather than on the official 20 enrollment figures that the Uni used, Tony Arnold, chairn StudEx, said last night. David Day, Elections Comi See related story Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1881. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and minor deficiencies for women and other tenure difficulties. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said Tacha fires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 6, 1985 VOL.1, NO.2 Magazine KANG JAYA Jayhawk basketball: Rockin' the field house --- First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. Sneak a A dog carefully p The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the University of Washington. R.S.C.; chairman of the committee. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Play Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1881. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. The letter, written by Hinnan's at By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staf By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Two football play arguments at a heart that the College of 1 Sciences interpret satisfactorily progress give them any chance to play this season show. According to doctailbacker Lynn Vlinebacker Dane Gri County District Cop the players also say he lege decided how to rule the wrong criteria to c status. The court docun players' response to a motion for dismissal on Oct. 8. The Univ for a change of vent asking that the cas Douglas County. Phelpsa said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. The National Coll Association establish The players had fh the University Sept were declared ineligible with the satist rule. Faced with a Michi prohibits the men's playing a game wi Louisville unless it a the University of Deb play neither, an Athle said yesterday. Officio By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Gary Hunter, assis said no final decision in Athletic Department ploring their options. "However, it appear playing either Detroit The Student Senate Committee last night same Senate seat dis rejected last week. StudE By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Student Senate elect as scheduled. See related story StudEx rejected the tion the first time numbers were based in University school rather than on the of enrollment figures the ty used, Tony Arnold StudEx, said last night The 20th-day figu- official enrollment of They are used in figur- sity's budget. David Day, Electio Kansan Magazine Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Contents UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 图 Cover 4 story As the Jayhawks jam, students find it harder to stay away from a night at the field house. 6 Tiny towns Citizens in area small towns have different outlooks on life. 100 14 No free time Even after the fires are out, a firefighter's work is never done. 10.37 Also inside . . . Quarter of a century 10 Crewcuts and curfews were the norm for the KU class of '60. Hitting the slopes 19 Rockin' review 19 A violent past 20 Book chronicles Zeppelin's stairway to rock immortality. Ski Kansas? Local buffs were doing it in Lawrence five years ago. Today's campus protests aren't made of the stuff they were 15 years ago. Cheap but neat 22 Some couches and easy chairs never leave Lawrence. Magazine Editors: Mancy Harley Peggy Helsel one semester. Manifest appeals three times annually as a supplement to the University Daily Calendar, and photographed by beisdemated for publication should be sent to 911-222-8400. PENNY ANNIE'S has Special Christmas treats for your Sweet Ones - A ZOO of Gummy Animal Candies - 12 Flavors of Cream & Butter Fudge - Hand Made Truffles - 41 Jelly Bean Flavors - D'Oray Chocolate from Belgium - Largest Selection of Imported and Domestic Candies & Chocolates PENNY ANNIE'S IN GOD WE TRUST LIBERTY 1984 Sweet Shoppe 730 Massachusetts Flavorful Popcorn Canister Carmel Corn or Cinnamon Corn Carmel, Cheese, Butter combo Cinnamon, Cheese, Carmel combo 21/2 gal. 9.95 4 gal. 13.95 4 gal. 14.95 4 gal. 14.95 61/2 gal. 16.95 61/2 gal. 19.95 61/2 gal. 20.95 Butter Corn 2½ gal. 5.49 4 gal. 6.95 6½ gal. 12.95 Cheese Corn 2½ gal. 7.95 4 gal. 10.95 6½ gal. 14.95 10:30-5:30 Daily, Thurs. until 8:30 843-5544 First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. Sneak att The players had filed su the University Sept. 19 a were declared ineligible for plying with the satisfactory rule. A dog carefully pad The National Collegiate Association established the The court documents players' response to the U motion for dismissal of the on Oct. 8. The University for a change of venue at asking that the case be Douglas County. By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Playe Faced with a Michigan just prohibits the men's basketplaying a game with the Louisville unless it also play the University of Detroit, KT play neither, an Athletic Depa said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assistant ait sai no final decision had been Athletic Department officials ploring their options. Officia "However, it appears now that playing either Detroit or Louis By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Two football players arguments at a hearing that the College of Libe Sciences interpreted satisfactory progress rug give them any chance o ble to play this season, c show. According to document tailback Lynn Will linebacker Dane Griffin County District Court or the players also say that a lege decided how it was terpret the rule, the Collej wrong criteria to deter status. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff StudEx Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge Student Senate elections will as scheduled. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff The Student Senate Exec Committee last night approved same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1801. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. StudEx rejected the seat distribution the first time because numbers were based on enroln in University schools on Oct. rather than on the official 20th-enrollment figures that the Univy used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx. said last night. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Court Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. David Day, Elections Commi pinned to the roof of our bench. The letter, written by Hiamone at The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the committee. The 20th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Univers They are used in figuring the Univ sity's budget. See related story Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Kansan Magazine QUALITY AUDIO - THE BEST PRICE! Superior Cassette Decks We offer the finest audio products available and we back them with professional service. Full Service include: 1) Ten-day repair guarantee. Stereo system will perform correctly out of the box or fix or replace it FREE for the first ten days of ownership. (2) 30-day exchange privilege. 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This amazingly affordable Luxman cassette deck features Dolby B and C noise reduction, fluorescent peak level indicators, soft-tooth transport controls, and metal tape capability. $138* - Lower prices available: 1) factory service method 2) "B" stock & mail order units KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO—VIDEO shop 25th and IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS (913) 842-1811 KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CAMPING THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. Sneak att I A dog carefully paddle Player Two football players arguments at a hearing that the College of Libe Sciences interpreted satisfactory progress rug give them any chance oble to play this season, c show. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff The players had filed the University Sept. 15 were declared ineligible plying with the satisfacto rule. According to document tailack Lynn Will linebacker Dane Griffin County District Court the players also say that lege decided how it was set under the rule, the Crown wrong criteria to date status. The National College Association established The court document players' response to the motion for dismissal of LI on Oct. 8. The Universi- for a change of venue in case b. Douglas County. Faced with a Michigan prohibits the men's bas playing a game with Losville unless it is the University of Detroit play neither, an Athletic said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assistant said no final decision had Athletic Department offi ploring their options. By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff However, it appears n playing either Detroit or I Officia By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff StudEx Student Senate election as scheduled. The Student Senate Committee last night app same Senate seat distri relected last week. See related story StudEx rejected the session the first time he numbers were based on in University schools or rather than on the official enrollment figures that they used, Tony Arnold, el StudEx, said last night. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge The 20th-day figures re official enrollment of the They are used in figuring city's budget. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff David Day, Elections A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the New York Public Library, R.S.C., chairman of the committee. 4 The letter, written by Hinman's at Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1882 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1881. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Kansan Magazine Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. X10L GENUINE LEATHER UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Students prepare for electrifying season By Gary Duda Kansan Magazine writer It stiffes studying, scrambles schedules and electrifies expectations — it's Kansas Jayhawk basketball. There are only 27 days left until the doors of Allen Field House open for the first home game of the KU men's basketball regular season. The Jayhawks are set to play Southern Illinois University on Dec. 3. Homework and exams might be robbing 'students of sleep, but head basketball coach Larry Brown's insistence that he pills that cures those nap-time blues. "It's a better pill than Vivarin," said Sarah Hederstedt, Hutchinson freshman. "I think the games will take quite a bit of study of studying," Ison said. "That's a part of life. You can't miss the ballgame just because you have to study." Mike Isaon, Lyndon junior, said he wouldn't allow school to interfere with KU basketball games. Ison said the sacrifice would be worth it if the 'Hawks had a winning season this year. Students already have begun preparing themselves for the season with pre-season drills. Attending practice scrimmages and reading about the players in newspapers and sports magazines are a few of the methods fans use to learn more about their top-rated team. Sacrifice of another kind was the word for William Gibbs, Goddard freshman. Gibbs said he intended to get a flat top haircut for the season. "I felt like doing something crazy for the season," Gibbs said. "It's kind of my own personal statement." "I try to keep track of what the players are doing and what the coaches are doing," he said. "I try to compare them with the fighter." Tom Farmer, Kansas City, Kan. junior, and despite being a long-time Jayhawk fan he still was getting in shade for the season. Steve Aleman, Hutchinson senior said he had attended the first official scrimage of夜 at midnight Oct. 15 and the intra-squid scrimage on Oct. 26. He said that despite the pre-season warm-up games, he could hardly wait for the first game of the regular season. "I've been counting the days and marking them on my calendar for the Pepperdine game in Denver," Aleman said. Attending scrimmages, however, isn't enough of a pre-season fan workout. Aleman said. He also attended team practices every new and Howard Hill, voice of the Jayhawks at the field house and director at KJHK-FM, said he also was getting ready for the season. He said he would be attending practices with his daughter to get to know the new team. players. Exciting was the word Hill used to describe how he felt about this year's team. teen. "This is more fun than a fellow really ought to have," he said. ron McCurdy, director of KU's peb band which plays during the basketball games, plays fun and hard work were the mix for the 50 members of the band. "The kids do this because they enjoy doing it" he said. joy doing it. For some, however, it may not always be fun. always be Barbara Brown, wife of Larry Brown, said the beginning of the season meant she would see less of her husband. She said basketball took over when the season started. "He eats it, sleeps it and drinks it," she said. "He gets home later. When he is home he wakes up. He always has vision during the season." Tim Phillips, Overland Park senior, said he wasn't able to get a season ticket. "I couldn't get a ticket, and I'm a senior." Phillips said. Desperate times calls for desperate measures. Phillips, a in visitor during the holiday. The season also means students will be scrambling for tickets to see the Jawhaws. All-sports tickets have become a rare commodity. High expectations for the Jayhawks have caused a sellout of tickets. member of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity, said he hoped he could capitalize on the bad luck of others. "I hope that our pledges don't make grades and I get to use their tickets." he said. If all else fails, Phillips said, he would have to rely on cable television. "I'm kind of bumming right now," Shepard said. "I guess I'll have to watch the games on television." Regardless of whether they have tickets or not, students' expectations for the Jayhawks this year were high. Michelle Wilson, Maple Hill freshman, said she expected nothing but the best for the Jayhawks. With a few breaks, Todd Rasmussen. Concordia sophomore, said the Jayhawks could go all the way "I think KU is going to run away with the Big Eight title," he said. "With a few breaks, who knows what could happen." First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. --- Sneak att A dog carefully padd Player Faced with a Michigan jun- prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the Louisville unless it also play the University of Detroit. KK play neither, an Athletic Depa- sied said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assistant atha said no final decision had been Athletic Department officials ploring their options. By Liz Maggaru Of the Kansan staff However, it appears now tha playing either Detroit or Louis The National Collegiate Association established the StudEx By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff The players had filed suit the University Sept. 19 a were declared ineligible for plying with the satisfactory rule. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge The court documents players' response to the U motion for dismissal of the on Oct. 8. The University for a change of venue at asking that the case be Douglas County. Officia Two football players arguments at a hearing that the College of Liber Sciences interpreted satisfactory progress rule give them any chance of ble to play this season, co show. Student Senate elections will as scheduled. According to document tailback Lynn Willi linebacker Dane Griffin County District Court or the players also say that or lege decided how it was g terpret the rule, the Colleg wrong criteria to determ status. The Student Senate Exec Committee last night approves same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the committee. StudEx rejected the seat distion the first time because numbers were based on enrollin in University schools on Oct rather than on the official 20th-enrollment figures that the Univey used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx, said last night. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The 20th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Universi They are used in figuring the Univ sitv's budget. See related story The letter, written by Hinman's at David Day, Elections Commi Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the university. Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Kansan Magazine 5 KU still has Brown, fans By Chris Lazzarino Kansan Magazine writer It was one year ago, almost to the day. College basketball was just around the corner, and anticipation of the unknown was made Kansas basketball fans reach a level of excitement that hadn't been seen in Lawrence for years. Lawrence for year. Larry Brown was in his second season at the University of Kansas; Damien Manning was in his first. Two the most-talked-about names in college basketball were both in Lawrence, perched on the edge of what was hoped would be a new era for Jayhawk basketball. The names of Naismith, Allen Chamberlain, Robisch, Lovellette, White and Valentine were banded about with renewed familiarity. After all, when a new age of greatness is near, old ages of greatness are suddenly transformed into family heritage. The new age would be the direct descendant of the greats. Kansas basketball was back Kansas basketball was blemished. The preseason excitement reached its peak when the Nov. 12, 1984, issue appointed rounds throughout Lawrence came true, although a bit earlier than expected. Brown, then coach of the New Jersey Nets, had resigned from that team, even before the playoffs. He was now head coach at KU. His departure from New Jersey was none too pretty, and Brown received a particularly ferocious send-off from the East Coast media. "I have left places, that's public space," Brown said. "Now, I am hopeful that I can stay at Kansas for a long time, and maybe one day they will write a story without my jobs being the major topic." ing the major topic. well, "Where You Gonna Be Next Year, Larry?" has been answered. Next year is this year, Larry Brown is the head basketball coach at the University of Kansas and Carol Lee doughnut bags can still be seen in the basketball office. "I love this school," Brown said. "I really like the people, and I feel comfortable here. The people have really been great." KANSAS BASKETBALL 40 Yet the future — secretly feared and publicly lauded — is here. Kansas basketball has traveled the journey of another year and is return- 'I am thrilled that Allen Field House is sold out. When it's packed,it's a special special place. But I'm disappointed that a lot of kids may not have the opportunity to see the games. A lot of kids have written and called me,but I just can't sneak that many in.' — Larry Brown head basketball coach Mark Pellock attempts to block Greg Dreiling's shot in the midnight scrimmage on Oct. 15. of Sports Illustrated hit the mailboxes and newsstands. mailbox8x2. There was the beloved coach — the teacher of the Crimson and blue — at the Carol Lee doughnut shop, dressed as any KU student headed for class. It was right Lawrence, pure KU. Right there on page 49, was Lawrence's Leary, laffers, no socks in thought at a doughnut shop. "Hey, I've been there I know that place! And it's in Sports Illustrated!" Sports illustrated But perched above the Kansas coiness is the biting title of the article — "Where You Gonna Be Next Year, Larry?" — implying that there might be an uncertain future for the marriage of Larry Brown and the University of Kansas. "I'll flatter that they would take the time to write a piece on me in a magazine but is so well respected," Brown did recently. "But it's tough when your life's right there for you to see. But that's part of being a college coach. You are visible. When you make a decision, everybody sees it. Things are always public knowledge." Brown's employment history, including leaving coaching jobs with the Denver Nuggets and UCLA Bruins, was certainly part of that public knowledge, a result of life in the limelight. ning with the crew intact — save assistant coach Bob Hill, who is now with the New York Knicks. with the new What some doomsayers feared would encounter the voyage of the Pequod if "Moby Dick" has proved to be just another episode of the Love Boat, and the passenger list has never been longer. Student tickets sold out long ago, and the rest of the public quickly followed suit. The dream cruise is booked solid and ready to sail. ready to sail. "I have mixed emotions about that," Brown said. "I am thrilled that Allen Field House is sold out. When it's packed, it's a special, special place. But I'm disappointed that a lot of kids may not have the opportunity to see the games. A lot of kids have written and called me, but I just can't sneak that man-in-" The appreciation Brown has for student support of the basketball team couldn't have been more graphically demonstrated late-night before a morning that officially brought the new season to Allen Field House. six thousand college students forsook "Late Night with David Letterman" for "Late Night with Larry Brown." It was energy, excitement and anticipation, all for the students. "I am just appreciative of the involvement of the students," Brown The students not only showed their care, they showed their total dedication. Allen Field House, in the midst of long-overdue renovations, rocked and rolled as if it were a regular season game. It was filled with enthusiastic students cheering on their team while the band cheerened on the students. said. "I want them to know what their support meant. Students were given a chance to coach, and they have written me letters telling me that it meant so much to them. A lot of people showed us that they really cared." Center Greg Dreiling said, "I know Forward Ron Kellogg takes it a step further. a part of. Selling out the field house, fans flocking to a midnight practice, forsaking sleep and studies to see the what it's all about, what it means to play in the field house. The crowd can really lift you up when you are hawk-eyed off day. Guys can be carried a tough game by the crowd. When the place is really packed, the vibrations can almost bounce you down the court.” step up. KU's fan club is the greatest in the world." Kellogg said. "It's been just great here. It's a great feeling to be a part of." Jayhawks play basketball — it all can add up to quite a bit for the players to think about. would like to think about it. "I think the fans are one of the special parts of the game," forward Danny Manning said. "It's one of the best feelings in the world, yelling their heads off. It really gets the adrenaline flowing and really gets you pumped up. It's hard to lose in that kind of atmosphere. at kind or other reason. "I think we all feel a little bit more responsibility. We don't really talk about it, but you can't help it when the place is sold out and we haven't even played a game yet." --- SINCE 1889 First night A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. 6 Sneak at A dog carefully pae Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge Playe A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1891. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Two football player arguments at a hearit that the College of Li Sciences interprets satisfactory progress give them any chance ble to play this season show. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff The court document players' response to the motion for dismissal of on Oct. 8. The Univer for a change of venue asking that the case Douglas County. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the University of Wisconsin-R.C.S. ,R.C.S., chairman of the committee. According to docu tailback Lynn W linebacker Dane Griff County District Court the players also say the lege decided how it w terpret the rule, the C wrong criteria to de status. The players had file the University Sept. were declared ineligible with the satisfaction rule. The National College Association established Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Faced with a Michigan, prohibits the men's playing a game with Louisville unless it also the University of Detroit play neither, an Athletic said yesterday. "However, it appears playing either Detroit or Gary Hunter, assista said no final decision ha Athletic Department of ploring their options. By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Offici StudE Student Senate election as scheduled. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff The Student Senate Committee last night a same Senate seat dist rejected last week. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. Kansan Magazine See related story studEx rejected the t tion the first time l numbers were based on in University schools rather than on the offi enrollment figures that ty used, Tony Arnold, StudEx, last night. The 200th-day figures r official enrollment of the They are used in figuringsity's budget. David Day, Elections Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Jo Black/Kansan Magazine OOD MONEY TO HOLD LECOMPTON — The Lane University Museum, which was built to be the Kansas capitol building in 1855, housed the United Brethren Church in Christ and Lane University until 1902. The Lane was restored and dedicated in 1982. All artifacts in the museum have been donated or on loan, except for a marble fireplace mantle. Small towns offer good times, history By Abbie Jones Kansan Magazine writer Seventeen-year-old Kenneth Bardwell, a junior at Tonganoxie High School, smiles as he points outside the window of Chuck's Bar-B-Q at his yellow hot rod. It is the car that provides the escape from his "boring" town, and the car local policemen recognize, he says. Men, muddy from working on flooded farmland, wipe their mouths and stretch before strolling out the door of Chuck's, the only drive-in restaurant in Tonganoxie. r two older couples order burritos, take a booth next to the wood- panelled wall and chat about the St. Louis Cardinals. Teenagers cruise up and down the drag on weekends, families dine in small cafes on homemade chili and fathers toil in the fields, or at the businesses their great-grandfathers started. It's the good life. The life where smaller is better and main street provides all the necessities of living. Spotted cattle graze near winding Highway 24-40, the road to Tonganox- Historical Society, and the author of "Yesteryears," a book about Tonganoxie's history, said this land was later sold to the United States government and eventually given to the Union Pacific Railroad. And in 1872, slowly moved south and west to settle in Oklahoma territory. But a woman named Magdalena Bury purchased 40 acres of land from the Union Pacific Railroad, which soon became the town's first acreage. Despite requests from settlers to name it Buvilley, she chose the name Tonganoxin in honor of the old DelaWaire chief. The town was officially established on July 21, 1866. Lenahan reported. But Feverly said Tonganoxie may best be remembered for its "Hiney Winery" spoof which fooled people all over the country. About three years ago a Tonganoxie man put an advertisement and a map in the local newspaper, the Tonganoxie Mirror, for people to come to the town and taste "hiney wine." Both the winery and its wine were a sham, and the map gave directions to the local police station. Jo Black/Kansan Magazine The Kansas City radio station WDAF AM-61 Country started advertising this fictional product, and soon LECOMPTON — Paul Bahnmaier, lifetime resident and president of Land Museum Historical Society, sees potential growth in Lecompton as a historic tourist town. Since the Lane Museum was restored in 1982, Bahnmaier says, Lecompton residents are finding their Civil War roots that have been "swept under the rug." Bahnmaier is a fourth-generation Lecompton resident and teaches sixth grade at Shawnee Heights. — John Fevurly Tonganoxie junior 'We don't have the crowds of people in big cities, but they don't have the peacefulness.' "We don't have the crowds of people in big cities, but they don't have the peacefulness," said John Fevrelly. Tonganex junior. Fevrely grew up on a farm in Jarbalo, just eight miles north of Tonganoxie, with the freedom to run a factory. He dune buggy in the country, he said. ie. No more than four restaurants, two grocery stores, five gas stations and fourteen police officers maintain this town whose population of about 7,000 people includes the surrounding area. But the transition to the University of Kansas, which required taking an organic chemistry class twice the size of his high school, was a challenge. Fevryl said he knew he had to start meeting people. "Looking all the way down Hoch Auditorium was a shock. I made a goal to know one person everywhere I went on campus," he said. Favruly's hometown was named after the last Delaware Indian chief who lived nearby. The log cabin Chief Tonganoxie built was burned, but a two-story house was built for him by the government and became a stopping place for whites traveling to and from Lawrence from 1855 to 1857, reported "The History of Kansas," by A.T. Andreas. John Cass Lennah Sr., president of the Tonganoxie Community "Small towns have a good time with big town people," he said. the police station had visitors from all over the area who had come to taste "hiney wine." Fevrelly said. And people in the city have printed bumper stickers which read "I love my hirey," with an upside down heart as the symbol of the word love. A tall, baby blue water tower marks the historical town of Eudora, just six miles east of Lawrence off Highway 10. At the other end of town the same sign belongs to "Welcome to Eudora" 9,300 and still growing." Paul Sommer, 75, who has lived in the town for 69 years, said the town was different today from when he began working for the post office in 1838. Then, he said, stamps only cost 3 cents for an out-of-town letter, two for a rural route and one penny for a letter if it didn't leave the post office. "Now I have to look around to find an old face. It's changing all the time." he said. Summer's father was born in Eudora in 1875, and then he and his wife moved to Oklahoma to farm in 1903. But the sandy soil of Oklahoma wasn't appealing to his parents, so they returned to Eudora in 1916. "Mother never was satisfied. She wanted to come back home," he said. First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE BIG BURN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. --- Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge Sneak atta By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the Board of the R.S.C., chairman of the committees. A dog carefully paddle Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, exceeds the statute's limit. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Player The letter, written by Hinman's st Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Two football players arguments at a hearing t that the College of Liber Sciences interpreted satisfactory progress rule give them any chance of ble to play this season, co show. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. Gary Hunter, assistant atha said no final decision had been Athletic Department officials ploring their options. However, it appears now that playing either Detroit or Louis According to document tailback Lynn Willi linebacker Dane Griffin County District Court or the players also say that or interpret the rule, the College wrong criteria to detain status. Faced with a Michigan jud prohibits the men's basket play playing a game with the Louisville unless it also play, the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an athletic Depa said yesterday. The National Collegiate Association established the The court documents players' response to the Urtmotion for dismissal of the on Oct. 8. The University for a change of venue at t asking that the case be in Douglas County. Student Senate elections will as scheduled. Officia The players had filed suit the University Sept. 19 at were declared ineligible for lying with the satisfactory rule. StudEx By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff The Student Senate Exec Committee last night approved same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. The 20th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Univers They are used in figuring the Uni sity's budget. David Day, Elections Commit studEx rejected the seat dist disture the first time because numbers were based on enrolin in University schools on Oct. rather than on the official 20th- enrollment figures that the Univ ity used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx. last night. See related story Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 JOHN R. CAMPBELL LECOMPTON — Dorothy Shaner, left, is owner of one of the three businesses in downtown Lecompton. Shaner has owned an antique store since 1975, when she retired from farming. Herman and Allie Banks, above, of rural Lecompton, can remember when farming was done with a horse and plow Herman, 86, a retired farmer, has lived in the Lecompton area since 1902 and Alie, 83, since 1927 Herman and Alie now use their backyard as a flowerbed. Marianne 'Now I have to look around to find an old face. It's changing all the time.' 7 Paul Sommer Eudora resident Kansan Magazine educate young immigrants. But in 1857 a group of German immigrants, who were looking for a Fern Long, president of the Eudora Area Historical Society, said the town sailed the military branch of the Ft. Trait trail which extended from Pl. Leavenworth to Santa Fe, N.M. in 1846 the trail was traveled by military men with their wagons and provisions to join the American cause during the war between the United States and Mexico, she said. Methodist In 1851 the Wakarusa Methodist Mission was established at the request of Chief Paschal Fish Jr., to educate young Indians, she said. sold in the town. "We keep digging up history all the time." Long said. place to start a new town, secured the 747-acre tract of land from the Shapira Indians. Chief Fish Instituted the settlement, and the site was named after the chief's daughter, Eudora, Long said. daughter, Eutoria, longtime. This year, members of the historical society were looking for a site which used to contain mineral water springs, but instead discovered an old bar with beautiful woodwork, she said. The barn is thought to have been a dance pavilion where bottled mineral water was sold in the 1800s and 90s, she said. time," Long said. And just down the hill from the barn were bolts and concrete founda- th which probably came from a bowling alley used in the early 1900s, she said. Mattie Kindred, 86, who has lived in Eutulla since she was 3 years old, observed seeing a bank robbery in 921, which the cashier and robber were shot. Officials put the wounded robber in the back of a wagon to haul him to jail — a sight he will never forget, she said. But it was pleasant growing up as the daughter of a barber, Kindred said. Her father charged 25 cents for a haircut and 10 cents for a shave. a haircut and to cease. "I think Eudora is fabulous. We had pleasure without spending a lot of money," she said. --sits atop a slope with tall trees, off Highway 1029. The city of Lecompont, with its scattering of historical buildings and small homes with groomed lawns, Herman Banks, 86, who lived on farms around Lecompton since 1902, recalled a day when his mother had saved money to buy him and his brother new straw hats his brother Banks. Born mother, the boys and their baby sister traveled to Lecompion in a wagon, but on the way home they were hit by a hailstorm with no protection other than the spree of the wagon's sprinkle. Banks' mother, the only both the baby and under the seats, but the boys had to sit on top. hard to sit on top. "Money in those days came pretty hard," he said. hard, "de baum" Pala Bahmani, president of the Lecompton Historical Society, said the region was founded in 1854 and Continued on p. 30 Step into Undercover for all your lingerie 21 W. 9th 749-0004 UNDERCOVER A delicious part of your college life! EGGROLL KING EGGROLL KING 1511 W. 23rd 84E-ROLL Sun.-Thur. 11-10 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 11-12 midnight COUPON FREE MEDIUM DRINK with purchase of any regular dinner Expires 12-6-85 COUPON FREE MEDIUM DRINK with purchase of any regular dinner Expires 12-6-85 First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Monkey THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. ... Sneak A dog careful Play 8 By Mike Snid Of the Kansan Two football p arguments at h that the College Sciences interp satisfactory proge give them any c ble to play this s show. According to c tailback Lymn linebacker Dane County District the players also upset terperet the rule, wrong criteria t status. Faced with a MI prohibits the men playing a game Louisville unless it the University of I play neither, an Ad said yesterday. Gary Hunter, as said no final decision Athletic Department ploring their options "However, it appl playing either Dittr The players had the University S were declared inplying with the sa rule. The court doo players' response motion for dismiss on Oct 8. The Ur for a change of v asking that the Douglas County By Liz Maggar Of the Kansan st The National Association establ Offic By Bonnie Snye Of the Kansan stu Stud Student Senate el as scheduled. The Student Se Committee last nig same Senate seat rejected last week See related story Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. StudEx rejected the first time numbers were base in University school rather than on the enrollment figures they used, Tony Arm StudEx, said last mid-The 20th-day figure official enrollment of they are used in figs i.y.a budget. The attorney of Myra Hinnam, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the United States Senate, R.S.C. chairman of the committee. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. David Day, Elect By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. Kansan Magazine I-70 Series gave fever to Midwest Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 By Mike Snider Kansan Magazine writer 'And there's the Topeka student who goes to Royals Stadium just because the fountains are nice. But for a scant few of us, baseball is an obsession. This season, the ranks of the obsessed grew.' It began harmlessly enough on April 9. The Kansas City Royals and Toronto Blue Jays met in Royals Stadium for the opening game of the 1965 baseball season. It was cold and baseball wasn't on our feet. minds. exciting KU basketball season had just ended. Final exams were approaching_ Who wanted to think about baseball? Little did we know that about six months and 168 games later, on Oct 16, another Royals-Blue Jays game, Game 7 of the American League Championship Series, would become so important to us. so important to them. That game and the following World Series only culminated a 1985 Mets-Legacy Baseball season that had touched and taken over many people's lives for a few, brisk October weeks. over water. Sure, most of us are baseball fans in captivity or another. There's the Chicago student who checks the Tribune to see how far back the Cubies are. There's the business management professor from New York who follows the Yankees because he would get bored watching the same players or manager week after week. And there's the Topaike student who goes to Royals Stadium just because the fountains are nice. but for a scant few of us, baseball is an obsession. This season, the ranks of the obsessed grew. Championship baseball knocked on our doors and we let it in. The number of Royals-rooters and Redbird-watchers multiplied while the eyes of the baseball world slowly focused on Missouri. The Royals and the St. Louis Cardinals were taking their fans on a heart-stopping and blood-pressure-raising trip to a baltuit until Oct. 27, when the Royals trounced the Cardinals 11-0 in Game 9 of the World Series. The only recent sports phenomenon that seized our emotions like this Series was the 1900 Olympics, where the U.S. hockey team took the gold medal from the claws of the mighty U.S.S.R. team claws of the mighty U.S.S.R. team. That youthful team captured the hearts of many Americans as they took on the bullets of international hockey. The Royals and Cardinals snared us much the same way, as they battled to reach the World Series. Before the playoffs, symptoms of baseball fever began to show on campus. Studying for tests had to wait until the final out of that crucial game was recorded. To justify watching or listening to games, students said, "This game will never be replayed. There will always be another test to study for." People with jobs jockeyed their work schedules so they could watch or listen to games. They had to because the teams tightrope over already all of elimination over to build the balance of the league's teams. league's teams. "I'll cover you during the Cards game this afternoon if you cover me for tonight's Royals game." Study breaks includes catching late night baseball highlights on ESPN and early-morning baseball reports. reports. "Did you say the Royals came back again?" The teams collected fans as both scratched their way past formidable opponents to make it to their respective League Championship Series. The two teams were reworked by being designed underdogs in the playoffs against the Blue Jays and the Los Angeles Dodgers. On Oct. 16, both teams clinched a spot in the Series and the diagnosis was complete — World Series fever bad bit KU. When both teams dropped the first two games of the playoffs, hopes fell, but never hit rock bottom. Some fans were just happy that both Missouri teams made it to the Series. Perhaps it was revenge against the rest of the country. The rest of the country had been talking about a Subway Series between the Mets and Yankees. Some brought up the possibility of a Freeway Series between the Dodgers and Angels or a true "world" Series with at least one Canadian team. Folks in these parts knew the rest were dreaming. We got ready for the I70 World Series that people had been whispering about all summer. When the teams won, we quit whispering. Most of the KU community prepared itself for a weeklong baseball brotha-h. And if the rest of the country wasn't interested, nuts to 'em. Students arranged their schedules around the Series. Professors and staff discussed their predictions. Betting pools were engineered in campus offices, businesses, dorms, halles, fraternities and sororites. Everywhere, the World Series was the talk of the town — on radio and television, in newspapers, bars, restaurants, gyms and classrooms. Games 1 and 2 seemed like a family reunion. There was no one to hate. No Gary Carter. No Reggie Jackson. No Mike Schmidt. Royals' fans were happy that Whitey, Willie and the boys were in Kansas City. boys were in Ramsdale. And after the Cardinals won the first two games, 3-1 and 4-2, we were glad to see the teams head down I-70 for Busch Stadium. Whoever wins the Series, it's stay'n in the family. When the Royals won game 3, 6-1, Cardinals fans didn't really worry. The Royals' power was a fluke. Besides, they had two more games at home, where they hadn't had a series swept from them in the regular season, and their ace Card, John Tudor, to pitch game 4. Sure enough, Tudor shut out the Royals 3 in Game 4 to win his second Series game. It looked pretty grim for the Royals and the Cardinals felt victory. But they didn't realize that history was repeating itself. The Royals had them right where they wanted them. where they play. Before Game 5, third baseman George Brett said on TV, "We're not giving up. We really want to win this thing." You had to believe that he was going to find a way to do it. The Royals walloped the Cardinals 6-1 and sent the Series back to Kansas City. The fun was over. At Game 6 in Royals Stadium, the Cardinals felt that Royal magic in the breezes from the fountains. They realized that the Royals were serious. The Cards took a 1-1 lead into the bottom of the ninth. Abracadabra. Exceeded. And the Royals showed that turnabout was fair play by winning the game in the bottom of the ninth. the name The Royals seven seemed anticlimactic. The Royals looked invincible with the momentum of their last two victories and the Cardinals nursed their hangovers from the previous night's plastering. The frustrated Cardinals were stuck on the field in a long game that was never really in doubt after the third inning, when the score stood at 5-0. One tough Dominican saw red and the rest of the Cards were blue. Meanwhile, the Royals fans danced in the aisles as their Royals danced around the bases on their way to an 11-0 victory. The Royals had done it. Their scrappy comeback rivals any performance by a sports team in decades. Maybe any decade. And their home is only 45 minutes down the road from Lawrence. At the pop rally the day after the Series victory, center field Willie Wilson joyfully shouted to the crowd surrounding the Liberty Memorial in downtown Kansas City, "We shocked the house!" the boat. These Royals not only shocked the bridge they shocked the whole baseball neighborhood. They brought us joy and made us proud to live in the Midwet. But they created a dilemma. What to do with all that spare time that had been devoted to the Series? Perhaps it's time to study. That could fill some of the time. I just hope it isn't too late. A shoe for all occasions MIA® Goes equally well with long pants, shorts, any length skirt or maybe just a really big shirt. Comes in red, navy, black, passion, majenta, stone or blush $36.95 Service, quality and fit...a Robinson's tradition...since 1901 ROBINSON'S 817 MASSACHUSETTS 843-1800 PIZZA Shoppe PIZZA GATOR WITH TE FRENCH Bring A Friend! 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By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deann Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Sneak atta The letter, written by Hinman's at Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuits, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deciencies for women and other minorities. A dog carefully padd Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Player Phelps said Tacha fires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Official Two football players' arguments at a hearing to that the College of Liber Sciences interpreted satisfactory progress rule give them any chance of ble to play this season, co show. According to document tailback Lynn Willi linebacker Dane Griffin I County District Court on the players also say that or lege decided how it was g rule the Collew wrong criteria to determ status Faced with a Michigan jud prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the Louisville unless it also play; the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an Athletic Depa said yesterday. The players had filed suit the University Sept. 19 at were declared ineligible for lying with the satisfactory rule. The court documents players' response to the Un motion for dismissal of the council on Oct 8. The University for a venue at 14 showing the case be at Douglas County However, it appears now the playing either Detroit or Louisis The National Collegiate Association established the Gary Hunter, assistant atha said no final decision had been Athletic Department officials ploring their options. By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff StudEx a By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Student Senate elections will as scheduled. The Student Senate Exec Committee last night approve same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. See related story StudEx rejected the seat distrion the first time because numbers were based on enroln in University schools on Oct. rather than on the official 20th-enrollment figures that the Univey used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx, said last night. The 20th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Universi they are used in figuring the Univ city's budget. David Day. Elections Committe Monday, Oct. 28, 1985 Kansan Magazine SILVER BULLET Reach for the high calibre light beer. Coors Light. SPONSORED BY LAPEKA INC. SINCE 1889 First night A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) A man is sitting in a camp. Cool Details page 3. Sneak atta Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge A dog carefully paddl Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Player By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Two football players arguments at a hearing to that the College of Liber Sciences interpreted satisfactory progress rule give them any chance of ble to play this season. co show. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff According to document tailback Lynn Will linebacker Diane Griffin County District Court or the players also say that a lege decided how it was ruled the rule to correct wrong criteria to deter status. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The court document players' response to the motion for dismissal of Ilion Oct. 8. The Universi'r venue a asking that the case be Douglas County. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the University of North Carolina, R.S.C., chairman of the committee. The players had filed the University Sept. It were declared ineligible plying with the satisfact rule. The National College Association established The letter, written by Hinman's st. Faced with a Michigan prohibits the men's hailing a game with Louisville unless it also the University of Detroit play neither, an Athletic said yesterday. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Offici "However, it appears playing either Detroit or By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff StudE Gary Hunter, assista said no final decision has Athletic Department of ploring their options. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Student Senate elect as scheduled. The Student Senal Committee last night same Senate seat dis rejected last week. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. See related story The 20th-day figures official enrollment of t they are used in figuri sity's budget. StudEx rejected the tion the first time numbers were based in University school rather than on the of enrollment figures that used, Tony Arnold StudEx, said last night David Day, Election 10 Kansan Magazine Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Class of'60 remembers crewcuts and curfews BUSINESS FIRST University Archives The Dine-A-Mite Inn, 23rd and Louisiana streets, was a popular hang-out for KU students in 1960. By Liz Maggard Kansan Magazine writer Allen Field House was brand new. The man it was named after, Dr. Forest C. "Phog" Allen, had retired the year before, and Dick Harp was the new head basketball coach. Wilt Grimstaff was king of the basketball court. In 1966, when members of the graduating class of 1960 first arrived at the University of Kansas, the total student enrollment was 8.500. West Campus didn't exist. The University Daily Kansas was a four-page tabloid paper. The Dine-a-Mite Inn, 23rd and Louisiana streets, was the place to hang out. Most men had crewcuts, and fraternity and ROTC members were the big men on cam-pauses. The Trio and folk music were popular. These are some of the memories of KU that members of the class of 1960 will share when they return to the University this weekend to reminisce and celebrate their 25th year reunion. Several 1960 class members got a head start strolling down memory lane when they discussed their college exp'ences recently. John M. Grew, Route 1, Lawrence, said he thought the world seemed to be a simpler and less confusing place when he was at KU. "It it seemed like there was more that you could count on then," he said. "If you played by the rules, the rules didn't change on you. catering by Black Tie The HALCYON HOUSE Bed and Breakfast John McGrew class of 1960 "It wasn't as big then as it is now, but I came from a small high school with a graduating class of 114" he said. "I thought it was hurt." Available for: lunchaoons cocktail parties wine & cheese weddings & receptions getaway weekend 'It just seemed like there was more that you could count on then. If you played by the rules, the rules didn't change on you.' man for KCTV, a television station in Kansas City, Mo. said he remembered being overworked by him and being left alone first came to Lawrence from Russell. "What was true when you were a freshman remained true when you were a sophomore and a junior and a senior." Nossaman said he recently went through old issues of the Kansan to prepare for the reunion. 1000 Ohio Lawrence, Kana: 68044 (913) 841-0314 "In terms of student attitudes and dress, I think we've come full circle," she said. "We were interested in getting an education that would prepare us for solving problems. I was really proud of being back to the same kind of basics." Valentino's Ristorante "I found out that we elected a lot of queens," he said. "I made a list of all the queen contests reported by the Kansan in just one year, and there were 23 of them." Dickinson said that curlews for women still were in effect when she attended KU. Jerry Nossaman, 1116 West Hills Parkway, Lawrence, agreed. Valentino's Pistonario Where you should wind up for dinner! $1.00 off Evening Buffet or 50% off Luncheon Buffet. One coupon per customer, offer expires 11/20/85 at Valentino's. Valentino's Ristorante Where you should wind up for dinner! come wrap yourself around our buffet 7 days a week $1.00 or 50¢ VALUE Wendell Anschutz, now an anchor- Dickinson said she thought attending KU in the 1950s was a lot like attending KU in the 1980s. "Those were the Eisenhower years," he said. "There were good times everywhere. It was a good time to go to college." Nossaman said the Kansan coverage of each contest would last as long as three weeks. Mary Ann Dickinson, 3065 Oxford Rd., Lawrence, said the queen contests were part of her memories of college life in the 1950s. SPOON come wrap yourself around our buffet 7 days a week “This was front page stuff,” he said. “The Kansan would run pictures of all the candidates.” "What I recall was having to nominate a queen candidate almost every Monday night," she said. Women in organized living groups He said his list had a calendar queen, a Student Union Activities carnival queen, a queen of the Military Ball, a Jayhawker queen, a queen of the Pershing Rifles, engineering and law school queens, a Cadet Corps, an industrial design queen and a Miss Santa. 749-4244 Right up the street, from all your shopping and downtown entertainment. The Grinder Man offers a wide variety of sandwiches, side orders and a salad bar at very reasonable prices. We've been delivering to you for years. Now come in and see us! THE GUNDER MAN THE GRINDER MAN 734 THE GRINDER MAN Mass. Open till 9 p.m. 704 Mass. 843-7398 Open Till 9 p.m. Mon-Sat Closed Sun First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN a boy with a stick in his hand THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S-C., chairman of the committee Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1891. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Sneak atta Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1882 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. The letter, written by Hinman's at By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff A dog carefully paddl Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. Player By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Fans cheer on the Kansas Jayhawk football team at a game in 1959 in Memorial Stadium. Two football players v arguments at a hearing to that the College of Libert Sciences interpreted t satisfactory progress rule give them any chance of b able to play this season, co show. The National Collegiate Association established the s According to document tailback Lynn Willis linebacker Dane Griffin i County District Court on the players also say that on lege decided how it was g terperpt the rule, the College wrong criteria to determ status. The 20th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Univers. They are used in figuring the Univ sit's budget. StudEx rejected the seat distrion the first time because numbers were based on enrollin in University schools on Oct. rather than on the official 20th-enrollment figures that the Univiey used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx, said last night. The Student Senate Exec Committee last night approved same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. The court documents players' response to the Unmotion for dismissal of the case on Oct. 8. The University a for a change of venue at asking that the case be n Douglas County. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff The players had filed suit the University Sept. 19 af were declared ineligible for plying with the satisfactory rule "However, it appears now the playing either Detroit or Louisville." See related story Gary Hunter, assistant athi said no final decision had been Athletic Department officials ploring their options. StudEx Student Senate elections will as scheduled Officia David Day, Elections Commit By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Kansan Magazine Faced with a Michigan kid, prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the Louisville unless it also plays the University of Detroit. KU play neither, an Athletic Depaain said yesterday. "The closing hours caused a kind of closeness within the living groups that I don't think is there anymore," she said. "We all used to come in at the same time and get together to talk." had to be in by 10.30 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays, 1 a.m. Fridays and Saturdays and midnight on Sundays. The men also used that time to get together. Dickinson said, even though they were not required to keep closing hours. keep closing户口 I told me it was tradi- tion for the men to all go out for breakfast together after taking their dates home, she said. Nossaman said reading oid Kanssamed reminded him that the 'In terms of student attitudes and dress, I think we've come full circle.' Mary Ann Dickinson class of 1960 Jayhawks once had dominated the University of Nebraska on the football field. "It's hard to remember defeating Nebraska, but starting in 1967, we beat them five straight years," he said. "I think it probably was an indication of how bad Nebraska was, not of how good we were. It probably never ever happen again." Continued on p. 31 Seigertt BZI MASS. Good Luck! to the 1985-86 basketball coaches and team From the management and staff at... Mr. Steak 920 W.23rd 841-3454 First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) A man is sitting on a log and Cool Details page 3. The image shows a duck swimming in water. It has a long neck, white body with light spots, and dark eyes. The duck is facing slightly to the right. Water ripples around it, indicating movement. Sneak atta A dog carefully paddl Two football players w arguments at a hearing to that the College of Liber Sciences interpreted t satisfactory progress rule give them any chance of able to play this season, co show. According to document tailback Lynn Willi linebacker Dane Griffin I County District Court on the players also say that on lege decided how it was g terperpt the rule, the College wrong criteria to determ status. The players had filed suit the University Sept. 19 if were declared ineligible for flying with the satisfactory rule. The National Collegiate Association established the The court documents players' response to the Umpotion for dismissal of the c on Oct. 8. The University for a change of venue at th asking that the case be m Douglas County. Player Officia By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Faced with a Michigan j prohibits the men's basket playing a game with it Louisville unless it also p of the University of Detroit, play neither, an Athletic De said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assistant said no final decision had b Athletic Department office ploring their options. "However, it appears no playing either Detroit or I StudEx By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Student Senate electio as scheduled. The Student Senate Committee last night a same Senate seat dist rejected last week. - See related story Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge StudEx rejected the tion the first time numbers were based. in University school rather than on the of enrollment figures that used, Tony Arnold StudEx, said last night. The 20th-day figures official enrollment of it They are used in figur. sity's budget. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff David Day, Electio A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the Board of Directors of R.S.C. ,R.S.C., chairman of the committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The letter, written by Hinman's art. Phelps said that Hinnan filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the facility. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. 12 Kansan Magazine Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Memories abundant for Lenexa man, 101 A century of memories condensed into one tiny apartment is Amel Hartley Stubbs most valued possession. The books, papers and photos, neatly stacked through the rooms in his Lexa home, are all he needs to transport his memory, still sharp after 101 years, to any time or place he has traveled during his long, long life. Stubbs' only secret for his longevity has been to enjoy the people he's been with. "I tell you, if you've got a lot of friends, well, you can't enjoy your friends if you're gone, he said. "And I played pool, and you can't play pool if you're dead. So I stick around." Stubbs was born on July 14, 1894, and was graduated from the University of Kansas in 1913. He admits he isn't as steady on his feet as he used to be. He walks slowly and carefully in the apartment, steadying himself on the furniture as he draws what he is looking for from the neat stacks of well-orned books and oft-offoked-at photos piled around the place. He knows where everything is, and as his discourse takes him from one memory to another, he can pull a book or photo from his resources to show the visitor. when he was one year old to a white pine honeestead south of Garden City, where Stubbs said his father started the Garden City Herald. The University was a quite different in 1911. Enrollment stood at little over 1,000 in the University's 48th year. Women's suffrage was still be- people were forced to move from their land over a century ago. He can quote the speech given by the Kaw chief to the secretary, and remember — although he won't repeat them — the unkind words the secretary returned. Stubbs is a student of languages. He said his interests eventually led him to study German while a freshman, on a full scholarship, at the University of Chicago. He continued studying and eventually taught German at KU. One of the high points of his life, Stubbs said, was carrying the Olympic torch as it passed through Kansas City Mo., in 1984. He pauses and thrifts through a photo until he extracts a photo of the event — an eight-byten-inch, full-color memory. that he used to pass on his way home every day. "Growing up on the homestead didn't seem hard to me," he said. "I didn't mind living on pork and cheese — we had that three or four times a week because it cost 15 cents in those days." Stubbs was a dedicated student and had precious little time to spend away from his books. He didn't go to his first KU football game until several years after he'd graduated In Emporia, his father worked as a city editor for the Emporia Republican, and later the Emporia Gazette. They moved from Emporia He and his wife Theresa lived on Kentucky Street. She worked to help pay expenses as he spent his days studying. He received the honor because, he said, he is the oldest living member in the Kansas City, Mo. of YMCA, an organization he has belonged to off and on since 1899. "I wasn't able to jog with the torch," Stubbs said. "A year or two sooner and I would have been able to jog OK. I walked it maybe a hundred feet or so." "Stubbs" interests are many and varied. His interest in botany led to a book published on wild mushrooms in the area. It has sold thousand copies and he said it was probably the most definitive book on edible mushrooms ever printed in this country. "I said, well, I was not an athlete, and they said yes, but you played volleyball until you were 86," did, "Stubbs said. I was playing against men half my age when I was 88 and having not a bit of trouble." "The fact that I can hardly walk at all now didn't happen to me until three or four years ago. I was walking three or four miles everyday, and enjoying hunting mushrooms, hiking. Enjoying all kinds of exercise." "I figured if I wrote him he wouldn't get my letter, but it was very nice of him to do it," Stubbs said. . Stubbs recalls his words when he heard he was to carry the torch. 1975 Stubbs said that President Reagan mentioned Stubbs' name in his 1984 election acceptance speech in connection with the Olympic event. Ansel Hartley Stubbs John Lechliter/Kensan Magazine "Although I was still an undergraduate, a senior, I was made a member of the German department. The courses that I taught were conversational German and scientific German. ing debated, and when one courageous young woman wore a "harem skirt" to campus, it literally made headlines. A visit from President Taft merited a story only a few inches long in the University Kansas. "All those PhDs made me the recording secretary for the department. I guess you could say I was underwhelmed because of being a student in that kind of a job—with all those PhDs around. Stubbs remembers the campus during his years at KU. "KU, it was all on the Hill back then. The old North College building was still standing. Fraser Hall was the main building that we had. That's where we had our German department. And it's where I spent a lot of my time." Stubhs remembered the snack shop and bookstore on 14th Street Stubbs graduated from KU in 1913 with a bachelor of arts degree. "I didn't have much time outside of my classes and my teaching for any fraternity work. But I was elected to Phi Delta Kappa. I also took some courses in education," he said. His mind moves easily across the decades; he recalls stories of the 1800s as easily as he lists the names of his grandchildren who went to KU, who they married and their spouse's majors. He is proud of his family tree, a tree he says is laden with PhDs and even a World War II bomber pilot. Stubbs recalls stories of his grandfather and father, who came to Kansas in 1865. His grandfather, a Quaker missionary, came to Council Grove to teach the Kaw Indian children to read and write. He later became a U.S. agent for the Kaw nation, Stubbs said. His father, then 18, acted as interpreter for the Indians when the Secretary of the Interior met with the leader of the Kaw people in the mid-1300s. Stubba" voice rises in indignation as he tells of how the Kaw 'I tell you, if you've got a lot of friends well, you can't enjoy your friends if you're gone. And I played pool, and you can't play pool if you're dead. So I stick around.' — Ansel Hartley Stubbs, Class of 1913 fields the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187 fields the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187 the Heart shoppe Grand Opening November 8 & 9 Friday and Saturday 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Gifts from the heart Register for 1 of 2 $10 gift certificates Free gift with purchase Refreshments 17 W. 9th Street 749-0991 the Heart shoppe Grand Opening November 8 & 9 Friday and Saturday 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Gifts from the heart Register for 1 of 2 $10 gift certificates Free gift with purchase Refreshments 17 W. 9th Street 749-0991 First night --- SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7,1985,VOL. 96,NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) MAN STOOLING A TREE Cool Details page 3. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1881. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Sneak atta By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanel Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1882 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. A dog carefully padd The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S-C., chairman of the committee. Player The letter, written by Hinman. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Two football players w arguments at a hearing to that the College of Libr Sciences interpreted t satisfactory progress rule give them any chance of able to play this season, co show. Nelips said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the university. According to document tailback Lynn Willis linebacker Dane Griffin I County District Court on the players also say that on lege decided how it was g terperet the rule, the College wrong criteria to determ status. The court documents players' response to the Unmotion for dismissal of the case on Oct. 8. The University for a change of venue at asking that the case be n Douglas County. Student Senate elections will as scheduled. The players had filed suit the University Sept. 19 af were declared ineligible forlying with the satisfactory rule. The Student Senate Exec Committee last night approved same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. The National Collegiate Association established the However, it appears now th playing either Detroit or Louis Faced with a Michigan just prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the Louisville unless it also plays the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an Athletic Depa said yesterday. Officia StudEx rejected the seat distrion the first time because numbers were based on enroll in University schools on Oct rather than on the official 20th-enrollment figures that the Univy used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx, said last night. StudEx By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff The 20th-day figures represent official enrollment of the University. They are used in figuring the University's budget. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Gary Hunter, assistant atha said no final decision had been Athletic Department officials ploring their options. David Day, Elections Commi See related story Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Traditions altered over 73 years By Susie Bishop Kansan Magazine writer Even though no parades, floats or crowning of queens existed in 1912 when the homecoming tradition began at the University of Kansas, the enthusiasm of the students and alumni made the event a tradition that has lasted through today. That enthusiasm displayed by students and alumni 73 years ago shows up year after year to help homecoming survive changes in society. society. After a decline in homecoming activities in the 1960s, the one activity that campus has become more inked with in recent years is the homecoming parade. The parade usually consisted of a few floats, the KU Marching Band and a clown or two. two. This year, said John Fevurly, junior class president, if students stand out on Wescoe Beach to see the parade on Friday afternoon, they're going to miss the fun. This year's homecoming parade, complete with 14 floats, KU Marching Band, five area high school bands, 13 Shirler clones and motorcycles, the mayor and other district campus dignitaries, will march from Seventh and Massachusetts streets to South Park at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday in celebration of KU and the returning alumni. As junior class president, it was Fevurly's job to overhaul the parade. Fevvly's poetry "The changes in the parade will benefit the community of Lawrence and the students." Fevvily said. and the students, PE and People who couldn't attend the parade in years past may be able to participate this year, he said, because KU and Lawrence district students and faculty won't have classes, and business people won't be at work. Other homecoming activities will include a picnic sponsored by the Adams Alumni Center on Saturday before the homecoming football 'Many of the old events that the University came to associate with homecoming have been pushed aside.' game against the University of Colorado. "This is the second year for the homecoming pre-game picnic," said Donna Neuner, director of member services for the Alumni Association. seveurs "N" said German sausages, hot den potato salad and all the fixings would be served buffet-style under a huge yellow and white striped tent just southeast of Memorial Stadium from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. **Junkyard Jazz**, in alumni and faculty jazz band, and a pep band from the Marching Jayhawks Band will provide entertainment. Chancellor Gene A. Budig, Monte Johnson, athletic director, and Fred Williams, executive director of the Alumni Association, have been invited to speak at the pre-game festivals. Anyone is welcome, but Neuner said reservations were encouraged. Tickets are $5.50 for adults and $3.50 for children under 12. Tickets can be purchased at the alumni center. elaborate decorations. The festivities at the first homecoming celebration included old KU football stars giving talks at a pep rally the night before the football game against Missouri. Cider and doughnuts were served to all those attending the rally. changed. The response of the alumni that first year of homecoming in 1912 kept campus organizations so busy that there was no time to spend on elaborate decorations. attending the rally. Many of the old events that the University came to associate with Over the years, the role and traditions of homecoming at KU have changed. homecoming have been pushed aside. bands, towels and pots. Gone, too, are the duck races, which later led to horse racing. Students dressed as hobos roamed the campus each homecoming weekend in the 1920s, but no more. Events such as fireworks lit from the top of Fraser Hall, torchlight parades through campus, and nightshirt parades have succumbed to the newer traditions of marching bands, floats and picnics. During World War I, the homecoming festivities went on, but in 1918, the first homecoming after the war, the University called off the celebration. The traditions became more sophisticated with house decorations on the fraternities and the dedication of the newly completed Memorial Stadium in 1922. The football game was played, but the rest of the activities were cancelled because the city of Lawrence was under quarantine for influenza. Saturation spending limit on house decorations was $50 in 1953. The limit expanded to $400 in 1978, the last year of house decorations. During World War II, the University almost disbanded the homecoming festivities. Officials reasoned that alumni wouldn't return to the campus because of gasoline and fireworks. rations. The strong sentiments of the students helped the success of homecoming in '1943. Even the soldiers enrolled at KU helped in the celebration. They were granted leave until the sounding of taps at 10:30 n.m on Friday. Airplane formations, performed by Air Force cadets, entertained the crowd during the half-time show. Since that time, halftime entertainment at homecoming football games Hungry? Head for Harry's! 106 N. Park Formerly Campus Hideaway - Try a basket of Deep-Fried Mushrooms, or better yet. Deep-Fried Zucchini with Harry's Secret Sauce. - Or, if you're really hungry try either Harry's Shrimp Platter or his Steak Sandwich. -If you're really hungry try them both! - For the sweet tooth try the Chocolate Soda: an old-fashioned soda made with Perrier Water. - If you're really hungry ask about the: GRIZZ BURGER CHALLENGE HARRY BEAR'S CHARCOAL Mr Burger Maker BROTLER Kansan Magazine 13 has included Mexican dances, gymnastics, acrobatics and trampoline exhibitions. Not just the football team is celebrating at homecoming, but also growth and achievement of KU. The dedication of Shrinagar Hall in 1932, the new Watson Library in 1924 took place during homecoming weekend when alumni returned and could appreciate the improvement of their alma mater. Beginning in 1934 and ending in 1968, the tradition of crowning a homecoming queen graced the half-time show of the football game. Continued on p. 27 SIRLOIN STOCKADE'S fell test! Rib-Eye Steak 12 oz. Dinner $7.49 A big, juicy Rib Eye Steak, cooked just the way you like it, served with your choice of a big entree Baked potato or Golden French Fries and Stockade Toast SIRLOIN STOCKADE INCLUDES SALAD BAR & HOT FOOD BAR 1015 Iowa SIRLOIN STOCKADE 1015 Iowa UNITED STATES OF AMERICA FIVE CENTS IF YOU'RE PAYING MORE THAN THIS FOR COPIES, YOU'RE GETTING BUFFAOLED. At Kinkos, we offer the highest quality copies at a very low price. And our staff has a friendly, helpful professional attitude you won't find anywhere else. For great copies. And great deals. sional attitude you want. Try Kikos. For great copies, And great deals. kinko's 904 VERMONT 2024 WEST 23 rd 622 WEST 12 th First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) A man sitting at a campfire Cool Details page 3 The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the University of R.S.C., R.S.C. chairman of the committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed viceancellor in 1881. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Sneak at Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. A dog carefully pa By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff The letter written by Hinman's at Playe By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Two football play arguments at a heart that the College of L Sciences interprets satisfactory progress give them any chance to play this season show. According to doc tailback Lynn W linebacker Dane Grin County District Coun the players also say the lege decided how it v terpret the rule, the C wrong criteria to d status. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University, The court document players' response to a motion for dismissal on Oct. 8. The Unive for a change of venuasking that the case Douglas County. The National Colle Association established The players had fi'i the University Sept. were declared insigligh with the satisfr plys. Offici By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Faced with a Michi probits the men's playing a game wi Louisville unless it al the University of Delta play neither, an Athlet said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assist said no final decision in Athletic Department or ploring their options. "However, it appear playing either Detroit i StudE By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff The Student Senate Committee last night same Senate seat dis reiected last week. Student Senate elect as scheduled. See related story StudEx rejected the tion the first time numbers were based in University school rather than on the of enrollment figures that used, Tony Arnold StudEx, said last night The 20th-day figures official enrollment of t they are used in figurity's budget. David Day, Election 14 Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Kansan Magazine 100 Paul Goodman/Kansan Magazine Lexie Engleman prepares to attach a five-inch line to a hydrant at the practice field behind the station at 19th and Haskell streets. The firefighters participate in an hour-and-a-half of drills three days a week. Fire station life busy By Theresa Scott Kansan Magazine writer The fluorescent lights gleamed starkly through a gray, morning drizzle. As the beams passed through the window panes of three oversized windows, cast a lattice shadow on the wet driveway leading to Eighth Street. inside the garage that houses Fire Station No. 1, 748 Kentucky St., seven uniformed firefighters readied themselves for a busy day. They placed heavy, yellow-sole, black rubber boots at intermittent spots around two fire engines and one hook and ladder truck. The boots snapped to red-suspended coveralls which were rolled down around the boot tops, ready to be yanked on at a moment's notice. All seven firefighters, who work from 7 a.m. to 7 a.m. three days a week, bustled about the garage, tending to their duties. One swept the floor, several checked the trucks, houses and equipment for cleaning, and instructed them and another hurried in and out of a door gathering supplies for the day. As the day progressed, the level of activity did not diminish. Even when the firefighters were not dousing flames, they were busy with many other activities. Bob Burton, captain for the "X" shift, said firefighters had to do many things besides answer alarms. "We go over the equipment, clean the station, check the trucks out, make sure everything is ready to respond when there is an alarm, make sure the tanks are filled with water and sweep." he said. "We have to do our own习业 work." Last year the Lawrence fire department received 1,341 alarms, averaging about three and a half calls each day. Although answering alarms is the primary function of a fire department, they are a frequent enough to keep firefighters busy. So, many other activities fill otherwise idle hours. A sign reading "From Mrs. Troustol's 3rd Grade Centennial School." 2145 Louisiana St., decorated with skittie figures drawn in children's handwriting and colored with crayons, hung firefighters one way, firefighters spend their extra time—giving tours of the station. Gregg Crossman, lieutenant on the "X" shift at Station No. 1, said, "We have tours of pre-school to grade school kids and seouts. Anyone that wants to can call for a tour. Sometimes firefighters from other communities want a tour." Along with showing the station to the public, the firefighters also are responsible for educating the public about fire safety. Lexie Engleman, who has been a firefighter for four years, is the "X" shift's public educator. She was a school teacher before she became a firefighter. That experience helps her to explain fire safety at local stores, businesses and schools, she said. When she isn't educating the public or fighting fires, Engleman said, she has little extra time. "We're constantly studying or doing something," she said. "We do drills or watch tapes. We never have extra time." Firefighters also must practice drills with other fire stations so firefighting efforts may be easily coordinated when more than one station is called to the scene. The drills allow firefighters to sharpen their skills at firefighting techniques such as using foam and ladders, at fighting a blaze on highrise buildings, and at salvaging property and removing water. Burton said firefighters also had to check fire $^2_3$ydrants in town once every $^4/5$e years to see how much water they could emit. --- Go For It! Enter the supernatural world of CONE·A·COPIA It's here! It's magic! The Magical Ice Cream Dream Machine It's CONE • A • CORIA ice cream and yogurt. The newest tongue rattling taste sensation of the year! Just imagine, your favorite candies, cookies, nuts and fruits magically blended with luscious vanilla ice cream or yogurt for an individual serving of your favorite taste, tempting flavor. FLAVOR CHART Take Snickers ice cream, made with real Snickers bars. Or peach yogurt, made with real peaches. Or even Oroo cookie ice cream or yogurt, made with real Oroo cookies go ahead. Live dangerously! Mix & match any of our 20 flavors and create your own tongue-rattling ice cream or yogurt extraganza. M&M S SNICKERS REESE C UPS BUTTERFINGER KIT KAT NESTLE CRUNCH HEATH ALMOND JOY HERSHEY MR GOODBAR ALMONDS WALNUTS OREO CHOCOLATE MINT STRAWBERRY PINEAPPLE PERCH CHERRY BLUEBERRY BANANA OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1014 W 2 trd (next to Command Performance) --- ATTENTION ADVERTISERS Now is the time to reserve space in the Dec.11 CHRISTMAS MAGAZINE Call your KANSAN Ad Representative TODAY! Deadline: Dec. 4, 1985 University Daily Kansan 864-4358 Good fortune awaits you at—House of Hupei 2500 W.6th 843-8070 Keep in mind— Potential rushees must register on Nov. 6 or 7 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Centennial Room Kansas Union Late registration will not be accepted. First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7,1985,VOL. 96,NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. PLEASE USE THE PHOTO'S ORIGINAL TEXT ONLY. NO EDITING, REPLICATION, OR TRANSFER OF THIS Image TO ANY OTHER SITE. Sneak attac A dog carefully paddlec Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge Player By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S-C., chairman of the committee. pointed to the letter in our book. The letter, written by Himman's at By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Two football players wif arguments at a hearing told that the College of Liberal Sciences interpreted the satisfactory progress rule to give them any chance of be able to play this season, course show. According to documents tailback Lynn Williar linebacker Dane Griffin in County District Court on 7 the players also say that once lege decided how it was gol terperet the rule, the College wrong criteria to determir status. The players had filed suit the University Sept. 19 after declared ineligible for nplying with the satisfactory prule. Faced with a Michigan judge prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the I Louisville unless it also plays the University of Detroit. KU play neither, an Athletic Department said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assistant athlete said no final decision had been in Athletic Department officials is ploring their options. The court documents 6 players' response to the Uni- motion for dismissal of the ca- on Oct. 8. The University al- for a change of venue at the asking that the case be me Douglas County. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. The National Collegiate Association established the sa However, it appears now that playing either Detroit or Louisvi Official By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Student Senate elections will g as scheduled. StudEx a The Student Senate Exec Committee last night approved same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff The 20th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Universi They are used in figuring the Univ sitv's budget. StudEx rejected the seat disti tion the first time because numbers were based on enrollin in University schools on Oct. rather than on the official 20th- enrollment figures that the Univ ity used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx, said last night. David Day, Elections Commit See related story Randy Arvizu, who has been a firefighter for four years, is a night inspector for the "X" shift. He checks buildings to make sure that the fire exits are not locked and that the buildings are not overwatered. He also checks to make sure building codes are not being violated. Besides inspecting businesses, Arvizu said he rolled fire hoses, cleaned windows and floors and studied between alarms. Crossman said the hook and ladder or fire trucks must be cleaned after they are used during drills or a fire to prevent them from rusting and to maintain an "esprit de corps." "It makes the truck last longer," he said, and it makes it took better. It's always nice to have a clean, shiny truck. It is annoying. "I don't mind it," but we all jump on it and get it cleaned up so we can be back to bed in 20 minutes. Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Shaun Coffey, who has been a firefighter for two months, said he spent most of his extra time studying maps of the city for his monthly map test and teaching it to students. The I class, which is offered through the University of Kansas. "There's a lot of learning on here," Coffey said. "Sometimes I watch TV, but I study, do training, Continued on p. 29 Paul Goodman/Kansas Magazine Paul Goodman/Kansan Magazine The crew went over a schedule and discussed drills they would do on the practice field during a recent morning meeting. From left, with back turned; Capt. Bob Burton, Milo Ransopher, Mark Wilson, Dennis O'Bryon, Jim Sloan and Rod Brown. Kansan Magazine JUNKYARD'S JYM End of Semester Special Join Junkyard's Jym 8 Weeks only $35.00 Nov. 1-Jan. 1 535 Gateway Dr. 842-4966 © 1986 DET CAMPAFT He the sam Then it's gobl I tried to I kept gaining and losing the same 20 pounds. Then I said,this time it's going to be different. I tried every pill, every gimmick to lose weight. Only to feel miserable when I gained it all back. Finally I said no, never again—this time I'm going to Diet Center. I lost the weight, without hunger. And I'm keeping it off. My only regret? DIET CENTER My only regret? Not going sooner! Lose 17 to 25 pounds in just 6 weeks! Pre-pay 6 weeks, get $25 off. $233.70 6 week fee -$25.00 Discount $208.70 You're going to make it this time. (Registration fee for new dieters only.) 841-DIET expires Nov. 16, 1985 935 Iowa (Registration fee for new dieters only.) ADMIT TWO ADMIT TWO A Night Out. With Mr. Steak. A Night Out. With Mr. Steak. Dinner and Movie Passes for two for only $15.95. All Dinners include choice of potato, steamed rice, or vegetable, soup or salad, and warm bread. Choose from traditional cut sirloin, 21 shrimp, steak kebob, chicken strips, smothered ground beef, or London broil dinners. (Offer not valid with any other special or discount.) 920 W. 23rd Mon-Thurs 11am-9pm Fri-Sat 11am-10pm 841-3454 mr. Steak First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TREKKING THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3 Sneak attac A dog carefully paddlec Player Two football players wi arguments at a hearing too that the College of Libera Sciences interpreted tl satisfactory progress rule give them any chance of b lie to play this season, cot show. The players had filer the University Sept. were declared ineligibly lying with the satisfac rule. According to document tailback Lynn Willi linebacker Dane Griffin County District Court $\textcircled{4}$ the players also say that he lege decided how it was perret the rule, the Colr wrong criteria to deter status. The court document players' response to the motion for dismissal of 't on Oct. 8. The Universi for a change of venue asking that the case Douglas County. The National College Association established By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Offici By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Faced with a Mich prohibits the men's playing a game w Louisville unless it w the University of De play neither, an Athl said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assaid no final decision Athletic Departmentploring their options However, it appa playing either Detro By Bonnie Sny Of the Kansan s. Stud Student Senate as scheduled. The Student Committee last same Senate seat rejected last week See related sto. StudEx rejection the first numbers were I in University rather than on enrollment figura used, Tony. StudEx, said lair. The 20th-day, official enrolm- They are used in sity's budget. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the committee A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanel Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Phelps said that Himman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1801. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and other tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. signed to the 10th of October The letter, written by Hinmons, at Kansan Magazine Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. 16 Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 THE TIME WAS WORTH IT. MISTER Guy MISTER Guy MISTER GUY David Day. Elections Commu A man in a leather jacket stands on a wooden fence in an outdoor setting. He is wearing a black and white patterned sweater and trousers. The background features trees and grass. 1985 I'll just use a blank space for the rest of the text. Hours: M-T-W F-Sat. 9:30-6:00 Thur. 9:30-8:50 Sun. Noon-5 p.m. SINCE 1889 First night A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A man is sitting in a campfire. THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3 15 Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S-C., chairman of the committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan, If confirmed by the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Sneak attac Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. The letter, written by Hinman's st A dog carefully paddled Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. Player By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Two football players will arguments at a hearing tod that the College of Liberal Sciences interpreted the satisfactory progress rule to give them any chance of be able to play this season, course. According to documents' tailback Lynn Williain linebacker Dane Griffin in County District Court on **7** the players also say that once lege decided how it was goid under the rule, the College wrong criteria to determir status. The court documents 4 players' response to the Uni- motion for dismissal of the ca- on Oct. 8. The University al- for a change of venue at the court, the case be muni- dated County. The players had filed suit the University Sept. 19 after were declared ineligible for nplying with the satisfactory prule. The National Collegiate A Association established the sa Official By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff StudEx a The Student Senate Execu Committee last night approved same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. Student Senate elections will go as scheduled. Faced with a Michigan judge prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the I Louisville unless it also plays the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an Athletic Departai said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assistant athlete said no final decision had been in Athletic Department officials; ploring their options. "However, it appears now that playing either Detroit or Louisvi See related story StudEx rejected the seat distri tion the first time because numbers were based on enrollin in University schools on Oct. rather than on the official 2010- enrollment figures that the Univ ry used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx, said last night. The 200th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Universi They are used in figuring the Univ situ's budget. David Day. Elections Commit Wednesday, Nov. 6 1995 MISTER GOY ...Homecoming weekend begins at Mister Guy of Lawrence...for men and women... a KU tradition since '67 free refreshments on all KU home football games!! MISTER GUY 020 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 842-2700 Kansan Magazine 17 Linda & Jerry 14 MISTER GUY First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) SANTA MARIA Cool Details page 3. Sneak a A dog carefully p Two football play arguments at a heat that the College of Sciences interpire satisfactory progres give them any chan to play this seas show. Play By Mike Snider Of the Kansan sta According to doe tailback Lynn linebacker Dane G county District Co the players also say lege decided how it should rule the rule, the wrong criteria to status. The court docu- players' response to motion for dismissal on Oct. 8. The Uni- tor of a change or of vera- king that the car Douglas County. The players had had the University Sepa were declared inig biing with the saturale rule. Gary Hunter, as said no final decision Athletic Department ploring their options Faced with a Mie prohibits the men's playing a game Louisville unless it the University of D play neither, an Ath said yesterday. "However, it applauds playing either Detroi By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan sta Studl By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan sta Student Senate el as scheduled. The National Co Association establis Offic The Student S Committee last nj same Senate seat rejected last week See related story StudEx rejected tion the first tir numbers were bus in University sch rather than on the enrollment figures used. Tony Ann StudEx, last n 201 The 20th-day figi official enrolmnt They are used in fijia sity's budget. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge David Day, Elec By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the U.S. Attorneys Committee R-S.C., chairman of the committee. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanen Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The letter, written by Hiimon's at Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1891. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1892 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. 18 Kansan Magazine Wednesdav. Nov. 6. 1985 Auctioneer's wares are towed automobiles By Jennifer Benjamin Kansan Magazine writer An auctioneer stands in the middle of a large lot at Fifth and Maple streets in North Lawrence and yells, "Much would you pay for this car." The car could be one you would see after a demolition derby or it could be one you would see in the parking lot of a resident hall on campus. The cars, some of which are auctioned for $30 or $40, come from the University of Kansas campus and Lawrence, Linda Faler, the bookkeeper of Jayhawk To and Storage, 50 Manle St., said last week. The cars are stored on the service's five lots for about six months before a decision is made to auction or sell them to salvage dealers, she said. The service, open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, started in 1976 and tows about two to five cars during a 24-hour period. Flaired said. Most KU students pick up their cars, which are stored on the lof, she said. They must bring a release from parking services or the KU police department, the tow charge of $13.75 and money for the car's storage, which is $2 a day after the first two days, she said. Most of the 50 to 53 cars on the lot now were towed in from accidents in Lawrence. Scrap from the badly damaged cars are used to build new cars. Before auctioning or selling the car, Jayhawk Tow notifies the previous owner of the car's location and the amount due for storage, she said. The owner has 10 days to contact the service before action is taken. After that period has expired, the owners decide whether to have an auction or sell the cars to a salvage yard. she said "A lot of the cars are old junkers that have been abandoned." she said. "A lot of them are from out of state especially the ones from campus. "We keep them a little longer — sometimes up to a year — just in case the person comes back to town." The last auction, on Aug 18, wasn't as successful as selling the cars might have been. she said "We had a big turnout at the last auction," she said. "But we thought that some of the cars could have brought more money." more money from salvage yard owners, she said, they may decide to sell the cars instead. If the service thinks it can receive The cars on the lot now will sit for another six to eight months, she said, and then another auction or sale will occur. Lon Faler, the owner of Jayhawk tow, said that most people who attended the auction were salvage owners, but not many Lawrence residents came money," he said. "Some of the storage had built up to $700 to $800 and the cars went for very little. Cars frequently come in from KU, he said. A Pontiac Vancefur, filled with clothes and other materials, has been on the lot since Sept. 27, he said on. "A lot of people call about their cars, but don't pick them up immediately, and the storage builds up quickly." Faler said. "You name it, we get it," he said. FORD Wrecked cars and one boat sit in the lot of Jayhawk Tow and Storage, 501 Maple St. Mark Mohler/Kansan Maoazine "Most of the time, something is really wrong with the cars, or people would pick them up." The service stores cars and any other vehicle parked illegally or blocking traffic, he said. One lot has a boat and a trailer on it now. Some cars are towed after a driver is arrested by Lawrence police, for an offense such as driving while intoxicated, he said. The cars are watched 24 hours a day, he said, so the service doesn't have a problem with cars being stolen from the lot, which is surrounded by a high fence with signs of "Keep Out" posted. Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking services, said recently that parking services requests that the service tow cars for violations, such as parking or in a fire lane, at a handicapped zone. If someone has excessive violations — five or more tickets — the parking officer places a wheel lock on the car, she said, so the person will have to take care of the tickets before using the car again. "A wheel lock is better for them because they don't have to go to North Lawrence to get their car," Hultine said. The students must fill out a release form to get the wheel lock removed or to get the car out of storage. Over the last fiscal year, the University had 57 excessive violations and 345 offenders in other categories. She said towing from a handicapped zone was at the discretion of the officer, unless parking services received a complaint. Lt. Jeanne Longaker, of the KU police department, said the police occasionally called the service to tow. "It's not something we do every day," she said. Complete range of services THE GREAT Shampoos Highlighting Haircuts Braiding Blowdry/style Styling Permanent wave Henna Color Manicures Retouch color Nail sets WATERS S Professional Hair Styling Free Consultation Tanning Memberships 841-5499 $ 20 $ 75 $120 2338 Alabama 1 month 6 months One year Bring in this ad and receive $5 Off shampoo, haircut and blowdrying or permits, highlighting and tanning memberships Open: Mon.-Sat. YOU'VE BEEN NEEDED 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Walk-Ins Always Welcome Left to right; Ann, Denise, Berniece, Nancy, Antonio First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A man is sitting on a rock and trying to light a fire. THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. A duck is swimming in the water. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Sneak attac Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. The letter, written by Hinman's attn. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff A dog carefully paddlec Player Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Two football players will arguments at a hearing told that the College of Liberal Sciences interpreted the satisfactory progress rule to give them any chance of be able to play this season, course. According to documents tailback Lynn Williar linebacker Dane Griffin in County District Court on 7 the players also say that once lege decided how it was goh terpetre the rule, the College wrong criteria to determir status. The court documents a players' response to the University for dismissal of the caon Oct. 8. The University al for a change of venue at the asking that the case be m Douglas County. The players had filed suit in the University Sept. 19 after declared inelegible for nplying with the satisfactory prule. The National Collegiate Association established the sa Faced with a Michigan judge prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the I Louisville unless it also plays the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an Athletic Depart said yesterday. Official By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Gary Hunter, assistant athlet said no final decision had been in Athletic Department officials m ploring their options. "However, it appears now that playing either Detroit or Louisv StudEx a By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff The Student Senate Exec Committee last night approver same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. Student Senate elections will as scheduled. StudEx rejected the seat distri- tion, the first time because numbers were based on enrolin- g in University schools on Oct rather than on the official 20th- enrollment figures that the Uni- ty used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx, last night. See related story The 20th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Univers. They are used in figuring the Univ sity's budget. David Day, Elections Commit Review The Led Zeppelin Saga HAMMER OF THE GODS Music from the band's albums and live performances Richard Rodgers Led Zeppelin book tells of group's trek to fame By Mike Snider Kansan Magazine writer If you have a whole lotta love for Led Zeppelin's music, this book is for you. for you. Or maybe you prefer that the group just rambles on. Well, this book has something for you, too. "HAMMER OF THE GODS: The Led Zeppelin Saga," (Morrow, $15.95), by Stephen Davis, chronicles the rise and fall of one of history's most popular heavy metal band. The book, currently available only in hardback, holds a place on the latest New York Times Non-Fiction Best Sellers list. Led Zeppelin, which guitarist Jimmy Page assembled in 1968, consisted of Page, John Paul Jones, bass guitar and keyboard, Robert Plant, lead singer, John Bonham, drummer and pianoist in a role in the music business when Bonham died in 1980. Davis, who has worked as a reporter for Rolling Stone magazine. The New York Times and the Boston Globe, told how the four musicians came together, first as the New Yardbirds and later as Led Zeppelin members. The wild sex orgasms account of the social conflicts and business of the group's many tours. Even though Davis begins the book with Jimmy Page's birth in 1943, it is the group's rise and occupation of the music world's pinnacle, beginning in 1973, that makes the book interesting. But problems arise with Davis' continuous immunoends to the group's supposed pact with the devil. He says in the book "Epistle to the Apostle" that he vehemently bent Page and the group had sold their souls to Satan. group has said that the groupies, who wouldn't allow their names to be used, said Jones' refusal to use the group's Well, that's all interesting speculation. Sure, the group used symbols and referred to magic and the occult in their music. But Page doesn't have his say in this book, so I can't buy the fact that he was the sorcerer's apprentice. pact with the devil brought the group bad luck, including the deaths of Bonham and Plant's son. For instance, in the book Davis tells of Page's thoughts on the group's first jam session: "Four of us got together in this room and started playing. Then we knew. We started laughing from relief or from the knowledge that we could groove together." But I think most people who grew up with and still listen to Led Zeppelin and their music will read this for the fun of it, listening to the band, and it informs the reader about the creative musical process. If you don't like the band and want another reason to hate them, read this book. It contains enough graphic accounts of decadence to turn your stomach and make you yearn for your Air Supply albums. Whatever the shortcomings, the book capsules the British music scene of the 1960s, a vibrant time when sparkled and blinked out ill starry. It is ridiculous to take Davis' word as gospel. He doesn't include the surviving band members' opinions on the issue of black magic. Instead, he bashes his hints of Page's magical dabblings on nameless testimonies, newspaper articles and magazine accounts. groove together. I enjoyed reading about how a supergroup like Zeppelin put it all together. But that's all I'm buying. You'll enjoy this book if wishing Chage, Plant and Jones play "Whola Lotta Love" and "Stairway to Heaven" on the Live! screen. Then send your shivers up your spine, for what in and what should ever be. Rumor of Kansas skiing once true By Theresa Scott By Theresa Scott Kansan Magazine writer There have been whispers on campus about it for years, but not many people know anything about it. Many doubt that it ever even existed. These doubters can't be blamed for not believing the rumors. Downhill snow skiing in Kansas seems improbable, but before 1980 Lawrence had what could have been one of the finest ski areas in the Midwest, a former owner and manager of the resort said recently. Kansan Magazine blue Mount. a 230-foot peak five miles southeast of Lawrence, is the highest point in Kansas. The mount's north face was developed into the Mount Blue ski resort in 1955. The slopes, which were opened in 1900, feature a snowy ground and augmenting system used to augment the winter weather. In its hiyad, the resort had a T-bar rope tow, a ski school taught by a former Czech Olympian, a ski shop, snack店 and a fireside lounge. It had a 140-foot advanced skiing course, 250 foot training slope, Mt. Blue at 250 feet and 400 people on snow weekends and even had its own telephone number for snow reports. patrick Rapp, who owned and managed Mt. Blue during its last year, said the economy and the weather caused the demise of the ski resort. Rapp said climate patterns in Kansas had changed during the last few years so winters were not strong enough for good skiing and for him to earn a profit. resist. He closed it during the recession because of high interest rates. "Rapp said, 'Also, there was not much snow. I'll never open it again.'" earn a profit. "The slope has to be opened about three to three and a half months for a profit," he said. prep. The last year that the slopes were open, skiing was possible for only four weeks, he said. He had intended to keep the runs open 24-hours a day, but the weather and economy made this impossible—of all other country skiing when there was not enough snow for downhill skiing. onWood! He said the ski slope wouldn't be too expensive because it would be too expensive to repair the lodge and the artificial snow-making machines. but not start an airplane. Happ said anyone running a ski resort in Kansas would have to be a "true farmer" because he would have to rely on the climate for good business. "The pipes are still there," he said. "And there are three ponds to make snow from, but they're obsolete and outdated. You would have to rip them out and start all over again." Cold temperatures on the weekend were needed to make the tons of man-made snow covering the slopes. To make artificial snow, below-freezing weather is a must, especially when weeksend when most people skied. However, artificial雪we were too keen to make enough artificial snow, Rapp said. When the weather and the market no longer made skiing a profitable business, Rapp said, he got out. business, HAPPY Arley Allen, Lawrence native and manager and general manager of Allen Press, 1041 New Hampshire St. said he had skied at Mt. Blue many times since it first opened in 1965. Colorado. "It was a great place for skiing on weekends to get ready for Colorado." Allen said. "It's a good place for those who had never skied to get used to it and for those who hadn't skied in "It was great," Allen said. "I have skied in Colorado and they are not comparable at all. It's a totally different situation. Kansas is not Colorado." a while to get their legs under them" "Everybody that came out really enjoyed it," he said. "But the climate wouldn't allow it." beginner, "It was also a nice way to get out doors in winter instead of being huddled around a TV all the time." a white to get their legs under. In 1970 it was reported that 75 percent of the skiers on the hill were beginners. --before and after all KU home basketball games. THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER Programs Personal Concerns Books and Periodicals Financial Aid Information Herscope Newsletter Career Information Resume Writing Our purpose is to provide information, support, advocacy and programs leading to more equitable treatment of and regard for all human beings. 218 Strong Open 8-12,1-5 864-3552 --before and after all KU home basketball games. Becerros MEXICAN Becerros MEXICAN Come Have Fun at Becerros Watch the replay on our 21" TV. We'll keep the kitchen open late! 2515 W. 6th 841-1323 --- First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. Sneak attac A dog carefully paddled Two football players will arguments at a hearing to that the College of Liberal Sciences interpreted the satisfactory progress rule to give them any chance of be able to play this season, course. Player According to documents tailback Lynn Willia linebacker Dane Griffin in County District Court on the players also say that on lege decided how it was g terpetrol the rule, the Colleg wrong criteria to deter status. The players had filed the University Sept. 19 were declared inelegible plying with the satisfacti rule. The court documents players' response to the U motion for dismissal of the on Oct. 8. The University for a change of venue at asking that the case be Douglas County. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff The National Collegiate Association established Offici By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Faced with a Michi prohibits the men's playing a game wil Louisville unless it it the University of Del play neither, an Athle said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assi said no final decision Athletic Department ploring their options. "However, it appea playing either Detroit StudJ Student Senate e as scheduled. By Bonnie Sny Of the Kansan st The Student Committee last m same Senate seat rejected last week See related store implementation the first numbers were b in University rather than on enrollment figure used, Tony StudEx, said la The 20th-day official enrolm They are used in sity's budget. See related story David Day, Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge 20 Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the committee. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff The letter, written by Hinman's at. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1881. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. Kansan Magazine Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Rallies today contrast with those of past years The protests and rallies of today on the steps of Strong Hall ring of divestment and anti-aparheid. EP. 1420. Protestors stage peaceful demonstrations against racial segregation. And if necessary, they are led willingly and quietly away by police. Fifteen years ago, local protests weren't made of the stuff they are today. Fifteen years ago, a city rocking was a city rocking with segregation, shootings, snipers and arson. And the violence. And the University of Kansas was a campus noted for unrest, as the curfews and Chicago Seven activist Abbie Hoffman at Allen Field House. Arlen Field Hill. Although the demonstration at which four people died at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio made headlines, Kansas received its share of controversy. The M The May 1970 issue of Time magazine ran a picture of police spraying mace at student at Lawrence High School, 2017 Loma slain St. who were rioting outside the article lead with, "Violence is no stranger to Lawrence, a community of 40,000 The article told of a town "churning with violence." During the tension-filled month of April 1970, flames lit the sky, gunshots crackled in the night air and police and National Guardsmen patrolled the streets of the town. A fire at the Kansas Union on April 20, 1970 caused $2,000,000 in damages. Officials determined the cause to be arson. The arsonist was never apprehended. Each loss is worth $10,000. Early in May, arsonists bit again, this time at Haworth Hall, and a bomb failed to explode in a bank near campus. A week later, a fire, set by a firebomb, gutted a Lawrence furniture store. Snipers shot at firemen who came to fight a fire in an off-campus building. April 13 and 14, 1970 — Fourteen black students at Lawrence High School, aided by members of KU's Black Student Union, seized high school administrative offices for the afternoon. They demanded the hiring of two black teachers and teachers aides, selection of a black homecoming queen and the addition of black studies courses. Students voted 924 to 167 not to accept the blacks' demand for the selection of black cheerleaders. April 15 — Violence broke out because of resentment. About 150 black youths — some armed with clubs and chains, gathered in Veterans Park, across the street from the school. They rushed Lawrence High, breaking 21 windows and overwhelming security guards before police reinforcements drove them back with mace and tear gas. April 16 - Central Junior High School, 1400 Massachusetts St., was evacuated because of a bomb scare. Black students at West Junior High, 2700 Harvard Rd., re-requested a meeting with the principal. The principal turned the students down, saying it would be "impropriate." "appropriate." Racial tension prompted 30 parents to withdraw their children from Central. Teachers were stationed at the doors of the school to control the students. 图 April 22 — Gov. Robert Docking declared a state of public emergency. Twenty-five city troopers and 242 National Guardmen were enriched to help fatigued local police enforce an 8 p.m. to 6 m. curfew. Phone lines were overloaded. KU student body was obeyed. David Awbrey was arrested for breaking curfew, and was sentenced to $125 and six months in jail. April 23 - Seven fire-bombings or attempted fire-bombings were reported. Boards painted black and studded with nails were put across roadways to slow police. May 1, 1970 — President Richard Nixon told Pentagon officials of his dislike for "these bums blowing up campuses." May 11 — The cost of disturbances to the city was reported at by Rocks and Rain. During the night, a large group rushed Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers' house, breaking a window with a rock. Fire bombs were hurled at the home of District Court Judge Frank Gray. Fires were set at laundromats and apartments. May 4 - Four people died and 11 were wounded during a demonstration at Kent State. $21,000 for security and overtime. July 13 — Harry "Nick" Rice, 18, a Leawood freshman, was shot and killed during a confrontation between Lawrence police and a group of young people in the 1200 block of Oread Avenue. Another student was shot. Witnesses said police threw tear gas at people trying to set a car fire after the crowd ran out of the Rock Chalk Cafe, 618. W 12th St. It isn't known whether police or a sniper fired the fatal shot. July 16 — KU freshman Donald Rick Dowdell, 19, was killed by a police officer after a car chase. He was pursued by police after leaving the Afro House, a black culture center. He and a friend had gone to the center after a shooting incident in the predominantly black area of east Lawrence. July 17 — Snipers' gunfire rang through the city. Police cars were damaged by rvcs and bricks. Duggar July 18-19 - Police used tear gas to disperse a rock-throwing crowd after trash fires were set in the street. Arrests were made for ag-. gravated assault, carrying concealed weapons and possession of marijuana. Neither school nor law officials could explain the sudden outbreak of violence that year. Kansas had no recent history of radical activity. Blacks were so outnumbered that there had been little serious racial trouble in the past. "There was an awful lot of excitement during that time." Lee Young, professor of journalism, said recently. "Quite a lot of the students really were concerned about racial problems and Vietnam, but there were also a lot along for the ride." Young, who was acting dean of the School of Journalism during the violence, said what stood out most in his mind about the turbulent times when he was in New York. "I was at a meeting of publishers and deans in New York," Young said. "I got a call at a sit in the morning about the Union burnning down." Young said he then rushed to the lobby of the hotel and picked up a copy of the New York Daily News. "On the cover of the paper was the scene at Lawrence High, and inside was the story of the fire," he said. He returned to Lawrence. He said groups of students and faculty members took shifts guarding campus buildings. "We guarded the buildings all night for about a week," Young said. Students and Faculty make the difference at Nabil's Restaurant Nabil's KU students get a 10% discount on Sunday nights with KUID. 9th & Iowa Open 1/4 a.m.-2 p.m. Hillcrest Shopping Center 5 p.m.-10 p.m. For parties of 5 or more, please call for reservations 841-7236 MI CO Students and Faculty make the difference at Nabil's Restaurant Nabil's KU students get a 10% discount on Sunday nights with KUD. 9th E. Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center Open 11 a.m. 2 p.m. 5 p.m. 10 p.m. For parties of 5 or more, please call for reservations 841-7226. RISSMAN LIQUORS —Chilled Wine Selection —Case Lot Discounts —1302 W. 6th—East of Dillons, Next to Jayhawk Gas. 843-1301 We've got the BIGGEST & THE BEST at Yello Sub 624 W. 12th 841-3268 MTB 85 RISSMAN LIQUORS —Chilled Wine Selection —Case Lot Discounts —1302 W. 6th—East of Dillons, Next to Jayhawk Gas. 843-1301 We've got the BIGGEST & THE BEST at Yello Sub 624 W. 12th 841-3268 SINCE 1889 First night A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A man with a stick in his hand stands in front of a fire. THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. Sneak attack A dog carefully padded Players By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff The players had filed suit in the University Sept. 19 after declared inelegible for mlying with the satisfactory prule. According to documents tailback Lynn Williart linebacker Dane Griffin in County District Court on 7 the players also say that once lege decided how it was goh terpule the rule. The College wrong criteria to determir status. Two football players will arguments at a hearing tod that the College of Liberal Sciences interpreted the satisfactory progress rule to give them any chance of be able to play this season, course. The National Collegiate Association established the ss The court documents a players' response to the Univ motion for dismissal of the ca on Oct. 8. The University at at the venue at the asking that the case be me Douglas County. Faced with a Michigan judge prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the U Louisville unless it also plays the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an Athletic Depart said yesterday. By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Gary Hunter, assistant athlete said no final decision had been in Athletic Department officials ploring their options. "However, it appears now that playing either Detroit or Louisvi Official StudEx The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff The letter, written by Hinnons, at Student Senate elections will g as scheduled. Phelps said that Himan filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. The Student Senate Exec Committee last night approved same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. David Day, Elections Commit See related story The 200th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Univers. They are used in figuring the Univ's budget. StudEx rejected the seat distrion the first time because numbers were based on enrolin in University schools on Oct. rather than on the official 2014-enrollment figures that the Univy used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx, said last night. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Kansan Magazine 21 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST M FREE DELIVERY 842-1212 All You Need To Know About Pizza! Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-1 a.m. 1601 W. 23rd — SOUTHERN HILLS MALL EASY AS 1 SINGLE 1 PIZZA Our Small 2 DOUBLE 2 PIZZAS Our Medium 3 TRIPLE 3 PIZZAS Our Large MENU WE FEATURE THE UNIVERSAL SIZE PIZZA—10 INCHES, 6 SLICES, FEEDS ONE TO TWO PEOPLE. STANDARD CHEESE A HAND FASHIONED CRUST WITH A GENEROUS TOPPING OF TOMATO SAUCE AND CHEESES. 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Pepsi or Diet Pepsi 25¢ ALL PRICES INCLUDE SALES TAX TOPPINGS PEPPERONI ITALIAN SAUSAGE GROUND BEEF HAM ANCHOVIES PIEAPPLE EXTRA CHEESE MUSHROOMS ONIONS GREEN PEPPERS BLACK OLIVES GREEN OLIVES SLICED TOMATOES JALAPENOS “NO COUPON SPECIALS” Monday Munchies 1—Single 1—Topping 1—Pepsi $4.00 Tuesday Two-Fers 2—Singles 2—Toppings 2—Pepsi's $8.00 Sunday Super Special 2—Super Shuttles 2—Pepsi's $10.00 Valuable Coupons PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY $1¥00 OFF Any Double Pizzas 842-1212 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY $2¥00 OFF Any Triple Pizzas 842-1212 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY $1¥00 OFF Any Lunch Pizza 11a.m.-4p.m. 842-1212 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY $5¥00 OFF Any Single Pizza 842-1212 NAME_ ADDRESS_ DATE_ PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY $1.00 OFF Any Double Pizzas 842-1212 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY $2.00 OFF Any Triple Pizzas 842-1212 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY $1.00 OFF Any Lunch Pizza 11a.m.-4p.m. 842-1212 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY 50¢ OFF Any Single Pizza 842-1212 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 4.6 2017.11.19 First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV 7, 1985, VOL 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) THE BIG MAN Cool Details page 3. Sneak attac A dog carefully paddles Two football players will arguments at a hearing told that the College of Liberal Sciences interpreted the satisfactory progress rule to give them any chance of be able to play this season, course show. Player According to documents tailback Lynn Williarr linebacker Dane Griffin in County District Court on T the players also say that once lege decided how it was goid in the College wrong criteria to determir status. The players had filed suit to the University Sept. 19 aftewere declared ineligible for mplying with the satisfactory prule. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff The court documents a players' response to the Univ motion for dismissal of the caon Oct. 8. The University al for a change of venue at the asking that the case be me Douglas County. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge The National Collegiate Association established the s A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Faced with a Michigan jug just prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the Louisville unless it also play the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an athletic Dept said yesterday. By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Gary Hunter, assistant as said no final decision had bee Athletic Department official ploring their options. Official The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the State Department of R.S.C. chairman of the committees. "However, it appears now I playing either Detroit or Lou Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Student Senate elections was scheduled. The Student Senate Es Committee last night appri same Senate seat distributi rejected last week. StudEx StudEx rejected the seat tion the first time been numbers were based on eni in University schools on rather than on the official' enrollment figures that the U used, Tony Arnold, chair StudEx. said last night. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff The 30th-day figures report official enrollment of the Un They are used in figuring the city's budget. David Day, Elections Cor The letter, written by Hinmen's at Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. See related story Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Kansan Magazine Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. 22 One man's junk furnishes another's apartment Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 By Susie Bishop Kansan Magazine writer Little money lingers in most students' bank accounts to furnish bare and lifeless apartments and bring for tuition, books, rent and food. But with just a little imagination, a comfortable apartment can be achieved on even the strictest of budgets. Each semester many seniors graduate and leave their campus corners and treasures to seek a new life in the working world. to make her attic corner into a pleasant place to reside. Breitenstein said she had applied coats of paint to the floor and put a bright carpet on the floor. Those students remaining at the University of Kansas have a chance to find new living quarters and amusements in mishaps for their private palaces. She said the bold yellow and white decor helped eliminate the feeling that she was living in an attic Lisa Breitenstein, Overland Park junior, shares an old house with three other roommates on Ohio Street. She lives in a two-story apartment fixing up her room in the attic. "A lot of times, people are moving out after graduation and are looking to get rid of their things." Neal Pfeiffer, Lenexa senior, said recently. Household decorations travel in circles from one student to the next, Susan Welling, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, said. Several items in her apartment came from students who left the University for some The fun, and sometimes frustrating part of decorating comes after the basic furniture is put in its place. For the rest of the house, Breitensien said it took about a month for her and her roommates to satisfy the furnishing needs of the house. Welling said, "When we buy it, we're just taking other students' junk." "We put a porch swing up for a special touch," she said. Many students said the majority of their furniture, dishes and wall hangings were provided from leftovers and other pantry items that had stored in basements or cities. Garage sales offer plenty of bargains for the deal-seeking student, but he should be aware that customers are much jank as they do bargainants. The resulting collage of furniture styles and colors mixes the most contemporary with the sometimes prehistoric. But the lack of a strict decorating scheme enhances, not detracts, the appeal of the apartment. Creative students won't let a low budget hamper their desire to make four plain walls into places that reflect their styles and interests. Breitenstein said the parch swing was free, too. She found it in her parent's house. "Whenever there is a garage sale, we can't pass it up," Welling said. "We just keep collecting stuff." Great buys usually don't come knocking at the door, Angrisano said. "We went to a couple of garage sales, but we didn't find anything," he said. "But we didn't really make an effort either." Local stores offer many ideas for decorating; some can be costly. Students who plan ahead can find great deals at any time of the year. Students going to Padre Island during spring break can take a short junt across the border into Mexico and find all sorts of trinkets to brighten up dull apartments at reasonable prices. Mexican blankets on the floor or the wall make a colorful addition to a room with old, yellowing lehcanon or bamboo mats. You can also bamboo mats can do the same thing. Mark Cerney, SUA staff member, said about 40 students had taken advantage of the library this year. Of course, posters also are a great way to solve the dingy wall problem. Every semester, Student Union Accommodations paint paintings to students for small fees. The Picture Lending Library rents framed pictures to students for 75 cents to $7.50 a semester, depending on their value. At the beginning of each semester the library has an exhibit of all the pictures. After the show, students still may rent the pictures, but they won't have good of a selection as before, Cerney said. "All the good stuff is taken, but they can still rent them." he said. they can sit rent them, he said. Bare floors are easy to dress up, too. Some students said they had seen checkerboard carpets gracing apartment floors. The floor covering is made of taped carpet squares from local rug shops. After the bare floor is conquered, the next problem is that annoying bright bare light bulb in the room. It will be corrected and corrected quickly and inexpensively. One inexpensive idea is to buy a Japanese paper lantern to cover the light bulb. The color of the paper See FURNISH, p. 23, col. 1 R Downtown Lawrence Put Yourself in our Shoes priority: PUMPS What's the most important footwear shape this season? Pumps. And what are the most important pumps to have? Fantares. priority: DRAPING fanfares ...says it all priority: VERGATILITY priority: THE SASH OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-5:00 McCall's Shoes priority: WALKABILITY priority: CONTOUPS --- SINCE 1889 First night A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Wilderness Cool Details page 3. Sneak attack A dog carefully paddled The court documents a players' response to the Univ motion for dismissal of the caon Oct. 8. The University al for a change of venue at the asking that the case be mi Douglas County. According to documents tailback Lynn Williar linebacker Dane Griffin in County District Court on T the players also say that once leged decided how it was got terperet the rule, the College wrong criteria to determi status. The players had filed suit in the University Sept. 19 after declared ineligible for nplying with the satisfactory prule. The National Collegiate A Association established the s Player Official By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Faced with a Michigan judge, prohibits the men's basketball play a game with the T Louisville unless it also plays the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an Athletic Departs said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assistant athlete said no final decision had been in Athletic Department officials is ploring their options. "However, it appears now that playing either Detroit or Louisv StudEx By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge The Student Senate Execx Committee last night approved same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. Student Senate elections will as scheduled. The 20th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Univers. They are used in figuring the University's budget. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff StudEx rejected the seat distrition the first time because numbers were based on enrolm in University schools on Oct. rather than on the official 201h+ enrollment figures that the Univ used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx. said last night. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. See related story David Day, Elections Commit The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1881. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. The letter, written by Himmons, n Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. Furnish Continued from p. 22 helps diffuse the light and give the room a softer look. If more light is needed, a bare bulb and cord can be entwined in a bamboo shade. The makeshift lamp shades and lanterns are available at most import stores, such as Pier I Import, 73 Massachusetts St. Imaginative students can find a use for almost anything. When Karen Campbell, Miltonville senior, was a freshman and living in a residence hall, she said she and her Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 roommate had used an old medicine cabinet as an extra mirror for the room. It also provided more shelf space for cosmetics and small items, Campbell said. Another innovative approach to the lack of storage space is to use the pop bottle crates that are divided into two-inch squares to store rolled-up socks. Book shelves appear like magic when bricks or concrete blocks are combined with wooden boards or leftover pieces of kitchen cabinet. covering the shelves with contact paper, paint or fabric helps a room obtain a finished look. Milk and produce crates help store sweaters, books and record albums. Wicker baskets for trash or dirty laundry can be picked up cheaply at sales, auctions or local shops. Some students in search of more floor space make hanging shelves by drilling four holes into pieces of wood Kansan Magazine 23 and then hanging them from ceilings with rope. with rope. Green plants make a big difference in the atmosphere of a room. Plants can be potted in just about anything — baskets, decorated tin cans, coffee mugs and juice pitchers. Besides garage sales and auctions, classified advertisements can be as good as a store's bargain basement. They offer a wealth of bargains. Steres, televisions, air conditioners, space heaters and refrigerators await purchase by the price conscious student. "There are a lot of good shops around town," Breitenstein said. "My roommate went to Everything But ice and bought a chair, a night stand and Venetian blinds for only $25." Everything But Ice, 618 Vermont St., advertises that it has anything a student might want or need to furnish his abode. Shine For the Holidays! Free manicure ($7 value) or With every Cellophane, Highlight or Color $10 off our Perm Package includes cut, condition and style offer expires December 31st, 1985 (Please mention this ad when making appointment.) Call today! 841-4488 A "Cut" Above The Rest 1341 Mass. open Mon.-Sat. Prime Cut Hair Co. Don't forget our King and Queen monthly contest. Enter today. BANSHEE BOMBER BY SIERRA WEST WITH THINSULATE SUNFLOWER 804 MASS. Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! Any way you want it, you can get it NOW, at.. 1618 West 23rd Street S Select from a variety of savoury dessert sandwiches, trapped with your favorite vegetable and spice served with sweet honey-baked sandwich with hot Sull Belt while or when not for you. For large appliances we get a 12' sub. More moderate drivers can vans or the b-garage, and we we include a bad we will include a key by us today! We open here 11 am until 2 am daily, and we will carry out for your convenience sided Sushi for our customers under 10. For most folks on the island, a compac- nious, nutritious pallet meal is, but there a wady of variety of shrimp, with a generous portion of potato baked beans, chips and chili, plus with drinks. milk or coffee Any way you want it...you did! AT SUB & STUFF SANDWICH SHOP... 1a 10u t't is rt — 1 Which came first? The chicken or the: (Please Mark One ) Pumpkin Pie Pumpkin Chiffon Pie Pumpkin Cream Cheese Pie 图示:羊脸被壳撞碎。 It really doesn't matter because Von at the harvest offers all four Don't fowl up your holidays, call and reserve your pies and breads TODAY! Apple, Dutch Apple, Brownie Pie, Blueberry, Pecan, Lemon Cake Pie, German Chocolate, Brown Velvet and Von's secret Carrot Gake Pie. All sandwiches are made on Harvest's homemade breads and croissants. HARVEST CAFE 8th & New Hampshire 842-6730 SINCE 1889 First night A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Cave Man THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. Sneak atta A dog carefully padc Two football players arguments at a hearing that the College of Lib Sciences interpreted satisfactory progress to give them any chance to play this season, show. Player By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff According to docum tailback Lynn Wi linebacker Dane Griff County District Court the players also say the Clerk torget the rule, the Cemrong criteria to de- status. The court documents players' response to the motion for dismissal on Oct. 8. The Univer for a change of venue asking that the case Douglas County. The players had fili the University Sept. were declared ineligible with the satisfa rule The National Colle Association establishe Offici By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Faced with a Michi prohibits the men's playing a game w Louisville unless it a the University of De played neither, an Athle said yesterday. 24 Gary Hunter, assa no final decision Athletic Department priorizing their options. "However, it appla- yed either Detroit Student Senate ele as scheduled. StudI StudEx rejected tion the first ten numerals were basi in University sch rather than on the enrollment figures, used. Tony Arn StudEx, last last n. The 20th-day fig official enrollment They are used in fi sit's budget. By Bonnie Snyd Of the Kansan sta The Student Se Committee last mig same Senate seat rejected last week See related story David Day, Elecuons Kansan Magazine Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the Board of Trustees of R.S.C., chairman of the committee. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in federal court, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and minor deficiencies for women and other minorities. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. MAZZIO'S PIZZA THE BEST. ANY WAY YOU SLICE IT. 1021 Massachusetts 2630 Iowa 843-8596 DINE IN OR CARRY OUT 843-1474 First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. Sneak attack A dog carefully paddled Player Gary Hunter, assistant athlete said no final decision had been in Athletic Department officials s ploring their options. Faced with a Michigan judge, prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the U Louisville unless it also plays the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an Athletic Depair said yesterday. The National Collegiate Association established the sa Two football players will arguments at a hearing to that the College of Liberal Sciences interpreted the satisfactory progress rule to give them any chance of be able to play this season, course show. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff The players had filed suit to the University Sept. 19 after were declared ineligible for mplying with the satisfactory prule. According to documents tailback Lynn Williar linebacker Dane Griffin in County District Court on T the players also say that once lege decided how it was goh terperet the rule, the College wrong criteria to determir status. "However, it appears now tha playing either Detroit or Louisvi The court documents a players' response to the Univotion for dismissal of the caon Oct. 8. The University alf for a change of venue at the asking that the case be me Douglas County. Official By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Student Senate elections will go as scheduled. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge StudEx a Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The Student Senate Execi Committee last night approved same Senate seat distribution rejected last week. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the committee. The letter, written by Hinman's at. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1891. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and other minorities for women and other minorities. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs; as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1892 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. See related story StudEx rejected the seat distri- tion the first time because numbers were based on enrollin in university schools on Oct. rather than on the official 201h- en enrollment figures that the Uni- vity used, Tony Arnold, chairman StudEx, said last night. The 20th-day figures represent official enrollment of the Univers They are used in figuring the University's budget. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. David Day, Elections Commit Kansan Magazine 25 Fishbone blends different styles Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 By a Kansan Magazine writer Ska-rock-reggae-postpunk-new wave-jazz band-band funk is a helluva long adjective, but it's one that aptly describes the style of Fishbone — as well as the California band can be described. Fishbone's energetic stage show and ethnic rock and roll sound has earned them plenty of attention in Los Angeles music circles. Fishbone earned a contract Columbia Records and an LP titled, what else, "Fishbone." truss. Whee! The band's freetic act should earn more attention when the band hits Lawrence on Tuesday to play Cogburs, 737 New Hampshire St. The music starts at 9 p.m. Tickets cost $5 in advance and are available at Cogburs, from Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity members or at CATS ticket outlets. The charge is $6 at the door. "It is a brand of ethnic rock and roll," said guitarist Kendall Ray Jones. "It has a lot to do with cross-cultural pollution. That is, it contains a lot of different musical styles." Fishbone may already have fans around these parts. The band has a music video, "(Modern Industry)" which is shown on TV 30. Drummer Fish, after whom the band was named,summed it up,saying, "Our music is like a mutt;it's The young band — members range in age from 17 to 19 — combine bits and pieces of all sorts of musical influences into a sound they call their own. made up of different things. But when it's put together, all these combine to make up our own sound." sound. Fishbone's members met in 1979 while being buses from their innery homes in Los Angeles to a junior high school in the suburban San Fernando Valley. The fledgling band took in members - they had as many as 16 at one time - and garnered different styles from the different backgrounds each member brought with him. "We were coming in from the inner-city and listening to one kind of music and then we would go out to the Valley and be exposed to more rock and roll and punk-type music." Jones said. "We were real young and inexperienced so we didn't know a band was supposed to follow guidelines. We didn't pay attention to any rules. "We just wanted to do it all . . . and we did." The band finally solidified into its present lineup: Fish; his brother John Norwood Fisher, bass; Jones; Angelo Christopher Moore, saxophone and vocals; Christopher Garden Dowd, trombone and keyboards; and Walter Adam Kibby II, trumpet. 秦始皇 By 1891, Fishbone was playing the Los Angeles club circuit under the name Megaron and the guidance of manager Roger Perry, who also had a hand in launching the team. They were the first to recognize the band to work in Coca-Cola commercials and then the recording contract. Aztec Inn Mexican and American Food Before or After the Game before or After the Game sk Shrimp Lobster Prime Rib Well Drinks & Margaritas $1.25 All day, Every day Public & Private Dining Club Open Late Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat 11:2 n.m. lunch 5:10 p.m. dinner Live Music I Live Luncheon Specials -Sat, 11-2 p.m. lunch; 5-10 p.m. dinner -Sun, 5-10 p.m. dinner Sat. 5-10 p.m. dinner 3520 W. 6th St. reciprocal with over 250 clubs 841-5646 189.572 189.416 11:45 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sun: 5-10 p.m, dinner PENDLETONS FLOWER&GIFT no at it as rt Mon, Tue Bell Hall Wed, Thur Stone Meadows Square + 600 Lawrence Avenue 841-6464 afs Fishbone: John Norwood Fisher, bass; Kendall Rey Jones, guitar; Angelo Christopher Moore, vocals and saxophone; Fish, drums; Christopher Gordon Dowd, trombone and keyboards and Walter Adam Kibby II, trumpet. WILLIAM & CURTIS PYRAMID PIZZA Salutes The Kansas Jayhawk Basketball Team * PYRAMID PETE PYRAMID PIZZA GO HAWKS! PYRAMID'S 3-2-1 Special $3 OFF any $3 OFF any Large Pizza w/3 Toppings $2 OFF any Medium Pizza w/2 Toppings Medium Pizza w/2 Toppings PYRAMID $1 OFF any Large Pizza w/1 Topping 14th & Ohio Under The Wheel 842-3232 We Pile It Ont Fees 11-10-85 FAST FREE DELIVERY Small Pizza with Toppings Expires 11-10-98 REMEMBER ALL YOU CAN EAT SUNDAYS AT PYRAMID! First night --- SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) SURVIVOR Cool Details page 3. Sneak at A dog carefully pa By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff The court docu players response to motion for dismiss on Oct. 8. The Univ for a change of ven asking that the cat Douglas County. Two football players arguments at a heart that the College of L Sciences interprets satisfactory progress give them any chance to play this season show. Playe According to doc tailbackLynn V linebacker Dane Gry County District Court the players also say lege decided how it rule the wrong criteria to a status. The players had ff the University Sept were declared ineligibly plying with the satis; rule. The National Col Association establisl Offic By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan sta Faced with a Mice prohibits the men's playing a game Louisville unless it the University of D play neither, an Ath said yesterday. Gary Hunter, said no final decision Athletic Department ploring their option "However, it appe playing either Detro Studl Student Senate e as scheduled. By Bonnie Sny Of the Kansan st See related story The Student S Committee last ni name Senate seat rejected last week. StudEx rejected tion the first ti- numbers were bade in University sch rather than on the enrolment figures used. Tony Aar StudEx, said last t The 200th-day fig official enrolment. They are used in fi- 26 David Day, Elc Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Kansan Magazine A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs; as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the Board of Regents of R.S.C., chairman of the committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The letter, written by Hinman's at- Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 Meat Puppets will play in Lawrence By a Kansan Magazine writer The style of music has been called a sort of "calmly demented country music," but this band also has been compared to punk groups. The Meat Puppets, an Arizona band that has twice played to sold-out shows in Kansas City, Mo., will try their brand of music on the Lawrence music crowd at 9 p.m. Saturday at the Lions' building, which is four miles east of Lawrence on East Street. Tickets are $5 and can be purchased at the door. The group has released three albums on the SST record label. Their latest, "Up On The Sun," was released in March. This release is a departure from the folkish punk of their previous albums. The band's first album, titled "Meat Puppets" was released in July 1982. England's New Musical Express called it one of the "most inventive demonstrations of the interplay between guitar, bass and drums." "Meat Puppets II," the group's second album, was also greeted with praise. It was given four stars by Rolling Stone magazine and named thirteenth-best album of the year by the Los Angeles Times when it was released in February 1984. . The group was formed in Phoenix, Ariz., in February, 1980. The band consists of Cirk Kurtwook, guitarist, drummer, bass and Derrick Bostrom, drums. They have kept Phoenix as their home because it is close to the desert. Many have associated their music with the desert, but the group claims that their only intention is to make "a fine piece of music." This Southwestern sound also is heard on the group's second album. Two songs that are particularly reminiscent of the desert are, "Aurora Borealis" and "I'm a Mindless Idol." The latest release has critics from all over the country singing praises. Kurt Loder, of Rolling Stone, calls the piece "one of the year's most compelling works." Richard Cromelin, from the Los Angeles Times, describes the group by saying, "The sound is tough and jagged, but somehow the Puppets make it pure and mellifluent. Joltingly intense and benignly playful, the Meat Puppets can be the find of the year." Gregg Turner, from New Musical Express, offered praise for the band's guitarist. He says, "Point a flashlight to the lightens on a noon moon night, and somewhere between them will beam light disintegrates and dies. Not so with the signal from the amp of Pupp's guitarist Curt Kirkwood." A The Meat Puppets: Curt Kirkwood, guitar, Cris Kirkwood, bass and Derrick Bostrom, drums. Develop your Homecoming Day memories KU Develop your Homecoming Day memories KU Megaphones KU Glassware KU Spoons KU Thimbles KU Jiggers KU Mugs 15% OFF KU SOUVENIRS DOWNTOWN 1107 Massachusetts 843-4435 Mon-Sat 9:00-10:00 HILLCREST 919 Iowa 843-8668 Mon-Sat 9:00-10:00 KU Christmas ornaments KU Playing cards KU Key chains KU Necklaces KU Rulers KU Decals OFFER EXPIRES exp. 11-13-85 ZERCHER PHOTO We Use Kodak PAPER the beautiful colors WEIS Kodak PAPER PAPER BAND GUILD Heaven Sent Balloon Co. We Deliver Surprises! KU Bouquet 1 metallic and 4 rubber balloons and a basket of candy MARIE only $12.50 includes delivery Hours: 10-5 M-Fri.-10-2 Sat. Deliveries any time by appointment We now carry Pendragon gifts 749-4341 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza We call 'em One Hour Photo's TEXAS WALLET PHOTOS You'll want 'em for great COLOR POSTERS! Pick your best shot and see it bright, beautiful and BIG! JR-Size (16" x 20"), reg. $24.95. $12.48! 50% OFF WITH THIS COUPON. ha no ut 't ps rt — 1 JR-Size (16" x 20"), reg $249.5 = $12.48; Big Daddy Size (30" x 30"), reg $295.5 = $14.98 JR-Size (*x* 20"), reg. $24.95 • $12,485 Pig Dadox *x* 10", reg. $14.95 Big Daddy Size (20" x 30"), reg. $29.95... $14.98! From 35mm negatives only. Interegn. or copy neg.. $3. No limit at any One Hour Photo Exp. 11-30-85 Not valid with other offers HC-11 YES, We have poster frames! Southern Hills Mall (841-7205) (841-7205) open Monday-Saturday 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. ONE-HOUR SERVICE SINCE 1889 First night A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) FIRE Cool Details page 3. Sneak attack ... A dog carefully paddled after a Players Two football players will press arguments at a hearing today say that the College of Liberal Arts a Sciences interpreted the NC satisfactory progress rule too late give them any chance of being able to play this season, court reco show. According to documents filed tailback Lynn Williams in linebacker Dane Griffin in John County District Court on Tuead the players also told that once the defense interprets the rule, the College used wrong criteria to determine U status. The players had filed suit agi the University Sept. 19, after were declared ineligible for not plying with the satisfactory prop rule. The court documents are players' response to the University motion for dismissal of the case, on Oct. 8. The University also sent a venue at that it asked that the case be moved Douglas County. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff The National Collegiate All Association established the sat Faced with a Michigan judge prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the Louisville unless it also play the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an Athletic Depa said yesterday. By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Gary Hunter, assistant at said no final decision had been Athletic Department official ploring their options. Official "However, it appears now I playing either Detroit or Louis StudEx By Bonnie Snyder of the Kansan staff Student Senate elections as scheduled. The Student Senate B Committee last night appa same Senate seat distrib rejected last week. David Day, Elections The 20th-day figures reflect official enrollment of the They are used in figuring sitv's budget. StudEx rejected the seation the first time beed numbers were based on e in University schools or rather than on the official enrollment figures that they used, Tony Arnold, chl StudEx, said last night. See related story Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs", as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the University of B.C. R.S.C., chairman of the committee. The letter, written by Hinman's attorney, Fred W. Phelps Jr., Topeka, said she nominated the nomination Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending, has been criticized by KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. "Myra feels that Deanell Tacha has been a full-time employee who unused because she was put Homecoming Continued from p. 13 The first homecoming queen, surrounded by 50 members of the Jay Janes, a women pep club, received a bouquet of flowers from then Gov. Ald Landon, who the played "Let Me Call You Sweetheart." The method for selecting a homecoming queen took different paths through the years. The first few years, the queen nominies served as hostesses for the opposing football team and sat with them during the game. The queen was chosen by KU football players The student body picked the homecoming queen for the first time in 1964. The last time a queen was chosen is a group of male students chosen by the school's culinary tea for the candidates. The finalists and the winner were picked Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 by a panel of University judges, none of whom were students. The Homecoming queen tradition became tanged in racial controversy in the 1960s. No black candidates were allowed. In 1967, the Black Student Union petitioned to be allowed to have a black homecoming queen crowned along with the traditional queen. The homecoming committee refused to allow the black queen to be crowned during halftime, but agreed to have the BSU queen named before the game. The tradition of crowning a queen was abandoned in 1970. The replacement that year was the presentation to James Koevigen, professor of botany. The seniors had begun giving the award to "Honor the most Kansan Magazine Outstanding Progressive Educator in 1959. Neuer said that although many traditions had been abandoned during the turbulent '60s, the deserted traditions could be resumed. The deserted tradition in the homecoming parade is an indication of changing times, she said. "Someday, the crowning of a queen may return." Neuner said. UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY EAGLE CENTER Your Party Deserves the Best! A winning tradition with KU students for 13 years. 27 Call now for your Homecoming Celebration. CORPORATE COACH P C CHAUFFEUR DRIVEN LIMOSINES For Any Occasion - Birthdays - Formals - Pleasure - Weddings (Special Package Available) AIRPORT SERVICE LUXURY SEDANS - Door to Door Service - Groups or Singles ANYTIME Day or Night 841-LIMO (24 HRS.) Today Thru Sunday Only "FALL SALE" LEVI CORDUROY JEANS $1699 - Limited Time Only - Regularly.$21.99 - Straight Leg or Boot Cut LEVI'S OPEN LATE THURSDAY EVENING TILL 8:30 SUNDAYS 12-5 Hurry And Save GUY'S LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS 20% OFF Arrow * Campus * Levi * Etc. GUY'S SWEATERS 20% OFF Campus * London Fog * Arrow * Etc. GAL'S SWEATERS 20% OFF Woolrich * Santa Cruz * Etc. JACKETS BY WOOLRICH 20% OFF 740 Massachusetts - Guys or Gals KING of Jeans 843-3933 First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) 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 Cool Details page 3. Sneak attac A dog carefully paddle Player By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Two football players arguments at a hearing to that the College of Liber Sciences interpreted satisfactory progress rigors give them any chance of ble to play this season, or show. According to document tailback Lynn Will linebacker Diane Griffin County District Court or the players also say that lege decided how it was judged and wrong criteria to dete- status. The court document players' response to the motion for dismissal of U on Oct. 8. The Universi- for a change of venue for a case by B. Douglas County. The players had filed the University Sept. 1 were declared ineligible plying with the satisfact rule. The National College Association established Offici By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Faced with a Michigan prohibits the men's play by playing a game with Louisville unless it all the University of Detre play neither, an Athletic said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assist said no final decision he Athletic Department & ploring their options. "However, it appear playing either Detroit StudE By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Student Senate elec as scheduled. The Student Sen Committee last night same Senate seat di rejected last week. See related story David Day, Elect StudEx rejected the first time numbers were based in University school rather than on the o enrollment figures they used, Tony Arnol StudEx, said last night. The 20th-day figure official enrollment of They are used in figu- sity's budget. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the editor of The Journal of R.S.C. R.S.C., chairman of the committee. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs; as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The letter, written by Hinman's attorney, Fred W. Phelps Jr., Topeka. 28 Kansan Magazine Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1881. The lawsuit, which is pending in the S. District Court in Topeka, criticized the suit's inclusion promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Wednesday, Nov. 6. 1985 Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. "Myra feels that Deanell Tacha has been a full-time employee who Pursuit of the trivial is multimillion dollar business United Press International NEW YORK — Even rabid players of Trivial Pursuit are not likely to know the name of the first French whisky or how many mailboxes there are at the Tokyo Disneyland They would have to travel to France and Japan to find versions of the game that explain the first French whiskey was called Binou and there are 10 mailboxes in Japan's Magic Kingdom. That's because the trivia in Trivial Pursuit, which has sold a whopping 35 million copies since its introduc- four years ago in Canada, are changed for each new country it enters, although everything else about it remains the same. Trivial Pursuit's manufacturers, Horn Abbot Ltd, hire journalists who hastily leaf through reference books to find regional trivia, preferably facts that have a humorous twist to them. In Australia, where Trivial Pursuit has sold more quickly than in any other country in the world, game players are asked where a Vietnamese sticks his dong. The answer: "In the bank." In the British edition, one card asks what the operator at Buckingham Palace says to the queen when her mother telephone her. The answer is — no kidding — "Your majesty, your majesty, your majesty." Chris Haney, 38, one of the three Canadians who created the game, said Trivial Pursuit is, or will soon be, available in 28 countries, including China, where all the questions are approved by the Communist Party. Sometimes the humor is decidedly dark. A question in the Japanese set asks about the success rate of kamikaze pilots during World War II. The game, which is called Trivial Pursuit in every market except for Quebec (where it is known as Quelques Arpent de Pègle), is the first Western game to be sold in China, he said. Although the profit margin is slim in most communist countries, Haney said he and his partners wanted to sell the game in the Soviet Union "more than any other country, as a point of principle." "We want to be truly worldwide and we won't be until we get into the East bloc," he said. "We want to do it for the fun of it." In the meantime, he is enjoying the millions he has made from Trivial Pursuit and exploring new ways to make millions more, such as Trivial Pursuit calendars, towels, stationery and other merchandise. He's also learning on telling the story of how he, his brother John, and Scott Abbott created the game and their company. Horn Abbot, in an MTV movie to be called "Horsesmothers. The Trivial Purse Story." --- Get Your Act Together! Shop at The Palace. THE ALTERNATIVE CARD SHOP The Palace GIFTS ♥ CARDS M-S 9:30-5:30 Thur. 9:30-8:30 6th and Mass. 843-1099 Get Your Act Together! Shop at The Palace. THE ALTERNATIVE CARD SHOP DOS HOMBRES Tues. 1.00 Well Drinks open to close Wed. 1.50 Margaritas open to close Thurs. 1.00 Mexican Beer open to close Monday Night All You Can Eat Tacos 4.25 Taco and Tostada Buffet 11-3 Sun. & Sat., 3.95. 4-9 Sun., Tue., Wed., 4.50 Banquet Facilities Delivery 5p.m. to 10 p.m. Sun. thru Thurs. Great Mexican Food & Even Better Margaritas 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 DOS HOMBRES Tues. 1.00 Well Drinks open to close Wed. 1.50 Margaritas open to close Thurs. 1.00 Mexican Beer open to close Monday Night All You Can Eat Tacos 4.25 Taco and Tostada Buffet 11-3 Sun. & Sat.,3.95, 4-9 Sun.,Tue.,Wed.,4.50 Banquet Facilities Delivery 5p.m. to 10 p.m. Sun. thru Thurs. Great Mexican Food & Even Better Margaritas 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) A man sits by a campfire. Cool Details page 3. Jim Sneak attack A dog carefully paddled after a Two football players will press arguments at a hearing today say that the College of Liberal Arts a Sciences interpreted the NC satisfaction progress rule too late give them any chance of being able to play this season, court reco show. According to documents filed tailback Lynn Williams a linebacker Dane Griffin in John County District Court on Tuesday the players also say that once the league decided how it was going to terpter the rule, the College used wrong criteria to determine its status. The court documents are players' response to the University motion for dismissal of the case, on Oct. 8. The University also for a change of venue at that t asking that the case be move Douglas County. The players had filed suit ag the University Sept. 19 after were declared ineligible for not plying with the satisfactory pro rule. The National Collegiate At Association established the sat Players Official By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Faced with a Michigan judge prohibits the men's basketball playing a game with the Louisville unless it also plays the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an Athletic Depa said yesterday. "However, it appears now I playing either Detroit or Loui Gary Hunter, assistant aid said no final decision had beer Athletic Department officials ploring their options. StudEx By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Student Senate elections as scheduled. The Student Senate B Committee last night app same Senate seat distrib rejected last week. Soe related story StudEx rejected the sea tion the first time bee numbers were based on e in University schools or rather than on the officia enrollment figures that the ty used, Tony Arnold, ch StudEx, said last night. The 20th-day figures report official carolishment of the They are used in figuring city's budget. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs; as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail today to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., chairman of the committee. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff David Day, Elections Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The letter, written by Hinman's attorney, Fred W. Phelps Jr., Topea, said she opposed the nomination Phelps said that Himman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. "Myra feels that Deanell Tacha has been a full-time employee who has advanced because she was put Continued from p. 15 keep up to date (on firefighting techniques and information) and clean the trucks." Jim Sloan, the shift mechanic, said he spent most of his extra time studying for tests and watching television, although his mechanic job keeps him very busy. Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 "There's not enough time to do everything," he said. "I have a list of stuff all the time that I need to catch up with." vestigation office. He said he spent about 45 minutes filling out forms for each 25-minute fire. Crossman said he spent most of his time doing paper work in the in- "The legal system requires piles of paperwork as well as the paperwork we do here." Crossman said. "I spend one hour at lunch and one hour in the doing it." The firefighters take their lunch break from 11:30 a.m. to 1 o.p.m. in the day room at the station. The day room is really two rooms. One is kitchen with a stereo, microwave, two refrigerators, a large stove and oven and a dining room table. The other is a carpeted living room with a couch, lounge chairs, a television and a video recorder. During lunch, most of them fix their food and eat at an oval dining room table, talking and listening to the stereo. Many of them also watch "All My Children" on the television. After a morning of drills and an afternoon of checking hydrants, inspecting businesses and educating the public, the firefighters spend an hour, from 3:30 p.m. to 5:40 p.m., jogging, riding a stationary bicycle or doing other aerobic exercise. Diagnose Kansan Magazine Dinner is from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. The firefighters are on stand-by after dinner until the next shift takes over at 7 a.m. They do most of their studying while they are on stand-by. Firefighters also must update their specific certifications. Burton, who is an emergency medical technician, said he had to spend four hours a month riding in an ambulance to maintain his EMTcer. tification. He also must take quarter by training sessions and tests. sessions and tests. Burke said firefighters worked at least an eight-hour day. Sometimes they also practice night drills and attend classes, lengthening their work day by up to eight more hours. Often studying or other tasks take longer than anticipated because they are interrupted by a fire alarm. "When that fire alarm goes off!" Crossman said, "everything is to change. You can't have a set schedule." RUGBY SHIRTS BY PATAGONIA AND RUGGED WEAR 100% COTTON SUNFLOWER 804 MASS. Sale: reg. $4.99 to $9.99 Now just $2.88 to $6.88 Simply Sensible Baskets Indians handweave Mexican bamboo called "carrizo" into hammers for laundry, storage, planters — or even big wastebaskets. Lids conceal what you put inside. Sale Pier 1 imports 738 Massachusetts Hours: 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat. 9:30-8:30 Thurs. HELLO NEIGHBOR during November for $1.00 OFF the regular price! 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Two football players w arguments at a hearing to that the College of Liberary Sciences interpreted tha satisfactory progress rule give them any chance of b able to play this season, cou show. The court documents players' response to the U motion for dismissal of the on Oct. 8. The University for a change of venue at asking that the case be Douglas County. The National Collegiate Association established th According to document tailback Lynn Williine backbaseer Dane Griffin II County District Court on the players also say that or lege decided how it was g, rule, that wrong criteria to deterr status. Gary Hunter, assistant said no final decision had Athletic Department off ploring their options. Faced with a Michigan prohibits the man's ban playing a game with Louisville unless it also the University of Detroit play neither, an Athletic said yesterday. By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Officia By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff "However, it appears to playing either Detroit or Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge StudEx By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs; as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Student Senate election as scheduled. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The Student Senate Committee last night a same Senate seat dist rejected last week. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the United States Department of R.S.C., chairman of the committee. The letter, written by Hinman's attorney, Fred W. Phelps Jr., Topkea See related story The 20th-day figures of official enrollment of the they are used in figurin sity's budget. StudEx rejected the station the first time it numbers were based on in University schools rather than on the off effort enrollment figures that they used, Tony Arnold. StudEx, last night. David Day, Election Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and minor deficiencies for women and other minorities. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. "Myra feels that Deanell Tacha has been a full-time employee who Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. 30 Kansan Magazine Towns Continued from n. 7 Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 originally named Bald Eagle. But during the winter of 1854-55, Samuel D. LeCompte of Maryland was appointed federal judge of the territory, and the name was changed in his honor. In 1855 the town became the proposed territorial capital during its pro-slavery days, and drew thousands of residents. Sara Walter, historian of the historical society, said the town became the permanent capital to get a $50,000 appropriation to build a capitol building After Kansas became a free state, the hopes of Lecompte becoming a capital city vanished. The thousands came to live in the town moved away. Banks said, "It's hard to believe, but an old man said he remembered all the streets in Lecompton were lined with houses. But after the capital failed, it went to pieces." Bahmiaer said what is now the Lane University Museum was once the proposed capitol building, before the appropriation from the federal government was used up and construction of the building halted. Walter said Lane University functioned as a university and church from 1882 to 1902. Then the university left and it was used only as a church. The building was used as a high school until 1927 when it was abanondation began in 1882 and the building has now become a museum. Bahrainer said, "Our museum is the best kept secret. It's a classic example of what a small town working together can accomplish." ● A 0 in dressy weekends, I can look 5000 sophisticated carousel MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 10:00-8:30 MON - THUR 711 West 23RD 10:00-6:00 FRI & SAT 1:00-5:00 SUNDAY MAD HATTER BULLWINKLE'S Salutes The Kansas Jayhawks in their 1985-86 Season KANS ISAN Stu- tee, the int's First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) CAMPING Cool Details page 3. Sneak attack ... A dog carefully paddled after a Players Two football players will press arguments at a hearing today say that the College of Liberal Arts Sciences interpreted the NC satisfactory progress rule too late give them any chance of being able to play this season, court rec show. According to documents filed tailback Lynn Williams a linebacker Dane Griffin in John County District Court on Tuesday the players also say that once the lege decided how it was going to terpest the rule, the College used wrong criteria to determine t status. The court documents are players' response to the University motion for dismissal of the case, on Oct. 8. The University also for a change of venue at that asking that the case be move Douglas County. The players had filed suit at the University Sept. 15 after were declared ineligible for not plying with the satisfactory pro rule. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff The National Collegiate At Association established the sat Official Faced with a Michigan judge prohibits the man's basketball playing a game with the Louisville unless it also play the University of Detroit, KU play neither, an Athletic Depa said yesterday. By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Gary Hunter, assistant at said no final decision had been Athletic Department official ploring their options. "However, it appears now playing either Detroit or Louis The 20th-day figures re official enrollment of the They are used in figuring sity's budget. StudEx StudEx rejected the seition the first time he book numbers were based on e in University schools or rather than on the officia enrollment figures that they used, Tony Arnold, ch. StudEx, said last night. David Day, Elections By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Student Senate elections as scheduled. The Student Senate I Committee last night app same Senate seat distrib rejected last week. See related story Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff The letter, written by Hinman's attorney, Fred W. Phelps Jr., Topka, said she opposed the nomination The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the University of California, R.S.C., chairman of the committee. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs; as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1981. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. "Myra feels that Deanell Tacha has been a full-time employee who has advanced because she was put Reunion Continued from p. 11 "Back then, we were part of the Big Seven Conference. Oklahoma University wasn't in the conference, but it was still known as Kansas State College." Nossman said that Kanan editorials of the early 1960s reflected the students' general lack of awareness of social issues. Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 "There were a couple of editors' about restaurants that refused to serve blocks, but it wasn't a big campus issue," he said. "The Kansas was primarily concerned with what we did. Probably the biggest international event curred while we were at KU was the launching of Spunkil, and it not very little play in the Kansan." Nossman said he remembered one event that did create a lot of student interest. "Senator John F. Kennedy visited the campus during the 1967-58 school year," he said. "Students filled Hoe Auditorium to listen to his speech." Hachad to its speech. Nossaman, McGrew and Dickinson all said they thought the greec system played a larger role in campus life when they were at KU than it did now. "It seemed as though you weren't a part of the social life at KU unless you were a member of a fraternity or sorority," McGrew said. "I know now that wasn't true, but it sure Kansan Magazine 31 seemed that way to me then. "There probably were more fraternities back than then there are now, and the University was only one-third the size it is today," Nossman said. Attending sporting events also was a popular pastime for KU students during this era. Berkley FLATS 图 843-2116 11th & Mississippi Lawrence, Kansas A Leasing office 1123 Indiana 一 - Over 40 New units - 2-Bedroom Available - 1-Bedroom - Laundry Facilities - Super Studio - Great Location! Walk Anywhere - Studio - Furnished and Unfurnished Units - 10 or 12 Month Leases - Resident Manager - On KU Bus Route - Off-street Parking - Cable T.V. - Applianced Kitchens - Adjacent to Campus NOW LEASING Formerly STADIUM APARTMENTS 湖北 Sharing Traditions. Fine Chinese Cuisine—a custom at House of Hupei—a KU favorite since 1983. Celebrate all your KU traditions in the Chinese tradition at House of Hupei. House of Hupei Open daily: Lunch 11:30-2:30 p.m. Dinner 4:30-9:30 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 'il 10:30 p.m. 2907 W. 6th next to Econolodge 843-8070 SINCE 1889 First night A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A man is cutting a tree with a stick. THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. Sneak a A dog carefully Two football pl arguments at a he that the College o Sciences interp satisfactory progr give them any chie able to play this sei show Play By Mike Snide Of the Kansan's The players have the University $ were declared in early with the se rale The court de players' response motion for dismis on Oct. 8. The U for a change of asking that the Douglas County. According to d tailback Lynn linebacker Dane County District the players also st. terpret the rule, t wrong criteria t status. The National Association estal By Liz Magg Of the Kansan Offi Faced with a prohibits the m playing a gam Louisville unless the University c play neither, an said yesterday Gary Hunter. Gary Hunter no final de the Atlanta ploring their opt "However, it plays either D Stuco By Bonnie ! Of the Kansa Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge Student Sena scheduled The Student Committee las same Senate s last retested last w StudEx rejection the first numbers were in University rather than on enrollment figuredly used, Tony StudEx, said is the 20th-day official enrollee They are used sity's budget David Day. See related s Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs; as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the committee. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff The letter, written by Hinman's attorney, Fred W. Phelps Jr., Topeka, said she opposed the nomination Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1891. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. "Myra feels that Deanell Tacha has been a full-time employee who Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1985 the SANCTUARY — The place to be for good people, good times and GREAT SPECIALS! DIME DRAWS 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover PLUS ½ Slab Spare Ribs coleslaw & garlic bread $525 50¢ Pitchers 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $1 cover PLUS Prime Rib with salad, baked potato or fries, dinner roll $695 All you can eat TACOS & TACO SALAD $150 4:30-6:30 p.m. $1 KAMIKAZES 11 a.m.-3 a.m. no cover! Super Schooners 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $175 We’ve also got the BEST BURGERS in town! 7th & Michigan 843-0540 We are reciprocal with over 300 clubs in Kansas! TUES WED that wasn't "," Phelps to thwart THUR 50 $ ^{¢} $ Pitchers 50¢ Pitchers PLUS Prime Rib with salad, baked potato or fries, dinner roll $1 cover $695 S FRI SAT $1 KAMIKAZES 11 a.m.-3 a.m. no cover! SUN SUN Super Schooners 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $175 is 9 acha, 1981 flors agree very time Roy A professor of said the hours of at in only a and translate uilt job," he ad tired" tiac affairs, when Larry llor of the all commit- organization Heller said.les. He said affairs was U executive of the 1969 office of as created N. p. 5. col. 5 thoma game by ESPN ient officials of rite of renew now set nib NBC TV to , Hunter said. n. 25, now an not released schedule yet y the Detroit hule probably jorrow 100 Rose Norton/KANSAN member of Stuve Committee, o the rest of the it last night's First night SINCE 1889 A tale of love and identity from the Bard opens tonight. See page 6 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN T THURSDAY, NOV. 7, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 54 (USPS 650-640) Cool Details page 3. 100 Marv Burger/Special to the KANSAN Sneak attack A dog carefully paddled after a duck in Potter Lake on Tuesday afternoon. Although the duck's feathers were ruffled, it escaped without harm. Plavers sav rule was interpreted late Two football players will present arguments at a hearing today saying that the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences interpreted the NCAA satisfactory progress rule too late to give them any chance of being eligible to play this season, court records show. The National College Athletic Association established the satisfac By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff According to documents filed by tailback Lynn Williams and linebacker Dane Griffin in Johnson County District Court on Tuesday, the players also say that once the College decided how it was going to inclure the rule, the college used its wrong criteria to determine their status. The players had filed suit against the University Sept. 19 after they were declared ineligible for not complying with the satisfactory progress rule. tory progress rule in 1883 to assure that student athletes make progress towards a degree. The NCAA leaves the interpretation of the rule up to each university. The court documents are the players' response to the University's motion for dismissal of the case, filed on Oct. 8. The University also filed for a change of venue at that time, asking that the case be moved to Douglas County. Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, had no comment on the The players say the College's interpretation judges them as if they were graduating seniors, and that is inappropriate criteria for evaluating their progress. The players ask in the court documents, "How in the world could the University of Kansas expect the plaintiffs to determine whether or not they were in the right courses when the administrative personnel hired specifically for that purpose could not make that determination?" were many actions Johnson County Judge Phillip J. Woodworth could take in today's hearing scheduled for 2 p.m. at the Johnson County Courthouse in Olathe. A deposition taken from Richard Lee, director of the office of supportive educational services and the primary monitor of the players' academic progress, says he was not notified until mid-August that the players were not making satisfactory progress toward a degree. Lee says in the deposition that it was too late for him to notify the players to take action to keep them eligible. On Monday. Thomas said there He could dismiss the case, decide against dismissal of the case or say he needed more time to look at the case. Thomas said. J. Stewart McWilliams, Williams' lawyer, and Ed Collister, Griffin's lawyer, had no comment. Prof denounces choice of Tacha for court judge In an affidavit taken from Big Eight Commissioner Carl James dated Oct. 21, James said KU followed NCAA and Big Eight procedures in reviewing eligibility petitions and continuing the players' financial aid. On Sept. 25, under a court injunction, Williams and Griffin were declared eligible to play football under head football coach Mike Gottfried's discretion until further court action. The letter, written by Hinman's attorney, Fred W. Phelps Jr., Topeka, said she opposed the nomination because she thought Tacha was not qualified to fulfill a judgeship. Tacha was nominated for the position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate, she will be the second woman in history to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. On Oct. 18, Woodworth denied the motions for dismissal and change of venue and asked the University to supply more information to the court. In the motion for dismissal, the University said the players had no constitutional right to participate in intercollegiate athletics. sity's evidence filed on Oct. 21, the players said the University did not address the real issues of their case and Woodworth should not give the University a summary judgment, which would dismiss the case. The attorney of Myra Hinman, associate professor of English for 25 years, sent a letter by express mail to the commissioner. R.S.C., chairman of the committee. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff "Myra feels that Deanell Tacha has been adding to the University treating women unfairly," Phelps said yesterday. Phelps said Tacha hires few minorities and underpays the ones who already work at the University. "Myra feels that Deanell Tacha has been a full-time employee who has advanced because she was put there to protect a system that wasn't complying with federal law," Phelps said. "She has done things to thwart A KU associate professor of English opposed the nomination of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs; as judge for the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a letter mailed yesterday to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Hinman said Tacha wasn't upholding an agreement signed by the University with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982 that emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. In their response to the Univer- According to an affidavit from Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, there was never a review of the College's interpretation of the satisfactory progress rule or how it applied to the players' being declared ineligible. See OPPOSE, p. 5, col. 1 Phelps said that Hinman filed a sex discrimination suit against the University of Kansas and some faculty members in the late 1970s, before Tacha was appointed vice chancellor in 1881. The lawsuit, which is pending in the U.S. District Court in Topeka, criticizes KU employment policies. The suit includes promotion, recruiting and tenure deficiencies for women and other minorities. According to depositions from Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, Gilbert Dyck, dean of educational services, and Robert Lineberny, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the College's office of records submitted a report to the office of academic affairs on July 10 saying that Griffin and Williams were ineligible. Neither Lee, who has monitored the academic progress of student athletes since Jan. 1, nor any KU football coaches knew until mid-tolate August that the players were not complying with the rule, according to depositions by Lee, Gottfried and David Didion, administrative assistant to Gottfried. Prestigious job is time consuming By Gary. Duda Of the Kansan staff The position of vice chancellor for academic affairs is one of the University's most prestigious and also one of its most transient, according to those who have held the position. Since the position was created in 1970, the University has seen five vice chancellors with an average of three years service move to greener - or at least calmer - pastures. Of the five, two have become university presidents, two have returned to being professors and the current one may become a federal judge. Deanell Tacha, the current vice chancellor for academic affairs, has been nominated by President Reagan for a judgeship to the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, pending approval of the Senate. The University's five vice chancellors for academic affairs have been Francis Heller, 170-72; Ambrose Sarlics, 172-74; Ron Calgaard, 179-74; Ralph Christoffer- son, 1979-81; and Deanell Tacha, 1981 until the present. The former vice chancellors agree that the position is very time consuming. Heller, currently the Roy A. Roberts distinguished professor of law and political science, said the position required endless hours of dedicated work. He said that in only a few months our work could translate into tired bodies. "It is a very very difficult job," he said. "People get worn and tired." The office of academic affairs, Heller said, was created when Larry Chambers, then chancellor of the University, directed a small committee to study the central organization of the University in 1969. Richard von Ende, KU executive secretary and a member of the 1969 committee, said the office of academic affairs was created Out of that committee, Heller said, came a realignment of titles. He said the office of academic affairs was formed then. Officials consider dropping Louisville. Detroit games POSITION p 5 col 5 By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Faced with a Michigan judge's order that prohibits the men's basketball team from playing a game with the University o Louisville unless it also plays a game wifl the University of Detroit, KU probably wil play neither, an Athletic Department officia said yesterday. Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, said no final decision had been made because Athletic Department officials still were exploring their options. "However, it appears now that we won't be playing either Detroit or Louisville," he said. The judge, Susan D. Borman of the Wayne County Court Circuit in Detroit, issued her ruling Oct. 29, and Athletic Department officials received their copy of her decision — consisting of a two-page court order and 15-page opinion — on Monday. Hunter said he thought KU would have a good chance of getting Judge Borman's decision reversed on appeal, but he didn't know whether it would be worth the time and effort. "We can play Detroit and forget about Louisville," he said. "We can forget about both of them. We can ask someone else to reschedule their game with us so we can play both Detroit and Louisville. Or we can appeal Judge Borman's decision." Hunter said Athletic Department officials bad four choices. "Our concern is that by the time we could get a decision from an appellate court, it would be too late to enter into a contract with Louisville." he said. Head men's basketball coach Larry Brown said he would abide by any decision made by Athletic Director Monte Johnson, and Hunter. "However, my gut feeling is to appeal it so that we can show people that we didn't just die." Hunter said that if the decision would be to play neither Detroit nor Louisville, KU would However, he said, KU will still play plenty of games because the Jayhawks are entered in the Big Apple National Invitational Tournament this month. be one game short of the 28 maximum games allowed by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. One of the attractions of the now apparently defunct game with Louisville was that it could be played on a football field. KU now has three regular season games scheduled to be televised on either national cable or network television. The Jayhawk's Dec. 7 game against the University of North Carolina in Greensboro will appear on CBS-TV. The KU-Kentucky game on Dec. 14 and the KU-Oklahoma game on February 24 will be carried by ESPN. Hunter said Athletic Department officials were exploring the possibility of rescheduling the KU-Oklahoma contest now set for Jan. 21 with the hope of getting NBC-TV to televise it. If arrangements can be made, Hunter said, that game will be moved to Jan. 25, now an open date on KU's schedule. The Athletic Department has not released the official men's basketball schedule yet because of the snag caused by the Detroit lawsuit. Hunter said the schedule probably would be released today or tomorrow. StudEx avoids election delay By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff The Student Senate Executive Committee last night approved the same Senate seat distribution they rejected last week. Student Senate elections will go on as scheduled. StudEx rejected the seat distribution the first time because the numbers were based on enrollment in University schools on Oct. 21 rather than on the official 20th-day enrollment figures that the University used, Tony Arnold, chairman of StudEx, said last night. ■ See related story p.7. The 20th-day figures represent the official enrollment of the University. They are used in figuring the University's budget. chairman, said the committee unanimously approved the more recent figures the first time because the recent figures showed that the School of Architecture and Urban Design would get two seats instead of one and Nunemaker would get 17 seats instead of 18. David Day, Elections Committee The Senate Elections Committee last night voted unanimously to send StudEx the more recent figures, the same ones the committee sent StudEx last week. The vote came after a closed discussion. A Nurmaker senator represents freshmen and sophomores in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Had they been rejected, the elections would have been postponed, Arnold said yesterday. The meeting was closed, about 45 minutes after it began. that all non-committee members, except a Kansan reporter, leave the meeting because, he said, committee members might be intimidated by the non-members. Jeff Polack, student body vice president, then said he would keep quiet but wanted to watch the rest of the meeting. Michael Foubert, vice chairman of the Elections Committee, then asked Foubert then moved that the committee close the meeting to nonmembers by going into executive session. He gave no time to reopen the meeting in his motion but said later a restructuring session would last 30 minutes. Day said the meeting was closed because the committee had personnel matters to discuss — the political interests of members of StudEx. Day said he knew the members of the Elections Committee would "open See SENATE, p. 5, col. 6 Student Body Vice President Jeff Polack reacts to the Student Senate Executive Committee discussion about whether the approaching student elections should be postponed. Ruth Lichtwardt, chairman of the Senate Minority Affairs Committee and vice presidential candidate for the Chrysalis Coalition, is to the left of Polack. ROMI COOKS Michael Foubent, a member of Student Senate Executive Committee, emphasizes his point to the rest of the StudEx members at last night's meeting. 2 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 News Briefs New war memorials approved by House WASHINGTON — The House yesterday passed bills creating three new memorials in Washington, one each for women veterans, blacks who fought in the Korean War and soldiers who were in the Korean War. Dan Fowler, the crane operator, received a ticket Tuesday that may cost him $198.50. HOUSTON — A crane operator who used his crane to help save a man trapped in an overturned 18-wheeler later was ticketed because the crane was too large for the back of his truck. The bills, each approved unanimously, were sent to the Senate. The memorial for black Revolutionary War veterans will be constructed on the Mall between the Washington Monument and Lincoln Memorial. It will be called Constitution Gardens. No sites for the others were specified. Money to erect the monuments must be raised privately. Rescue proves costly Army officer shot Police said they saw Fowler, 49, and his crane stranded in traffic after a tractor-trailer overturned at about 8:30 a.m. on the entrance to the La Porte freeway, trapping the driver, Richard Henry Clements, inside. SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Assailants on a motorcycle shot and wounded a U.S. Army major as he rode his motor scooter to work yesterday. Groups advocating Puerto Rican independence took responsibility for the act. Authorities said Maj. Michael Snyder, 37, was shot on a highway as he rode to his office near the army installation at Fort Bugham. The attack, which also wounded a civilian, came a day after 150 independence supporters protested a visit to San Juan by FBI Director William Webster. From Kansan wires. Guerrillas sieze Colombian courthouse BOGOTA, Colombia — About 25 left guerilla shots their way into the Palace of Justice yesterday, but three hours later troops stormed the court building, seizing the lower three floors and freeing more than 100 hostages. The Associated Press houses and all other Guerrillas of the April 19 Movement still held a large number of judges on the top two floors of the five-story structure, according to one of the hostages, Supreme Court President Allonso Reves. He was contacted by telephone and said, "If the government doesn't cut off its attack there is no answer." Bogota radio stations said preliminary Reyes told radio station Todelar, "We are here with a large number of judges as hostages and it is a question of life or death that the gunfire stop. Please pass that on so the president will give the order to stop the attack." reports indicated at least 17 guerrillas and one police lieutenant were killed and four policemen were wounded. As the judge spoke, bursts of submachine gun fire could be heard from Reyes' office on the fourth floor of the building. Exchanges of gunfire continued as night fell. Radio Caracol telephoned federal Judge Fernando Gonzalez before the army assault, and he said, "I think all 24 members of the Supreme Court are being held hostage." It was not known whether Gonzalez was among more than 100 people who were freed and fled from the building during and after the army assault. Radio stations said President Belisario Betancur's brother, federal Judge Jaime Betancur, was among those who escaped unharmed. President Betancur met with his cabinet in an emergency session, but no details were given and it was not known whether it was negotiating with the guerrillas. At least 15 guerrillas were killed when the soldiers launched their assault at 3 p.m., Radio Caroline An anonymous person who telephoned the radio played a tape recording which declared that M-19 guerrillas had seized the Palace of Justice in the name of peace and social justice. The movement takes its name from the April 19, 1970 presidential election that dissidents said was fraudulent. Last June, the M-19 rebels broke a truce with government security forces that had lasted for nearly a year. Yesterday's attack came just a day after nine bombs exploded across Bogota, knocking out some electrical power and causing other damage, but no casualties. No group took responsibility for the bombings, but officials blamed left-wing insurgents President redefines goals for Star Wars The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan redefined his goals for the proposed Star Wars missile defense system yesterday, saying he would deploy the space shield unilaterally if other nuclear powers could not agree on a worldwide nuclear defense and disarmament program. "If we had a defensive system and we could not get agreement on their part to eliminate the nuclear weapons, we would have done our best and we would go ahead with deployment, even though, as I say, that would then open us up to the charge of achieving the capacity for a first strike," Reagan said in an interview less than two weeks before his meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in Geneva. The president's comments appeared to negate the terms he laid out in an interview with Soviet journalists last week in which he said he would not deploy a defensive system until offensive missiles had been dismantled. But Reagan denied there was any inconsistency in his separate descriptions of his policy. "The terms for our own deployment would be the elimination of the offensive weapons." Reagan said to the Soviets. "We won't put this weapon — this system — in place, this defensive system, until we do away with our nuclear missiles, our offensive missiles. And if the Soviet Union and the United States both say we will eliminate our offensive weapons, we will put in this defensive thing in case some place in the world a madman someday tries to create these weapons again." dead woman, identified by ABC as Svetlana Dedkova, plunged to her death from the 27th floor of a Toronto building in an apparent suicide. But yesterday he told the White House correspondents of Western news agencies that if the U.S. research program, officially named Strategic Defense Initiative, were to come up with an effective system to defend against nuclear attack, the United States would call a meeting of all nuclear powers to see whether the United States could use that weapon to bring about the elimination of nuclear weapons. If that conference failed to gain an agreement for mutual use of the defensive system, Reagan said, "we would go ahead with deployment." Earlier yesterday, when asked whether he meant to give the Soviets veto power, in effect, over deployment of the proposed defensive weapons system, Reagan replied, "Hell no." Reagan also said in the wideranging discussion that he suspected but couldn't prove that the defection and subsequent return of Soviet masterspy Vitaly Yurchenko and two other Soviet citizens were part of "a deliberate play" by the Kremlin in the days leading up to the Nov. 19-20 Geneva summit. The president said he was perplexed by the three cases, but "we just have to live with it because there's no way we can prove or disprove" that the cases were orchestrated. Death toll 36; floods persist United Press International Floodwaters that have killed at least 36 people surged through Virginia, Pennsylvania, Maryland and West Virginia for a third day yesterday, cutting off basic services in many towns and forcing thousands to seek higher ground. The James River creep from low-lying areas of downtown Richmond, Va., through the warehouse district, sending rats scurrying to find dry ground. The nation's capital braced for flooding expected today when the Potomac River crests. In West Virginia, looting was reported in several cities and thousands of dead chickens posed a health hazard. A circus featuring wild animals was trapped in an armory by the high waters. The death toll stood at 17 in West Virginia, 16 in Virginia, one in Maryland and two in Pennsylvania, officials said. The flooding in the four-state area caused an estimated $220 million in property damage. The rain that pushed rivers over their banks stopped yesterday and many waterways began to recede after cresting at levels that surpassed records from the 1800s, the National Weather Service said. West Virginia Gov. Arch Moore declared a state of emergency in Clarksburg where floodwaters knocked out the water system. Businesses were closed but grocery stores and hospitals remained open. Thousands of chickens killed in Pendleton County flooding posed a serious health hazard. "We are concerned about possible contamination," Moore said at a news conference yesterday. Looting was reporting in Petersburg, Granville and Marlinton. Moore said. More than 10,000 West Virginia residents were evacuated in three days of flooding that Moore said may have caused $100 million in damage. Families poured into some 30 shelters. Police report Soviet's suicide From Kansan wires The wife of a Soviet trade representative based in Toronto died Tuesday, police sources said. The sources said yesterday that she committed suicide, and ABC News said she was thought to be the Soviet woman who ended her love affair with KGB agent Vitaly Yurchenko. Canadian authorities refused to provide specific details of the woman's death and said there was no link between her and Yurchenko, the Soviet spy who left Washington for Moscow yesterday after slipping away from a CIA escort last weekend. Canadian police sources said the ABC quoted anonymous State Department sources as saying the dead woman was thought to have been having an affair with Yurchenko and then ended it abruptly, causing him to return to the Soviet Union. Canadian government authorities said earlier yesterday that there appeared to be no link between the woman's death and American news reports that Yurchenko left Washington after the wife of a Soviet diplomat in Canada told him their love affair was over. In another Soviet defection case in New Orleans, a federal judge left little doubt that he would refuse to order a Soviet sailor removed from his ship despite testimony the sailor clearly wanted to defect when he jumped ship last month. In Washington, meanwhile, the Senate Agriculture Committee, which oversees the U.S.-Soviet grain trade, voted to prepare a subpoena to compel the defector, Miroslav Medvid, to appear before Congress. In New Orleans, after a daylong hearing, U.S. District Judge Martin Feldman interrupted closing arguments to criticize lawyers who were trying to get Medvid back on American soil for more interviews. UP IN THE AIR POLYESTER ABOUT WHAT TO DO? WE PROMISE NOT TO LEAVE YOU HANGING IN MID-AIR. IT WON'T COST A DIME TO WALK THROUGH THE DOOR TO SEE THE EXCITEMENT THAT THURSDAY NIGHTS HAVE BEEN GENERATING. YOU THURSDAY NIGHT PEOPLE SIMPLY LOOK MAHVELOUS. $1.25 DRINKS ALL NIGHT LONG GAMMONS SNOWBOARDS Baby BOOMERS 23rd & Ousdahl REDLINE REDLINE AEII TV30 & KJHK FM91 fishbone REDLINE AEII TV30 & KJHK FM91 present fishbone Tuesday, November 12 look for tickets on campus and the AEII house 1116 Indiana & Cogburn's Cogburns 737 New Hampshire A benefit for The Emergency Service Council november 12 Campus/Area Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 University Daily Kansan 3 News Briefs SIDS may be cause of infant boy's death A three-month-old boy died Tuesday apparently from sudden infant death syndrome, or SIDS, Alan Sanders, deputy coroner said yesterday. Logan King, 217 Deerfield Lane, was pronounced dead on arrival shortly before noon Tuesday at Hospital, hospital official said. The syndrome is the sudden and unexpected death of an infant who was well or almost well before death and whose death was unexplained after the performance of an adequate autopsy, Sanders said. Sanders said that the autopsy was nearly complete except for a few tests to rule out infection and other complications. His findings to suggest foal play Sgt. Don Dalquest, Lawrence Police Department, said police and an ambulance were called at 11:41 a.m. Tuesday to King's babyfoster's home in the 3500 block of Yale Road. Planning post filled He said Logan, who was the son of John and Debbie King, 217 Deerfield Lane, was not breathing when police and ambulance attendents arrived and transported the child to the hospital. Mark Buhler, vice president of Columbia Savings Association's local office, Lawrence Federal Savings, 901 Vermont St., was appointed to the Lawrence/Douglas County Planning Commission Tuesday night. Buhler replaced Nan Harper, who resigned last month after serving for three years. Harper teaches a class at KU and owns Harper and Hiebert, 706 Massachusetts St., with Douglas County Commissioner Nancy Hiebert. Mayor Mike Amyx recommended Buhler as the new planning commissioner and other city commissioners approved his selection. Buhler will join the nine other planning commissioners at the monthly meeting Nov. 20. Weather Today will be partly sunny with highs in the mid- to upper 50s and winds from the west at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear with lows in the mid- to upper 30s. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with highs in the mid-60s. Correction Because of a photographer's error, a student was misidentified in a cutline in Tuesday's Kansan. The student in the picture was Jim Tucker, Shawnee senior. Because of a reporter's error, a student was identified incorrectly in a story in yesterday's Kansas. The student quoted in the story should have been identified as Chris Roesner, Salina junior and pledge class social chairman of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. Clarification A story in yesterday's Kansas said the Prairie Room in the Kansas Union was a formal dining room for faculty. The room is open to anyone. From staff and wire repo ts Groups create anti-apartheid task force By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Students from three anti-spartial groups and administrators met for an hour and a half yesterday and decided to set up a joint task force. The actual purpose of the task force, however, was not decided. Reactions after the meeting from students in the groups and an administrator were mixed, although teachers thought the meeting was productive. David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs; Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and service; and Del Shankel, professor of history with members of the KU Committee on South Africa, Black Student Union and Blacks Against Anarchist Dwayne Fulhage, a member of the KU Committee on South Africa, said yesterday that he and Ambler changed the meeting three weeks ago. The meeting was not a result of the rally on Monday, and the incident Protesters of apartheid charged Five anti-apartheid protesters were charged yesterday with one count each of interference with the conduct of public business in a public place. By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff They have received summonses to appear Nov. 12 in Douglas County District Court for arraignment. The five were arrested Monday in Chancellor Gene A. Budig's suite after refusing to leave. They wanted to speak with Budig about deprivation and apartheid during the University of Kansas Medical Center during the day. Those arrested were Edward Jackson, Topeka sophomore; Ruth Lichtwardt, Lawrence junior and student body vice presidential candidate for the Chrysalis Coalition; Michael Maher, Roeland Park junior; Lisa Rasor, Topeka sophormore; and Jane Ungerman, Lawrence senior. Of the five, everyone except Jackson is a member of the KU Committee on South Africa About 50 protesters crowded into the suite and five remained after KU police warned that failure to leave would result in an arrest. Students against apartheid rallied Monday in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall and then took their messages of "Divest now" and "KU out of South Africa" to Strong Hall. This incident marked the third time protesters were arrested on campus and the second time at Strong. Protests on May 3 and 9 of the Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in companies doing business in South Africa resulted in the arrests of more than 65 students, KU employees and others. was not discussed at the meeting said Fuhlage. Tonganoxie junior. More than 150 protesters invaded Strong Hall Monday and five were arrested after refusing to leave Cancellor Gene A. Budig's suite. Lennie Wesley, program director for Black Student Union, said, "We laid the groundwork. I thought it was productive. We set up a task force to examine how to deal with apartheid." Ambler called the meeting "productive and helpful." Wesley, Wichita junior, said another meeting was scheduled for Nov. 21. Ambler said he honed meetings such as these would prevent activities such as Monday's protest in Strong from occurring again. "I believe, probably stronger than most, that dialogue and debate are the civilized ways of resolving differences," he said. But Heather Cusick, a KU Committee on South Africa member, said she was disappointed with the meeting. "My impression was that there was a lot of opposition from the administration on having a task force on divestment," said Cusick, Salina senior. "The task force should encourage Kansas University Endowment Association." ADOPT THIS HOUSE PROPERTY BY AND SPORTS MORE BETT. "We have to keep up the pressure to divest from masses of students and keep students involved," Cusick said. Charles Watson, Arkansas City junior, said everyone agreed that aparteidh in South Africa was evil and morally repugnant but didn't agree on the best ways to eliminate it. He said the group "agreed to disagree." Members of the Pi Beta Phi sorority, 1612 W, 15th St. and the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, 1602 W, 15th St., work on their homecoming float entry No stamp, no enrollment By Susie Bishop Of the Kansan staff Dean's stamp deadline is tomorrow Students who have not received a dean's stamp by tomorrow afternoon will not be able to enroll until January, administrators and school representatives said yesterday. Most of the schools will stop giving deans' stamps to undergraduates tomorrow afternoon, said Gary Seward, who runs records and educational services. "The reason Nov. 8 is the date is to encourage students to see their advisers immediately." Thompson said. "Most advisers don't want the advising period to drag out for three to four weeks." Students without a dean's stamp will not be allowed to enroll during pre-enrollment, which began Monday and lasts until Nov. 22. Thompson said. There will be no exceptions, he said. "In order to get into the enrollment center, you have to have a dean's stammt." Thompson said. meaning varies from school to school, provides an indication to the enrollment center that the student is ready to enroll and has met the requirements of his school or college. Thompson said. "The stamps are so many different things," he said. "It is the school's prerogative to do whatever amount of checking on the student." Some schools glance over a student's records. Other schools study the records thoroughly before giving the required approval to continue in the pre-enrollment process. Thompson said. The dean's stamp, though the Most schools will tell students that they are out of luck if they haven't received their dean's stamp by Friday afternoon, Thompson said. "We honor each school's wishes, so no student can enroll without a doctor's approval." "If they want to be in that school, they have to follow the rules of that school." made a provision for students who miss the deadline. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which has the largest number of undergraduates, has Joe Vanzand, coordinator of the advising support center, said students who already had their adviser's signature and students who didn't require an adviser's signature would be granted a dean's stamp regardless of the late date. Freshman and sophomores who didn't see their adviser will receive a special stamp which permits them to attend the final day of enrolment, Nov. 22. Vanzandt said freshman and sophomores who fell into this category would forfeit their assigned pre-enrollment time. "Our intention is not to place any unnecessary road blocks in the way of students who have unintentionally missed the date, but to have some penalties for those students who are negligent." he said. If a freshman or sophomore can cajole his adviser into signing the enrollment card after the advising period ends, the college will issue a dean's stamp. Vanzandt said. However, he said, bothering advisers after the advising period isn't recommended. "The departments are no longer obligated to provide advising past the designated period," he said. The College provides a last resort for its tardy students, but most of the other schools take the hard-line approach. Marla Schinstock, an office worker in charge of issuing School of Business dean's stamps, said the school would follow University policy and not issue dean's stamps after Friday's deadline. Schinstock's message was clear. "They don't get one." she said. Excuses won't wash with her, she said. Any exceptions have to be heard and approved by Corwin Grube, the school's director of undergraduate studies, before earning a dean's stamp. "If a student can prove he was sick, that might be an exception," Schinstock said. Most schools follow the example set by the School of Business, Thompson said. Bleachers prepared for opener By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Basketball fans with reserved tickets for lower level bleacher seats in Allen Field House won't have to sit on the floor or bring their own folding chairs to tomorrow's exhibition game between the KU men's basketball team and the national team from Czechoslovakia. If all goes well, that is. Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director in charge of facilities, said yesterday that the contractor installing new bleacher seating had assured him the seats would be in place for the game tomorrow night. Tipoff for the KU-Czechoslovakia game is set for 7:30 p.m. "The seats won't be completely finished, but they will be ready for public use," he said. "To look at them now, you wouldn't think there is any way the job will be done, but we have been told that it definitely will be." "I hope they're right, because the game is sold out. It's part of our season ticket package." Charlie Burt, sales manager for the contractor, Hoover Brothers Inc. Kansas City, Mo., said the seating would be "structurally complete" by January 2013, as detailed in details such as colored end caps on the bleachers would be missing. The company is working almost around the clock to complete the installation in time. Burt said. "We're working almost 24 hours a day and have three walks going," he said. "We're doing everything possible to get the project completed." Burt said the $228,000 renovation project, which was supposed to be completed by Oct. 15, was behind schedule because the necessary materials had not arrived from the manufacturer until last week. "Installation usually takes two to three weeks," he said. "But obviously when you don't have the materials, you can't get the job done." Installation of the new seating will increase the present field house seating capacity of 15,200 by 200-300 seats. Burt said the new seating also would improve the appearance of the basketball arena. He said the end bleacher sections would be red with blue end caps, and the side sections would be blue with red end caps. MISS. STREET DELI 041 MASSACHUSETTS MISS STREET DELI 1941 MASSACHUSETTS Homemade CHOCOLATE, CHERRY, LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake No coupons accepted with this offer. 95¢ reg $1.50 Offer good through Nov. 30 THURSDAY 50¢ Pitchers 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $1 cover Also try our Prime Rib Special for $6.95 the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 842-1212 Pizza Shuttle says: Get it together! 10—1 item 10" Pizzas $25¥00 Additional Pizzas $2 Additional items 50¢ 16 oz. Pepsis 25¢ Feed your fraternity, sorority, office, dorm floor, groups of any kind! Pizza Shuttle 1601 West 23rd Southern Hills Mall 842-1212 THURSDAY THURSDAY 50¢ Pitchers 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $1 cover PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FINE DELIVERY 11 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 Squeezing in spaces About 400 students live in KU's eight scholarship halls, but only 157 parking spaces are available in the three lots designated for hall residents. Residents at the University's scholarship halls are known for their unique brand of community living. Besides sharing housing, they divvy up cooking, cleaning and other hall chores. But, unfortunately, they can't share parking spaces. Residents can pay $20 a semester for permits, but even with a permit, there's no guarantee they will find a spot for their Toyota or Buick. The lots, situated oh-so close to campus, are tempting targets for students who attend night classes or study at the library. Patrons of two of Lawrence's most popular taverns — The Wagon Wheel Cafe and the Jayhawk Cafe — also find the lots convenient. Why? Because students who don't live in the halls swipe the spaces. To make matters worse, parking services oversells permits for the three lots — thinking that the same 157 spaces rarely will be filled with the same 157 cars. The solution seems simple. Build another parking lot. But there isn't much room for expansion in the scholarship hall neighborhood. To the west sits campus; to the east sits a row of Greek houses on Tennessee Street. Parking services recently submitted a proposal to the office of facilities planning to build a lot just east of Joliffe Hall. The lot would hold about 40 cars. Squeezing in 40 more spaces might not accommodate every hall resident who has to park his or her Buick down on Kentucky Street. But the sooner such a lot is built, the better. Forty extra spaces east of Joliffe would save at least 40 students a long—and potentially dangerous—walk home to the scholarship hall Stephan's blunders Bob Stephan should have known better. Kansas' attorney general, who wants to be the state's next governor, has made two decisions that together may rank as one of the biggest blunders in Kansas political history. Decision one was agreeing this spring to secretly settle a suit by Marcia Tomson, a former clerk in his office. Tomson says Stephan fired her because she wouldn't warm up to his sexual propositions. The decisions most likely will cost him even a shot at Cedar Crest next fall. Decision two was encouraging a friend to publicize the terms of that settlement last week. Now the whole mess is splattered across front pages of newspapers statewide. Tom- He compounded that mistake by going public with details of the settlement — an act that came off as a chinny attempt at public disclosure. son threatens to refile her suit on grounds that the secret deal was violated. And Kansas Republicans jockey to fill what they see as a probable void in the governor's race. The whole mess leaves Stephan looking increasingly less like the Republican nominee for governor. Perhaps that's for the better. Regriddess of the truth of Tomson's charges, Stephan broke a rule of public office: Don't make secret deals. Stephan has mishandled his personal affairs. Those questioning his candidacy for governor stand justified in doubting whether he can handle the affairs of 2.4 million others. NATO's strong support Western European allies in NATO last week gave three expressions of clear support to President Reagan as he heads toward a summit meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev on Nov. 19-20 in Geneva, Switzerland. Now he must find ways to use that support. Then NATO defense ministers met in Brussels, Belgium, and issued a statement that "the president goes to Geneva with the full support and solidarity of the alliance." They also called on the Soviets to stop using a "double standard" by which the Soviets violate current treaties. First, the Netherlands announced its long-delayed decision to accept U.S. cruise and Pershing 2 missiles. The decision was a defeat to a strong, six-year domestic opposition. Further, it was a rebuke to Gorbachev, who had appealed directly to the Dutch to refuse the missiles. At the same meeting in Brussels, Great Britain dropped a condition for guaranteed amounts of research of the Strategic Defense Initiative, commonly known as Star Wars. The British now support the program fully and soon should have an agreement on sharing research. The NATO statement; however, avoided specific support of Star Wars by keeping its support in general terms. Even if a cynical view says the statement is a necessary pre-summit exercise, it still shows the failure of constant Soviet efforts to divide NATO. Especially backed up by the Dutch decision on missiles, it helps Reagan go to the summit as he wants — able to negotiate from strength. That being the case, Reagan can afford to negotiate with a firm philosophy but a flexible list of bargaining points — the best way to make progress. If he does, he will justify the support of the United States, NATO and the world. Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus Miller Susanne Shaw General manager news adviser General manager, news adviser Business manager Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Slauffer Fint Hall. **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.** **GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The** The University Daly Kansan (USPS 600-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 115 Stauffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and final periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60044. In Douglas County, mail subscriptions cost $15 for six months and $27 for a year. Student subscriptions cost $3 and are paid through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Fink Hall, Lawrence, KC 68045. MINNABACK STREET AND ROUND THE MISTER'S GIRL I'M NOT SURE, BUT IT COULD BE ONE OF NATURE'S LITTLE SIGNS THAT WE'RE IN FOR A ROUGH WINTER... Newspapers' rough and tumble game A lot of people understand basically how football is played, and surprisingly it's a lot like putting out a newspaper. For one thing, both football teams and newspaper people work hard, but they make their mistakes in front of God and everybody. Nobody else on campus risks looking foolish so regularly. That notoriety may contribute to their image problems. Drawing an analogy between football teams and newspaper staffs may help people understand newspapers. A recent national survey suggests a lot of people don't. Today's football teams play different players on offense and defense. Likewise, newspapers have advertising and news sides, and they don't tell each other how to play. Both sides work to make sure that advertisers don't decide the news any more than alumni call the plays. A good ad side, like a good defense, can take a team a long way. It sets up the offense in good position over and over. line: They're the beasts of burden that move the offense. But the ball handlers, the news editors, make it work. Photographers, if they fit in, are like tight ends who both block and catch. Reporters are like the offensive Then there's the special teams, the opinion page people. These kamikazes stick to themselves. They don't dictate the offense or defense, and they don't take orders on how to play their game. Editors — an editorial board — write editorials. Columnists write columns, and they don't have to agree with the editorial board. From editors, readers cheer and boo and write letters, but they don't write editorials. News editors and reporters don't write any of those things. Reporters, even with bylines, do not give opinions any more than offensive linemen return punts. Good news mix opinion and news except in clearly labeled "analysis" or "commentary" columns. Newspapers have behind-the- Dan Howell Staff columnist scenes people equivalent to trainers and equipment managers. Those include the layout and wire editors and the copy desk. By the way, copy editors write most headlines; don't blame the reporters. Commercial newspapers also have circulation departments that equate roughly with ticket and concession staffs. As for coaching, the Kansan operates more or less with all the coaches (faculty) in the press box. On the field, it really is a student operation. It resembles — sometimes too much — sandlot games in which the captain is the quarterback and calls the plays. Not all student papers are that way, and of course commercial papers have publishers who often work about like head coaches or even athletic directors. You know, set up schedules and speak to local organizations. That's the scoop on who does what. Of course, every analogy breaks down. Few newspapers have their own weight rooms or say prayers before press runs. Newspaper people eat half a pizza as their entire daily nutrition, not as part of an evening snack. Football players, on the other hand, don't pretend to know the meaning of everything. And for all they care, liberal bias might have to do with snow tires. Well, sports folks spend half their waking hours watching people play games and the other half measuring the results of that play. The closest thing to that is being on the chain gang. Oh, by the way, an analogy of a football team to a newspaper staff seems to call for mention of the sports page. At least sports seems like the logical connection, right? On the road to Geneva Reagan faces tough summit choices WASHINGTON - President Reagan is taking a crash course in Kremlinology to prepare for the Nov. 19-20 meeting in Geneva with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. One of his toughest decisions is how to respond to Gorbachev's proposal to cut the superpower nuclear strain in half if Reagan will give up his effort of building the futuristic Star Wars space defense system. The public relations aspects of the run up to the summit also have White House officials scrambling to raise Reagan's foreign policy profile with a rash of interviews with foreign reporters and an important televised speech a few days before the Geneva meeting. The same officials are telling Reagan to clam up when White Helen Thomas United Press International White House Reporter House reporters fire questions at him concerning the summit or world affairs. As a result, Reagan refused to answer any questions for three days while at the United Nations in New York last week. It has taken Reagan five years to get around to what most of his recent predecessors have viewed as a top priority from the moment they stepped into the White House — the need for tensions in superpower relations. Officials fear that Gorbachev gained the high ground by proposing the 50 percent cut in offensive nuclear arms. In Reagan's presidency, East-West relations have been conducted in a cold war atmosphere, fueled by adventures in Central America sponsored by the Soviets, the occupation of Afghanistan and the downing of an unarmed Korean airliner. In the past, the president has scoffed at nuclear arms agreements, always certain that the U.S. had gotten the worst of the deal. He stacked the National Security Council with hardline anti-Soviet experts. But hardliners still predominate in the administration and are vocal in the shunk Reagan should approach the Soviets on the nuclear arms issue. Those experts have more or less departed the scene, going back to unmasking the evil forces. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard Perle are the leaders of the group who believe the Soviets have defended on arms agreements too often in the past to be trusted now. Weinberger wants to go to Geneva as a member of the summit team and canceled an Asian tour to press his case. But others in the administration want him to stay home. The makeup of the U.S. delegation to Geneva will be revealing. The U.S. arms negotiators already are there and may be called upon for advice. In other sidelights on the summit, one of the preliminary scenarios called for Reagan and Gorbachev to have a private talk without advisers that would last 20 minutes or more before each meeting. But now it is understood that the time has been shaved to seven minutes or so. Reagan apparently is going along with the plot line. He also hopes to have the last word by flying to Brussels to report to allied leaders on his way back to Washington on Nov. 21. When he arrives in the nation's capital he will head for Capitol Hill to deliver a report of the summit results to a joint session of Congress. Mailbox The open highway Some of your readers who have not driven toward Kansas City recently may be interested to know of an improvement. It was apparently about three weeks ago that the intersections of L-435 and L-35 were opened. This means that one may drive east on K-10, continue on I-435 east, and very shortly afterward turn off to I-355, either southbound toward Wichita, or northbound toward Des Moines. I found that the driving time from south Lawrence to Kansas City International Airport (using 1-635 and 1-29) is now as low as one hour and ten or fifteen minutes, with comparable reduction in driving time to downtown Kansas City. Although some construction is now underway on 1-35 north of the intersection with 1-435, there is now no essential impediment to traffic. To my mind, the only goal yet to be achieved is placing signs on I-35s, near I-455, saying that the next exit is the proper one for K-10 and Lawrence. Interestingly enough, I wrote the above information to another regional newspaper, which decided the letter nor to write a separate story. I think this opening is newsworthy, I cannot figure the reason for the reluctance, which I have met before on such highway stories. Could it be pressure from some local merchants who do not wish local customers to find out how easy it is to shop in Kansas City? J. Bunker Clark professor of music history A foolish, deadly fad As Kansas State Chairman for the Operation Lifesaver program, a railroad-financed public safety effort endorsed both by Gov. John Carlin and the National Safety Council, I am writing to beg your editorial support in halting the foolish fad that has already cost the life of one University of Kansas student: an act called "training." An individual who is in a vehicular accident with a train is 40 times (not 40 percent, 40 times) more likely to be killed or to suffer serious injury than in a traffic accident involving two highway vehicles. Although the Operation Lifesave program originally was aimed principally at balting railroad-highway grade crossing accidents, we have become involved in any situation in which members of the public encountered with trains or railroad counters with trains or railroad equipment. Now take away the limited protection the shell of the vehicle offers and figure how susceptible the pedestrian or trespasser is when struck by a train. A locomotive alone can weigh 200 tons or more, not to mention the fact that most trains, with multiple locomotives and fully-loaded freight cars, weigh between 5,000 and 10,000 tons. Gambling an 180-pound human being against such odds is unimaginable. Please help us stop this senseless practice before it reaches epidemic proportions. Other railroaders and I are available at any time to provide education, assistance and programs — free of charge upon request Jim Johnson Jim Johnson Southern Pacific Transportation Company Kansas City, Kan. Correction Because of an editor's error, Ray Dillinger's name was misspelled in Monday's Mailbox. Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 From Page One 5 University Daily Kansan Oppose Continued from p. 1 and prevent the implementation of the rules. "Now she's going to be on a federal bench to defend the civil rights that she has made a lifetime of defeating." Tacha was out of Lawrence and unavailable for comment yesterday Carol Prentice, academic affairs administrator, assistant, said the office.com computer. KU Executive Secretary Richard von Ende said Himan's letter was not representative of Tacha's performance at the University. "It is ridiculous to levy these accusations against Deanell Tacha," von Ende said. "She has led by example as a role model and by occupying leadership positions at the University. "To say she is thwarting women and minorities is the most blatantly ridiculous thing I've heard in a long time." Robbi Ferron, director of affirmative action, agreed. "I can assure you that Dr. Tacha's record with our office in supporting women and minorities has been exemplary." Ferron said. Hinman said, "I wrote the letter to point out the lack of experience she has as a judge. She's been out of the business of law for five years, and you get behind if you're out of the field." Hinman said she was exercising her right as a citizen to voice her opinions. "I want the 10th circuit to be the best," Hinman said. "I'm just expressing my rights." Position could be hard to fill By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff It may take as long as a year to fill the position of vice chancellor for academic affairs if Deanell Tacha is confirmed as a U.S. 10th Court Circuit of Appeals judge, a former executive vice chancellor for the University said yesterday. Del Shankel, former executive vice chancellor and now a professor of microbiology and biochemistry, said replacing Tacha could take a while. "The process can take anywhere from a couple of months up to a year or so," he said. Shankel, who was executive vice chancellor when Tacha was chosen in 1981, said the speed of replacing Tacha depended on whether a replacement came from within the University. Of the five vice chancellors that have served the University's office of academic affairs, four have come from within the University. But Shankel said Tacha's replacement would not necessarily be a University employee. The only vice chancellor for academic affairs to come from outside of the University was Ambrose Saricks. Before his appointment as vice chancellor for academic affairs, he was dean of the graduate school and assistant dean of faculties at Wichita State University. Saricks, however, had been with the University for 16 years before moving to Wichita. The vice chancellor for academic affairs is one of the three vice chancellors who report to Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor of the Lawrence campus. Deans of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the schools 'The process can take anywhere from a couple of months up to a year or so.' -- Del Shankel professor of microbiology and biochemistry, former executive vice chancellor of architecture and urban design, business, education, engineering, fine arts, journalism, law, pharmacy and social welfare report to the office of academic affairs. Shankel said Tacha's replacement — provided the Senate confirmed her nomination — would have to meet several qualifications set forth by a search committee. "I think they are looking for a person who has demonstrated academic leadership skill," he said. The replacement, Shankel said, would also have to show a commitment to teaching and research. He said being able to deal with people was also an essential qualification. John Brushwood, member of the 1981 search committee, and Roy A. Roberts, distinguished professor of Spanish and Portuguese, said the committee to replace Tacha would probably work in much the same way as he did in 1981 to replace Tacha's predecessor, Ralph Christofferson. Brushwood said the 12-member committee he served on asked for applications from both inside and outside the University. The process of reviewing applicants involved reading information about each person, Brushwood said. He said that many of those who would apply for the position would not be qualified, but that the review process would thin out the unqualified. Brushwood said because Tacha would probably be leaving at the middle of this academic year, it would be quite likely that an interim vice chancellor would be needed. Christofferson, who now works for the UpJohn Co., Kalamazoo, Mich. said the job was not one that would be undered to be a lifetime position. Because of the high visibility of the job and the long hours it demands, Christofferson said, it is very easy to get worn out in a few years. because of the need for a more efficient system of dividing the responsibilities of running the University Raymond Nichols, chancellor emeritus and member of the committee, said that after World War II, the University had an enrollment of 5,000-6,000. He said with the increase of growth to about 20,000 in 1960, the University needed to create more administrative positions. Continued from p.1 Saricks, who now is a KU professor emeritus of history, said he didn't receive any offers to become president or chancellor of any universities. He said he had enough of the duties of vice chancellor. "It itg to be too much paperwork and government red tape," he said, "I wanted to get back to teaching." Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! Heller said other colleges and universities looked at the position of vice chancellor for academic affairs as a good place to find leaders for their schools. He said that when he served as vice chancellor, he received many offers from universities to become president. 1618 West 23rd Street Any way you want it, you can get it NOW, at... This, Heller said, is also true of anyone who performed well in the position. "I think it's probably fair to say if you're an effective chief academic officer in a major institution, your name is going to show up on presidential search committee lists," he said. Calgaard, currently president of Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas, said that when he served as vice chancellor, he also received offers to become president at other universities. 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After the StudEx meeting, Easley said possible intimidation was not a legal reason for closing a public meeting. Arnold said one of the reasons for using the official figures was to avoid the appearance of inconsistency in case the 1985 election was questioned. 7th & Michigan 843-0540 Lawhorn, holdover senator, had first questioned the validity of the updated figures in a letter to Easley, student body president, on Oct. 25. "It's not in the best interest of Senate to conduct ourselves in the manner in which the Elections Committee did," he said. The four officials were Arnold, Polack, Charles Lawhorn and William Easley. reciprocal with over 300 clubs Continued from p. Four Senate officials and the Kansas reporter were asked to leave the meeting after three of the officials spoke against the Elections Committee's figures and in favor of using the 20th-dav figures. up" if only members of the committee were present. David Ambler, vice cancellor for student affairs, said Tuesday that the Senate rules should be amended to require that 20th-day enrollment figures be used for seat apportionment. "It's that kind of sloppy, petty thing that hurts the reputation of the Senate," Ambler said. EARN A PART-TIME INCOME PLUS $5.040 FOR COLLEGE. Qualify to train in one of several interesting skills available in a nearby Army Reserve unit, and you'll earn a good part-time salary, plus receiving up to $5,040 for college that won't cost you one penny. You'll serve one weekend a month (usually) plus two weeks annual training and earn over $1,225 a year to start. You can begin to earn your college fund after just six months in the Army Reserve. Ask your local Reserve recruiter for all the details about the New G.I.Bill college money opportunity. Stop by or CALL: 843-0465 ARMY RESERVE BE ALL YOU CAN BE. International Year of the Youth Apostolic Letter of Pope John Paul II To the Youth Of the World In the Gospel (Mark 10: 17-19) Christ says, "No one is good but God alone." Only God is good means this: In him and him alone all values have their first source and final completion; he is "the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end." Only in him can we confirm our values as authentic. Without the reference to God, the whole world of created values remains as it were suspended in an absolute vacuum. It also loses its transparency, its expressiveness. Evil is put forward as a good and good itself is rejected. Why is God alone good? Because he is love. Christ gives this answer in the words of the Gospel and above all by the witness of his own life and death: "For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son." God is good precisely because he "is love." As we have said, the question about the meaning of life forms part of the singular treasure of youth. When youth is tested by personal suffering or is profoundly aware of the suffering of others, when it experiences a powerful shock at the sight of many kinds of eivl that exist in the world, and finally, when it comes face to face with the mystery of sin, Christ reminds us, "Only God is good"; only God is love. This reply may seem difficult, but at the same time it is firm and it is true; it bears within itself the definitive solution. How I pray that you, my young friends, will hear Christ's reply in the most personal way possible; that you will find the interior path which enables you to grasp it, accept it and undertake its accomplishment! As Christ speaks to the young man in this particular Gospel, so he speaks to each one of you. When you say, "Good Teacher," he asks, "Why do you call me good? No one is good but God alone." And therefore the fact that you are good bears witness to God. "He who has seen me has seen the Father." Thus speaks Christ, the teacher and friend, Christ crucified and risen; always the same yesterday and today and forever. This the kernel, the essential point of the reply to these questions which you young people put to him through the treasure which is within you, which is rooted in your youth. Your youth opens different prospects before you; it offers you as a task the plan for the whole of your lives. Hence the question about values; hence the question about the meaning of life, about truth, about good and evil. When Christ in his reply to you tells you to refer all this to God, at the same time he shows you what the source and foundation of this is in yourselves. For each one of you is the image and likeness of God through the very act of creation. Precisely this image and likeness make you put the questions that you must ask yourselves. These questions show how man without God cannot understand himself and cannot even fulfill himself without God. Jesus Christ came into the world first of all in order to make each one of us aware of this. Without him this fundamental dimension of the truth about man would easily sink into obscurity. However, "the light has come into the world." "and the darkness has not overcome it." + (This is the fourth of fifteen letters in a bi-weekly series,.) ST. LAWRENCE CATHOLIC CAMPUS CENTER 631 Crescent Road Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Phone 843-0357 BUFFALO BOB'S Smokehouse SMOKEY JOE SANDWICH SPECIAL Chopped ends of BBQ beef, ham, turkey and pork baked in a mild BBQ sauce. Served hot on a bakery fresh bun with tater curl fries and pickles. WHEEL LOG $2.75 Large Sandwich $3.50 Extra Large Sandwich THE TASTE THAT WON THE WEST --- NO COUPONS ACCEPTED WITH THIS OFFER 719 MASSACHUSETTS OFFER GOOD TILL NOV.30 Formerly Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse—Same nice people—Same management 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday Features Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 LAZAR CROSSON AND MICHAEL LEE IN THE STAGE Suzy Mast/KANSAN At top, Sir Toby, played by Phil Schroeder. Olathe sophomore, is held back by his friends after being insulted by Malvino, played by Mark Rector, Lawrence sophomore. Above, Sir Toby, played by Phil Schroeder. Olathe sophomore, and Feste, played by Bill Green, Glenview senior, laugh while watching the action during dress rehearsal Monday of "Twelfth Night," which starts tonight. Right, Oliva, played by Deborah Brown, Lawrence senior, listens as Feste tries to prove that he isn't the only fool. M. F. WESTON AND C. ROWLEY Curtain rises tonight on Shakespeare play By Susie Bishop By Susie Bishop Of the Kansan staff A little chicken soup and plenty of adrenaline should pull some of the characters in William Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" through a successful opening performance tonight. Kevin Crawford, Lawrence sophomore, said Monday that despite his cold, he was impatient awaiting the opening curtain of tonight's performance in his role of Fabian. "Hopefully the adrenaline will take over," Crawford said. "But I'm still waiting for the chicken soup from Mom." The comedy, part of the University Theatre Series, runs today through Saturday and Nov. 14 through 16 in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. All performances begin at 8 p.m. Tickets are available at the Murphy Hall box office for $4, $3 and $2 for the Thursday performances and $5, $4 and $3 for the weekend shows. Discount tickets are available for KU students, senior citizens and other students. "I'm so proud of this show and how far we, as actors, have come." Crawford said. "I want people to see it. Everybody, including us, will have fun." "twelfth Night," directed by Ronald A. Willis, director of theatre at KU, offers a comical look at human self-indulgence and gender confusion. "There are inexhaustable resources in Shakespeare to awaken people to their own humanity and the humanity of others," he said. The duke sends Cesario to woo his sweetheart, Olivia, but Olivia falls for Cesario instead of the duke. Cesario, however, resists Olivia's advances, Sebastian, the other twin, shows up and falls in love with Olivia. Willis said the actors had done a superb job of creating their own The play, set in the mythical land of Illyria, portrays the plight of a set of twins who are shipwrecked. Each thinks the other is dead. One twin, Viola, disguises herself as a man named Cesario and takes a job as a page to the Duke of Illyria. Cesario falls in love with the duke, and in the end, Viola wins his belt. "When you see the show, you will believe that those characters made up the very words they are speaking." he said. Willis stressed that the success of a performance doesn't rest on the director's interpretation of the text. The elaborate costumes, designed by the artist, feature a variety of theatre and media arts. "It's a misman that the director does the interpreting alone," he said. show the opence and the self-indulgence of the characters through vibrant colors and shining materials. "The costumes reflect the sense of the characters' public face and their private side that maybe even the characters themselves aren't aware of." Willis said. The setting and the lighting, created by Delbert Unruh, associate professor of theatre and media arts, portrays the reflecting mirror motifs in Illyria and in today's society. "People look at the world and see reflections, and not the truth," Willis said. Some of the most helpful inter pretive hints come from the actors he said. He said the characters who are created by the sweat and tears of the actors are often credited to the director. Willis said he just provided the direction and the final decision. "The actors are important." Willis said. "They lead me to new perceptions through their energies." "I'm proud of the performers and what they do," he said. The actors have put their bodies and souls into creating a thorough and believable performance of the Shakespearean classic, he said. When the male actors accepted their roles, Willis he asked them to grow beards and not cut their hair Crawford said he might keep his beard after the show was over. Willis said some of the actors changed their hair color and became louder and brassier in public to perfect their roles "I kind of like it," he said. "It'll keep me warm during the winter. The show was a great excuse to grow it." The actors go through these changes to help them become more comfortable in their roles. Willis said, not because he asked them to. "No one is doing the show for me," he said. "They are doing the show for themselves. I'm doing the show for myself." Even though the play is performed often, Willis said he tried to make this production original so that even if the audience had already seen another production of the show, they still would enjoy it. Many reasons exist for someone's not going to see a Shakespeare play, he said. Maybe they were bored by reading the play in school, or have seen a poor production, or maybe they have chosen to stretch themselves only to the level of to-day's pop society. those who choose to go will probably find themselves enjoying the show without effort, he said. Late planners pay more for flights home during breaks Of the Kansan staff By Susie Bishop "Now is almost too late — unless you want to fly first class." Elizabeth Jeffery, leisure and corporate agent for Maupintu Travel Service. 831 Massachusetts St., said Monday. Sure. Thanksgiving break is still 19 days away. But students who haven't purchased their airline tickets for home might be in for an unpleasant surprise. "A day or two really makes a difference in this business," she said. Patricia Feeny, Santa Fo, N.M., junior, said she has had her airplane ticket to Albuquerque, New Mexico. She said she had her parents purchase and send the ticket early this semester. Last Christmas, Feeny spent $200 for a round-trip flight to San Diego, waited until the last minute to buy it, she said. Feeny said she didn't think many students flew to New Mexico for Thanksgiving break "Because there are very few flights from Kansas City to Albuquerque, there aren't many flight specials," she said. Flights into Texas and Chicago book up very quickly, she said. People destined for these places must act quickly if they want a seat at any price "A lot of people fly from Kansas City to Chicago," Lauri Buchenheimer, Glenview, Ill., sophomore said. "Between the businessmen and the students, you'll never get a flight home." bachtennheimer said because of the demand for low-price airfare to Chicago, she purchased her ticket at the beginning of October. "The last time I flew home, I knew half of the passengers on the plane." Bachenheimer said. "I know I'll never have a hard time finding a ride home from the airport. You'd think people from Chicago were taking over Kansas." "I'm a member of Midway's Mileage Plus program," Bachenheimer said. "After this trip home, I have enough mileage to pay for a trip back to Kansas." When it came time to buy the ticket home, she said she called all of the airlines to find the best price. Mileage Plus offers free flights to Midway Airlines' frequent fliers, based on accumulated mileage spent in the air. Bachenheimer said she also was a member of a similar program sponsored by United Airlines. "With my United membership, I'm working toward a free trip to Hawaii," she said. One school year compiles many bills and many miles, she said. milly man: "It it really adds up when you travel four times. Rohanbeg, one said. The Thanksgiving flights started to fill up more than $1_{1/2}$ months ago, Jeffery said. The price-cutter fares and the non-stop flights fill up first. Jeffery said most of the Super Saver rates require 90-day notice. Being flexible may include some or all of the following - paying full coach fare or first class prices, leaving late at night or early in the morning or missing classes because no flights are available during the break. "We usually can find space for them, if they can be flexible." deffery said. For the student who hasn't bought a ticket home vet, hope remains. Sandy Strand, travel consultant at Sunflower Travel Service, 704 Massachusetts St., said, "It's easier getting students to their destinations than getting them back. They all want to come back on the same day." Even though the flight demand increases all over the United States during the holidays, few if any flight routes are added, because the airlines don't have the extra planes, Strand said. She said she probably could find flights for students who wait until the day before leaving campus. The Super Saver flights and the holiday fares save the student between 50 percent and 75 percent of the regular full-fare price. "Most often students will drive rather than pay the full price," Strand said. Reservations have to be made far in advance of the flight, and even so, the special prices don't apply to some days around the holidays, Strand said. "We've been urging students to make their flight reservations since August," she said. Matt DeWein. St. Louis freshman, said he had prepared for the season by shooting clay pigeons, or disk-shaped targets, at a farm near In fact, Strand said students should start making arrangements now for the Christmas Students hunt game, challenge around Lawrence Many KU students have been preparing for the hunt and are ready to stalk and kill unsuspecting fowl. By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff The chilly winds of fall often bring to mind images of huddling in the stands, watching the Jayhawks battle it out on the football field. But for many students, falls bring to mind a sport of a different kind. Pheasant and quail season, which runs from Saturday through Jan. 31 for the area east of Highway 281 and Nov. 16 through Jan. 31 for the area west of Highway 281, is the biggest hunting season in the state. Gary McCormack and Game Area manager at the Clinton Wildlife Area, said Tuesday. Hunting. "Next weekend will be real busy in western Kansas," he said. "A lot of people hunt." "I shoot pheasant and quail because it's sporty and they're hard to hit," he said. "Also, you can eat them." Lawrence every weekend since the beginning of the semester. Maynard Shelly, professor of psychology, said people hunted in war because they were pacific. "It's exciting because the hunters don't know where they will find their prey." he said. "People hunt more for the challenge than for power, especially those that hunt with bows and arrows." He said people hunted big game, such as wolves and polar bears, because they presented a real challenge and were dangerous to hunt. Shelly said he also thought people hunted because it was something different to do. "It's novel," he said. "If you hunted for a living, you wouldn't enjoy it as much." "If you risk your life, then you feel things you can't feel in ordinary ways." he said. Reid said squirrel season was open from June 1 to Dec 31. Rabbit season is open all year. Other hunting seasons open now are prairie chuker from Nov. 2 to Jan. 31, and deer from Nov. 2 to Dec. 8 and from Dec. 26 to Jan. 5. The federal government sets the number of days the duck season can be open, Reid said. The Kansas Fish and Game Commission sets the dates of this season and the pheasant, quail and prairie chicken seasons. DeWeen said that besides hunting quail and pheasant, he also liked to hunt squirrels and rabbits with a 22-caliber shotgun. Scott Calliam, Lake Quivira junior, said he planned on going hunter for the season. He said he shot trap at his farm in Smithville, Mo., but said hunters also could practice shooting at Clinton Lake. "I hunt about six or seven times a year for quall, duck and geese," he said. "Really, you can go anywhere there's an open field," he said. He trapshoots clay pigeons and skeet during the summer, he said, although he shoots trap more for fun than for practice. He said he hunted game for sport, but did not enjoy it as much as he did when he was younger He said he also had fun hunting because he got to watch his two Brittany spaniels track decays and downed birds. "I have cut down because I don't enjoy it as much as I used to," he said. "I don't enjoy the killing end of it, so I shoot more trap." bros. "Sometimes we work the dogs without the guns because it's fun to watch them work," he said. "you can buy your license," he said, "get your dog in shape and clean your gun. But I don't have the time or the money for that." Chance Morrow, Dodge City sophomore, said he didn't do anything to get ready for this year's quail and peaahunting seasons. Reid said the best pheasant hunting areas this year would be in the western one-third of the state. Morrow said he was going to hunt in western Kansas near Dodge City, but would not be able to go often this year because of the distance. "Some spots are real good," he said, "and others are not so good." Reid said the best qual-hunting ground would be in southeast Kansas because the qual population was biggest there. "The pheasant population in the northwest is 68 percent higher than it was in 1984," he said. "The population down in 1983 and 1984 because of ice in the spring when they lay. Even with this increase, the number is still below the five and 10 year averages." He suggested that hunters practice shooting before the season opens and that they get in shape to handle all the walking the sport requires. To hunt legally, hunters must purchase a one-year permit, Reid said. A permit costs $9.50 for Kansas residents and $50.50 for nonresidents. These permits are good for all game except deer, which require a special permit. On Tap Nancy Haney Peggy Helsel CONCERTS: the Romanties will perform at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in Hoch Auditorium. Tickets are available at the Student Union Activities box office in the Kansas Union and at all CATS ticket outlets, including Omni Electronics, 540 Fireside Court. Reserved seats are $11 for students with a KU ID and $12.50 for the public. Private Parts, featuring Dawayne Bailey on the guitar, will play at p.m. today, tomorrow and Saturday at The Jazzhaus, 928 12th Massachusetts St. Cover charge is $30. □ PLAYS: Twelfth Night, a comedy by Shakespeare, will be performed at 8 p.m. today, tomorrow and Saturday in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets for the play are $5, $4 and $3, except for the opening night performance, when tickets are $4, $3 and $2. KU students, senior citizens and other students can receive a discount. Tickets can be purchased at the Murphy Hall box office. II SUA MOVIES: "Birdy" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union. Tickets are $2 and can be purchased at the SUA box office "The Breakfast Club" will be shown at 3:30 p.m. 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday in Woodruff Auditorium. Tickets are $1.50. The midnight movie for tomorrow and Saturday will be "Fire and Ice". Tickets are $2. Several short features will be shown at 2 p.m. Sunday. "Closed Mondays", "Neighbors", "The Sand Castle", "The Life of a Polyp", "NY NY", "The Interview", "Leisure" and "Vicious Cyles" all will be shown for $1.50. "Wuthering Heights" is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Woodruff Auditorium. Tickets are $1.50. ( Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 Senate boosts crew funds By Sandra Crider Special to the Kansan The Kansas Crew says it is a stroke closer to being in ship shape for competing, thanks to a bill passed last night by the Student Senate giving it more than $11,000. About 40 crew members showed up at last night's Senate meeting to support the bill, which made it possible for the team to get new sets of oars, a main amplifiers and ergometers, a type of exercise machine. Last night's meeting was the last regularly scheduled meeting before Senate election, scheduled for Nov. 20 and 21. David Brandt, Prairie Village sophomore and captain of the men's crew team, said the additional help from Student Senate should help the team win the first championship that has won the last four Big Eight and state championships, Brandt said. The largest percentage of the allocation will go toward the new oars, which will improve the team's success for competition. Brandt said The Senate also approved a bill requiring that the percentage of student representation on the boards of student, campus and community groups financed by the Senate equal the percentage of the group's funds received from Senate, or 20 percent, whichever is greater. The groups have until Jan. 1 to comply. Tony Arnold, chairman of StudEx and author of the bill, said, "It's only fair we should have representation proportionate to funds. Students should have some say in where their money goes." Clyde Chapman, director of Lawrence Consumer Affairs, said members of his organization would comply with the new rule because they wanted to keep their financing. Student Senate allocations account for about 35 percent of Consumer Affairs funds. He said he would probably talk to members of other community groups involved to readdress the bill next semester. The rule would not change the way the group operates, he said, but might hinder its representation of the community. "It restricts our ability to draw our board of directors from the community we represent," he said. "The The Senate also passed a petition asking the administration to address the "blatantly unfair" procedure of allowing student athletes to enroll early. faculty and staff provision would have been more fair." Gordon Woods, liberal arts and sciences senator, said, "The system is set up to give everyone the same random chance to get their classes. Then the athletes get first crack. That's not fair." The petition recognizes the positive contribution that the athletes make to the University of Kansas but states that the university makes of the athletes' special privilege. In other action, the Senate: Passed a resolution declaring Monday as Vietnam Memorial Day at the University. Passed a resolution supporting the policy platform of Associated Students of Kansas. Passed a resolution supporting the Great Peace March, in which 5,000 advocates of nuclear arms control will march across the United States. Allocated $1,394 to Big Brothers-Big Sisters for special projects. Mid East discussed A veteran foreign correspondent gave his assessment of the continuing conflict between Israel and its Arab neighbors last night. By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff John Law, former chief Middle East correspondent for U.S. News & World Report, gave a speech titled "How Many Minutes to Midnight?" to more than 200 people in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Law outlined the history of the Jewish presence in Palestine. Throughout his speech, he maintained that Israel had engaged in an aggressive policy of expansionism and provocation of the Palestinian and neighboring Arabs. "I will state that right now, in my view, it certainly is very close to midnight bells tolling for the Middle East today," Law said. Law is director of policy research for the National Association of Arab Americans. Members of several student groups distributed literature before the speech, which denounce- ed the association and warned that because of Law's involvement with the group, his statements were biased. Mike Geller, St. Louis senior, and member of Students for Truth, said, "The National Association of Arab Americans is claiming to help Arab-Americans, when they're only trying to weaken Israel, which happens to be the best U.S. ally outside of Europe and the only democracy in the Middle East." The association does little or nothing to help Arab-Americans, Geller said. Law said the Arab-Israeli conflict was in its 66th year. The first violence occurred in 1020, he said. Several Jews were killed when Palestinians attacked a settlement because they were feeling hemmed by in Jewish settlers, some of whom arrived in the area during the 19th century, he said. Law said peace could come to the Middle East only if Israel was willing to surrender territories gained in the 1967 war against Egypt. On Campus Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union. ■ Canterbury House will sponsor an Episcopal worship service at noon today in Danforth Chapel. The Christian Science College Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel. The Mt. Oread Bike Club Racing Team will meet at 8 p.m. today in the Governor's Room of the Union. The KU Men's Soccer Club will practice at 4 p.m. today and Tuesday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The KU Women's Soccer Club will practice at 4:30 p.m. today and Tuesday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. "The Wiz" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1204 Oread Ave. The Biology Club will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Sunflower Room of the Union. STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOPS Via Videotape Friday, November 8 576 CITY HIGH SCHOOL 408-849-2144 FREE! 1:30 Time Management 2:30 Preparing for Exams 4:00 Listening and Notetaking To attend, register at the Student Assistance Center MEI MOBILE AUDIO SYSTEMS CX142E ETR AM/FM tuner receiver with auto-stop cassette deck, separate bass and treble controls, radio monitor and full electronic tuning system 11.2.7 AUDIO TECHNICA Reg. $159.95 Special Price $99.85 CHRISTMAS & THANKSGIVING FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST --- 914 W. 23rd (913) 842-5511 NO EXTRA CHARGE! AIRLINE COUNTER PRICES Make your reservations at todays prices. On campus or downtown. Lawreno Custom Radio DON'T DELAY DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED CALL NOW! The Finest In Car Stereo Sales and Repair Which is a simple one-step test? Which has a dramatic color change to make the results unmistakable? Which is 98% accurate, as accurate as many hospital and lab tests? The hand is gripping something. Maupintour travel service Test yourself. Which early pregnancy test is as easy to read as red, no-white, yes? Which is portable for convenience and privacy? K. D. Union/900 Mass. 749-0700 e·p·t plus Early Pregnancy Test Premium gel premine Baby gel preemie cream Lactate monitor solution You're right. You get a Plus! SILADIUM RINGS NOW ONLY $89.95 CENTRAL STATE UNIVERSITY STATE UNIVERSITY OKLAHOMA UNIVERSITY SAVE $50 CENTRAL STATE UNIVERSITY CENTRAL STATE UNIVERSITY STATE UNIVERSITY EMORIA PB - 61 CENTRAL STATE UNIVERSITY MAY 1, 2015 ADMINISTERED BY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA OKLAHOMA UNIVERSITY SHREVE UNIVERSITY OKLAHOMA UNIVERSITY SAVE $50 ArtCarved Siladium college rings are now more affordable than ever Choose from an incredible variety of styles See your ArtCarved presentative now and save $50 on a great Siladium college ring Every ArtCarved ring is backed by a Full Lifetime Warranty. ARTCARVED CLASS RINGS Attention Greeks! Don't Miss Our New Greek Products November 7-9 10 a.m.-4 p.m. KU Bookstore Kansas Union TIME MAGNETIC RESISTANCE PLACE bax Deposit Required © 1983 ArtCarved Class Rings THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS HOMECOMING 1985 Saturday, November 9 NIC PICNIC PARADE 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m., Saturday, November 9 Tent southeast of Memorial Stadium Adults $5,50 Children 12 & under $3.50 For advance tickets, call 864-4760. New day! New time! New place! 9:30 a.m., Saturday, November 9 Massachusetts Street Theme: HAWKS GO HAWAIIAN! 1:30 p.m., Saturday, November 9 for advance tickets, call 864-3141. C JAYHAWKS vs. COLORADO BUFFALOES CONCERT: The Romantics 8:30 p.m., Saturday, November Hoch Auditorium General public $12.50 Students with KJID $11.00 For tickets, call 864-3477 or CATS outlets. 9 For more information on any of these events, call the KU Alumni Association, 864-4760. 10 8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 Man enters plea in kidnapping By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff A 19-year-old Lawrence man pleaded not guilty to charges of aggravated assault, making a terrorist threat, rape, aggrigated kidnapping, and aggravated sodomy yesterday in Douglas County District Court. The preliminary hearing and arraignment for Mark R. Ma, 2333 Atchison Avenue, was yesterday at 3:30 p.m. Mike Malone, Douglas County associate district judge, set a jury trial date for Jan. 13, 1986. On Oct. 21, Maas shot himself in the mouth as a Lawrence police officer was serving him with a warrant for arrest on some of the charges. He was released from the University of Kansas Medical Center Oct. 26. The charges of aggravated assault and making a terrorist threat were filed Oct. 21 against Maas in connection with an Oct. 8 incident that led outside Lawrence High School and involved a 15-year-old girl. Charges of rape, aggravated kio napping and aggravated burglary were filed Oct. 22 in connection with the assaults against a Rural Baldwin town on the same date. Douglas District Attorney Jim Flory filed the charge of aggravated sodomy yesterday in connection with the Oct. 20 incident. Flory called the girl to the witness stand to testify against Maas in connection with both incidents, and she was also questioned by Maas' attorney, John Nitcher. In her testimony, the girl said she had known Maas for two and a half years and dated him on and off for about a year and a half. On Oct. 8, she said, about two weeks after she had broken up with him, Maas came to Lawrence High School about 3 p.m. and asked her to leave with him so they could talk When she refused, she said, Maas showed her a gun and told her he would shoot her and himself if she didn't go with him. She said she left with him in her car and then brought him back to his own car. As he was getting into his car, the heard him say he would “get” her. When she opened the passenger-side door and asked him why he had made the comment, she said, he pulled her inside. She then agreed to go with him to Clinton Lake. At the lake Maas ran from the car and she followed him into the woods. She said she found him leaning against a tree and removed the gun from his coat pocket. "I didn't want him killing himself," she said. Maas asked her to return the gun so he could unload it, she said. She gave him the gun, and he removed the bullets and returned it to her. She said Maa took her back to the school and she agreed not to tell anyone about the incident. She told her father about the incident the next day because Maas had been following her around, she said. Her father notified the police about the previous day's incident. She did not have any further confrontations, she said, until about 11 p.m. Oct 20 when Maas' awakened her at her parent's rural Baldwin home. "He covered my mouth with his hand and held a gun to my head," she said. "He told me not to scream." She said Maas held the gun on her while she dressed and then forced her into his car, which was parked about 100 yards from her house. Maas handcuffed her right hand to the car door and her left hand to her right hand, she said. Maas drove to a dirt road near a school in Wakarausa, she said, and while she was handcuffed, Maas raped and sodomized her. She said they were parked on the dirt road near the school for about an hour and a half. Maas then drove her, still hancou- fed, into Lawrence and showed her graftifi he had written on various structures around town. About 6 a.m on Oct 21, she said, Maas returned her to her parents' home. She said she got into bed for about 15 minutes before getting up to get ready for school. She saw her family before leaving for school, she said, but said nothing about the incident because she had promised Maas she would not. At school, the girl told her cousin about the incident. The cousin told a. Nitcher then called the girl's father to the stand. friend, and at their urgings, the gnr told her father, she said. The girl's father told the court that after his daughter had told him Maas had threatened to kill her and himself, he had called Maas and asked him about the incident. The father said he did not call Maa's parents at that point because, he said, he was afraid Maas would try to kill himself over his "young love." The father said that as a youth, he had tried to kill himself over a girl. That girl later became the mother of his daughter, he said. The father said the daughter was in therapy for problems she was having with her parents. When asked by Nitcher whether the girl had a reputation for telling the truth, the father said, "She has a problem with telling some of the truth some of the time." The father said he thought his daughter was telling the truth in her court testimony. Nitcher also called the girl's cousin to the stand. The cousin, also a Lawrence High student, testified that the girl had told him the morning of Oct. 21 that Maas had raped her, and that he had taken the girl to her father. He said that as far as he knew, the girl did not have a reputation for lying. Actor to intimate Poe's strange fate Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered hard and weary. Over many a volume of curious and forgotten lore — While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping. As of someone gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door. " "Tis some visitor," I muttered, "tapping at my chamber door — Only this and nothing more." By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff Many a fan of the macabre in American literature would recognize these solemn words as the opening stanza of Edgar Allan Poe's poem, "The Raven." A professional actor will come to the University tomorrow to bring to life a single night in the life of Edgar Allan Poe. The actor, Scott Keely, will present "Goodnight, Mpoe" at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Tickets are $4 for the general public and $3 for students with a KIDY. Keely's appearance is sponsored by Student Union Activities. Sometimes before dawn on Sept. 27, 1849. Edgarr Allan Poe bored a steamship at Richmond, Va. bound for New York. The ship arrived two days later, on schedule. Poe, however, had disappeared. He was found Oct. 3, delirious and raving in a Baltimore tavern. He never fully regained his senses, and five days later Poe was dead. "Goodnight, Mr. Poe," Keely's interpretation of what might have occurred during the night of Oct. 2. The presentation includes excerpts from several of Poe's works, such as "The Raven," "The Conqueror Worm" and "Annabel Lee." But Keely's presentation is not merely a poetry recital. "He won't stand up there on a podium." Rick Lindley, SUA fine arts board member, said yesterday. "He's got props and a costume. He imitates Poe's manierrisms and speech, and tries to intimate why Poe met an untimely end." Lindley said Keely had researched Poe's life and works. Keely, who has been an actor for more than a decade, has taken his one-man Poe show throughout the country. He also has written, acted and directed for radio and educational television. Keely's performance also includes Poe's sometimes humorous views on politics and the events of his day. Tickets are available at the SUA box office and will be sold until an hour before showtime tomorrow evening, or nevermore. AXΣ AXΣ TONIGHT AT 7:30 GUEST SPEAKER - DR. ROBERT DEKOSKY, ROOM 2001 MAL. KU Baha'i Club Invites Interested Students and Faculty to Attend Our Meeting Thursday, Nov. 7 7:30 p.m. Oread Room Kansas Union Topic of Discussion Elimination of Prejudice Featured Speaker: Zhalih Para COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA TEL: 0123456789 TELEPHONE NUMBER "A wonderful surprise" American Flyers Fri. 1-5.00 Daily 7:20 3:50 Sat. & Sun. 2:30 5:00 VARSITY TEL: 0123456789 TELEPHONE NUMBER "The Live and Die" LA Fri. 1-5.00 Daily 7:30 4:00 Sat. & Sun. 2:30 5:00 HILLCREST 1 CHARLES DOWNSON DEATH WISH 3 CANNON Daily 1-6.00 7:30 5:00 Sat. & Sun. 2:45 HILLCREST 2 JAGGED EDGE Daily 1-4.95 7:30 4:00 Sat. & Sun. 2:30 HILLCREST 3 THE NEW MEETING BRINGS RENO WILLIAMS The American Repertory Daily 1-4.95 7:30 4:00 Sat. & Sun. 2:30 CINEMA 1 GORGULA 1985 ALL NEW! Fri. 1-8.00 Daily 7:20 Sat. & Sun. 2:55 5:00 STEPHEN KING'S SILVER BULLET Daily 6:30 CINEMA 2 SISSY SPACEK a true story Fri. 1-4.55 Daily 7:20 2:55 Sat. & Sun. 2:55 4:55 *Bargain Show* COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE TEL 843-762-5111 "A wonderful surprise." American Flyers Fri. '1' 9:00 Daily 7:30 9:35 Sat. & Sun. '2' 3:30 15:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE TEL 843-762-5111 The LIVE and DIE CA Fri. '1' 5:00 Daily 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun. '2' 3:30 15:00 HILLCREST 1 CHARLES BRONSON DEATH WISH 3 DAUNTON Daily '1' 5:00 7:30 9:30 Sat. & Sun. '2' 4:45 HILLCREST 2 JAGGED EDGE Daily '4' 4.55 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun. '2' 3:30 HILLCREST 3 THE ELECTRIC ENTERTAINMENT HALL 213 WEST 45TH ST. NERO WILLIAMS The Entertainment Hall Daily *4-15* 7:20 Downtown Sat & Bunn *2-30* CINEMA 1 GODZilla 1985 ALL NEW! Fri. *8-10* Daily 7:25 Sat & Bunn *1-35* 7:25 Daily 9:30 STEPHEN KING'S SILVER BULLET CINEMA 2 SISSY SPACEK O five story Fri. *4-15* Daily 7:20 Sat & Bunn *2-50* 7:50 Marie Trivial Pursuit SILVER SCREEN EDITION THE PURSUIT GOES ON. AND ON. AND ON. Nowadays (and nowanights) the Big Man On Campus is the one with the biggest collection of Trivial Pursuit card sets. So here are six more editions to pursue: Baby Boomer Edition-From Eisenhower to Flower Power. - Silver Screen Edition-A ton of titillating Tinseltown trivia. Tinseltown trivia. All-Star Sports Edition—Here's your chance to knock a jock right on his artificial turf. Genus II $ ^{\mathrm {TM}} $ Edition-Picks up where the Genus Edition $ ^{\mathrm {TM}} $ laughed off. RPM $ ^{\mathrm {TM}} $ Edition-Music! Music! Music! From Beethoven to Boy George. Young Players $ ^{\mathrm {TM}} $ Edition-From the Brothers Grimm to the Brothers Gibb. the Brothers Grimm to the Brothers Gibb. Get'em all. Play'em all. Have a ball! Trivial Pursuit Fiorinal Pessuit ALL-STAR SPORTS EDITION Trivial Pursuit GENUS II EDITION Trivial Pursuit ALL-STAR SPORTS EDITION Trivial Pursuit GENUS II EDITION Trivial Pursuit RPM EDITION Trivial Pursuit YOUNG PLAYERS EDITION Every American is entitled to Life, Liberty & the Pursuit of Trivia. X Trivial Pursuit YOUNG PLAYERS® EDITION TRANSFER PURCHASE in the registration treatment at New Hampshire law. Certified for the general purpose and in the U.S. under license to HOLLOW & RIGHTCORP B.C. Bay Shore N.J. BOOKER (BCORE) is registered under the BILLARY OF AMERICA Act. Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 9 Politician supports equality The Associated Press TOPEKA — Indianapolis Mayor William Hudut said yesterday that the U.S. Justice Department was driven by ideology — not pressure from the public — in its effort to end affirmative action in government business practices. Hudnut, who was in Topeka for a round of appearances and to deliver a lecture on "Politics and Religion," has gone to court resisting a Justice Department order attempting to halt a court-imposed legislative action program in police and fire department hirings and promotions. "Our's is an effort to increase the number of women and minorities in our police and fire departments." Hudnut told a news conference. "I would prefer we have goals and guidelines to do that. They (the Justice Department) say we have a race and sex-conscious policy." Hudnut, a Republican, said his city was only continuing a policy dictated by the federal government when Jimmy Carter was president. Under Ronald Reagan, Hudnut charged, "The Justice Department has done a 180-degree flipflop." "Mr. Meese and Brad Reynolds have decided they are going to impose their conservative philosophy on America," Hudnut said. "I think what they are doing is wrong — legally, politically and morally." Hudnut, a third-generation Presbyterian minister-turned-politician, also paid a visit yesterday to Dr. Karl Meninger, the 92-year-old co-founder and chairman of the board of the Meninger Foundation, a community service lecture in a series named for Meninger. In his prepared remarks, Hudnut expressed concern over the mixing of religion and politics in this country. "Government has to be the impatient arbitrator on issues, not an advenience." He said he was "very concerned" about "one-issue" issue politics, in which individuals or groups judge candidates wholly on their stand on one issue. Hudnut said the visit to Menninger's office on the foundation grounds in northwest Topeka gave him "an opportunity to express the love and affection our family has for him." The Indianapolis mayor said he paid his respects to "one of the leading Presbyterian laymen in America," and discussed with Menninger the development of The Villages residences for unwanted and wayward youth, which he said "has had a little bit of a rough go in Indianapolis." Meningner was instrumental in founding The Villages in Topeka in the mid-1970s. Hudnut addressed the Greater Topeka Chamber of Commerce on "The Indiana Story," relating how Indianapolis went about revitalizing itself. "We are trying to encourage downtown re-investment without discouraging suburban investment," the mayor said. He said what worked for Indianapolis wouldn't necessarily work for cities such as Topeka, which still is struggling to revitalize its central city area. "I think each city is unique," Hudun said. "You've got to analyze your strengths and weaknesses and build on your assets. You have to figure out what you do well and then build on it." Defendant removed from gambling case The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — One of nine alleged underworld figures accused of skimming $2 million in gambling money from Las Vegas casinos was severed from the case yesterday just before a key government witness testified. U. S. District Judge Joseph E. Stevens Jr. and attorneys involved in the case would not say how the charges against Carl A. DeLuna, the defendant, were disposed. The announcement came just before Allen Glick, who prosecutors say are arguing for Army Corp. with money loaned by the Teamsters Central States Pension Fund, took the witness stand. "The charges against defendant Carl Angel DeLuna have been disposed of, and he is no longer a defendant in the case. He will not be present henceforth." Stevens told the ury. government has proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt as to the other defendants," he told jurors. "You are not to consider this fact when deciding whether the The court session was canceled yesterday morning as lawyers for both sides met in the judge's chambers. The announcement by Stevens was made at the start of the afternoon session. Glick, who bought two Las Vegas casinos with a $62.75 million loan from the pension fund, testified that Frank Renay, a fund trustee, and Alvin Barron, the fund's asset manager, both said he would need to contact Balstrier. Glick testified yesterday that Frank Baldistrieri, the reputed organized crime leader in Milwaukee and one of the defendants in the skimming case, held strong control over loans made by the Teamsters pension fund. Barron also said Balistrieri was influential in pension fund loans, Glick said. Man injured by firecracker The Associated Press SALINA — A Kansas Wesleyan football player was listed in satisfactory condition today after losing part of his right index finger in a freak fireworks explosion in his dormitory. Michael Bland, 19, a freshman from Diboll, Texas, said Tuesday that the incident started as he watched a televised football game with three friends in his room Monday night. "I told them I had something to make them be quiet, but I really didn't mean anything by it," he said. He brought out a six-inch firecracker he purchased in Texas and ignited the fuse. Bland said he tried without success to pull the fuse out of the firecraeker and yelled to his friends to leave the room because he could not get a window open. Bland ran from the room, fell in the hall and said he remembered seeing a friend standing next to a fire escape. David Smith, dean of students at the college, said Bland released the firecracker just as it exploded by the door. Our three-year and two-year scholarships won't make college easier. Just easier to pay for. Even if you didn't start college on a scholarship, you could finish on one. Army ROTC Scholarships pay for full tuition and allowances for educational fees and textbooks. Along with up to $1,000 CALL OR WRITE PROFESSOR OF MILITARY SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS - LAWRENCE, KS 66045 PHONE: (913) 864-3311. ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS PRO TINT 842-0261 Automotive Window Tinting Specialist Pro Tint uses only TOUGH KOTE film so you won't be looking out through scratched windows. As long as you own your car we guarantee the tint from peeling, bubbling, or changing colors. CALL US TODAY, and find out how reasonably priced quality tint can be. 2201 "D" W 25th St. PRO TINT 842-0261 Lawrence, Ks. AMERICAN AID TO ISRAEL: Its Impact on Israeli Policy in the Middle East a lecture by Samir Abed-Rabbo, Ph.D in International Law author of American Aid to Israel, and The International Law and Question of Palestine 1986 7 p.m. tonight Nov. 7, 1985 Alderson Auditorium Kansas Union sponsored by General Union of Palestinian Studenti BUY ANY ONE SWEATER IN STOCK SAVE 50% ON SECOND SWEATER (2nd sweater equal value or less) 1/2 PRICE SWEATER SALE! MAURICES Where Fashion Doesn't Cost A Fortune 706 Massachusetts Street, DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE FREE 46 Point Check Up Service Clinic Buy any sweater at current ticket price and receive a second sweater of equal value or less at 1/2 PRICE! Choose from crews, V-necks, cardigans, shetlands, hand knits, fisherman knits, vests, Shakers, and novelties ...all in a variety of comfortable styles and popular fall & winter colors. Watch for additional sale items in pants, skirts, dresses, and outerwear. FREE To make √ FREE Tues. & Wed., Nov. 12 & 13, 6-10 p.m. 2 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR CHECKS ✓ Lights ✓ Horn ✓ Windshield Wipers/Washers ✓ Mirrors ✓ Radio/Antenna ✓ Seat Belts ✓ Upholstery 2 BODY INSPECTION Damage Glass Hood and Trunk Latches Window & Door Operation 3 4 UNDER HOOD CHECKS ✔ Battery & Cables ✔ Cooling System ✔ Fluid Levels ✔ Engine Filters ✔ Drive Belts 5 ELECTRONIC TESTS (scope check) ✓ Ignition Point Dwell ✓ Ignition Timing ✓ Plug Wires ✓ Hot Idle RPM ✓ Ignition Points ✓ Distributor Cap ✓ Rotor ✓ Spark Plugs ✓ EFI Checker Test 6 UNDER CAR CHECKS $ \checkmark $ Shock Absorbers $ \checkmark $ Exhaust System $ \checkmark $ Steering Linkage $ \checkmark $ Tire Wear $ \checkmark $ Universal Joints & Seals $ \checkmark $ Rear Axle (Lube Level) $ \checkmark $ Brake Pads/Shoes $ \checkmark $ Wheel Cylinders (Visual) $ \checkmark $ Fluid Leaks $ \checkmark $ Springs ROAD TEST AND OPERATION (optional) ✓ General Engine Operation ✔ General Handling & Steering ✔ Brakes (including hand brake) ✓ Transmission Performance ✔ Clutch (if equipped) ✔ Tire Balance ✔ Speedometer ✔ Gauges ✔ Warning Lights ✔ Power Steering (if equipped) ✔ Air Conditioning (if equipped) make an appointment, please call no later than Nov. 11 between the hours of 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and ask for Joyce. LairdNoller 1116 W.23rd 842-2191 TOYOTA EXCELLENCE AWARD SERVICE EXCELLENCE AWARD 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday WINNER TOYOTA SERVICE TOTAL PARTS AND SERVICE THE REAL STUFF THE RIGHT PRICE 1 10 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 Parties set '86 election goals The Associated Press Democrats and Republicans informally inaugurated their 1986 election campaigns yesterday, posting rival claims of success on the day after off-year balloting produced a GOP runaway in New Jersey but a historic Democratic sweep of Virginia. Several of the nation's big-city mayors savored new terms in municipal elections: Ed Koch in New York, Coleman Young in Detroit and Kathy Whitmire in Houston. Miami's six-term Mayor Maurice Ferre was the most notable casualty. He ran third behind Raul Massivel and Xavier Suarez, who square off in a run-off election next Tuesday. Democratic Party chairman Paul G. Kirk Jr. hailed moderate Governor-elect Gerald L. Ballies in Virginia a winner, and said first-time statewide victories Tuesday by a black and a woman showed a powerful, historic and positive force. Noting that President Reagan had campaigned for the losing GOP ticket in Virginia, Kirk said Democrats need have no fear of presidential popularity as they bid to win control of the Senate in 1986. But at the White House, spokesman Larry Speakes countered that Republican Gov. Thomas Kean was re-elected by a landslide in New Jersey, despite the significant damage (CAP) control of the State Assembly for the first time since 1972. "We won two out of three," he said. Kean said he told Reagan he wanted to make New Jersey's new GOP coaliation a model for national Republican politics. "I want to send a message to Washington that the Republican Party can do whatever it wants to do if it includes all the people in its plans," said Kean. The president celebrated his 1984 re-election anniversary with a speech to party officials and campaign workers in which he said the GOP had a commanding lead in polls that gauged support of 18 to 24 year-old voters. "We hold a lead, in other words, on the years ahead," he said, without mentioning the results in Virginia and New Jersey. Leaders of both parties had agreed in advance that New Jersey and Virginia were the key battlegrounds as they looked ahead to the 1986 congressional elections, with the GOP looking for signs of a nationwide Republican realignment and Democrats hoping for a comeback after Reagan's 49-state re-election sweep in 1984. Kirk said, "The Virginia race was another test by the Republicans of their realignment effort and in that regard. . . once again they have failed in that test." Kirk said Democratic defeats in the New Jersey assembly were largely the result of Kean's popularity. But Speakes said that in Virginia, the Democratic success was because of the popularity of outgoing Gov. Charles Robb, whom he said often pursued policies "very much like Ronald Reagan . . . I think the Democratic party in Virginia spent most of its time trying to distance itself from the national party." 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Photo Album 100 page Photo Album $500 Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 Nation/World University Daily Kansan 11 Congress splits budget vote United Press International WASHINGTON — The Republican- led Senate yesterday stuck to its "Gramm-Rudman" balanced budget plan, but the Democratic-controlled House again rejected it in favor of its own proposal. The House voted late yesterday, 248-177 with near Democratic unanimity, against the Senate's proposal, sending the issue toward its second House-Senate conference in a month in an attempt to resolve differences between the House Democratic balanced budget attempt and the "Gramm-Rudman" plan. Republicans contended their "Gramm-Rudman" proposal was a "real" deficit-cutting effort. Democrats said theirs was just as "real" and said "fair" as well. "I think the test of seriousness is the willingness to negotiate, said Ritro Fiorelli. " A previous House-Senate conference on the Senate's "Gramm Rudman" balanced budget broke up last week in disagreement. Since then, the House has countered with a Democratic alternate balanced budget plan. The Senate's 74-24 vote yesterday in favor of the "Gramm-Rudman" plan was almost the same as its first vote for the measure Oct. 10, with 26 Democrats joining Republicans in support. That was in stark contrast to the unity displayed by House Democrats last week when they almost unanimously passed their own balanced-budget plan. Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore., leader of the Senate conferences, said there would "have to be some give" on both sides in the search for a compromise and suggested Senate Republican leader Robert Dole, House Speaker Thomas O'Neill and "someone who speaks for the president" might have to meet in an attempt to bring the sides together. Opposing the measure, Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., said the Republicans 'stole back the political high ground" with their bill, which he called unconstitutional, unfair and unworkable. But Sen. Pete Domenci, R-N.M., insisted the plan "set up a hammer" that would fall on Congress if it failed to balance the budget. "I'm not saying we won't get out from under it, but if there is anything we could pass that would make deficit reduction real, this is it," he said. Both balanced budget measures are tied to a bill to increase the federal debt ceiling to a record $2 trillion. The Treasury says it must be passed by Nov. 14 to keep the government running. Both bills set decreasing deficit levels for the next several years and require Congress to meet the targets. If the deficit limits are not met, the president is empowered to cut spending. Critics charge that that feature is an unconstitutional grant of presidential power. UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY the best in party pics! 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HANDEL · PINNOCK FIREWORKS MUSIC English Concert LP: 25% Off Cass.: 25% Off C.D.: 15% Off LP: Only $6.49 Cass: Only $6.49 C.D.: 15% Off PACHELBEL KANON ALBINONI ADAGIO MUNCHINGER • STUTTGART MESSAH SIR COLIN DAVIS PHILIPS NEW LP: 25% Off Cass.: 25% Off C.D.: 15% Off KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO_VIDEO shop 0 12 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 S. African students take risk for exams United Press International JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Troop> and police patrolled near Cape Town yesterday to protect about 4,500 mixed-race students who risked a clash with anti-apartheid protesters to take important examinations. In Pretoria, government authorities reported few incidents of the racial violence that has taken at least 836 lives in the last 14 months in white-rated South Africa. But in Soweto, the country's largest black ghetto situated just outside Johannesburg, a truck and a shop were reported torched. Demonstrators also burned down a school in Kwanobuhole, outside Port Elizabeth. No injuries were reported in the violence in Soweto and Kwanobuhle. About 2,000 students of mixed racial ancestry took year-end examinations at the Goodwood showgrounds about six miles from the center of Cape Town. Police patrolled nearby in armored trucks and soldiers kept watch in smaller mine-proof armored vehicles. Police said earlier that two people were shot to death Tuesday and a third was wounded when about 700 black youths attacked police in Cape Town's Gauleytown township. Traops and police also patrolled on foot as the students sought refuge in the fenced-in showgrounds from others seeking to enforce a school boycott called 18 months ago by opponents of apartheid. At the nearby Wingfield air force base, soldiers checked students' names off a list before letting about 1,000 youths take tests Authorities protected 1,500 more students during exams at the Faure base for mixed-race soldiers of the Cane Colored Corps. No incidences of violence were reported at the testing centers. under military protection. Education Ministry spokesman Abel Jordan declined to say how many students chose to take their tests in the face of the boycott, but school workers said slightly more than one-third of Cape Town's mixed-race students turned out. The school boycott was launched in 1984 by the Congress of South African students, which has since been outlawed, to protest what it called inferior education at segregated institutions. In Cape Town, local and foreign reporters met with a police public relations officer, Capt. Jan Calitz, for an off-the-record briefing on the implications of new curbs on newspaper and television coverage of race riots around Cape Town, Port Elizabeth and Johannesburg. "I think we cleared up quite a few points and I look forward to prosperous mutual cooperation." Calitz said. The government imposed broad restrictions Saturday on newspaper and television coverage of black riots, banning television and newspaper cameras entirely and putting journalists under the control of police. One reporter said after the meeting, however, that there was "a substantial amount of misunderstanding" about the limitations. Cocaine usage rises says new drug study United Press International WASHINGTON — Coca-use in America rose dramatically in 1984 and supplies of the drug were so plentiful in many big U.S. cities that the wholesale price for each ounce of the government study said yesterday. Marijuana use was down 3 percent, the study by the Drug Enforcement Agency said, mainly because fewer young people were using the drug. The DEA's annual "Narcotics Intelligence Estimate," a detailed analysis of drug use, supplies, trafficking and money in 1984, also the most significant factor on the international cocaine market was the expansion of all phases of trafficking - cultivation, processing and distribution. While still dominated by Colombia, and less so by Peru and Bolivia, trafficking and production had moved substantially into other South American nations, such as Ecuador and Brazil, the report said. Cocaine use in the United States rose 11 percent in 1984, the study said. Taking cocaine with heroin intravenously in a "speedball" — the method that killed comedian David Leblush — also was on the increase, with the number of hospital emergencies because of "speedballs" up 37 percent. The report said that in early 1984, cocaine was so plentiful that there were large wholesale price reductions in many U.S. cities. Attorney General Edwin Meese, in a statement with the report, said the study indicated that the U.S. fight against illegal drugs was "a long and difficult battle." Group wants new sales law United Press International WASHINGTON — Legislation is needed to crack down on flimflam operations that use promises of good pay and travel to attract young people and then exploit them in door-to-door sales jobs, a House panel was told yesterday. But other witnesses, including an FBI official, told the subcommittee on civil and constitutional rights that current law was adequate to deal with the problem. Earlene Williams, national director of Parent Watch, said the average experience for youths selling magazine subscriptions and other products door to door "is one of long hours, hard work, without adequate sleep or food, pushed about by abusive crew chiefs, with little or no pay." Venita Shrewsbury, 25, of Cincinnati, told the panel she was attracted to an interview in a motel room by a newspaper advertisement that promised travel throughout the country and high pay. Instead, Shrubsbury said, she was put to work in a crew of young people that was selling cleaning fluid in half-gallon containers for $29.95. Despite her long hours, she told the lawmakers she never was paid except for a few dollars in meal money. Shrewsbury testified she finally faded after her crew chief charged falsely that his books showed, after deduction of $300 for motels, that she owed him $300. "When victims answer the ads," testified Deputy Assistant Director Wayne Gilbert of the FBI, "they are given a high-pressure sales pitch and made to feel they must make a decision about employment immediately." "All of the victims tell of long hours selling door-to-door or attending meetings, crowded living conditions in motels far away from home and the small allowances they received for food," he said. time again in our investigations, victims told us they could have left but Elizabeth and Paul Green traveled from Panama City, Fla., for the hearing but did not tell the lawmakers what happened to their daughter Valerie, who, at the age of 16, signed on to sell a cleaning product immediately after being interviewed in a notel. But Gilbert said that "time and "It was like she was brainwashed," her mother told a reporter during a recess in the hearing. Valerie packed a suitcase and left home immediately after the interview, her father said. "I blame it on that ad in the paper." her mother said, her voice breaking. "It said she could make $1,000 a week and have fun in the sun." Within hours, Valerie boarded a small, private plane with five other young people and died with them when it crashed. Craxi wins confidence, favors PLO United Press International ROME — Prime Minister Bettino Craxi's government won a confidence vote in the Chamber of Deputies yesterday after he defended the legitimacy of the Palestine Liberation Organization's armed struggle against Israel. Craxi's government was reassembled after the ruling coalition collapsed because of its actions after the Oct. 7 Achille Lauro hijacking attempt, the government must win a similar confidence test before it may continue in office. The Senate vote, expected tomorrow, is regarded as a certain victory and will confirm Craxi's five-party government coalition as if the crisis never erupted. Craxi won the vote in the Chamber of Deputies after a defiant speech in which he recognized the right of the PLO to use armed struggle to recover Israeli-occupied territory. The vote was 347 to 238 with one abstention. "The PLO must be judged by the standard of history." Craxi said. "To dispute the recourse to arms by a movement that seeks to liberate its country would mean to challenge the course of history." Craxi said that Israel had military supremacy in the Middle East and that there existed no military force in the region that could threaten it. "For 18 years Israel has been occupying Arab territory, where Arab peoples live," he said. "We think Israel should give back those territories in exchange for peace, a restitution that should be negotiated." Name Brand Fashions At Wholesale Prices - Wool Skirts - Dresses - Sweaters or $20 nothing over $30 - Wool Jackets 10% off anything with this ad Wide variety of styles and sizes from petites to plus sizes. Also children's and men's clothing. 717 Mass M-F Noon to 6 Thurs til 8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-5 PENNY ANNIE'S Sweet Shoppe 710 Main Street, Suite 245 PENNYANNIES has We make our own Cream&Butter Fudge. 12 flowers 20-Flavors of Ice Cream. Quarter pound dip on a HAND ROLLED WAFFLE CONE only 69¢ a dip. Largest selection of Imported and Domestic Candy in Laurence. 10:30:5:30 daily, Thurs. until 8 p.m. 730 Mass. 12 Flavors! Tantalizing Treats. 843-5544 Come in and enter today. Drawing will be held thru Nov. 30 Winners will be notified on Dec. 17,1985 Students and Faculty make the difference at Nabil's Restaurant 4 VCR's Nabil's 106 N. Park (formerly Campus Hideaway) 749-5246 KU students get a 10% discount on Sunday nights with KUID. 9th & Iowa Open 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Hillcrest Shopping Center 5 p.m.-10 p.m. For parties of 5 or more, please call for reservations 841-7226. Dive into Harry's SHRIMP BASKET: 8 ounces of shrimp, cocktail sauce & Curly Q fries. Or, take on HARRY'S JUMBO: 10 oz. burger with Curly Q fries. go4it $4.00 Lifetime Memberships thru Nov. 9,1985 AT Adventureland Video we're celebrating our 4th Anniversary, And we're giving you the gifts. JEEP4X4 JEEP 4X4 4 WHEEL COMMANCHE ADVENTURELAND VIDEO'S FOURTH ANNIVERSARY HONDA ATV Sweepstakes 4 VCR's FREE TAPE RENTALS 4 WHEEL ADVENTURE LAND VIDEO 925 IOWA HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 842-0526 ADVENTURE LAND VIDE --- Hungry? Head for Harry's! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1814 West 23rd (next to Command Performance) Go For It! Enter the supernatural world of CONE·A·COPIA The Magical Ice Cream Dream Machine! HARRY BEAR'S KINDNESS IS THE BEST MONEY WE CAN EARN. Pizza was actually invented in 1623, when the wife of Luigi Pizziano accidentally sat on a large ball of bread dough left to rise on a chair. The resulting pancake had such an interesting, saucer-like shape that she spread it with tomato sauce, tossed on some cheese, and popped it into her stone oven. Later, when pizza had become a Pizziano family staple, Luigi's took to throwing it at him, his triste style, when he didn't come home on time. The first pizza delivery! ? Ridiculous facts concerning pizza and its origins... PIZZA Get a large (1 topping) Thin Crust Pizza for $5.99 OR a large(1 topping) Original Crust Pizza for $6.99 You can always order extra loops for a small additional charge Dine-in, Ovenrym or Delivery Godfather's Pizza. Puzzo™ restaurants. Nov 30, 1985 "TACOS" Tuesdays & Thursdays $2 All you can Eat. 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina 2600 Iowa MEL AMIGO MEXICAN RESTAURANT SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! "50¢ MUNCHIES" includes: Burgers-Tacos Chili Sundays & Mondays after 5 p.m. 843-4076 "What I 'Mystified" Like About You" "Rock You Up" "She's Got Everything" The ROMANTICS!! THIS SATURDAY Homecoming Night Nov. 9, 8:30 P.M. Hoch Auditorium Tickets on Sale Now at, The SUA Box Office, all CATS Outlets, and through Dial-A-Tick $12.50 General Admission $11.00 Student with valid KUID Produced by SUA Special Events and New West Presentations Thursday, Nov. 7.,1985 Sports 13 University Dailv Kansan News Briefs Game will be crucial for KU to go to bowl Tailback Lynn Williams did not practice yesterday and is still questionable for Saturday's game against Colorado. Williams has been plagued with neck and shoulder problems, and he injured his knee against Oklahoma last Saturday. Saturday's game against the Buffaloes, which will begin at 1:30 p.m. in Memorial Stadium, is this year's homecoming game for the Jayhawks. The game could be crucial in determining possible bowl bids. Kansas and Colorado are both considered to be candidates for the Independence Bowl. Head coach Mike Gottfried sae Jon Stewart would start at defensive end in place of Amonte Hollowan. The Jayhawks went through a full-contact practice in Memorial Stadium yesterday, emphasizing game situations. "We are executing better as the week goes on," Gottfried said. Pellock may sit out Kansas basketball coach Larry Brown said earlier in the week that he may redshirt forward Mark Pellock, who underwent surgery to repair cartilage damage in his right ankle. Brown said no official decision would be made for a couple of weeks. Pellock first injured his ankle in last season's exhibition game against China, and he reinjured it in preseason practice. Kansas will open its season with an exhibition game against the Czechoslovakian National Team at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Allen Field House. The student season ticket includes the Czech game, sports information director Doug Vance said. Warriors ink Mullin OAKLAND, Calif. — Chris Mullin, the Golden State Warriors' top draft pick, has signed a four-year agreement with the struggling National Basketball Association team for an evening, a team spokewoman said Mullin and his agent, Bill Pollack, traveled to Oakland from New York City Tuesday night. The final pact that Mullin signed yesterday morning reportedly was for around $2 million. From Kansan wire reports. Silhouetted by the windows behind the diving board in the Robinson Natatorium, a KU diver leaps into the air. NEW YORK — Bobby Cox, who led the Toronto Blue Jays to the American League East Division title and the first pennant in the club's history, yesterday was named AL Manager of the Year by the Baseball Writers Association of America. Cox was the only manager named on all the ballots cast by the 26 voting members. Two writers from each AL city voted. Howser's Royals defeated Cox's team in the American League Championship Series and went on to win the World Series over the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games. However, all votes were cast before the start of the playoffs. Cox resigned after the playoffs to become general manager of the Atlanta Braves. Each writer was asked to name three managers in order of preference. Points were awarded on a 5-3-1 basis. Cox, 44, received 16 first-place votes and 104 points to beat Kansas City's Dick Howser for the award. Howser finished second for the second straight year; he received four first-place votes and 63 points. Gene Mauch of the California Angels, in the finished behind the Royals in the AL West division, finished third in the voting with eight first-place votes and 57 points. Billy Martin of the New York Yankees was fifth with 19 points and Jackie Moore of the Oakland A's was sixth with four points. Cox named AL manager of the year Tony LaRussa of the Chicago White Sox and John McMara of the Boston Red Sox each received one point. United Press International KU swimmers set for second lap of season The SMU women's team placed 10th and Texas A&M finished 11th in the National Collegiate Athletic Association meet last season. Kansas finished 14th. On the men's side, the Coach Gary Kempt said yesterday that it was an important meet for both Jayhawk teams because they were ranked last in the teams that were ranked high last year. By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas swim team will begin the second lap of its season Saturday in Dallas when the men and women's softball teams from southern Methodist and Texas A&M. Kempt said Texas A&M would be just as good as it was last year, but Southern Methodist was a mystery to him, because the coaches hadn't released much information about the Mustang swimmers. If the SMU tradition holds up, the Mustangs will have a strong team again this year. Kempf said, but the KU teams are making progress. The "So it is important for us to swim well," he said. Mustangs finished seventh and the Aggies placed 23rd, but the Jayhawks didn't qualify for the meet. Kempf said that booking KU into meets against top teams put the KU teams into the limelight. "We have certain areas that we need to improve on, but we knew that coming in." Kempf said. "Right now we're headed in the right direction, but in swimming those things can change in a hurry." The women's team will be led by Tammy Pease and Marcy Herrold. Between them, they have won five individual races in the Big Eight Invitational. Kempt said the Texas A&M team was small in quantity, but big in quality, and it would be necessary for Kansas to swim well as a team to win the meet. Jayhawks, on paper, match up better against Texas A&M. But Kempf said Kansas also had to swim well in the backstroke, butterfly and 200 freestyle. In the Big Eight Invitational, Taryn Gaulien won the 100 butterfly for Kansas, and Blanca Castillo of Kansas won the 200 butterfly. Liz Duncan won the 100 backstroke and Sheryl Jakobsen, Becky Heil and Tana Bowen finished second, third and fourth respectively in the 200 backstroke. Susan Spry won the 200 freestyle for the Jayhawks. The women's strength in the Big Eight Invitational was their relay teams, where they won five of six races, but Kempf said that gave Kansas no advantage over the Mustangs and Aggies. "I don't see an advantage, but I wouldn't hesitate to put any of our relay teams up against anyone." Kempf said. Kempt said the men had to swim well in the butterfly and breaststroke to compete with Southern Methodist and Texas &M. Grant Seavall was the Jayhawks' top finisher in the 100 butterfly at the Big Eight Invitational, with a second-place finish. In the 200 butterfly Kevin Walker's ninth-place finish was tops for Kansas. KU tennis players strive to change image, gain respect By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff Tennis players from Kansas are a little like Rodney Dangerfield — they don't get a whole lot of respect. But two KU athletes, Mike Wolf and Michael Center, are doing their best to change all that. Wolf and Center were in Los Angeles last week competing in the Volvo All-American tournament against players from around the country, including tennis powers such as Stanford, UCLA and Pepperdine. And Wolf and Center held their own. Wolf took the No. 1 seed player in the tournament, Jim Grabb of Stanford, to three sets before losing in the first round of the singles competition. Then in the consolation matches, he beat two All-Americans before losing to a third All-American. In doubles, Wolf and Center beat the No. 1 seeded doubles team, Brandon Walters and Richard Matuszewski of Clemson, to put Kansas tennis on the map, as KU coach Scott Perealman said. In the second round, they lost to the eventual tournament winners, Jorge Lozano and Luke Jenes of USC. "When you go to UCLA and they see you're from Kansas, you don't get a whole lot of respect." Center said yesterday. "But we don't deserve it. We haven't done anything. This tournament showed me that we can compete with anyone. We could be one of the best teams in the country." Tennis rankings come out in January, and Center shrugged and said "maybe top 20" when asked for a prediction of where the And Wolf would stand. But they may have come back from Los Angeles with something more important than a boost in rank — confidence. "We're not quite as salient as some of the teams," Wolf said, "but I think Center believes we can beat them now, and I've always believed it." Perelman thinks that Wolf and Center now have the confidence to win a big tournament. Their next opportunity will be in February, at the Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches Association Indoor tournament in Houston. Wolf will also compete in singles in Houston, and the Los Angeles trip raised his expectations. "In L.A. I had nothing at all to lose," he said. "From now on, I will expect to beat most of those guys." Center, meanwhile, has not had a good fall season. He lost in the first round of the qualifying tournament in Los Angeles, and he said the two doubles matches were the first con- FOOTBALL Two children are playing a football game, one is holding the ball and the other is trying to block it. In the background, three more children are running around. "I'm playing in spurs right now," he said. "I would get two points here, two points there." Frat accuses opposition of cheating By Harlen Makemson Of the Kansan sports staff Charges that Delta Upsilon fraternity has used an ineligible player in the Greek Trophy football tournament have fallen on deaf ears at Recreation Services, who say the tournament will continue as scheduled. The defense of the Wild Watkins Wenches put the pressure on the Golden Oldies on their way to a 14-0 victory. The two teams played yesterday for the intramural women's Independent Championship on the football fields at 23rd and Iowa Streets. John Johnson, graduate assistant in charge of team sports for Recreation Services, said yesterday that the only eligibility requirements necessary to participate in their activities are students, faculty or staff, and that they were not on two teams in the same sport. John Lechliter/KANSAN "As far as we're concerned, the DU's haven't broken any rules," Johnson said yesterday. Some fraternities involved in the tournament; however, think Delta Upsidon has violated Intrafraternity Council rules and should not be playing in the men's Greek Trophy final today. The controversy surrounds sophomore William "Pack" St. Clair, who according to Delta Upson president Jay Wagnon, went through rush at the house two years ago, wasn't inducted in the house last year, but is a pledge at the house this semester. Wagnon said yesterday that other traternities were contending that St. Clair in effect "depledded" from the house by not being active last year, a view that Wagnon says has no basis. Drew Hiss, president of Delta Chi, said he had information "from a reliable source" that St. Clair was a social affiliate, which according to Hiss would make him ineligible for trophy play. Hiss said his house unintentionally forfeited yesterday's semi-final game with Delta Upsilon, saying that the Infrafraternity Council told them "They have yet to show us anything in writing," Wazon said. they did not need to play the game. Johnson said the dispute was out of the hands of Recreation Services because Delta Upsilon had met all of their rules. "We were told by the IFC that the game would be a forced disqualification," Hiss said. "Recreation Services has doubled back on what the IFC said." "The dispute won't come to Recreation Services: the IFC will handle it," Johnson said Grant Tennison, president of the Intrafaternity Council, was unavailable for comment last night. Phi Delta Theta 1 earned the right yesterday to meet the Delta Upsilon squad. Ducks 1, in today's 4:30 p.m. men's Greek Trophy championship by shutting out AKL 27-0. KU to face Panthers Bv Heather Fritz By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas volleyball team, holding its next two matches in Robinson Gymnasium, will take on Eastern Illinois tonight in a non-conference match and Oklahoma tomorrow in a Big Eight conference match. The meeting with Oklahoma will be a re-match of Kansas' four-game loss last week in Norman, Okla. The Sooners are 5-1 in the Big Eight and are second to Nebraska. Kansas is fifth out of the six conference teams. The Jayhawks, 14-10 overall and 2-5 in the conference, will play the Eastern Illinois Panthers today at 8 p.m. and Oklahoma tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. Eastern Illinois is 14-14 for the season and 1-4 in the Gateway Conference. KU coach Frankie Albiz said yesterday that she had never coached against Eastern Illinois but that it shouldn't hurt the team. Despite the attempts of hitter Catalina Suarez, who is second in the Big Eight in kills with 170 for a 3.9 a game average, blocking and hitting are what have hurt the Jayhawks in their last few matches. Kansas is last in the Big Eight with 141 percent in hitting efficiency. First-place Nebraska has 135 percent. "We'll just have to be sure to watch them at the start of the game," she said. "The thing that takes longer to pick up is the weak hitters and the weak spots." NIU to leave conference United Press International DE KALB, III. — Northern Illinois President Clyde Wingfield announced yesterday that NIU is dropping out of the Mid-American Athletic Conference, effective July 31. NIU Men's Athletic Director Robert Brigham had recommended the move, calling the MAC conservative and unimaginative. Brigham was particularly critical of the conference's limit of 65 football scholarships a year. In addition, the athletic director said NIU has had trouble getting publicity in the face of attacks because of the MAC's Ohio orientation. According to Brigham's recommendation, Northern's Division 14 football program will go independent. Brigham hopes to eventually place the NIU football team in the Big Eight or Big 10 Conference. Brigham said the Division I basketball program may attempt to join the Midwestern City or Metro Conferences. NIU's women's sports program will also leave the Mid-American, he said. MAC Commissioner James Lesgiss issued a statement defending the conference, and said a replacement for MIU would not be actively pursued. "The Mid-American Conference has enjoyed its affiliation with Northern Illinois," Lessig said. 4 14 University Daily Kansan The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 8.25 10-20 3.90 4.25 6.00 9.30 21-25 3.40 4.25 6.75 10.30 For every 5 words add: 304 504 754 95 AD DEADLINES Classified Display ... $4.40 net column height Monday Thursdays 4 p.m. Tuesday Fridays 4 p.m. Wednesday Thursdays 4 p.m. Friday Thursdays 4 p.m. Classified Display advertisements can be one only calorie wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is an inch high. No reveries allowed in Calorie Wide displays. No allowance for Northern Iowa allowed in a classified display. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE Classified Ads ENTERTAINMENT Found items can be advertised FREE if care for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kawaian business at 804 4358. POLICIES DON'T MISS THE LAWRENCE DEBUT OF SST RECORDING ARTISTS THE MEAT PUPPETS. SAT. NOV 9 AT THE OUTHOUSE (4 MI E OF MASS. ON 150). FREE— Shelf tie 8 mo., spayed, shots. Very cute, friendly. Must place ASPA. 842-1510 PERSONAL PATCH. I know who you are. I want to meet When Where. Respond here. - No responsibility is assumed for more than one is correct insertion of any advertisement until credit has been established * Tousures are not provided for classified or $100-$399 Weekly Up! Mailing Circulars? No quota! Securitely interested rich self-addressed envelope: Success, PO Box 740CEG, Woodstock, IL 60086 - Tear sheets are not provided for classified or displayed advertisements. - Words set in ALT CAPS count as 2 words. * Words set in BOLD ACE count as 3 words. * Deadline is 4 to m. - 2 working days going to - Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount - only - No responsibility is assumed for more than one it - Truly warrant rate discount. * Samples of all mail order items must be submitted. NIGHT LIFE: Mobile DJ Dance Music. A mixture of New Rock and the classically presented over a watt sound system. When it's time to dance; call NIGHT LIFE: 749-4713 1023 Mass. 749-7471 MISCELLANEOUS BUS PERSONAL - Checks must accompany all classified job mails to The University Dial Karen. Witty, attractive female, 20, seeks intelligent, educated graduate in political science. Needs photo please. $50, Lawsuits. K2 sportswear CUSTOM DESIGN FOR QUALITY SPORTWEAR We Make Ideas Come Alive 1023 Mass. 740 7471 - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only. 116 Undergraduate positions available in the LA&S COLLEGE ASEMILYM. Make your voice heard. Filing deadline Nov 8. Nomination forms required. Job description needed. More information call 864-4898. - correct insertion of any advertisement - no refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified - on presentation of pre-paid classified advertising - blind box ads - please add a $49 charge Aerobics by Styli Gale and Gary, good, fun and exciting. The classes are Monday, Saturday and midweek. Enroll two friends. Free parking. THE FAR SIDE Creative, thinking singles, find kindred spirits Male singing groups, find kindred spirits Writing P.O. Box 306239, Lawrence, KS Writing P.O. Box 306239, Lawrence, KS KU vs. Colorado Pregame and Postgame at THE ROCK CHALK BAR closest establishment to the stadium COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater area. Call for appointment. 915-346-1400 12th & Oread - Tanning membership not required. "The picture's pretty bleak, gentlemen. .. The world's climates are changing, the mammals are AEROBIC CLASSES GET NOTICED EUROPEAN SUNTANNING - 1st class FREE - New facial tanners - Extended 30 min sessions - 8 Suntana Lounges - Extended 30 min. sessions WEIGHT ROOM 841-6232 BLOOM COUNTY EUROPEAN BUNTANNING 25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA Rent' 19.4% *Rent* $ T.258.8 a month Curtia Matheus 14 W.73d 32 w 424-575 Sat; M 9:30 to 11:30 the size of a walnut." Import assistant, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, 11B. and of course, travel authorization. By GARY LARSON taking over, and we all have a brain about © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate H-7 OH, MASTER LIFESTYLES EDITOR, AMAZING THE 'TRUNKS' PIECE YOU DID FOR 'AMERICA LAST WEEK'S IS ALL AGES EDITION? OVER EGGNS? Health Insurance for Students. Short-term and long term plans available. Call Dutton Insurance. EXECUTE THE NINE SERVICES PRESENTED IT UP. THERE THE WALL, ECONOMIC OF BENEATH, "OUR YOUTH" SPLISHED IT OVER THERE "THE NEW WEEK ON THIS WEEK'S CONEF. PHRAINT HUMANITY will BE INTERRUVING A MORE COMMUNI- AL WEEK." 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Haircuts $7, perm $10 at Channels. Contact Chris at 842.7900. Walk-ins welcome. Jahwahs, Go Hawaiian is the 1986 Homecoming Theme. Go Hawaiian with the best, Paradise Sound shirts and pants from The Elc. Shop. T32. Saturdays 11-13 pm - 3pm M-Sat. Till 4th. T13-5 Sundays MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 We get your computer's heads on straight. Computer Repair Alpha/Omega Computer Services Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event? J M Favors offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specialties plus speed and reliable delivery. You design it or it jeans and t-shirts. 2201 W 81 (Belmont Gibson) 811-4499. Modeling and theater portfolio - shooting now beginning. Consultations, call for information, 749-528-3000. of the day's entrees & soups CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK New from California. Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure. 316-842-3744. PO Box 3652. Wichita. Monday & Friday. Monday & Friday. KU喜提需要. needed. REWARD-Free Trip to Daytona plus Commission Money. WANTED: Organized group or individual to promote the 1 Spring Break Trip to Daytona. If interested, call 1-800-453-9021 immediately! **Rent'Tl**: **Rest'Tl** $29.25 $8.98 per month. Smityt's TV **144 W**. Drl. #423-751. Mon-09:30-Sun-9:00. 1-Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, jersey and capz. Shirt back by Swell WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from $75, or sailing at South Padre Island and Daytona Beach from $99. Hurry! Sunsuit Tours for more information toll free A sunschase Representative TODAY! Take your winter break counts. count on Sunschase Thousands of R & R Albums—$2 or less. Also lose items:衣ets at S and Sun only. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Quantrillts 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles. Bike Sale 10% off, all Bianchi Models Touring, Snowmobile Models Bicycle Bicycles. Bicycle Sunflower 5% off, all Maassenbach MVE SINGLES Share your college activities with a companion computer. Our unique VIDEO IN-CLUB experience allows eligible adults in an afternoon than months of bar sessions single games. For more information visit www.mvesingles.com. LOOK OUT LAWRENCE! THE KU KONNESHOT has found a system of dating which works. COMPUTER DATING with a personable touch. THE KU KONNESHOT it has it!! Find out about the KU KONNESHOT itself and address stamped envelope to THE KU KONNESHOT P.O. BOX 388 Lawrence KS 6044 FOR RENT MATH TUTOR - Bob Mearns has an MA in math from KU. I have 802, 102, 110, and 138 were among my classmates. I also taught calculus seriously in 1975 and often tutors elementary school students. My videos are WDDINGS+ Video/Audio Movies #82 6055 Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 West 7th. One bedroom furnished, 3rd floor. $225 plus utilities. Lease through 842-833-9430. Price could be negotiated. 842-833-9430. Apartment available next to Union. Starting Jan or (immediate). Woman B. 694-8111. Envions. 350 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10017. Jayhawker Towers ON CAMPUS - For 2,3 or 4 persons - All Utilities Paid THE LIS EGGADG ASSOCIATION SENT YOU THIS CHECK FOR THE GRAPH IN DEEP APPRECIATION. - Individual Contract Option * 10 Month Lending - Limited Access Doors Available for KU students - Individual Contract Offer Furnished rooms from $100 with unused utilities. Two tubs. From Kansas Univ. No pets. - Furnished or Unfurnished 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 - Air Conditioned - Swimming Pool Now leasing for spring A man and a boy are talking. - On Bus Line Lutour househouse, 2 bedrooms, 1/17 room Garden house, 3 bedrooms, 1/15 room minutes to Hampton, Hampton Place, 480-110 - Laundry Facilities - Swimming Pool - On Bottom Line Sublease 2 bedroom apartment on KU bus route. Free phone installation, free cable, off-street parking. - Air Conditioned 2nd BED OFF FIRST MONTH'S RENT. ONE & two bedrooms available beginning at $800/month. All have CA, gas hot, DF, WF reffing. Energy efficient on bus route. Cal 831-4754
Rooms for rent. Special Nov. rate. Clean and quiet home. No drugs! Call 749-7627. Mark. by Berke Breathed I KNEW THIS WAS A RACKET! Sublue, own bedroom in mice duplex near cam- puter room. Air atmosphere $167, mo. plus habitat 842.32208 Buffalo, own bedroom in mice duplex near cam- puter room. Air atmosphere $167, mo. plus habitat 842.32208 Subluate 1 bedroom furnished apartment at Sun Night Inn. On bus route B41-8431 or 842-196 Soblease 3 bedroom furnished apartment, 804-561-7290, downstairs to campus; Call 708-451-349 or Jim/Julie Foster 804-561-7290 Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and visit BEARLEY FLATS. Vacations available now and at semester. Plan ahead, lease now for next year. 843-2116. Sublease 28R, 219TH, Apt. DwL, laundry/storage mil. energy efficiency, batten, great west loca- tion Attractive 2 bedroom condominium for rent. 134, bath, CA, FP, range refrigerator, microwave, kitchen, laundry, paid cable TV swimming pool. Walking distance. Available. Decide Le-1. Lease require. $95, 749-$809. Avalon Sublease-1.1g, bedroom, gas & water paid Available Nov. 15. Mail p.m.'s m.847 5797 Cooperative living lovers your expenses while expanding your mind. Room available at Rainbow Mountain, 7pm. Call 843-5708 (after 5 p.m.) for an application to part of our thriving environment Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 Cory, carpeted apartment near campus Missouri available alternate: 748-096-165 Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 849-4185. ANNOUNCEMENTS PRE-REGISTRATION BLUES? Need help with exploring career options? Call the Emily Taylor Career Center at 643-8521 for an appointment of a counselor from 9 a.m. to 9 a.m. or 2 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. When you call someone, you can call or drop by Headquarters We're at 1419 Massachusetts. Our number is 841-2345. It's free, confidential, and WE NEVER CLOSE. News and Business Staff Positions The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Monday, November 25. 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. **GREASEH PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS** WORKSHOP. Learn about: defining a topic; using the library; taking notes; and organizing/writing the paper. Tuesday, November 5, 7-9 AM. Deyne Dyeh Center, FRIES. Presented by the Student Assistance Center, 121 St. Hardy 844. Hall Damone 4.624. Write it! in the Kansas Classified Rent' $19.00 Color T.V. $2.68 Sat. $8.30 Sniffy's TV 1447 1174 843-5751 Sat. 9:30-11:30 *Price varies by location.* Paid Staff Positions Paid Staff Positions Editor, Business Manage The Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester Editor and Business Manager positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Kansas Union; in the Office of Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. tuesday, November 19. 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. SKI COLOHARO through Thanksgiving! Rent a con- do! Includes wauna, tub, bot, bus to蒋 in the resort. Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $14.99. $14.99 of 447 W. 21st, 843-7541. Mon.-Sat, 9:30-9:59, Sun. The Secrets Out! Scholarship Halls are great places to live. 4 women and 4 men schol. halls (50 per hall) friendly atmosphere less expensive because of self保障s self governing close to campus Spring Semester Openings Anyone may apply. Applications available in 123 Strong Hall. VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL EDUATION 1: November, November 8; 1:90-Time Management. 2:30- Exams. 4:00-Listening and Notetaking. FREE! Video: The Student Assistant Center. 123 Strong Hall, 8th floor. Deadline for applications 11/8 SCOLOHADE All-inclusive package for $298 Limited offer; call for information/registera- tion. SERVICES OFFERED drive training at Lawrence Driving School! Receive drive training for successful completion, tramp, provided 841.7935 STADIUM BARBER SHOP. 1033 Massachusetts, downtown. All haircuts $6. No appointment. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-5716 HIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-8421. OUTLINEED enhanced with library M SEARCH G, editing, revising Victor Cahar 381-829-7560 FOR SALE Baseball cards and sports nostalgia. Buy, Sell and Trade 3-D. DIE BASEBALL cards. Open 10-5 M-S. Cards from various brands. 72 Pontiac Grand Ville 65k miles, seat six comfortably, $100 or best offer. European 10-speed bicycle, $400 new, $755, Nikon FG Camera, Dacia korda, dedicated flash, $200, John at 842-300-4300 CARPET 30,500 square inches in a rainbow-colored carpet and sizes. Big Bobs Use Carpets. 841-BOS. CD Player. Lowest Price/Brand New $200 and in yours. 843-326. Ask for Mark Canon AE1 Prog. with Canon 1.8 lens, UV filter, Flounder Flash, Excellent condition, 715, 749-754 CLEAR! Optically clear window plastic. Mylar or "dome" 36" or 100" wide. Bluemetry Energy. 8.5mm. Sales for Sale: Technique Quartz Turntable 128t, Hiatty Turntable 130t, Infinity Tone Deck 130t, Kenwood Tune 100t, Sony Cassette Deck 100t. GOVENMENT HOMES from $1 (U$repair). Also delinquent tax property. Call 1-800-678-6900 Honda Scooter 180, Aero 80 Red - 450 miles. Like honda scooters, they are better for transportation. Call 913-341-1500 - eavennings IBM-PCXT compatable computer. Only $499! Call 842-7683, ask for Charlie. Philip Glass album -EINSTEIN ON THE HEAC- brand-开新 half-weight. 841.2126. Name answering machine, sunlamp, jewelry, aik swateary, desk study, lamp, twin bedspread Stirling Bracelet; mint condition, cuff on waist classical style, $35 or best offer. Call 842-4682. THE MOST COMPATIBLE American PC/XT Warehouse, Authorized Dealer, Warranty, Authorized Dealer, Distributor Think Inc. 832.505.838-85, Johnson, KS 65041 Tired of looking everywhere for QUALITY TRES & WORLDS at reasonable prices? Well, you don't have to go to London. We brand ourselves at our everyday low prices (comprising up to £145) and all over 160 W 2.3rd (Bedside Pizza) H79-5497. AUTERED: Queen, includes: Pedestal, waveless mattress, 5 year warranty. My cost $470, 4 mo ago. Will take half price or best offer. 842-3229 Western Civilization Notes - New on Sale! Make sure to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class practice. 3) For research. 4) For analysis of Western Civilization 'available now at Town Creek, The Jawhawk Hookers, and Collector Stamps, Mint and used. Cau- sage, U.S., Europe and more. Open 10 a.m., Sat, out until 5 p.m. OLVMPUS OM-10 wilh: 00:510 zoom $200. O.B.O. 841-0964. AUTOSALES 1972 Mercury. Runs great. $500 or best offer. Call 841-6088 after 4 p.m. 1024 Mercury MacBook 4-boor door frame 1024 Mercury MacBook 3-boor door frame Katf 7.6 @ cover level host box, 48 dpi monitor 190.4x x 1/9 convertible hard drive 64,000 miles 20.30 mg. manhasset $1800 call after p. 814; m-8430 195 Ford Mustang, new stereo, new tires, look great, call Yousen; 841-1326 1977 Chevy Impala auto. Cruise, new 1978. Buck Rialt auto. New paint. 841.7595 1800 PONTIAC Phoenix L2. Automatic, AiL, Stores FWD and more MGP Bike Best Offer 842 750-874-2569 1984 BMW 318, Low mileage, all electric, custom interior. Beautiful. Call 249-7944. 1985 300 ZK NISSAN TURBO. Red like new. T-Top. Loaded. Good price, 841-1392. 75 Datum B210 Gas saver, runa well, Cradle, new tire, call 843-228 12 no room to go. CLASSIFIEDS 78 Firebrib bmi 70 ki, ac amf cass, excelcll cond 482-8475 WB 91 W Scooter - great car inside/in, AM/PM cassette equalizer, new radials, $1500. BW 91 W Steering wheel - Late '82 Culzea GT Littick, AT, overdrive, AC cass. radio, cruise PS, PB, low miles, exc. cond. no flaws, alloys, new Pirelli and exhaust. Need to equipment market $650 801 894 1234-749 7437-day Found—Texas Instruments calculator. Oct. 13th in paper at East of Computer Center. Ask for details. 77 NOVA, Automatic, PS, PB, runs, $850. 864-3202. BabySitter wanted for 3 children in our home. Prefer daily from 9-12; will consider 2 or 3 day schedules. Own transportation Call 842-1692. Child care center needs time, part-time HELP WANTED Cuida center needs full-time, part-time teachers. Call for appt. 749-0268. HOUSEKEEPER- Responsible woman needed for Tuesdays and Thursdays. Must have own kitchen, oven, stove, cookin and transporting a fifth grade girl to and from dance class after school. Negotiable in advance. Help Wanted—Pyramid Pizza is looking for a few GOOD drivers. If you have your own car, age are presenting delivery for a Lawrence pizzeria and sign that the scraper of the top your car, see who's having fun AND MAKING MONEY on the job. We ask Bracey Bill after 4. You'll be glad you did. Help wanted. waitresses and kitchen positions, or fall-time available. Apply in person or by phone. Visit us at our website now: **Join our "NANNY NETWORK" of over 250 joined by us. You should enjoy creative childcare, educational, and community programs for great salary, benefits and a 12 month contract. Round trip air transportation provided by us for style picks. We are seeking a broadcast engineering and performance engineer in RESEARCH AID NEEDED for data collection in Topeka with children with severe disabilities. Also data entry and summary in Lawrence. Must be currently enrolled, have reliable transports, and have a record of attendance. Prefer someone with behavioral observation and/or data entry experience. Send resume Lynda Powell, AADP Resume, Laurie, KSSS 4649. by November 8EOEA1A Scholarship Hall Director (Miller Hall) 3/4 unit graduate position for the Spring, 1986 semester. Responsibility for facilitating resident personate and scheduling of guest classes. Must have bachelor's degree or appropriate residential living experience. Salary $4000 plus room and board. Applications in Code 125, 125 Strong Hall LK, Lavrence, NS, K606. Application deadline November 15, AA/EEO The University of Kansas Budget Office has two position designs for student assistants with possible full-time employment during the summer. The first of these two positions will assist with the process of budget and budget planning, and the second position will gain a good exposure to fund account and have an opportunity to work within the university's budget requirements a minimum of seven hours of accounting. The second position is secretarial and clerical in nature. It requires good typing ability and proficiency with spreadsheet software. Both positions require senior graduate student status and good written and oral skills. Position dates are month half–half time appointments. Closing dates are November 15, 1985. Position start dates are flexible. For information call Jana Hinz, Budget Office, 404 W. Springfield Road, Strong Hall. Equal Opportunity Employer. Travel Field Opportunity. Gain valuable marketing experience while earning money. Campus. Required needed immediately for travel. Travel Field Opportunity. Gain valuable marketing experience while earning money. Campus representative needed immediately for Florida to call, Florida Call Brad Nelson 1-800-282-6221. CHILD CAREBESTON AREA We have many families looking for loving children care workers and teachers on round trip transportation. Allene kusch, Chidcarete Brookline, MA 01764 617-566-8698 Krisbern R. Brookline, MA 01764 617-566-8698 Female ALE A.M. 7:30-12:00; P.M. 10:12 weekends also. 749-0288 WANTED Bass Player/ Vococalist for working band persu- record contract. Styles: rock, R & R, H Negozeg, & funk. Serious injuries only. Brad, 749-1275. Female roommate for second semester. @ school, gymnasium, pool, swim, swim- pool, completely furnished, plus 150 utilities. Notables: 843-1215 Stacy Female roommate wanted to share 2 Bd. Apt. W&D.C. A/C/H. Newly remodified, furnished close to campus & Downtown, on bus route $138 Weekends only. Bd. #49-3358, Learn Lennar No weekends please. Roommate needed immediately to make a nice duplex at Traillage with fireplace, etc. Have own bedroom (unfurished). $140 (negotiable) plus 1/2 utilities. 841-3602. Two Female roommates for beautiful, renovated 4 Bdm room, separate bedrooms, 1025 Ohp, $175-$300 mo. plus utilities. Call Julie or Marciat 749-1968 WANTED • 2 SEASON BASKETBALL TICKETS PRIE NEGOTIABLE 842-9911 WANTED: Roommate for. Spring, sometime. Wonderful 3 Bedroom Bedroom Brookdale Apt. Close to campus. Cable, A/C, Pool, 815 per month. We’re nice, fun people. 842-2625 WANTED: Roommate for spring semester. Wonderful 3 bedroom Bedroom Meadowbrook apartment. Close to campus, A/C, pool, $115 monthly. We’re nice, fun people. 92/825. Wanted: non-smoking, female to submit apart money $125.00 / 5% utilities. Call 641-835 between the hours of 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. Phone Classified Heading: - Address Dates to run | | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1-15 words | $2.60 | $2.75 | $2.25 | $6.25 | | For every word added | $0.60 | $0.40 | $0.25 | $1.05 | Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Classified Display 1 col. x 1 inch = $4.40 1 1 1 Thursday, Nov. 7..1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 15 Classified Ads HOUSEMATE(S) for great house. Close to KU 945-7378 looking for female resident to occupy room at a nursing home. If the woman may be limited, do not wait any longer. Call Responsible mate roommate for spring memo. Meadowbrook, two bedrooms, apt, very quiet. TYPING 1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing. Judy, 842,7945. 24-Hour Typing All day, all night, Resumes, Passwords, page checks to campus, best work conditions. A-1 professional typing. Term papers, Theses. A-1 professional Resumes, etc. Using IBM SELectric Software. A DIFFERENT Service. Tape THANSCRIP SACA is a specially Experienced Jean Sheal tutor. A. LSMITH TYPING SERVICE - Experienced. past papers, resume, memorandums, 824. 510. 3780. The first paragraph is a short summary of the job description and responsibilities. **MAA TYPEGING/4821942 Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs. Law Review articles typed by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in b by 6 p.m. out by 10 p.m. day same. A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resume, papers, dissertations, etc. reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available: 843-1850 Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Stanford, Scribner, Cornice,啪叫 Call Nancy 841-1219 THE WORDOCTORS: Why pay for tying when you can have word processing? 983-3147 All Kinds of Typing: GOOD IMPRESSIONS spelling/spunctuation errors corrected 841-320-8222 AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Process- ing/Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics, Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates. 749-1118 Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term words, punctuation, etc. X260X with memory 842 4754 or 843 2614, 6 p.m. DEFENDABLE, professional, experienced TRANSCRIPTION also, standard tape sette. DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE to absorb student paperies up to 30 pages. Call Mommy's. Mommy's. 842-784-9120 before 9 n. m. Please. Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone # 842-3190; after 5:30. Bar. Exec Type-Type for all your typing needs. Disk Storage Reasonable. Call Mary. 843-7446 or QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling Corrected TRIAL Wordprocessing . CONSISTENTIOUS. TRIAL Convenient . CONSISTENTIOUS. Call 842-736-1050. TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 814-6254 *EXPERIENCED TYPEPST. Term paper, theses. THM Correcting Specific I will correct spelling difficulty. TOP-NOTCHprofessional word processing manuscript, resume, thesis, letter quality print Keep in mind Potential rushees must register on Nov. 6 or 7 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Centennial Room Kansas Union Late registration will not be accepted. $1495 COMPLETE High-Res Monitor, 25K, 2 Drives, Graphics Capability, Enhanced Keyboard, Clock/Calendar, MS-DOS, 1 YR Warranty AND Batteries INCLUDED WINNER LEADING EDGE MODEL "D" "PC EDITOR'S CHOICE—Among the bargain-priced PC-compatibles tested, Leading Edge Model D is the clear winner. That's not surprising—it's the newest machine tested and was designed around lessons that were learned from some of the others. It combines all the features that you could possibly want as standard equipment with a price that you'd expect to pay for a stripped IBM machine." PC Magazine—Oct., 1985 THE "Leading Edge is a registered trademark" COMPUTER OUTLET Your computer connection at 843-PLUG • 804 N.H. "That isn't the case for the stipend, Stephan said. "In short, no effective means exists to insure that teachers will cash payments to senior teachers at parochial schools would cover only secular services," he said. In another opinion, the attorney general said the city of Sublette failed to exempt itself from the state property tax lid because its charter ordinance was improperly drawn. State can't pay parochial teachers Parish schools can use state program TOPEKA — The attorney general yesterday said that extending a state internship program for teachers so that it would include parochial schools would not violate the constitution as long as the state did not pay parochial teachers to administer it. cessive entanglement prescribed in our First Amendment," the opinion said. "Accordingly, we believe that participation by parochial schools in the Kansas internship plan would not violate the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment." United Press International terns at parochial schools would not withstand a constitutional challenge. Attorney General Robert Stephan issued an opinion that said including parochial schools in the internship program would not violate the First Amendment's separation of church and state. However, he said, the state's payment of a $1,000 cash stipend to senior teachers who supervise in- Under the department's proposed teacher internship plan, first-year teachers are to be supervised and assisted by panels of professional educators. Interns who successfully complete the one-year program are recommended for full teacher certification. The opinion was issued to Rodney J. Bieker, legal services director of the Kansas Education Department. United Press International "The plan does not require the day-to-day administrative supervision of the state in religious activities and, in our opinion, does not entail the ex- Blue Cross, hospital clash over new rule WICHITA — Wesley Medical Center is threatening to sue Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas unless the insurance company rescinds by Monday a new policy to stop making payments directly to the hospital. In August, Blue Cross, the state's largest health insurer, announced it would no longer pay the bills of Blue Cross subscribers directly to Wesley, the state's second-largest hospital. Instead, beginning Jan. 1, Blue Cross will send its subscribers, who will then be responsible for reimbursing the hospital. son said yesterday that the change would be an inconvenience for patients and would hinder Wesley's cash flow. Wesley spokesman Gordon Thom- Blue Cross' planned payment change will not affect Medicare, Plan 65 or Plan D benefits, Johnston earlier said. "Cheeks would be going to the subscriber, who then would have to sign that check over to Wesley," he added. "I'll see you on the delay payment to Wesley by weeks." In announcing the payment change, Blue Cross said it was severing its ties with Wesley because it considered Wesley's new owner, a former employer in America, Nashville, Tenn., a competitor in the health insurance market. marketing for Blue Cross, said the health insurer would not change its decision despite the threat of a lawsuit. HCA recently purchased Health Care Plus, a health maintenance company that serves Kansas. "In the final analysis, it is your subscribers and our patients who will suffer the most unless Blue Cross reconsiders its decision to terminate Wesley as a contract provider." Davis stated in the letter. Davis said a lawsuit would be filed in state court unless Blue Cross rescinded the new policy by the close of business hours on Monday. "I remain hopeful that you will change your position, since continued refusal to do so on your part will leave Wesley with no alternative but to initiate legal proceedings." A.B. Davis Jr., Wesley president, said in a letter this week to Wayne Johnston, president of Blue Cross in Kansas. Blue Cross will continue to have contracts with three other Wichita hospitals: St. Francis Regional Medical Center, St. Joseph Medical Center and Riverside Hospital. John Knack, vice president of Thomson said it was unfair for Blue Cross to have contracts with the city's three other hospitals and not Wesley. QUALITY AUDIO-THE BEST PRICE! YAMAHA YAMAHA We Carry The Entire Line Of Yamaha Speaker Sale Compare at $110 $88 KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO - VIDEO shop Nicolas Cage Matthew Modine Birdy SUA FILMS Tonight! 7:30 $2 Woodruff Aud. Youthful Energy! Prize-Winning Talent! "'... (one of the) best of a young generation of American quartets. '' Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 10, 1985 Crafton-Preyer Theatre Murphy Hall Krista Bennion, violin Robert Rinehart, violin Ah Ling Neu, viola Ramon Bolipata, cello Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982 VISA/MasterCard Accepted Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association THE RIDGE STRING QUARTET Half price for KU Students DOUBLETREE'S HOLIDAY SHOPPER SPECIAL St. Furz Macy's THE DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS IN KANSAS CITY RATE GOOD EVERY DAY 11/15-1/5 RATE GOOD EVERY DAY 11/15-1/5 $46 Here's your chance to get an early start on your Holiday shopping. Ask for the "Shopper's Special" when you make reservations any day of the week and you'll receive a deluxe double room. THE ROOM ON THE NIGHT Let us provide complimentary transportation to and from the sensational Oak Park and Metcalf South Malls, only minutes away. End your day with a swim in our indoor pool, relax in a soothing hot tub, and enjoy the exquisite cuisine in Restaurant '85. Offer is valid November 15, 1985, through January 5, 1986, and is subject to space availability. For reservations, call (800)528-0444 or dial direct (913)451-6100. The Doubledtree Hotel at Corporate Woods, 1010 College Boulevard, Overland Park, Kansas (1-435 at U.S. 69). DOUBLETREE HOTEL KANSAS CITY 16 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985 Award-winning quartet to perform By Jill White Of the Kansan staff Krista Bennion only partially realized her goal to study violin at the Curtis Institute of Music. She and two friends from the San Francisco Conservatory did study at Curtis, in Philadelphia, but not for long. Bennion and her friends, violinist Robert Rinehart and violist Ah Ling Neu, joined with cellist Ramon Bolpata to form a competitive performing group, the Ridge String Quartet. After winning both the Fischoff Chamber Music competition in Southbend, Ind., and the Coleman Chamber Music Competition in Los Angeles, in 1882, the Ridge String Quartet became a professional touring group. The Ridge String Quartet will perform in the KU Chamber Music Series at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the Crafton-Preyer Theater, Murphy Hall. Tickets for the concert are $4.50 and $5.50 for KU and kindergarten through 12th-grade students. Public tickets cost $9 and $11, and senior citizens tickets are $8 and $10. "Some judges encouraged us to stick together and become a professional touring quartet," Bennion said last week. "That encouragement plus Schneider's and Felix's encouragements helped us stay together." The members of the quartet were performing with the New York String Orchestra in 1981 and 1982 under the direction of Alexander Schneider, who is the only living member of the Budapest String Quartet. Felix Galimer was one of the quartet's instructors at Curtis. Bennion said she liked playing with a quartet because she worked with other people on a continuous basis and because there was "more great music" for quartets. "Playing in a quartet is difficult technically as well as musically," Bennion said. "Agreeing on the way to play something is often difficult and the ability of members to give and take a little bit is very important." BALLET DE MUSICALES At the Spoleta Festival in Charleston, S.C., the Quartet earned the reputation as a group with technical security, taut ensemble, remarkable blend, fine rhythmic sense, subtle style, intelligent planning and knowledgeable repertoire. "Success for a musician is being totally devoted to music and really loving what you do and just wanting to share music with other people," Bennion said. "If you want to give through music, it seems like things work themselves out so you can. It helps that we all come from a similar musical background." "We all met in the preparatory department of the San Francisco Conservatory when we were in high school. We would go there on Saturdays." The quartet will play three chamber pieces for the KU concert: Haydn's String Quartet in G Major, Opus 17, No. 5; Bartok's Quartet, No. 2, Opus 17; and Beethoven's String Quartet in E-flat Major, Opus 74. "The Haydn piece is very heavy with a dramatic operatic quality but still has the humor of Haydn," she said. "The Bartok quartet is the most lyrical and beautiful of Bartok's quartets. The Beethoven piece is my favorite. It has been nicknamed the Harp Quartet and is one of those monumental quartets." The Ridge String Quartet fields the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187. fields the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187 MEL AMIGOS MEXICAN RESTAURANT SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! OYSTER on ½ SHELL 50¢ each Fridays only 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina $1 MARGARITAS Wednesdays All Day $1 WELL DRINKS Saturdays All Day 2600 Iowa 843-4076 COACH MEL AMIGO MEXICAN RESTAURANT MEL AMIGO MEXICAN RESTAURANT OYSTER on ½ SHELL 50¢ each Fridays only 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina 2600 Iowa MEL AMIGOS MEXICAN RESTAURANT SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! $1 MARGARITAS Wednesdays All Day $1 WELL DRINKS Saturdays All Day OYSTER on ½ SHELL 50¢ each Fridays only 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina 2600 Iowa 843-4076 EXPOSE YOURSELF TO OUR CAMERA FOR YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT Seniors: Back by Popular Demand Senior Pictures Mon., Nov. 11th to Fri.,Nov. 15th Call the Jayhawker Yearbook Office immediately for an appointment at 864-3728 MASS. STREET DELL (304) 825-1111 MASTACHUSETTS P "4 p.m. to close daily" WE WANT YOU TO TRY OUR ALL NEW DELI BURGERS Traditional Burger $1.99 Swiss & Bacon Burger $2.35 swiss cheese and ranch style bacon Big Blue Burger $2.35 blue cheese and sauteed mushrooms WHAT A DEAL— Traditional Burger Basket and 12oz. soft drink $1.49 50¢ COUPON 50¢ OFF OFF FIFTY CENTS 4p.m. to close daily OFF 4 p.m. to close daily ALL NEW DELI BURGERS 50¢ OFF OFF OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30, 1985 • All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef • Select a fresh baked deli bun onion, kaiser or whole wheat • Served with potato chips, kosher dill spear and any small soft drink KODAK DISC 300 Compact camera. Compact price. KODAK disc 3100 Camera pictures with just a touch of a button. Comes with a Full Three-Year Warranty* Get one at our low price so you won't miss any of your holiday memories to come. 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Only at Kibbutz. kinikto's Ocean Coast Crested Bay 212D & DWA 748-5932 640-3018 640-3019 (212) 821-IDENA 841-6177 904 VERMONT 843-9019 12th & INDANA 841-6177 PICAFLIC HOME EMPTY ENTERPRISE ATTENTIONS Center Southern Hills Shopping Center 160 W. 23rd, Sp. 109 160 W. 23rd, S. 109 (913) 824-8177 (913) 824-8177 Sunday Evening Worship 5:30 pm followed by Supper ($1) ECM Student Christian Center Student Christian Centre 1204 Oread, (1 blk. north of K.Union) DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER Serving Lawrence & KU Since 1973 COMPLETE Ecumenical Christian Ministries: The United Methodist Church The Presbyterian Church (USA) The United Church of Christ The Church of the Brethren COMPLETE *WV* *VOLVO* *SUBARU* *MG* *DATSUN* *MZADE* *TOYOTA* *HONDA* Complete service and parts sales for most foreign cars. BOSCH Automotive Parts FULL LINE OF IMPORT CAR PARTS 841-4833 1008 E 12th USA REASON AND RELIGION "Agnes of God" confronts this problem. Explanations must be sought. Superstitions have to be exposed. Still Living can only be done by faith. And the future is always unknown. Use reason in connection with believing, and Know the beliefs involved in reasoning. P.S. - Parking one's brains doesn't belong in the Ch Lutheran Campus Ministry 1204 Oread 843-4948 Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m. carouse SWEATER & COAT SALE 25-40% OFF All Coats 20-30% OFF Fall Sweaters 20-30% OFF Jr. Fail Tops 711 W.23rd 10-8:30 Mon-Thur 10-6:00 Fri-Sat 1-5:00 Sunday SINCE 1889 Going bowling? KU-CU game could determine who gets a bid for a bowl game. See page 13 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EAGLE FRIDAY, NOV. 8, 1985,VOL: 96,NO. 55 (USPS 650-640) Cloudy Details page 3. 1986 Bryan Graves/KANSAN Devoted floaters Don Pratt, Mission Hills junior, left, and Mark Wes, Manhattan senior, work on the Kappa Sigma fraternity float for tomorrow's homecoming parade. The two men and others spent much of last night putting the finishing touches on the float. Kansas faces possible debt in fiscal 1986 TOPEKA — Although Kansas is facing a potential shortage of $90 million in tax collections through the next budget year, Gov. John Carlin will not again "lead the long, lonely charge" for a tax increase after being flatly rejected by Republican legislative leaders last year, his spokesman said yesterday. The Associated Press However, that does not mean Carlin will automatically renew his call for an increase in the state's sales tax. He has decided that the Legislature must initiate a tax increase. Mike Swenson, spokesman for the Democratic governor, said that Carlin's worst fears about the budget would be confirmed today by a group of financial experts. The so-called consensus revenue estimating group is expected to slash up to $90 million from its earlier projections of tax-generated income in fiscal year 1986, which ends June 30, 1987. "For the past year, the governor has tried to alert all Kansans and the Legislature to what he knew we were Now, facing a dramatic drop in income of nearly $100 million over the next 18 months, Swenson said it would be impossible for lawmakers to ignore the financial realities. And it would be up to them to decide how to handle it because Carlin would not be embarrassed again. Judge won't rule in case dismissal on KU's request going to be facing." Swenson said. "When he recommended a revenue measure, he knew we were facing a very serious situation. He began with the year ago and that's why he came out in favor of a sales tax increase." "He's not going to lead the lonely charge again," Swenson said of Carlin's campaign last year for a tax increase. "He'll need the support from the Legislature before he'll go on that limb again. The Republican-controlled Legislature, however, spurned Carlin's idea of raising taxes and succeeded in building a budget without any new major sources of revenue. 'He did everything he could to alert them of the situation. It's going See TAXES, p. 5, col. 1 By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff OLATHE — A judge decided yesterday not to rule on the University of Kansas's motion for dismissal of two football players' case against the University in a hearing in Johnson County District Court. "We were hoping that he would reach a decision today because the season's almost over," said Vickie McIntosh. "University general counsel." Instead of making a decision on the University's motion for dismissal, Johnson County Judge Philip J. Woodworth set Nov. 21 for final oral arguments in the trial. Thomas said that if neither par- He gave the University until 5 p.m. Wednesday to file a response to the 'players' arguments that were filed Tuesday afternoon. Both parties to the suit can decide whether to file on Nov. 21 for oral arguments. Tailback Lynn Williams and linebacker Dane Griffin fitted suit against the University on Sept. 19 to regain their eligibility to play KU football. Thomas filed a motion for dismissal of the suit on Oct. 8. If he and J. Stewart McWilliams, William's lawyer, don't agree with See HEARING, p. 5; col. 6 ly wanted to make oral arguments, Woodworth could make a decision on Wednesday. Woodworth said he had thought that the two parties would have agreed on the facts by now, but that had not happened. "We're not optimistic that'll happen, but it's possible," she said. "I just don't know if we're prepared to go ahead today," he said. Both sides did have their own ideas on how the proceedings should have gone. Ed Colliert, lawyer for Griffin, said after the hearing. "After they file their response, we're going to see whether we agree or disagree on facts. If we agree on facts, then we may submit the case to the judge with some questions of law." The players' lawyers said that they interpreted the University's motion for dismissal as a request for summary judgment, where the judge rules from the bench. In that case, the judge should not be entitled to address University failure to address the real issues of the players' case. Closed session raises questions By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff The Student Senate Elections Committee may have violated the University Senate Code on Wednesday when it closed a meeting to discuss Senate seat distribution for this month's elections. The committee met Wednesday night to decide whether to send the same apportionment figures to the Student Senate Executive Committee that StudEx rejected last week. Michael Foubert, vice chairman of the committee, asked non-members besides a Kanans reporter to leave the meeting. When they refused, the committee closed the meeting by moving into executive session. Foubert said he did not think Stu. dent Senate meetings were subject to open meetings laws. He also said the committee members were being intimidated by those who were not on the committee. The non-members who attended were William Easley, student body president; Jeff Polack, student body vice president; Charles Lawhorn, holdover senator; and Tony Arnold, chairman of StudEx, who was asked by David Day, Elections Committee chairman, to speak to the committee. Easley said, "In a sense, they asked the opposition to leave." Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, said that the University Senate Code required Student Senate to obey the state open meetings law regardless of the whether the law itself applied to the Senate. "We don't have to decide whether the law applies," she said. "I think that what the Senate Code provision means is that . . . what's laid out in the statute is to be our operating rule." Thomas said she would not judge whether the committee acted against the code because the Student Senate formally asked for her opinion. The code, which governs Faculty Senate and Student Senate, says in Section 4 of Article 17, "All committees mandated by this code and all other committees or sub-committees to the laws this code shall adhere to the laws set in the State Kansas governing open and closed meetings." Day said he had not realized that closing the meeting was violating the code. He said he was sorry the violation occurred, but said closing the meeting was effective. "I got input from every single committee member that was there." Day said. He said the only members who were involved were three experienced senators. Easley said, "I think if I was a committee member and the student body president and vice president walked into a meeting to address an issue, I would assume they would know what they were talking about. If that called intimidation, then we were as intimidating as bell." Student Senate meetings do not have to obey state open meetings NCAA ponders altering eligibility rule See MEETINGS, p 5, col. 4 By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Delegates to the National College Athletic Association's January convention in New Orleans will consider several proposed amendments to its initial eligibility rule, commonly known as "Proposal 48," an NCAA official said Wednesday. Ted Tow, an NCAA assistant executive director, said that Proposal would be effective Aug. 1, 1980. The amendment is amended at the January convention. The initial eligibility rule now states that to be eligible for practice and competition in intercollegiate athletics during their first year of college, incoming athletes at Division I schools must have graduated from at least a 2.0 grade point average. Two hundred and eighty-three schools, including the University of Kansas, make up Division I, the NCAA's top competitive division. Proposal 48 will change the rule to require a 2.0 GPA in a high school core curriculum of 11 academic courses and will also require a score of a least 700 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test or 15 on the American College Test. However, opponents of Proposal 48 want the rule amended to make it less stringent. Tow said Proposal 48 had been criticized by officials of black colleges who said the standards discriminated against black athletes. "Initial opposition to the rule did come from historically black institutions," he said. "But additional research done by the NCAA in the last three years shows, in some areas, a lack of correlation between the eligibility standards and actual success in college." Richard Lee, assistant athletic director for support services, said he hadn't had an opportunity to study the proposed changes but that he would be opposed to any NCAA legislation that would unfairly affect any one school more than another. "Such a rule could have what I consider to be a negative effect on predominately black institutions," he said. "I think the presidents of those institutions have a legitimate concern." Tow said similar criticism had caused the NCAA president's commission to vote at their meeting in Denver last month to sponsor an amendment to Proposal 48 at the January 1986 convention. However, he said, that amendment has since been modified and will be sponsored jointly by the president's commission and the NCAA council. Tow, who serves as NCAA staff Council stalls on proposal See PROPOSAL p. 5, col. 1 By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff The ongoing battle over the University's classified research policy will continue as the University Council deferred action yesterday on proposed changes in the policy. CRINC is a privately incorporated research organization. It works with the University on engineering and engineering-related research. According to Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, these are the areas that are most affected by the classification policy. The council voted 13-12 to send the classified research proposal to the executive committee of the Corporation for Research Inc. (CRINC) for consideration of possible effects of the changes. The action was taken in the hope that CRINC would accept the new proposal as part of its policy on research projects, according to Horowitz, who is also director of CRINC. Horowitz originally presented the proposal to the council in September. Arthur Skidmore, professor of philosophy and council member; made the recommendation to send the classification policy to CRINC. According to Horowitz, CRINC now follows the University's policy of allowing the classification of the research process and the results of the research for one year. During the meeting, Skidmore called the classification proposal "repugnant and a compromise of the principles of the University." William Tuttle, professor of history and council member, said that sending the proposal to CRINC would members more time to consider the issue. The proposed changes would allow CRINC to extend the one-year limit three years and would allow some information to be secret for an indefinite period of time. "I think we were being somewhat stamped into a vote," he said. "This is too important an issue to move quickly on." Indefinite or partial classification The committee's decision on whether to accept the new classification guidelines will be presented to the Faculty Council at its next meeting Dec. 5. would involve only an "insubstantial" portion of the research under the proposal. Horowitz said she would present the proposal to CRINC's 12-member executive committee in two weeks. The council failed to reach a decision on the proposal after prolonged debate at its Oct. 3 meeting. The proposal met resistance from some faculty members who said it infringed upon the University's princi- plic and open discussion and disseminated. Proponents of the change said the current policy restricted research, training and teaching. Earlier, Horowitz said that the new policy was designed to accommodate corporations and government agencies who might require that the research results remain classified while they use the information for product development. ALO BROOKLYN CO. Paul Goodman/KANSAh All-nighter Joe Duncan, second from left, owner of the company in charge of installing new bleachers in the lower level of Allen Field House, directs his crew. His men worked last night to try to get the bleachers built before the basketball game tonight against Czechoslovakia. Duncan said that the bleachers would not be ready for tonight's game, but that they might be ready for the beginning of the regular season. 2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 News Briefs Reagan announces Heckler's successor RUSH SPRINGS, Okla. — A 9-year-old boy saved two younger members of his family by pushing them through a window in their burning mobile home and then died in the fire, firefighters said yesterday. WASHINGTON — Otis R. Bowen, a former Indiana governor, was selected by President Reagan yesterday to be the next secretary of health and human services, replacing Margaret Heckler, who will become U.S. ambassador to Ireland. Reagan said he picked Bowen because, among other qualifications, Bowen was an experienced family doctor. A question has been raised about Bowen's decision some years ago to treat his terminally ill wife with three drugs not approved by the Food and Drug Administration, but he has denied any illegal action. David Spicer Jr. died Wednesday night in the fire that gutted his family's home four miles west of Oklahoma in springs in central Oklahoma. Boy dies saving kids Fire Chief Herb Miller said the boy apparently managed to knock out a bedroom window and push the younger children through it. Both parents were at work and Spicer was the oldest child there. Vets visit River Kwai KANCHANABURI, Thailand — World War II veterans and widows from Britain made an emotional visit yesterday to the "Death Railway" over the River Kwai, laying wreaths and paying a long-awaited tribute at a war cemetery. About 16,000 prisoners of war died from disease, hard labor and Japanese executions while building the link between Thailand The trip was part of a commemoration of the 40th anniversary of the end of World War II. Shiites say Americans executed From Kansan wires. BEIRUT, Lebanon — An anonymous caller claiming to speak for Islamic Jihad said yesterday that the terror group decided to execute its long-held American hostages by firing squad because negotiations with the Reagan administration "treated a dead end." United Press International Police searched a bombed-out Coca-Cola factory in west Beirut, where a second caller said the bodies of six missing Americans would be dumped, but found no trace of the men. In Washington, when President Reagan was asked whether the Americans had been executed by their presumed Shiite Moslem captors, he said, "Evidently, there's no substantiation of that at all." An anonymous caller claiming to represent Islamic Jihad, or Holy War, told a Western news agency in Beirut. "We decided to execute the American hostages by firing squad. Wait for another call from us at 1 p.m. regarding the status of the corpse of the American hostages and where these corpse will be found." The same caller did not telephone the agency at 1 p.m., however. Authorities said the second call, telling police where to find the men's bodies, appeared to be a hoax. The failure of the first caller to call back at 1 p.m. raised speculation that the captors were trying to put new pressure on the Reagan administration. As the price for the men's release, Islamic Jihad has demanded U.S. pressure on Kuwait to free 17 Iraqi and Lebanese Shites convicted of bombing and Kuwait targets in Kuwait in December 1983. Moslem west Beirut over the past 19 months. Buckley's captors say they killed him last month, but a corpse has not been found. "We wish to tell America that this sad end of the American hostages will not be the last," the first anonymous caller warned. "We shall shake the earth under America's feet and the feet of its agents." Six Americans, including U.S. diplomat William Buckley, disappeared or were kidnapped in mainly The caller said a videotape of the Americans before their deaths would be sent to news organizations. He made no mention of four Frenchmen the Islamic Jihad also claimed to be holding. The new standards are likely to encourage changes in toxic waste disposal methods, with less reliance on dumping and increased use of in-incineration to dispose of hazardous wastes, he added. Delinquent toxic dumps to be closed United Press International WASHINGTON — "Black Friday" is at hand for the nation's 1,600 toxic waste dumps, with hundreds very likely to shut down because of their failure to meet the deadline for compliance with new federal standards. Under the law, toxic waste dumps that miss the deadline today — labeled "Black Friday" by some — must shut down immediately. Winston Porter, the EPA's assistant administrator for hazardous waste programs, said that most of the facilities involved were private dumps used by factories to handle their own hazardous wastes. But, he said, a few are commercial landfills whose shutouts could lead to isolated regional shortages of dumping space. The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that about 500 of the facilities — landfills, deep injection wells, pits, ponds and lagoons — cannot meet today's deadline to install equipment required to check for leaks. Another 50 to 100 firms have been unable to obtain the necessary liability insurance to cover $6 million a year in cleanup costs in case of an accident. Colombian rebellion ended United Press International BOGOTA, Colombia — Security forces recaptured the Supreme Court building yesterday, ending a 27-hour siege by leftist rebels in which the court's president and the leader of the guerrillas were killed, authorities said. Carlos Martinez, national Red Cross director, said outside the Justice Palace after the assault, "All the rebels died. There is complete At least 30 rebels died during the siege, and 14 of the bodies were burned Wednesday night when the four-story court building caught fire, Martinez said. Police said the rebels also tied sticks of dynamite to their belts and legs to make sure they died before they could be captured. Other leftist rebels this week released three U.S. missionaries they had kidnapped last month, U.S. Embassy officials said yesterday. The missionaries were released to members of a government-sponsored peace commission in Colombia's eastern jungle. "They didn't want to give themselves up." Martinez said. Timothy Cain, 35, Keokuk, Iowa, his wife, Bonnie "Bunny" Cain, 33, of Alexandria, Va., and Steve Estelle, 34, of Douglas, Ariz., were released at 9 p.m. Wednesday at a remote jungle site about 200 miles southeast of Bogota. There was no immediate word on their conditions. Radio reports citing police and military officials said the missionaries were released by the Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces, or FARC, without any ransom payment. Police said that Alfonso Reyes, Supreme Court president, and Andres Almarelas, rebel leader, died during the siege. Also reported killed was Judge Maria Inez Ramos, who had supported a law granting pardons to guerrillas, but her death could not immediately be confirmed. Martinez said that the assault in the court building was a triumph for the armed forces and the government. In suite of the sacrifice of life. Helms offers to help Soviet sailor United Press International WASHINGTON — Sen. Jessie Helms, R-N.C., declaring he was trying "to save this young man's life," issued a subpoena yesterday that could pry seaman Marisel Medvid off a Soviet grain ship in the Mississippi River. yesterday on behalf of Medvid, asking yet another federal court to keep the ship in port until Medvid is questioned again. George Dunlap, a staff member on the Senate Agriculture Committee, said that Helms signed the subpoena at 2 p.m. EST yesterday and dispatched the committee's deputy counsel to New Orleans to attempt to serve the papers. In New Orleans, the American Civil Liberties Union filed suit late "We have to do everything we can and hope that somehow someone in a position of authority will grant the relief Medid need to save his own life," said Martha Kegel, ACLU director in New Orleans. In Florida, a Romanian sailor who walked into a Jacksonville immigration office and asked for political asylum had his wished granted yesterday, and started a new life in the United States. Asylum for Stefan Vernea, 38, of Constanta, Romania, was granted by Perry Rivkind, Miami district director for the Immigration and Naturalization Service. At the White House, President Reagan said he had asked U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese to look into the case of Medvid, who twice jumped ship in apparent efforts to defect but was returned to the vessel by U.S. officials. Asked whether he thought the subpoena could hurt U.S.-Soviet relations on the eve of the Reagan Gorbachev summit, Helms quoted Rhett Butler's famous retort in "Gone With the Wind" — "Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn." 3rd round barren in arms talks In a prepared statement, Kampelman said Soviet proposals presented Sept. 30 contained some unacceptable aspects, but also some "seeds to nurture." Max Kampelman, leader of the U.S. delegation, said that the latest round was productive, but that the United States had hoped to be closer to agreement. Kampelman said the fourth round of talks would begin Jan. 16. United Press International But Karpov told reporters when the new U.S. proposals were presented that the U.S. Strategic Defense Initiative, a space-based missile defense program popularly known as Star Wars, remained the biggest obstacle to reducing nuclear arms. Viktor P. Karpov, Soviet arms delegation leader, did not make a statement at the close of the latest round, the third since talks began March 12. GENEVA, Switzerland — The United States and the Soviet Union recessed the third round of their arms control talks yesterday without any sign of definite progress before this month's summit between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The Soviets are demanding that any arms agreement include a ban on Star Wars and other space-based weapons systems. Reagan has said repeatedly that he would not scrap Star Wars. After talks in Moscow this week with Gorbachev and Eduard Shevardnadze, Soviet foreign minister, George Shultz, secretary of state, said that differences remained on arms control issues in advance of the summit between Reagan and Gorbachev in Geneva on Nov. 19-20. The third round began Sept. 19 and lasted seven weeks. Two hours after they ended, Kampehnan called in reporters to read his statement but did not reply to questions because of a rule of confidentiality agreed to by both sides. CHECKERS PIZZA Weekend Night Owl Special! CHECKERS PIZZA Weekend Night Owl Special! Checker's Night Owl Special—Friday & Saturday 10 p.m.-3 a.m. only. 2 LARGE PIZZAS (1-Topping) 6-PACK OF SOFT DRINK All For $9.99 Delivery • Carry Out • Dine In 2214 Yale Hours Sunday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. 841-8010 CHECKERS PIZZA Weekend Night Owl Special! 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BATH BED RM 140 square feet BED RM 140 square feet Big Picture Windows Location: On campus, on bus route. Thermostat: All Utilities Paid! LIVING/DINING RM 240 square feet Paid Cable TV Hookup Private Entrance: Double locks on doors. Carpet: Wall to wall, several colors. INDIVIDUAL CONTRACT Lease On the KU Campus 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 3 News Briefs The seating for tonight's exhibition basketball game between the KU men's basketball team and the Czechoslovakian national team will be a combination of something old and something new, including borrowed and something blue. Bleachers readied for KU-Czech game Campus/Area However, not all of the bleachers on the lower level of Allen Field House will be new. All fans with tickets for tonight's game will have seats, Doug Vance, sports information director, announced yesterday. One section of the new bleachers won't be in place by game time. Workers have been working in three shifts almost around the clock in an effort to have all the new seating installed by tonight. KU basketball fans should allow plenty of time to find a parking space near Allen Field House and find their seats before the 7:30 tipoff of the KU-Czechoslovakia season officer tonight. Fans increase traffic Traffic problems are anticipated before and after all home games because all 15,200 seats in Allen Field House have been sold. Naismith Drive between 18th Street and Sunnyside Avenue will be open only to people with perimeter parking lots beside the field house. Motorists may park in the new lot that is accessible from 19th Street and Ousdahl Road. The body of a 26-year-old Lawrence man was found Wednesday in the garage of his home in the 1300 block of East 16th Street, Lawrence police said yesterday. Police said the man apparently committed suicide by going into the garage, starting the car and inhaling the exhaust fumes. Man found in garage About 11:30 p.m. Tuesday, the man had told his wife to take their child and leave for the night, police said. The wife returned to the home at about 11:30 a.m. Wednesday and found her husband dead. Today will be partly cloudy with highs in the mid 60s. Winds will be from the south at 15 to 25 mph and gusty. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with lows of 35 to 40. Tomorrow will be cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers and highs around 50. Weather From staff and wire reports. Clarification In a story that appeared in Wednesday's Kansan, it was unclear whether In The Streets, a campus newspaper, had an advisory board. Craig Krueger, former editor of In The Streets, said yesterday that the paper has had both an advisory board and a board since it began last semester. The advisory board is composed of three KU professors, a lawyer and two former In The Streets editors, including Krueger. Six students compose the editorial board. A bill that was generated in the Student Senate University Affairs committee asked In The Streets to form an editorial board. Interest in College business low Students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are losing their voice. Not because they've been screaming, but because they are not participating in its governing body, an assistant to the dean of the college said yesterday. By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff Pam Housen, an assistant to the dean and secretary of the College Assembly, said only 30 applications had been received by yesterday for undergraduate students in the College assembly, the College's governing body. "If the positions go unfilled." Houston said, "student representation to the assembly will be lower than it should be." The deadline for applications is today at 5 p.m. The applicants' names will appear on the Student Senate ballot during elections Nov. 20 and 21. Judy Foley, Omaha senior and a member of the assembly this semester, said few students applied for the undergraduate seats because the assembly didn't do much. "They don't really do anything," Foley said. "Most meetings last about 15 minutes. Sometimes they change class names, but everyone always votes 'yes.'" She said important issues such as changing undergraduate degree requirements didn't come up often. But, she said, even when these issues were being discussed, only about 15 meetings regularly attended meetings. Foley said she thought that many students didn't realize what the College Assembly was. As the governing body of the college, the assembly approves actions such as the recent changes made in the undergraduate degree requirements. Houston said. The assembly is composed of all faculty members of the college and of elected and appointed graduate and undergraduate students. It meets the first Tuesday of every month at 4 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. The 116 seats for undergraduate students are divided evenly among freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors, giving each class 29 representatives. Although representatives hold their positions for one year, Houston said, seniors can be elected to the assembly and can be representations until they graduate Once students are elected to the assembly, she said, they can become members of standing committees. These committees are the College Budget Committee and the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising, which usually initiates course changes. Houston said low student representation in the assembly was not unusual, as this year's undergraduate seats were not filled. "This has been a common problem over the years," she said. Last year, students were given 100 seats in the assembly, but only 61 people applied for the positions. Houston said many students who were elected to the assembly were not active representatives. "Some people drop out," she said. "Of those who don't, few attend the meetings." She also said graduate student representation was not sufficient to fill all the graduate seats available The graduate representatives for the assembly were chosen in September and October, she said. Only 13 of the 26 at-large seats were filled. Owner sues KU student in club case By Abbie Jones Special to the Kansan In an unprecedented crackdown on underage drinkers, a Lawrence bar owner was awarded $500 in damages Wednesday in small claims court in a suit against a KU student who entered his private club in April with false identification. Ace Johnson, owner of The Sanctuary, 1401 W Seventh St., sued Ronald Smith, Overland Park junior, for the amount Johnson was fined by James Alcohol Beverage Control Board for violating the age requirement. Johnson was charged with the violation after Smith was approached by Lawrence police and arrested in The Sanctuary. He was found guilty in Douglas County District Court in May of possession of liquor by a minor and possession of false identification. The student's attorney said he had no comment. Smith could not be heard. "This is the first time we have ever seen it happen, but I guarantee you it will be the last, as a result of this court," she proclaimed Glover, Lawrence city prosecutor. Johnson said he filed the suit to warn underage people not to enter prison. "Myself, the district attorney's office, ABC and other bar owners throughout the state are trying to stop the minors using fake L.D.s." Johnson said. "I can legally arrest any minor who comes into my place with a false LD." Other Lawrence club owners said that they had never sued a minor in small claims court. Mike Kirsch, owner of Gammons, 160 W. 3rd St., said that in the past, his bar had confiscated L.D.s, but he never taken an individual to court. Doug Compton, owner of the Mad Hatter, 700 New Hampshire St., said he had never sued a minor, but he liked the idea. "I think it's a good deal because we get a severe penalty," Cmion said. "You are going to see bar owners going after the kids," Johnson said. "Somebody has to set the example, and I'm the one." University Daily Kansan Johnson said that this was the first time he had ever sued a minor. The manager of the Sanctuary was arraigned in 1981 and ordered the bar with false identification. He said he waited to sue Smith until the University began classes to draw attention to the problem. "He's the scapegoat," Johnson said. "He's the example. He may go down in history." (1) Chad DeShazo/KANSAN Bud Littleton, left, and a co-worker from Window Systems Construction Co., Lee's Summit, replaced windows yesterday in back of the Kansas Union. Littleton said the windows were being replaced to make the Union more energy efficient. Paneful perch Laboratory illuminates architects The Bob Foley Illumination Laboratory was dedicated in a ceremony attended by about 70 people yesterday afternoon. By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff Ronald Helms, director of architectural engineering, said the laboratory at Pennsylvania State University, one of the best in the country, was not even close to KU's quality. A new laboratory has been constructed at 232 Art and Design Building, from company donations of more than $70,000. "It will let the students experience firsthand state-of-the-art lighting systems," he said. "It will add a dimension to their education." Helms said the laboratory demonstrated basic principles of lighting, such as visibility and color of objects. Students can also set up different systems for research. The Robert J. Besal Memorial Educational Fund awards grants for scholarships to architectural engineering students and for faculty development. "KU is the only institution in the country with two full-fledged faculty members in lighting." Helms said. Cindy Ong, Overland Park senior, said the laboratory would be useful for students to see installed lighting. KU architectural engineering students now can study lighting in the best illumination laboratory in the country. "It's so different actually seeing it and reading about it in a book," she said. "We've had a basement room in our town now. That's nothing at all compared to being the lights in the ceiling and being able to move them around." Bob Foley, chairman of Bob Foley Co., Inc., a Kansas City lighting company, was surprised that the illumination laboratory was named after him. "I think I get more emotional as I grow older," he said, blinking tears from his eyes. By Susie Bishop Helms said Foley helped solicit 29 companies to donate equipment. "He's Mr. Electrical in the Kansas-Missouri area." Helms said. "I didn't know anything about this," he said. "I thought it was going to be named after my personal friend Jesse, who died a few years ago." Robert Besal, whose educational fund helps support the University, was vice president of Lithonia Lighting Co. Floats are pomped up for parade Of the Kansan staff The parade, which used to wind across campus after Friday afternoon classes, was changed to Saturday morning and the downtown route this year. The changes should enable more students, "We'll have the homecoming parade rain or shine," junior class president John Fevryly, who is in charge of the parade, said yesterday. "You can't postpone a parade." Rain or shine, thousands of dollars of colored pomp will drift, drive and float along Massachusetts Street early tomorrow morning. Students in many fraternities, sororites and residence halls are pumping their fingers to the bone in preparation for the homecoming parade at 9 a.m. tomorrow. Pumping is stuffing 4-inch-square pieces of colorful tissue paper into glue-covered chicken wire. Boxes of pomp await able fingers to twist, stuff and spray them in place on the 14 floats signed up to participate in this year's homecoming competition. faculty and Lawrence residents to participate in the parade, Fevurly said. Many exhausted students will present their best effort to judges on Saturday morning. "We won't be working all night, maybe until 3 a.m. or 4 a.m." Elizabeth Polka, Lenexa sophomore and float chairman for Alpha Chi Omega sorority. "We'll get a little sleep before the parade." Five judges will evaluate the floats as they pass by the reviewing stand at Ninth and Massachusetts streets. This year's judges are Timothy Bengtson, this year's HOPE award winner; an area business man; a representative from the Athletic Department; an alumnus and a representative from the office of minority affairs. The announcement of the first and second place winners in moving and non-moving categories will be made at Memorial Stadium before the KU-University of Colorado football game, he said. The pump comes from companies in Topeka and Kansas City. If the float builds run low on sup- The floats will be judged in eight categories, including originality and best use of the "Go Ahead" slogan. pies, on the road they go. Each package of tissue covers 2 square feet and a 25-package carton costs $22.50. "We may end up making a road trip to Kansas City to get more." Polka said. Alpha Chi Omega teamed up with Alpha Tau Omega fraternity for the float competition. Their float re-enacts the bombing of Pearl Harbor, but with a twist - Jayhawk-shaped airplanes, dropping football bombs, circle the unsuspecting Buffaloes on the USS Colorado. Other variations on the Hawaiian theme that will grace the Lawrence streets include Buffaloes being buried in the sand by Jayhawks dressed in beach attire, slave Buffaloes fanning the King Jayhawk, and Jayhawks stuffing sacrificial Buffaloes into a smoking volcano. Delta Delta Delta sorority and Kappa Sigma fraternity's moving Jayhawk should begin systematically sacrificing the evil Buffalo to a smoking volcano early Friday evening, said Allison Taylon. St. Louis junior and float chairman. She said only two clouds floated on their noses and the dry ice dumped volcano and the threat of rain. MISS STREET DELI 041 MASSACHUSETTS MISS STREET DELI 041 MASSACHUSETTS Homemade CHOCOLATE, CHERRY, LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake MISS STREET DELI Homemade CHOCOLATE, CHERRY, LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake No coupons accepted with this offer. 95¢ reg $1.50 Offer good through Nov. 30 NATURAL WAY NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING We believe that natural fiber clothing is more comfortable and healthier than synthetic clothing. Let your body breath! We believe buying the finest quality is always the least expensive. Cotton, wool, and silk designs, and hand-made sweaters from around the world at reasonable prices make us unique. We believe our customers are unique and our greatest asset in bringing quality clothes to Lawrence. UNIQUE GIFTS & EXOTIC JEWELRY SUNDAY HOURS 12-5 820 Mass. 841-0100 Silk Cotton Wool Tailgate Chicken Special 8 Piece Carry Out 1 pint Cole Slaw 1 pint Potatoes only 5.99 RUSTY'S IGA DISCOUNT Westridge * 8th & Kassid * 841-0144 Hillcrest * 9th & Iowa * 843-2313 Southside * 23rd & Louisiana * 843-8588 GO HAWKS! BEAT THE BUFFALOES! Tailgate Chicken Special 8 Piece Carry Out 1 pint Cole Slaw 1 pint Potatoes only 5.99 RUSTY'S IGA DISCOUNTS Westridge * 6th & Kasold * 841-0144 Hillcrest * 9th & Iowa * 843-2313 Southside * 23rd & Louisiana * 843-8588 GO HAWKS! BEAT THE BUFFALOES! KU WORK BEYOND FAILS 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN At this year's Homecoming Day festivities, the early Jayhawk will catch the parade. And he'll have to go downtown to do it. Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 A downtown parade At 9:30 tomorrow morning, the homecoming parade will march down Massachusetts Street — a switch from a nearly 20-year-old tradition of having the parade go through campus on the Friday afternoon before the game. John Fevrely, junior class president, decided to switch the time, date and place of this year's parade so more local residents could attend. This year's parade — complete with 14 floats, the KU Marching Band, five high school bands, clowns, politicians and campus dignitaries — will run from Seventh and Massachusetts streets to South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets. The move downtown will allow students and professors who have Friday afternoon classes to watch the parade. Spectators won't have to hassle with finding parking on campus, either. Lawrence residents who can't take off from work on Friday afternoon will be able to cheer on the floats and the band alongside the University community. KU may be the home of the Jayhawks, but Lawrence is the home of KU. Homecoming should be a celebration that both the city and the campus can share. And although the time, date and place of the parade may be different, the homecoming spirit will remain the same. Let's just hope it doesn't rain on this parade. All in all, the move to a Saturday morning parade should encourage a bigger turnout. It also recognizes the important link between the University and the community as a whole. Dipping into the till The Social Security trust fund began paying for Congress' ineptitude a week ago. The price was $38 million The price was fitting The Treasury dipped into the trust fund to keep the government running. That's because Congress didn't head off the problem last month by raising the debt ceiling, the limit on the amount of money the government can borrow. It's easy to understand Congress' reluctance to raise the ceiling in the face of the record federal budget deficit. But dipping into the Social Security trust fund is outrageous. The answer to the problem lies in quickly hammering out a plan to chisel the deficit down. Any such plan would supply Congress with at least a rough outline for action on the debt ceiling. Congress put off the sticky problem, but it must do something within a week. The Treasury threatens to close up shop if it can't get its hands on more money by then. Congress, then, wouldn't have to delay a decision on the debt ceiling. The answer to the problem would be in front of all 535 members' noses. The principals in the deficit debate raging in Washington say they're already following this plan: first the deficit dilemma, then the debt-ceiling question. But Congress should have sweated out the deficit question long ago. It was the biggest issue in last year's election; it should have received top priority when Congress convened in January. Had Congress used its time judiciously, it wouldn't face cramming important issues onto the calendar right before the holiday recess. It's the equivalent of an unprepared college student cramming the night before a final exam. Students who put off school work see the consequences in bad grades. With one important distinction. When Congress crams, innocent bystanders such as the Social Security trust fund suffer. Commending a curator Robert Hoffmann, a curator of mammals at the Museum of Natural History on campus, has provided one more indication of KU's academic reputation. Last week Hoffmann was named director of the National Museum of Natural History/National Museum of Man, part of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. When he goes there in May, he will supervise exhibits, public education and the research of 120 curators. Hoffmann, Summerfield distinguished professor of systematics and ecology, plans to also make time for his own research on the evolution of mammals in North America. Those who have visited the Smithsonian know the wonders of its natural history museum. Those who haven't may get a number such as 81 million items in the collection and 6 million visitors annually. Although the scope is smaller, the KU museum provides the same chance to ponder nature. It also continues to be one of the University's best attractions to the public, as shown by the recent swarms of school children during Dinosaur Days. We congratulate Robert Hoffrann on his appointment. From his first paying job selling peanuts at a zoo, he has turned a lifelong interest in animals into a chance to help the progress of science. For the rest of KU, Hoffmann's appointment offers a reminder that the museum in the middle of the campus is a fine one, attracting attention and visitors from far away. It deserves attention here as well. Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager Editor John Hanaa Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.** **GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The The Kaman reserves the right to edit or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kaman newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall. The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 60645, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class passage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60644. In Douglas County, mall subscriptions cost $1 for six months and $2 a year. Elsewhere, they cost $1 for six months and $3 a year. Student subscriptions POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045. THE BUCK DROPS HERE ©1985 WARREN S. MOSKIN Mailbox Privileged athletes While walking to my night class in Wescoe Hall Monday night, I wondered what was going on, that so many noisy, disruptive students were emerging from Hoch Auditorium and walking down Javahk Boulevard. My question was answered in Tuesday's Kansan: They were privileged varsity athletes enrolling early for next semester's classes. Because I am a graduate student, I was pleased to note that according to the spring 1966 Timetable, graduate students are in the first-to-enroll category with seniors. Nowhere did I see that athletes had preference over that category. But according to Gary Thompson, director of student records and educational services, this "was not the first time varsity athletes had been allowed to enroll early, regardless of their class rank." At some point, KU student athletes will have to become one of the crowd, like the majority of us. They need to know why they are students first, athletics second. Otherwise, I pity their not being able to grow up without someone from the Athletic Department leading them along by the hand every step of the way. What better time to start this growing up than at enrollment. Lori MacCurdy Lawrence graduate student Training hearsav I was shocked to read about the KU sophomore who died last week in the training accident. It is sad to see the young man end his life on the basis of poor judgment. I feel, however, that the articles printed in the Kansan are more hear-say than fact. The Nov. 4 column by Ewan Walter finally brought me to the conclusion that few people who are writing about training know about it or have drank it. Actually, there is no "game" to training at all. I have been at KU since 1978 and have trained three or four times a year. The popularity of training has been so great in the past that it received a write-up in a KU yearbook. Training can be done by one person or a group of people. What actually happens is a person sits behind a triangular metal support on a train bridge approximately three feet from the track. Behind the support the person is shielded and hidden from the oncoming train. As the train approaches the anxiety builds until the train passes with a rush of sight and sound. The person stays seated until the train passes. Granted, training is illegal because of trespassing laws, but I have never heard of or witnessed anyone attempting such a foolish feat as jumping across the track in front of an oncoming train. Everybody is looking for thrills in their lives, but most have enough common sense not to push it to the brink of disaster. With the coverage this accident has received, the public must think that KU students are off their rockers, running in front of trains. Obviously a few must be, but not the rest of us. Lincoln, Neb., graduate student Coverage complaint As a KU graduate and permanent Jayhawker, I want to commend you on the consistently excellent news coverage you provide in the Kansan, the important and sometimes only coverer of events for thousands. In many years of reading the Kansan, I have but one complaint. When I was out of state for a conference, my children were pictured playing in a park (summer Kansan, June 26). Although rightly titled the "Denning sisters," one of them, Mary Alice, was not named. And although their mother's name and out-of-county address were given, my name with our local address wasn't. Gerald Denning 1421 W. Second Terr. An open forum? The University had a long tradition of fighting racism. But those days are gone. The University supports apartheid. The trustees rot in the squalor of inhumanity. The chancellor is a coward. He speaks with disdain for racism, but his actions invest in it. The University is not well. The University as open forum is the catch phrase. When all of South Africa is dead and the blood is on the chancellor's wealthy white hands, will that be enough open forum? I think probably so, because the University will die, too. William H. Taylor Lawrence graduate student Aspiring to be leader of the PAC Before I could finish the fifth article I'd seen this week about the 1988 presidential election, I went outside to shake off an onepressed feeling. One of the neighborhood boys was sitting on the steps. He also looked depressed. I asked him whether something was wrong. "Yeah," he said, "I just can't get my PAC off the ground." "How much are they making you Boy Scouts carry these days?" I asked innocently. "No. My political action committee he responded with a hint of scorn. "How about a contribution?" he asked. "If I don't get started now, I'll never raise enough money to beat the Kennedy and du Pont grandkids." "Oh." I said. The oppressed feeling wasn't going away. Guest Shot Shawn Aday "Hold it," I demanded. "What election are you going to run in?" "Presidential, 2024," he chirped, chin up. "The election may be a ways off, but the Michigan and Iowa primaries should be right around the corner pretty soon. "And if I don't get in the game early, I don't stand a chance. Most of us politically ambitious kids have it rough, you know. I mean, the Kennedy kids and the du Pont kids and the Roosevelt kids and the O'Neill kids can do whatever they feel like when they're growing up. And then when they get close to 30, people start begging them to run for things. "But what can I do? I could try acting, but 'Bedtime for Bonzo' was probably a one-of-a-kind movie. Maybe I could become a general. A lot of old-time presidents were generals, but I haven't heard about any popular ones lately. I guess you'd need to win a pretty big war to get popular enough to be president. Just my luck, I'd put in all that work to become a general and then I'd never get a big war to win." "Listen kid," I said, "money and fame aren't everything. Look at Abraham Lincoln. He didn't have either." "That old log-cabin line isn't going to work in the 21st century," he said, scornful again. "It wasn't a line," I objected. "It was the truth. Besides, I meant that you should read and study and learn as much as you can and be as honest as you can instead of worrying about PACs and money." "That shows what you know," the kid said. "Why should I know everything when I can keep plenty of aides around to fill me in?" It's not what you know, it's who you can afford to hire to run your campaign. He's the one who makes you look good. "Lincoln would never make it in those new campaign commercials where everything and everybody looks pretty and they don't have to say anything. "He wouldn't even know what a PAC was, I'd bet." Anti-apartheid protests a waste of time The South Africa protest fad once again has influenced a campus rally and parade. This time, it ended with five arrests. And once again the protesters have wasted their time and effort. They take pride in their bravery for stepping out to protest against the establishment, an establishment that condones free speech. Evan Walter Staff columnist They have repeatedly thrown the issue in everyone's face. If the issue is of such importance to them, why don't they go to South Africa to fight for their cause, instead of inconveniencing a college campus? is a cruel one, but it must, and will, end. After all, no evidence suggests that divestment will cure the array of problems in South Africa. Subversive groups have swarmed South Africa with riots and murders, and for years the free world has pressured the government to change. Voices of sharp disapproval have come from all corners. If none of that has worked, why would divestment cause the government to change? Divestment, although proposed as a tool of pressure on the Botha regime, would strongly encourage civil disobedience of the aroused people. Within the oppressed mob is an intense anger and aggression. The South African masses are dangerous. Further outbreaks of civil disobedience could render South Africa's group that subverts the minds of the young rioters in South Africa. The biggest danger of divestment is that it would encourage and The South African government has practiced a system of aparthid for many years. President P.W. Botha has demonstrated to the world that he is an unjust oppressor. The system 'If the issue is of such importance to them, why don't they go to South Africa to fight for their cause, instead of inconveniencing a college campus?' five million whites, already in grave danger, helpless in the face of angry mobs and in the ruins of a crumbled economy. Yet, the divestment advocates have amplifiedly narrowed the scope. "It is our intention to make South Africa ungovernable." Oliver Tambo, president of the African National Congress, recently told reporters. The Congress is a dangerous Marxist The problem with the divestment strengthen advocates of Tamba's approach. Would that be freedom? In other countries where rising political activists had promised "no more governing class," what happened? That would be imminently dangerous to South African civilians, especially to white civilians, whose safety the United States should be every bit as concerned about as it is the blacks'. advocates isn't their motives. It is with the ends of their plans and their means of getting there. Their only end is to stop apartheid. Their only means is to stop supporting the evil regime by divesting from companies that do business in South Africa. Divestment is not a plan of action. A better way to get rid of apartheid would be for political leaders to apply pressure to the South African government. Messages delivered directly to the Boehner government imply achieving constitutional change. Although diplomacy doesn't work very fast, it maintains stability. The divestment advocates make another error of judgment. They make the generalization that all South African blocks are unified in their beliefs and struggles. The problems within South Africa aren't due to apartheid alone. The varying differences within the country also must be considered. The violence isn't simply black versus white, but black versus black versus white versus more black. The country is divided into numerous factions and tribal units, many intensely engaged in their own rivalries. Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Taxes Continued from p. 1 to have to be a bipartisan, joint effort to solve the financial problems facing Kansas." Swenson said the six-member estimating group likely would slash its earlier estimates of tax collections by $40 million for the current budget year, which ends June 30, 1986. And it would cut its income projections another $40-$50 million for the following fiscal year. “There’s no doubt now that revenues are going to drop dramatically over what we had been expecting,” he said. “Over the next two years we’re talking potentially "Now, it's important that this issue doesn't become a victim of election-year politics. It would not be intelligent for the Legislature to ignore the problem again and leave it for a longer horror. It needs to be addressed now." over $80 million or $90 million plus. This has been building. It's a very serious situation and something the governor warned would happen. November, 1986, and several lawmakers, including House Speaker Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, Senate President Robert V. Talkington, R- and Sen. Fred Kerr, R-Patt, already have expressed interest in the post. "The situation is worse than anyone could have predicted a year ago." Swenson said. "Our three biggest industries, agriculture, aviation and oil and gas, are all hurting. Our biggest problems have been with sales tax and income tax. That's a sign our economy is in trouble. The time to act is now." Swenson was referring to the jockeying already taking place among hopefuls in the race for the GOP gubernatorial nomination. A new governor will be elected in Proposal Continued from p. 1 liaison to the presidents' commission, said the commission's original amendment provided for an "eligibility index" that would permit a student athlete to use a higher GPA if offered an offseason or a GPA lower than 2.0 or to higher GPA to offset a score lower than 700 on the SAT or 15 on the ACT The new jointly sponsored amendment still provides for an eligibility index, but stipulates that it be phased out by the fall of 1988, he said. Under the new proposal, Tow said, the indexes would become increasingly strict. In 1986-87, a test score of 740 on the SAT or a 17 on the ACT could compensate for a core curriculum GPA of 1.8. In 1987-88, the index would be reduced so that it would require a score of 720 on the SAT or a 16 on the ACT to obtain a GPA of 1.9. In the fall of 1988, the rule as it is He said several other proposals would be presented by three factions at the convention. currently written would go into effect, Tow said. Meetings One faction wants no reference to test scores at all in the rule, he said, while another wants the rule as written to go into effect on Aug. 1. The third faction isn't satisfied with the present rule, but still wants some reference to test scores in any amendment, he said. laws, according to a 1977 opinion by Curt T. Schneider, former Kansas attorney general. Continued from p. 1 However, Jeff Southard, deputy attorney general, said yesterday that Robert J. Stephan, the current attorney general, might have a different opinion than Schneider. He said his initial reaction would be that Student Senate was subject to the law because the University created the Senate and gave it the power to allocate student activity fees. Southern said that under state law, government meetings can only be closed to discuss matters of non-essential concern; it matters that did not affect the order. Day said the committee discussed "personal matters of StudEx members and possible conflicts of interest and the allocation of seats." Southard said conflict of interest was not a legitimate reason to close a meeting. When the doors reopened at Wednesday's meeting, the committee voted unanimously to send the same figures back to StudEx. At the beginning of the meeting, Arnold, Easley and Polack spoke against the figures the Elections Committee sent to StudEx. on enrollment figures from Oct. 21 instead of the 20th-day enrollment figures that the University used officially, Arnold said. This time, StudEx approved the figures. StudEx had rejected the figures the first time because they were based Day said the difference between the more recent numbers and the 20th-day figures was that according to the newer figures, the School of Architecture and Urban Design would receive two seats instead of one and Nunemaker, which consists of freshmen and sophomores in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, would receive 17 seats instead of 18. Arnold said, "The people who lose are the students and ie press, because things were discussed off-the-record that were not limited to personal subjects." Easley and Polack said they would not take responsibility for the figures the Elections Committee sent or for StudEx's approval of the figures. Lawhorn said he knew of people who planned to appeal the validity of the elections to the University Judicial Board because of inconsistent planning of the elections. Easley and Polack said they would not appeal because they hoped concerned students would make the appeal. Hearing Continued from p. 1 the university's view of the facts, they will meet with the University general counsel in court on Nov. 21, he said. The University said the case could be dismissed on a clear, legal basis, because there wasn't an answer. The players to play for football in KU. "We felt he could have decided today," Thomas said yesterday afternoon. Thomas and Rose Marino, assistant general counsel, have said that the case had to be settled before the end of the football season for the University to gain satisfaction. Neither Williams nor Griffin had their scholarships removed, and both have played in games since Sept. 19, when they filed suit against the University to regain their eligibility. The end of the regular football season will not necessarily mean an immediate end to the suit, according to Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director. Hunter said both sides would probably continue court proceedings even if they continued past the end of the KU football season. KU vs. COLORADO Live Broadcast HZR 106 1 p.m. Saturday Sponsored By Bum Steer Bar B Q Laird Noller Ford KU Bookstores Mister Guy Sunflower Cablevision Zercher Photo Ed Marlings KU vs. COLORADO Live Broadcast KZR 106 1 p.m. Saturday Sponsored By Bum Steer Bar B Q Laird Noller Ford KU Bookstores Mister Guy Sunflower Cablevision Zercher Photo Ed Marlings Goodnight, Mr. Poe A One Man Show written and performed by Sean Ketchy Tonight! TICKETS ON SALE SUA Box Office Public $4 Students $3 With KU ID FINE ARTS It is the evening of October 2, 1849. And Edgar Allan Poe is dying. 7 p.m., Alderson Auditorium KU vs. COLORADO Live Broadcast 1 p.m. Saturday Sponsored By Bum Steer Bar B Q Laird Noller Ford KU Bookstores Mister Guy Sunflower Cablevision Zercher Photo Ed Marlings QUALITY AUDIO – THE BEST PRICE! ONKYO Receiver We Carry The Entire Onkyo Line Receiver Sale High Quality at Low Price Compare at $225 $188 KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO–VIDEO shop Youthful Energy! Prize-Winning Talent! (one of the) best of a young generation of American quartets... Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 10, 1989 Crafton-Preyer Theatre Murphy Hall Krista Bennion, violin Robert Rinehart, violin Ah Ling Neu, viola Ramon Bolipata, cello Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3988 VISA/MasterCard Accepted Partially funded by the KU Student Activities Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association THE RIDGE STRING QUARTET Half price for KU Students TICKETS ON SALE SUA Box Office Public $4 Students $3 With KU ID FINE ARTS 46 Point Check Up Service Clinic Tues. & Wed., Nov. 12 & 13, 6-10 p.m. 1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR CHECKS ✓ Lights ✓ Horn ✓ Windshield Wipers/Washers ✓ Mirrors ✓ Radio/Antenna ✓ Seat Belts ✓ Upholstery 2 BODY INSPECTION ✓ Damage ✓ Glass ✓ Hood and Trunk Latches ✓ Window & Door Operation 3 UNDER HOOD CHECKS ✓ Battery & Cables ✓ Cooling System ✓ Fluid Levels ✓ Engine Filters ✓ Drive Belts 4 ELECTRONIC TESTS (scope check) ✓ Ignition Point Dwell ✓ Ignition Timing ✓ Plug Wires ✓ Hot Idle RPM ✓ Ignition Points ✓ Distributor Cap ✓ Rotor ✓ Spark Plugs ✓ EFI Checker Test 5 UNDER CAR CHECKS ✓ Shock Absorbers ✓ Exhaust System ✓ Steering Linkage ✓ Tire Wear ✓ Universal Joints & Seals ✓ Rear Axle (Lube Level) ✓ Brake Pads/Shoes ✓ Wheel Cylinders (Visual) ✓ Fluid Leaks ✓ Springs 6 ROAD TEST AND OPERATION (optional) ✓ General Engine Operation ✓ General Handling & Steering ✓ Brakes (including hand brake) ✓ Transmission Performance ✓ Clutch (if equipped) ✓ Tire Balance ✓ Speedometer ✓ Gauges ✓ Warning Lights ✓ Power Steering (if equipped) ✓ Air Conditioning (if equipped) To make an appointment, please call no later than Nov. 11 between the hours of 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and ask for Joyce. Toyotas Only, Please Laird Noller 1116 W. 23rd 842-2191 TOYOTA 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday SERVICE EXCELLENCE AWARD WINNER Goodnight, Mr. Poe A One Man Show written and performed by Scott Kelby Tonight! QUALITY AUDIO—THE BEST PRICE ONKYO Receiver We Carry The Entire Onkyo Line Receiver Sale High Quality at Low Price Compare at $225 $188 KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO - VIDEO shop HONEYWELL UNIT 102 MENU SERVICES TEMP GAS AIR RADIO BLASTER FAN WATER ELECTRICITY GAS AIR RADIO BLASTER FAN WATER ELECTRICITY ONKYO Receiver We Carry The Entire Onkyo Line Receiver Sale High Quality at Low Price Compare at $225 $188 KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO-VIDEO shop FREE 46 Point Service To make an appointment, please call no later than Nov. Laird No. Youthful Energy! Prize-Winning Talent!"... (one of the) best of a young generation of American quartets ..." Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 10, 1985 Crafton-Preyer Theatre Murphy Hall Krista Bennion, violin Robert Rinehart, violin Ah Ling Neu, viola Ramon Bolipata, cello Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982 VISA MasterCard Accepted Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association THE RIDGE STRING QUARTET Half price for KU Students 28 FREE 1 2 3 4 5 6 TOYOTA TOYOTA SERVICE TOYOTA SERVICE TOYOTA PARTS AND SERVICE THE REAL STUFF. THE RIGHT PRICE. 6 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 Committee to act on malpractice The Associated Press TOPEKA — The Legislature's special intercommittee studying the problems of high medical malpractice insurance rates made some decisions yesterday on its recommendations to the 1986 session, but delayed action on the toughest choices facing it until today. The hard decisions involve whether to set limits on the amount of damage awards in malpractice cases and whether to reduce the ceiling on the maximum payment that can be made from the state's Health Care Stabilization Fund in malpractice cases. The legal community is strongly opposed to any caps on damage awards, while the medical community is pressing for such limitations because it believes they will help hold the line on or reduce malpractice insurance premiums. The committee reviewed and approved its proposals on requiring hospitals and other health care facilities to report instances of suspected malpractice to the state Board of Healing Arts, and setting guidelines on awarding attorney fees. Also reviewed was the setting of interest rates in structured settlements, requiring pre-trial settlement conferences to try to avoid going to trial, strengthening peer review of doctors and other health care providers, and requiring screening panels to judge the merits of malpractice claims before lawsuits are filed. Rep. Koe Knoop, R-Manhattan, said that the committee agreed in general with everything brought before it so far, but that the real controversies would come up today when the caps are being considered. The committee meets again Nov. 21-22 to give final approval to all its proposals and to the report it sends to the 1836 Legislature convening in January. One proposed bill given committee endorsement would require all licensed health care facilities to report to the Board of Healing Arts any cases of alleged medical malpractice that they deem legitimate following an in-house hearing. Failure to report such cases could result in the facility having its license revoked or suspended by the Department of Health and Environment and a fine levied of $1,000 a day for each day the incident is not reported within 30 days after a determination is made of the seriousness of the case. Sen Jack Steineger, D-Kansas City, said the requirement could end what the legal profession has called a "conspiracy of silence" on the part of physicians and hospitals to protect themselves. The proposal approved on guidelines for approving attorneys fees in medical malpractice cases does not limit those fees as to dollar amounts. However, it would establish guidelines for judges to follow in approving how much of the judgments lawyers get to keep. By Jill White Of the Kansan staff Education gets good grades The School of Education received favorable reports on its preliminary review by the Kansas Department of Education, school officials said yesterday. Jerry Bailey, associate dean of teacher education, said the accreditation review team gave a generally positive review in its oral report on Wednesday. "We found some standards that were not being met and some standards that were being met with some weaknesses, but we also found some strengths," Ervay said. "That's typical of every visit. I don't think The 23-member review team, which comprises educators from across Kansas and is headed by Stuart Ervay, director of the Center for Educational Research and Service at Emporia State University, was on campus Monday through Wednesday. Ervay read selected reviews by team members to about 35 KU faculty members and administrators at the noon meeting. there are going to be any problems with any of the programs." The report given on Wednesday was only a preliminary review designed to give the University an overview of the team's assessment. Ervay said it would take several months for the reviews of each member to be compiled into an official review. KU's School of Education will have the opportunity to write a formal response to the review. KU's response and the review will be sent to the State Board of Education in Topeka where a committee will determine which programs are eligible for certification. Paul Haack, acting dean of education, said the oral review cited some strengths of KU's programs as well. "The areas which needed 'fine tump'." He declined to indicate which programs received attention because, he said, the report was preliminary. "They reviewed over 100 different areas in the content of different fields and different levels," Haack said. "There were only two or three areas where I worry about anything more than fine tuning." The school spent about a year preparing a a,1000-page report for the review process. The review team then spent three days on campus comparing KU's report to their findings and to the standards outlined in the State Board of Education's handbook of regulations. Ervay said the review team would compile a document with one page for each standard. The document would indicate whether KU's report was valid and whether the programs complied with the standards. The document would describe weaknesses based on the evidence the team members collected through interviews and documents. And it would make recommendations on how to meet the standards and how to strengthen the weaknesses. PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY --- $1 OFF any 2 pizzas or $2 OFF any 3 pizzas ANY PIZZA ORDERED Expires 12-31-85 HOURS Mon -Thurs 11 a.m-2a.m Fri & Sat 11 a.m-3a.m Sunday 11 a.m-1a.m NAME___ ADDRESS DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY AΔΠ-ΦKΨ Picaroon Road Rally November 17 3 p.m. Entry Deadline: Nov.10 Tickets: $3.50 Pizza Party following Road Rally at the A $ \Delta\Pi $ House Treasure the Discoveries of the Season at our OPEN HOUSE PENDLETONS FLOWER & GIFT Sunday, November 10, 12-5 OPEN HOUSE VIRGINIA Stone Meadows Square 600 Lawrence Avenue 841-6464 Carriage Rides Sunday, November 10th Starting every 15 minutes at Watkins Park, 11th and Mass. Call the DLA office, 842-3883, for more information. 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. PARKING LOT Downtown Lawrence Association Brought to you by Participating Downtown Merchants CHECKERS PIZZA KU HOMECOMING SPECIAL "Win or Lose Party!" KU vs. Colorado SPECIAL 16" 2-TOPPING PIZZA $4.99 Dine In Only $1.50 Pitchers 11 a.m.-Midnight SUNDAY SPECIAL Includes $6.99 includes 14" 2-item pizza 4 soft drinks No coupon necessary Not good with any other offer $1.00 or $1.50 OFF OFF Any small pizza Any medium pizza $2.00 OFF Any large pizza One coupon per order. Includes delivery. Expires in 2 weeks. FREE SOFT DRINKS 2 free soft drinks with the purchase of a small pizza or 4 soft drinks with the purchase of a large pizza . One coupon per order. Includes delivery. Expires in 2 weeks. Bring in your KUID and we'll take $1 off a small, $2 off a medium or $3 off a large pizza! Not good with any other offer. Dive In Only 2214 Yale Sunday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. 841-8010 Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area 7 Romantics to play new hits Saturday By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Lawrence won't have a power shortage on Saturday night. The Romantics along with Donnie and the Rock will provide enough straightforward, energetic rock-and-roll to power the KU campus through Homecoming. The Romantics will play a homecoming concert in Hoch Auditorium tomorrow night at 8:30 p.m. Donnie and the Rock, a Kansas City/area band, will open the show. The Romantics are guitarist and lead vocalist Wally Palmar, guitarist Coz Canler, drummer David Petrusat and bassist Mike Skill. They have been touring for more than five weeks to promote their new album, "Rhythm Romance." The Detroit-based band's previous album, "In Heat," was certified gold. The single from that 1984 album, "Talking in Your Sleep," was a Top Five international hit. "Detroit is such a musicali- ly/oriented town," Skill said, in a phone interview from Madison, Wis., on Wednesday. "All influences — motown, rock, black music, white music — make it an electric kind of city," he said. The electricity of Detroit rubs off on The Romantic's albums, "Rhythe Romance" has an electric feel about it that is created by a heavy dance beat and strong melodies. The band's familiar 4/4 beat and use of "clear-sounding," electric guitars is enriched by "full-bodied" guitars and added The band's situation is exciting, he said, because things are coming together after five weeks on the road, and their new single, "Test of Time," is getting played on the radio and in dance clubs. keyboards. Skill said. "It's at the point where the single's taking off," Skill said. "We've been getting the songs in the right order, and they've worked out well. With the new single out it gets easier." Also, the band will play "Rock You Up," "What I Like About You" and other songs from their four previous albums. The Romantics will play their new single and other songs, such as "Mystified" and a remake of "Poison Ivy," from the new album Donnie Miller, of Donnie and the Rock, said Wednesday that his band, which had been playing the Kansas City area for seven years, and The Romantics would be "a good double bill." Donnie And The Rock have opened for Shooting Star, Nightranger and Survivor. Most recently, they opened for the Kinks on their tour last summer. Miller said his five piece band played their "no gimm rock-and-roll" mostly to college crowds. "They liked us," he said. "Our music is simple and easy to sing along with after the first chorus." Miller said he was going to Miami later in the month to do some studio work on the band's first album. "Look for something real soon,' he said. The University of Kansas is going to open the eyes of U.S. high school students about the American infrastructure. KU to teach U.S. civics classes By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff The Center for Economic Education has developed a teaching unit for national distribution from a $90,000 grant by the Associated General Contractors Education and Research Foundation. The infrastructure is the permanent public installations such as roads, utilities, public buildings, dams and ports. Emerson Hazlett, director of the Hazlett said a team consisting of himself, John Guenther, professor of curriculum and instruction, David Parr, associate professor of civil engineering, and graduate and undergraduate students had been working for almost a year on the program. center, said Wednesday that this unit was one of the first developed to teach students about the importance of the infrastructure. The rough draft was finished two weeks ago and is now being tested in high schools all over the country. In 1985, 400,000 high schools in the United States. The three-week teaching unit is designed for civies classes. It consists of a film strip with an audio cassette, a teacher's guide and student activity sheets. Haisselt told the level of difficulty and the segments of the unit they wanted to use. $40,000 of the grant was earmarked for development of the teaching unit. The remaining $50,000 will be used to produce 10,000 of the units. Hazlett said people took the infrastructure for granted. The program is designed to teach students about the economic costs and benefits of keeping up the infrastructure. This will enable the students to better determine economic priorities "The infrastructure is the public capital in the economy which provides an economic base and helps economic growth," he said. Pat Weiss, assistant director of economic education and curriculum instruction, had students in her C&I 441, Advanced Methods of Teaching Social Studies in Middle and Secondary Schools, design activities for the unit. "Students always work better when they feel the relevance of their work," she said Vacation pay won't follow job switch Previously, when a University employee transferred from one status to another, he was allowed to return to his previous position for accumulated vacation days. By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff University employees will no longer receive cash payments for earned vacation time if they transfer from classified to unclassified status, Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday. Cobb said that because of a recent interpretation of a state statute, the University found it was not authorized to pay employees for accrued vacation days when they transferred positions within the University. Richard Mann, director of institutional research, information services and personnel services, said the Unclassified employees are generally considered to be senior administrators and staff members. Of course, they are the University's support staff. PIZZA SHOPPE PIZZA BATEN WITH 12 FEBRUARY 842-0600 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center WE DELIVER! DELIVERY SPECIAL! Two Topping King Size Pizza and 32 Oz. Pepsi— $7 95 plus tax Additional Toppings Only 90' each. DINE-IN CARRY-OUT LIMITED DELIVERY UDK Exp. 11-30-85 Bring A Friend! MEAL FOR 2 Single Topping Prince Size Pizza, 2 Salads and 2 Pepsis $5 95 plus tax DINE-IN ONLY. UDK Exp. 11-30-85 PIZZA Shoppe PIZZA BATTER WITH TE FINDERS' 842-0600 6th and Kazold Westridge Shopping Center WE DELIVER! transferred and the effective date of the transfer. DELIVERY SPECIAL! Two Topping King Size Pizza and 32 Oz. Pepsi— $7 95 plus tax Additional Toppings Only 90° Each. DINE-IN CARRY-OUT LIMITED DELIVERY UDK Exp. 11-30-85 Bring A Friend! MEAL FOR 2 Single Topping Prince Size Pizza 2 Salads and 2 Pepis $5 95 plus tax DINE-IN ONLY. UDK Exp. 11-30-85 In a letter Monday to University administrators, deans and department heads, Cobb outlined the new policy. Mann said that few University employees would be affected by the new policy because few transferred services within the University. cumulate depends on how long he has been employed by the University. David Lewin, director for personnel services, said the effect of the change would depend on how long an individual had worked for the University. SILADIUM RINGS NOW ONLY $89.95 SAVE $50 ArtCarved Siladium® college rings are now more affordable than ever. Choose from an incredible variety of styles. See your ArtCarved representative now and save $50 on a great Siladium college ring. Every ArtCarved ring is backed by a Full Lifetime Warranty. ARTCARVED CLASS RINGS Class Rings Make Perfect Christmas Gifts November 7-9 10 a.m.-4 p.m. KU Bookstore Kansas Union DATE TIME PLACE The letter said that when an employee is preparing to move from one position to another and his status will be changed, the department representative will give that employee a letter specifying the amount of vacation that is being University officials tried to pay the employees for their vacation days, Mann said, but they were told by administrators that they couldn't. CENTRAL STATE UNIVERSITY CENTRAL STATE UNIVERSITY ORLANDO UNIVERSITY OKLAHOMA UNIVERSITY 18 SINCE UNIVERSITY 18 But vacation time could still be transferred, Mann said. The amount of vacation time an employee can ac- change came about when the University recently changed the status of several medical personnel at the university of Kansas Medical Center. Steak Dinner for Two at Whistlers Walk restaurant Includes: $11.95 2 8 oz. Steaks 2 Tossed Salads Choice of Potato Dinner Rolls Beverage Good Friday and Saturday Nights Only From 5-9 p.m. 3120 W.6th between Lawrence and Kasold 842-1200 A BAND IS BORN STING BRING ON THE NIGHT A FILM BY MICHAEL APTED THE GAMMAEL DOLOMYN COMPANY PRESENTS AN NEW FILMS PRODUCTION STING BRING ON THE NIGHT STARRING OMAR HAKIM, DARRYL JONES KENNY KIRKLAND, BRAMFORD MARGALUS DOLETTE MCCONALD, JANIE PENDARVOS FILM EDITOR ROBERT A. LAMBERT A.C.E. PRODUCTION DESIGNER KENINIANO SCARROTTI DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY BALF Q. BOOK A & D. EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS SR. FREESEN C ANDREW MEYER PRODUced by DAVID MANSON, DIRECTED BY MICHAEL APTED THE OPENING OF THE FILM IS MAKING AN IMPACT ON MEMORY OF WEEKEND FILMS PC1 - 13 PROMOTIONAL & ADVERTISING CARDBOOKS INCLUDED IN THIS MATERIAL NOW PLAYING AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU 8 Universitv Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 Stephan won't pay Tomson United Press International TOPEKA — Attorney General Robert Stephan said yesterday that he would not pay $265,000 demanded by a former employee to prevent the filing of a new lawsuit against him. Talking to reporters after a meeting with the state Republican Executive Committee, Stephan made comments indicating he would fight back against actions taken against him by the employee, Marcia Tomson, and her lawyer, Margie Phelps. Tomson last week threatened to file a new lawsuit against Stephan after he disclosed some terms of the secret settlement in a sexual harassment suit Tomson had filed against him. Stephan was asked whether he would pay $265,000 demanded by Tomson to settle again. "There's no way I'm going to pay that kind of money." Stephan said. After his closed-door session with 20 top state Republican leaders, Stephan said the thought of giving up the gubernatorial race had never occurred to him. He was one of six potential candidates who met with the GOP panel. Stephan pinned much of his troubles on what he called a vendetta against him by unnamed people, including the Phelps law firm. "Obviously behind all this is an effort to ruin me politically," he said. He said he knew he risked stirring up controversy when he disclosed that $24,000 was paid by him to Tomson to settle the suit. He added that he knew now that it was a mistake to settle the matter in secret in the first place. "There's no doubt in my mind that, as governor, I would never, ever allow such a secret deal to go through again," he said. Stephan and state GOP chairman, Vern Chesbro, said after the meeting that the attorney general's problems with Tomson and Phelps were discussed, but committed members of the press concerns about the situation. Stephan said no one suggested he get out of the race. "Naw, we didn't even get into that," he said. "There was not even any talk about who should and shouldn't run." Chesbro said the committee decided to wait to see how Stephan's situation turns out. Stephan began fighting back earlier yesterday when he said his office would make a full investigation of a remark suggesting that Phelps should be shot. When the investigation is complete, he said, the file will be turned over to Shawnee County District Attorney Gene Olander for review. "He says 'I'm going to fight back because I've done nothing wrong,' and I think we believe him." Chesbro said. stephan obtained from Phelps a copy of an affidavit by a man who said he overheard Kay Houser, the chairman of the Governor's Committee on Crime Prevention, suggest that Phelps be shot. Alleging that the conversation was serious, the affidavit also alleged that Director Tom Kelly of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation agreed to the suggestion. Police suspect arson in Oliver By a Kansan reporter KU police are investigating series of small fires thought to be son that occurred between Sept. and Nov. 5 on the fifth floor of Oliv Hall. KU police Sgt. John Brothe said yesterday. Brothers said the residence hall manager told police Wednesday that 11 small fires had been started in the residence hall. Although none of the small fires caused significant property damage, Brothers said, neither the police nor housing office officials are considering the fires pranks. In Kansas, arson is defined as damage to any building or property of another by fire, and if the building is occupied, the crime is considered aggravated arson. Brothers said. Brothers said arson was a class C felony, punishable by a three- to 20-year prison term and a fine of up to $15,000. Aggravated arison is a court-ordered sentence and carries a prison term of five years for sale and a fine of up to $15,000, he said. "These are written up as ag-gravated arson." Brothers said. Fire may not be accidental By a Kansan reporter under control; McSwall said, but damage to the house was extensive. A fire Wednesday evening that caused $18,000 in damages to a Lawrence home is being investigated by the Douglas Country Fire Investigation Squad, Jim McSain, Lawrence fire chief, said yesterday. "indications are the fire was not accidental." MeSwain said. Firefighters were called at about 9 p.m. to 835 Garfield St., and took about 15 minutes to bring the fire Although he knew what had started the fire and in what area of the home the fire started, McSwain said, he would not release the information until the investigation was completed. The fire investigation squad was at the scene for several hours Wednesday evening and continued to investigate yesterday, he said. Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said police suspected "two or three students" of starting the fires, and had asked him to file a complaint. "I will file on any charges the police recommend." Stoner said. "The Wiz" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1204 Oread Ave. On Campus The Biology Club will meet at 4 p.m. today in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. Mark W. Casteel, admissions representative from Stetson University College of Law, will meet with pre-law students at 2 p.m. today in the Pine Room of the Union. The Strat-o-matic Baseball Club will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Parlor C of the Union. The KU Sword & Shield will meet at 8 p.m. Monday in the Walnut Room of the Union. The Chrysalis Coalition will meet at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Oread Room of the Union. Big Bob's "Used" CARPET DORM ROOMS, APARTMENTS, WHATEVER THE JOB — WHY BUY NEW, WHEN YOU'VE GOT BIG BOB! BRING IN THIS AD FOR AN ADDITIONAL 10% SAVINGS! MasterCard. VISA Open Sunday and Holidays Monday - Friday 9-7:30 Saturday and Sunday 10-5:30 • Save up to 80% off new. • Yet so many rolls look "like new." • Every roll twice-cleaned and professionally sanitized. • Hundreds of styles, a rainbow of colors. • FREE doormat just for stopping by. BIG BOB'S USED CARPET SHOP LAWRENCE STORE NOW OPEN! 738 NEW HAMPSHIRE • (913) 841-BOBS BIG BOB'S USED CARPET SHOP LAWRENCE STORE NOW OPEN! 738 NEW HAMPSHIRE (913) 841-BOBS On the Record Wednesday morning from outside Elvira Angleetti Interiors, 1015 W. Ninth St., Lawrence police said. The signs, which said "Elvira Angletti," were removed from mountings 8 feet above the ground, police said. Cameras, musical instruments and stereo equipment, valued together at $1,554, were stolen Tuesday evening from an apartment rented by two students, Lawrence police said yesterday. Police said the apartment might have been entered through a sliding glass door. A suspect is being investigated, police said. Two 4-by-6 wooden signs, valued at $500 each, were stolen early A student's purse was stolen Monday morning from Wescoe Hall, KU police said. The bag and its contents, which included two Pell Grant checks and a department store payroll check, were valued at $884. COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA FILM STUDIO 706-548-7288 GENE BRAKEN MATT DILLON TARGET SHOWING: Fri. '5:00 Daily 7:00-9:00 Sat. & Sun. '2:30'5:00 An antique portrait valued at $5,000 was returned to Lewis Hall Wednesday, KU police said. The portrait of the wife of Luther N. Lewis, the hall's benefactor, was stolen between 5 p.m. Oct. 15 and 9 a.m. Oct. 16. On Wednesday, the portrait was found in the second-floor lobby of the hall. COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNSLID B49 5230 GENE RACKEN-MATT DILLON TARGET (8) Fri. 1-5:00 Daily 7:20-9:40 Sat. & Sun. 1-2:30-5:00 VARSITY DOWNSLID B49 5230 LIVE AND DIE (Fri. 1-6:00 Daily 7:30-9:40 Sat. & Sun. 1-2:30-5:00) The student had put her purse on the floor before it was stolen, police said. VARSITY CITY-WEST TELEPHONE AVIATION THE LIVE AND DIE Fri. 5:00 Daily 7:00-9:40 Sat. A. Bun. 2:30-5:00 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA Gene Hackman-Matt Dillon TARGET Fri. 5:00 Daily 7:20 9:40 Sat. & Sun. 2:50 5:00 VARSITY LIVE AT DIE Fri. 5:00 Daily 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun. 2:50 6:00 HILLCREST 1 JAGGED EDGE Glenn Close Jeff Bridges Daily 4:45 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun. 2:30 HILLCREST 2 BRING ON THE NIGHT Daily 6:00 7:25 9:28 Sat. & Sun. 2:45 HILLCREST 3 CHARLES BARNSON Death Wish 3 CANNON Daily 6:00 7:30 9:30 Sat. & Sun. 2:45 CINEMA 1 "A wonderful surprise" American Flyers Fri. 4:55 Daily 7:25 9:28 Sat. & Sun. 2:45 4:55 CINEMA 2 NOW Fri. 5:00 Daily 7:20 9:80 Sat. & Sun. 2:50 6:00 *Brarain Show HILLCREST 1 9:30 AM and IOWA SUNDAY JAGGED EDGE Glenn Close, Jeff Bridge Daily "4:45 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun" 2:30 HILLCREST 2 THE NIGHTWORKS SUNG BRING ON THE NIGHT PU 15 Daily '5:00-7:25 9:25 Sat & Sun '12:45 HILLCREST 3 CHARLES BRIDSON DEATH WISH 3 DANNNON Daily 7:30 9:30 Sat. & Sun. 2-45 CINEMA Fri. 4:45 Daily 7 CINEMA 1 A wonderful surprise! American Flyers Fri. 4:45 Daily 7:20 9:25 Sat. & Sun. 2:45 4:45 CINEMA 2 Daily Ticket Only Fri. '15:00 Daily 7:25 8:00 Sat. & Sun. '25:00 '5:00 We're Open Again! Stop in for the best food in town! Vista RESTAURANTS 1527 W. 6th/Lawrence Open: Sat - Thurs 10:30 am - 11 pm Fri - Sat 10:30 am - 1 am For the best in 134567890 Authentic Chinese Food House of Hupei 2907 W. 6th 843-8070 HOW DO YOU GET HOT,CHEESY, CUSTOM-MADE PIZZA TO YOUR DOOR IN 30 MINUTES OR LESS? EZIPER COMMON Call Domino's Pizza. One call from you sets Domino's Pizza in motion. From that moment on, we do everything possible to make sure that your hot custom-made pizza is delivered to your door in less than 30 minutes. DOMINO S PIZZA Weekend Special Get a 16" custom-made Domino's Pizza with one topping and four bottles of Coke for only $8.99 Limited delivery area: One offer per order. 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Limited delivery area. 电话 Enjoy Coke Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 9 Mob threats entered in trial United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — San Diego businssman Allen R. Glick testified yesterday that mob kingpin Nick Civivala threatened him and withheld loans from a Teamsters union pension fund because Glick failed to honor an agreement. Glick testified a second day in the trial of eight reputed organized crime figures accused of skimming more than $2 million from Las Vegas casinos owned by Glick's Argent Corp. in the early and mid-1970s. On trial are Frank Balistriet, 17, and his sons, John, 37, and Joseph P. 45, all of Milwaukee; John Alupa, 77, John Cerone, 71, Joseph Lombardo, 66, and Angelo LaPietra, 60, all of Chicago; and Milton Rockman, 73, of Cleveland. Carl Angelo DeLuma, 88, of Kansas City, was dropped Wednesday from the trial, apparently after entering a plea in the case. Prosecutors claimed the defendants used their influence in the Teamsters union to get a $62.75 million loan approved by the union's Central States Pension Fund for Glick, who then bought Las Vegas casinos, Glick, prosecutors alleged, became the "victim" and unknowing partner of underwater figures after the first loan and a second were made. The federal government alleged the defendants then skimmed gambling profits and divided the money between mob figures in Las Vegas, Kansas City, Chicago, Milwaukee and Cleveland. Glick testified that the elder Balistrieri became his contact in arranging for the loans from the Teamsher's pension fund. A short time later, according to Glick, Balistrieri forced Glick through threats to promote Frank Rosenthal, a casino employee at the time, to an executive position in the Argent Corp. He also said that within a short time Rosenthal was forcing important executive decisions on Glick. In March 1975, Glick testified, Rosenthal instructed Glick to attend a meeting at a Kansas City hotel with Civella, who died of cancer in 1983. He said the meeting was his first introduction to Civella, and that it was undertaken in an "interrogation-like" setting. "You don't know me, but it would be my choice that you never leave this room alive." Glick quoted Civella as saying. Glick said Civella later told him that if he cooperated, he "may" survive. He said Civella told him that if he didn't accept Civella's authority, then Glick would get the message "by bullet." Glick also testified that Civella told him not to interfere with Rosenthal. Civella said he would cut off future loans from the pension fund to show his authority, Glick added. "Civella said since I did not acknowledge nor honor ... the partnership or understanding . . . I would not receive additional funding," Glick said. Officials may restore old plant Prisons trying to cut food costs United Press International TOPEKA — Kansas prison officials are exploring the possibility of buying a closed meat-processing plant near Oskaloosa and using inmate labor to process beef and pork for state prisons. The plant is owned by the State Bank of Oskaloosa, which obtained the facility through foreclosure. Larry Bowser, bank president. said the bank has offered to sell the old Sholin Meat Processing plant and its 18-acre site for $185,000, or 38 acres and the plant for $175,000. Corrections officials said it would be cheaper to slaughter and process cattle and hogs from the Kansas State Penitentiary farm at Lansing at a state-owned meat plant rather than continue to buy meat on a contract basis through private firms. Richmond Mills, secretary of the Kansas Department of Corrections, said the plant would provide jobs for about 25 minimum- and medium-security inmates at the Lansing institution. If the state buys the plant, he said, the inmates will make the daily ride to Oskaloosa, about 30 miles west of the prison. Mills discussed the proposed purchase earlier this week with the Special Legislative Committee on Federal and State Affairs. Mills said about five prison employees would be needed to supervise the inmates. He also said a security fence would have to be constructed around the plant. He plans to present the proposal to the Joint Legislative Committee on State Building Construction later this month. Asserting that the price of the plant is negotiable, Mills said it would be much less expensive to buy an existing plant than to build a new one. Construction on the plant was completed in 1977, and it oper.ted until February 1984. Bowser said the bank assumed the plant in a July 1984 foreclosure. Oskaloosa Mayor Jim Swoyer Jr. said he favored the idea of the proposed purchase of the plant. Seniors: Back by Popular Demand! Senior Pictures Mon., Nov. 11th to Fri.,Nov.15th Call the Jayhawker Yearbook Office immediately for an appointment at 864-3728 TO OUR CAMERA FOR YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT EXPOSE YOURSELF HAWKS Go Hawaiian at the Paradise Cafe and bakery Colorado game special: BUFFALO STEW Lunch and Dinner Paradise Café and bakery 728 Mass. 842-5199 Everybody is Welcome! REFRESHMENTS ARE PROVIDED For more information call 841-9768 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST * FREE DELIVERY Islamic Center of Lawrence presents Friday, Nov. 8,1985 7 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union EASY AS 1-2-3 $1 OFF ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ "Evils of Communism" by: 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center HOURS Mon - Thurs. 11 a.m-2 a.m. Fri & Sat. 11 a.m-3 a.m. Sunday. 11 a.m-1 a.m. 842-1212 A. AHMEDULLAH Former Minister of Interior of Afghanistan PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY 6:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Mon-Sat 8 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Sun 5 p.m.-10 p.m. Wed-Sun 4c Copies FINE HANDMADE BELGIAN CHOCOLATES Chocolate Unlimited 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Mall 749-1100 Sun 2-10 p.m., Mon-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-11 p.m. 818 Midwest Mass. Business Systems Inc. 842-4134 The University of Kansas Department of Music and Performing Arts present KU JAZZ CHOIR RONALD C. McCURDY KU JAZZ ENSEMBLE1 KIM PARK Telephone 502-1017 70 8:00 p.m. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1985 CRAFTON-PREYER THEATRE TICKETS ON SALE IN THE MURPHY HALL BOX OFFICE ALL SEATING GENERAL AMISSION PUBLIC BIC. KU STUDENT WITH ID: 18, SENIOR CITIZENS AND 10, MIDDLE CITIZENS FOR RESERVATION CALL 913/684-3892 VBAMRMACTOR ACCEPTED HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS! V AIX AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! brother HP 10 ABSOLUTELY COMPLETE PERSONAL COMPUTER SYSTEM for only $1998. This Includes: - Zenith ZF/148/42 computer - Zenith ZVM/1330 monitor - Box of Disks - Brother HR-10 Printer - Box of Paper - Printer Cable - "Easy" Word Processor from the makers of Wordstar. O. EZCOMP COMPUTER CENTER COMPUTER CENTER HOLIDAY PLAZA (913)841-5715 ZENITH data systems 10 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 Senate approves base funds The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Senate yesterday approved spending of $71.5 million next year to prepare McConnell Air Force Base in Kansas for the arrival of B-1 bombers — one of the legislative hurdles for the project. The money was part of an $8.6 billion money bill for military construction. It was passed on a 94-1 vote. The legislation is set to go to a House-Senate conference committee where the members will promise between the two chambers. However, the money for McConnell should not run into any opposition. The House also provided $71.5 million in construction bill passed last month. military installation. The latest vote by the Senate stamps an official seal of financial support for the continued operation of the base in Wichita and, in effect, should block any attempt to close the Confusion arose last spring over the future of McConnell after it was placed by the Defense Department on a list of 22 bases that could be closed to save money while not jeopardizing national security. The Pentagon prepared the list for Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., chairman of the Armed Services Committee. In April, the Senate panel voted against the construction money for McConnell and the other 21 bases although it reversed itself a month later and gave authorization for the B-1 construction projects at the Kansas base. Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan., and Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Dan, led a two-front campaign on behalf of McConnell. In a statement yesterday, Dole said the vote reflected the success of efforts to persuade Congress that "McConnell was essential for the R-1." After the Senate committee's in- THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW Oh ROCKY! © 1982 MICHAEL CROOKS PRESS FRI & SAT midnite movies! HILLCREST THEATRE THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SNOW Oh ROCKY! 1 STING BRING ON THE NIGHT PG-13 2 CSSX PRESENTS XXX I Wanna be Teased! 3 to Choose From! ALL SEATS $4.00 titial vote, Defense Department of ficials expressed support for the construction monies and the continued operation of McConnell. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger has said the list only was to illustrate the types of bases that could be closed if Congress approved legislation to streamline procedures for base closures. Once the conference committee reaches a compromise on military construction appropriations, the bill will return to the House and Senate for votes on the agreement and then will go the president for his signature. TOPEKA — Six potential candidates for the Republican nomination for governor in 1986 — including a surprise woman entrant — told the state GOP executive committee yesterday why they wanted to be governor and whether they would support whoever wins the nomination. The surprise possible candidate who showed up was Barbara P. Pomeroy of Whitewater, who is an adjunct professor of public administration at Wichita State University, on leave From the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. Woman nominated for GOP race The Associated Press KJHK FM91 REDLINE fishbone day , November 12 REDLINE AEII 130 & KJHK FM91 present fishbone Tuesday , November 12 Cogburns 737 New Hampshire Cogburns FISH A benefit for The Emergency Service Council Pomeroy, 47, is a native of Hutchinson with college degrees from Emporia State University and the University of Kansas and a candidate for a doctorate at WSU. Also appearing before the committee were House Speaker Mike Hayden, Senate President Robert V. Talkington, Secretary of State Jack Brier, Attorney General Robert T. Stephan and state Sen. Fred Kerr of Pratt, in that order. Three other potential candidates couldn't make it yesterday, but U.S. Rep Bob Whittaker of Augusta was scheduled to come to Teppeka today to meet with state Chairman Vern Chesbro and other party officials. Pittsburg businessman Gene Bickell was reported to be traveling on business and could not be here. Neither could Larry Jones of Wichita, chairman of the state Board of Regents, who was in Australia. Minsky's PIZZA WIN a LARGE Minsky's PIZZA! PIZZA! Announced on 106 KLZR! PICK THE WINNERS Have Your Name in Lights & of these BIG 8 GAMES vs. Nebraska Iowa State ___ Kansas State ___ vs Oklahoma ___ vs. Oklahoma State vs. Missouri Tiebreaker: Pick the Score of Kansas ___ Name ___ vs. Colorado. A WINNER EVERY WEEK! 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Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 Nation/World University Daily Kansan 11 Floods rage in eastern U.S. United Press International Floodwaters that have killed 40 people in four states washed through the streets of the nation's capital yesterday, inundating Washington's posh Georgetown district and closing national monuments. President Reagan signed an executive order declaring flood-striken West Virginia a disaster area, while Virginia officials prepared to ask for a similar declaration. Water 11 feet deep covered the farmers' market in Richmond, Va. Four days of heavy rain pushed rivers in West Virginia, Virginia, Pennsylvania and Maryland to their highest crests in more than a century, forcing at least 20,000 people to flee their homes and inflicting more than $350 million in damage. The death toll stood at 40 — 19 in West Virginia, 17 in Virginia, three in Pennsylvania and one in Maryland. Authorities in West Virginia said they could not account for 43 more people in flooded areas. The rain ended Wednesday and Appalachian rivers began receding, but the water surged downstream under sunny skies toward Richmond and Washington, D.C. In Washington, the Potomac River crested at 12 feet at 6 p.m., five feet above flood stage, washing over its banks into Georgetown and flooding a fashionable shopping strip. Jim Golden, who works in the Watergate Building, watched the chocolate-brown water wash over the banks of the Potomoc several hundred feet away. "I've seen pots and pans and everything floating down the river," he said. "It'd be a hell of a ride in a canoe." At least one waterfront pub, Chadwick's, reported brisk business despite sandbags at the front door, 40 feet from the raging waters. "There's lots of fresh seafood on the menu," Joe McGuinness, owner, said. Georgetown merchants put sandbags around their stores to prevent water, running four feet deep in their basement reaching expensive merchandise. The Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial and the Jefferson Memorial were closed by the National Park Service. Several highways and roads, including Independence Avenue along the Smithsonian Mall, were shut down, bringing morning rush-hour traffic to a standstill. In the historic Old Town section of Alexandria, Va., 12 feet of water ran through King Street, damaging shops and restaurants, police said. The National Guard sent portable water purifiers and toilets to flood-ravaged Pendleton County, W.Va., where power and water services were disrupted, said John Price, Gov. Arch Moore's press secretary. More than $50,000 worth of food was sent out, as were medical supplies, blankets and body bags. Price said, but residents were adjusting to the calamity. "Many of them know how to live off the land," he said. "They can all hunt and fond for themselves in the wilderness." Speakes tells Congress to fit budget to Reagan United Press International WASHINGTON — The White House, its enthusiasm for balanced budget legislation apparently cooled by worries about threats to military spending, yesterday warned that any bill from Congress must meet President Reagan's "principles." The House and Senate hardened their positions on opposing balanced budget plans Wednesday, sending the issue into conference. But the Senate did not appoint its negotiators yesterday and Senate aides said a meeting was unlikely before next Tuesday because Congress is taking Monday off for Veterans Day. An earlier House-Senate conference on balancing the budget fell apart, and Senate aides said "we're no closer this time" to agreement. The balanced budget legislation is attached to a bill to lift the federal debt ceiling to a record $2 trillion. The Treasury says they need the debt limit hike by Nov. 14, but since two previous deadlines have been surmounted without the increase — once by dipping into Social Security funds — Congress is skeptical of this date as well. If the Nov. 14 deadline is firm, that will only leave three days for Congress to act next week on the balanced budget — Tuesday through Thursday. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the House version "cuts the base" from which spending reductions could be made by exempting some programs, meaning more cuts would have to come out of the Pentagon. "We intend to get a bill that suits him (Reagan)." Speaks said later. Asked if Reagan would accept a balanced budget plan that violates his military buildup plans, Speakes said, "I think we'll just wait and see the product before we say. But the president is firm that there was a commitment made (to the buildup)." BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320 SAVE AT IMPORTS • DOMESTICS EXOTIC CARS Rafplis AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 CATHAY RESTAURANT The best place to have Chinese food. Introducing the Famous "Empress Chicken" A dish from the kitchen of the Empress Dowager Tzu Hsi, the most luxurious figure in Chinese Ching Dynasty. For only $5.95, including dessert and tea. SAVE AT IMPORTS • DOMESTIC • EXOTIC CARS Ralphs AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 Hours: Mon.-Fri. Lunch 11 a.m.-2.30 p.m. Dinner. 4:30 p.m.-10 p.m. Sat. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun. 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Closed Tues. 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza 842-4976 Go For It! Enter the supernatural world of CONE A COPIA The Magical Ice Cream Dream Machine! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1814 West 23rd (next to Command Performance) BORDER BANDIDO SUNDAY SPECIAL 1 TEXAS BURRITO ONLY $1.79 1528 W. 23rd 842-8861 Across from Post Office. STUDENT GROUPS GET DISCOUNTS AT THE KANSAN!! Hungry? Head for Harry's! Dive into Harry's SHRIMP BASKET: 8 ounces of shrimp, cocktail sauce & Curly Q fries. Or, take on HARRY'S JUMBO: 10 oz. burger with Curly Q fries. 106 N. Park (formerly Campus Hideaway) 749-5246 HARRY BEAR'S HARRY BEAR'S BOWLING COACHING CLUB SAC AT THE TOWER 2013-14 DRINKING IS A SEXUAL STIMULANT Drinking Myth of the Week 903 N. 2nd 7 to 6 M-F 842-2922 AUTOMOTIVE SALE DRINKING IS A SEXUAL STIMULANT. Contrary to popular belief, the more you drink, the less your sexual capacity. Alcohol may stimulate interest in sex, but it interferes with the ability to perform. LAWRENCE BATTERYCo. Batteries The Student Assistance Center Be Ready for Winter Don't Get Caught with your Battery Down! 3 YR. 400 AMP... $29.95 4 YR. 455 AMP... $34.95 5 YR. 525 AMP... $39.95 5 YR. SUPER 650 AMP... $49.95 W/EX to Fit Most Cars and Lt. Trucks Ten Minute Free Installations—Free System Check Sale ends Sat. 11/23/85 Free Helium filled Balloons for the KU Homecoming parade and game!!! The Palace GIFTS ◆ CARDS M-S 9:30-5:30 Thur. 9:30-8:30 Sun.-12-5 8th and Mass. 843-1099 SUA FILMS THEY ONLY MET ONCE, BUT IT CHANGED THEIR LIVES FOREVER. They were five total strangers, with nothing in common, meeting for the first time. A brain, a beauty, a jock, a rebel and a recluse. Before the day was over, they broke the rules. Bared their souls. And touched each other in a way that they never dreamed possible. THE BREAKFAST CO. THE BREAKFAST CLUB R RESTRINTEED INDIVIDUAL FEMALE ACADEMIES FRIENDLY FOR MEN AND WOMEN A UNIVERSAL PICTURE Fri. & Sat., Nov. 8 & 9 3:30 p.m., 7 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. $1.50 Woodruff Aud. Behold A Dazzling Spectacle of Sight and Sound. A Fantasy Adventure Unlike Any Other. FIRE AND ICE PG PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUBSTEDDED PSO BROADCASTING GOLF STUDIOS HOME NATIONAL MAY NOT BE NATIONAL FOR LICENSE MIDNIGHT MOVIE Fri. & Sat., Nov. 8 & 9 $2 Woodruff Aud. Various Short Features - Closed Mondays - Hardware Wars - Vicious Cycles - Neighbors - The Interview - Ny Ny - The Sand Castle Leisure - The Sex life of a Polyp Sunday, Nov. 10 at 2 p.m. $1.50 Woodruff Aud. 12 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 AIDS may hit top 10 of premature deaths United Press International ATLANTA — Acquired immune deficiency syndrome may soon become one of the 10 leading causes of premature death in the United States, a federal health official said yesterday. Meanwhile, researchers said as much as 15 percent of the central African population may be infected with the AIDS virus and prostitutes appear to be a major source of transmission. Although AIDS is confined largely to homosexuals and intravenous drug users in the United States, it has affected heterosexuals in Equatorial Africa. The recent findings in central Africa were reported in the Nov. 8 Journal of the American Medical Association AIDS already is the fourth leading cause of premature death for men in New York City and the sixth leading cause for women there, the national Centers for Disease Control reported. The CDC, which refers to premature death as "years of potential life lost," said information from AIDS cases indicated there were about 11,000 years of potential life lost in the United States due to AIDS in 1982. That figure increased to 34,000 in 1983 and 74,000 last year. Dr. John Livengood, of the CDC's division of surveillance and epidemiological studies, said that "although AIDS was not one of the top 15 causes of premature mortality nationally in 1984, it may emerge as a leading cause in 1985" if present patterns continue. "AIDS is becoming a significant cause of mortality," Livengood said. "If present trends continue it will be somewhere among the top 10 causes of premature death." As of Nov. 4, the CDC had received reports of 14,519 cases of AIDS and 7,450 deaths since the first U.S. case of the disease was recorded in 1981. So far this year there have been 6,693 cases, with hundreds of new cases being reported each week. The top 15 causes of premature death currently are: accidents and unintentional injuries, cancers, heart disease, suicides and homicides, chronic liver disease and cirrhosis, strokes, pneumonia and influenza, pulmonary disease, diabetes, congenital anomalies, atherosclerosis, nephritis, septicemia, respiratory distress syndrome and sudden infant death syndrome. AIDS is caused by a virus that destroys the body's immune system. Victims die of a variety of illnesses, including a parasitic type of pneumonia and a tissue cancer. It is spread through blood, blood products and sexual contact. Between 1982 and 1984 in New York City, important changes occurred in mortality patterns of persons aged 15-64, the CDC said, and the death rate increased 4 per cent for 100,000 population for males with premature deaths jumping 7 percent. MOSCOW — Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev struck a conciliatory tone yesterday on the 68th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, calling for a Geneva summit that will help remove "distrust, hatred and suspicion." Soviet view split on summit United Press International Gorbachev told those attending a reception following the traditional military show of might in Red Square that he sought "a constructive dialogue and a search for mutually beneficial agreements" with the United States. His speech inside the Kremlin came only 12 days before President Reagan and Gorbachev meet in Geneva for the first superpower summit in six years. "If a businesslike, constructive approach for which we are ready prevails, then the forthcoming meeting in Geneva may prove to be fruitful and serve towards improving the international situation," Gorbachev said. In the speech, reported by the official Tass news agency, Gorbachev said, "It is vital that distrust, hatred and suspicion be eliminated from international relations." The tone contrasted with the warnings to Washington that Defense Minister Sergei Sokolov gave in advance of the military hardware that rumbled across Red Square on the anniversary of the revolution. Sokolov, talking of an "explosively dangerous" international situation, said, "The Soviet government is sacrely fulfilling the behest of Lenin to defend our security . . . to equip our armed forces with everything necessary." As he finished speaking, martial music struck up and masses of Soviet troops marched past, followed by heavy weapons that included T-72 tanks, armored carrier, self-propelled artillery and rockets. In the speech, carried on international television, Sokolov vowed that, "We will not allow the military balance between the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R., between NATO and the Warsaw Pact, to be upset." Western diplomats noted there were no new weapons among the hardware that rolled by the thousands of spectators filling the square. Reagan unfazed by Soviet objections United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan said yesterday that he was "not yet" bothered by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's objections this week to Star Wars and pressed ahead with plans to defend the anti-missile shield at the Geneva summit. Reagan presented Medals of Freedom to three national security experts, met with a citizens group supporting plans for the Strategic Air Command and Wars — and was briefed by outside experts on the Soviet Union. White House spokesman Larry Speakes's later announced that Reagan's weekly Saturday radio address would be beamed to the Soviet Union in Russian to discuss "his hopes for peace and his hopes for a successful summit." Speakes challenged the Soviets to drop their usual practice of electronically interfering with Voice of America broadcasts. The VOA also said it would broadcast the Democratic response to Reagan's radio address by Rep. Sonny Montgomery, D-Miss., chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee. A House aide, however, said Montgomery would not respond to Reagan's remarks on the summit. "We hope the Soviets will take this occasion to halt their jamming, and that this would lead to a permanent halt to jarming of U.S. broadcasts so that the Soviet people can get this message from the American president," Speakes said. "Willingness to do so on the part of the Soviets would be an important step in improving the free flow of information between our two countries." As he left the East Room after presenting the nation's highest civilian award to veteran arms negotiator Paul Nitze and security strategists Albert and Roberta Wohlstetter, Reagan was asked if he was "disturbed" by Gorbachev's behavior. Pausing, and then grinning, Reagan replied, "Not yet." Secretary of State George Shultz returned from meetings with Gorbache and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze Wednesday. A U.S. official reported that the Soviets were argumentative and unwilling to understand or accept the U.S. rationale for Reagan's military buildup and no longer would accept even laboratory research on Star Wars. PIZZA DELIVERED CHEAP & FAST 842-0600 THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mass phone: 843-1151 PICAFLIC HOME VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS Southern Hills Shopping Center N64 W. 23nd St, 105 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 842-8177 PIZZA DELIVERED CHEAP & FAST 842-0600 THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mass. phone: 843-1151 PICAFLIC HOME VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd St, 108 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 842-8177 KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 841-7219 comprehensive health associates • free pregnancy tests • outpatient abortion services • alternative counseling • gynecology • contraception Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 yello sub DELIVERS 841-3288 INSIDE NINTH AT MISSISIS SIPPI CENTER SHAMPOO AND HAIRCUT $9.00 FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUPON JUST HAIR II MODERN HAIR DESIGN STUDIO 842-4414 708 W.NINTH EXPLORER 11-30-85 The Friday Night FREE MOVIE! at ECM (1204 Oread, 1 blk. N. of K. Union) “The WHIZ” at 7:30 pm Fri., Nov. 8 MISS. STREET DELI DUI MASSACHUSETTS WE WANT YOU TO TRY OUR ALL NEW DELI BURGERS “4 p.m. to close daily” Traditional Burger $1.99 with lettuce and tomato Swiss & Bacon Burger $2.35 swiss cheese and ranch style bacon Big Blue Burger $2.5 blue cheese and sautéed mushrooms Traditional Burger Basket WHAT A DEAL— and 12oz. soft drink $1.49 COUPON 50¢ OFF FIFTY CENTS OFF ALL NEW DELI BURGERS 4 p.m. to close daily 50¢ OFF OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30, 1985 50¢ OFF • All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef • Select a fresh baked deli bun onion, kaiser or whole wheat • Served with potato chips, kosher dill spear and any small soft drink NOT the GLEN MILLER BAND appearing Fri., Nov. 8th Sat., Nov. 9th Cogburns fishbone appearing Tues., Nov 12th 8:00 p.m. Tickets available at AETT & Cogburns 737 New Hampshire 843-9723 comprehensive health associates * free pregnancy tests * outpatient abortion services * alternative counseling * gynecology * contraception Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 vello sub DELIVERS 841-3268 INSIDE NINTH AT MISSISSIPPI CENTER SHAMPOO AND HAIRCUT $9.00 FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUpon JUST HAIR II MODEL UN HAIR DESIGN STUDIO 842-4414 708 W. NINTH EXPIREE 11-30-85 The Friday Night FREE MOVIE! at ECM (1204 Oread, 1 blk. N. of K. Union) “The WHIZ” at 7:30 pm Fri., Nov. 8 MISS ST. OAKI MASSAL 50¢ COUPON 50¢ OFF OFF FIFTY CENTS 4p.m. to close daily OFF 4 p.m. to close daily ALL NEW DELI BURGERS 50¢ OFF 50¢ OFF OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30, 1985 * All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef * Select a fresh baked dill bun. onion kaiser or whole wheat * Served with potato chips, kosher dill spear and any small soft drink GLEN MILLER BAND NOT the GLEN MILLER BAND appearing Fri., Nov. 8th Sat., Nov. 9th Cogburns fishloone appearing Tues., Nov 12th 8:00 p.m. Tickets available at AETT & Cogburns Cogburns NOT the GLEN MILLER BAND appearing Fri., Nov. 8th Sat., Nov. 9th Cogburns Sunday Combination Dinners! New combination dinners served every Sunday—Choose Sweet & Sour Shrimp, Treasure Chicken, or Beef with Snow Peas. Includes soup appetizer, entree, fried rice dessert, and hot tea. All for only $3.95 per person Sun. only Royal Peking Restaurant 店飯都京 店飯都京 Tues./Sat. 711 W.23rd St. Malls Shopping Center Tues/Sat. Lunch 11:30 a.m./3 p.m. Dinner 4:30 p.m./10 p.m. Sun/12 p.m./9:30 p.m. closed Mondays 841-4599 exp. 11-30-85 2 free CRAB RANGOON appetizers with purchase of any dinner entree $1.10 value BURTALO BOB'S Smokehouse SMOKEY JOE SANDWICH SPECIAL Chopped ends of BBQ beef, ham, turkey and pork baked in a mild BBQ sauce. Served hot on a bakery fresh bun with tater curl fries and pickles. WHEEL $2.75 Large Sandwich LOG $3.50 Extra Large Sandwich Large Sandwich THE TASTE THAT WON THE WEST --- NO COUPONS ACCEPTED WITH THIS OFFER 719 MASSACHUSETTS OFFER GOOD TILL NOV.30 Formerly Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse—Same nice people—Same management Sports Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 University Daily Kansan 13 News Briefs Jayhawks to meet Czech team tonight Kansas will continue its exten- tion season tonight against the Czechoslovakian National Team at 7:30 in Allen Field House. The exhibition is the third of eight stops in the United States for the Czech team. They continue their tour Saturday with a game against Indiana. Larry Brown, Kansas head basketball coach, said earlier in the week that he would use the game to assess the team's progress. Kansas opens its regular season Nov. 22 in Denver. Colo. has suspended Derrinepure in the first round of the National Invitational Tournament. "We really haven't the opportunity to go up against anybody other than ourselves," Brown said. "So it will be a good gauge to see them and find. They have some big athletes and not that much. It should be a good test for us." The Czech team has two 7-footers in its lineup — 7-foot Juri Okac and 7-foot Jaroslav Skala The probable starting lineup for Karnas is Ron Kellogg and Danny Manning at forward, Greg Dreiling at center and Calvin Thompson and Cedric Hunter at guard. Swimmers in Dallas The Kansas swim teams toormow will be in Dallas to swim against Southern Methodist and Texas A&M. Kempf said it was a big meet for the Jahyahs because they were swimming against two of the top swim teams in the nation. Last season, the SMU women's team finished 10th in the National College Athletic Association meet, and the Texas A&M women finished 11th. Kansas placed 14th. The Mustang men finished seventh and the Aggies finished 23rd in the championship. Minnesota hosts KU In the Big Eight Invitational, the women's team came off with a victory, and the men finished third. The men's tennis team will play Minnesota today in a dual match in Minneapolis. It is the team's last competition of the fall season. Minnesota is in everybody's top 20 and most people think they are a top 10 team, so we'll have our hands full," head coach Scott Perelman said. "They will have about 1,000 people at the match, so it will be a good test." MSU star arrested Skiles, a 21-year-old senior from Plymouth, Ind., had been expected to lead the team this season. He will miss next Monday's exhibition game with the Czechoslovakian national team. "The length of suspension will be determined upon further investigation," a statement from the school said. MSU spokesman Nick Vista said Coach Jud Heathcote will review the specific charge against Skiles From Kansan wire reports Bowl officials will watch game closely By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff If Kansas or Colorado are entertaining thoughts of going bowling this year, tomorrow's game is a pivotal one, a member of the Independence Bowl selection committee said yesterday. Kansas, 5-4, and Colorado, 5-3, are two of several teams the committee is considering for the Dec. 21 bowl in Shreveport, La., Bob Vanatta, Louisiana Tech athletic director and Independence Bowl selection committee member said. "We are looking at a lot of options and combinations." Vanatta said. "But its hard to look at possible match ups now." Official bids cannot be offered until 6 p.m. Nov. 23. Vanatta said that if Kansas defeated Colorado and at least split its final two games, the bowl committee should consider the Jahwah wks.7.5 report Colorado, which went 1-10 last season, also could get in the bowl picture with its sixth win of the season, and head coach Bill McCartney could clinch his first winning season at Colorado. "There is still a lot for us to salvage this season, and it all rides on the KU game," McCartney said. "We're not out of the bowl picture by any means." Kansas, which gave up 328 yards in offense to Oklahoma last week, will have an advantage playing against its second wishbone team in a row, head coach Mike Gottfried said. "We've worked against the wihbone for two weeks now, and we should have learned some things from the Oklahoma game." Gottfried said. "But Colorado has different challenges which could offset some of that." Cecil McGehee, Colorado's Colorado Game 10, Nov. 9 Lawrence associate athletic director, said there was a lot of bowl-talk in Boulder, and the Kansas game was another important game. CU "It items that every game this year has been a must game," McGehee said. "But the Kansas game takes on added meaning because you know we have a chance at a winning season and a possible bowl bid." Gottfried said he wasn't concerned about bowl bids, but only about winning the game. "We're just looking for our sixth win and a break-even point," Gottfried said. "It would be something if we could get one (a bowl bid)." In addition to the Jayhawks and Buffaloes, other teams bein- con sidered by the committee include Army, Mississippi State, Louisiana State, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia Tech, North Carolina, South Carolina and Clemson. Vanatta said that after tomorrow it games the possible bowl picture should become clearer. Besides the Colorado-Kansas game, Clemson plays North Carolina, Minnesota plays Wisconsin, South Carolina goes against Florida State and Tennessee plays Ole Miss. One of the 11 committee members will be at Memorial Stadium for the Kansas-Colorado game. It will be the third time the Independence Bowl hosts Kansas this season. Scouts also saw Kansas State and Oklahoma games. Vanatta said Kansas and Colorado had three points in their 'favor this season — wide open offenses, accessibility and teams that were "hungry" for a bowl bid. Offensively the Jayhawks are averaging 411 yards and 27.9 points per game. Colorado is averaging 326. 5 yards and 20.9 points per game philipis pel-gibre "My basic philosophy is to look for a team with a wide open space. Vanatta said, "Colorado doesn't throw the ball as much as Kansas, but they still have an exciting offense." Vanatta said the committee would look for at least one "turnpike" team. A team within 500 to 700 miles from Shreveport would be desirable because it is important to get fans from both teams to attend the bowl. Vanatta characterized both Kansas and Colorado as hungry teams because it has been several years since either has gone to a bowl game. Kansas' last bowl appearance was in the 1981 Hall Of Fame Bowl in Birmingham, Ala. The Buffaloes' last post-season appearance was in the 1977 Orange Bowl in Miami. "It's always exciting when we invite hungry teams to the bowl," Vanatta said. Volleyball team sweeps Panthers By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas volleyball team had little trouble defeating Eastern Illinois 15-6, 15-11, 15-9 last night in a prelude to tonight's match with Oklahoma. Kansas lost to the Sooners in four games last week in Norman, Okla. Despite winning a game, KU head coach Frankie Albitz said that Kansas wasn't even in the match with Oklahoma. Tonight, she said, that might be different. Kansas' record is now 15-10 After tomorrow one of the teams can start setting the table for a possible bowl berth. "You can always win a match," she said last night. "But I don't expect them to give us The match begins at 7:30 in Robinson Center. Kansas started quickly with 21 kills in the first game against Eastern Illinois. The Jayhawks jumped to a 8-4 lead and closed out the game. The Jayhawks played because of several Jayhawk errors. The Fusiliers up 5-1 when Kansas players killed the ball long or into the net three times and stepped under the net twice. anything. Right now, I just hope to stay with them. Any team is beatable." Kansas tied the game at 5-5 on a block by Julie Ester, but eastern Illinois went ahead again 8-5. The game went to 10-10, and Kansas closed it out 15-11 on two kills by Judy Desch. "We didn't know anything about this team," said KU setter Monica Spencer. "We just tried to play our game. Once we started making them make mistakes, we did OK." In the third game, the lead changed hanoi four times before Kansas went ahead 9-8. The Jayhawks moved to 14-9 on three kills by Ester and two by hitter Catalina Suarez, and they won the match on a service ace by Suarez. The match was held in Robinson Center, where spectators could hear every hit and all of Albiz's instructions. For the first time this season, Albiz called out plays during the points. "I just started that," she said. "Until now I didn't think they could handle it." NORTHWESTERN UNION Paul Goodman/KANSAN Shannon Ridgeway, a hitter on the Kansas volleyball team, dives for the ball three straight games in Robinson Center. The KU women will host the in the first game against Eastern Illinois. Kansas beat the Panthers last night. Sooners tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Robinson Center. Tourney bracket may be replayed By Harlen Makemson Of the Kansan sports staff John McGrath, Interfraternity Council adviser, said yesterday that the charges that Delta Upsilon used A few hours after the Hill Championship is played Sunday in Memorial Stadium, the Interfraternity Council will have a judicial board meeting to decide whether one bracket of the Greek Trophy tournament will need to be played again. an ineligible player in the men's Greek Trophy tournament were serious enough to warrant the meeting. Grant Tennison, president of IFC, said that fraternity teams must play by the rules of Recreation Services, as well as IFC rules. He said that if an infraction did occur, IFC rules would have been violated, not "To be fair to everyone, we need to have a judicial meeting." McGrath said. Recreation Services rules. will be in attendance at the meeting representatives from Delta Logism McGarth said the judicial council consisted of seven elected fraternity members. Representatives from Delta Chi and Pi Kappa Alpha—the fraternities that complained to IFC If part of the tournament was paired and Recreation Services would not be needed, The teams involved in a replay, along with Delta Upsilon, would be Sigma Chi, Pi Kappa Alpha and Delta Chi. possibly end up with would be a Rec Services Greek champion and an IFC Greek champion," Tennison said. "But I would like to see that be the same team." "Strangely enough, what we could Tennison said that another option the judicial board could consider would be a redistribution of Sport Cup points. Judge says prejudice hurt boxer United Press International NEWARK, N.J. — A federal pug-yesterday ordered New Jersey to free Rubin "Hurricane" Carter, the former middleweight boxer whose 19-year battle to clear himself of murder charges was made famous in a ballad by Bob Dylan. The judge ruled that Carter, 48, who is black and has been imprisoned for all but six months since his 1966 arrest, was the victim of racial prejudice in his original 1967 trial and 1976 retrial for a triple murder in a Paterson, N.J., tavern. U. S. District Judge H. Lee Sarokin set aside Carter's conviction and life sentence and said Carter might have been found innocent if prosecutors had not used prejudicial evidence against him. The judge said he hoped "that constitutional considerations, as well as justice and compassion, will prevail" and that prosecutors will not bring Carter to trial again. One of Carter's lawyers, Edward Graves, talked to the former middleweight title contender at Rahway State Prison after the ruling. "He is elated, of course," Graves said of Carter, who could be freed after a bond hearing in federal court Friday. "He wants out of there now. He has never given up." John Goceljak, first assistant Passaic County prosecutor, said his office will not say until the hearing Friday whether it will drop the case, retry Carter or appeal Sarokin's ruling. "We just received the judge's opinion and we're reviewing it," he said. Carter will not be in court Friday, but could be released from Rahway within hours after bond is set, his lawyers and prison officials said. Carter's case drew national attention in 1975 when Bob Dylan wrote and recorded an eight-minute song called "Hurricane," which claimed the former boxer had been framed and "falsely tried." The song helped build momentum for Carter's request for a second trial, granted by the New Jersey Supreme Court in 1976. Dylan was in California and not available for comment on Thursday's ruling, said Elaine Schock, his publicist at CBS Records in New York. CAMPAIGN Chad DeShazo/KANSAN Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology, returns a serve from his wife, Benson, who was playing at the Robinson courts yesterday afternoon, and he played tennis at different courts around Lawrence whenever he had the chance. Backward backhand Buoniconti undergoes operation United Press International MIAII — Marc Buonconcini, paralyzed from a college football injury, underwent an hour-long operation at Jackson Memorial Hospital yesterday to stabilize the injured vertebrae in his neck. Buonconi is still listed in serious condition and is in the intensive care unit. Baderman said the operation was carried out to aid the healing of the damaged second and third vertebrae. "It will get him off his back, he was very much immobilized before," she said. Bounconti was paralyzed from the neck down in the accident. Football predictions
CarothersConboyLazzarinoGraves
Colorado at KansasKansas24-17Kansas24-21Kansas24-21Kansas28-3
Kansas State at Oklahoma St.Oklahoma St.42-10Oklahoma St.28-10Oklahoma St.38-7Oklahoma36-10
Oklahoma at MissouriOklahoma35-7Oklahoma35-10Oklahoma62-3Oklahoma41-7
Iowa State at NebraskaNebraska32-14Nebraska42-10Nebraska38-17Nebraska51-3
Army at Air ForceAir Force38-9Air Force28-17Air Force28-7Army28-24
TCU at Texas TechTexas Tech17-7Texas Tech28-21Texas Tech21-10TCU21-20
USC at CaliforniaUSC54-40USC31-21USC24-13USC24-14
Alabama at LSULSU14-13LSU24-23Alabama21-20Alabama33-10
Wisconsin at MinnesotaMinnesota20-10Minnesota27-24Minnesota16-13Wisconsin28-21
UCLA at ArizonaUCLA25-21UCLA28-27UCLA21-17Arizona36-24
Season Totals46-32-2-.59053-25-2-.67956-22-2-.71849-29-2-.628
The predictors are James Carothers, associate professor of English; Bill Conboy, professor of communication studies; Chris Lazzerino, Kansan sports editor; and Bryan Graves, Kansan photo editor. 14 University Daily Kansan Classified Ads The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 0-15 2.60 16-20 2.90 21-29 3.20 For every 5 words add: 304 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday 4 p.m. Classified Display ... $4.40 Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 13 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 3.75 5.25 8.25 4.25 6.00 9.25 4.75 6.55 10.35 50⁴ 75⁴ 1.05 Classified Display advertisements are only one column wide and more than six inch deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No reserves allowed in classified display ads. Maximum depth is eight inch of classified display ads. POLICIES - Words set in ALL CAPS case as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE case as 3 words * Deadline 14 p.m. – 2 working days prior to publication FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS advertising - Wired hotcode=create and a $4 service charge. - Inly warned about thefts. - Sample the items before they must be submitted to retail or advertising - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only. - to The University Daily Kansas. * All advertisers will be required to pay in advance - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established I found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Karanbaug business office at 843-4586. until credit has been established * Tearsheets are not provided for classified or - Blind box ads - please add a $4 service charge - Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed - Certified by both Country and Title - Only earned on account - Valid until all orders must be submitted - No responsibility is assigned for more than one or correct insertion of any advertisement. * No refund on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising. ENTERTAINMENT Dance to live fiddle music! Jayhawker Oldtime Harmony Company. Make your new party享 music! Floating is believing, Float Connect now open on (or Floating, Open all day Sun & Mon—and every day) from 8am to 7pm. Call 864-3545 LOST/FOUND DON'T MISS THE LAWRENCE DBUG OF SST RECORDING ARTISTS THE MEAT PUPPETS. SAT. NOV. 9 AT THE OUTHOUSE (4 MI. E OF MASS. ON 15th). Lost - Keys attached to suede coin purse, friday behind Spencer Museum. Call 843-269 or 844-409. Pens are available at Fennell Pens cooper. Please call 843-269. Reward: Lost Watch Friday Nov. 11 in Violent Feminism exhibit. NIGHT LIFE Mobile DJ Dance Music. A mixture of New Rock and the classics presented over a 400 watt sound system. When it's time to dance, call NIGHT LIFE 789-4713. 3 Weekend Special Computer Literacy Instructional Program (CLIP) booklet sent to campus mann from Hilltop Child Development Center to Dept. of Human Development. Call Carol Saul 841-7347, 841-2181. THE KANSAS UNION JAYBOWL --- Don't pay by the person, pay by the hour— unlimited bowlers! Bounded-Bracelet, Computer Center Auditiorn describe at Computer Center Information an hour lane rental One Bedroom Apt. for sub-level baseeffective Dec. 15 One Bedroom B apt. for sub-level baseeffective Dec. 15 Fire bus, route 60, bus route 140 1 bedroom apts. from $198 some utilities paid. Near downtown and the University. No pets please. ANNOUNCEMENTS THE FAR SIDE The Secretis Out! Arts and Crafts Fair Lawrence Community Nursery School, 641 Alabama, Sat. Nov. 16 a.m. — p.m. Professional artists and crafts people, food baked. Found-Calico Kitteri in the Laundry mat at 9th and Mississippi. Call 814-9401. Scholarship Halls are great places to live. 4 women and 4 men schol. halls (50 per hall) friendly atmosphere less expensive because of shared responsibilities sensitive environment close to campus Spring Semester Openings Anyone may apply. Applications available in 123 Strong Hall. FOR RENT Deadline for applications 11/8 Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 West 8th. One bedroom furnished. 3rd floor. $25 plus utilities. Lease through price; price could be negotiable 841-320, 843-143. Are you tired of living in a dorm? Cows and lives are hard to come by, so we ask for assistance. Please advance, leave now for next week at a terminal. Attractive 2 bedroom condominium for rent. 13/4 baths, CA. FP, range, refrigerator, microwave, DW, WD bookshelf, paid cable TV, swimming pool, required. $395,749-800. Available Dec. 1. Lease required. 395,749-800. Cooperative living lovers your expenses while expanding your mind. Room available at Rainbow House for $110/month. Call 843-7079 (after 5 p.m.) for an application to become part of our thriving community. Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Bail 484-1418. For rent. Grown bed. Lg. 1 bedroom, bedroom 2, bedroom 3, and a master suite. Closet Available / 86. Home 749-2198 or 84-727-7373. Closing Date: 05/16/2017. Furnished rooms from $109 with some utilities paid. Two bills: from Kansas Union. No pets. No smoking. No pets. Luxury: townhouse, 2 bedrooms, 1/2 baths, garage, fireplace, inset, solarium window. Pave path. Gas stove. Refrigerator. Wet room. Garage. Kitchen. Bedroom. Bathroom. HEATHEROOD VALLEY: $300 OFF FIRST MONTH'S RENT. ONE & two bedrooms available beginning at $300/month. All apartments have heating, including efficient and efficient appliances on the route. Phone 447-744-7941 Rooma for rent. Special Nov. rate. Clean and quiet. No homework. Call 749-7627. Mark Rooma for rent on the hill /1 mile from Union, 895 and 815. Call 841-6405. Ternpers flare when Professor Carlson and Lazzell, working independently, ironically set their time machines to identical coordinates. Sublease at semester. Large, new, 2 bedrooms, 1 block from Institution. Call 843-3228 Sublease 22R, 25TH, Apt, DW, laundry/storage m. energy efficient, banty, great west location. Nice Rooms $135.00 Util. Paid. 942-4736 after 5 p.m. MASTERCRAFT AFFECTS a completely furnished two bedroom apartment available immediately! We also have subleases on 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments in the rear, near KU, Call 814-1212, 814-359, or 749-454. Bv GARY LARSON © 1955 Harvey Weinstein Fundworks © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate BLOOM COUNTY YOU'RE GETTING A FANNY-LIFT? NO NO... A NOSE JOB, WHODAYA THINK? Aspen 801 SUA Travel is going to beautiful Aspen Colorado. The hotel has a 4-1-2 room and all amenities, everything, even lift tickets. Sign-up deadline is next week. Hurtury. Registration at the SUA of Aspen Colorado. The Islamic Center of Lawrence invites you to attend an interesting lecture by a famous and well acknowledged speaker. Mr. A. Ahmedwell, will speak from 7:00 p.m., Friday, Nov. 8, 1983. Place: Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union, K. L. Lawrence. Everybody is welcome. Refreshments are provided. OLNER WEINRELL JONES, YOUR OPINION PLEASE : I'M CONDENSED. LITTLE COMMENTS. SUR- GERY. DO YOU THINK IM NOT BEING TOO INSECURE ? VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL 1:00-Noon, Management on November 8. 1:30-Time, Management on November 9. Exams: 4:00-Listening and Notetaking; FREE! Register to attend at the Student Assistance Building. KUIVCF "Christianity and Supreme Court Decisions" PERSONAL By 6:30 Conference Room Prof. John Macauley Professor of History and Religion The Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester Editor and Business Manager positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Students 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., Tuesday, November 19. News and Business Staff Positions Friday, Nov.8 WILL, LET ME JUST SAY THIS ABOUT THAT... COLOHAR-DO All-inclusive package for $239. Limited offer, call now for information/registration. Paid Staff Positions Editor, Business Manager 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. Hide: Freeze Gopher: Happy 30th B-Day. Let's go cannibalize K and L then permit live. Let's hide by Berke Breathed **Hert't:** **Color T** V $24.88 m.m. Smith's T **V** 1 Ward 2 Wrcl 643-7531 Sat. Mon.-Sat. 9:30-10:00 Ward 2 Wrcl 643-7531 Sat. Mon.-Sat. 9:30-10:00 Happy Birthday to the Munchkin who isn't a teenager anymore. Have a good one KUQUAT/AF HAPPY 22 No. 90 You're Still My No. 1 I Love You Are *Rent-VCR* with 3 movies, overnight $14.99. Smith's TV $147.99, Lard $423.99. Mon.-Sat. JAMES DEAN: How about that movie?b, but please no jaws. JW FIRSTLY, IT'S---- WHAT IS WRONG WITH MY FANNY? The University Daily Kanusa 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 University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; in In Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Monday, November 25. Madison-Hawthorn 38-B Day. I love you very much! Coach Shapiro was very kind and helpful. Pajari Happy 18 and welcome to KI, David. Slender, mature, affectionate but yt male student seeks mature young lady for companionship and social interaction. Interests include dining, dancing, music and nature. If you wish affection, friendship, please send photo with reply. Reply. Book 67, 119 Fint Hall, University Dialy Kanan. C. Happy 22nd, Billy Flaherty! White male, 25, poor vision, dull personality, skimpy and not too bright, seeks winnie blonde with great looks, great body, family connections, class wardrobe and fantastic personality. Must be unarmed. Sdn sincere requires only to孟孝, Box IA, rm. 119 Staunford Flint University of Wisconsin. Witty, attractive female, 28, seeks intelligent, sincere man 18-25, rebel and into politics. Send email to bharti@uva.edu $119-$300 Weekly Lp Mailing Circulars! No charge for delivery. Mail at: Success, Box 470 CXC; Woodstock, MN 56572. **Box 470 CXC** Woodstock, MN 56572. BUS. PERSONAL YES, it's finally for you! HAPPY BIRTHDAY HARLAN! Jayhawke Go Hewlett at: BILAR'S VINTAGE ROSE! **BLIRD'S** & **LITTLE** **Mini Miu's** Barb's Vintage Rose 725 W. 1st St. 841-2451 *M-8 to 10 p.m.* Th 10-8 p.m. Aerobics w/ Style G, Girls and Fun-gay good morning meetings. Enjoy two friends or and Saturday morning. Earn two friends. Free classes on Monday and Tuesday. 116 Undergraduate positions available in the LAS& COLLEGE ASSEMBLY. Make your voice heard. Filing deadline no. 8. Nomination forms are available online (mail@las college assembly). More information call 864-729-3060. KII vs. Colorado Pregame and Postgame at THE ROCK CHALK BAR closest establishment to the stadium Hillel RETREAT Hillel at Mizzou! "The Widening Rift Within Judaism" Cost $10 RSVP by Tues., Nov.12 For more info call The Hillel Office 864-3948 COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentially assured. Greater area call for appointment 913-245-1400 StagePro Do you want your next party sound system and DJ to be professional? 841-1306 Call StagePro 415 N. 2nd Dinettes, Dinettes, Dinettes! We have over 50 dinettes to choose from. 5 factory set sets with 40 pieces. Two sets extra sturdy steel and durable vinyl cushions. All five pieces only 680. Hurry to Midway Furniture & Watered Landscapes. 916-492-2343. Outside in Kx and Mng. Creative, thinking singles, find kindred spirits through LOVE LINE, the directory for educated singles. Write P.O. Box 3602K, Lawrence, KS 6046. One-issue membership $4.00. SKT CULTUR RISING! Skateboards & Accessories QUALITY STUFF ONLY V UPTOWN BICYCLES 1337 Mass. 749-0836 For all your winter clothing needs all the way (Party clothes, Topcouts, etc.) shop at EVELYN'S VINTAGE CLOTHES. 811 New Hampton, Sat. & Sun 10-5 Haircuts 7, perm $30 at Channels. Contact Sat-Mat at 82-7900. Walk-ins welcome. Health Insurance for Students Short-Term and long term plans available. Call Datum Insurance Hert's' 19° Carr $ T V £8.95 z. month Curtis Matesh 147 W 3rd D $84.975 Mon- Sat- 9al 30 Friday 841-LIMO for AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, portrait, resume of course,冈本, portrait, Swila Studio 749-1011. We get your computer's heads on straight. Computer Appliance - AlphaMega Computer Services. Mismatched mattresses. National bedding manufacturer contacted us to liquidate several loads of mismatched close-out or discontinued mattresses. We take two tins each $39 each piece. Open to the public every day. Midwest Furniture and Watered Lily Furniture 842-2534. Outlets in KS and MO and growing. Jayhawks, Go HaWaiian is the 1985 Homecoming Theme. Go HaWaiian with the bad, Paradise Sound pads and parts from The Etc. Shop. T23. Thu Apr. 11-30 p.m. M-Sat. T14 thur. 12:5 Sundays Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event or holiday season; these prices available on imprinted specialties plus other custom apparel and accessories our latenured arrives. 200 W. 254 (Bendigh Behind Glenwood). Modeling and theater portfolio - shooting now Beginner to professionals, call for information. (doesn't have to be expensive.) NATURAL WAY NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING Let Your Body Breathe! A 820 Mass. 841-0100 A New from California. Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure. 316-842-3744, PO Box 362, Whitchurch. 67201,坐 on in Monday or Kanan, KU Represen *Kent'14. T* V.C. T. V$28.8 m.m. Smity's TUJ 14'W. Zr23. bd47-523 H: 9:30-10:00. Sun-T 5 Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, jerseys and capz. ShirtArt by Swetl MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Laurel Menu of the day's entrees & soups WINTER BREAK skating at Steamboat Springs and Vail from 72°, or salting in South Padre Island and Daytona Beach from 99°. Hurry, call Sunshee Tours for more information toll free (1-800-321-9911) or contact a Sunshake Repertoire member your winter break counts. count or Sunshake Bike Sale 10% off all Biancani Models, Touring, Sport, Racing and All Terrain Bicycles Camera Repair now at One Hour Photo. Southern Hills Malls, MI-7295 HY SINGLES Share your college activities with a compatible companion. Our tutors are available to meet more eligible adults in an afternoon than months of barcences or singles games. Our more information can be obtained by calling 612-597-3040. LOOK OUT LAWRENCE!!! THE KU KONNECESS found a system of dating which works. COMPUTER DATING with a personable touch. THE KU KONNECESS it has!! Find out about us by simply sending $2.00 in a self-addressed stamp at www.ku-konnecess.com CONNECTION KU KONNECESS KS 60044 MATH FUYOR. Bob Meers holds an M.A. in math from K.U. at Beowulf, 102, 116 and 123 were among the fellows of the school. He is also a senior in 1955 and often tutors elementary students in mathematics and art. WRITING, AIMS/Audio Music, 842-9334. HELP WANTED Babyfitter wanted for 3 children in our home Prefer daily from 9-12; will consider 2 or 3 day visits. Child care center needs full-time, part-time teachers. Call for appl. 749-0256. Executive Coordinator, KU Graduate Student Council. Applicant should be knowledgeable of campus, academic programs, and University requirements. Must have coordinated of programs developed by GSC Executive Committee. Must be KU graduate student or a faculty member with 50% graduation assistance. Salary $50 per month, eligibility for staff infusion and for rates. Resume must include: Name, Student ID, November 10th, 5 p.m. Submit resume and names of three references to Roshhan Parris; Graduate Student Council; Box 1; Kansas University. Fulltime cook for fraternity house. Good salary. no saturdays. Call 842-967-0371. Lingerie models needed at Undercover for annual show 21 W. 98th Street. Apply in person, Thurs. the 7th, Fr. the 8th, and Mon. the 11th between 2 and 4 p.m. Join our "NANNY NETWORK" of over 250 placed by you. You should enjoy creative childcare, be willing to relocate East for a 9 to 12 month commitment and be able to take care of your children. Round trip air transportation provided. Warm, loving family presence prescribed by us for your use. Please visit www.nannynetwork.com for details. Rd Bld. Wilson, CT 68997 (303) 834-1743. NO FEE! Norge Village part-time laundry attendant. PRE-MEDICAL SECRETARY: part-time position in the College of Liberal Arts A and Sciences. Prep for medical school followed by courses of studies in nursing or pharmacy. Provide student students applying to medical and dental schools; preparing confidential files on approximately ten percent of applications. Supervise Sciences Committee; planning and coordinating visits by medical/school officials; and assisting with medical examinations statistics. Above all, this position requires the ability to interact well with students and faculty during hours, as well as working late hours. Ncourse/nstudent. Deadline for applications is November 12, 1985. Applicants must have a Bachelor's degree or equivalent, required. Contact Cherch Brucker 1063, Strøggen 844-307 during office hours: 12:30-4:00 MWF 844-307 Female Abel A.M. 7:30-12:00; P.M. 10:12 weekends also 749.0982 The University of Kansas Budget Office has two position openings for continuous half-time student assistants with possible full-time employment. The position requires a Bachelor's degree and positions will assist with the process of budget and accounting transfers to the University's budgets. This person will gain a good exposure to fund accrual processes and work with the process of budget and accounting in the University's financial environment. This position requires a minimum of seven hours of academic credit per year, including three clinical in nature. It requires good typing ability and proficiency with word processing and spreadsheet software. The graduate student status and good written and oral communications skills. $400.00 to $400.00 per month for half-year appointments. Closing dates vary based on availability. For information call Jana Hinz, Budget Office, 641-3186. Applications available in 299 Kansas City, MO. To apply visit www.kansascity.edu/fire-flexible FOR SALE CLEAR™ Optically clear window plastic. Mylar or Polyester 50" or 100" wide illuminator Earth. Comic Books, 10th Anniversary, Pentebas, et. mk. Comics, Open 15-13 Tue-Fri, Sat. & Sun 10-8-51 Baseball cards and sports nostalgia. Buy, Sell 28 W. 21rd Street. Open 10 a.m.-M 5; 29 W. 24rd Street. CARPET 35,000 square feet in a rainbow colors. All styles and sizes. Big Bod's Use Carpets. 1984 21 inch touring bike Low mileage. Retail. 1984 - askking $200 with many at. 844-600-601 842-7638 PC INTEGRATION: The most compatible at the lowest price. Purchased. Systems are built for you. Refurbished. Internal 1/2 height, just $30, installed and tested (full year guarantee). Fender Jager guitar; $75/best offer. Beginner's drum set, some hardware, make offer. #40-62838. 100A Speaker $160/pair, MXR Aluizer $100, Kounten Tuner $100, Sony Cassette deck $100 For sale 1 STUDENT SEASON BAKETELKAT 849-822-9081 1st reasonable offer. Call Adam at 849-822-9081 o r sale Yamaha receiver, sony turntable, KLH speakers, 256C. Call 794-2193 For sale Horpoint washing machine, 1 year old, excellent condition. $300. For sale. Sony receiver, Bt turntable, Sanyo cassette, Buhl speakers, $30 for system, will install. Call 212-679-5811. GOVERNMENT HOMES from $(1$/uRep) Alibo 001-865-6872 - 001-865-6872 EAT GIARGS for delivery to: www.alt.govalergs.com Get a Real Student Season Basketball Ticket Best Offer Tickets! Call 841-1332 or 841-1194 Gibson Les Paul deluxe model, and Peavey "Hertitage" amplifiers like: new $500 each/$800 total. Honda C70 Scooter (1981) Great for campau. easy to invest $300 best offer. Mark 644-6251 IBM PC Jr. 128K monitor, parallel port, internal modem, the system self rell try best. Quick of. Buffalo's 65K monitor. KWALITY COMICS~Comic Books, Science Fiction & Adventure and simulation games 1136 842-750-7900 www.kwality.com Moped: 1984 Honda Spree. Only 90 miles, moving sale. 2928. #Chell 843-5731. Phone answering machine, suntamp, jewelry,睫毛液,lamps, tundra, twin bedspread CALL 842-913-6700 CALL 842-913-6700 MOST COMPATIBLE American PCXT Computer from $959. Full year warranty. Authorized Dealer, Distributor Think Micro, Inc. 842-335 Box 3995, Lawrence KS 60044 Tried of traveling everywhere for QUALITY TIRES & WHEELS at reasonable prices! Well, you don't need to worry about the brand brands are at our everyday low prices (compatible with MAIL-ORDER!) Come in and check out what makes us different. VINTAGE CLOTHES Many unique items for the die-hard individual! Wool suitcases, jackets, trims. Prices for the camera in your pocket, styles for the phone, etc. WARM CANDLES, 1465 Mass. Sat-Sun 9-5. Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make use of this book to prepare for: preparation, a. For exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization available at town Griet. The Jayhawk Booksellers, and others. Collector Stamps. Mint and used. Canada, U.S. and more. Open up 10-5, Sat. Sun. only 12- New Hampshire, Booth 28 (2 Second Room). OUM OM-16 with 100,000 zoom $20. O.B. O. 841-9358 IM-160. AUTO SALES 1972 Mercury. Runs great. $500 or best offer. Call 841-6388 - 24 p.m. 1758 Mercury Monarch 4-door auto trans. a/c 75,000 miles - $11,000. Mobil 843-1222 when唤起 75,000 miles - $1,000. Call 843-1222 after p.m. '79 Caprice 4 cars - d, PS, PB, aile 10, onboard battery, battery, power unit, tires, tires, battery, Pioneer AM/FM cassette, damaged long rear quarter car bitter, runs well, driven easily. 1977 Chevy Impala auto, Cruise, new tree, 1978 Buckle Regal auto. New paint. 841-7955 1929 Baskin-good condition; for sale at a very good price. Call 842-4327. 1813 Manda GLC, 2 door, HI. 5 speed, FWD, rear directional, highway minibus $3000 or take over $96 payments. Can't afford both car and school must-sell car at as soon as possible. 749-7523 1989 BMW 313, Low mileage, all electric, custom interior. Beautiful. Call 769-2343. Great student cat! *Curtiss Salon A.M.-F.M. radio, tape recorder, great music, and body artistry.* @ "S21 Ceilica GT Littack, AT, overdive, AC, cass. radio, PBs, PBL, mounts, exc. cord, no flaws, alloys, new Pirelli and exhaust. Need to sell, salehold, market $600 861-049 854-273 71 NOVA, Automatic, PS, PB, runs $850 MA-3200 MA-3200 C Get Something Going! Kansas Classifieds 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4388 Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 Nation/World University Daily Kansan 15 Classified Ads 1985 30X ZUN NASSAN TURBO. Red like new. Low mileage. T-Top. Loaded. Good price. 841-1328. 78 Firebird brn 70 ki m, ac amf cass. excellent cond. 842-4875 78. Horizon, 64,000 miles 4 cyl./ A/C. Auto 4-dr- FWD. Hatchback. AM/FM. Clean body. Economic and dependable car in good condition. 823-3174 Ala Romeo. 1920 TV Gaupe. Limited edition, every extra 20 kilometers. Silver in silver, serious in silver. For sale 84 Honda Civic DX, 2 dr. hatch, 5 speed. For sale 100 Honda Civic DX, 2 dr. hatch, 5 speed. For sale 100 Honda Civic DX, 2 dr. hatch, 5 speed. for sale @ 12 Horns Cive! 1500 DX, 3 dr hatch, speed for sale @ 12 Horns Cive! 1500 DX, 3 dr hatch, moving for sale @ 12 Horns Cive! 1500 DX, 3 dr hatch. SERVICES OFFERED PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICES. Complete resume preparation. All fields. Mailing services available. Call toll free anytime. 7800-6-CAREER. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716. STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1053 Massachusetts, bowns all haircuts. $6. No appointment needed. OCTL21NEd, edenhanced with library R SEARCH, editing, g editing, revising, Victor Carson 48-309 Charles 48-309 BRIGHTHIGH - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-8421 TYPING 1-1000 pages. No job too small or too large. Affordable and affordable typing, Judy, 842.7945. 24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes. Job relocation. Best resume. Best quality and fast service. 849-7000. A professional typing. Term papers, Theses A professional typing. Using IMS Select Reasonable 824-3264 AAA TYPEING/842-1942. Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs. Law review articles typed by KG legal secretary. Generally, if in bf 10 p.m. out by 10 p.m. same day. DIPEFFERENT Service. Tape TRANSCRIP for 843-807. Specially Experienced Jenafsh for 843-807. A. L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced paper, term papers, macmillan documents Absolutely LETTER PERFECT Ward process. Send resume to 914-638-5000 or visit day service available 844 Illinois, 943-601-612. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard secretary, Stryker-Corona, type call. Pancy Call All Kinds of Typing: GOOD IMPRESSIONS Faint; easy to spell; spelling/impression errors cor- rected AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing/Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics, Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates. 749-1118 Call Terry for your typing needs; letters, term- papers, law papers, dissertations, etc. Sharp ZX505 with memory. 842-4754 or 843-2671, 5 p.m. 11 p.m. DEFINABLE, professional, experience DEFINABLE, professional, experience RHAPTION ABOVE; standard certificate. DISSERTATIONS THESES: LAND PAPERS/ T typing, Editing and Grapes. ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter student papers (up to 30 p.m.) or Mommy's paper: 842-7878 before 9 p. m. Please. Dissertations, Theses. Tern Paper. Over 15 yr. experience. Phone: 842-2310 5:30. Bark: 842-2310 5:30. A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850. ATTN MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS. Excellent (cyst intact, APA format experience). ExactType-Quality for all your typing needs. Disk Access-Quality Calling. Mary, 843-744-601, 841-922-604 PROFESSIONAL typetw with 15 years experience. Fast, accurate, and reliable. Call Peggy after 5 hours. QUALITY TYPING Letters, themes, dissertations applications. Spelling corrected BF-82749 TRIO WRDWPacing CONSCIENTIUS BILD IRLWPDacing CONVENIENT W should accept rlw RWPDacing CONVENIENT W EDITING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 814-6254 EXPERIENCED TYPEP1 Term papers; thees MID Correcting selects Will correct spelling Writing selects Will correct spelling TOP-NOTCH!professional word processing, marcuspress, resume, these, letter quality print- ing. THE WORDDOCTORS: Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? 843-3147. WANTED English B.A. Tycling or Tutoring, Spelling and grammar corrected, Overnight service. Call Roommate roommate for second semester. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, all amenities, car port, swimming pool, completely furnished. $185 plus 1/2 utilities. Notable 84328 Stacy 女性 female roommate for second semester $117 plus 1/4 utilities. 749-2848 5:30. Ask for Rase female roommate needed for 2nd semester. Split-lieu townhouse $145/month plus low utilities. $300/month rent per room. Female roommate wanted ASAP to share new 2 female roomhouse. All modern convenience-include DW, microwave, A/1, 1/2 baths, Bathroom, 1/3 of rest and utilities, energy call. F84-85484 Female roommate for spring semester. 2 bedroom furnished house $10 plus 1/2 utilities. Male Roommate Needed. Pet OK $160/mo plus 1/2 ual. Start Dec. 1. Phone #834-7831 Photographically attractive females in interested with the subject. Inquire for appointment at 841-3538 before arriving. Repairments of 40-room bedrooms at 10 p.m. Roommate needed immediately to share a room Roommate needed with fireplace, etc. Have own bedroom (unfurished) 30 (notiegible) plus 1/2 utilities. 841-2602. Tickets to KU vs. Nebraska football game. Call Chad at 843-2670. Two Female roommates for beautiful, renovated 4 Bdroom house, separate bedrooms, 1026 Ohio, $175 $300 mo. plus utilities. Call Julie or Marci at 749-199 WANTED - 3-SEASON BASKETBALL TICKETS PRICE NEIGGOTABLE. 842.9811 WANTED: Roommate for Spring semester. Wonderful 3 Bedroom Bedroom迈博莱河 Apt. Close to campus, Cable, A/C, Pool, $115 per month. We're nice, fun people. 842-3625 WANTED: Roommate for spring semester. Wonderful 3 bedroom Meadowbrook apartment. Close to campus, A/C, pool, $115 money. We're nice, fun people. 842-263. Wanted: Roommate for spring semester to share 4 bedroom townhouse. $125 per month. Call Wanted: non-smoking, female to subunit apartment. #112.52 / 5 utilities. Call 841-888 between 7:00 a.m. and 9:30 a.m. FOR KEYBOARDISTS ONLY Taylor's BW Keyboards are without a doubt one of the most difficult instruments to properly amplify. Because of Peavey's commitment to designing and manufacturing the products discriminating musicians need for contemporary playing, we proudly introduce the KB SERIES. These units are not warmed over versions of guitar, bass, acoustic or steel amps. They're for keyboardists only, who design features as specialized EQ, gain structures, patching configurations and portability. For years companies have been making keyboards feel good to your hands. isn't it time you discover the company who makes keyboards sound good to your ears? Total keyboard customers prefer Benchmark Total keyboard amplification systems by Peavey. The Musician's Edge. PENJY 843-3007 PULLIAM'S MUSIC HOUSE The University of Kansas Theatre Presents William Shakespeare's Mirthful and Merry Comedy 2601 Iowa TWELFTH NIGHT November 7,8,9 & 14.15.16.1985 HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS! 8:00 p.m. Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982 VISA/MasterCard Accented Twelfth Night is KU's entry in the 1986 American College Theatre Festival Partially funded by the KU Knights Activa Fe V Jet strays into Soviet air; controllers avert disaster United Press International TOKYO — A Japanese airliner strayed off course in the same area where a Soviet fighter shot down a Korean jet in 1983, but swift action by Soviet ground controllers averted another disaster, the Foreign Ministry said yesterday. The Japan Air Lines Batee 747, carrying 132 passengers and crew on a flight from Tokyo to Moscow, went off its course Oct. 31 about an hour after takeoff as it flew north over the Sea of Japan, according to JAL spokesman, Geoffrey Tudor. It strayed because of a navigational error by the cockpit crew, he said. Foreign Ministry officials said Flight 411 was about to enter a prohibited zone west of Soviet-held Sakhalin Island. The Japanese Defense Agency said radar personnel picked up the straying plane and tried to make radio contact. JAL Flight 411 was in the same area where a Soviet fighter shot down a Korean Air Lines jumbo jet in 1983, killing all 269 people aboard. The officials said the Soviet controllers made smooth and efficient contact and gave swift permission for the jettler to turn west and move its course. Passengers were unaware of any problem, Tudor was. At the same time, the radar showed that several unidentified planes — presumed to be Soviet fighters — had scrambled from bases on Sakhalin Island intercept the airliner, the officials said. ZBT's BAHAMA MAMA ARRIVES AT 8 P.M. TOMORROW NITE 1625 EDGEAILL OPEN PARTY!! LeBallister said the two holdouts never changed their votes. One of the holdout jurors, who refused to be identified, said after the verdict, "Miller was browbeaten and swayed by the interrogation. He would have signed anything put in front of him." Juror says spy duress caused case mistrial 1/25 EDGEBILL The Associated Press "For one it was an ego trip, for the other it was sincere conviction," she said. "To most of us it was black and white." Miller, 48, was brought to the courthouse yesterday for a brief conference with his lawyers and the judge. Lawyers said the meeting concerned housekeeping matters. LOS ANGELES — The deadlock that forced a mistrial in the Richard W. Miller spy case was caused by two holdout jurors, one with sincere convictions about the innocence of the former FBI agent and the other on an ego trip, a fellow juror said yesterday. "Most of us thought the govern-ment did a good job." LeBallister The jury was stalement with a vote of 10-2 Wednesday in favor of conviction before U.S. District Judge David Kenyon declared the mistrial. Miller was the first FBI agent ever charged with espionage. He was fired the day he was arrested in October 1984. "I think we could have gone on to 'nother year and we couldn't have had that, lose people, juror Bobbi LoBallister, the baldouts, whom she would not identify She said the two jurors who favored acquittal thought Miller had been coerced into making incriminating statements to his superiors before his arrest. "That was it—dupes," she said of their argument. Joel Levine, defense lawyer, said outside court that he and Stanley Greenberg had not decided whether they would represent Miller at a second trial, which the government has said it will seek. MONDAY SHRIMP SPECIAL All you can eat Boiled Spiced Shrimp $5.95 plus Boiled Spiced Potatoes & tons of garlic bread 6 p.m.-? Weaver's Charge Account 4 Ways to Charge of Weaver's Mastercard VISA Card WeaverS Inr PILE ON THE PEARLS! 54% OFF PEARLS ONE DAY ONLY—SAT., NOV.9th PEARLS—AT PRICES SO GREAT WE CALL THEM DOOR BUSTERS $9.99 orig. $30 7" Freshwater Bracelet with 14K Gold Beads and Clasp $19.99 orig. $53 16" Cultured Freshwater Strand with 14K Gold Beads & Clasp $119.99 orig. $444 18" Cultured 7mm Baroque Strand Necklace $9.99 orig. $29 4mm Round Stud Earrings PEARLS, PEARLIS, AND MORE PEARLS—the essential to Fall's fashion. Wear pearl strands separately; paired with other strands of different lengths, or combined with gold. Knot them, drape them, mix them—get them! Now's the perfect time to add pearls to your jewelry collection. You'll save 54% on our large assortment of cultured pearl strands, bracelets, earrings and pendants. There are five qualities to look for in choosing your pearl Luster - a mirror-like finish on the surface of the pearl, Overtones - a permanent and natural labeled color on the pearl, nacre - size the larger the pearl, the scarcer - Shape- the more symmetrical the pearl, the more valuable it is. For example, round, pearl and tear-shaped pearls. PEARLS OF WISDOM MONDAY SHRIMP SPECIAL All you can eat Boiled Spiced Shrimp $5.95 plus Boiled Spiced Potatoes & tons of garlic bread 6 p.m.-? Reservations accepted Tuesday Special: 10¢ Draws 11 a.m.-3 a.m., $2 cover the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540 Weaver's Inc. 9th & Mass. Q. What is the difference between a natural peak and a cultured peak? A. Natural peaks are formed by deposits of nacre—a crystalline substance around an island which has found its way accidentally into the body of an oyster例形, a grain of salt that forms a peak is a saltwater peak formed by an oyster when the irritant is added to man. Q. What characteristics should one look for in a pearl? Q. How Should I care for my cultured pearls? A. Treat your pearls like precious jewels. Store in a chaple bag or wrap them in tissue. Never expose them to hair spray or perfumes. Wash with mild soap and warm water (do not use chemicals), dry them on a flat surface. Restring them periodically—making sure the necklace is knotted between each bead. Jewelry-Main Floor KS 16 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 Praeger seeks money for center at Haskell By Abbie Jones Special to the Kansan Lawrence City Commissioner Sandra Praeger was in New York this week on her first trip to find funds for a multipurpose cultural center on the Haskell Indian Junior College campus. During her trip, she planned to speak to representatives from Indian philanthropic organizations to determine the possibility of receiving funds. Praeger is president of the Haskell Indian Junior College Foundation, which was formed last year to raise money for the college. She and Gerald Gipp, president of the college, will return today from the New York seminar on higher education for Indians. The center, still in the planning stage, may include a museum, research capabilities, galleries, permanent and traveling exhibitions, a performance hall and a snack and gift shop. Praeger said. Praeger said the ultimate goal of the visit to New York was to get fun ding. She said it would be a good chance to share concerns with educators. Members of Haskell faculty met last week to discuss fund-raising possibilities for the center. Praeger and Gipp are expected to report any progress made in New York to these members. "This was the first meeting with this group of people." Praeger said about the meeting with Haskell faculty. "It was primarily just to brainstorm and get some ideas about what the facility should include. The center could be an exciting learning experience and provide an opportunity for some good research and study." The cultural center could be run by students and could potentially make money for the school. Praeger said. About 35 people from across the United States who are associated with Indian higher education were invited to the two-day seminar in New York, which is sponsored by the Phelps-Stokes Fund, and co-sponsored by the Rockefeller and Ford foundations, she said. Hospital lobby becomes bazaar store By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff KANSAS CITY, Kan. — The lobby of Bell Memorial Hospital at the University of Kansas Medical Center looked more like a crowded retail store than a hospital yesterday and Wednesday during the Med Center Auxiliary's Fall Bazaar. The annual bazaar, which raised more than $10,000 last year, benefits organizations affiliated with the Med Center, Louise Redford, co-chairman of the Fall Bazaar, said yesterday. Proceeds from this year's bazaar will go to the Jay-Care Learning Center. Yesterday, eager shoppers bought dolls, paintings, books and other crafts from local artists who brought their wares to the hospital lobby. The auxiliary asked craftsmen to donate 30 percent of their sales to the bazaar. Redford said. Nearby, other shoppers silently bid for antique furniture, silver trays and even a Kansas City Chiefs pennant that was autographed by the players. The items were donated by auxiliary members and local businesses. "I cannot tell you how busy we've been." Redford said. "There are 6,000 employees and most of them have probably been down at least once." Redford said most of the shoppers were Med Center employees, although some people from the community stopped by, and some shop- pers were patients in the hospital "And it's entertainment for them, especially the children." "The nurses bring the patients down in a wheelchair if they can," Redford said. "They're some of our best customers." Charlene Lawwill, chairman of the Fall Bazaar Committee, said that baked goods were the fastest sellers. Among the cakes, cookies, breads and brownies made by auxiliary members were 50 apple pies. "They sold almost as fast as we put them out." Lawwill said. The bazaar also included a plant sales white elephant sale and a luncheon The auxiliary is a 285-member organization that donates time and provides financial support to several Med Center projects. A member can be anyone who wants to help the University, she said, although most members have some connection with the Med Center. The auxiliary's primary sources of income are two gift shops in the hospital and the annual bazaar, said Redford. Although proceeds from the bazaar will not be tabulated until this weekend, Redford said, the auxiliary hopes to raise about $11,000. Jay-Care will use the money for general maintenance, such as painting and buying furniture, said Jan Kalny, director of the center. "Early Frost" Watches may help AIDS By a Kansan reporter The Topeka AIDS Project (TAP) is sponsoring 5 "Early Frost" Watches in Topeka and Lawrence. Clubs, churches and private homes will hold viewing gatherings, requesting a $10 donation from those who attend. Many gatherings will hold a discussion after the movie. The national broadcast of "An Early Frost," a television drama about the effect of AIDS on an American family, may help raise money for, and focus attention on, AIDS projects around the country. As many as 10,000 Watches are expected to be held in more than 100 cities around the country. All the money raised will remain in the communities to help local AIDS patients. The director of TAP said yesterday that he hoped the Watches would raise $2,000 to help people in and around Topteka who have AIDS. induces to help local AIDS patients. "An Early Frost," to be broadcast Monday by NBC-TV, stars Ben Gazarra, Gena Rowlands and Aidan Quinn, and portrays the devastating effects of AIDS on a young attorney and his family. It is the first television drama about the AIDS crisis. Becerros MEXICAN Becerros MEXICAN Sunday Special Bowl of Chili, Taco Frijoles, Nachos and a Soft Drink $3.25 As always, our chips and salsa are Free! 1.00 Margaritas all day Becenitos MEXICAN 2515 W. 6th 841-1323 --- C Students Always Welcome THE KANSAS UNION PRAIRIE ROOM Level Two 1618 West 23rd Street For large appetites, we've got a 12" sub. More moderate dinners can enjoy the 6" size, and we've included a kid. Any way you want it, you can get it NOW, at... fry us today! We are open from 11 am until 2 am daily, and we may dine in or carry out your requirements. Select from a variety of sixteen delicious sandwiches, topped with your choice of lettuce and spices served warm or cool, freshly-fried white or wheat Sub-Roll Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! sized Sub for our customers under 10. For most folks the sandwich is a nutritious, palet-pleased meal; it has a wide variety of "stuff" to help round out the ingredients, including potato salad, baked beans, chips and chili, plus soft drinks, milk or coffee. Any way you want it...you got it! AT SUB & STUFF SANDWICH SHOP... S Theta Chi's and Alpha Gam's We've Sacrificed, Now Let's Erupt and Jam at Homecoming '85 Good Job Gals Good Job Guys & Gals You're the man in charge. And you can handle it. Because the Navy has given you the management and technical training to get the job done. DRESSFORSUCCESS. dollars worth of sophisticated equipment. Thirty men report to you. And what you do includes the care and responsibility for millions of At age 22 you can be a leader in the Navy. With all the decision-making authority you need to help you match up to your responsibility. The rewards match up too. The rewards match up, too A solid starting salary of $17,000, and up to as much as $31,000 in four years with regular promotions and increases. Responsibility and reward, it's the way you measure success in the Navy. See your Navy Recruiter or CALL 800-327-NAVY. NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST. NAV OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST. Leading cheerers SINCE 1889 Two from KU are among nation's best cheerleaders. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, NOV. 11, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 56 (USPS 650-640) A man with a hat and scarf. Cold Details page 3. Parole officer says McMurry must pay debt By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff Convicted embezzler Steve McMurry has until the end of January to begin repaying the more than $257,000 he skimmed from the KU bus system, or he may be ordered to return to prison. McMurry's parole officer said Friday. "We'll give him enough rope to hang himself with," said Van Wistman, the parole officer. "If he has not begun to make payments by the end of January, we will initiate action to have his parole reviewed." Under the terms of his parole, which expires in 1988, McMurry was ordered to repay $257,051.17 he embezzled from the University of Arizona and to seek psychiatric care. So far, McMurry has repaid $0 of the debt. Mc Murry was the coordinator of the KU on Wheels bus system from 1978 to 1982. He was arrested in September 1982 and charged with five counts of felony theft of property. He was convicted in Douglas County District Court in June 1983 and sentenced to four consecutive and one concurrent two- to five-year prison terms. McMurray was paroled Dec. 21, 1984, after serving 17 months in state prison. He moved to Colorado in 1986. He now lives in the Denver area Wistman, who met with McMurry on Thursday, said he told McMurry to begin making monthly payments in the $200, beginning in December. McMurry could not be reached for comment yesterday. At that rate, it would be more than 100 years before the debt would be repaid. Wistman said that before a detailed payment schedule would be set, McMurry had to assess his financial situation. McMurry will submit an accounting of his expenses in two weeks. McMurray said he had never been confronted about making restitution. "He didn't understand the consequences of not making the payments," he said. "If his parole is dropped, all the man he's spent on the street doesn't listen to him." CHRIS Paul Goodman/KANSAN If his parole was revoked, McMurry would have to serve an additional 17 months in prison before an would be eligible for another parole. Wistman said. "If he had made some kind of payments it would have shown that he was making an effort," he said. "I don't show well on his record." Tim Boller, chairman of the Transportation Board and Lawrence senior, said he was pleased with the new parole arrangement. "It's only right that he repays the money." Boller said. "I'd certainly be happy with any money that is recovered." He said McMurry's payments would be deposited in a general fund that would be used for future needs. Wistman said, "Unless he hits the lottery, he's not going to pay this off before his parole runs out." Mary Prewitt, University assistant general counsel, said KU knew that McMurray would not pay off the debt before his parole obligation expired. He said the university filed a civil lawsuit against McMurray to recover the stolen money She said a Douglas County District Court judge awarded the University the same amount that McMurry was ordered to pay in the criminal case. "The suit was filmed because it gives us tools that are not present in a criminal case," Prewitt says. "They're not going to keep him on parole." The civil case keeps the judgment alive for a longer period of time." Prewitt said that after the McMurry's parole obligation ended, the University would seek a court order to garrison his wages until the debt was remand. Romantics The University had sought other avenues to recover some of the equipment. "We examined the possibility of obtaining the land," she said. "We decided that it would cost more to obtain the land, so we would have received in a judgment." In August 1982 McMurry bought two pieces of real estate in Lawrence that were worth about $100,000, according to Douglas County records. She also said that declaring bankruptcy would not absolve McMurry of his obligation to the University. "Money obtained through fraud cannot be discharged by bankruptcy proceedings," she said. Prewitt said that the University knew about the land but said that it was heavily mortgaged. Wally Palmer, the lead singer of The Romantics, belts out "One in a Million." The band performed Saturday night in Hoch Auditorium before about 2,300 fans. See review, back page. Romantic evening Clouds delay view of comet By John Williams Of the Kansan staff The weekend's cold, cloudy weather not only put a damper on homecoming spirit, but also delayed the witnessing of an event Lawrence residents and KU students have been hearing — the return of Halley's comet. have been at the Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, atop Lindley Hall, Friday and Saturday nights, if weather had permitted, Mara Whitacre, president of the Astronomy Associates of Lawrence, said yesterday. Observation of the comet was to late just in case the weather did not cooperate." "Sure, I was disappointed because we could not see the comet Friday night or last night," she said. "But we planned on four nights to observe The weather didn't cooperate as Lawrence received its first real taste of winter this weekend. Saturday's temperature plummeted almost 30 degrees in 12 hours, the National Weather Service said yesterday. A high of 65 degrees was reported See WEATHER, p. 6, col. 1 Planes fall on homes after crash The Associated Press CLIFFIS D Park, N J. — Two private planes crashed and plunged into the New York suburbs yester- decades of residential buildings and killing all inland Authorities said the death toll might rise above 20 once the charred homes were searched. Two people were found dead in a light propeller plane that crashed in nearby Fairview. But the greatest casualties were feared here, where a three-engine jet belonging to Nabisco Brands Inc. slammed into two two-story buildings, setting those structures and three adjacent buildings afire. At least two people were aboard the Nabscio jet. Witnesses said the planes "went down like falling stars." Donna LaSalle, 19, of nearby North Bergen, said she saw the collision from a shopping center. "A small plane was in front, going slow, then all of a sudden a very big plane going fast came up behind it. The pilot had dashed into the small one," she said. At least eight people injured on the ground were treated at hospitals after the accident, which occurred in clear weather shortly after 5 p.m. in northern New Jersey across the Hudson River from Manhattan. Authorities said transcripts of radio conversations showed the pilots were aware of each other. "As soon as the (jet) hit, two buildings almost immediately and simultaneously were demolished and burned, and the fire immediately began," said Capt. Tom Tipper of the nearby Fort Lee police department. "As far as victims go, there is no one alive in any of those buildings," said Pierson. He estimated the five buildings housed as many as 90 families, but said it was not known how many people were in the homes. The planes knocked down power lines, leaving more than 1,400 homes without power in the two communities. The pilots of the Nabisco jet, capable of carrying 12 passengers, were presumed dead, although their bodies had not been found, said State Police Sgt. Tom Dombroski. New York City police sent helicopters to illuminate the crash area, and hundreds of onlookers crowded streets in the two densely populated suburbs. Police cordoned See PLANES, p. 5, col. 6 Professor of business dead at 68 By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff Harold Krogh, professor of business for 31 years, died Saturday evening at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, a hospital spokesman said yesterday. Mr. Krogh, 68, suffered an apparent heart attack Saturday evening while attending a performance of "Twelfth Night" at the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall with his wife, Bess, and several friends. Mr. Krogh is survived by his wife, Bess, of the home; and three children, Richard, 2405 Sequila Lamar, Linda, Nev.; and Laurie, San Francisco. His son said that of his father's many qualities, he best remembered the fact that "He could remember things like the score of a football game from 1929," Krogh said. "He could tell you who scored what and how they did." Friends and family remember Mr. Krogh as a caring, dedicated and sincere person. Services for Mr. Krogh are pending with Rumsey Funeral Home, 601 Indie Dr. David Shulenburger, associate dean of business, said Mr. Krogh was a sincere and dedicated person with experience moved around insurance and finance. Shulenburger characterized Saturday as "one of the best worst days." See KROGH, p. 6, col. 3 Loren Crasa UDK Helping hand Group caring for AIDS patients This is the first in a two-part series dealing with AIDS in northeastern Kansas. The series coincides with the showing at 8 tonight of "An Early Frost," an NBC made-for-television movie portraying the effects of the deadly disease on a man and his family. By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff "I have AIDS." Three simple words. One com plicated, staggering thought. pincated, staggering though A fatal fact That fact has stricken more than 14,000 people nationwide, and more than half have died. AIDS, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, shatters lives, alienating many of its victims from jobs, family and friends. When they most need support, many of these people are affected by the illness too busy or too frightened to help. A group in Topeka is trying to offer that support by finding lifelong buddies for people who may not have a lot of life left. The Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, has reported 12 AIDS cases in Kansas. The Kansas Department has put the number closer to 40. Although the numbers haven't climbed to the heights reached in many states, they are rising rapidly. Why? Because it is easier for what they think is the inevitable. The Topeka AIDS Project is one such group. It has established the "Buddy" system, modeled after the Shanti program in San Francisco. which matches people with AIDS or AIDS-related complex with a network of supporters. People with ARC, which has also been called "pre-AIDS," test positive for the AIDS virus and exhibit the same symptoms as AIDS victims — night sweats, fatigue, chronic diarrhea, weight loss and swollen lymph nodes. But they do not get the infections or cancers that accompany AIDS. Estimates on how many people with ARC eventually develop AIDS range from 10 percent to 25 percent. A co-founder of TAP recently said the Buddy program was established as a system to provide emotional and support to people who have AIDS or ARC "We have now trained 23 volunteers who will serve not only as Buddies, but also as cleaning teams, clerical workers, administrative helpers and in other capacities," said Max, the co-founder, who asked that his last name not be used. The definition may sound simple; the project is not. The services range from grocery shopping to providing an outlet for new and sometimes frightening emotions. Jeff said he had received excellent support from his friends and family. But he said they often didn't have the J. Hillard, the other founder of TAP, said, "As an ex-social worker, I like to say we're providing direct services to people who need them." One man with AIDS, who asked to be identified as Jeff, said, "The Buddy system is, more than anything, emotional support." "I'm so limited in what I can do that I don't really have too much to enjoy," he said. "It makes a big difference being with people, but sometimes I have all day and all night to take care of. time to spend with him. "Sometimes there isn't anybody around." Joe, a volunteer for TAP, who asked that his real name not be used, that's what we there for, and then know that what's we there for. To provide the best service, TAP required all volunteers to complete a 24-hour training course. More than 20 volunteers participated in the training, which was divided into four Saturday sessions. "We're there to offer support — emotional support, mental support." This week, Buddies will begin 10-hour course in home health care, taught by the Shawnee County American Red Cross. But no amount of training can prepare a volunteer completely AIDS has an overall mortality rate of about 40 percent, and the rate increases with time. "We're looking at a disease with a 100-percent mortality rate at about five years," said Suzanne Shaffer, a nurse specialist in the hematology clinic at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. "The patient knows the diagnosis is a death sentence." The Buddy knows, too, and that knowledge can be a heavy burden. "You try to intellectualize it, but of See BUDDIES, p. 5, col. 1 Leading cheerers SINCE 1889 Two from KU are among nation's best cheerleaders. See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, NOV. 11, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 56 (USPS 650-640) TWENTY-FOUR MILES Cold Details page 3. Parole officer says McMurry must pay debt By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff Convicted embezzler Steve McMurry has until the end of January to begin repaying the more than $257,000 he skimmed from the KU bus system, or he may be ordered to return to prison. McMurry's parole officer said Friday. "We'll give him enough rope to hang himself with," said Van Wistman, the parole officer. "If he has not begun to make payments by the end of January, we will initiate action to have his parole reviewed." Under the terms of his parole, which expires in 1988, McMurry was ordered to repay $257,051.17 he embebzd from the University of Chicago to seek psychiatric care. So far, McMurry has repaid $60 of the debt. Mc Murry was the coordinator of the KU on Wheels bus system from 1978 to 1982. He was arrested in September 1982 and charged with five counts of felony theft of property. He was convicted in Douglas County District Court in June 1983 and sentenced to four consecutive and one concurrent two- to five-year prison terms. McMurry was paroled Dec 21, 1984, after serving 17 months in state prison. He moved to Colorado in June. He now lives in the Denver area. Wistman, who meet with McMurray on Thursday, said he told McMurry to begin making monthly payments until $200, beginning in December. McMurry could not be reached for comment yesterday At that rate, it would be more than twice before the debt would be $300. Wistman said that before a detailed payment schedule would be set, McMurry had to assess his financial situation. McMurry will submit an accounting of his expenses in two weeks. McMurray said he had never been confronted about making restitution, Wistman said. "He didn't understand the consequences of not making the changes." Paul Goodman/KANSAN "If his parole is dropped, all the time he's spent on the street doesn't count. He'll go back to square one." If his parole was revoked, Mike would have to serve an ad- ditional 17 years. would be eligible for another parole, Wistman said. "If he had made some kind of payments it would have shown that he was making an effort," he said. "860 doesn't show on his record." Tim Boller, chairman of the Transportation Board and Lawrence senior, said he was pleased with the new parole arrangement. "It's only right that he repays the money." Boller said. "I'd certainly be happy with any money that is recovered." He said McMurry's payments would be deposited in a general fund that could be used for other purposes. Wistman said, "Unless he hits the lottery, he's not going to pay this off before his parole runs out." Mary Prewitt, University assistant general counsel, said KU knew that McMurray would not pay off the debt before his parole obligation expired. The judge filed a civil lawsuit against McMurry to recover the stolen money. She said a Douglas County District Court judge awarded the University the same amount that McMurry was ordered to pay in the criminal case. Romantics "The suit was filed because it gives us tools that are not present in a criminal case." Prewitt said. "They're not going to keep him on paper." The civil case keeps the judgment live for a longer period of time." Prewitt said that after the McMurry's parole obligation ended, the University would seek a court order to garrison his wages until the debt was repaid. The University had sought other avenues to recover some of the embezzled funds. Prewitt said. In August 1982 McMurry bought two pieces of real estate in Lawrence that were worth about $100,000, according to Douglas County records. "We examined the possibility of obtaining the land," she said. "We decided that it would cost more to obtain it than we would have received in a judgment." She also said that declaring bankruptcy would not absolve McMurry of his obligation to the University. "Money obtained through fraud cannot be discharged by bankruptcy." Prewitt said that the University knew about the land but said that it had not. Wally Palmer, the lead singer of The Romantics, belts out "One in a Million." The band performed Saturday night in Hoch Auditorium before about 2,300 fans. See review, back page. Romantic evening Clouds delay view of comet By John Williams Of the Kansan staff The weekend's cold, cloudy weather not only put a damper on homecoming spirit, but also delayed the witnessing of an event Lawrence residents and KU students have been anticipating — the return of Halley's comet. have been at the Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, atop Lindley Hall, Friday and Saturday nights, if weather had permitted, Mara Whitacre, president of the Astronomy Associates of Lawrence, said yesterday. Observation of the comet was to "Sure, I was disappointed because we could not see the comet Friday night or last night," she said. "But we planned on four nights to observe late just in case the weather did not cooperate." The weather didn't cooperate as Lawrence received its first real taste of winter this weekend. Saturday's temperature plummeted almost 30 degrees in 12 hours, the National Weather Service said yesterday. A high of 65 degrees was reported See WEATHER p. 6 col. 1 Planes fall on homes after crash The Associated Press CLIFFSIDE N.J. — Two private planes crashed and plunged into the New York suburbs yesterday, setting residential buildings ablaze. Authorities said the death toll might rise above 20 once the charred homes were searched Two people were found dead in a light propeller plane that crashed in nearby Fairview. But the greatest casualties were feared here, where a three-engine jet belonging to Nabisco Brands Inc. slammed into two twostory apartment buildings, setting those structures and three adjacent buildings afire. At least two people were aboard the Nabisco jet. Witnesses said the planes "went down like falling stars." Donna LaSalle, 19, of nearby North Bergen, said she saw the collision from a shopping center. "A small plane was in front, going slow, then all of a sudden a very big plane going fast came up behind it. The big airplane just smashed into the small one," she said. At least eight people injured on the ground were treated at hospitals after the accident, which occurred in clear weather shortly after 5 p.m. in northern New Jersey across the Hudson River from Manhattan. Authorities said transcripts of radio conversations showed the pilots "As soon as the (jet) hit, two buildings almost immediately and simultaneously were demolished and burned, and the fire immediately raced through the buildings," said Capt. Tom Pierson of the nearby Lee Police department. "As far as victims go, there is no one alive in any of those buildings," said Pierson. He estimated the five buildings housed as many as 90 families, but said it was not known how many people were in the homes. The pilots of the Nabisco jet, capable of carrying 12 passengers, were presumed dead, although their bodies had not been found, said State Police Sgt. Tom Dombroski. The planes knocked down power lines, leaving more than 1,400 homes without power in the two communities. New York City police sent helicopters to illuminate the crash and hundreds of on-lookers crowded street corners. Populated suburban Police cordoned See PLANES, p. 5, col. 6 Professor of business dead at 68 By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff Harold Krogh, professor of business for 31 years, died Saturday evening at Lawrence Memorial hospital spokesman said yesterday. Mr, Krogh, 68, suffered an apparent heart attack Saturday evening while attending a performance of "Twelfth Night" at the Crafton-Preeyer Theatre in Murphy Hall with his wife, Bess, and several friends. Mr. Krogh is survived by his wife, Bess, of the home; and three children, Richard 2405 Sequoia Linda Lindsay Nev.;Nev.; Laurie, San Francisco. His son said that of his father's many qualities, he best remembered him. Services for Mr. Krogh are pending with Mursey Funeral Home, 601 Inverness Ave. Friends and family remember Mr. Krogh as a caring, dedicated and "He could remember things like the score of a football game from 1929, Krogh said. "He could tell you who scored what and how they did it." David Shulenburger, associate dean of business, said Mr. Krogh was a sincere and dedicated person who moved around insurance and finance Shulenburger characterized Saturday as "one of the best worst days." See KROGH, p. 6, col. 3 Lionel Crayer UDK Helping hand Group caring for AIDS patients This is the first in a two-part series dealing with AIDS in northeastern Kansas. The series coincides with the showing at 8 tonight of "An Early Frost," an NBC made-for-television movie portraying the effects of the deadly disease on a man and his family. By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff "I have AIDS." Three simple words. One complicated, staggering thought. priced, staggering though A fatal fact That fact has stricken more than 14,000 people nationwide, and more than half have died AIDS, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, shatters lives, alienating many of its victims from jobs, family and friends. When they most need support, many of these people suffer from the disease if they are too busy or too frightened to help. A group in Topeka is trying to offer that support by finding lifelong buddies for people who may not have a lot of life left. The Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, has reported 12 AIDS cases in Kansas. The Kansas Department has put the number closer to 40 Although the numbers haven't climbed to the heights reached in many states, they are rising rapidly. You can tell because of the implications for what they think is the inevitable The Topeka AIDS Project is one such group. It has established the "Buddy" system, modeled after the Shanti program in San Francisco; which matches people with AIDS or AIDS-related complex with a network of supporters. People with ARC, which has also been called "pre-AIDS," test positive for the AIDS virus and exhibit the same symptoms as AIDS victims — night sweats, fatigue, chronic diarrhea, weight loss and swollen lymph but they do not get the infections or cancers that accompany AIDS. Estimates on how many people with ARC eventually develop AIDS range from 10 percent to 25 percent. A co-founder of TAP recently said the Buddy program was established as a system to provide emotional and physical support to people who have AIDS or ARC "We have now trained 23 volunteers who will serve not only as Buddies, but also as cleaning teams, clerical workers, administrative staff," said Max. The co-founder, who asked that his last name not be used. The definition may sound simple; the project is not. J. Hillard, the other founder of TAP, said, "As an ex-social worker, I like to say we're providing direct services to people who need them." The services range from grocery shopping to providing an outlet for new and sometimes frightening emotions. Jeff said he had received excellent support from his friends and family. But he said they often didn't have the One man with AIDS, who asked to be identified as Jeff, said, "The Buddy system is, more than anything, emotional support." time to spend with him "Sometimes there isn't anybody around." "I'm so limited in what I can do that I don't really have too much to enjoy," he said. "It makes a big difference being with people, but sometimes I have all day and all night to take care of. Joe, a volunteer for TAP, who asked that his real name not be used, that's what we're there for, and then know that's what we're there for. "We're there to offer support — emotional support, mental support." To provide the best service, TAP required all volunteers to complete a 24-hour training course. More than 20 volunteers participated in the training, which was divided into four Saturday sessions. This week, Buddies will begin 10-hour course in home health care, taught by the Shawnee County American Red Cross. But no amount of training can prepare a volunteer completely. AIDS has an overall mortality rate of about 40 percent, and the rate increase is "We're looking at a disease with a 100-percent mortality rate at about five years," said Suzanne Shaffer, a nurse specialist in the hematology clinic at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. "The patient knows the diagnosis is a death sentence." The Buddy knows, too, and that knowledge can be a heavy burden. knowledge can be a heavy burden. "You try to intellectualize it, but of 4 You try to intellectualize it, but of See BUDDIES, p. 5, col. 1 2 --- Nation/World University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 11, 1985 News Briefs Fire guts frat house; no injuries reported BOULDER, Colo. — A suspicious fire yesterday gutted the Chi Psi fraternity house at the University of Colorado, the second fire at the fraternity house this fall and fourth in the area in three months. Firefighters said they did not know what started the fire, but the first three fires, including one at the Chi Pi house Sept. 24, were thought to have been set by arsonists. SALT LAKE CITY — Mormon apostles met in the Salt Lake Temple yesterday in a 140-year-old rite almost certain to result in Era Taft Benson, 86, president of the Council of Twelve Apostles, being the new spiritual leader of 5.8 million church members worldwide. Visit stirs response Residents of the Psi Chi house moved out after the earlier blaze and no one was injured in yesterday's fire. LONDON — British newspapers treated with smugness the excitement sweeping Washington over the visit of Prince Charles and Princess Diana. Mormon rite begins The official announcement of a new Mormon president to replace Spencer Kimball was expected to be made at a news conference today, a church spokesman said. "There is a certain smug satisfaction in watching a country that fought so hard over 200 years ago to rid itself of King George III, now falling at the feet of the young rovers," the Sunday Times said. Thai leader punched BANGKOK, Thailand — A university student punched Prime Minister Prem Tsim sulanlanda yesterday at a sports stadium, giving the Thai leader a bloody nose, police said. Prem had presided over the closing ceremony of Thailand's 13th University Games at Ramkhamhaeng University and was walking to his car when he was attacked. From Kansan wires. ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasser Arafat, responding to criticism that he favored peace with Israel, said in an interview broadcast yesterday that the Palestinian people would "never let the gun fall from their hands." Arafat pledges to continue fighting Israel The Associated Press And in Jordan, King Hussein told a military graduating class that "the Arab flag" soon would fly over Jerusalem. Arafat's statement on Abu Dhabi television followed a declaration he made only last week in which he denounced violence against unarmed civilians anywhere and pledged to punish violators of a PLO commitment against terrorism outside Israeli-occupied territory. The interview with Abu Dhabi television was conducted Friday in Cairo, Egypt. Arafat said in the interview that his earlier Cairo declaration was "a diplomatic riposte to the fierce U.S. and Zionist campaign against the PLO." The declaration was criticized by some Arabs who contended he had dropped the Palestinian armed struggle in favor of peaceful accommodation with Israel. Arafat said the contents of the declaration represented "truthful respect for international legitimacy, which distinguishes between resistance against an enemy and terrorist operations against innocent civilians outside the occupied land." But, he said, Palestinian resistance remained committed to "escalating armed struggle inside the occupied territories." In Amman, Hussein said in a speech that Arabs soon would rule Jerusalem, a city with a population of 400,000. Israel captured the Old City of eastern Jerusalem from Jordan in the 1967 Arab-Israeli War and later annexed it. "It will not be long before the day that the Arab flag will fly over Jerusalem and the voices (from the mosques) will cry 'God is great' and the bells will ring from the churches there." Hussein said yesterday at the Royal Military Academy in the Jordanian capital. The king, in alliance with the PLO, has proposed peace with Israel in exchange for Israel's withdrawal from all lands occupied since the 1967 war. Peace the king said, should be based on "right and justice" and should restore "the occupied territories to their legitimate owners." Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres has expressed willingness to negotiate with Hussein and with Palestinians who renounce violence. But Israel says it will never give up Jerusalem, which is a holy city for Jews, Christians and Moslems alike. Israel also opposes Hussein's call for a United Nations-sponsored peace conference. Gunman seizes plane out of Entebbe airport From Kansan wires KAMPALA, Uganda — A gunman suspected of having ties to an insurgent rebel group yesterday hijacked a Uganda Airlines domestic flight with 49 people aboard and forced it to fly to rebel-controlled territory, officials said. A man saying he represented the National Resistance Army telephoned the British Broadcasting Corp. offices in Nairobi, Kenya, and said the plane was seized by rebels. The caller said the plane was diverted to Kasese in southwestern Uganda, 200 miles from Kampala, because the military government had been using that flight to bring troops to Kampala. The caller said the crew and non-military people would be released unharmed but did not say what *would happen to military men who might be aboard Four West Germans were among the passengers and crew aboard the Fokker Friendship, said Guenter Held, West German ambassador to Uganda. He identified the four as medical personnel working in northwestern Uganda and said he had no other details on the hijacking. The twin-engine turboprop was hijacked shortly after 10 a.m. on a flight from Entebbe airway, 25 miles south of Kampala, to Arua, 200 miles northwest of the capital near the Zaire border, said Paul Ssemogere, Uganda's internal affairs minister. Entebbe airport was the scene of the 1978 rescue by Israeli commandos of an Air France jetliner hijacked by Palestinian guerrillas. The number of hijackers in yesterday's incident was unknown, Sensemegerre said. He said the pilot reported "an armed man" in the cockpit of the aircraft but was unsure whether there were any accomplices in the cabin. There was no further communication with the aircraft after the pilot's brief message and the possibility of more than one hijacker could not be ruled out, he said. The government, he said, suspects that National Resistance Army guerrillas have infiltrated the base. "Obviously, it is a very strong suspicion that it is the work of the NRA. It is just speculation but one cannot rule out that theory," he said in remarks from Nairobio, where peace talks are under way between the rebels and the military government. The government seized power in a July 27 coup that toppled President Milton Obote. The guerrillas refused to lay down their arms after the coup. An NRA spokesman in Narroon samie he had no knowledge of the hijacking. He noted, however, that telephone links to rebel-controlled areas were cut off one week ago. "We have not been able to get in touch with our people inside and have no information on the incident," the spokesman said. A senior government official said the hijackers apparently seized the aircraft thinking two senior military officers were on board. 32 S. Africans start fasting From Kansan wires JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — About 32 political prisoners began a hunger strike in Cape Town's maximum-security Pollsmoor Prison yesterday as police said four people died in the worst antigovernment violence in a week. In another development, education officials said President Pieter Bloetha had agreed to meet university officials today to discuss school boycotts called to protest. South Africa's system of racial segregation The delegation will explain demands by black and mixed-race students for the withdrawal of police and soldiers from segregated townships and for the abolition of segregated education, the officials said. Family and friends told reporters in Cape Town the hunger strikers refused breakfast yesterday to start their campaign. Supporters said the strikers would hold a series of 24-hour fasts. Two white clergymen, the Rev. Robert Petersen and the Rev. Godfrey Kraatz, and about 30 black women were involved in the hunger strike, said spokeswoman Heather Petersen. The hunger strikers are among about 450 people being held without charge under emergency rule provisions invoked in Cape Town last month. The strikers are demanding the release of all emergency-rule detainees, access to lawyers and the release of white trade unionist Shirley Gunn, who is being held under different political laws. In the confrontation between the government and journalists, The Sunday Star said a letter alleging wrongdoing by journalists was "bogus." "Louis Nel, deputy minister of information, waved the letter before a national television audience Wednesday, saying its author had seen a television crew stage a riot. Nel used the contents of the letter to justify the government's Nov. 2 decision to outlaw television crews, still photographers and radio reporters from riot areas. Print journalists must report to police as soon as trouble simmers. Debt limit again haunts Congress rowing limit from $1,823 billion to $2 trillion. For the first time in its history, the government may default on its financial obligations, bouncing millions of federal checks. WASHINGTON — Congress' usual frenzy threatens to become absolute chaos late this week with the simultaneous expiration of the federal debt limit, a stopgap money bill, the 16-cent-a-pack cigarette tax and numerous other laws. Treasury Secretary James Baker warned late last week of "swift and severe repercussions," including higher interest rates, if the United States defaulted on its obligations after Thursday because Congress had failed to raise the national bor- In addition, much of the federal government could be shut down, sending a half-million or more "nonessential" workers home on an unscheduled holiday and closing government offices from Washington to Anchorage. The two problems — a government shutdown and a default — will require separate congressional solutions. The shutdown can be averted if Congress passes a stopgap appropriations bill to finance government agencies past the expiration of the current temporary spending bill, which is midnight Thursday. An appropriations bill gives the government the legal power to spend money, but it needs an increase in the borrowing limit to raise the money to spend since it will have exhausted its financial reserves by Friday. Big Bob's "Used" CARPET DORM ROOMS, APARTMENTS, WHATEVER THE JOB — WHY BUY NEW, WHEN YOU'VE GOT BIG BOB! BRING IN THIS AD FOR AN ADDITIONAL 10% SAVINGS! • Save up to 80% off new. • Yet so many rolls look “like new.” • Every roll twice-cleaned and professionally sanitized. • Hundreds of styles, a rainbow of colors. • FREE doormat just for stopping by. 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KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO-VIDEO shop Monday, Nov. 11. 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 3 News Briefs Sophomore arrested on assault charge A 20-year-old KU sophomore, a walk-on with the KU football team, was arrested early Saturday morning after he allegedly assaulted a police officer at a private club, Lawrence police said yesterday. Timothy M. O'Neal, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., sophomore, was arrested on charges of disorderly conduct, assault on a police officer, resisting arrest and obstruction of the legal process. Police were called to the Jazzaus, 926% Massachusetts St. about 1:40 a.m. Saturday and found the student arguing with a woman, police said. When police attempted to intervene in the dispute, the student allegedly pushed Officer Peggy Cobb. Three officers tried to stop him and, after he allegedly pushed Cobb, this time into a doorway. Police said the student refused to give him his name and resisted their attempts to handoff him. O'Neal also had an outstanding arrest warrant on charges of allowing a person to ride unlawfully, failure to pay costs and contempt of court. Bail was set at $1,750 in connection with the Jazzhaus incident and $35 for the outstanding warrant. Bond for the Jazzahus incident was dropped, however, when Douglas County Sheriff Rex Johnson approved O'Neal's release on his own recognition. O'Neal posted the $35 bond on the warrant charges, and is scheduled to appear at 7:45 a.m. Nov. 19 in Lawrence Municipal Court in connection with the outstanding warrant. He is scheduled to appear at 4 p.m. Nov. 19 in Douglas County District Court in connection with Saturday's arrest. Brent Bahler, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan., said last week that the hearing was set for 2 p.m. Thursday. Tacha hearing set Weather President Reagan nominated Tacha for the lifetime position, which pays $83,200 a year, after endorsements by Dole and Kassebaum. Today will be cloudy with a chance of drizzle, possibly freezing in the morning. The high will be 35 to 40 with northeasterly winds at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be cloudy with a 20 percent chance of light rain. The low will be in the mid- to upper 30s. From staff and wire reports. Correction Because of a reporter's error, a story in the Oct. 23 Kansan misstated facts about the Emergency Service Council. The story reported a decline every year in ESC money from revenue sharing and personal funds. The decline was only this year. The story also said that the council helped 10-25 people a week since 1972, when it was founded. That number is true only for recent years. Alan Haagman/KANSAN TRESPONDING 1 dies, 2 injured in 2-car collision Lawrence firefighters work to help the Douglas County Ambulance Service free two people who were trapped for about an hour in a car after a head-on collision. The driver of the other car involved in the accident, which occurred last night about five miles west of Kasal Drive on Douglas County Road 438, was pronounced dead at the scene. By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff One woman was killed and two other women injured in a two-car accident about 5:30 p.m. yesterday on Douglas County Road 438 about five miles west of Kasao' Drive, a Douglas County Ambulance service spokesman said last night. Kansas highway patrolmen, Douglas County shcriff's officers, Douglas County Ambulance Service personnel and Lawrence firefighters responded to the accident. By 10:30 p.m. yesterday, the Kansas Highway Patrol had not released the victims' names. Roger Lee, Douglas County Ambulance Service spokesman, said two ambulances and a supervisor's van responded to the accident. A third ambulance was called but later canceled when attendants discovered the driver of one car, a brown Ford Mustang with Jefferson County tags, was dead. Lee said. The ambulance attendants, assisted by Lawrence firefighters worked for almost an hour to stabilize the other two patients and remove them from their car, a dark-colored Ford Thunderbird. Lee said the driver of the car was critically injured, but did not know the condition of the passenger. All three women were taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, and one woman was transferred to the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan., about 8:45 p.m. yesterday, he said. Acting Capt. William Stark of Fire Station No. 4 said firefighters used the jaws of life, a hydraulic tool used to remove crushed metal from around accident victims, to remove both victims from the Thunderbird James Chaney, Linwood, said he saw the driver of the Mustang try to pass a pickup truck in front of him. All three vehicles were headed east, he said. Residents sell lawns to game-day parkers "We were coming back from pheasant hunting and the brown car tried to pass my brother," Chaney said. "She must have seen the headlights come over the hill and tried to brake. By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff Some people may need money badly enough to sell the shirts off their backs, but many residents near Memorial Stadium try to scrape up a few extra bucks by selling the ground around their homes on Saturday afternoons. In this dog-eat-dog world, these neighbors wage war against each other before home football games in an attempt to sell their lawns as parking lots. The stiff competition has benefited fans by causing eminent offers of special incentives to lure owners to park in their yards. John Majele, Prairie Village graduate student, said Saturday that he offered friendly workers as well as "primo parking" in front of his house on Illinois Street for $3 to undercut the competition. "You have to smile, be friendly, wave, say hello and not be too push," he said before the KU-University of Colorado homecoming event. "you also have to let him know exactly what he's going by pointing to the house." "The beer makes a big difference," Hamilton said. "They can drink all they want." Tim Hamilton, Wichita sophomore, stood on a curb on 11th Street, just around the corner from Merleian, with a sign telling drivers about his $5 parking places. What the sign didn't say was that free beer was part of his parking package. Hamilton said that once he lured cars into the alley leading to his back yard, the woman next door sometimes stole his customers. "She's taken three already today," he said. "But now she's filled, so we go to our vard." Hamilton said rainy weather didn't matter when it came to parking cars on the lawn. "We never see the owners," he said of his landlords. "There are big mud holes, but they let us keep money, so I guess they don't care." "We're selling spaces for $3 instead of $5 because of the competition and the cold," Isenhour said. "Our parkers with cheaper prices, Vicky Isenhour, Merriam junior, and Tom Soetaart, Shawnee junior, were having a sale on the ground around their house on Illinois Street. Soetaert said he didn't care whether the cars tore up the lawn. "It doesn't matter what the front yard looks like you explain," he said. The fervor of the competition is part of the reason John Bodle, a May KU graduate, decided to offer valet parking on the yards of houses that his father offers for rent near 11th and Maine Street. Bodle earns $100-$250 each game by selling the yards for $5 a parking space. Unlike other lawn parking entrepreneurs, Bodle parks the cars himself because he said he could squeeze up to 50 cars onto the yards and keep the lawn from getting torn up. Besides, he said, customers like it. A couple of hours before game time, parking lawn attendants begin showing up along streets near the stadium. Some, such as Bodle, guard the lawn entrances until the game ends. Others, such as Tom Haensich, wave down cars until they quit coming. Then they go to the game themselves. Haischin, a May KU graduate, said he worked for the first time during the KU-Oklahoma State game helping a friend sell parking places down an alley off 11th Street. His friend, Jim Osborn, 1017 Alabama St., parks about 20 cars on his yard every home game for $5 a spot. Haischin flagged down the cars by waving a sign and by hollering at people as they drove around looking for a place to mark. After stopping a prospective customer, he directed him down an alley where Osborn took his money and showed him where to park. Haenisch tried to accommodate all customers, even assuring one that he could leave at halftime. "Ozzie!" he yelled down the alley. "This guy wants out at half." Student lived life with pride "Sure, we can do that," Haenisch said, turning to a man driving a four-door car and waving him down the alley. By John Williams Of the Kansan staff For those who knew Jeanna Marie Carkoski, only one word fully described her, "superior." Miss Carkoski, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, died at 4 a.m. Saturday at the University of Kansas Medical Center. She suffered severe head injuries after falling from a third-story ledge about 5 p.m. Friday, as she was cleaning a window at the Alpha Phi sorority, 1602 High Drive. Miss Carkoski was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and was transferred to the Med Center by helicopter at about 6:30 p.m. A memorial service, sponsored by the Navy Reserve Officer Training Corps and Alpha Phi, will be conducted at 8 p.m. today in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union A rosary will be given at 7:30 p.m. today, and the funeral will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Church of St. Pius X. Omaha. Miss Carkoski was born June 11, 1966. She is survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene T. Carkoski, Omaha; two sisters, Becky and Michelle, of the home; a brother, Thomas, of the home; a maternal grandmother, Ann Peterson, Minden, Neb.; and a paternal grandmother, Marie Carkoski, Grand Island, Neb. Col. Michael Wuyl, commander of KU Naval ROTC, said that Miss Carkoski, a midshipmen third class and accepted in advanced standings because of her superior academic standing, was a very special person. "Superior might be a good word to assign to her," he said. "She was one of our best people." Miss Carkoski had been active in the Naval ROTC program for two years, Wyly said. Last summer, she had cruised on the U.S.S. Ajax, on which she had sailed to Guam and Hawaii and received a good performance report. Col. Wwyl said Miss Carkoski would receive full military honors at the grave site, including the traditional gun salute and presentation of the U.S. flag to her mother and father. Miss Carkoski, a French and political science major, also was active at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Drive, and at her sorority as the junior Panhellenic Association delegate. Susan Pinches, Lawrence junior, said, "She could always cheer anybody up in a matter of minutes. She seemed like a little girl. She was tiny and had a little girl voice. She was really cute and innocent, but she knew more of what she wanted to do with her life than other people did." Geri Fenley, Troy senior, said, "When she dressed up in her uniform, you could just see in her face how proud she was and you never heard a complaint out of that woman's mouth." Kansan reporter Karen Blakeman contributed information to this story. Of the Kansan staff Two of the best lead KU cheers By Liz Maggard Two KU cheerleaders have been selected by the National Cheerleaders Association to its 1985-86 first team All-American collegiate cheerleading squad, Elaine Brady, spirit squad adviser, said last week. Brady said Friday that the two cheerleaders, Alice Priest, Wichita junior, and Alan Grover, Tahquah, Okla., junior, were among 20 cheerleaders from across the country who had been selected to the first team. Priest and Grover will be honored at the KU-Kentucky basketball game on Dec. 14, she said. Plaques and certificates will be presented to them during halftime ceremonies. The two KU cheerleaders were selected from more than 2,000 cheerleaders, representing more than 306 universities and colleges, who participated in the organization's 1985 All-College Cheerleader clinics, Brady said. Grover said he was shocked at being selected. "I're not so shucked that I can't be so incredible," he said. "I didn't expect it at all. "I can't believe that Alan Grover from Tahlequah, U.S.A., actually did it." Priest said she thought it was an honor to be selected. "It's great," she said. "I'm really excited." The only other Big Eight Conference university represented on the first team squad is Oklahoma State University. Three cheerleaders from OSU were selected. In a letter informing Brady of the selection, Van Power, the association's executive director of marketing, said the association's All-American selection board "where these students, their technical and physical cheerleading skills, dedication, enthusiasm, and leader ship were decidedly superior." Brady said she thought one reason Priest and Grover were selected was that they were both national gymmasts with outstanding ability. Priest said she had competed in national gymnastics for 13 years and had competed at the "elite" level for two years while participating in a live-in program for 25 gymnasts in Shreveport, La. Grover said his gvmnastic ability was inherited "I've never competed in gymnastics, although I've wanted to," he said. "My father was a gymnasist [for KK]." "All my ability comes from my father and my mother, who also was a gymnast." Priest said being a member of the KU cheerleading squad was fun, but also was a lot of hard work. "In high school, I was a football player, wrestler, and i ran track," he said. "Cheerleading is harder than any other sport I've been involved in. Partner stunts especially take a lot of strength and coordination." Priest said the cheerleading squad currently was preparing for the NCA national championships. Each competing squad will submit a 3½-minute videotape of a cheerleading routine representative of all its cheers, chants and stunts, she said. The cheerleaders have been polishing their routine by practicing three or four hours a day, Priest said. The routine will be videotaped Wednesday night. Davis said NCA officials would screen the videotapes and pick 20 squads to compete at Disney World in Orlando, Fla., in January. The top 10 finalists from that competition will compete on national television. BORDER BANDIDO MONDAY MANIA! ALL YOU CAN EAT TACOS $2.99 Make your own at our taco and salad bar 1528 W.23rd 842-8861 Across from post office 10¢ DRAWS 25¢ DRINKS Tuesday Night GAMMONS SNOWFLAKE 23rd & Ousdahl Southern Hills Mall The Black Student Union general assembly will sponsor a Debate between the "Chrysalis" & "Common Sense" candidates for Student Body President Tonight! 6:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union (please attend) (please attend) 一 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Monday, Nov. 11, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Closed-door politics The Student Senate Elections Committee on Thursday night voted to use Oct. 21 enrollment figures in apportioning Senate seats for the Senate's Nov. 20-21 elections. When it came time to discuss the apportionment issue, the committee went into an executive session and banished all non-committee members, including a Kansan reporter, from the meeting. A meeting that was supposed to be open became closed. But few students will know exactly why The University's Senate Code says groups bound by the code -- including Student Senate and its committees -- must follow the state's open meetings laws. The open meetings laws are supposed to guarantee that representative bodies carry out their business in public, for all to see. Such a body can work behind closed doors only in narrow, specifically defined circumstances. The committee's closed-door session failed to fall under those exemptions. Instead, the committee chose to ignore the Senate Code and conduct an important debate free of scrutiny, both from its opponents and the public. These political high jinks may permit one faction or another to achieve short-term victories. But they also underline the credibility of the committee, its officers and the Senate as a whole. It does so just before an election. In fact, if such undemocratic practices as carrying on debates in secrecy and flouting the Senate's own principles are going to continue, then student voters will be justified in demanding that the culprits be removed from office. Talking to the Soviets As Summit Fever heats up, the rash of recent bizarre incidents in East-West relations and the public posturing of the principal players have overshadowed the really significant news — the United States is talking to the Soviet Union. The two sides still disagree about the number and kind of weapons that should be cut. But at least both are talking about reductions. The negotiators in Geneva can get down to details. The Soviet proposal last month to cut offensive weapons by 50 percent was met by a similar offer from President Reagan. The Soviets even agreed to extend the Geneva talks to consider the U.S. proposal. The trip last week by George Shultz, secretary of state, to Moscow was the first visit by a senior Reagan official to see a living Soviet counterpart — Vice President Bush was always a tad late when he arrived on the funeral circuit. Shultz spent two days with Eduard Shevardnadze, Soviet foreign minister, to discuss possible cultural, educational and commercial exchanges that Reagan and Premier Mikhail Gorbachev can agree on when they meet. But the focus continues to be on arms control. Both sides are realistically skeptical that a comprehensive arms accord will be reached. They also want to have some agreement — no matter how tentative — to show the folks back home after the public relations pomp and puffery fades. Regardless of the outcome, at least the leaders of the world's two most powerful nations will have talked and eaten and maybe even joked around a little together. It's better to disagree face to face than to try to read minds around the world. With mutually assured destruction at the touch of a button, intercontinental misunderstanding could be as deadly as intercontinental missiles. Blanket on the press South Africa's bold attempt to restrict media coverage isn't fooling anyone. But journalists are tougher than that. Those who have covered the South African story have faced danger, death and prison, yet they don't plan to stop. President Pieter Botha may think that throwing a blanket over the press will make South Africa's racist reputation go away. In the past 14 months, more than 800 people have been killed in riots and demonstrations against apartheid, and the press was there to tell the world about these horrors. According to some in South Africa's government, the constant presence of journalists has catalyzed the increased violence. The press didn't make up the deaths or the situations that brought them about, any more than history books invented the Holocaust. Learning about apartheid and the violence it has spawned has prodded other countries to condemn South Africa's practices. Violence has now spread into white areas, and international concern over the instability of the white regime has weakened the economy. The South African government is getting shaken up and it doesn't want the rest of the world to know. Botha's back-door censorship of the press may hush a few voices in his government, but the monumental effort to curb the press will be in vain. Violence over South Africa's legal segregation won't be quelled by a restricted press. Both may think that trying to kill the bearer of bad news may ease the pressure to end apartheid. But the press will still find a way to shine a spotlight on the crimes of apartheid, and Botha's government will be held accountable. Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMille Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR** should be typed, double spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. **GUEST SHOTS** should be typed, double spaced and less than 700 words. The The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 60645, daily during the regular school year, except Saturday, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., 60444 In Douglas Couch's book, $4 for six months plus $12 for six months plus $14 for six months. Student subscriptions cost $3 and are paid through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA6045. In a hurry to read this? Just wait Combine tons of sugar, a load of caffeine and gobs of adrenaline. Toss in a lump of clay and shake it for 20 hours. Don't ever let it rest. This recipe makes one hyperactive, edgy person. They're the ones I can't seem to avoid. Here's another recipe: Take a long line, a phone's busy signal, a scheduled meeting and a pair of uncomfortable shoes. Combine these with the person created from the first recipe and you get a creature who drives me up a wall. The artificial stimulants may not even be necessary for such a character, but I'm one of the many targets for those people who won't stop running. We're caught in a society that demands instant gratification in more ways than I can imagine. We're being pushed off the sidewalks by carriers of the "Now Syndrome." They knock over anyone who slows their pursuit of immediate satisfaction. People often act as if they're living in a continual two-minute warning. The prevalent attitude is "nothing is more important than what I need now and nothing should interfere with my getting it." CITY OF BROOKLYN Rick Zaporowski Staff columnist This need includes the demand for people, services and products. People in Lawrence, for example, are arguing for the right to continue to apply for and buy firearms without buying to wait to use them. Then, an anxious woman could call her husband at his office and make the following request: "Honey, on your way home from work tonight, could you pick up a five-minute Personal Pan Pizza, a box of Minute Rice, some Jiffy Pop popcorn and an It's all part of a speed-hungry trend. People want to pull the trigger on a whim the instant the desire hits them. They want your complete attention upon eye contact and they'll interrupt your most important conversations because they need an answer immediately. labeled this fashionable behavior as assertiveness. I call it impatience and presumption. It's OK to be rude if you're after something you really want. We've This speed craze feeds on itself then spreads to the people who, for example, would rather chew their food 30 times each bite instead of swallowing it whole. What does a working woman do if she is married to a man who wants his dinner on the table between 5:10 and 5:15 p.m. so he can watch the sports at 5:22? She feeds him fast food. Last week, I was sitting in a car at a drive-through window of a fast-food joint and I overheard the woman behind me impatiently ordering. The lady wanted to know whether she could order five salad bars to go because she didn't have time to get them herself. I wanted to grab the microphone and respond to the woman myself. "Ah, sure lady, we'll give you your five salad bars. How many cherry tomatoes do you want on each plate? Now, lady, do you like the crunchy leaves from the inside part of the lettuce head or the greener, more flavorful leaves from the outside? And should I pick the shaved carrots out of our lettuce mixture? Thank you, please drive through." The "Now Syndrome" often keeps me away from cafeteria lines. If it takes me more than 10 seconds in the Wescoe Cafeteria line to decide whether I want Twinkies or Zingers, about five people will cut ahead of me, and in the process I'll be smashed against the Hostess fruit pie rack. Louis Vian JDK I don't blame anyone for wanting to move quickly through a line, wanting to get fast service in a restaurant or wanting to avoid waiting in a dentist's office. Anyone who depends on a tightly scheduled datebook can't wait around for dawdling people. But a fast-approaching appointment is no reason to presume that the streets should clear for your car and that people should immediately cater to your needs or else face being trampled. Let's take a deep breath and quit watching the second hand on the clock. Contrary to popular belief, people have been known to actually see the hour hand move. It doesn't take a quick eye. You just have to be patient. Mailbox On the evening of Nov. 5, we attended a speech by John Law, sponsored by the School of Journalism and the department of political science, with the intention of learning more about the Israel-Arab conflict. A biased perspective We had hoped to hear an unbiased perspective from someone who was portrayed to be a reputable journalist. Instead we heard very strong opinions that implied an extremely biased view. It's unbelievable that the School of Journalism and the department of political science financed a person who posed one-sided propagandist views that we were not prepared to bear. Karen Megged Lawrence junior Laurie Weber Chicago junior The wrong address I'm confused about Myra Hinman's express mail letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee opposing the nomination of vice chancellor Deanell Tacha as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals. Since when does someone who is complaining about civil rights violations and sex discrimination write to Sen. Strom Thurmond? His chairmanship of the Judiciary Committee aside, how can Professor Hinman (or her counsel) be sure that the good senator from South Carolina won't accept the accusations as a recommendation? Steve Linscheid Verbatim Lawrence third-year law student Held accountable Student coordinates class The University of Kansas differs from many universities in that it employs undergraduates as teaching assistants, or TAs. L.J. Buckner, Topeka senior, has been a TA for Arthur Thomas, the Arthur Young distinguished professor of business, since his junior year at KU. He is the TA coordinator for BUS 240, Financial Accounting I. He talked recently with Kathy Flanders, staff columnist, about teaching classes as an undergraduate. How long have you been a TA? BUCKNER: This is my third semester. I'll do it next semester, too. I've heard BUS 240 is one of the largest classes taught in the business school. How large is it? BUCKNER: I was informed by an ex-assistant to the dean of the business school. I talked to him about a stats test, then he called me up in the spring and asked if was interested in being a TA. I said sure. I was a sophomore at the time. BUCKNER: It starts at 300 students in each class, and there are two classes. But about 75 dropped out so far. How did you get the job as an undergraduate? BUCKNER; I don't like to glamorize it. I make sure the handouts get to the proper place. There are tons of them - handouts for every class. I post homework scores. I just make sure the things Professor Thomas wants are getting done. People are supposed to So what are your duties? go through me before talking to him — that's what makes me coordinator rather than just a TA — but it doesn't have to work that way. I also spend five hours a week in the help room in Wescoe. I help students with their homework. I also do teaching recitations on Fridays and attend the lectures. What's the Friday recitation about? BUCKNER: On Friday all the TAS — there are 12, including me— hold recitations that are 50 minutes long. What we do is talk about or do problems on a certain topic. The limit is 27 in each session, but it has gone down to about 23 or 23. That's an average. Is it unusual for an undergraduate to be a TA? Does being a TA make you want to teach when you get out of school? BUCKNER: No, it quells my interest. I wanted to at first, but the monetary rewards are not enough in the real world. BUCKNER: Not really. Before I was a TA, there were TAs as Juniors and there are junior TAs now. What is it like to teach people who are at your own level in school? BUCKNER: One reason our program is so successful is that we don't teach down, we teach with them, because we're at the same level. It was not that long since we, the TAs, were in the same spot, asking for help. The first day of teaching recitation I was nervous for all of five minutes. We're all familiar with the subject. Int R1 Eccl B1 7349 L. J. Buckner So what do you want to be? BUCKNER: I don't know. Rich, famous and important, right? No. I'll start out as a CPA, but I can't know from there. How much time does the job take? BUCKNER: It's budgeted to the University for 16 hours a week. But it varies. It's probably anywhere from 10 to 20 hours a week, depending on how smart I am on getting it done. My disorganization can make it take longer. What are the students' reactions to your not being a grad student? is your not being a grad student? BUCKNER They don't disrespect me — they feel I'm confident in what I'm doing. There haven't been any negative remarks to me because I not a grad student. What we do, we're able to do. we don't have a course grade. We don't have a course support, not just to Professor Thomas, but also to the students. That's basically what matters. o d e s s n r r l u i t Are you working any other jobs? BUCKNER: I have a part-time job in Topeka, and I work every night in Lawrence. It's unique in comparison to other universities. Others have professors or grad students — they don't have students teaching students. It's unique to KU, and it's successful. They learn a heck of a lot of accounting in the semester. We throw it at them and we help them at it. Why was the program developed into what it is today? BUCKNER: On the face of things, the major selling point of some universities is their student to teacher ratio. Our class ratio is 500 to one. So because of that ratio, we developed an adequate support staff of TAs and graders. We have a staff of 18 along with the professor. The way we do things, it's not that important to have a full professor. The people on the staff aren't' people who get C's in accounting — they got A's, and they did well in most of their courses. What's the biggest gratification you receive from the job? BUCKNER: The biggest gratification is having someone come into the help room and come to me with a problem they don't understand. I give them five minutes and they leave the room understanding the problem they had when they came in. I just do the job. I don't like to dramatize what we do. It's setup in a logical fashion and it works. There's not much more to it. 1 Monday, Nov. 11, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Buddies Continued from p.1 course you cannot do that," Joe said. "Part of it is realizing we're going to become close to these patients and become friends with them — some of them we already are friends with. "I just try to remind myself periodically that that will happen. And I try to remind myself that you don't know when it will happen. It could be a long time, it could be soon. Because of that pressure, Max said, not all volunteers want or are suitable to be Buddies. Hillard said, "It can be real intense. Everyone is screened, and some people simply don't have the ability to empathize properly." Max said, "Some people can't handle the idea of death or approaching death. "And you have to realize that we're dealing here with issues of abandonment in a way, because you can form a very close relationship with this person with AIDS, knowing all the time that he's probably going to die and probably going to die within two years or less." Volunteers who are not Buddies work on fund-raising projects, provide transportation, cook meals and clean homes. The closeness still exists, said Virginia Allen, director of Good AIDS education needed, doctor says By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff No cases of AIDS have been reported in Lawrence, but the community needs to prepare itself, William Wade, a doctor of osteopathy in Topeka, said recently. "There are people there who will be diagnosed within the next 24 months." Wade said. "Education is the best way to allay hysteria. As people become aware, their fears tend to ascend." No formal effort to educate the Lawrence community exists, although a group of residents met recently to discuss forming an AIDS project. "It was a bull session mainly," said Dan Zimmerman, a coordinator of the meeting. "One of the things we need to start doing is getting information together. "But right now we have no notion of what we will do." Lynn Heller, supervisor of Health Education at Watkins Hospital, can answer questions concerning AIDS and provide referrals, said Jim Strolb, Watkins director. Information also is available through groups in other cities and through statewide organizations: The Public Health Service has established a national telephone line that provides a recorded message on AIDS and important developments. Toll free (800) 342-AIDS. The Topeka-Shawnee County Health Department will sponsor a public forum on AIDS at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 20, at the Health Center Auditorium, 1615 W. Eighth St., Topeka. Topics will include transmission of AIDS at risk groups and antibody testing. (913) 233-5141. The Kansas AIDS Network provides information for homosexual communities in Kansas health professionals and other interested groups through seminars and pamphlets. (913) 357-7499 ■ The HTLV-III Information Line, established by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, provides information about AIDS, the HTLV-III antibody test (HTLV-III is the virus thought to cause AIDS) and test site locations. Toll-free (300) 823-0040. Gay Talk, Kansas City, Mo., answers questions and provides referrals. (816) 931-4470. The Gay Rap Telephone Line, Toppea, answers questions and provides referrals. (913) 233-6588, between 9 p.m. and midnight The Topека AIDS Project works with and gives support to people with AIDS and AIDS-related comorbidity. A weekly support group meets at 7:30 p.m. Mondays. (913) 357-4140 the refrigerator — the whole thing " Samaritan, a project similar to TAP that serves metropolitan Kansas City. the refrigerator — the whole thing.” AIDS is a condition characterized by a specific defect in the body’s natural immunity against disease. Because their immune systems are suppressed, AIDS are susceptible to a variety of rare illnesses that a healthy body can easily fight. "In a lot of ways there's nothing more personal than cleaning someone's house," she said. "You can't be emotionally removed from someone whose toilet you're cleaning." And "a lot of cleaning to do, volunteers say." "When I say clean, I don't mean vacuuming and dusting, necessarily," said Judy, a Buddy supervisor who asked that only her first name be used. "Rather, it's the kind of cleaning you do in the kitchen and bathroom with Clorox, and clean out And so Buddies scour and scrub. And they make sure that if they have sore throats or coughs, or even athlete's foot, they stay away. "One thing a person with AIDS must be extremely careful about is getting infected by these OF's, or opportunistic infections." Max said. "And mold in the refrigerator or on food that is aging, or the furry stuff that gets under the shelves or drawers, can be a risk." Fungal infections can be real fatal, to an AIDS patient. Judy The volunteers learned in the training sessions that they were more likely to infect than be infected by a person with AIDS. "As I explain to the nurses," Shaffer said, "even though we're very frightened, perhaps, about our own safety, we probably do present much more of a risk to the patient than he does to us." Because of that, hospitals are working toward the same goal as TAP volunteers — minimizing the time spent in the hospital. "Hospitals are not the safest places in the world because of the volumes of people that come through," Shafer said. "These patients are much safer, as far as acquiring infections, at home." "You want to get the person home, back to his family, his significant others, so that he can live as normal a life as possible." Planes The Buddies do everything possible to accomplish that goal. For exam- Continued from p. Melvin Greyson, a spokesman for the Parippany-based Nabisco, did not know whether anyone other than the two pilots was aboard the jet. He said the plane was was bound from Morristown Airport, about 25 miles away, for Teterboro Airport, about five miles from the crash site. According to transcripts of radio conversations, the pilot of the jet said he saw the Piper Cheroke, and the pilot of the smaller plane said he was clear of the area where the jet was supposed to be, said Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Peter Nelson. off a four-square mile area encom passing both communities. Mary Zakarian, of Fairview, whose home was struck by wreckage, said "I saw light and I thought it was World War III." ple, they try to make everyday tasks simpler. "If a person is trying to stay in the home, sometimes the difference whether they can eat or not might be a microwave oven." Hillard said. More than anything else, support groups such as TAP try to improve the quality of life outside as well as inside the hospital. Allen said, "We're trying. We're making mistakes, but we're done." "People are trying to do something, AIDS isn't the plague." Tomorrow: A profile of two AIDS patients. 49.95 EYEGLASS SALE Choose from any stock frame including plastic or metal frames, and pay only $49.95.The price includes your reading or distance prescription in glass.plastic,or oversized lenses,This ad cannot be used in conjunction with any other optical promotion. Some restrictions do apply. POLLY SCHNEIDER Come in and ask us for details. Offer Expires 11-16-85 HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 XOO Student Groups get discounts at the Kansan! SOPHOMORES! TRY THE BASIC OUTLOOK If you are starting to look at life after college, try our "basic" outlook. Apply for the special Two-Year Army ROTC Program during your sophomore year. Attend a six-week Basic Camp this summer and earn $600. It's tough. But the people who can manage it are the people we want to serve as officers in the active Army or Reserves. Do well at Basic and you can qualify for the Army ROTC Advanced Program in the fall. You'll earn $100 a month for 20 months your last two years in college. And the opportunity for a two-year full tuition scholarship. You also will receive the extra credentials that will distinguish you in whatever career you may choose. Try our "basic" outlook on life. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ON ARMY ROTC CALL OR WRITE PROFESSOR OF MILITARY SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE: 66045 PHONE: (913) 864-3311 ARMY ROTC. THE TWO-YEAR PROGRAM. PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY HOURS HOURS Mon.-Thurs. • 11a.m.-2a.m. Fri.&Sat. • 11a.m.-3a.m. Sunday • 11a.m.-1a.m. --- $1 OFF ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS. DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W.23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY REDLINE AEIP TV30 & KJ FM present fishbone REDLINE AEII TM30 & PEDLINE TV30 KJHK FM91 K REDLINE AEП TV30 & KJNK FM91 present fishbone Tuesday, November 12 look for tickets on campus and the AEП house 1116 Indiana & Cogburn's Cogburns 737 New Hampshire A benefit for The Emergency Service Council fishbone 12 fish bone 1 6 University Daily Kansan From Page One Monday, Nov. 11, 1985 Lawrence businesses hit by armed robbers By a Kansan reporter Two armed robberies occurred in Lawrence on Saturday, Lawrence police said yesterday. At about 3 p.m. Saturday, a man walked into Stalter's Lair Retail Store, 312 N. Third St., and demanded money. The man carried either a .32- or .38-caliber handgun in his left hand, police said. The clerk gave $60 to the man, who was described as white. 19-20 years old and 5 feet, 6 inches tall with brown hair. The second robbery occurred about 10:40 p.m. Saturday at Derby, a ser- lier. vice station at 2330 Iowa St. A man walked up and told the attendant to give him all the money, police said. The attendant said to the man, "I hope you are joking." In response, the man exposed the but of a pistol in his pocket and said, "Don't make me cap you off." The attendant then gave the man $574, and the robber ran away. When the attendant pretended to push an alarm button, the man reached through the window and grabbed him. The Derby attendant described the robber as a black man, 20-23 years old, about 5 feet 5 inches tall and weighing 130-140 pounds. Weather at midnight Friday in Lawrence, but by 1:30 p.m. Saturday, the temperature had dropped to 37 degrees as a cold high-pressure system brought arctic air from Canada. Continued from p. 1 The weather service spokesman said the cold and cloudy conditions, with a chance of freezing drizzle, rain and temperatures ranging from the 20s to mid-30s, should continue until tomorrow night or Wednesday. In conjunction with the cold Canadian air, a low, moist air mass from the Gulf of Mexico had pushed north and rose above the colder air mass, forming the clouds and drizzle — even freezing drizzle in some parts of Kansas, a weather service spokesman said. The sudden low temperatures have brought only traces of snow in Kansas, while Rapid City, S.D., has received 14 inches of snow since Saturday, he said. Light snow was falling in Goodland at 3:30 p.m. yesterday. Comet watchers might get a break, however, as a new front pushes through, bringing clearer skies to the area later this week, he said. "A lot of people have expressed interest in seeing the comet, even though it's not very bright yet," Whitacre said. The comet, which last was seen 76 years ago, isn't yet visible with the naked eye, but is plainly visible using telescopes and binoculars. To make accommodations for better viewing of the comet by the public, Astronomy Associates extended normal observatory hours, 8 p.m. to midnight Friday and Saturday last week and this weekend, Whitacre said. Krogh Continued from p. 1 He said that on Saturday, Mr. Krogh had attended the Homecoming Day parade with his grandchildren, something he had enjoyed immensely. Howard Stettler, professor emeritus of business, said he had known Mr. Krogh since he first came to the University in 1954 as an associate professor of business. "Students had a very high regard for his knowledge and ability." Stetler Stettler said Mr. Krogh was a prominent figure in the insurance industry both in Kansas and nationally "He was sort of Mr. Insurance," he said. Stettler, who was with Mr. Krogh at the performance Saturday night, said Mr. Krogh and his wife enjoyed attending KU theatre productions. Mr. Krogh was the moderator and coordinator of the business school's annual "Insurance Forum." At the event, he presented several classes in insurance and finance. Mr. Krogh came to the University of Kansas in 1954 as an associate professor of business. He became a full member of business administration in 1960. In 1859, Mr. Krogh attended the Harvard Graduate School of Business, among various other prominent graduate schools. Before coming to KU, Mr. Krogh was an assistant professor of finance at Drake University from 1948 to 1975 and then became professor of finance at Drakes in 1964. Mr. Krogh was a decorated World War II veteran and a retired lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army Reserves. San Francisco 49ers vs. Denver Broncos on "Our NEW big screen TV" TUESDAY DIME DRAWS 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL SPECIAL LARGE 2 Topping Pizza $4.99 Dine In Only Special Wed. Special: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over,300 clubs 843-0541 KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 25 $ ^c $ DRAWS 11 a.m.-Midnight NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH CHECKERS PIZZA Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. 2214 Yale 841-8010 Specials yello sub DELIVERS 841-3268 Hamburger Chips Cookies (1 pkg.) 16 oz. Drink This Week's Specials Tuesday Fridav Wednesday Taco Salad 16 oz. Drink $2.05 Tuesday Pizza Pocket French Fries 16 oz. Drink $1.95 Thursday Monday Chicken Fried Steak Sandwich Onion Rings 16 oz. Drink $2.40 $2.00 THE KANSAS UNION HAWK'S NEST 9-3:30 Level 2 Chinese Plate Egg Roll Fried Rice 16 oz. Drink $1.65 WE DO THE COOKIN' AND DELIVERIN' 842-0600 PIZZA SHOPPE DON'T JUST TAKE HISTORY. MAKE HISTORY. Be the generation to abolish nuclear weapons everywhere. Join The Great Peace March. No one under the age of 30 has ever lived free from the threat of nuclear war. Millions believe that they will die in a nuclear war within the next ten years. There comes a time in history when young people must take a stand and become the conscience of the nation. Students can make the difference. On March 1st, 1986, you can take a stand by being one of five thousand people who will leave schools, homes, jobs, and families to walk from Los Angeles to Washington. D.C. We will walk 15 miles a day, 255 days, 3,235 miles. Our one goal: nuclear disarmament. Nothing less. We need you to make it happen. We need you to create a citizens movement so massive that world leaders will have no choice but to abolish nuclear weapons. If you're eighteen or over, in good physical condition, and ready to devote nearly a year of your life to peace, then step forward. Help turn hope into history. Look for the Great Peace March representative on campus today. The Great Peace March YES! Card Yes! I want to march. Send me an application. Yes! I want to get academic credit for marching. Send me information. Yes! Endorsed is my contribution of: $100 $50 $25 Other $ Yes! I want to help. Contact me. Address Daytime phone ( ) ___ Evening phone ( ) ___ Campus Mail to PRO-PRO & Office Suite 203, Los Angeles, CA 90048 (905) 653-6243. Please make checks payable to PRO-PRO. Your contributions are tax deductible THE GREAT PEACE MARCH Step Forward. 1 Monday, Nov. 11, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 Ched DeShazo/KANSAN THE NATIONAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES Cynthia Trabach, Lawrence graduate student, helps her daughter, Shawna, out of a carriage at 11th and Massachusetts streets. The $5 rides were offered yesterday by Mel Garrett Jr., Kansas City, Mo., driver and owner of the carriage. Carriage attracts attention When Mel Garrett Jr's children were young, he to give to them rides on Shetland ponies. Now that his children are grown, he dons a black top hat and cape and gives rides to strangers in a replica 17th-century horse-drawn carriage By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff Garrett let his horses clip-clip through downtown Lawrence yesterday, pulling his carriage filled with smiling children and adults, as a promotion for business in the downtown area. "It was really fun," said Peggy Johnson, Route 6, after she and her two children, Kristy, 5, and Scott, 4 climbed down from the carriage. "You get to see everybody and everybody waves." The 15-minute carriage rides, which began at Watkin Park, 11th and Massachusetts streets, were sponsored by the Downtown Lawrence Association to attract shoppers to the area and to encourage downtown merchants to remain open on Sundays, said Susan Cairns, DLA president and owner of the Yarn Barn, 918 Massachusetts St. "We are trying to encourage Thunder and Apollo, the two horses pulling the carriage, picked up their passengers at the park and carried them west on 11th Street, north on Vermont Street, east on Seventh Street and south on Massachusetts Street, dropping them off where they started. Unless, of course, they wanted to be dropped off somewhere else. For $5, as many as four people could go for a ride, complete with hot apple cider served at the park and wool blankets provided in the carriage. Megan Hughes, Lawrence freshman, sold tickets for the rides. She said that sometimes people didn't complete their rides. businesses to stay open on Sundays," Cairns said. "This is a fun way to promote downtown and to give families and/or dates something different to do." The carriage will be downtown again Nov. 17 and Dec. 1 and 15 to cart passengers from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Cairns said that Thursday nights also might be added to the schedule "There were two ladies who wanted a ride to work, so she dropped me." waiting list for rides at 3:30 p.m., Cairns said she was disappointed at the number of people who had shown up. "I was a little disappointed at the turnout," she said. "But you expect that with something that's just starting. Everybody waves at the carriage, so at least they're taking notice." Calira said the idea of giving carriage rides in Lawrence was an off-shoot from the carriage rides that were given on the County Club Plaza, Kansas City, Mo. "We have just one (carriage)," she said. "If it picks up, we might consider getting more than one next year." Although there was a 30-minute Garrett said that although he had not kept track of how many rides he had given, he thought business was all right for the first day. He has been using his horses and carriage for 16 years at weddings, anniversaries, parades and parties, but said it was only a bobbie for him. "In the 1800s, this was our forefathers' transportation to and from where they wanted to go," he said, patting the side of his maroon, gold and black carriage. "Rich folks used this type of deal. Fraternity celebrates last payment in fiery fashion Kevin Kombrink, president of the ATO Building Corp., proudly held up the flaming mortgage as it lit the ATO living room. About 150 alumni and relatives cheered and applauded. The mortgage curled and blackened. Kombrink dropped the ashes in a tin tray. ATO made its final payment on the $180,000 By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff Alpha Tau Omega fraternity saw its debt go up in smoke Saturday morning. mortgage from 1965 on Oct. 1. The fraternity borrowed the money from its national fraternity organization to build a wing to its house at 1537 Tennessee SL. to double its capacity to 96 residents. "It's nice to own your own house," Kombrink said. "We're free and clean. It's a real town." "Now we can channel funds in the direction of renovating the house." David Hoees, ATO president, said the survival of the house had been in doubt in the early 1970s. At that time, fraternity living was unpopular and the house had difficulties making its payments. "The house almost went under." Hosee said. "They were down to 55 people living here. But then they got a very good group of people and managed to turn it around. "After that, there haven't been any problems." There aren't many fraternities that still have mortgages to pay, Hoose said. They have either kept the same houses or moved to other houses when the demand increased. ATO had the opportunity to build the southern wing when a house next door burned down. Konbrink said KU's chancellor in 1965. Clark Wescoe, who is an ATO alumnus, helped to obtain the mortgage. "The chancellor wanted the biggest and the best for his old fraternity." Kombrink said. "ATO here at KU is very large. The number of members who live in the house make it one of the five largest fraternities in the country, he said. Although the yearly mortgage payments of $40,000 have, come exclusively from the residents, they should not expect a break on their rent now, Kombrink said. The excess money now will be used for a renovation of the house. The house was built in 1940. The house structure is sound, Kombrink said, but ATO plans to renovate the inside in three or four years. "We want to take the walls down and redesign the whole house inside to make more efficient use of the house," he said. Kombrink said he hadn't decided what to do with the ashes of the mortgage. JUNKYARD'S JYM End of Semester Special Join Junkyard's Jym 8 Weeks only $35.00 Nov. 1-Jan. 1 535 Gateway Dr. 842-4966 KANSAS' FREEWAY SINGLES CLUB OFFERS A SMOOTH WAY TO GET YOUR LOVE LIFE IN GEAR Surely it happened to you, and you've seen it happen to others. You're driving down the street at rush hour and in the lane next to you sits that speeding car. The rest of the way down the street, you make dam sure that person doesn't leave your eyesight and you even try to navigate your way into a position where you can pull alongside that car at the next light. You exchange a few innocent glances and then ... ZOOM!¹ the person turns left never to be seen again. "That's what happened to a California woman who saw her 'Prince Charming' disappear forever in a yellow Cadillac several years ago. I tat woman, Ruth Gulloude, whom she called on she called the Freeway Singles Club, an organization whose single members after numbered stickers on the backs of their cars signifying them as single and available." The process is simple enough. To join members pay annual缴. That entitles them to a numbered decal that is attached to the rear window of the car. Now a national organiza- tion to communicate with out the United States have the member numb- viation on the deck. The way Singles Club of Kans- sas is 'KS'. When a member is spotted by an interested member, the spotter jumps down the number and mails a letter with that number on the outside of the envelope to the Freeway Singles Club. The Club takes the number and matches it with the address of the person owning that number and mails the letter sent by the spotter. To get things rolling in the Lawrence area we are offering regular $35 memberships for only $5 to the first 50 applicants. 图 PSC KS250 MASTERING CENTRE BROADWAY, N.Y.C. 10019 FSC KS250 Freeway Singles Club P.O. Box 3652 Wichita, KS 67201 (316) 264-3742 For more information contact: Freeway Singles Club P.O. Box 3652 Wichita, KS 67201 (316) 264-3742 Kansas University Representatives needed Kansas University Representatives needed. JOIN US AND HAVE FUN! DJ. Special Performances Middle Eastern & Malaysian Dinner Belly Dancer JOIN US AND HAVE FUN! D.J. Special Performances Middle Eastern & Malaysian Dinner Belly Dancer International Club invites you to a Semi-formal Dance Saturday, Nov. 16 8 p.m.—1:30 a.m. at the Elks Club, Lodge Room 3705 W. 23rd Street Tickets sold at the SUA Office $3 members $4 non-members $5 at the door Pd. for by the Student Activity Fee CLONE SALE REPRINTS FROM COLOR NEGATIVES ONLY 15C EACH NOV. 11-15 ONLY KU KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union PIZZA Shoppe and Pub Westridge Shopping Center 6th & Kasold WE DELIVER! 842-0600 MONDAY NIGHT football MONDAYS ONLY! King Size Pizza, 2 teppings and 32 oz. Pepsi— $7 95 plus tax Mention Monday Night Football Special when ordering and receive extra mazarella FREE! PIZZA Shoppe Westridge Shopping Center 6th & Kasold WE DELIVER! 842-0600 MONDAY NIGHT football MONDAYS ONLY! King Size Pizza 2 tappings and 32 oz. Pepsi... Mention Monday Night Football Special when ordering and receive extra mozzarella FREE! MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Come watch the game with Harry! 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Last Chance before the Holidays! 104235 Last Chance before the Holidays! Everyone wants to look their best for those special holiday parties. Call today and get ready for the season of celebrations. Loose 17 to 25 pounds in 6 weeks! Pre-pay and get $25 off. $233.70 6 week fee $25.00 discount $208.70 all you pay! (registration fee for new dieters) 841-DIET Expires November 16, 1985 DIET CENTER 935 Iowa Street Hillcrest Medical Center 8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Monday, Nov. 11, 1985 Protesters to meet in Chicago By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Several KU students will join more than 100 students from other colleges and universities at the Student Conference Against Apartheid and Racism on Nov. 16 and 17 at the University of Chicago. Jane Ungerman, a member of the KU Committee on South Africa, said yesterday that seven or eight KU students probably would attend the conference, sponsored by the Progressive Students Network. "It strengthens us to keep in touch with other activists on other campuses," said Ungerman, Lawrence senior. "It's encouraging to meet other people and exchange ideas." The anti-apartheid movement at the University has grown, Ungerman said, because people are connecting apartheid with racism on campuses and in the country. "They are understanding that until everybody is free to live their lives none of us are really free," she said. "Once you see something is very wrong, you get to a point where you can't sit by and do nothing anymore." Joe Isobaker, coordinator for the Midwest Progressive Student Network, based at the University of Iowa, said yesterday that students at the conference would discuss protests and rallies on campuses last spring and this fall. Members of South Africa liberation movements will speak at the conference. Students from other universities, including Columbia University, which has divested its interests in U.S. companies that do business in South Africa, also will speak at the conference. Isobaker, a University of Iowa senior, said student involvement in the anti-apartheid movements across the country was increasing. "The dramatic growth is an indication of greater things to come," he said. "In terms of the student movement, it's definitely going to continue to grow." "Most have a longer-term vision of social change," he said, "and much more hope for a better world." Isobaker said the core group of students of others was able to follow and actively alive on their campuses shared some characteristics. They understand the connection between Spartaco in South Africa and racism in the United States, he said. KU's anti-aparached movement seems to typical of other state universities, Isobara said. For example, he said, on most campuses the movement became strong last spring with more white students struggling for divestment, while more black students became involved sometime during this semester. At the University of Kansas, about 65 students were arrested during protests in May at Youngberg Hall and Strong Hall. In addition, five students were arrested last Monday after refusing to leave Chancellor Gene A. Budig's suite. Isobaker said 4,000-5,000 students across the country had been arrested during campus protests. Student protests had succeeded in bringing about divestment, be said. The University of Iowa divested most of its stocks in June, Isobaker said. In April, more than 137 University of Iowa students were arrested during protests at the university. However, he said, Iowa didn't divest all of its stocks. In the spring, about 1,200 protesters at Cornell University were arrested in three days, Isobaker said. Five hundred protesters were arrested at the University of Colorado, and more than 150 were arrested at the University of California at Berkeley. Memorial site to be consecrated By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff A brief, informal ceremony today will consecrate the site of a campus Vietnam memorial, which has been in the planning for two years, the chairman of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee said last week. Tom Berger, chairman, said an artist's rendering of the memorial by Doran Abel, Junction City senior and fifth-year architecture student, would be placed at the construction site at 3 p.m. today. "I'm very excited about having the ceremony on Veterans Day," Berger said. "It means we we're moving closer and closer to the memorial. This is a very concrete step toward completion." The memorial will be built at the southeast corner of Memorial Drive and West Campus Road. The site location has undergone several changes in the past two years because of aesthetic and construction conflicts. Berger, a Vietnam veteran, will say a few words to thank people and to consecrate the site. "It will be very short and informal," Berger said. "The public is welcome, and approximately 50 individuals and family donors from all over the nation have been contacted by letter about the ceremony." Berger said a formal dedication ceremony featuring several speakers would be announced before construction of the memorial was completed. He said he hoped construction would begin as soon as possible so the memorial could be dedicated this spring. "I don't know how long construction will take," Berger said. Greg Wade, a landscape architect for the University of Kansas, said he was waiting to see what the artist's rendering looked like to design the detailed construction plans. Wade completed the site plan design of the existing conditions in October. Berger said the main element of the memorial would be a 5-foot, 1-shaped wall made of cottonwood limestone, indigenous to Kansas. The names of more than 60 KU students killed in the war or listed as missing in action will be cut into the stone. An inscription representative of the honor and sacrifice of the students and some kind of symbolic relief also will be cut into the stone. Youth adds to string show The technical perfection, energy and expressiveness of the Ridge String Quartet's performance yesterday was impressive, audience members said. By Jill White Of the Kansan staff The quartet, the youngest performers in this semester's Chamber Music Series, played "almost perfect technically," said Stan Shumway, chairman of the department of music. "They play with great precision and expression." Shumway said. "They are exciting and outgoing. You can tell they're worked very hard." Jackie Davis, director of the Concert and Chamber Music series, said it was important to bring "emerging stars" to the series as well as more established groups. “it's important for students to see performers who are just that much better.” Only three years ago the quartet members were students at the Curtis Institute of Music and performing with the New York String Orchestra under the direction of Alexander Schneider. Schneider is the only surviving member of the famous Budapest String Quartet. Schneider, other professors and judges of competitions that they won encouraged the quartet to become a professional touring group. In 1982, the quartet won the Fischoff Chamber Music competition in South Bend, Ind., and the Coleman Chamber Music competition in Los Angeles. Since then, violinists Krista Bennion and Robert Rinehart, violist AH Ling Neu and cellist Rarmon Bolipata have performed more than 50 concerts each season in cities including New York, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Almost 700 people attended the afternoon concert in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. The quartet opened the concert with Haydn's "String Quartet in G Major, Opus 17, No. 5." Haydn's quartet interweaves uncomplicated themes between the violins and viola and uses the cello as an accompanying bass line. Becky Parks, Lawrence sophomore who plays violin with the University Symphony Orchestra, said, "Technically, I thought they were wonderful. They have so much energy. But they sounded young, like there's some maturity lacking." The second piece, Bartok's "Quartet No. 2, Opus 17," fused Romantic and Impressionistic influences with new rhythmic and harmonic ideas. Special effects such as muted strings and glissando effects added mystery to the somber last movement. David Steele, Salem, Ore., senior, said the quartet's technical perfect tion was made more evident with the Bartok piece. "It's impressive," said Steele, who also plays violin with KU's orchestra. The energy and concentrated effort increased with the closing piece, Beethoven's "String Quartet in E-flat Major, Opus 74." Harmonically simple at the start, the piece grew more complex and ended with a sweeping fortissimum unison passage and two quiet chords. Davis said the quartet's performance was outstanding because it was "highly energetic and very technically accomplished." On Campus The Strat-o-matic Baseball Club will meet at 7 p.m. today in Parlor C of the Kansas Union. KU Sword & Shield will meet at 8 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Union. **Theater media arts and radio TV-film majors will meet at 7 p.m. today in 3 Jolliffe Hall to discuss departmental matters.** comprehensive health associates * free pregnancy tests * outpatient abortion services * alternative counseling * gynecology * contraception Overtimed Park KS 810/335-1400 Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 SAVE AT IMPORTS & DOMESTICS EXOTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 SAVE AT IMPORTS & DOMESTICS EXOTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mass. phone: 843-1151 Kief's is behind the DEL FUEGOS DEL FUEGOS Boston, Mass. DEL FUEGOS CASSETTE Offer Expires: 11-16-85 HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. 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This Includes: - Zenith ZF/148/42 computer - Zenith ZVM/1230 monitor - Box of Disks - Box of Paper includes: - Brother HR-10 Printer - Printer Cable - "Easy" Word Processor from the makers of Wordstar. EZCOMP COMPUTER CENTER HOLIDAY PLAZA (913)841-5715 ZENITH data systems 1 Sports Monday, Nov. 11, 1985 University Daily Kansan 9 News Briefs Colorado dims KU's bowl aspirations Alan Hagman/KANSAN Women's swim team splits meet at SMU The Kansas women's swim team split its meet with Southern Methodist University and Texas A&M, and the men's team lost to both the Aggies and Mustangs Saturday in Dallas. CRUSSMAN 37 Tammy Pease led the women's team with two individual victories. She won the 50-yard freestyle in 24.1 seconds and the 200-yard breaststroke in 2:24.6. She also swifm on the winning 400-yard freestyle relay team. Kansas women defeated the 15th-ranked Aggies 90-42, but fell to the eighth-ranked Mustangs 79-54. The team's men lost to both No. 7 Southern Methodist 72-22, and to No. 15 Texas A&M 52-41. Other winners for the Kansas women's team were Dionne in the 100-yard breaststroke and Spry in the 100-vard freestyle. 'Four kids have told me they're coming, but I'll wait until they sign,' Brown said. Kansas cornerback Danny Crossman looks on as Kansas defenders attempt to pull Colorado back Anthony Weatherspoon to the ground. Weatherspoon gained 65 yards on 16 carries in the Buffaloes' 14-3 victory Saturday in Memorial Stadium. Diver Mike Prangle captured the only first place finish for the men by winning the three-meter event. Chris Cook finished third in both the 200 and 500 yard freestyle and Chris McCool placed second in the '100 freestyle. Carrick DeHart, a 5-foot-3 guard from Santa Monica, Calif., High School, is among the top prospects considering Kansas. DeHart averaged 15 points a game last season for Santa Monica. Signing day nears The early signing period for college basketball begins Wednesday and runs through Nov. 20. Kansas could sign as many as four high school players, head coach Larry Brown said Friday. DeHart's teammate Keith Harris is also considering signing with the Jayhawks. Harris averaged 17 points and 10 rebounds last season. From Kansan wire reports. Kickers face hard times as a group By Chris Lazzarino Sports editor Sports editor At stiff north wind was blowing through Memorial Stadium. The temperature was dropping, and the coldest day of the season was about to turn a bit cooler for the Jawhaws Jeff Johnson stood behind the 30-yard line, preparing himself for a 39-yard field goal attempt. He had already missed a 21-yard attempt in the first quarter, but that was into the wind. Late in the first half he hit a 36-yard, with the wind. Kansas was down by four points, and those four points were the gap the layhawks needed to cross if they wanted to keep alive any realistic hopes of going to a bowl game. Now, with a bit less than five minutes left in the third quarter, he was back in virtually the same position. The Jayhawks hadn't been able to find the end zone for nine straight quarters, so field goals took on that much more importance. Three points would put the Jayhawks one small point away from Colorado, and they could get some momentum for the rest of the game. But the attempt failed. That mystical area between the bars was, once again, penetrable. Kansas head coach Mike Gottfried dropped to his knees. Frustration, frustration, frustration. Kansas was so close. Yet so very far. With 39 seconds left in the quarter, another field goal attempt was at hand. But Johnson was forced to watch Chase Van Dyne, a freshman, take over his high-pressure job. The situation was totally new to Johnson. Against Vanderbilt on Sept. 14, he missed two field goal attempts. His job was put on the line during the next week's practice. If he wanted his job, he would have to win it back The competition lasted throughout the week, and got tighter as the Indiana State game approached. No decision would be made until game time. No one knew whether it would be Johnson, Van Dyne or Mike Goldman. Before the Indiana, State game, Johnson was told he was Kansas' kicker. By the game's end, he had rewarded his coaches for showing their confidence in him with field goals of 53, 52 and 34 yards. There wasn't a happier man in Memorial Stadium. Saturday however, the ax had fallen. Van Dyne was on the field, and Johnson was on the sidelines. And Johnson wasn't the only disappointed kicker. Goldman was hoping for a chance to kick for Kansas, just as he had when Johnson's job was on the line after the Vanderbilt game. But at this moment, Van Dyne was Gottfried's man. Again, the attempt failed. 28 yards, with the wind. Short, wide and just plain bad. Frustration, frustration, frustration. "It was a great snap and a great hold." Van Dyne said. "I just rushed it. Kickers are either heroes or not. It's that simple." Nebraska in Lincoln Kansas ended up losing the game 14-3, and Saturday must face When they aren't heroes, the kickers help each other get back on track. Kicking is an intense individual effort, but the close group becomes even closer when a friend is down. "It is definitely a symbiotic relationship," Goldman said. "We help each other out. When he (Johnson) missed the first field goal, I talked to him. It's not like I'm Mr. Coach, but I just told him that he's a good kicker. I said, 'Man, go out and make the next one.' "It's important for us to help each other out. I just hope that I will get the opportunity to go out and miss one so they can help me." Now it appears that the three will again be competing for the kicking job. By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff Colorado, one of the Big Eight Conference's doormats last season, achieved one of its goals for this season with Saturday's 14-3 win over Kansas in Memorial Stadium — a winning record. The victory ensured the Buffaloes, 1-10 last season, of at least a 6-5 record. Colorado, 6-3 overall and 3-2 in the Big Eight, has games against Oklahoma and Kansas State remaining on its schedule. The loss, Kansas' third straight, dropped the Jayhawks to 5-5 overall and 1-4 in the conference. "We'll accept a bowl bid if you're offering, but we still have two games to play." CU head coach Bill McCartney said. "We have our work cut out for us with Oklahoma coming up." "Our first priority was to have a winning season." Colorado quarterback Mark Hatcher said after the game. The Kansas offense has not scored a touchdown in 11 quarters, dating back to the first quarter of the State game on Oct. 26. But the Jayhawks did have their moments on hawks against Colorado. Kansas quarterback Mike Norseth moved into first place on KU's list for total offence in a season with 2,923 yards. He passed Frank Seurer's previous mark of 2,789 yards set in 1983. Wide receiver Richard Estell broke two pass reception records. He passed Bobby Johnson's record of 58 receptions in a season, set in 1983, with eight catches, which moved his season total to 60. Estell's 107 career receptions also passed Emmett Edwards' mark of 105, set in 1974 Kansas' bowl hopes took a big step backwards with the loss, but Estell said KU's bowl hopes were still alive. "We were very disappointed," Estell said. "It has been a dream of ours since last spring. We've worked so hard for the dream, but the dream over we. We've got two games here and over those, maybe we'll get a bowl bid." The Jayhawks play No. 3 ranked Nebraska next week in Lincoln and Missouri on Nov. 23. The Colorado defense provided all the points it would need just 52 seconds into the game when strong safety Mickey Pruitt intercepted a pass from Norseth and returned 27 yards untouched for the touchdown. Three of those opportunities ended in missed field goals, two from Jeff Johnson and one from Chase Van Dyne. Gottfried's disappointment was obvious when he slumped to his knees after Johnson missed his second field goal. "You can't miss scoring opportunities, but we have to come back," Gottfried said. "We had other chances and just didn't do it." After last year's dismal record, McCartney switched the Colorado offense from a pro-set passing offense to the wishbone attack. The switch made a starting quarterback out of Hatcher. In spring practice, he beat out senior Craig Kennan, who started the final three games last season, because of his ability to run the wishbone offense. Saturday the Colorado wishbone offense was good for 201 yards, 76 yards below its season average. McCarter said much of the credit for the turnaround was given to the wishbone offense. But the defense, which is ranked 17th in the nation, has played a large part in the resurgence of the Buffalooes. 5 field goals power Steelers by Chiefs United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Louis Lipps returned a punt 71 yards for a touchdown and Gary Anderson kicked a club-record five field goals to help lift the Pittsburgh Steelers to a 36-28 victory yesterday over the Kansas City Chiefs. - See NFL roundup p. 11. Lipps, the American Football Conference's leading punt returner, returned six Kansas City punts for 128 yards and caught three passes from David Woodley for 40 yards to help the Steelers reach the .500 mark at 5-5 with their first road victory in five tries this season. Anderson kicked field goals of 31, 31, 27, 36 and 28 yards as the Steelers handed the fading Chief's their sixth consecutive loss. Woodley also threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to John Stallworth and Walter Aerbromcie scored on a 2-yard run. Stallworth finished the game with seven catches for 126 yards. Lipps returned his second punt for a touchdown this season midway through the second quarter to help out Pittsburgh in front for good. Tennis team loses By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas men's tennis team last to Minnesota 3-6 in a dual match Friday in Minneapolis, Minn., in the Jayhawks' last competition of the fall season. Mike Wolf and Larry Pascal won singles matches for the Jayhawks, and Wolf and Michael Center won win doubles. Wolf beat Matt Grace 64, 36. Grace made the quarterfinals of the Volvo All-American tournament in Los Angeles earlier this month, and is the No. 1 player in the Big Ten conference, KU head coach Scott Perelman said yesterday. Pascal beat Sonas Svensson 6-7, 6-4, 6-4, and Wolf and Center beat Grace and Svensson 6-4, 3-6, 6-1. "It was encouraging in a way." Center said yesterday. "They're a top 20 team and we definitely could have won. We lost three really close matches." Center lost in No. 2 singles to Chuck Menzbach 3-6, 67; and Darin Herman lost in the No. 3 spot to Casey Merickel 3-6, 46. In No. 5 singles, Kevin Brady lost 6-7, 6-7 to Matias Ossio, and David Brody lost to David Maassaart 1-6, 2-6 in the No. 6 spot. By Chris Lazzarino Sports editor Hunter sparkles in exhibition game Kansas guard Cedric Hunter is establishing himself as one of Kansas' top basketball players. In fact, head coach Larry Brown took that one step further after the Jayhawks' 83-69 victory Friday night over the Czechoslovakian National Team "His our best defender. He's playing with so much more poise. When he's in the game, you know he is going to give you great effort." "Cedric played great," Brown said. "He's our best player right now, and it's been that way every day in practice." Hunter's shooting was no less than perfect, with six field goals in six at- temps and two free throws in two attempts for 14 points. Brown also praised the play of center Greg Dreiling. Dreiling hit 5-of-6 field goal attempts and was perfect on the free-throw line in two attempts for 12 points. "That's the best Greg has played since practice started," Brown said. "He kind of had a case of the blahs coming right off the World University games. I think he he's starting to play better." Forward Danny Manning led all scorers with 18 points. He was 8-of-12 from the field and 2-of-2 at the freethrow line. He and Czech center Oto Matkey led all players with eight rebounds. Manning had two of the Jayhawks' five offensive rebounds. The Czechoslovakian team had 14 offensive rebounds, and both teams finished with 35 rebounds. Although the Jayhawks had a 60.3 shooting percentage, Brown wasn't pleased with the team's shot selection. International rules allow for a three-point line, which drew a few attempts from the Jayhawks. Kansas officially had three three-point attempts. "I'm glad that's over," Brown said. "I thought we were the European team with our shot selection. When we are shooting outside, it's tough for me to sit there." "It's our first game and it's over. "It's an opportunity to look at our game and see our deficiencies. Our execution wasn't any good and that was a factor in our play. We haven't had an opportunity to work against the zone that much. "I'm glad we don't have to play with the three-point play. Offensively, we start an outside-oriented team, instead of working the ball inside. I don't think we played too well. But that's how we've been practicing, so it doesn't surprise me." Forward Rodney Hull was held out of the game because of missing a weight practice. "Rodney's in the doghouse." Brown said. "He missed a weight workout, but he'll be back. That was it." Sooners rally late By Heather Fritz of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas volleyball team blew a 13-5 lead in the fifth game of its match with Oklahoma Friday night in Robinson Center, losing the deciding game of the match 15-13. Oklahoma rallied from being down two games to one for a 15-6, 8-15, 12-35, 16-14, 15-13 win. The loss drops Kansas to 2-6 in the Big Eight conference. The Sooners are 6-2. Kansas plays another conference match tonight against Iowa State in "If you want to know what happened, I don't know," KU head coach Frankie Albiz said after the loss. "I wish I had an answer for you." ly 15-6, but Kansas came back and won the next two games. In the fourth game, Oklahoma led 14-10, but the Jayhawks rebounded. Kansas pushed the score to 14-15, and Oklahoma finally won 16-14 on its seventh game point. "God, we could have beat them." KUitter Shannon Ridgeway said. "I don't know what happened." Oklahoma won the first game easi- In the deciding game, Kansas moved ahead quickly 13-5, but then the Jayhawks' serve fell apart. "It seems like we're the only team that can be beaten when we're up by eight points," said a tearful Julie Ester after the match. "We still feel like we can beat them." Kansas committed three service errors in a row, and Oklahoma ran off 10 straight points to win the match. Hitter Tammy Hill said, "When a team like Oklahoma gets its moment, it's hard to win. But we really should have beat them." Phi Delts, AGDs are Hill champs By Harlen Makemson of the Kansan sports staff The stands in Memorial Stadium yesterday were empty except for a few parents and two Recreation Services officials who decided to check out seats underneath the press box that even Bob Uecker wouldn't want. There were no bands and no tailgate parties. However, there were four intramural football teams at the stadium playing for rights to become Hill champions, in one of the coldest intramural finals in recent memory, according to Johnny Johnson, graduate assistant in charge of team sports for Recreation Services. Greek teams in both the women's and men's divisions were able to overcome the weather and their opponents yesterday to take Hill championships over their opponents from the independent division. In the men's game, Phi Delta Theta blew open a tight game with 10 quick points in the second half, and went to defeat Mad Hatter 16-3. Phi Delta Theta scored a touchdown on its first possession, but missed the extra point and settled for a 6-10 lead. The score stayed the same until the final play of the first half, when former Kansas kicker Mike Hubach booted a 84-yard field goal for Mad Hatter to cut the score to 6-3. In the women's Hill championship, Alpha Gamma Delta capitalized on penalties and good field position to scope three unanswered touchdowns in the first half, and held on for an 18-0 shutout over Wild Watkins Wenches. Midway through the second half, Phi Delta Theta extended its lead to 9-4 on a 44-yard field goal. On the next play, Phi Delta Theta intercepted a Mad Hatter pass and returned it to the Mad Hatter's 24-yard line. A pass to the 2-yard line set up the final touchdown, a two yard scramble, to make the final score 16-3. "The hill championships were held about three weeks earlier last year," Johnson said. The Hill championship football games, in which the champion from the Greek Trophy tournaments meets the champion from the Independent Trophy tournaments, have been held at Memorial Stadium for at least the past three years, Johnson said. NHL goalie brain dead United Press International STRATFORD, N.J. — Pelle Lindbergh, the All-Star goaltender for the Philadelphia Flyers, was declared brain dead and was not expected to recover after a car crash early yesterday. Edward Viner, the team physician, said Lindbergh, one of the National Hockey League's top goalies, suffered extensive brain and spinal cord injuries and was being kept alive on life-support systems at a Stratford hospital. "I's a tragedy of overwhelming proportions," said team spokesman Rodger Gottlieb. "The team is obviously grief-streaken, as are all of us." 10 University Daily Kansan The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Classified Ads Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 8.25 10-20 3.20 4.25 6.00 9.30 21-25 3.90 4.75 6.75 10.35 For every 5 words add: 304 504 754 1.05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Monday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. Classified Display ... $4.40 www.shop.bestbuy.com Classified Display advertisements can be only one width wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues allowed for display advertisements except in low visibility areas. No coverage. FOUND ADVERTISEMENT until credit has been established. * Tusitions are not provided for classified ar POLICIES - Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. - Deadline is a p.m. - 2 working days prior to publication. - A letter must be submitted to the school office. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Their ads can be placed on person or simply by calling the Kansas business office at 800-4139. - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD ACE count as 3 words * Deduction is 4 m — 2 work one order to m - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to publication of advertisement. HAPPY 22 No. 90 You're Still My No. 1 I Love You Amy - No responsibility is assumed for more than one is correct insertion of any advertisement. PERSONAL to The University Daily Kanan • All advertisements will be required to pay in advance - Blind box all = please add a $4 service charge. • Blinds must accompany all ads made admited Dimwitted, unattractive, dumb freshman valley girl seeks part time pleasure with an indiscriminant student. Call Val at 783-PLAY Happy H22 No. 19 You're Still My No. 1 I Love Somewhat new to the area, certainly new to this and slightly apprehensive. I'm a successful pro-adventurer, tall, nice looking, wavy and eloquent enjoying outdoor activities, travel seeking bright, attractive gentleman whose sensitive and down to earth for companion-beneficiaries. Write to. Book 154, Lawrence. KS 6004 Sleender, mature, affectionate but bsy male students meet mature young lady for companionship and social interaction. Interests include dining, dancing music r i nd nature if you wish affection, painting, sport, please send photo with reply. Reply to Box 471, 119 Flieth University, Daily Kansen. White male, 25, poor complexion, dull personality, skinny and not too bright, seeks wimmione blonde with great looks, great body, family connections, class wardrobe and fantastic personality. Must be articulate. Send sincere reply only to O'Sheyne, Box 14, KI 18 Saunier-Film Hall, University of Kansas. correct insertion of any advertisement * No refund on cancellation of pre-paid classified WORD OF THE WEEK rodomontade (rod uh mote) n. pretentious boasting or bragging; bluster. Brought to you by: The Amoral Minority Winn, attractive female, 20, seeks intelligent, sincere mate, 18-35, law enforcement, Politics. Send resume to Sara Winn, Law Department, 746-953-4000. BUS. PERSONAL YOU ARE NOT ALONE. Leishan/gay peer counselors. For referral call 811-2453 or 869-3611. Sponsored by Headquarters & GLOSK. Funded by Student Senate. 110 - 130 - Weekly IP/Dialing Circumstances! No exceptions. 140 - 150 - Email Addresses! No exceptions. Success. BOF 40C6, EDDG, Woodstock. SKT CULTUR RISING! Skateboards & Accessories QUALITY STUFF ONLY UPTOWN BICYCLES 1337 Mass. 749-0836 Thousands of R & A r Albums—$2 or less. Also罢 items tars. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Quintrils 811 New Hampshire Buy, Sell, or Trade all style music THE FAR SIDE of the day's entrees & soups COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater health area. Call for appointment. 913-345-1400 MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Union's recording CHRISTMAS SPECIALS! 2 FOR 1 memberships -OR- $10 OFF non-member tanning packages (as low as $4 per session) CHRISTMAS SPECIALS! 2 FOR 1 memberships -OR- $10 OFF non-member tanning packages (as low as $4 per session!) offers expire 11/23/85 EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA PHONE 841-6232 EUROPEAN 11 **Country Health** "Halliday Sale 210 Belle Haven Fri Nov. 13-10.44 to 7-9 Sat Nov. 16-10.44" *Sale includes 8 priority collectors items Sat & Sun until 8 p.m. @ nt1185 811 New Hampshire Buy, Sell, or Trade* By GARY LARSON © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate My name's Elmo. Well, it all started rather innocently...Killing socially,y'know..A game warden here,a tourist there...impressing the other guys,y'know..But then I just couldn't stop..Sometimes I'd even Stash an extra one in the crotch of a tree. 11-11 At Maneaters Anonymous BLOOM COUNTY Dinettes, Dinettes, Dinettes! We have over 50 dinettes to choose from. 6 factory set sets with a walnut faux leather type tabletop. 4 chairs made of walnut and rosewood. 2 upholstered cushions. All five pieces only $69. Hurry to Midwinter Water & Waterbed Liquidators. 783-349-2284. Outlets in Kz and Mk and growing. Haircuts 7, perm 80 at Channels, Contact Chris Mon Sat at Mat 847.9000, Walk-ins are Health Insurance for Student. Short-term and long term plans available. Call Dollard Insurance, 780-396-1122. IF HALLEY'S COMET IS GONNA WARN ME ON THE HEAD, I MAY LEAST WISH A MUTILATION! LOOKING ATTRACTIVE DON'T DO IT. ORUS... COSMETIC QUESTION! JUST THINK, HAVE YOU EVER WONDERED? WHAT BRIARMA STEERING WOULD BE WITH A SMALL NOTE? We get your computer's heads on straight. ComputerRepair.AlphaOmegaComputerServices. Rent'19. Color $T $28.80 a month Curtis Mathes, 147 w. Wr 824-837-5311 Mon - Sat 9:30 a.m. FEEL THE FLOW INC. Vitamins, Minerals & More 10-40% lower prices CALL 864-6027 imposter passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course, fone-phone. NEW THE A NOBODY! YES, BUT AN ATTRACTIVE NOBODY. Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, dresses, blouses, pliage cuec, etc. for in-upcoming events. Customizable product available on imprinted specialization plus other services. Our team of talented artists. 2301 W. Jibb (Behind Gebirge) Mismatched mattresses. National bedding manufacturer contacted us to liquidate several loads of mismatched close-out or discontinued mattresses. We offer two twin sets only $89 each piece. Open to the public every day. Midwest Furniture and Watered Liquorators. 789 New Hampton 842-254. Outlets in Modelling and theater portfolio--shooting now Begins in Professionals, call for information CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for Chauffeur Driven LIMOUSINES For Any Occasion. New from California: Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure: 306-542-7942, PO Box 3622, Wichita, Monday & Friday: Monday & Ravensburg KU Hauptserviessen needed. Rent' 19-Color $38.88 a month. Smity's T-shirt 144 W 27th bd 83-7531. Maturity: 9-30 to 9-30. Sun-15 Say it on a shirt, custom milk screen printing, T-shirts and caps Shirtart by Swetl F 76-1611 Thousands of R & R albums—$2 or less. Also collectors items, Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Quartitles 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles. 24 HOURS a DAY • 7 DAYS a WEEK Aerobics w/ Style. Gals and Guys—fun good workouts. Four times weekly—M, W, R, Evenings and Saturday mornings. Enroll two friends - free sessions. Teri 814237 or Alira 8410967 Creative, thinking singles, find kindred apaches through LOVELINE, the directory for educated singles. Write P.O. Box 3602KD, Lawrence, KS 68046. One-case issuership $4.00. Do you want your next party sound system and DJ to be professional? Stage Pro Call 841-1306 StagePro WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from 75%, or surnaming at South Padre Island and Daytona Beach from 989%. Hurry,伞 Sunchase Tours for more information toll free. contact a Sunchase Representative TODAY! count on your winter break counts. count on SUNDAY. 415 N. 2nd MAYE TUTOR: Both tutors holds an M.A. in math from KU, where 802, 1023 and 933 are among the courses he taught. He began tutoring similarly in 1975 and often tutor elementary statistics - $8 per 40 minute session - Bell 843-9023. WEDDINGS - Audio/Video Matters 842-3253 Bike Sale 10% off all Banchi Models Touring, Sport, Racing and All Terrain Bicycles ENTERTAINMENT JEM. Thanks for the wonderful weekend! Forever you and forever h--y, JCH. LOOK OUT LAWRENCE!! THE KU KONNENSE has found a system of dating which works. COMPUTER DATING with a personable touch. THE KU KONNENSE has it!! I find out about the KU KONNENSE's self-addressed stamped envelope to THE KU KONNENSE. 9046 Lawrence, KS 60044 by Berke Breathed Dance to live fiddle music! Jayhawk Oldtime Bassarider Music. Make your new party uni- tude Camera Repair now at One Hour Photo. Southern Hills Malls. 841-7265 Fleeting is believing. Plain Communication open new events, from Sun & Mon to Summer and even evening. Special for Now. NIGHT LIFE Mobile DJ Dance Music. A mixture of New Rock and the classics presented over a 609 watt sound system. When it's time to dance, call NIGHT LIFE 749-4713. A MEYWORK FOR THIS GENERATION IF I'VE NEVER HEARD ONE YOU CAN RENCH ME AT THE "JONN COLLINS PRINT AND BODYWORK CLINIC." Arts and Crafts Fair Lawrence Community Nursery School, 645 Alabama, Sat. Nov. 16 to a.m. — 4 p.m. Professional artists and crafts people, baked goods. The Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1988 Spring Semester Editor and Business Manager positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Tuesday, November 19. Paid Staff Positions Editor, Business Manage Aspenbeer 814. SUA Travel is going to beautiful Aspen Colorado Jan 12 and you can be there. Trip dates are March 3-5 and every day, even lift tickets. Sign up deadline is next week or May 1. Registration at the SUA of Aspen Colorado is free. Hillel כפל 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. Grad Students and Faculty A Wine and Cheese Party cordially invited Wed., Nov. 13, 8 p.m. 2819 Tomahawk Wed., Nov. 13, 8 p.m. for more info call The Hillel Office 864-3948 *PCAROON* · ADPI- Psi P1s Raid Roll, Nov Iv, 5 m2, Party Press afterwards at ADPI host Rent. 19* T. TV $21.88 a month, Smarty TV 14 wd. W 823-7531. Sat. 8:30-9:00. W 14 wd. W 823-7531. Sat. 8:30-9:00. Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight 814.49, Smith's TV 1447 W 1497 621 4632; Mon, Sat. Monday, Wednesday News and Business Staff Positions The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, StauFFER-Flint Hall by p. 5.m., Monday, November 25. 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. Diwali Festival, November 23. - 10 p.m. C庙 School, Indian food, culture and dance program. Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 West 8th. One bedroom furnished, 3 floor. $225 plus utilities Lease through 9/30/18 price could be negotiable 843-3120, 843-1330. 2 Bedroom apartment for rent. Close to campus rent starts at 1-306 or 1-496. Bldk at 719c or Lasa or Campsite A. Call 888-528-2222. Attractive 2 bedroom condominium for rent. 1/4 baath, CA, FP, range, refrigerator, wine- dW, DW bookings, pallet tv, swimming pool, DW lockups, Available Dec. 1. Required. $365, 749-5099. Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at BERKELEY FLATS. Vacations available now and at semester. Plan ahead, lease now for next year. 843-2116. Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Bills 829-4185. Cooperative living lowers your expenses while expanding your mind. Room available at Rainbow House for $10/month. Call 845-9794 after 5 p.m. to become part of our Airbnb environment. For rent. Dread home. Lg. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fenced yard, 4000/month, Water and electric included. Available /18. Call 749-2190 or 1-622-7373, ex27.44(14)8 Furnished rooms from $100 with some utilities paid. Two beds, from Kansas Union. No pets. KU Basketball season ticket for sale. Best offer call 841-7396 Lina. HEATHERWOOD VALLEY. £200 FOIRST MONTH'S RENT. ONE & two bedrooms available beginning at $80/month. All apartments have sufficient parking. Enquiries via e-mail or on hand. Phone 435-4744 for details. Nice Rooms $135.00 Util. Paid. 842-4730 after 5 p.m. Luxury laurelwood 2 bedrooms, 1/2 baths, garage, fireplace, duck, seclusion window. Free parking. Call 800-562-9703. Sublease Affordable studio apartment in good neighborhood. $175 all utilities paid. Available Rooms for rent on the hill /1 mile from Union 895 and 815. Call 841-6465. One Bedroom Apt for sub-base effective Dec. 18 for aging 6-12. Call Shelby at 749-528-3087. Bathroom Apt for aging 6-12. Call Shelby at 749-528-3087. Sulasse at semester, Large, new 2 bedroom, i block from Union. Call 843-3228 ON CAMPUS 2-Br. Apts. for KU students. Jayhawker Towers - For 2, 3 or 4 persons - Individual Contract Option - All Utilities Paid - 10-Month Leases - All Utilities Paid 1 - Limited Access Doors Available - Air Conditioned - Laundry Facilities - Swimming Pool - On Bus Line - Fox Cable TV - Furnished or Unfurnished Now leasing for spring MASTERCAFT AFFAIRS a completely furnished two bedroom apartment available immediately! We also have subluxes on 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms. The rooms are very near KU. Call 1421-1212, 8411- or 7949-295. 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 1 bedroom apts. from $198 some utilities paid downto and downto the University. No peri- ple please. FOR SALE 8402 11 inch touring bike _Low mileage_ Retail $400 - askking $300 - with many cars. 8404-6401 98-128 X 'C INTEGRATION': The most compatible at the lowest price. Fully guaranteed. Systems equipped with disk special; 20 MB internal/1 2/8 inch, just $30, installed and tested (full year guarantee). Baseball cards and sports nastalgia Buy, Sell and Trade $ I D's Baseball cards. Open 10 M-5. M. CARPET 35,000 square yards in a rainbow of colo- mar colors. Used in Carpets. Used Carpets. 728 New Hampshire, 841-Bulldog. CLEARLY Optically clear window plastic. Mylar or Polyethylene $^{10}$ or $^{100}$ wide. Blunt energy Bom Comic Books, Penthouse, pentes, et Max's Comics. Open 1-12 Tue, Fri, Sat & Sun 10-5 8-11 FOR SALE:Sony D-5 Diekman, Brand new, Call 843-9035 for 5 p.m. Fender Jager guitar $175/best offer. Beginner's drum set, some hardware, make offer. 842-6304 STUDENT SEASON BASKETBALL TICKET is reasonable price. Call Adam at 842-9338 For sale. Hotpoint washing machine, 1 year old, excellent condition. $300. for sale. Sony receive, $30 turntable, Sanoya camera, honele speakers, $20 for system, will send. Get a Real Student Sports Basketball Ticket. Best Offer Tailcall! Call 804-1132 or 804-1139. from U ($1 report). Also deliverk tax information to all 1-857-690-687 EXH G9/889 For sale. Yamaha receiver, Sony turntable, KLA speakers, $259; Call 740-219-821. BEAVEY - "Hettlage" , deluxe model, and PEAVEY - "Hettlage" , deluxe model, and each $200 pair OBO. Calt Scell. 664-1121. Honda C-70 Scooter (1883). Great for campus, easy to manage $500 best offer. Mark 844-6251 KWALIFY COMICS—Comic Books, Science Fiction, Holiday play and simulation games IIII IBM PC Jr. 128K monitor, parallel port, internal RAM. This is a real quick and real best. Req: a computer with 4 MB of RAM. Moped: 1840 Honda Spree. Only 900 miles, moving sale, $299. Call 842-3371. Must Sell: Brand new compound box with accessories. $130. Call J. Geseler 847-749. Must sell immediately 1727 Mobile Vts suitable for 15 person, furnished. AC, WD) negotiable. ONKYO STEMEI RECEIVER - 70 waits for stemmei, many features, excellent condition. Call 1-800-553-2691. PASSPORT RADAR DETECTOR. New condition, would sell in best offer, 20% off. Answer answering machine, sunlamp, jewelry, slender sweater, tappet, tamps, bedside bedspread. Call 850-267-1191. Call 850-267-1191. Student basketball ticket. Highest bidder. Call after 6 p.m. today only. 843-841-261 Monday, Nov. 11, 1985 THE MOST COMPATIBLE American PC/XT Computer from $295. Full year warranty. Authorized Dealer, Distributor, Think Micro, Inc. 833-835 Box 395, Lawrence, KS 60044 Tired of looking everywhere for QUALITY TIRES THERES ARE STUDIO RESOURCES at IMPLOR PRESS, all major brands are at our everyday low prices (computers and laptops only) up to $149.00; 810 W. 222d in Pizza Hut 794-5432; Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sense to use them: (1) As study guide. (2) For class. (3) In the book: A History of Western Civilization. Analysis of Western Civilization 'available now at Town Crier, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and Zenith Terminal (moderate & monitor) for off campus hookup to KIU computer systems. Excellent support. Collector Stamps, Mint and used. Canada, U.S. Europe and more. Open 10-5, Sat. Sun, only 11W New Hampshire, Booth 28 (Second Room). Monad Silver 10 SPEED CARD. Nomad Silver MOTORCHEEK 10 SPEED Model. Namad Silver w/ Blue, like new, exceptional value $140 AUTO SALES 1972 Mercury, rmb great, $550 or best offer. Call 841-6288 after 4 p.m. 1977 MG Midget, 842-8352, late evenings VEGA wagon 60,000 miles, AM/FM, snow tires included, 7500 or best offer, bolt 841-3039 1799 Capsper 4 dr. PS, FB, PAIR, 18,000 on rebuilt engine: 15,000 on rebuilt truck (recruits) to perform on right rear quarter but driven right rear quarter but runs well, driven daily $400 or be, b44-7137 1979 Babcock, good condition for sale at a very good price. Call 842-8427. 18 Manda GLAC, 2 door, 1H, speed 5, FWD, rear defender, highway miles 9000 or take over 499 payments. Can't afford both car and school anymore must sell car as soon as possible. 1984 IBM SW310, Low mileage, all electric, custom interior. Beautiful. Call 749-2842. 78 Firebird bm 79 ml, ac amf cass. excellent cond 842-865 Alfa Romeo, 1979 GTV Coupe. Limited edition from the factory. Available in exotic incurious only, please. 605-832-7478. www.alfasport.co.uk 78. Horizon, 64,000 miles 4 cyl. A/C. Auto 4-fwd FWD. Hatchback. AM/FM. Clean body. Economic and dependable car in good condition. 843-3714. For sale. 850 Highway Civic Drive, D2. dr. horse, 3 speed. Bought in 1976, $24,000. Insured, aboard, must sell one, owner $2000, 749-2181. *Great student cat.* **78 Cutlass Salon A-M - P-M** radioface, new radials, great mech. and body design. **79 Virtually** free. **It is True You Can Buy Jeep for $44 through the U.S. government. Get the facts today! call** Is it True You Can Buy Jewels for 444 through the government? Get the facts today* (cash) at http://www.jewelryfor444.com. Computer Literacy Instructional Program (CLIP) booklet sent through campus mail from Hilliard Development Center to Dept. of Human Development Call Card 861-7447, 841-2811, 841-2812. For sale. 28 Hands Civic I500 DX. 2 hatch hatch. 25 Hands Civic I500 DX. 2 hatch hatch. must sell one, $300; $300 F4-21918. LOST/FOUND Found-Calice kitten in the Laundry mat at 9th and Mississippi. Call 811-4001. Lot- Watch Friday Nov. 1 at Violent Femmes concert. Please call 943 8980. Reward 1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large 4-6 affordable and affordable typing, Judy. 842-7945. 1-3 Dependable, accurate, professional, WORKED in schools, libraries, papers, books, etc. Data Word 841-8707. Lost - Keys attached to audeen cure prunet, frye- lout Bound Spence Museum. Call 813-206-984 or 844-689- Lot - Watch. Friday Nov. 1 at Violent Femmes concert. Please call 812-538-583. Reward. 24-Hour Typing All day, all night. Resumes, notes, and reports. Campus best. Bust and fast service. 811-500-7600. A. L.SMITHTYPING/Dissertations, beses_therm tapes. Paper 842-9807 after 5:30 A3 professional typing. Term papers. Thesis of research in computer science. Using IBM Selectric I. Reasonable Price. AAA. TYPEING/942-1942. Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs, Law review Article typed by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in by 6 p.m. out by 10 p.m. same day. A DIFFERENT Service. Tape TRANSCRIPT specially. Experienced. Jennifer Shafer Absolutely LETTER PERFECT Word process software for your PC. Available same day service any 844. Ilium, 843-6818 Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard secretary. SMITH-Corona, pica type Call Names All Kinds of Typing: GOOD IMPRESSIONS Past affordability/spelling/punctuation errors are common in most types of typing. A-Z. Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850. 1-Plus Typing: law papers, resumes, dissertation submissions with memory or 449-877-6, p. 6 - p. 11mn. * AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Process- ing, Typing Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics Wordart Document upgrading - Free estimates 749-1118 DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced TRANSCRIPTION also, standard assessment TESTS. DISSERTATIONS / THESES. LAW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphic. ONE-DAY Service available on shorter paperstubs (up to 30 pages) on Call Kathy, Mommy? (up to 625 pages) Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yr. experience. Phone: 482-3109 after 3:00. Ski: ExeType-Quality for all your typing needs. Disk storage, Quality Call, Mary, 842-7446. PROFESSIONAL typet with 18 years experience. Fast, accurate, and reliable Call Peggy after 5 years of service. QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertation applications, application Spelling corrected Call us: 518-734-2069 TRIGI Wordpressening CONSCIENTIUMS CONVENIENT WILL accept ripliks. Call: 651-783-4290 TYPING PLUS assistance with competition editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes Have M.S. Degree B41-6244. TYPING PLUS Ferm Term papers, theses IBM Correcting Select Tapes to correct spellin. Phone 854-8343, Mrs. Wright. TOP-NDTCProfessional word processing manuscript, reports, theses, letter quality printers. WANTED VANGAN English B.A. Typing or Tutoring, Speaking and grammar corrected, Overnight service call Female Roanate Wanted immediately to share two bedroom apt. Very nicely furnished, have large bathroom with large window conditioning, close to campus and downloft residence,包租1400美元和 half unit 842-7987. 16 per room. Female roommate wanted ASAP to share new 2 story townhouse. All modern conveniences in chair DW, microwave, AC, 1 1/2 baths/2 bedroom 1/4 of rest and utilities,免费用 Call 854-3981 KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS Female roommate for spring semester. 2 bedroom furnished house. $10 plus 1/2 utility. Write ad here: Female recoupled needed for 2nd semester. Spouse loudhouse $145/month per low-unit room. Bachelor's degree required. Wanted: Roommate for spring semester to share 4 bedroom tenement ($120 per month, $850 per week) in the Bronx. Wanted: non-smoking female to submit age morality # 4192-25 / utilization Call 841-648 between ages 30 and 65. --- --- Name ___ Address ___ Dates to run Monday, Nov. 11, 1985 Sports University Daily Kansan 11 Male Roommate Needed. Pets OR $160/mo, plus 1/2 usl. Unit Dec. 1. Call $1.49. Photographically attractive females interested in Lawrence's newest modeling agency. Inquire for training at 841 328 between 6 and 10 p.m. RIDE NEEDED to or from Dallas-Houston area over Thanksgiving 11/22-11/29. Good conducive space; expensive and driving. Call Claire 843-0494. **ROOMMATES FOR TOWNHOUSE/1 bed; 2 bath;** **fireplace. In Traitland. Looking for 1 or 2** **non-moonsets. $150 per month plus 1/3 utilities or less.** 819-2399 Marmiteehouseatfantasticbusiness $153 plus chase to campus, near busine 843-309-8828 Roommate needed immediately to share a nine duplex at Traillidge with fireplace, etc. Have own bedroom (unfurished). $140 (negotiable) plus 1/3 utilities. 841-2602 Tickets to KU vs. Nebraska football game. Call Chad at 864-2670. Two Female roommates for beautiful, renovated 4 Bdroom, house, separate bedrooms, 1025 Ohiio, $175 $200 mo. plus utilities. Call Julie or Marci at 149-1968 WANTED: Roommate for Spring semester. Wonderful 3 Bedroom BedroomaWoodbrook Apt. Close to campus. Cable, A/C, Pool, $15 per month. We're nice, fun people. 842.3625 WANTED: Roommate for spring semester. Wonderful 3 bedroom Meadowbrook apartment Close to campus; A/C, pool. $115 monthly. We’re nice, fun people. $42-265. HELP WANTED Classified Ads Child care center needs full-time, part-time eachers. Call for appt. 749-0295. Executive Coordinator, KU Graduate Student $90.5% Applicant should be knowledgeable of campus, academic programs and Universities; coordination of programs developed by GSC Executive Committee must be KU graduate student $50.0% graduation grade; $50.0% graduate assistance. Salary $50 per month, eligibility for staff tuition and fees rate. Course registration fee is November 11, 8 p.m. Submit resume and names of three references to Rosham Parris; graduate school records from University of Kansas 8643-8944-1012 Fulltime cook for fraternity food. Good salary. n6 saturdays. Call 842-8371 - **re-case Village part-time laundry attendant** *@Piquele Aido* A.M. 7:30 - 10:20, P.M. 10-12 *@Piquele Aido* A.M. 7:30 - 10:20, P.M. 10-12 Wanted—Church Musician Gospel/Conformity/Sacred Student/adult Resellers; call for resume. Work-Study Clerk Typist position available for Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays in the Church Music Department of Oklahoma Union. Application deadline: Friday, November 15; applications available in 403 Kansas City. PRE-MEDICAL SECRETARY - part-time position in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. basic duties include, as required, providing courses of studies in health fields; processing recommendations for students applying to medical and dental schools; reviewing records of students annually for evaluation by the Health Sciences Committee; planning and coordinating activities in analysis of certain medical school statistics. Above all this position requires the ability to work independently with initiative. Flexible hours. Student/nonstudent. Deadline for application is September 15th. Interested students be interested in long-term employment. Resumes required. Contact Cherri Brackey, 1602 Strong, 8:30 AM – 7:30 PM, 12:30 AM – 3:00 MWB and 8:30-12:30 T&R Position Available – Gift Shop Manager, Museum of Natural History. Requires experience in retail sales; inventory and product management; public relations and the public and supervise/ schedule hourly help. Preferred qualifications; merchandising and accounting experience. Need to be enrolled at least 1 university course and have a flexible schedule $325/mo to start 30 weeks. Must possess current application form, contact Mary Slade or Mary Ann Munsch, 602 Dyche, 864-454. Applicant must have equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer. The University of Kansas Budget Office has two position openings for continuous half-time student assistants with possible full-time employment. The position will assist with the process of budget and accounting transfers to the University's budgets. This person will gain a good exposure to fund acquisition processes and will assist with the process of budget and accounting transfers to the University's financial environment. This position requires a minimum of seven hours of accounting. The second position is secretarial and requires a Bachelor's degree and proficiency with word processing and spreadsheet software. Both positions require senior or graduate student status and good written and oral communication skills. This position may be terminated month for half-time appointments. Closing dates are November 15, 2018. Position start dates are feasible. For information call Jana Hinz, Budget Manager, 303-467-1300, Sturgall High. Equal Opportunity Employer. MISCELLANEOUS Quality (kwa!*bee*n) *n.* 1. the degree of excellence of a thing superior to another in higher or similar categories etc. above average *S.* Kinko's kinko's Great great great place 129th & IDAWA 841-8177 804 VERMONT 843-8019 23rd & IOWA 749-5392 kinko's SERVICES OFFERED Haircuts $7, perm $80 at Chanel, Contact Chris Mat Sat at 842-793-7915. Walk-in kits. PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICES Complete resume preparation. All fields. Mailing services available. Call toll free anytime. 1-800-6-CAREER Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716 STADIUM BARBER SHOP. 1033 Massachusetts, all haircuts. No. 460. No appointment necessary HARPER LAWYER 1101 Mass. Suite 201 749-0117 Bucs register win No.1 tentation THEME & THERS OUTLINED-enhanced with SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising, Victor Karl 824-921-8300 BIRTHRIGHT—Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling, 843-4621 United Press International The Philadelphia Eagles recorded a Quick overtime victory while the slow-starting Tampa Bay Buccaneers finally registered their first triumph of the season. Eagles 23, Falcons 17 At Philadelphia, Ron Jaworski hit Mike Hack with a 99-yard touchdown pass 1:49 into overtime yesterday to give the Eagles a 23-17 victory over the Atlanta Falcons. Bucs 16, Cardinals 0 Bengals 27, Browns 10 At Tampa, Fla., rookie Donald Igwebuke kicked three long field goals and the Buccaneers parlayed that with a grudging pass defense to earn their first victory of the season, a 16-0 decision over the injury-ravaged St. Louis Cardinals. At Cincinnati, Boomer Esiason threw for 362 yards and a TD and Cleveland rookie quarterback Bernie Kosar made three critical second-half mistakes, helping Cincinnati, 5-5, to its third straight victory. Cleveland, 4-6, lost its fourth in a row NFL Roundup Bears 24, Lions 3 Fuller, subbing for the injured Jim McMahon, ran for two TDs and the Bears' defense forced four turnovers to keep Chicago, 10-0, undefeated. Detroit, 5-5, fell five games behind the Bears. At Chicago, quarterback Steve Packers 27, Vikings 17 At Minneapolis, Lynn Dickey came off the bench to engineer two fourth-quarter scoring drives and safety Mark Murphy returned an interception 50 yards to rally the Packers, 4-6, over Minnesota, 5-5. The Packers scored three TDs in a span of 4:39 of the final period. Bills 20. Oilers 0 At Foxboro, Mass., Irving Fryer scored on a 77-yard punt return and a 5-yard reception to pace the Patriots, 7-3, to their fifth straight victory. The error-prone Indianapolis Colts fell to 8-7. Patriots 34. Colts 15 At Orchard Park, N.Y., quarte back Bruce Mathison, making his first NFL start, ran for a TD while the Buffalo defense forced six turnovers to 4-6 hush Houston's three-game winning streak. Buffalo improved to 2-8. rushed for two second- half TDs to lift the Giants, 7-3, to their fourth straight victory. The Rams, who lead the NFC West, dropped to 8-2. Cowboys 13, Redskins 7 Seahawks 27, Saints 3 At New Orleans, Curt Warner ran for one TD and defensive end Jacob Green returned an interception 19 yards for a score, lifting the Seahawks. 6-4. The Saints, 3-7, lost their fifth in a row. Chargers 40, Raiders 34 4c Copies At Washington, Tony Dorsett tied a club record with his 76th touchdown and Rafael Septien kicked two field goals to keep Dallas, 7-3, tied with the Giants atop the NFC East. At San Diego, Lionel James raced 14-5ards around right end 3-44 into the playoffs over the Raiders, 5-5, to their first victory over the Raiders, 6-4, in the past eight tries. 101 Dolphins 21, Jets 17 DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER Serving Lawrence & KU Since 1973 At Miami, Mark Duper, who Saturday came off the injured reserve, culminated a splendid return to action by grabbing a 50-yard TD pass to Marino with 41 seconds left, propelling the Dolphins, 6-4, over the Jets, 7-3. Tonight, San Francisco plays the Broncos in Denver. COMPLETE Complete service and parts sales for most foreign cars. 818 Midwest Mass. Business Systems, Inc. 842-4134 - WW * VALO * WV * MO * DATSUN * HONDA * TOYOTA * HONDA * BOSCH BOSCH Automotive Parts VISA Employer ID Number OF IMPORT CAR PARTS 841-4833 1008 E 12th MONDAY SHRIMP SPECIAL All you can eat Boiled Spiced Shrimp $5.95 plus Boiled Spiced Potatoes & tons of garlic bread 6 p.m.-? Reservations accepted Tuesday Special: 10¢ Draws 11 a.m.-3 a.m., $2 cover the the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540 Giants 24, Rams 19 TREAT YOURSELF... QUALITY AUDIO—THE BEST PRICE! While you treat a friend! 2 FOR 1 memberships offer expires 11/23/85 • 8 Suntana Lounges • No Waiting! • Coolest, Fastest, Safest $10 OFF non-member tanning packages (as low as $4 per session!) offer expires 11/23/85 2 FOR 1 memberships offer expires 11/23/85 At East Rutherford, N.J., Joe Mor- EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA * 841-6232 NOW YOU CAN AFFORD THE BEST! State of the Art We stock the entire line DENON DEFINITIVE UNLIMITED DEFINITIVE UNLIMITED DEFINITIVE UNLIMITED CD Player Sale KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO - VIDEO shop The University of Texas Department of Music and Dance presents: KU JAZZ ENSEMBLE 1 and KU JAZZ CHOIR RONALD C. McCURDY DIRECTOR KIM PARK saxophone SOLOIST 8:00 p.m. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1985 CRAFTON-Preyer THEATRE TICKETS ON SALE IN THE MURPHY HALL BOX OFFICE ALL SEATING GENERAL ADMISSION PUBLIC; $6, KU STUDENTS WITH ID $3, SENIOR CITIZENS AND OTHER STUDENTS; $5 FOR RESERVATIONS, CALL 913/864-3982 VISA/MASTERCARD ACCEPTED HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS! 7 V THE PERM THAT OUTSHINES THEM ALL C ELLOPER CELOPERM CURL WITH TRANSLUCENT CELLOPHANE SINE S Get Ready for the Holidays at Joda & Friends Hair Salon 745 N.H. 841-0337 Perm Hair Cut & Condition Now $35.00 thru Nov. with coupon (long hair 5.00 more) ask for Peggy or Nancy MERCEDES BENZIM P Students Always Welcome THE KANSAS UNION PRAIRIE ROOM Level Two THE KANSAS UNION PRAIRIE ROOM Level Two 12 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Monday, Nov. 11, 1985 Romantics rock it up at KU By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Processed, fast-fooD rock 'n' roll came to Hoch Auditorium on Saturday night in the form of The Romantics, and about 2,300 fans ate it up. Similar to what McDonald's and Wendy's have done to hamburgers. The Romantics have smoothed the edges of their musical product to increase their audience. As a result, success has come to the band, whose members are vocalist Wally Palmer, lead guitarist Coz Canler, bass player Mike Skill and drummer David Petratos. The band's 1984 album, "In Heat," went gold and featured the Top 40 hit "Talking in Your Sleep." But success can have its disadvantages. Sometimes a group refines its music to fit the mainstream and loses its roots in the process. This is what is happening to The Romantics, who are based in Detroit. Neither the 1984 album nor their new album, "Rhythm Romance," packs the punch of the band's debut album. The band has added robust guitar sounds, keyboards and a more danceable backbeat to replace the rhythm section of the band's rockabilly that drove the music of their first album Review Donnie and the Rock, a Kansas Cl- ty band, opened for The Romantics with a loud, well-rehearsed, head-banging set of hard rock. The Romantics proved to Saturday night's audience that what is recorded on vinyl isn't concrete. Their 1½-hour concert left those people in the auditorium calling for second helpings of music. The band started the show with a new song, "Let's Get Started," and played only three more songs from their new album, including their single "Mystified." The single "Test of Test" was scratched from the playlist. From the beginning of the show, the crowd didn't need much en- couragement from the band to start a party. After the first song, people got tired of dancing on top of the filmsy show and danced down and danced in the aisles. The band built the rest of the 18-song show on their first and fourth albums, with songs such as "Rock You Up." "One in a Million" and "When I Look in Your Eyes." The group transcended the complacency of their last few albums with a clean, upbeat live performance. Even ear candy such as "Talking in Your Sleep" was enhance- ed by stronger guitar riffs from Palmer and Canler and the Emulator II digital sampler that coded out lyrches that had been recorded on a computer disc within the synthesizer and enhanced. The audience got into the act by clapping their hands and singing along with songs such as "Open Up Your Door," a Beatles/ like song reminiscent of "Twist and Shout." Palmer's voice provides the most unique element of the band. He doesn't sound like most singers and he doesn't have a gimmicky voice. He just sounds natural. When it came time to cook up a climax for the show, the band went to their recipe file and pulled out old, reliable dishes such as "What I Like About You," "'She's Got Everything," and a couple of oftused recipes, "Shake Your Tail Feather" and "Route 66." The crowd went crazy when Canler hit the first chords for "What I Like About You," a song that has been a standard in Lawrence dance clubs for the last few years. Molly Thompson, Omaha freshman, said the band saved its best song, "She's Got Everything," for last. Thompson had never seen the band live before, but was impressed with their performance. 2 floats win first place in parade By a Kansan reporter Two homecoming floats took first place honors Saturday after the Homecoming Day parade down Massachusetts Street. The awards for the best of the 14 floats entered in the contest, titled "Hawks Go Hawaiian," were presented by the Board of Class Officers before kickoff at the football game against the University of Colorado. The float made by the Theta Chi fraternity and the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority took first place in the division for floats with moving parts. In the division for floats without moving parts, Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity and Chi Omega sorority took first place. The float, titled "Sacrifice the Buffaloes," depicted a large Jayhawk sitting on a Hawaiian throne, being fanned by two Golden Buffaloes. At Eric Scheck, Topeka junior and Theta Chi house manager, said his fraternity and the AGDs worked on their float for about two weeks. BUFFS BEACH Anne Hills/KANSAN This float, made by PiKappa Alpha fraternity and Chi Omega sorority, won the award for best float without moving parts in the Homecoming Day parade Saturday down Massachusetts Street. the other end of the float, two baby Jayhawks beat on tom-toms and another Jayhawk sacrificed a third Golden Buffalo in a volcano. Sarah Capek, Lincoln, Neb. senior and homecoming chairman for Chi Omega, said her sorrow and the Pikes took about two weeks to build their float, "Bury the Buffaloes." a small Jayhawk wearing sunglasses. The small Jayhawk was watching a big Jayhawk bury a buffalo in the sand. "We had a lot of participation from both houses," Capek said. "It was a lot of fun." Week Ahead at KU Today Compiled by the office of University relations. Published as a public service by the kansan Nov 11 Promotion/enure deadline. For self- nationism and recommendation of faculty in College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and education, engineering and fine arts schools. Send application to: CAREER DEPARTMENT, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN. Miscommputer workshop "Introduction to WOLDRSTAT 9 in 9 h, Miscommputer Room. Boston, MA" Master classes. Claude Frank, piano all Day. Swarthost Reclaial Hall, Murphy Hall. Also **varsity wrestler** exhibition. Through 25, 10.14. Kansas University gallery. Geronimo luncheon. black aging. Jacob Gordon. African studies study. 11.30. a.m. Alceva R. IIliou Tomorrow Microcomputer workshop 'Intermediate' Course 842-193 for information on Computer Center. Call 864-1292 for information chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee 2.p.m., Woodruff Auditurium, Union. Exxon colloquium "Catholic Social Thought and the American Economy" Robert Shelton, religious studies department 3:30 p.m. International Room, Union KU Vietnam Memorial. Informal ceremony to celebrate site. Plaque to be placed in place 4 p.m. **Physics and astronomy collumn. "Getting a Charge out of Space Flight" Jim Laframboise, author of *Space Jump*. "A concert call. KU Jazz Ensemble I and Vocal Band." KU Jazz, southbound Restrictial Hall Call 864-302-1858, for rehearsal. Nov.12 Hazardous Waste Management Seminar. All day, Audenor Audientium, Union. Seminar is free, but enrollment required. Call 644-386. Classified Senate meeting. 7 p.m., 305 Burge Classified Senate meeting. 7 p.m. 305 Burge Union. - SUA film, "Wuthering Heights" 7:30 p.m. wood pound Auditorium, Uniprt. Philophy department lecture. "Is Morality a Branch of Practical Reason?" Hume's answer. Annie Baker, University of Pittsburgh or Philippe of philosophy, i.p. Council, Room Union. Retires Chab coffee, 10 a.m., Adam Lounge Alameda Center, Music厅 Wednesdav Acadia Amphitheater Center at 14 a.m. Animal timehour for ages 3-10. 10 a.m. Meet in museum hour for ages 10+. Nov. 13 Affirmative action workshop. "Search, Screening and selection." Skip Turner 14, 4, 208. University Forum. *Post-Colonial Southeast Asia.* 11:45 a.m., James Rush, University Field Staff International. Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Broad Ave. Call 843-6833 Art lecture. Manuel Neri, California sculptor, about his work. 2 p.m., Adelson "Marketing Yourself. Resumes and Interviews" 7 p.m., Regional Station, Room, Union English department symposium. "Emily's Symphony," 11:30am, Mt. Hale Yale University, Yale Campus, 402 Westwood. Women's Resource Center workshop. *Marketing Yourself. Resumes and Interviews.* - SUA film, "Last Tango in Paris." 7:30 p.m. p.M. Soundtrack Auditorium, Union. Thursday African Studies "The Haitian Movement, Movement of Haitians in South Africa," University of West Zealand 7:30 p.m. 108 Bishop's Square, University of West Zealand 7:30 p.m. Faculty recital. Faculty Chamber Ensemble 8 p.m. SWairbout Hall Hall Nov. 14 - many azimuth computer workshops. Office of Computer Information Systems at Microsoft Computer Room, Computer Center To Help with Data Processing. Brown Bag Bat TV, Victor Papinki, School of Architecture and Urban Design. Noon. Reception Retiree Club birth party. Program by Chayne Elliott. 3:30 p.m. Summerfield Room, Adams Courtyard. 3:30 p.m. Latin American Solidarity program. Same as the Latin American Socialism Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1984. Psychology colloquium "Loneliness." Warren Jones, University of Tulsa 4. p. 947. MFR RANUFM 92. "The American Past," with Caird Pickett 7 n.m. - SUA film, "Zazie" 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Audruit Union, Insurance Faculty recital. Chuck Berg, saxophone. Ronald McCormick, trumpet 8 a.m. Swarthout Fridav Nov. 15 *SIA Film*, "The Killing Fields" 3:30 p.m. Woolfudd Auditorium, Union. Also at 8 p.m. The Woolfudd Film Festival KANU-FM "02" - Opera is My Hobby" with James Seavey 7.9 Johnson seeks 9 p.m. women and women's dual meet with Southern Illinois University 7 p.m. Johnson Observatory open house. If sky is clear, 8:30 p.m., Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory 6:40 p.m., Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory 7:30 p.m. C concert. Jayhawk Singers. 8 p.m. Big Eight Room. Union Dance contest. The Fanatix. 9 p.m., Burge Union. Viewing of Halley's Comet. If sky is clear, is 10 p.m., t.Memphasis Observatory, 509 Lindley Hall. - "8 UA Films, "Urgent A Music War," "The Song of War," and "D.O.A. Madness, Woodwind Audition." Saturday Nov.16 Volleyball tournament. With universities of Tulsa, Texas-El Paso, Illinois-Chicago and Kan- mond. - Museum of Natural History workshop* *Royal Botanical Garden, Albuquerque, NM* (1:30 p.m.) *Call 864-4173 for information.* KANU-FM 92 "The Music Jazz Show" 9:30 a.m. Volleyball. Big Eagle Conference game with Kansas State University . 7:30 p.m. Allen Field KNUFW C 14 "The Jazz Scene" 9 a.m. Football, KU-Netrabas. 11:40 a.m. Lincoln, Nebraska - Museum of Natural History workshop * Injuries in Danger - Anges 8-dualil 130 p.m. * The Gallery Swimming. Men's and women's dual meet with University of Wyoming and Drury College: 2 p.m.; The float featured a palm tree and Retires Club potluck dinner. Slide show "The Vatican Collections: The Papacy and Art." Edyma Gilbert, department of curriculum and education, 6:30 p.m. Summerfield Room, Alumni Center - SUA film, "Bedazzled." Midnight Woodruff Audition, Union Sunday Nov. 17 Bowling. Men's and women's singles tournament, Jaydoyt, Union. KANU·FM 92 "The KU Concert". 1:30 p.m. Fall concert. Collegegium Music . 2 p.m. trial court, art museum. Bowling. Men's and women's singles tourna- - SIA/Film, "The Times of Harvey Milk"; 2 milk; woodpuff Auditioner, Union also 7-100 SIA/Film. "Night with the 'Hawks,' Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and Williams Funds, sponsors. Scrimmages for men and women's basketball session. 4:30 p.m., Allen Field House Student Recital Student Brass Chamber Ensemble b.m. swt. Swarming Recital Hall THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The next Week Ahead will appear Nov. 18 and cover through Nov. 24. The deadline for submitting entries for next week's calendar has passed. Entries for the Nov. 25-Dec. 1 Week Ahead must be submitted in writing to the office of University relations by 5 p.m. Wednesday. Holidays and semester breaks may alter the schedule. An asterisk indicates an admission charge for an event. 2 PASSPORT PHOTOS Instant Color Attractive Flattering No Appointment Necessary Visa • Immigration Resume • Passport Share Your Memories. Send Snapshots. DOWNTOWN 1107 Massachusetts 843-5435 Phone: 312-391-39 HILLCREST 919 Iracey 843-5668 Phone: 312-391-39 STOP BY TODAY Kodak PAPER ZERCHER PHOTO ALOU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320 PICAFLIC HOME VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd St. Sp. 105 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 842-8177 2 PASSPORT PHOTOS Instant Color Attractive Flattering No Appointment Necessary Visa • Immigration Resume • Passport Share Your Memories. Send Snapshots. DOWNTOWN 1107 Massachusetts 843-4635 Mon.-Fri. 9:30-10 HILLCREST 919 Iowa 841-8668 Mon.-Fri. 9:30-10 ZERCHER PHOTO STOP BY TODAY Kobak PAPER CALL NOW! To Receive The Lowest Air Fares & Best Available Flights For Your Thanksgiving & Christmas Travel TRAVEL CENTER LAWRENCE TRAVEL CENTER AIRLINE HOTLINE 841-7117 Southern Hills Center, 1601 W. 23rd St. 9-5:30 Mon.-Fri. 9:30-2 Sat. CALL NOW! To Receive The Lowest Air Fares & Best Available Flights For Your Thanksgiving & Christmas Travel TRAVEL CENTER LAWRENCE TRAVEL CENTER AIRLINE HOTLINE 841-7117 Southern Hills Center, 1601 W. 23rd St. 9-5:30 Mon.-Fri. 9:30-2 Sat. TRAVEL CENTER LA MERCE TRAVEL CENTRE All Natural Ingredients 6 types to choose from Garlic Parsley Linguini Tomato Basil Pasta Mixed Vegetable Pasta Whole Wheat Pasta Spinach Pasta Corn Pasta Pasta Pasta Pasta We've Got the Pasta You've Been Hungry For! 843-8544 Community Mercantile COOKING SAFE WITH HONEY AND VINEGAR Christmas Bonus. 12,345,6 78.00 NEW LEFT PACKARD Christmas Bonus. 12,345,678.00 A $15 REBATE on the HP-12C Business Calculator. It's the gift that has no equal for business professionals - like you - in real estate, finance, banking and investments. That's because it has more built-in financial calculating power than any other handheld. And Hewlett-Packard is giving $15 Christmas bonus on HP-12Cs purchased between November 6 and December 31, 1985. So now's the time to ask for an HP-12C. But if nobody gets the hint, buy the HP-12C for yourself from a dealer who has no eq.sl. reg. $120.00 SALE $95.00 KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union reg. $120.00 SALE $95.00 KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union Junior-year programs Postgraduate Diplomas Facilities Department of Science and Research Opportunities in the Social Sciences London School of Economics and Political Science A chance to study and live in London The wide range of subjects includes newbooks and Finance $\times$ Actuarial Science Academics and Business Studies $\times$ Economics Econometrics $\times$ Economic History $\times$ European Studies $\times$ Geography $\times$ Government $\times$ Industrial Relations $\times$ International History $\times$ International Relations $\times$ Law $\times$ Management Science $\times$ Operational Research $\times$ Personnel Management $\times$ Philosophy $\times$ Population Studies $\times$ Politics $\times$ Regional and Urban Planning Studies $\times$ Sea-Use Policy $\times$ Social Administration $\times$ Social Planning in Development Countries $\times$ Social Work $\times$ Sociology $\times$ Social Psychology $\times$ Statistical and Mathematical Sciences $\times$ Analsys. Application forms from Administrations Register, L.S.E., Houghton Street, Boston, MA 02116, staying whether undergraduate or postgraduate and quoting Room 10. CORONAVIRUS CAUTION SE EXPOSE YOURSELF TO OUR CAMERA FOR YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT Seniors: Back by Popular Demand! Senior Pictures Mon., Nov. 11th to Fri., Nov. 15th Call the Jayhawker Yearbook Office immediately for an appointment at 864-3728 1 SINCE 1889 Rockin' the Hill Be it the Boss or Get Smart. 2 groups want more rock at KU See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, NOV. 12, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 57 (USPS 650-640) B Ugly Details page 3. B. J. R. Mike Horton/KANSAN We do windows Bud Littleton, job supervisor for Window Systems Construction, Lee's Summit, Mo., prepares to replace the windows in a starwell between the third and fourth floors in the Kansas Union. The company is replacing all the windows in the Union. Littleton was working yesterday. Senator says success in accords not likely By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff On the eve of the superpower summit, Americans should not be expecting any significant agreements on arms control or regional conflicts, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said yesterday. Sen, Richard Lugar, R-Ind., who has been chairman of the committee since 1984, spoke on U.S. foreign policy in a news conference and interview and in a speech to about 200 students at the University of the Kansas Union yesterday afternoon His speech was part of the Pearson Lecture Series. Lugar said President Reagan had limited expectations for his summit with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The two leaders will meet Nov. 19-20 in Geneva, Switzerland, in first U.S.-Soviet summit since 1973. "The president looks at the summit as a way to curtail the threatening feelings, the paranoia, that the Russians have," he said. "Whether or not that will work. I don't know "He clearly will give illustrations of regional issues that are of concern to the United States — Afghanistan, Nicaragua and the Middle East. I think that will likely be much of the subject matter of the summit. "But we're in the early innings, the agreements we come to will be largely ceremonial. We will only begin to bite into substantive issues." Lugar, who was a member of a Senate observation group that visited the arms talks in Geneva earlier this year, said Soviet proposals on arm reductions were an important breakthrough. However, he said that he didn't think the Reagan-Gorbachev summit would resolve the arms control issue. "Many people believe that the leadership will come to some conclusion on arms control," he said. "I think this is very doubtful." 'If you're playing for keeps, and in the arms negotiations you really are, details are important," he said. Lugar said he thought the Russians would give in on their demand that the United States abandon research on nuclear weapons, commonly known as "Star Wars." "They have a great deal of strategic defense work of their own," he said. "They know the game fairly well." "They would like to bring some controls to it — to hold down the computer." He called the recent distribution of cruise missiles in the Netherlands, the last of five NATO countries to accept deployment of the missiles, a sign of unity that the Soviets should not ignore. "The Soviets know of this unity and it worries them," he said. "Especially now, before the summit, this apprehension will build, the Western allies was important." Besides the upcoming summit, Lugar also spoke about the U.S. role Marcos resigns from post Urging early elections See LUGAR, p. 5, col. 3 United Press International MANILA, Philippines — President Ferdinand Marcos submitted yesterday a conditional letter of resignation to the National Assembly to pave the way for early presidential elections in January, and he urged approval of legislation permitting the vote. The action by Marcos came as a movement to draft the widow of slain opposition leader Benigno Aquino as a candidate gained strength and as the Moral Majority's Rev. Jerry Failwell arrived in Manila for a two day visit. Marcos, amid growing pressure from domestic opponents and criticism from the U.S., announced Nov. 3 he was calling for early presidential elections that originally had been scheduled for 1987. Marcos, facing complaints that the constitution provides for an early election only if the presidency is vacant, submitted his "irrevocable" resignation but made clear it would be effective only when the election is held and the winner chosen. Many Filipinos believe his call for early elections was in response to pressure from the Americans who are concerned about the fate of two U.S. military bases in the Philippines. Falwell, saying the former U.S. colony deserves "unswerving" U.S. support, praised Marcos for calling the elections. "He has done something that has surprised all his enemies," Falwell said. "What more honorable thing could he do?" The 68-year-old Marcos, president since 1965, said his mandate over the past two years had been the "object of propaganda and dissent that have cast a shadow over the continuing validity of the policies and programs I have instituted. "I am, therefore, left no choice but to seek a new mandate in an election that will assess, as demanded by the opposition, the policies and programs I am undertaking." Marcos' letter accompanied a Cabinet bill calling for an early presidential and vice-presidential election to be held Jan. 17. "Cabin Bill No. 7 shows President Marcos does not want an election. He wants a coronation," said opposition member of parliament Ramon Mitra. Marcos has faced increasing opposition since the August 1983 assassination of Aquino, slain in military custody upon his return to the Philippines from three years of self-exile in the U.S. At a suburban sports club last night, Aquino's widow, Corazon Aquino, received an endorsement from eight other potential aspirants nominated by the so-called Convenors Group, which is backed by influential educators, church officials and businessmen. Mrs. Aquino, 52, and former Sen. Salvador Laurel, head of the largest coalition of opposition parties, are regarded as leading presidential candidates against Marcos should an election be held. Petition arises in support of Tacha's quest for judgeship By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff A petition supporting the nomination of Deanell Tacha as a judge for the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, signed by 80 to 100 KU faculty and staff members, was mailed yesterday to the chairman of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, was nominated for the lifetime position Oct. 30 by President Reagan. If confirmed by the Senate Judiciary Committee in a hearing on Thursday in Washington, D.C., she would be appointed to the humanian to be appointed to the 10th circuit bench. The petition, circulated in several campus buildings Friday and yesterday, was mailed to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S-C., the Committee chairman, after Myra Hinman, the vice president, was mailed a letter to Thurmond Wednesday. In the letter, Himman said that she opposed the nomination because she thought Tacha was not upholding an agreement signed by the University of Kansas with the U.S. Department of Labor in 1982. The agreement emphasized equal employment opportunities at KU. Himan said in the letter, written by her attorney, that Tacha had fewer minorities and underpaid and inhibited promotion of those who already worked at the University. Her attorney, Fred W. Phelps Jr., Topeka sent the letter to Thurmond by express mail. Several faculty and staff members said they disagreed with the letter last week "The petition was started because of the letter Myra Hinman wrote," Marilyn Yarbrough, associate vice chancellor of research, graduate studies and public service, who mailed the petition, said yesterday. Yarbrough, who has worked with Tacha for nine years, said Tacha had helped recruit her to KU and had supported her. "I had nothing but support from her when I was up for promotion and tenure." Yarbrough said. "I was successful at both, and it was when Deanell had something to do with it." Tacha was unavailable for comment yesterday. Carol Prentice, academic affairs administrative assistant who works in Tacha's office and who signed the petition, said she noticed a lot of support for Tacha. "The petition is just an expression of the support Donellan has." Prentice said. Yarbrough said the number of signatures probably was not indicative of the support provided. "The petition was quickly done," Yarbrough said. "Although there were a lot of signatures, probably not everyone who wanted to had a chance to sign it." Part of the petition said. "We submit to you, as women and minorities, faculty and staff, that Deanell Reece Tacha has comported herself admirably and with all due respect for law and equality in her role . . . Her commitment to uphold the law has been sustained in the achievement of qualified women and minorities has been a credit to the ideals of this nation . . . Yarbough said that the only reason the petition was sent was to respond to the questions raised by Hinman and to "set the record straight." "I don't think the committee will have any problem with Deanell's appointment." Yar- "I was elated when I heard of the nomination. I think she will make a very good judge. She knows the law." AIDS patients deal with death sentences every day Kansas sufferers know the odds This is the second in a two-part series dealing with AIDS in northeastern Kansas. Today's story focuses on two patients with AIDS and a patient with AIDS-related complex. By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff As of Nov. 4, the United States reported 14,519 cases of AIDS. More than 7,450 of those people have died. The numbers: - Homosexual or bisexual men compose 78 percent of the AIDS cases. - Fifteen percent are intravenous drug abusers, 1 percent are hemophilic, 1 percent have receivevacy drugs, 5 percent have no known risk factors But people with AIDS are more than just numbers. They are human lives. the odds every day of their lives. They are human beings who beat "It's not easy knowing you have a fatal disease, feeling there's a time bomb." The revelation that he has AIDS, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, was so devastating to him that in a day it was diagnosed from his mind. "People with AIDS are dealing with a death sentence," Joel Justesen, Topeka, said recently. Justesen has AIDS. "I don't remember much of that day," he said. "There's a whole period there that is just sort of blank." Jeff, which is not his real name, worked on the Gay Rap Telephone Line in Topeka and had read the brochures about AIDS. Others with the illness expected the diagnosis "I saw that I had these really classic symptoms." he said. "I was "And then I saw my doctor. He thought I might have Giardia or something like that. That's what he wanted me to have." really frightened and upset. "I was expecting it," he said. "But it was also the last hope. There was a slim chance that I could have had something else." Jeff said he believed in self-regulation and biofeedback and after overcoming the initial fear, he felt confident he could fight the illness. Jeff said he wasn't surprised when AIDS was the diagnosis. After being hospitalized twice, however, he isn't as positive. "I haven't been as strong," he said. "Any kind of physical activity is tiring to me if it's more than a few minutes." Justesen, who hasn't had to be See AIDS, p. 7, col. 1 Movie portrays tragedy of AIDS By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff Joel Justesen, who has AIDS and is one of the co-founders of an educational organization, the Kansas AIDS Project, said that he thought parts of the movie were realistic and parts weren't. TOPEAK — "An Early Frost," an NBC made-for television movie portraying the struggles of an AIDS patient that was aired last night, was most accurate and informative, a Topека man who has AIDS said. "There have been close to 15,000 cases of AIDS and each one of those is a different story," he said. "For Hollywood to make a movie that would be realistic, they would have to consider all sides of the issue." "An Early Frost" was a portrait "I thought the movie was very sensitive and the struggles were portrayed very accurately," he said. William Wade, a Topeka doctor of osteopathy who has worked with AIDS patients, answered questions about the illness and the movie after it had been shown at a Topeka private club. of how members of an American family responded to learning that their 29-year-old son was homosexual and had contracted AIDS. About 50 million viewers nationwide watched the film, which starred Aidan Quinn, Ben Gazarra and Gena Rowlands. dividuals should take with sex. Between 50 and 100 people watched the movie and participated in discussions at the Lambda and Bare Essentials, two Topeka private clubs. After the movie, donations were taken for the charity network to support a network for people with AIDS and ADS-related complex A volunteer for the Topeka AIDS Project, who asked not to be identified, said about 50 "Early Frost" Watches took place in Lawrence, Topeka, Manhattan and surrounding communities. He said he hoped about $2,000 would be raised from the Watches. As many as 10,000 viewing gatherings were expected to be conducted in private clubs, churches and homes across the countr See FROST p 7 col 5 2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan News Briefs Arrest warrants filed GENOA, Italy — Prosecutors issued nine new arrest warrants yesterday in the Achille Lauro hijacking, including one for Palestine Liberation Front leader Mohammed Abul Abbas, a state attorney indicated. The new warrants — containing charges of hijacking, kidnapping and murder — brought the number of suspects to 18. The suspects are accused of the Oct. 7 hijacking of the Italian luxury liner and of the murder of Leon Klinghoffer, a wheelchair-bound American who was shot and flung overboard. GENEVA — Swiss authorities yesterday unveiled unprecedented security measures for next week's superpower summit, including an order for soldiers to issue only one warning before shooting intruders. Swiss raise security SALT LAKE CITY — Ezra Taft Benson, 86, a once outspoken conservative who now vows to be spiritual leader of all Mornons, was named the church's new president yesterday by the Mormon hierarchy following 140 years of tradition. Church head named Other measures call for intercepting unidentified or suspicious aircraft in forbidden areas, banning photographing security precautions and holding demonstrations and the closing of several border crossings. Benson, flanked by his two new counselors, was announced as the 13th "prophet, seer and revelator" to the world's 5.8 million Mormons at a news conference at church headquarters. Coffee may cause ills WASHINGTON — A study released yesterday revealed that people who drink five or more cups of coffee a day are almost three times more likely to suffer heart disease than are people who drink less than five cups of coffee a day. But, the study said, the evidence is too weak to urge Americans to curtail their coffee habit. From Kansan wires. South Africa threatens expulsion United Press International JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — The government yesterday issued its toughest warning yet that nearly 1.5 million black migrants from neighboring nations could be sent home if Western pressure for sanctions against South Africa increases "The instigators and proponents of sanctions, boycots and disinvestment should accept the blame and carry the moral responsibility for the resulting hardship of millions," du Plessis said. Employment Minister Pietie du Plessis said the government was preparing "contingency plans should sanctions and disinvestment necessitate the repatriation of foreign workers." Government and mining sources said du Plessis pulled back at the last minute from plans to announce immediate, small-scale reparations. President Pietter Botha had warned previously that the migrants might be sent home, but there had been no talk of contingency plans. On Sept. 9, President Reagan ordered a ban on trade in nuclear technology, bank loans and computer sales to South Africa to protest the white- minority government's system of racial segregation, known as apartheid. He also barred the import of Krugerger gold coins. The next day, 11 Western European nations approved a similar limited package of economic, cultural and military sanctions, and the British Commonwealth has threatened to take tough action against Pretoria if South Africa fails to show progress in racial relations within six months. Expelling the nearly 1.5 million migrants would hurt both South Africa and its neighboring states, because it was The mountain kingdom of Lesotho, surrounded by South Africa, earns half its annual income from funds repatriated by its citizens working in South African mines. Mozambique takes its citizens' repatriated earnings in South African rands and back to the workers in highly devalued local currency. In South Africa, "the backlash would be horrific" in the mining industry if repatriation was ordered, said Clive Knobbs, head of the Rand Mines gold division. The mining industry employs about 210,000 foreigners. ing of underground workers and would be hard pressed to replace foreign workers who had years of experience, said a spokesman for the Chamber of Mines, a private federation of mine owners. Mining firms have invested heavily in the train- Marcel Golding, spokesman for the 150,000-strong black National Union of Mineworkers, said if the government went ahead with the repatriations, it would call a nationwide strike on all mines. Du Plessis' threat came as a delegation of mixed-race education leaders met with Botha to discuss the unrest that plagued year-end examinations in Cape Town. Troops and police last weekend had to protect students taking examinations from anti-apartheid protesters. Dissident students in the Cape Town area have demanded the examinations be postponed because of the climate of violence that has claimed at least 50 lives in the past three months. Nationwide, 840 people have been killed in black and mixed-race townships since September 1984, when a new constitution took effect excluding the nation's black majority from political power. Rebels to release hostages United Press International KAMPALA, Uganda — Ugandan rebels said yesterday that they had custody of the 49 passengers and crew members aboard a hijacked Ugandan Airlines plane and would free within two days all but 10 military personnel held as "prisoners of war." The ruling military council said the second version was a lie and one Ugandan official characterized it as an attempt to save three-month-old peace talks with the government. The council condemned the hijacking as terrorism. The National Resistance Army said it also would keep the plane, which was forced to land at a rebel-controlled airstrip in the western town of Kasase after the hijacking Sunday. But the other passengers and crew members will be released within 48 hours, the NRA said. A rebel spokesman told foreign reporters that the NRA carried out the hijacking, then told Ugandan journalists that a crazed army officer with no connection to the rebels was responsible. Police and security forces raided several houses near Entebbe airport, about 25 miles south of the capital, and arrested about 200 people in connection with the hijacking, residents said. The suspects included several employees of Ugandan Airlines. The airport, where the hijacked flight originated, was closed for several hours. Army troops also conducted house-to-house searches in Kampala, but it was not immediately known whether the searches were related to the hijacking. Gunfire erupted and residents stayed home until the fighting ended. Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1985 Pilots knew planes' proximity United Press International CLIFFSIDE PARK, N.J. — Air safety investigators were at a loss yesterday to explain why a corporate jet and private plane collided although the pilot of each aircraft was warned the other was nearby. Five people were known to be dead, and searchers with a crane and bulldozers picked through the rubble of a Cliffside Park neighborhood for the body of a sixth person, missing and presumed killed in fires touched off by the crash of the flaming jet. Bush reveals 'Hat Trick 2' Police said it was miraculous that no more lives were lost when the Falcon 50 jet, owned by Nabisco Inc., exploded and rammed into the densely populated neighborhood of duplex homes. "At the time of the crash, there were 14 people occupying six of those buildings, and 13 of them had a chance to escape," state police Capt. Joseph Caraprotta said. In New York, Mira Rosen, Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman, said both planes had been in contact with the FAA tower at the Teterboro, N.J., airport just before the crash, and each had been told to watch for the other. Rosen said there was no evidence that either pilot had violated navigational rules and said there was "definitely not" any indication of error by FAA controllers. United Press International The operation, "Hat Trick 2." began Nov. 1 and is aimed at disrupting drug traffic on land and sea routes into the United States from the south, Bush said. NEW OBLEANS — Vice President George 'Bush' said yesterday that several Latin American governments have joined with the U.S. military and a host of federal agencies to conduct the largest drug smuggling crackdown ever attempted. "The real success of this operation, however, does not rest with the thousands of pounds of drugs seized," Bush said. "It depends on our commitment to continue the fight. The war against drug smuggling is a constant process." About 250,000 pounds of narcotics have been seized in the operation's first 10 days, Bush said. Bush heads a federal task force appointed by President Reagan to coordinate stepped-up investigations and crackdowns on drug smuggling. The Navy and the Coast Guard were working on maritime surveillance, he said, and air operations were being conducted by the Customs Service with the Navy, Air Force, Army and Marines. New drug fails man with AIDS United Press International PARIS — French doctors announced yesterday the death of an AIDS patient whose medical improvement they had cited in a news conference heralding an innovative treatment for the disease. Other physicians, originally skeptical of the medical team's report of a treatment that appeared to inhibit the progress of the virus, indicated that the drug cyclosparine A might have contributed to the patient's death. Phillipe Even, part of the medical team that announced the treatment, said the 38-year-old male AIDS victim died Saturday night at Laennec Hospital despite a "biologically favorable" response to the drug. Even attributed the death to "medullary aplasia and liver complications linked to a viral infection and a medical intolerance unrelated to cyclosporine." Medullary aplasia is the destruction of bone marrow, which produces certain cells of the immune system. Jan Orenstein, associate professor of pathology and director of autopsy services at George Washington Center in Washington, said cycloporine, immuno-suppressor, could have been a factor in the death. "AIDS patients do not inherently get medullary aplasia," Orenstein said. "What they did with the corpse was wipe out his murrow." Michael Green, director of developmental therapeutics at the New York University cancer center, said AIDS patients had been known to suffer hypoplastic marrow, a decrease in certain cellular elements of bone marrow. Aplasia means absence of these elements. Green said it was possible that cyclosporine could have contributed to the patient's death, but not enough details of the case were known to say for sure. A second AIDS patient admitted to Laeneee Hospital also died after treatment with cyclosporine, but Even said the patient had died in 12 hours of admission and was too far gone for any treatment to have helped him. MIDDLE EAST COUNTY CITY SCHOOL Aztec Inn Mexican and American Food Best Steaks and Lobster In Town Prime Rib and Shrimp, Too! For the best,try our Margaritas and Well Drinks $1.25 all day-every day Luncheon Specials Public and Private Dining Club Open Late Coming Soon: Mexican Food Buffet all-you-can-eat lunch Hours: Mon.-Sat. 11-2 p.m.; 5-10 p.m. dinner Sun. 5-10 p.m. dinner $4.75 Live Music Fri. and Sat. nights 3520 W. 6th St. for reservations call 841-5646 reciprocal with over 250 clubs Aztec Inn 100 Buy 1 at regular price and Get 1 of lesser or equal value at $ \frac{1}{2} $ price with coupon Mexican dinners only Good Sun.-Thurs. until 12/11/85 3520 W. 6th St. 841-5646 REDLINE AEII TV30 & fishbone REDLINE AEII TV30 & KJHK FM91 present fishbone Tuesday, November 12 look for tickets on campus and the AEII house 1116 Indiana & Cogburn's Cogburns 737 New Hampshire A benefit for The Emergency Service Council KJHK FM91 12 FISH Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1985 Campus/Area 3 University Daily Kansan News Briefs Services for Krogh to be held tomorrow Mr. Krogh, a KU professor since 1960, died Saturday evening at Lawrence Memorial Hospital of an apparent heart attack. Mr. Krogh was 68. Services for Harold Krogh, KU professor of business, will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Trinity Lutheran Church, 1245 New Hampshire St. Arts prof honored A KU professor of theatre and media arts was honored for his contributions to education and conduct students at a ceremony last week. Friends may call until 9 p.m. today and from 9 to 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Rumsey Funeral Home, 601 Indiana St., where the family will receive friends from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. today. Friends also may call at 1 p.m. tomorrow at the church. Jed Davis, the professor, received the 1985 KU Chancellor's Club Career Teaching Award on Friday in Chancellor Gene A. Budig's suite. The award, which includes a $5,000 stipend, is given to a professor who has taught at KU for at least 15 years and is an example of KU's commitment to teaching excellence. Jobs open on Kansan The Kansan is accepting applications for a spring semester editor and business manager. Some dates have changed from those announced last week. Applications are due by 5 p.m. Nov. 19. They are available in the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall; the journalism dean's office, 200 StauFFER-Flint; and the Student Senate Office, B-105 Kansas Union. Applicants will meet Dec. 2 with the Kansan Board, the governing body of the newspaper. The editor will be manager will be chosen afterward Applications for other news and business staff positions are due by 5 p.m. Dec. 2 in 200 Stuffer-Flint. New tickets issued "twelfth Night" audience members who were unable to see the Nov. 9 performance to its conclusion may attend any of the remaining performances, Nov. 14-16. Present station stubs or identify yourself at the Murphy Hall Box office to receive replacement tickets. Weather Today will be cloudy, with a 20 percent chance of showers. Highs will be in the low to mid 50s. Winds will be from the southeast at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be cloudy and cold, with a 30 percent chance of rain. Lows will be in the low to mid 30s. From staff and wire reports Correction Because of a reporter's error, a story in the Nov. 1, Kansan incorrectly reported that the Corporate Coach limousine service is operated from Mel Amigos restaurant. The service is run from the home of Bob Forbes, general manager of Mel Amigos and owner of the service. Corporate Coach's phone number is 841-5466. Steve Mingle/KANSAN THE FESTIVAL Common Sense Coalition candidates David Epstein and Amy Brown and Chrysalis Coalition candidates Milton Scott and Ruth Lichtwardt exchange smiles during a presidential-vice political debate sponsored by the Black Student Union, BSU president Charles Watson, Arkansas City junior moderated the event last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Student Senate elections are Nov. 20-21. Top rock may be a possibility for KU By John Williams Of the Kansan staff Big-name rock'n' roll groups could perform at Memorial Stadium if a student group circulating a music survey can persuade Student Union Activities to bring them to Lawrence, the group's coordinator said yesterday. Craig Krueger, Sioux City, Iowa, senior and coordinator for Rock for KU, which is now distributing a music survey to 1,500 students, said that the University of Kansas did not have big concerts for two reasons. "And they are just excuses," Krueger said. The first reason that administrators and concert coordinators bring up is that KU is too close to the Kansas City metroplatan area, which is a popular stop for many concert tours. The other reason given is that KU does not have adequate places to perform. he said. Steve Traxlier, director of SUA Special Events, which books KU concerts, said that using Memorial Hall for concerts would be expensive. The stadium has little power, and using electrical generators is a costly option, he said. The stadium also lacks adequate food service, and catering is expensive. Seating in the stadium is a problem, too, and some fans could sit on the Hill, where security would be difficult and the crowd could listen to concerts for free. Group looks at new talent By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Most students have heard of Foreigner and Bruce Springsteen, but how many know about Get Smart and Naked Raygun? Two KU students have started a non-profit company to help little-known bands introduce their sounds as they entertain. Sound Alternative Productions, a non-profit organization, and Redline, a Lawrence production company, will present Get Smart, a band originally from Lawrence but now based in Chicago, on Friday at The Outhouse, a building about four miles east of Massachusetts Street on 15th Street. On Dec. 7, Sound Alternative will present Naked Raygun, a hardcore band from Chicago, at The Outhouse. Sound Alternative tries to bring bands that appeal to listeners of KJHK-FM, Jeff Hekmati, Lawrence senior and one of the Krueger cited the University of Colorado as an example of where big concerts worked out well. He said Boulder was close to Denver and the university had a stadium about the size of Memorial Stadium, but that did not stop the university from booking large concerts. company's organizers, said yesterday. For about six years, KJKH has referred to itself as a "sound alternative," Hekmati said. The company wants to be separate from KJKH so it can make its own decisions but wants listeners to identify the company with KJKH. Previous concerts have attracted crowds of about 200 at each concert, he said. Tickets range from $2 to $5 and are sold at the door. Any money raised goes toward other concerts or to KJHK. Hekmati said that John Cheney, Lawrence senior, had started the company to satisfy a void in Lawrence for various types of live music. The company was formed about $1 \frac{1}{2}$ months ago. Cheney, KJHK music director, and Hekmati, KJHK night program director, want to offer a variety of live music — including hard core, punk and rock groups — for everyone, especially KJHK listeners, Hekmati said. He said Rock for KU was pursuing the possibility of bringing concerts to KU with the help of SUA. The group also wants to show SUA that students are more interested in large concerts in Memorial Stadium. hope this will motivate students to think about it, and pressure the proper authorities to accommodate us. "Perhaps the most important thing we are doing is showing that it can happen and that the students want something like this." "If the students want it to happen then it will happen," he said. "We The survey asks students which groups they would like to hear, how much they would spend on concert tickets, who their favorite male and female vocalists are and what type of music they prefer. Traxler said that in the 1970s, such groups as ZZ Top and Yes played in Allen Field House and Hoch Auditorium, but because of seating problems and acoustics in the field house many bands turned to places where they could play their concerts better and make more money. SUA, however, has been trying to get stadium shows, Traxler said. This summer Memorial Stadium was considered by Bruce Springsteen as a place to watch if Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Mo., was not available, he said. "We knew Springsteen would sell better than Hawkstock did in 1982," he said. "The stadium show had been the biggest money, so we have to be really careful. But Springenstein decided not to play in Kansas City, St. Louis or New York. "SUA definitely wants a well-known group in the stadium, and we (SUA and Rock for KU) are going to have to work together to make it work. It will be interesting to see what the surveys say." BSU OK's Chrysalis in election By Sandra Crider Special to the Kansan The Black Student Union last night endorsed the Chrysalis Coalition after a debate between the presidential and vice presidential candidates of the Chrysalis and the Common Sense coalitions. About 50 people attended the debate at the BSU meeting in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. This was the last scheduled debate before the Student Senate elections, Nov. 20-21. BSU members said they thought that issues facing black students would be better represented by Chrysalis' candidates, although some were skeptical about the dedication of either coalition to minorities on campus. Lennie Wesley, Wichita junior, said he was not convinced of the seriousness of the candidates' com- parison to the problems of black students. "I will believe what I see when I see it," he said. BSU members asked the candidates about several issues, including decreased financing for BSU students and a shortage of minority students on campus. In the debate, the candidates, Milton Scott and Ruth Lichtwardt, presidential and vice presidential candidates for Chrysalis, and David Epstein and Amy Brown, presidential and vice presidential candidates for Chrysalis, agreed on one subject, the ineffectiveness of this year's Senate. "We are concerned for students and not for keeping Senate as a self-serving clubhouse." Scott said. Epstein said that members of his coalition would serve on Senate as students and not as students as politicians. The two groups had different views about the role of the Senate concerning the Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in U.S. companies that do business in South Africa. Brown said that Senate leaders could be valuable by working behind the scenes with the Endowment Corporation and Chancellor Gene A. Budig. Lichtwardt stressed Scott's and her personal commitment in working to abolish apartheid. "We need to ask them, 'How can we help you get KUEA's money out of Switzerland?' "We're not waiting until we're elected to do something about it," she said. "I'm even willing to be arrested if it will further our cause." Epstein said his coalition would concentrate on getting students to test at high levels. Lichtwardt said, "We'll be working to show people why we're better than Common Sense." Women select GSP-Corbin first for hall living By Bob Tinslev Of the Kansan staff Each spring as housing contracts begin to arrive at the office of residential programs, hundreds of incoming freshman women vie to stake claims on rooms in Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall. Many say the rush on the two halls is a prelude to a rush of another kind. GSP-Corbin long has been reputed as the stepping stone for KU women who want to pledge a sorority. The halls are among the first to fill when housing contracts begin to arrive at the residential programs office. bin for fall 1986. Fourteen women have inquired about GSP. Fred McElhenie, director of residential programs, said last week that the 79 women who had inquired about GSP-Corbin were not guaranteed space until they submitted housing contracts but they would be given priority. The office already has received 65 requests from women who want to reserve space at Cor- Although GSP-Corbin residents share a dining room and a hall government, separate commissioners have At Corbin, 310 spaces are available, and at GSP,429 are open. Hall contracts will be sent out next semester. McEllenie said that a common perception existed among many women that their chances of pledging a sorority were enhanced if they lived at GSP-Corbin. mythical powers that help them get into a sorority," he said. Donna Stewart, Panhellenic Association adviser, said that GSP-Corbin women did not have a higher pledging rate than women from other residence halls, apartments or other universities. McElheney said the surge in popularity for GSP-Corbin began 10-12 years ago and has been common ever since. 'I think some people think there are some The hall also is a popular destination among the daughters of KU alumnae who lived there during their college years, he said. "I think the whole ball began rolling when people began saying, 'I had a good experience in Corbin or GSP, and I want you to have one, too.'" he said. Apparently this wasn't always the case. Caryl Smith, dean of student life, said that when she came to the University of Kansas in 1972, Corbin was hard to fill. Debbie Christie, a former Corbin resident who also was a resident assistant at the hall and now is one of its assistant resident directors, said that when she was a high school senior, many of her friends had planned to live at Corbin. This was one reason she decided to live there. "I would say a lot of the girls go through rush," she said, "but in the years I was an RA nearly half went through rush. So it's not necessarily true that they all go to sororities." Christie said another draw for GSP-Corbin was the excellence of its programs for residents, but she said other halls had good programs, too. TUESDAY DIME DRAWS 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Wed. Special: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the Sanctuary th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0122 A workshop designed to improve and enhance your interviewing skills and resume writing techniques. --- MARKETING YOURSELF There will be three opportunities to attend this program November 13 7-9 p.m. International Rm. Kansas Union November 13 December 2 3-5 p.m. Regionalist Rm. Kansas Union December 10 December 10 3-5 p.m. Regionalist Rm. Kansas Union --- For more information, call the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 864-3552. MISS STREET DELI 1041 MASSACHUSETTS Homemade CHOCOLATE, CHERRY LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake No coupons accepted with this offer. 95¢ reg $1.50 Offer good through Nov.30 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1985 End of the paper chase Next week's Student Senate elections will mark the end of the paper chase. Last year, students could cast votes at only five locations. But with voting machines greeting them as they walk in the door to class, fewer students will have to go out of their way to vote. The machines also will speed up the vote-counting process. Winners in all Senate races should be known by 10 p.m., predicts David Day, chairman of the Senate Elections Committee. The Senate Elections Committee decided to swap the stacks of multicolored paper ballots used in most past elections for 24 voting machines borrowed from the Johnson County Elections Office in Olathe. The machines will be placed in several locations on campus — in both Unions and in the classroom buildings where students will be most likely to vote for candidates representing their professional schools. In last year's election, workers took about six hours to tally votes in the races for student body president and vicepresident. But they spent two days shuffling through paper ballots to determine the winners in the 66 senatorial races. When it comes to obeying new alcohol laws, housing officials at Kansas State University seem to trust their students' judgment. In addition, using machines will cost the Senate considerably less than the $1,500 spent printing paper ballots in last year's election. Johnson County is lending the machines to the Senate for free, but computer paper for the machines should cost $95. Also, the Senate will have to pay a private moving company a small fee to transport the machines to and from campus. At K-State, students who turned 19 before July 1 this year are old enough to take 3.2 beer to their rooms and drink it. No KU students, whether 19 or 90, can have beer in University housing. Finally, the behind-the-curtain privacy of voting machines ensures accuracy: Students can cast votes without other students peering over their shoulders, and no ballots can get lost on their way to the ballot box. In the wake of the state's new alcohol laws, the University of Kansas decided to prohibit 3.2 percent beer in its residence halls. K-State chose not to change its policy, and K-State housing officials say they might wait to change the policy until the drinking age goes to 21 in 1987. Although there is nothing inherently wrong with paper ballots, the end of the Senate's paper chase should mark the start of smoother-running elections. And if the Senate can save a little money in the process, all the better. K-State's right idea K-State is one of three Big Eight schools that still allows alcohol in residence halls. The other five simply invoked a flat ban. K-State's policy implies that by the time students reach college, they can learn to follow school rules and state laws. The policy at KU attempts to resurrect the notion of the University operating in loco parentis — in place of a parent. Some students are bound to avoid rules and break laws. But housing officials and resident assistants have enough to do without also having to guarantee that students, in the privacy of their rooms, are abiding by the state's drinking laws. KU officials were correctly concerned about possible liability for drinking-related accidents. The decision to ban beer at any function sponsored by an organized living group adequately addresses this concern. K-State wisely recognized that drinking and driving would best be avoided by allowing those who can legally buy beer to drink it in their rooms. It appears that KU could learn a few things from K-State. Another hole in the belt Once again, it appears that Kansas will have to make do with less. Revenue officials have projected that the state will end the current fiscal year, 1986, with $55 million less in savings than expected. Income for fiscal 1987, which won't begin until July, already looks to fall $77.5 million short. Gov. John Carlin says this won't require spending cuts for the remainder of this fiscal year. But state budget officials are studying their spreadsheets to figure what this bleak revenue picture portends for next year. fiscal year than it planned for this year. This might force the same kind of deep spending cuts the state faced in 1982, cuts from which the Regents schools still are trying to recover. Or, legislators may decide to raise taxes. But last session, a proposal by Carlin to add a half cent to the state's sales tax hardly received a warm reception. The proposal never came before the Legislature because the Republican leadership denied that it was needed. They were wrong. The modest sales tax increase would have at least eased the loss of revenue. It was needed then. It is needed even more now. Rob Karwath Editor John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Duncan Caihoun Business manager **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.** **GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words.** The Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Oo-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adiser The Kansas reserves the right to reject edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The University Daily Kansan (USF$ 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 60445, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and final periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., 6042. In Dogges County, mail subscriptions cost $1 for six months and $27 a month. For an annual fee, a student. Student subscriptions cost $3 and are paid through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 66045. Fax: Good luck "CRIME" With this machine we could be sure of the owner of every gun sold! Owning a gun not documented on these machines would be as illegal as not registering for the draft. This machine could revolutionize crime fighting in America!!! "CRIME" This machine says that an idea like that would lose $1,680,000 a year for the NRA. Such a maneuver would defy logic! StoreCorp - 95 JDK To have an endowment association that invests in firms that make profits in South Africa and then transfer them to new firms is one of the contradicts any definition of morality. Freedom should extend beyond the narrow confines of KU and Walter's brain all the way across the sea to the people in South Africa. Jon DeVore Lawrence resident "Conservatism" is just another euphimism for old-fashioned racism. If Reagan refuses to remove U.S. financial support for South African bondage, one cannot expect any progress at home either. Walter is also apparently unaware that he attends a University. To clear this up, air, such entities theoretical- for noble goals such as freedom. Plan Bailer communications Walter apparently is unaware of the connection between civil rights in this country and apartheid. Civil rights progress has stalled in many parts of the world, but that the Reagan administration's attitude about blacks is the problem. Gottfried and the football team Mailbox Gottfried and Notre Dame? Much has been written and said lately concerning the possibility of KU's football coach, Mike Gottfried, being hired as football coach for Notre Dame. Rumors and speculation that Gottfried will be asked to replace Notre Dame football coach Gerry Faust when this season concludes are promoting this crazy idea. I do not think Notre Dame selects its competition to inflate its winning record in the way they did. They secrete records to compete with that will upgrade the program. Gottfried says he has not been contacted by Notre Dame about this coaching position. This answer is similar to the one he gave after the 1983 season concerning the Memphis State coaching job for which he applied but was rejected by Memphis State. If Notre Dame is not the premier coaching position in the country, it certainly ranks near the top. With rich tradition and prestige, why would Notre Dame want to hire Goffried, a coach who has yet to prove himself as a major college football coach? Well, maybe Notre Dame would hire Gottfried for his recruiting skill? Probably not. Recruiting at Notre Dame has its advantages over KU, granted, but both schools have one thing in common — academics first and football second. In this 1985 season, virtually none of the five wins to date has come against teams with .500 records, and two of the five wins were against Division 2 powers, Indiana State and Eastern Illinois. Gottfried's other experience in 1983 with a Division 2 power was a loss to Norlinern Illinois here in Lawrence. Gottfried has defeated only two teams with records better than .500 — Missouri in 1983, and Oklahoma in 1984. The 12 other wins were against teams that were sub-.500. Said another way, these 12 teams lose more than 50 percent of their games. Evan Walter's column in the Kansan on Nov. 8, "Anti-apartheid protests a waste of time," in which he suggests that the foes of apartheid in this country go to South Africa, is the most absurd piece I have seen on the issue. Absurd piece on protest Telling people to leave the country smacks of sentiments I thought were dead, such as "America" like it or "and" "My country right or wrong." In Gottfried's three seasons at KU, he has proved beyond a doubt that he cannot recruit enough average high school talent, let alone the blue-chip athlete, needed to build a consistent Big Eight contender. At Notre Dame, it's national championships. Consequently, Gottfried's success (if you can call it that) has come through the Juco connection. This highly successful junior college transfer program and walk-on program is known throughout the community. Twenty-five Juco players are on the '85 roster. 'The self-promoted need or perceived need to win at any cost has overridden the building of a program with integrity.' Gottfried has displayed extremely poor judgment in the handling of the academically ineligible players. This lack of discipline displayed by Gottfried has compounded these problems. Playing athletes who are academically ineligible is an affront to common sense, dignity and any sense of fair play. Adding insult to injury. Gifted has the audacity to select one of the players as team captain. This episode has been an embarrassment to the University of Kansas, the state of Kansas and a blow to the integrity of KU athletics. Also, the athletic department spent more than $100,000 on this mess, and the problems are still unresolved. Money is not the problem here, but a commitment to the University and what it stands for is. One of the saddest parts of this diry flasco is the impact it has on the players who attended class, made the grade, stayed eligible, attended football practice, started several games and, through some divine wisdom by Gottfried, are benched and replaced by academically ineligible players. If a player can get a judge to declare him eligible, Gottfried says he will play him. Why not? The self-promoted need or perceived need to win at any cost has overridden the building of a program with classless acts. I can imagine at KU Within the embarrassment of this academic situation lies the fact that KU will have to forfeit games won while using ineligible players. According to a Journal-World sports writer, no big deal. Forfeits are not kept track of and most schools do not change their records to indicate such. Again, win today. The end justifies the means, doesn't it. Some people have called Gottfried a fix-it man because he turns programs around. Check the football program at Cincinnati, Gottfried's only major coaching position, after his two illusions 6-15 seasons. Their program is still floundering. So much for "mister fix-it." KU's football program under Gottfried is displaying the characteristics of a program out of control. For good or bad, KU fans, Gottfried likes his name in the limelight. It's also observed that Gottfried Johnson and Chancellor Gene A., Budig have little control over the KU football program. Who does? Maybe Notre Dame does need Gotfried. KU cannot afford him. The price is too high. David Schneider Lawrence resident Constructive leaders A glance at the campus activity calendar shows that Student Senate elections are less than two weeks away. This election, however, does not appear to be inspiring the controversy that enveloped the campus last year at this time. The two coilitions vying for the top spots can hardly hope to put on a show comparable to the production last year's seven coilations gave us. The controversial issues have seemed to disappear, as Common Sense and Chrysalis appear to be battling student anapathy more than each other. What is not being brought to the students' attention, however, may have serious negative ramifications for student Senate and every student at KU. Ruth Lichtwardt, vice-presidential candidate for the Chrysalis Coalition, was arrested in association with the protests at Strong Hall on Monday. Although the five that were arrested were warned at least two times to leave the office, these students decided to remain and face charges of criminal trespass. The University administration was clear in its statement that these students were in "diametric opposition to what a university stands for." The Student Senate is the one direct link students have with the administration. Those who have held leadership positions in the Senate have emphasized the necessity of a good working relationship with the administration. The vice-presidential candidate for the Chrysalis Coalition, however, has placed herself in direct opposition to the administration. Although student leaders should not allow the administration's decisions to go unchallenged, they must be capable of presenting their criticisms in a constructive manner. Her arrest on Monday appears to signify an unwillingness to work in constructive ways for an improvement in the educational experience of all KU students. Unless Lightward and the entire Chrysalis Coalition can answer such objections, students would be advised to look elsewhere for leadership. Atchison sonhomore Fall splendor's swift passing When I was younger, autumn seemed to last forever. Walking home from school, we would kick the gold and red leaves beneath our feet as we rushed to play in the snow, left of late afternoon sunshine. Once home, we would grab rakes and gather the leaves covering the front yard into billowy piles beneath the large oak in our front yard. We would form forts out of them and then burrow into the sides, popping out to surprise one another. Then we would push the leaves into piles as high as we could, swinging the rakes above our heads to throw the leaves to the very top of the pile. We would pull ourselves onto one of the low branches directly above one of the piles and throw ourselves down to land breathlessly among them. The piles never felt quite as soft as they looked when we hit. P Gina Kellogg Staff Columnist We would take weekend outings with our parents to small towns we had never heard of (but where many of our college friends spent their lives growing up). The crisp autumn air whiplifted through the slightly opened windows, blowing our hair as we pressed our faces to the glass. The trees that whizped past displayed colors that seemed to glow with a soft fire. We would stop at roadside stores where they gave free glasses of apple cider. The glasses were just big enough to tempt your taste buds and entice you to buy a gallon to take home. Sometimes there were caramel apples we were allowed to eat in the car — as long as we promised not to touch anything until we got home. Now the days that are cloudy and gray seem to outnumber the days of sunshine and sparkle. They filmed the sun glinting off the rushing water in a quiet forest But today, fall doesn't seem to last as long as it did when I was younger. Suddenly fall just appears, almost overnight. Then just as suddenly, all the leaves have fallen off the trees. They stand bare against the cloudy autumn sky. I saw a nightly news program lant week make a special broadcast from New England. The colors of autumn for their viewers. brook, stately trees with fire and gold leaves dancing in the breeze and golden pastures of grazing cows, bleating sheep and running The scenes made me think: "Kansas is just as beautiful as that." But when I glanced through my window at the huge oak outside, the leaves, which had glowed golden in the warm sunlight just days before, now lay silently in yellow mounds upon the ground. I ran to the window and looked down the street but saw that my tree was not the only one that stood bare of foliage. Few of the other trees displayed any remaining leaves. It seemed that autumn was already over. Although the tree may stand naked and bleak, other reminders linger, to show that we are not yet in the clutches of winter. Last week I was walking my dog and watching my breath cloud up before my face. Faintly from overhead the honking of gese came down to me and I looked up to see the crooked, shifting V. My dog's ear perked as he listened to their muffled calls. As we watched them disappear from view, I knew that autumn wasn't over yet. Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 PRESIDENT OF THE UNION FOR TRANSFORMATION Mark Mohler/KANSAN Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, emphasizes his points to about 200 people in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Lugar spoke yesterday as part of the Pearson Lecture Series. Lugar Continued from p. 1 in solving the political problems in the Middle East and the economic situation in Central and South America. He said that the optimism over a possible break in the stalemate in Middle East relations earlier this year had evaporated and that no resolution was in sight. Lugar said he hoped that Hussein, Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak and Israel Prime Minister Shimon Peres would soon begin negotiating to bring an end to hostilities in the region. "We had hoped that when Jordan's King Hussein came to the United States in June, that he would announce that the acts of war were over. He never said that," Lugar said. "That has been one of the agonizing processes." The negotiations, he said, should include representatives of the Palestinian people but that the Palestine Liberation Organization and its chairman, Yasir Arafat, would be unwelcome. WICHITA — Gates Learjet Corp. may decide this week the winner of a high stakes duel it triggered with the announcement that manufacturing operations would be consolidated in either Tucson, Ariz., or Wichita Cities fight over jet site The Associated Press Both cities stand to gain or lose hundreds of Learjet jobs and hundreds of others caused by the multiplier effect of new jobs. The company's 1984 payroll was $33.7 million in Wichita and $34.9 million in Tucson. "This is a simple matter," said Bob Brown, Wichita mayor. "Wichita either has 1,100 empty dinner buckets or 1,100 of the kind you like — when you open them they've got a boiled egg and a sandwich in them." Learjet sent the cities scrambling to develop incentive plans. Oct 23 when it announced the consolidation as a cost-cutting move. Like other small plane manufacturers, the business jet builder has been suffering through a sales downturn since 1980 when companies began sharply curtailing purchases of big-ticket items. Production has dropped from 12 jets a month in 1982 to fewer than two per month. The company lost $10.6 million on sales of $406.6 million in 1984. Learjet employs 1,135 people in Wichita and 815 in Tuscon, but it won't say how many of those are manufacturing jobs. So far, the company is talking about moving only its manufacturing operations. The machinists union represents 550 non-supervisory manufacturing workers in Wichita. The company estimated 600 manufacturing jobs at Learjet in Tuscon and about 200 marketing and administrative employees. The company is seeking about 250,000 square feet in additional manufacturing space and wants to make its move during its traditional holiday shutdown period in December. One goal of consolidation is to eliminate some manufacturing jobs. Heart attack kills visitor By a Kansan reporter The father of two KU students died in his car of a heart attack in the intersection of Naismith Drive and Sumymside Avenue on Saturday, a Douglas County Ambulance Service spokesman said yesterday. Henry Witt, 51, Rockport, Maine, and father of Hank, a junior, and Kathleen, a sophomore, was pronounced dead at 3:52 p.m. Saturday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, a hospital spokesman said. Mr. Witt was visiting the area for a meeting in Kansas City, Mo., and was attending father's weekend at the Alpha Delta Pi sorority, of which his daughter is a member. Services for Mr. Witt will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Camden, Maine. CLONE SALE REPRINTS FROM COLOR NEGATIVES ONLY 15¢ EACH NOV. 11-15 ONLY KU KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union fishbone Appearing Tonight Live from L.A. Cogburns Thurs., Nov. 14th As seen on MTV Johnny Reno & The Sax Maniacs 25¢ Draws BLOCK 1 This is just a placeholder image. It should be replaced with the actual content you are looking for. If there is no text in the image, it's not possible to provide a description or analysis. Let's look at the first block again. Line 1: [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] Line 2: [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] Actually, it looks like one line of empty boxes. The prompt says "Preserve text where applicable". So if there's any text, I will include it. But the image has no text. It looks like an empty placeholder. If I had to guess, I would conclude that it might be a sample image from a presentation or a report. The layout suggests a document-like format, but without text, it's hard to tell. I'll stick to what's clearly visible. 737 New Hampshire 843-9723 150 The most exciting few hours you'll spend all week. Run. Climb. Rappel. Navigate. Lead. And develop the confidence and skills you won't get from a textbook. Enroll in Army ROTC as one of your electives. Get the facts today. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. CALL OR WRITE: PROFESSOR OF MILITARY SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWENRCE,KS 66045 PHONE:(0131) 864-3311 ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS BUFFALO BOB'S Smokehouse SMOKEY JOE SANDWICH SPECIAL Chopped ends of BBQ beef, ham, turkey and pork baked in a mild BBQ sauce. 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Evenings by Appt. $10 OFF Creative $2.50 OFF Package Shampoo, Cut & Blow Dry 6 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1985 Crowd pays tribute to memorial site Sharl Getting/Special to the KANSAN THE FAMILY WELCOME THE NEW STREET LANDING ON THIS PARK! Tom Berger, chairman of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, unveils the artist's rendering of the planned $35,000 Vietnam memorial. About 50 people attended yesterday's consecration ceremony at the intersection of Memorial Drive and West Campus Road. About 50 people, including donors and members of the KU Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps, braved the cold yesterday to attend a short Veterans Day concession ceremony of the KU Vietnam Memorial site. The $35,000 memorial, which has been in the planning for two years, will be built at the southeast corner of Memorial Drive and West Campus Road. By a Kansan reporter In a short speech, Tom Berger, chairman of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, thanked the people involved in financing and designing the memorial, and then thanked the staff of the memorial placed on the site. About 35 members of the Air Force ROTC Detachment 280 Corp of Cadets stood at attention behind Berger, John Musgrave, Baldwin law student, and Ashner law student. Musgrave and Ashner are both committee members. Musgrave, a Vietnam veteran, said, "This memorial stands to honor those KU students who paid the ultimate price, not the 12 still missing. We do not memorize the missing, we demand their return." Farm Aid bolstered by Nelson United Press International TOPEKA — Despite an additional $10,000 that has been made available to help Kansas farmers from the proceeds of the Farm Aid Concert, some farmers are reluctant to ask for help, an aid distributor said yesterday. Willie Nelson's Farm Aid Concert in September initially brought $5,000 to the Consultation of Cooperating Churches in Kansas, said executive coordinator Dorothy Berry. Another $10,000 was received last week for emergency farm relief. "Last week we were fortunate enough to get a second letter from Willie Nelson which told us that he really listened to what we said when we wrote to thank him," Berry said. Berry said the $10,000, to be distributed through local churches, is not limited to food as the first $5,000 was, but is intended for any kind of limited emergency need. "We know there is a reluctance on the part of all of us, not just farmers, to ask for this kind of aid," Berry said. "We're not trying to make a mailing list of those who get his aid. We are asking the pastors to share with us as much as they can the kind of stories that those farm families face, but we want those stories couched in such a way that it protects their identity." Farm families need to contact local church pastors to inquire about the relief, she said. Distributor gives scholarship By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff The president of the Coors distributor for Douglas County presented a $2,000 check to the University of Kansas yesterday to finance scholarships for U.S. veterans and their families. and their families. Eldon Dandenhauer, president of Lapeka Inc., the Coors beer distributor for an eight county area that includes Lawrence, presented the check on Veterans' Day in the chancellor's suite in Strong Hall to Caryl Smith, associate vice chancellor for student affairs. Also at the presentation were representatives from the Kansas University Endowment Association, William Easley, student body president, and Tom Berger, chairman of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee. A scholarship for the same amount was presented to Wasburn University. "We selected these two universities because they are by far the most effective educators in my service area," Danenhauer said yesterday. Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said that the only stipulation for the scholarships was that they be awarded to veterans or their sons or daughters who are KU students. The money can be divided at the University's discretion. "It hasn't been decided yet how the scholarships will be divided," Rogers said. "But we will probably award four $500 scholarships for the spring semester." rogers said application forms should be ready after a meeting tomorrow. Forms are available at the office of student financial aid, 26 Strong Hall. Applications should include background, financial need, academic record and an explanation of qualification as a veteran or offspring. Dannenhauer said that this scholarship was given by Lapeka, 2711 Oregon St., in conjunction with Coors' national Veterans Memorial Scholarship Fund, which donated $500,000 for scholarships at universities across the country. About $800 for the local scholarships was raised through donations put in canisters in veterans organizations, retail liquor stores and clubs. The rest of the money was a contribution from Lapeka. Although this is the first year for Lapeka to award a scholarship, Danenhauer said he hoped Lapeka could donate other scholarships. "We hope that this will be an ongoing program for many years to come." Danhenhaer said. Kansas teachers' salaries rising The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Kansas has followed the trend of the rest of the nation in addressing problems in the teaching profession, with salary increases outpacing inflation and more talented students entering teacher training programs, a new study indicates. secondary schools in Kansas are experiencing only slight growth. According to a Carnegie Foundation report, which found the nation making slow but steady progress in improving the condition of teaching, the improvements came at a time when enrollments in elementary and The number of public school students was 405,822 in 1984-85, up three-tenths of a percent from the previous year. Secondary school enrollments are dropping in the state, but elementary enrollments are on the rise. That matches the experience of most of the country, which is expected to suffer a teacher shortage through the early 1990s as children from the baby boom of the '70s enter school. yesterday, charts the progress of states as they address the dilemma of teaching: fewer and less competent young people entering the profession at a time when schools need more teachers and the public clamors for an improved educational system. The report, which was released In Kansas, average teacher salaries rose to $21,208 in 1984-85, which is lower than the national average of $23.5*. Inflation sapped 12 percent from the buying power of teachers between 1972 and 1982, but the report said that trend has been reversed. A video documentary examining torture in various countries, including Argentina, Nicaragua (pre-1981), N. Ireland, and South Africa, through the eyes of former torturers and torture victims. 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AIRLINE COUNTER PRICES (1) Don't wait another 12 Years to see the HUNGARIAN STATE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Adam Fischer, Conductor Making Its First North American Tour Since 1973 8:00 p.m. Wednesday, November 20,1985 Hoch Auditorium Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Program Les Préludes Concerto No. 3 in D Minor for Piano and Orchestra Concerto No. 3 in D Minor for Piano and Orchestra Jeno Jando, Solist Jeno Jando, Soloist Liszt Bartok Symphony No. 5 in E minor Tchaikovsky Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office For reservations, call 913/864-3982 Public: $15 & $13; KU & K-12 Students: $7.50 & $6.50; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $14 & $12 VISA/MasterCard Accepted Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association 'An enormous orchestra with a positive and colorful personality.' The Guardian, London "A superb, highly disciplined orchestra." Daily Post, Athens K HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 7 Aids Continued from p. 1 hospitalized, said he began paying strict attention to his body. "If my body says it's hungry, I hungry." "If my body says it's tired, I have to stop and rest." "I just got over a cold that didn't seem to want to quit. People with AIDS can get the flu. We can get bronchitis. We can get colds and get over them. But every time you do get something like that, you have to ask yourself, 'Is this the beginning of the end?' "No matter how you try to prepare, it's still disconcerting when it comes up, and it's frightening. I think it inimical," she said, that accompanies having AIDS." Justesen said that for him, loneliness and isolation were the hardest effects to endure. He said he would like friends now held him at a distance. "I was excommunicated from my church a month ago, which hit rather hard," he said. "There's one very good friend of mine who had nothing to do with me for a year. I saw him in September. . . and some of the friendship was salvaged. But he couldn't deal with his own mortality." Because AIDS has been found mainly in homosexual and bisexual men, contracting it may mean a second "coming out" for some people. "In addition to having AIDS, there's the disclosure of the unsesen test." Sometimes that makes more difficult than the illness itself. John, a Wyandotte County man with AIDS-related complex, who asked that his last name not be used, said he was trying to summon the courage to tell his father about his illness. "I told my brother," he said. "He was one of the first ones I blabbed to, and his response was one that helped me shut up. He just flippantly said, 'Well, when you play, you've got to pay,' Much of the isolation comes from fear, said Justenzo, who is one of the co-founders of the Kansas AIDS Network, an organization that seeks to educate Kansans about AIDS. "I think where the real fear has come up, the FRAIDS — fear regarding acquired immune deficiency syndrome — has been among people who just don't understand the communicability of the disease," he said. "There are so many ungrounded fears." AIDS is transmitted primarily through sexual contact or through blood from a person with AIDS. Chien-Liu, a physician in the department of infectious diseases at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan., said the virus that is thought to cause AIDS had been found in saliva and tears, but the amounts probably were too small to infect someone. "There is no evidence that friendly, casual contact is transmitting the disease." Liu said. Jeff said that some unexpected changes in his values have occurred since his illness was diagnosed. Recent financial problems upset him greatly, he said. John, who hasn't told his employer that he has ARC, said, "There's no way I can spread it to co-workers. I'm putting them in no danger. If I thought I was, I'd quit." "It's interesting to me that I would get so upset over money and how important money is to me," he said. "The financial situation seems real gross to me because I've had to borrow money. My middle-class identity is shaken. "I also sometimes think, 'If I'm going to die anyway, why waste the money?' I think the chance that I can stay alive until there is some drug that'll help is very slim. "But who knows? Maybe I can." EXPOSE YOURSELF TO OUR CAMERA FOR YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT Seniors: Back by Popular Demand! Senior Pictures Mon., Nov. 11th to Fri., Nov. 15th Call the Jayhawker Yearbook Office immediately for an appointment at 864-3728 FREE 6" VEGETARIAN SUB with purchase of 12" sub 1 coupon/sub/person • no deliveries good through 11-26 Yello Sub 745 New Hampshire 843-2949 12th & Oread 841-3268 7:30 a.m.-1 a.m. or 2 a.m. Fri, Sat 10:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Mon-Sat try, with donations remaining in the communities to benefit AIDS projects. Continued from p.1 Frost "We have become aware that there are people who have not contacted us to formally register, but they are having Watches on their own," he said. Five or six Watches were conducted in Lawrence homes, the volunteer said. "We expect more contributions to come in than those who are registered." "They portrayed AIDS in a way it should be done," he said. "They kept saying AIDS was not a gay disease. I think it was presented in the right way." The volunteer said he thought the movie was realistic. The Leading Edge Model D PC-compatible computer will sell at $1495, offer four slots, up to 640K memory, double floppy drives, graphics capability built in and monochrome or RGB monitor output on the system board. Leading Edge Model D: High Power, Low Price CANTON, MA—In a move designed to break through the price barrier of the IBM compatible PC world, Leading Edge Hardware Products Inc. has announced the introduction of the Model D PC. The Model D is more than the equivalent of a $3000 IBM PC. It provides integrated support for both RGB color and high resolution monochrome displays. In addition, graphica support is provided for the more popular business programs on the standard hi-res monochrome monitor. This is a feature not provided for IBM's text only monochrome system. The user can also expand the system to its full 640K memory capacity by simply adding chips to the system board. This allows lower cost memory expansion while conserving valuable expansion slots; the Model D has four slots, all available to the user. vides no loss of system functionality-indeed an increase of functionality - in a package that requires 28% less desk space than most competitive systems - all at a price of just $1495. In essence, the Model D pro- The base Model D includes a clean high resolution monitor, 256K, 2 disk drives, parallel and serial ports and a clockcalendar. The keyboard addresses IBM-user complaints with typewriter layout and exra large return and shift keys. The system comes with a full warranty. Add to this Leading Quality assurance quality support and service, and Model D may be the premier IBM compatible PC on the market. Computer Outlet, 804 New Hampshire, Lawrence, is the first dealer of the Model D in Kansas. Bill Killough of Computer Outlet says that, "Price and Performance will make this the hottest selling micro in 1985." FREE COMEDY SHOP A. J. JOEL MADISON YOU MUST SEE ONE OF THE BEST WE'VE EVER HAD. WE GAVE HIM A "9" LAST TIME HERE. NO COVER! (SHOW STARTS AT 10:00) SO MANY PEOPLE HAVE ASKED US TO DROP THE COVER FOR THIS POPULAR EVENT, THAT WE COULDN'T RESIST THE THOUGHT OF PACKING THE HOUSE IF EVERYONE COULD WALK IN FREE, AND SEE THIS GREAT SHOW. AND THE DRINKS ARE CHEAP. You're Right on Campus in the Jayhawker Towers Apts. Great view of campus, or of the Jayhawker Towers POOL! Closets: 11 feet wide, dresser built in. Two Sinks: No waiting for your roommate! BATH BED RM 140 square feet Walls: Solid, rich brick. BED RM 140 square feet Big Picture Windows Location: On campus; on bus route. Thermostat: All Utilities Paid! LIVING/DINING RM 240 square feet Paid Cable TV Hookup 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 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Nov. 12. 1985 Law school to have Chinese exchange Campus/Area By Jill White Of the Kansan staff Details of the first exchange program between a law school in the People's Republic of China and KU's School of Law have been finalized, the KU dean of law said last week. A delegation of three law professors, the dean of law and an interpreter spent Oct. 20 to Nov. 1 in New York from the Peking University of Law. Mike Davis, dean of law, said the details that were finalized provided for the exchange of students, faculty and library materials. "Basically, they said if our students can get there, the rest will be on them." Davis said. "Our students will get free tuition and the food is naturally free." If the food's not free, it's very inexpensive." He said Peking would accept as many KU law students who met the language requirements as possible. The first exchange students could go to Peking as early as next fall. Davis said the KU students could stay for either one semester or a full year. But the students could get KU credit for up to six hours of class taken at Peking. "I've already been approached by two students from here who are interested in going to Peking," Davis said. "We talked to many students in China who wanted to come to KU." KU's law school agreed to accept as many Peking students as it could find one-semester scholarships for. The students would not be required to take the Law School Admissions Test but they would have to go through an admissions process. An admissions team would consider the prospective student's grades and faculty recommendations. Davis said KU's law school also could create special study programs for the Chinese students who were interested in combining law and related areas of study. Possible combinations include law, business, economics, philozoics, administration or urban planning. Davis said he would not know until this spring how many Chinese students the University of Kansas could accept. The first faculty exchange will take place in May when a KU professor travels to China. The professor will stay at Peking for three weeks to lecture and to interview Global Chinese exchange students. The professors of law who went to China with Davis were Martin Dickinson, George Coggins and Keith Meyer. Mon Vin Lung, KU's law librarian, served as the professors' interpreter. Peking will send a professor to KU in fall 1986 to lecture and do research for one semester. The library exchange was fairly simple and will begin immediately. Davis said. On Campus The KU Men's Soccer Club will practice at 4 p.m. today and Thursday at the practice fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The KU Women's Soccer Club will practice at 4:30 p.m. today and Thursday at the practice fields at 23rd and 1st streets. The KU Committee on South Africa will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Orea Ave. The Strategy Games Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union. College Republicans will meet at 7 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. The Tau Sigma Student Dance Club will meet at 7 p.m. today in 242 Robinson Center. The KU Democrats will meet at 6 p.m. today at 2300 W. 26th St., Apt. A-1. The University Forum will feature James Rush, a physician from Universities Field Staff International, at 11:45 a.m. tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. Rush will speak about "Post-Colonial Ammety International will show the video "The Hooded Men" at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in the audio-visual room of Lippincott Hall and at 7:30 p.m. in 107 Green Hall. The KU chapter of the Public Relations Student Society of America will meet at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in 202 Staffer-Flint Hall. The University Placement Center will sponsor a seminar, "Summer Employment in Internships," at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in 3 Lippincott Hall. A meeting for psychology majors to be advised on admission to the graduate school will be at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in 3139 Wescoe Hall Southeast Asia." Luncheon reservations must be made by noon today. A lecture, "The Rastafarian Movement in Jamaica and the USA," by Leachion Semaj, a specialist in culture and human behavior from the University of the West Indies in Jamaica, will be given at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 103 Lippincott. The KU Dr. Who Appreciation Society will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Walnut Room of the Union **DOUBLE FEATURE** Rent VCR & 2 Movies 覆盖 11& 4.19 **SMITTY'S TV** (1447 W. 32-8442-3751) M-S 9:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun, 1-pm. S Almost 1,000 selections including XXX Win $40! Devise a New Name and Logo for the KU Dance Club Overnight $ 14.49 SMITTETY TV 1447 w. 2364842 9731 M-5 9:30 m.-5 p.m. Sun. 1-5 p.m. Almost 1,000 selections including XXX MEL AMIGOS MEXICAN RESTAURANT SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! "TACOS" Tuesdays & Thursdays $2 All you can Eat. 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina "50¢ MUNCHIES" includes: Burgers-Tacos Chill Sundays & Mondays after 5 p.m. 2600 Iowa 843-4076 All You Can Eat Sunday Buffet $5.25 House of Hupei 2907 W. 6th Entries must be submitted to the Dance office in 251 Robinson by FRIDAY, NOV.22 For more information, call 864-4264 6 HOUR SALE TODAY ONLY 2-8 p.m. JUNIOR SHIRTS 7.99 values to $30.00 CORDUROYS 14.99 values to $35.00 ESPIRIT GENESIS SANTA CRUZ 25-50% OFF TURTLENECKS 9.99 values to $35.00 FALL PANTS 9.99 values to $50.00 SWEATERS 9.99 values to $50.00 carouse DENIM JEANS 9.99 values to $35.00 carouse 711 W.23rd The Malls Shopping Center INSIDE NINTH AT MISSISSIPPI CENTER SHAMPOO AND HAIRCUT $10.00 FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUPON JUST HAIR II MODERN HAIRDESIGN STUDIO 842-4414 708 W.NINTH EXPIRES 12-31-05 INSIDE NINTH AT MISSISSIPPI CENTER SHAMPOO AND HAIRCUT $10.00 FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUPON JUST HAIR II MODERN HAIRDESIGN STUDIO 842-4414 708 W.NINTH EXPIRES 12-31-05 COFFEE TASTING Students Always Welcome THE KANSAS UNION PRAIRIE ROOM Level Two THE KANSAS UNION PRAIRIE ROOM Level Two comprehensive health associates * free pregnancy tests * outpatient abortion services * innovative counseling * gynecology * contraception Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 yello sub delivers 841-3268 ROLL OUT THE BARREL Every Tuesday and Thursday Refill Your "HAWK" Glass ONLY $1.00 2 P.M.-Close It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO yello sub delivers 841-3268 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA GENE BECKMAN MATT DILLOON TARGET Fri. $5.00 Daily 7:20-9:00 Sat. & Sun. $2.30-$5.00 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA GENE BACKMAN MATT DILTON TARGET Fri. '5:00' Daily 7:20 9:40 Sat & Sun. '2:00' 5:00 VARSITY LIVE and DIE THE A Fri. '5:00' Daily 7:20 9:40 Sat & Sun. '2:30' 6:00 HILLCREST 1 JAGGED EDGE Glenn Close, Jeff Bridges Daily '4:45' 7:30 9:40 Sat & Sun. '2:30' HILLCREST 2 SOUND BRING ON THE NIGHT PG 13 Daily '5:00' 7:20 9:25 Sat & Sun. '2:45' HILLCREST 3 CHARLES-BROOKSON DEATH WISH 3 CANNON Daily '5:00' 7:30 9:30 Sat & Sun. '2:45' CINEMA 1 A wonderful surprise from the American Flyers Fri. '4:55' Daily 7:20 9:25 Sat & Sun. '2:45' 4:55 CINEMA 2 TREAT Fri. '5:00' Daily 7:25 9:30 Sat & Sun. '2:50' 5:00 *Bargain Show VARSITY STATIONARY TELEVISION AVAILABLE THE LIVE and DIE in LA Fri... 6:00 Daily 7:00-8:40 Set & Sun. 7:30-8:00 HILLCREST 2 THEATRE AND CINEMAS SOUND BRING ON THE NIGHT P/E 10 Daily, 5:00-7:26 9:25 Sat. & Sun., 2:48 HILLCREST 1 HAGGED EDGE Glenn Chess, Jeff Bridge daily *4:45 7:30 8:00 Set. Sat. 8:30 HILLCREST 3 CHARLES-BRINSON DEATH WISH 3 CANNON Daily 5:00 7:30 8:30 Sat. & Sun. 2-45 CINEMA 1 * A wonderful surprise * American Flyers Fri. 4-15 Daily 7:20 0:25 Sat. & Sun. 2:45 4-15 CINEMA 2 1300 W. 74th St. NEW YORK, N.Y. THE WEEKNOW Fri. '5:00 Daily 7:25 9:30 Sat. & Sun. '2:30 '5:00 The Grinder Man, we deliver! 843-7398 Legal Services for Students Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE! - Notarization of legal documents - Advice on most legal matters - Preparation & review of legal documents - Notization of legal documents - Many other services available Call or drop by to make an appointment Funded by student activity fee. 8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday 117 Burge (Satellite) Unit 864-5665 SUA FILMS NINA RUBINOVA LAURENCE OLIVIER MERLE OBERON Wuthering Heights DIRECTED BY WILLIAM WYLER ACADEMY AWARD Best Cinematography BEST PICTURE New York Film Critics Award BEST PICTURE BEST DIRECTOR BEST ACTOR Academy Award Nominee "Goldwyn at his best . . . a strong and somber film, sinister and wild . . . poetically written, brilliantly played." NEW YORK TIMES Tonight! $1.50 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. Sports 9 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1985 News Briefs Jayhawk rugby team finishes with victory The Kansas collegiate rugby team ended its fall season by defeating Central Missouri State on Saturday at Saturdays game in Warrenburg, Mo. "We just outclassed and overmatched them," Larry Witherbee, team member and recorder, said yesterday. The club side was idle this week but will finish its season with a Merit Table. Match Saturday against the Kansas City Rugby team in Kansas City, Kan. Kansan is 5-1 over 2-1 in Merit Table Matches. The victory left the Jayhawks 6-2 overall and 1-1 in Merit Table Matches. Kansas lost earlier to Kansas State in a Merit Table Match. The club side has defeated Jefferson City, Mo., and Topena in Merit Table Matches. The loss came against the Kansas City Blues. The next week, Kansas turned around and defeated the Blues en route to the championship in the Heart of America Tournament at Swope Park in Kansas City, Mo. $CU linebacker dies SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Santa Clara linebacker Dave Cichoke was found dead in his room yesterday. Cichoke, a 220 pound sophomore from Portland, Ore., played Saturday in Santa Clara's 21-19 victory at Cal State Northridge. He left the on his own power in the fourth quarter, the game, complaining of dizziness. Mike McNulty, Santa Clara sports information director, said Chickoe did not return to the game, but sat on the bench with no loss of consciousness. Penn State tops poll Penn State has become the fifth team to reach the top of the Associated Press college football poll this season, ending Florida's one-week reign Drake punts football The Nittany Lions, in second place a week ago, boosted its record to 9-0 by defeating Cincinnati, 31-10, Saturday and by taking advantage of Florida's 24-3 loss to Georgia, which dropped the Gators to 11th place. DES MOINES, Iowa — Drake University is dropping intercollegiate football for one season and will reinstate the sport in 1987 on a scaled down level, University President Michael Ferrari announced yesterday. From staff and wire reports. NHL goalie's alcohol level exceeds limit United Press International STRATFORD, N.J. — Philadelphia Flyers goalie Pelle Lindbergh, clinging to life yesterday on a respirator, had a blood-alcohol level more than twice the legal limit when his custom sports car plowed into a school, the team doctor revealed. Dr. Edward Viner said no decision on turning off the life-support systems would be made until Lindbergh's father, who has heart trouble, arrived from his native Sweden late last night. "He had had a fair amount to drink," Viner said of the all-star goaltender. "Pelle was not a drunk. He was a nice kid celebrating victory with a rare off day coming up. The real tragedy is he did what so many of us do in situations like this." A blood test showed Lindbergh's blood-alcohol level was 0.24 percent. The legal limit for operating a motor vehicle in New Jersey is 6.10 percent. No other dangerous substances were detected in Lindbergh's bloodstream, Vinaer said. Lindbergh, 26, the National Hockey League's top goalie last season, was considered brain dead and doctors said he would die if the life-support systems were turned off. 1. Police said Lindbergh smashed his customized Porsche into a school in Somerdale, N.J., about 10 miles east of Philadelphia. No official estimates were given of how fast Lindbergh was driving when he hit the school, but one officer guessed his speed as high as 80 mph. ! He said it was highly unlikely that the family would decide on ending Lindbergh's life until today. Friends of Lindbergh's said the Swedish criterion for the end of life is the bessation of heartbeat, not brain death, that the family did reluctant to accept the American standard. Lindbergh's fancee, Kerstin Pietzsch of Stockholm, was at the gomtender's bedside. His mother was rosting at the hospital. Saberhagen wins AL Cy Young Award The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bret Saberhagen, who won two games for Kansas City in the Royals' World Series victory over the St Louis Cardinals, yesterday was named the youngest pitcher in American League history to win the Cy Young Award. "This is great for me and great for Kansas City," the 21-year-old pitcher said at a news conference. Sabermeyer, only three years out of California, was earlier named the World Series Most Valuable Player. In his second year in the major leagues, Sabenher posted a 20-6 record with an ERA of 2.87. With remarkable control and poise and a sharp command of several pitches, he struck eight hits and issued only 38 walks. "An award like this is definitely a team award." he said. "If you don't have 25 guys fighting for you every time you go out there, then you don't have a chance." Saberhagen's wife, Janeane, gave birth to their first child, Drew William, the day before Saberhagen pitched the Royals' 11-0 victory over St. Louis in the seventh game of the World Series. He admitted with a lauchn that he may have trouble topping his storvbook season next year. "I guess all I can do is try to win 21 Nodding toward Janee who sat across the room with Drew William, he added, "But Janee says 'No.' She wants to be able to get out and see the World Series games in person next year." Saberhagen admitted that he was surprised at his big margin of victory in voting by members of the Baseball Writers Association of America. He was named on 27 of 28 ballots and received 23 first-place votes, gathering 127 points to 88 for runner-up Ron Guidry of the New York Yankees. 'games, win three World Series games and have twins,' he said with a laugh. thought it would be a lot closer than that," he said. John Schuerholz, Royals general manager, appeared with Saberhagen at the news conference and admitted, "The success we've had this year is almost hard to comprehend." "None of it would have been possible without a lot of hard working and dedicated players like Bret Saberhagen. We're very proud of him," Schuerholz said. "I was definitely surprised. I Saberhagen said his goals for the season were much more modest than in the previous season. "I was hoping for 14 or 15 victories and an ERA around 3.2," he said. "At the beginning of the year Mark Gubicza (another Royals pitcher) was joking about the fact that we had a Cy Young incentive clause in our contract — that we would get bonus money for winning the Cy Young. Who would have imagined it would have come true for me?" "That's what we said," said Schuerholz said with a laugh. Saberman said he knew about at all-star break that he was in line for the game. "But I didn't want to get ahead of myself," he said. "I just took it one batter at a time, one inning at a time, one game at a time." The youthful right-hander said he planned to work hard in the off-season and come back a better pitcher next year. Slow greens, wet fairways hamper team By Frank Hansel By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff Wet fairways and slow greens were the Kansas men's golf team's biggest enemies in the first round of the Hail Sutton Invitational in Shreveport, La., KU head coach Ross Randall said yesterday. The Jayhawks are tied for seventh place after shooting 308 yesterday. Southern Methodist leads the 15-tem tournament with a first round 294. The three-round tournament concludes tomorrow. Randall said the bermuda grass greens were slower than the bent green grasses that the Jayhawks were used to at Alvamar Country Club. "We can't get used to hitting the ball hard on these greens," Randall said. "It's like putting on our tees (at Alvamar)." Steve Madsen is the individual leader for Kansas with a first round three-over-par 74. He trails tournament co-leaders Billy Gabbert of McNeese State and Kevin Melita of Southeast Louisiana, both of whom shot even par 71. Randall said the team was in good shape after the first nine holes, but they gave away too many shots on the back nine. Freshman John Ogden was next for Kansas with a first round 75 against Ríanan Brian and Greevy shothunting 79 and earned Chris Hutcheens, who both shot 80. Madsen shot 37 on both sides but he bogeyed three of the last four holes. Hutchens opened with a 37 but shot 43 on the second hole, and 36 on the front but finished with a 39. Randall said the team was disappointed with the round, but there was still time to move up in the standings. Southern Methodist has a five shot lead over Southeast Louisiana, which shot 299. Pan American and Baylor are tied for third at 301 followed by: North Texas State, 303, McNeese State, 306, Kansas and Southwest Louisiana, 308, Louisiana Tech, 311, New Orleans, Centenary College of Louisiana and Northwest Louisiana, 313, Tulsa, 318, Texas-San Antonio, 320 and Southwest Texas State, 321. 10 Mark Mohler/KANSAN the club members Sharon Lucey, left, and Jenny Dixon, practiced their moves yesterday in Hobinson gym sium. Lucye was helping Dixon practice for a karate test later this week. Getting their kicks DU loses 2nd place points By Harlen Makemson Of the Kansan sports staff The interimternity Council judicial board decided late Sunday night not to replay the Greek trophy football tournament and to disqualify the Delta Upsilon squad from receiving second place points that would go toward the Greek sports trophy. Joe Saliba, chairman of the IFC judicial board, said yesterday that Delta Chi and Pi Kappa Alpha had Delta Upsilon's grade release forms from the past two years of which showed Pack St. Clair as being a member. If a person does not show up on a grade release form, he cannot participate in Greek trophy sports, according to the IFC. Last week, Delta Chi and Pi Kappa Alpha charged that St. Clair, who was playing on the DUpsilon Upsilon team, was not an active member of the house and that theDU's should not be allowed to continue in the competition. Delta Upsilion, according to Saliba, based its defense on "word of honor," saying it could produce documents showing that St. Clair was in the process of being initiated. The judicial board had ruled prior to the meeting that any evidence coming forth after Nov. 5 — the day the complaint was filed — would not be allowed as evidence. Grade release forms for this semester were posted on the net but not turned in to Delta Upsilon on time, according to Saliba. complaint, St. Clair was not on any form," Saliba said. "On evidence up to the day of the Phi Delta Theta will still receive the 200 first place points that go with winning the tournament. The points go toward the all-sports trophy that is given after all Greek Trophy sports are completed. The decision not to replay the tournament means that second place will be unoccupied, as far as IFC is concerned, and Delta Chi, which forfeited to Delta Upsilon as an indirect result of the charges, will have to settle for third place. "Delta Chi was assuming guilt," Saliba said. "They should have played the game. We cannot find just reason for replaying the tournament." Field goal pushes Broncos past 49ers United Press International DENVER — A 24-yard field goal by Rich Karlis with 1:27 left brought Denver a chilled 17-16 victory over the San Francisco 49ers last night and pushed the Broncos into sole possession of first place in the AFC West. The 49ers had taken their first lead of the game with 3:46 to play on a 45-yard field goal by Ray Wersching, which appeared to have made up for a night of missed opportunities. But two key plays allowed the Broncos to march from their own 30 to the winning points. A 42-yard interference penalty called on San Francisco's Dwight Hicks against Steve Watson on a third-and 13 situation allowed Denver to retain possession during the game-winning drive. Then, under pressure from a blitzing Romie Lott, Denver quarterback John Elway managed to complete a 22-yard desperation throw to Watson down to the 48ers' 9. After three plays, Karlis came on to put the field goal directly between the two. Following Karlis' field goal, the 49ers had ample time to move into field goal range themselves, but could not even pick up a first down. The last San Francisco hope ended when safety Randy Robbins hauled down Roger Craig short of a first down. The Broncos, however, missed a major scoring chance when Sammy Winder was stopped at the goal line of fourth down in the third quarter. Elway put the Broncos ahead in the first half with touchdown throws of 3 yards to Gene Lang and 6 yards to Watson, the second of those set up by a trick play that wound up as a 50-yard completion to Watson. San Francisco scored on field goals of 26, 22 and 45 yards by Wersching in addition to a 13-yard throw from Joe Montana to Mike Wilson. With the Broncos leading 14-3, Denver was forced to punt from its own 15, but the snap by Glenn Hyde sailed over the head of punter Chris Norman. Norman managed to leap high enough to get a hand on the ball, but he couldn't give a punt away and San Francisco took over at the Denver 4. Denver won for the fifth time in six weeks and raised its record to 7-3 — one game in front of Seattle and the Los Angeles Raiders. San Francisco, meanwhile, fell to 5-5. Crew team may acquire use of depot The contract would transfer the building to the crew team with the requirement that the depot be moved within four months after the contract is signed. Elliott said. He estimated the total cost of the project to be almost $250,000, including the price of the land. Elliott said he hoped to have the building moved by this spring and put in place by next fall. His original proposal called for moving the building brick by brick. But he said the team had received a grant of $30 million from the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which structural engineer, who would come to Lawrence later this month and study ways to move the building. Elliott said the crew team was also hiring a project coordinator, Doug Kansas City architect, to help with planning and raising funds for the move. By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff "This is a good deal." Bowen said. "We get a boathouse and the city of Lawrence gave a historical site." The Kansas Crew team is working with the Lawrence Preservation Alliance to bring the old Union Pacific railroad depot in north Lawrence to a new spot near the corner of Seventh and New York streets for use as the crew team boothouse. Bowen called the developments encouraging to team members. When she first started crew, she said, boats were kept in a fenced-in area and stored under Memorial Stadium in the winter. Last year, when the team got the use of the warehouse, the equipment was finally protected from the weather. Sports Almanac The crew team now stores equipment in an old warehouse on the corner of Seventh and New York Streets. The original plan was for the team to try to buy the piece of privately owned property near that warehouse and build a new boothhouse. Bowen said members were hoping Lawrence would buy the land near Seventh and New York Streets and lease it to them. Elliott said the depot would house locker rooms, showers, weight rooms and offices, and the team would still need to add another building to store shells. Representatives of the two groups are studying a contract for the transfer of the building to the KU Crew team, team Coach Cliff Elliott said yesterday. Union Pacific has also agreed to give the crew team $10,000, which would help pay for moving and renovating the depot. BIG 8 Car Yds Yds ppb 502 395 385 394 Alabama 457 457 457 Colorado 540 2431 270.1 Okaloosa State 373 1598 179.1 Michigan 364 1914 167.4 Kansas 358 1274 127.4 Tennessee 368 796 147.4 Kansas State But when Union Pacific decided to tear down the old depot, some people in Lawrence said that the nearly 100-year-old building was a historical site and that they didn't want it torn down, crew team president Janet Bowen said. Elliott said the company then offered the building to the city. Rushing Offense Plays Yds Yds Pg Nebraska 714 4334 601.6 Oklahoua 714 3177 601.6 Kansas 728 4017 401.7 Oklahoma St. 567 4050 401.7 Missouri 597 3500 350.3 Colorado 613 3633 314.8 Iowa State 605 2280 214.8 Kansas St. 605 2280 214.8 Att Cap Yds Yds #1 Kansas 319 216 2743 274.5 Missouri 319 153 1708 170.9 Iowa State 207 144 1894 164.9 Kansas St. 162 104 1893 165.9 Kansas St. 93 104 1893 165.9 Oklahoma 84 43 832 118.9 Nebraska 122 47 836 97.3 Colorado 84 43 832 118.9 Plays Yds Yds Pts Okahanna 429 1352 187.4 Nebraska 603 976 739.0 Okahanna St. 557 2292 386.5 Kansas 650 2292 386.5 Iowa St. 600 319 198.0 Kansas 727 3609 360.0 Kansas St. 600 319 198.0 Missouri 600 319 198.0 Att Cp Yds Yds pp Okalahoma 178 66 633 195 Okaloosa St. 178 66 913 110 Kanawa St. 189 90 1274 141 Iowa St. 199 104 1297 141 Colorado 259 104 1297 141 Nebraska 200 144 1672 109 Missouri 200 144 1672 109 Kansas 224 122 1790 182 Car Vids Yds pp Oklahoma City 342 447 63.8 Nebraska 345 433 63.7 Colorado 341 1202 133.6 Kansas City 341 1202 133.6 Oklahoma State 418 1601 147.7 Iowa State 418 1601 147.7 Kansas City 446 1601 212.3 Missouri 402 2104 212.3 Eastern Conference NBA W 1 L Pct. GR Boston 6 1 807 New Jersey 6 1 807 Philadelphia 4 4 500 2% Washington 2 8 500 New York 2 8 500 Central Division Detroit 6 5 .067 Milwaukee 6 4 .000 Chicago 6 4 .100 Atlanta 4 2 .444 Indiana 4 2 .333 Cleveland 4 2 .299 Western Conference Midwest Division Denver 6 1 857 - Houston 6 2 -75 % Washington 6 3 128 % Udall 4 4 960 ,2% Dallas 4 5 266 ,4% Sarasota 4 5 266 ,4% L.A. Lakers 1 9 .857 - Portland 7 2 .778 - LA Clippers 4 5 .600 - Golden State 4 5 .444 3 Seattle 2 6 .343 St Louis 2 6 .000 6 Saturday's Games New Jersey 128, Missouri 123 Chicago 97, New York 94 Boston 124, Detroit 108 Houston 115, Dallas 110 Houston 112, Cleveland 114 Washington 106, Sacramento 94 Sacramento 97, Seattle 93 Sunday's Games Philadelphia 108, Milwaukee 97 Portland 110, Cleveland 107 Golden State 117, Sacramento 111 Last night's Game New Jersey at San Antonio NFL Today's Games Washington at Detroit Phoenix at New York Milwaukee at Chicago Oakland at San Francisco Ulah at LA-Lakers L.A. Cipriani at Golden State Sacramento at Portland San Diego at Phoenix American Conference | | W | L | T Pct. | PF | PA | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New England | 7 | 3 | 0 | 12 | 58 | | N.Y. Jets | 7 | 3 | 0 | 12 | 58 | | Miami | 6 | 4 | .000 241 | 211 | | Indianaapolis | 6 | 4 | .000 241 | 211 | | Baltimore | 2 | 0 | .000 241 | 210 | Cincinnati 5 5 0 500 287 288 Pittsburgh 5 5 0 200 219 181 Cleveland 4 6 0 400 150 159 Houston 4 6 0 400 162 205 Denver 7 3 4 0 .700 238 197 Seattle 7 3 4 0 .700 238 195 L.A. Angels 6 4 5 000 238 227 São Paulo 6 4 5 000 238 227 Sicheng 6 4 5 000 238 227 Kansas City 7 3 0 0 .700 199 National Conference East Cleveland Chicago 10 9 0 1 000 278 127 Minnesota 3 5 0 300 300 267 Detroit 5 5 0 200 177 210 Oakland 4 5 0 190 120 Tampa Bay 1 9 0 190 120 L.A. Rams 8 2 5 0 200 210 151 San Francisco 5 2 0 200 244 194 New Orleans 3 7 0 200 176 282 Atlanta 1 9 0 100 108 307 Dallas 7 3 3 0 700 220 153 N.Y. Giants 7 3 0 700 220 179 Philadelphia 5 5 0 500 158 162 Washington 5 5 0 500 158 162 Arizona 4 6 0 600 158 162 Sunday, Nov. 17 Buffalo at Cleveland Chicago at Dallas Tampa Bay at New York Jetts Los Angeles Rams at Atlanta Minnesota at Chicago New Orleans vs. Green Bay at Milwaukee Pittsburgh at Houston Philadelphia at St. Louis San Diego at Denver Minnesota at Detroit New England at Seattle Columbus Raiders Kansas City at San Francisco NHL Wales Conference Patrick Division W L T PU GF GA Philadelphia 7 2 4 10 NY Islanders 7 4 16 51 Washington 7 6 18 62 54 NY Giants 7 6 18 62 54 New Jersey 7 6 11 53 50 New York 7 6 11 53 50 Boston 10 4 1 21 60 44 Quebec 9 4 1 19 68 44 Buffalo 9 5 1 19 60 43 Houston 7 4 14 60 43 Montreal 10 4 1 19 60 43 Cambell Conference Minnesota 4 6 3 11 45 52 Chicago 4 7 3 11 45 52 Oakland 9 9 4 9 53 56 Detroit 9 9 4 9 53 56 Illinois 1 11 2 4 42 68 10 > SANTEE Lakers Edinburgh 11 1 13 78 70 Calgary 6 0 1 17 67 47 Vancouver 7 6 2 18 61 62 Winterspring 6 0 1 13 61 74 Boston 5 0 1 13 61 74 10 University Daily Kansen Classified Ads KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 The University Daily CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 8.25 10-20 2.90 4.25 6.00 9.35 21-25 3.10 4.75 7.00 10.35 For every 3 words add: 304 504 754 1.05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. per column inch Classified Display advertisements can be unify one width, and on more than one minimum depth in one touch. No revenues allowed in Classified display ads. See classified display ads. - Words to send in ALL CAPS count in 2 words. * Words to send in BOLD FACE count as 3 words. * Words to send in p.m. - 2 working days prior to publication. * Above rates based on consecutive day inertions. * No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of the prepaid class admitted advertising. * Please please add $4 service charge. * Check must accompany all classified ads mailed * All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established. * Teenagers are not provided for classified or classified ad displays do not count towards mon- tiple classified ad displays. * Samples of all mail order items may be submitted prior to publication of advertising. Classified Display...$4.40 per column inch POLICIES Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1985 Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the kansas business office 804-3158. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 804-4358 ENTERTAINMENT Dance to live fiddle music! Jayhawker Oldtown Bardnage Company. Make your new party unit special! Floaties is believing. Floatie Connnect now floaties. Open all day Sun & Mon—and every day of the week. NIGHT LIFE Mobile DJ Dance Music. A mixture of New Rock and the classics presented over a 400 watt sound system. When it's time to dance, call NIGHT LIFE 798-4713. LOST/FOUND Computer Literacy Instructional Program (CLLP) booklet送来 campus mail from Milpot Child Development Center. Office of, Human Care. Call Carroll Scott 841-287-914, 841-283- 841-282. Found- gold necklace in front of Watson Library. Call to identify 864-4715. Lost - Keys attached to suicide coin purse, friday behind Spencer Museum. 643-896-206 or 648-869-400 FOR RENT 2 Bedroom apartment for rent. Close to campus. starts at 10:00 am. b847-3706 for Lana Kernan. $2,950 per month. 1 Bedroom apt, close to campus $110/month plus utilities. 841-449-440 Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 West 9th. One bedroom furnished. 3rd floor. $225 plus utilities. Lease through. No. Dogs, price could be negotiable. are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at BERKELEY LIFE. Vacations available now and at semester. Plan ahead,lease now for next year. 843-2115. Cooperative living lovers your expenses while expanding your mind. Room available at Rainbow House for $110/month. Call 843-7398 (after 5 p.m.) to apply to become part of our thriving community. Attractive 2 bedroom condominium for rent. 134 baths, CA, FP, range, refrigerator, microwave, DW, WD hookups, paid cable TV, swimming pool. Walking distance. Available. Decide 1. Lease 2. Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 842-1485. For oval. Orange lg, 5 bedrooms, 7 bath. For rectangular. 6 bedrooms, 7 bath. Clarified. Available (1/8) Call 749-3192 or 443-7273. Available (1/8) Call 749-3192 or 443-7273. Furnished rooms from $100 with some utilities from kansas union. No pets. 841-5600 KU Basketball season ticket for sale. Best offer call 841-3706 Lina LIVE HERE! Two bedroom, fireplace, Two bathrooms. 100% occupied. Samantha Place to-c 8-CM/Call 704-9463 or 8-CM/Call 704-9463. THE FAR SIDE Large one bedroom, gas heat, water/water paddl. $255, 749-789 or 841-250. Luxury townhouse, 3 bedroom, 1/2 baths, garage, fireplace, deck, entertainment mountain Place. 749-3155. HEATIERWOOD VALLEY: $200 FIRST OFF MONTH'S RENT. ONE & two bedrooms available beginning at $300/month. All apartments have Ca gas, heat WG, DF rearr. Energy efficiency and noise reduction. Nice Rooms $135.00 Ubl. Paid. 942-4736 after 5. n One Bedroom Apt. for sub-lease effective Dec. 15 for spring 69. Call 842-3481 or 795-3479. Balcony, nice view, bus route, 10 minutes walk to campus and drive up to a mile from Union. Hosts $99 and $123. Call 842-3481. Sublease at semester. Large, new, 2 bedroom, 1 block from Union. Call 832-328. Sublease-Affordable studio apartment in good neighborhood $175/month paid available San Francisco Bay Area 1 bedroom apts. from $199 some units paid. 2 bedrooms and the University. No pets please. 643-505-8338 MASTERCRAFT offers a completely furnished two bedroom apartment available immediately! We also have subleases on 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartments in the near NEK. Call MASTERCRAFT, 1121-8155 or 794-3495 ANNOUNCEMENTS Arts and Crafts Fair Lawrence Community Art Center 200-498-3155 a.m.-p.m. Professional artists and crafters per week. SKIERS: Complete Colorado alki, trip 329, Limited special offer, call 842-6000 by Nov. 15. International Club invites you to a Semi-formal Dance Saturday, Nov.16 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. The Filia Club Club invites you to a Semi-formal Dance Saturday, Nov.16 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. at the Elks Club, Lodge Room 3705 W. 23rd Street Tickets sold at the SUA Office $3 members $4 non-members $5 at the door Pt. for by Student Activity Fee Pd. for by Student Activity Fee By GARY LARSON 1985 Universal Press Syndicate Tune into NBC "TODAY SHOW" Wednesday 11/13 for the NBC TV segment if your in- ventor wants to be featured. featured along with our Nanny's wife and client's family; and Hc-23 Nanny's Ridon, Wilton and Ooddy. 0807-234-9555 Garbage dumps of the wild BLOOM COUNTY Hillel Movies at the Hillel House 940 Mississippi 7:30 tonight News and Business Staff Positions Stop in for some popcorn & our great pick of flicks! Diwali Festival, November 23 - 6-10 p.m. Cormorant and dance dressed by the kids in India MY GOSH. YOU DID IT, YOU GOT A Nose JOB AT THE "JOHN COLLINS" PRINT AND BODY WORK CLINIC." 10'-Color T. V. $28.98 per month. Smith's Y. 14'-W. 84; bays 743-875, Mon.-Nov. 18-30; Sun. 12'-W. 84; bays 743-875, Mon.-Nov. 18-30; Sun. IBM USER'S & COMPATIBLES—Meeting November 12, 7:15 p.m. at the Computer Center Auditorium. Program will be Commodo vs. the software exchange Library. Public welcome! Rent-VCV, with 2 movies, overnight 814.69, Smith's TV, #147 (W47, rid. #43/45). Mon., Sat. (7:00 - 10:00). Aspen 811 SUA Travel is going to beautiful Aspen Aspen 811 SUA Travel is going to beautiful Aspen package price is only $25 and includes everything, even lift tickets. Sign-up deadline is before June 30th. office in the Union or call 864-3477 for details. SNIERES-Complete Colorado skis trj. Limited special offer, call 843-9000 by November The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Monday, November 25. The University Daily Kansan is anEqual Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of national origin or ancestry. PICAHOR" ADPI - Pai Pai Road Rally Nov 17, 5 p.m. PAI Party afterwards at ADPI house Editor, Business Manager The Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester Editor and Business Manager positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; in In Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Tuesday, November 19. 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 age, or an ordea. Paid Staff Positions THERE WAS CONFUSION... SO MUCH, CONFUSION. THEY...THEY ALMOST CHAPPED THE END OFF OF ME, AND ACCOMPLISHED AND GAVE ME BOSOM IMPLANTS. by Berke Breathed THOSE BUTCHERS! COME IN. LAY DOWN. MY GOSH, YOU DID IT. YOU GOT A Nose Job AT THE JOHN COLLINS PAINT AND BODY WORK CLINIC... THERE WAS CONFUSION... SO MUCH, CONFUSION... THY...THEY ALMOST CHOPPED THE END OFF OF HIS DECERT'S NOSE AND GAVE ME BLOOM IMPAINTS... THOSE BUTCHERS! COME IN... LAY DOWN... HOW DO YOU FEEL? FAINT... WOOZY... BUT VERY ATTITATIVE. Place an ad. Tell the world. Call the Kansan. BUS. PERSONAL HOW DO WE FEEL ? FAINT... WOOLY... BUT VERY ATTACKIVE... 810-350 Weekly/Up Maintenance Circuits) Our office is located at 267 N. Broadway, Suite 406, Los Angeles, CA 90076 Woodlock, Inc. **enquiries:** PC 2476C8, PC 2476D6 NEW FEEL THE FLOW INC. Vitamins, Minerals & More 10-40% lower prices CALL 864-6027 Aerobics on Saturdays. Gals and Guys—fun, good fun! A great way to bond with friends and Saturday morning. Interiors two free trees, friendly staff, and Saturday morning. 1234567890 MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Union's recording of the day, its entreaty. COMPREIENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATESI- ally and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidential assured. Greater area. Call for appointment. 913-548-1000 CUSTOM DESIGNS FOR QUALITY SPORTWEAR We Make Ideas Come Alive 1023 Mass 749-7471 H2 sportswear **Country Heard** *Holiday Sale 2710 Belle Haven* Fri Nov. 13th and 14th and 19th from 8:30 to 10:00pm Tue Nov. 16th through 18th, first arrives with shortened hairs through LOVELINE, the directory for educated singles. Write P.O. Box 20029, Lawrence, KS 56102. CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for Chauffeur Driven LIMOUSINES For Any Occasion. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK Dinetes, Dinetes, Dinetites! We have over 50 dinetes to choose from. a factory set select with two sinks and a large extra sturdy steel frame & durable vinyl cushions. All five pieces only 60% Hurry to Midwest Furniture & Watered Liquidators 738 921-6034, 922-8035 in Ks and Md and growing. Do you want your next party sound system and DJ to be professional? 841-1306 Call Stage Pro Health Insurance for Students Short-term and long term plans available. Call Dallon insurance, 415 N. 2nd cent'19" Color T. V $28.90 a month, Curtis W, Sun; W 2nd, 824-5738, Sat.- Mon; 9-30 Sat., Wed. In our private hot tub! $5.00 off Regular $15.00 Includes FREE THE PERFECT DATE... Include EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA PHONE 841-8232 - Optional Movie Renta LOOK OUT LAWRENCE! THE KU KONNECT HUNDS found a system of dating which works, COMPUTER DATING with a personable touch THE KU KONNECT has it !!! Find out about us by simply sending a message to the KU KONNECT. THE KU KONNECT n . b u x i s w a r n . LR 5 6044 Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa 1.1, and of course, hire a lawyer. MATH TUTOR - Bob Moores holds an A in Math from KU in UTA, 102, 112 and 138 and were among the first students to study abroad annually in 1975 and often tutors elementary school students. DIPLOMA IN WEDDING - Audie Mauller B-9235 We get your computer's head on straight. Computer Repair. AlphaOmega Computers Services. Mismatched mattresses. National bedding manufacturer contacted us to liquidate several of mismatched closet-out or discontinued twin sets only $8 each. Open to the public every day. Midwest Furniture and Waterliden Hills Amphitheatre 842-252. Outlets in RS and MO and Manhattan 842-252. Modeling and theater portfolio - shooting not Begins in Professionals, call for information Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event or as a gift. Price available on imprinted specialties plus other items from our catalog of our talented artists. 2201 W. 35th (Bend Gibbons) New from California: Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure. 364-8744-372, FO Box 3858. Wichita, Monday - Friday, Monday & Friday, KU Represen­tives needed. Not all students are. Common but all KU students have Sense. Thousands of R & R Albums—24 onzas. Also collectors items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Quantrills 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all styles music. Rent-1' Clr. T. V. $29.95 a month. Smitty's TV. 14' W. 3rd. $42.95 a month. Sat. 9:30-8:30, Sun. 1-5:17. Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t-shirts, ties and caps. Shirt Cuttage by Swellis $12.95 WINTER BREAK skating at Steamboat Springs and Vail from FF, or sizing at South Padre Island. Suncatchers Tours for more information toll free at suncatcher.tourism.mil or visit the TODAY! When your winter break is over, go back to FF. Bike Sale 10% off all Blanchi Models Touring, Ski Bike Sale 25% off all Blanchi Models Bicycles Sainfoin Powder 10% Manassanet Camera Repair now at One Hour Photo, Southern Hills Malls, 841-7265 PERSONAL A O P's: Thanks for all your hard work on Rock Chak '86 | The Men of Sigma Phi Epsilon Dimwitted, unattractive, dumb freshman valley student, indeterminate midrump student, Call Val at 783-PLY Slender, mature, affectionate but bxy male students seek mature young lady for companionship and social interaction. Interests include dining, dancing, mast and nature. If you wish affection, attention and friendship, please send photo with resume to Box 671, 119 Flight Hall, University Dalran Kaiser. Somewhat new to the area, certainly new to this and slightly apprehensive, a m successful professional, swim, 29, tall, nice looking, wrist and ankle in sports shoes, travel seeking bright, attractive gentleman whose sensitive and down to earth for companionship and warmer nights. Write to: Hox 154, Box 154, New York, NY. Thank you, St. Jude for favors granted. Three Our Fathers, Hail Mary's and Gleary Be's. This graveyard has not been known to fail. Publication must be promised. Witty, attractive female, 20, seeks intelligent, since male, 18, and rebel to politics. Send resume to H.E.A. Box 645, New York, NY 10017. C. s.d.onen" necessarily stand for computer science. White male, 25, poor completion, dull personality, skinny and not too bright, sees winniness blonde with great looks, good body, family connections, class wardrobe and fantastic personality. Must be uncritical. Send sincere only to refine, Box IA, Rm. 11 Stauffer-Flint Hall, University of Not all students are COMMON, but all KU students have SENSE. FOR SALE 1984 21 inch touring bike. Low mileage. Retail $449- akin $200 - with many at: 864-8001. 842-7638 PC INTEGRATION: The most compatible at the lowest price. Fully guaranteed. Systems starting at just $499! Hard disk special: 20 MB internal, installed and tested (full year warranty). BRUNET LAMPS. Buy out of a lifetime!! 86 assorted burgers with 3 way switch and dishwasher. 75 New York, Midwest Furniture and Watered Liquidators. 21 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS Outlets in RSA & Baseball cards and sports notation. Buy, Sell. Basketball cards and Sports Open 18 M-5. W and w2rd Street. Heaven Sent Balloons & Gifts We deliver surprises balloon bouquets costumed deliveries singing telegrams party decorations Hours: 10-5 Mon-Fri; 10-2 Sat. Deliveries by appointment We now carry Pendragon gifts 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza 749-4341 Bedding Closet. A leading manufacturer has discontinued several covers. They offered us this one time special at beheadment at 88 Cedar St. E, Z TERMS AVAILABLE. Open 7 days! Midwest Furniture and Waterbed Liquidators. 738 New Hampshire, Lakewood, KS, 625-2047. Outsures in USA. CARPET 35.00 square yards in a rainbow of color and texture. Upcycled. Used Carpets. 728 New Carpet. 641 BORN. CLEARly OPTICAL clear window plastic. Mylar or Polyethylene 90" or 160". Bluestone Emulsion. Cinema Books, Playhouse, Metacomp, Comic Books, Open 12 p.m. Tue., Sat. & Sun. 10 a.m.-5 b. 11 a.m. FOR SALE Sony D-5 Diskman, Brand new, Call 843-270-9100, 5 p.m. ONKYO STEERER RECEIVER - 70 watts per channel, many features, excellent customer call. Federer Jager guitar, $75/best offer. Beginner's CUSTOMER PICK. Cutterter BARO medium size, slightly used critterberr, excellent condition, very obedient, cute, friendly. Price negotiable. Call Kristine Fra sale: Hotpoint washing machine, 1 year old, excellent condition. $300. For sale. Sony receiver, ficturatable, Sanyo for sale. 749-2165, for system, will sell self- assembled. 749-2165. Set sale: Kazuo Rivio 1440cc For sale: Yamaha receiver, Sony turntable, KLH Rivio 1440cc GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM (U$1 rep.) Also deliquent tax payment. Call 1-800-657-807 www.govnet.com PEAUVE 'Heritage' amplifier for $200 HENRY HEYDEN 'Nature' amplifier for $150 HUA-70 C-Scooter (100), Great for campanage HUA-70 Scooter (100), Great for campanage Get a Real Student Season Basketball Ticket Best Offer Tickets: 644-1132 or 844-1119 PASSOFT RADAR DETECTOR. New condition, must sell in best offer, 1947-1922 Must Sell: Brand new compound box with a chrome finish. Must be suitable for Must sell inquiries 1772 Mabie Villa suitable IBM PC Jr. 18kK monitor, parallel port, interfac modern software. Must tell really quick. Best of- cep. KWALITY COMICS - Classic Books Science Fiction play and simulation games. 1111 NEXT DAYS! Moped. 1840 Honda Senda. Only 900 miles, moving sale. $299. Call 843-5371. Must sell immediately 1977 Mobile Villa suitable for 2 bedrooms / 2 / negotiable make offer. Phone 841-6431 after 1 t密, must sell to best offer. 749-1972 POVERTY SALLE 13' Color TV, Queen size Phone answering machine, sunlamp, jewelry, ski sweatshirt, suit, treadmill, twin bed, rug Cell phone 653-7190 THE MOST COMPATIBLE American PC/XT Computer from $99. Full year warranty, Authorized Dealer, Distributor, Think Micro, Inc. 843-523 Box 3996, Lawrence, KS 60044 Tried of looking everywhere for QUALITY TREES & WREELS at reasonable prices? Well, you don't have to worry. Our brands are on our everyday low prices (can save up to 50% when shopping online!), our album is out! W.23rd & Bide Pizza Hall: 789-547-357. Western Civilization Notes: On sale Now! Makes sense to use them. 1. As study guide. 2. For class practice. 3. For homework. 4. Analysis of Western Civilization available now at Town Crier. The Jayhawk Bookstore, and Zenith Terminal (monitor & monitor) for off-cam system, system, Excellent condition, model: 600; code: 789-389-001 AUTO SALES Collector Stacks, Mint and used. Cana, USA; U31 Europe and more. Open 10-5, Sat, Sun only. 813 New Hampshire, New York. $499-$599. Brownstone, FEEDER Model. Northern Silver v/ Blue, like new, exceptional value $140 1972 Mercury. Runs great. $50 or best offer. Call 841-6028. after 4 p.m. 176 Vega wagon, 90,000 miles. AM/FM, smo tles included, x5 or best offer. BK14-8300-00 1977 MG Midget, 842-8352, late evenings 179 Capple 4 dr. PS, PB, air, 100 on rebuilt, engine; 1500 on engine trans (receipts); new, trees, battery. Pioneer AM/FM cassette; damage, power supply; battery runs well), driven dawn $00 or bo. 842.7137 1972 bobcat- good condition for sale at a very good price. Call 843-4297 181 Manza GLC, 2 door, HB, 5 speed, FWD, rear, defogger, higher mileage . $3000 or take over $99 payments. Can't afford both car and school anymore-must sell car as soon as possible 1989 BMW 318, Low mileage, all electric, custom interior. Beautiful. Call 749-2834. 1974 Ford Mustang Liftback, Runs good, some runt, 800 or best offer. Call 842-5633. 78 Buck Regal Repul 74,900 mi. AC, PB, CB. 86 Buck Regal Repul 5,120 cm. Cloth 2966 毋须仅仅 8874 m² 78 Firebile bm 70 ki, ac amfim cass. excellent cond B42.4675 78 Hewlett-Brown 64,000 units 4 cyl. A/C Auto, 4-dr. FWD. Batchback. AM/FM. Clean body. Economic and dependable car in good condition. 803-3214 Alfa Romeo, 1979 GT Coupe. Limited edition, 400cc. Includes optional rear spoiler. Only please. $655.83-$709.27 after 6. *See Offer Details* - **型号:** 84 Honda Civic DX. 2 dr. hatch, 6 bapod, 6 door, carseat, cassette condition, moving ahead mode, automatic window control. - **颜色:** Black/White/Red. HELP WANTED for sale. 82 Honda Cars $100 DX, 2 dhratch, for sale. 82 Honda Cars AM/FM cassette. Moving, must sell, one owner. $300. Call 749-2193. Great student car? 72 Carlson Cass A.M.-P.M. radio tape, new radials, great mech, and body grade. $1200-814-7433, e威 and weekends. Child care center needs full-time, part-time teachers. Call for appl 749-0236. Fulltime cook for fraternity held. Good salary, no saturdays. Call 842-8673. WorkStudy. Clerk Typist position available for Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at the Federal Building. Application deadline: Friday, November 14. Application available in 404 Kansas UNION. Application number: 404 Kansas UNION. FOR KO Nanny/Au Pair, for three year old child, Art/cultural oriented family. San Francisco area. Room and board & $75 per week. Apply to area agency 123-823-8511 after i.p.m. Classified Heading: PRE-MEDICAL SECRETARY - part-time position in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Basic duties include: acting as campus resource person for students following courses of instruction for students applying to medical and dental schools; preparing confidential files on applications for students to medical and dental schools; conducting medical school statistics. Above all, this position requires the ability to interact with medical school statisticians. Above all, this position requires the ability to interact with application administrators with initiative. Flexible hours. Student/not student. Deadline for application is November 15th. Application is not required for long-term employment. Resume required. Contact Cherri Buckley, 1602 Struthers Drive, New York, NY 10022, 8:30-12:30 M-W KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS Write ad here Female weeks A.M. 7:30-12:00; P.M. 10:45 addide also 749-0288 Phone: | | 1 Day | 3-5 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or 8 Weeks | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1-15 words | $2.60 | $3.75 | $6.25 | $8.25 | | For every 5 words written | $30.0 | $60.0 | $75.0 | $105.0 | Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Classified Display 1 col. x 1 inch = $4.40 Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1985 11 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Work-Study Hourly Position available with Bureau of Child Research, 10-20 brs. per week for entry level positions. Resume ad mailing list, filling publication requests, photocopying, distribution of mail information and filing. Must have good organizational skills and knowledge of computer entry and good typing skills necessary. Complete application at AA 311 Barnet Terrace (Meadowbrook) or May 18, 1985. Classified Ads Part-time mornings, must be 2. Apply in person Knoll焊接 Supply, 1045 Penn EOE. Position Available - Gift Shop Manager, Museum of Natural History. Requires experience in retail sales, inventory and purchasing; bookkeeping/video/schedule hourly help. Preferred qualifications: merchandising and advertising experience, interest in retaining position for 2 years or longer. Contact HR at [email] . Need to be enrolled at least 10 hours by course provider. Applicant must have a wk. position will start in January, 1986. To obtain enrolment information, visit the MIRY Ann Munsch, 02 Dyche, 864-454. Applications must be submitted until November 12, 1985.Equal Opportunity Employer. RESEARCH ASSISTANT - WESTERN CIVILIZATION Quarter-time position for six weeks with the Western Civilization Program in the investigation and evaluation of educational materials (audiovisual, textbooks, etc.). Position will be offered to the resources available to the instructional staff of the program. Positions will be for six months of duration beginning on August 15, 1986. Position requires a Baccalaureate degree. Prefer academic background in history, geography, or Western Civilization, and some evidence of reference library research skills. Salary is $480 a month. The University of Kansas Budget Office has two position openings for continuous half-time student assistants with possible full-time employment. The position requires experience in positions will assist with the process of budget and accounting transfers for the University's budgets. This person will gain a good exposure to fund accounting practices at the University's financial environment. This position requires a minimum of seven hours of accounting. The second position is secretarial and must have experience in office administration and proficiency with word processing and spreadsheet software. Both positions require senior or graduate student status and good written and oral communication skills. Position may be extended month for half-time appointments. Closing dates are November 15, 2015. Position start dates are January 4, 2016. Applications available in 319 Strong Hall. Equal Opportunity Employer. Wanted—Church Musician, Gospel/Contemporary/Sacred, Student/adult Interested, call 841-6363 M-F. Salary commensurate with ability. Interested in the travel industry? The nation's largest college tour operator is looking for a Bach Degree or Master's degree in finest spring trips to Fort Lauderdale or Daytona Beach. Earn free trips, and good compulsions while gaining great business experience. For more information, call. TYPING 1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Affordable and affordable typing. Judy. 849-795. 24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes, Essays, Reports. Best quality and fast service. 841-006-9000. A3 professional typing. Term papers, Theses, Dissertation Resumes, etc. Using IBM Selectric software. AAA TYPING/842-1942 Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs, Law review articles by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in b y 4 m. p.ujt in m. p. n. same day. A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-180. Absolutely LETTER PERFECT Word process software. Get 100% of your satisfaction. Daily same service day delivery. 844-811-6954. 844-603-6914. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard secretary, S.J. Corinna,icia type. Call Nancy K. Cornish. All Kinds of Typing: GOOD IMPRESSIONS spelling /apelling error patterns errors 84-707 FF AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics, Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates 749-118 Pl+ Typing, law papers, resumes, dissertations and memoirs with memory 847-454 or 843-727, 6 p.m. in午 9:15 a.m. DEFENDABLE : professional, experience DEPENDANT : standard tape. TRANSCRIPTION also: standard tape. DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter student papers up to 30 papers. Mommys Paper, 1943-87; before 9 p.m. Please. exe type, Quality for all your typing needs. Disk 841-7944, Call Manager 841-7946, 841-9544 TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, drafting, and preparation of dissertations, paper, letters, applications. QUALITY TYPING Letters, these, dissecta, applications, applications, ligneted correct 841-2744 TRIG Wordprocessing CONSICIENTIOUS CONSICIENTIVENIANT Will accept rush calls. Call 861-3111 A. L.SMITH TYPEING/Dissertations, theses term papers. Phone 842-8657 after 5:30. PROFESSIONAL typet with 15 years experience. He was a accurate clinician. Cal Peggy after 5 years at 442 866-7998 or at 442 866-7990. A DIFFERENT Service. Tape THANSCRIPT FRS is a specialty Experienced Jeanne Shattar FRS. EXPERIENCED TYPEI Term papers, theses experimentally correct spelling Phone 814-8544. Mrs. Wright TOP-NOTCH professional word processing, manuscripts, rehearses, themes, letter quality print- ing. WANTED experience. Phone 842-1230 after 5:30. Barb: English B.A. Typing or Tutoring. Spelling and grammar corrected. Overnight service. Call 842-1643. Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs. Two Female roommates for beautiful, renovated 4 Bdroom, house, separate bedrooms, 1026 Ohio, $175$300 mo. plus utilities. Call Julie or Marci at 749-189. Dissertations. These, Thesis Paper. Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone 842-391 5:00; war 8:30. www.math.upenn.edu/psychology WANTED: Roommate for Spring semester. Wonderful 3 Bedroom Bedroom迈博蓝Apt. Close to campus, Cable, A/C, Pool, $11 per month. We’re nice, fun people. 842-2635 WANTED: Roommate for spring semester. Wonderful 3 bedroom Meadowbrook apartment. Close to campus, A/C, pool, $115 monthly. We’re nice. fun people. 842-325- Wanted: Roommate for spring semester to share 4 bedroom (townhouse) $125 per month; call (718) 630-9980. Wanted: female roommate, now or spring semester; female housemate $125/month (148-867-3020) Wanted: non-smoking female to submit apartm- panels $192.50 / ushirt. CALL 418-6585 for more information. Roommate needed immediately to share a bed with a friend (unfurished), 6 negative, plus /7 beds (unfurished) BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320 PICAFLIC HOME VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 2rd St. Sp. 109 Lawrence Kendall 60044 (913) 842-8177 SAVE AT Ralphs AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 Roommatesdodetoharitfancastichouse $15 plus Roommate's dorm, near busine 843-362. Keep trying. Female roommate wanted ASAP to move new 2 story townhouse. All modern conveniences include IH, microwave, AC, 1/2 baths; kitchen, laundry and 1/2 of rst of energy, utility. Call 842-5834. ROOMMATES FOR TOWNHOUSE/1 bath, 2 bath. fireplace. In Traitridge. Looking for 1 or 2 non-smokers. $150 per month plus 1/3 utilities or less. 841-239. Female roommate needed for 2 first semester Split-level housemate $105/month, plus low utilities. Female roommate for spring semester, 2 bedroom furnished house $10 plus 1/2 utilities. Photographically attractive females interested in Lawrence's newest modeling agency. Inquire for appointments at 841-3283 between 6 and 10 p.m. RIDE NEEDDED to and from Dallas-Houston area over Thanksgiving 11/22/21. Good conversation about储蓄 expenses and driving. Call Care 843-0494 SERVICES OFFERED Female Roommate Wanted immediately to share, two bedroom apt. Very nicely furnished, have a large kitchen, conditioning, close to campus and downtown is on campus. Hail durations half utilities 842-7887, if no answer keep trying. E enroll now in Lawrence Driving School! Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transp. provided, 841-7749. Male Roomsite Needed: Peta OR, 160/mo plus 1/2 u/sl. Start Dec. 1. Batch 843-4871. Haircuts $7, perm $80 at Channels. Contact Chris (855) 294-1234 or chris@channels.com. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Texas. Computerark ZENITH STUDENT & FACILITY DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE 2-180 GEMINI BOARD 841-0094 STADIUM BARRIER Shop 1033 Massachusetts, downhall All haircuts $6 No appointment THEME & THEIS OUTLINED - enhanced with library RE-SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising, Victor Clark, 842-820. BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-8421 DeAnn E. Fowler, the driver of one of the cars, was pronounced dead at the scene, a Kansas Highway Patrol spokesman said yesterday. The accident occurred at about 5:30 p.m. Sunday. A passenger in Hutton's car, Vickie L. Langton, 26, Perry, was in fair condition at Lawrence Memorial hospital with a broken hip, a broken leg and a broken arm, a hospital spokesman said. The aorta is the main artery that carries blood from the heart to the body. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM The highway patrol spokesman said Fowler was traveling east on Douglas County Road 438 and had tried to pass a pickup truck ahead of them. He said he and the lonely Jon's car approaching from the west and pulled back behind the truck. An 18-year-old Perry woman died and two other women were hospitalized, one in critical condition, after a two-car collision Sunday evening on Douglas County Road 438. By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Services for Ms. Fowler will be at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Williamstown Assembly of God Church, Williamstown. Burial will be at the Underwood Cemetery, Williamstown. She lost control of the car as she pulled behind and crossed the center The family will receive visitors between 7 and 8 p.m. today at the Hampton-Barrett Funeral Home, Oskaloosa. A memorial fund has been established at the Williamstown Assembly of God Church. 1 killed,2 are hurt in two-car collision line, striking Hutton's car almost head-on, the highway patrol spokesman said. Ms. Fowler was born Dec. 15, 1966, in Topeka. She was a lifelong Perry resident. She attended Hairbenders School of Hairstrying, 938's Massachusetts St., and worked part time at K-Mart Discount Stores. 3106 Iowa St. She was a May graduate of Perry-Lecompont High School. Ms. Fowler is survived by her parents, Dale and Judith Fowler, of the home; two brothers, Eric, 1900 W. 31st St., and Shawn, of the house; a maternal grandmother, Doris Steinmetz, Perry; and paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Fowler, Grantville. Patronize Kansan Advertisers. PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL Free Consultation THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO 745 New Hampshire 841-5796 MEL AMIGOS MEXICAN RESTAURANT OYSTER on 1/2 SHELL 50¢ each Fridays only 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! 2600 Iowa $1 MARGARITAS Wednesdays All Day $1 WELL DRINKS Saturdays All Day 843-4076 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST * FREE DELIVERY HOURS HOURS Mon · Thurs · 11 a.m. - 2 a.m. Fri & Sat · 11 a.m. - 3 a.m. Sunday · 11 a.m. - 1 a.m. $1 OFF any 2 pizzas or $2 OFF any 3 pizzas ANY PIZZA ORDERED Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS_ DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W, 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center at EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY ALL YOU CAN EAT BBQ RIBS A two-piece Chicken Snack, with your choice of One Side Dish, Green Beans, Baked Beans, Whipped Potatoes and Gravy, Cole Slaw, or Potato Fries and a Biscuit for $1.06 FREE Small drink with the Lazer Gold Card includes: Whistlers Walk restaurant Tuesday Nights from 5-9 (Offers good 7 a.m.-9 p.m. Tue, Nov. 12 Only) - Introductory Tanning Session only $1.06 1819 W. 23rd 6 a.m.-10 p.m. includes: salad choice of potato rolls only $5.95 - Memberships for only $10.06 Reg. $175 individual, couple or family 3120 W. 6th between Lawrence & Kasold 842-1200 BREAKFAST 6-10:30 a.m. Any Breakfast Biscuit for $1.06 FREE Coffee with Lazer Gold Card LUNCH AND DINNER 10:30 a.m.-10 p.m. MZR106 106 Day Today! 2500 W. 6th 841-7230 MRS. WINNERS TRAILRIDGE ATHLETIC CLUB Also offering Racquetball and Nautilus or Free weight equipment, Brand New tanning beds, Whirlpools and Saunas. - Certificate for 5 Tanning Sessions, only $10.06 MASS. STREET DELI inc 941 MASSACHUSETTS BREAD BOX "4 p.m. to close daily" Traditional Burger WE WANT YOU TO TRY OUR ALL NEW DELI BURGERS $1.99 with lettuce and tomato Swiss & Bacon Burger $2.35 swiss cheese and ranch style bacon Big Blue Burger $2.35 blue cheese and sauteed mushrooms WHAT A DEAL Traditional Burger Basket and 12oz. soft drink $1.49 $1.49 50¢ COUPON 50¢ OFF OFF 50¢ OFF 4p.m. to close daily 50¢ OFF FIFTY CENTS OFF ALL NEW DELI BURGERS 504 OFF OFF OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30, 1985 OFF 50¢ OFF - All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef • Select a fresh baked deli bun onion, kaiser or whole wheat • Served with potato chips, kosher dill spear and any small soft drink 12 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1985 C O O --- UP PYRAMID PIZZA S $1.00 OFF ANY PIZZA We Pile It On! Expires 12/20/85 14th & Ohio Under The Wheel 842-3232 FAST FREE DELIVERY PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY $2.00 OFF Any Triple Pizza 842-1212 NAME ADDRESS DATE $3.00 OFF The Large King Tut Expires 11/30/85 Expires 12/20/85 14th & Ohio Under The Wheel 842-3232 FAST FREE DELIVERY We Pile It On! PYRAMID PIZZA Kief's Gramophone Shop maxell UDS-II $1.99 Holiday Plaza each in case of 10 $1.00 OFF Any Double Pizza PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY 842-1212 NAME ___ ADDRESS ___ DATE ___ Expires 11/30/85 HIGHLIGHTING --- 50% off Silver Clipper 2201 P. W 25th St. Business World Lawrence, Ks 842-1822 LairdNoller 1116 W. 23rd TOYOTA 842-2191 Minor Engine Tune-Up $39.95 ** *Replace Spark Plugs *Replace Fuel Filter**** VTS-4 PODCAST *Replace Fuel Filter*** *Replace Points and Condenser(if equipped) *Set Engine to Manufacturer's Spec. *Add' parts & labor extra PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY $100 OFF Any Lunch Pizza 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Fill & Drain Kit $12.95 Suggested Retail 75% OFF $3.24 w/coupon 4 oz. Waterbed Conditioner $6.50 Suggested Retail Includes all Japanese imports Please present coupon at time of write-up Excludes Rotary Engine 842-1212 NAME ADDRESS DATE 47 $ ^{c} $ w/coupon Waterbed Works 710 W.6th 842-1411 Expres 11/20/85 New Hours: Mon-Wed 9-6 Thurs 9-8 Fri 9-5 Sat 10-5 Pendragon --- 10% OFF on any Crystal Prism with this coupon valid thru Sunday, Nov 17 9th & Mass. 843-6533 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY 50¢ OFF Any Single Pizza 842-1212 NAME ADDRESS DATE $1.00 OFF the processing of your next roll of Kodacolor film ZERCHER Expires 11/30/85 1107 Mass. 843-4435 --- PHOTO Kodak PAPER FOR & DESIGN LOOK Expires 11/26/85 919 Iowa 841-8668 --- THE GRINDER MAN Buy a Maxi Sandwich (12 in.) get a Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Mon. Sat. Mini Sandwich (6 in) FREE! EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA PHONE 841-6232 coupon expires 11/23/85 $1.00 VALUE Dine in Only (expires Nov. 15, 1985) 704 Mass. 2 FOR 1 749-4244 FREE DELIVERY $1.00 off Evening Buffet (Sun—Thurs) 50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week) 2 FOR 1 memberships -OR- $10.00 OFF non-member tanning sessions (as low as $3 per sessions) --- Valentino's Ristorante PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI Expires 11/26/85 PrimeCut Hair Co. Holiday Special Cellophane $10 --- 1341 Mass. open Mon.-Sat. Please bring coupon 841-4488 expires 12-31-85 HARRY BEAR'S 106 N. Park Birmingham, Alabama 749-5246 HARRY BEAR "BUCK" $1 Good for $1 off any sandwich UDK Exp. 11/30/85 BORDER BANDIDO UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY $5 OFF a POSTER PRINT (16" x 24") of your favorite University Photography Party Pic. UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY Buy one #1 Texas Burrito at regular price and get the 2nd one FREE! Express 11/20/85 BUY 2 PARTY PICS. GET 1 FREE To redeem, include this coupon with order. expires Dec. 31, 1985 (not valid with any other offer) 2340 Iowa 843-5279 Weavers 9th & Mass. TEXAS TRAINING 2340 Iowa 843-5279 Entire Stock Jockey for Her 20% OFF Bikinis, Tanks, Camisoles Expires 11/16/85 CHECKERS CHECKERS 2214 Yale PIZZA 841-8010 $1.00 OFF ANY SMALL PIZZA $1.50 OFF ANY MEDIUM PIZZA $2.00 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA --- PIZZA Shoppe The one and only UDK DELIVERED KING SIZE PIZZA $6.95 + tax 6th and Kauld Watertridge Shopping Center 842-0600 single topping and 32oz Pepsi Extra topping only .90 Exp. 11/30/85 | Choose from any stock frame including plastic or metal frames, and pay only 49.95. The price includes your reading or distance prescription in glass, plastic, or oversized lenses. Offer expires 11/16/85 49. 95 EYEGLASS SALE 12 HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CD 742 Mass CHECKERS The Palace GIFTS CARDS --- CHECKERS 841-8010 PIZZA expires 11/30/85 2214 Yale $3.00 OFF ANY LARGE DELUXE PIZZA One Coupon Per Order CHECKERS Coupon Off any 1986 calendar priced at $4.95 or more. Exp. Nov. 30th 843-1099 8th and Mass. .75¢ --- *Paul Mitchell & Redken Products are available 1422 W. 23rd. St. 842-1788 STEVES SALON is featuring 2 FOR 1 HAIRCUTS CELLOPHANES SAVE$5 CELLOPHANES w/coupon* transluscent colour SALE$15. 809 Vermont 843-8808 $1.50 OFF Any Large Pizza with extra cheese 507 W. 14th Under "The Wheel" 842-3232 We Pile It On! Expires 12/20/85 Fast Free Delivery with extraordinary shine no on date PYRAMID PIZZA ≈ Headmasters. Movie Club Memberships ½ Price OVER 1400 MOVIES VCR w/ 2 MOVIES OVERNIGHT Tues. & Wed. $10.00 SMITTY'S TV Mon. - Sat. 9-9:30 Sun. 1-5 1447 W. 23rd. 842-5751 --- FAST FREE DELIVERY 14th & Ohio Under The Wheel 842-3232 $1.00 OFF ANY PIZZA PYRAMID PIZZA We Pile It On! Expires 12/20/85 Down, not out SAEs say hazing penalty has solidified fraternity See page 3. SINCE 1889 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, NOV. 13, 1985; VOL. 96; NO. 58 (USPS 650-640) Rainy Details page 3 Soviet proposal sparks hope in Reagan WASHINGTON - President Reagan sagged yesterday that Soviet calls for a nuclear free zone in Europe, long opposed by the United States, might offer a potential for progress on medium-range nuclear missiles at the superpower summit. From Kansan wires Reagan, in an interview with five European television networks, also said he may be able to give 54 year old Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev some fatherly advice at the talks, noting it will be the first time an American leader will be older than the Soviet head of state during a superpower summit. Also yesterday, the Reagan administration proposed an open laboratory arrangement for the United States and the Soviet Union to exchange scientists and double-check each other's Star Wars research, a senior administration official said yesterday. But the Soviet Union, so far, has refused to go along with any agreement that permits research into Star Wars technology, the official said, even though the United States thinks such research is clearly permissible under the 1972 Anti-Stallion Missile treaty. The official, who briefed reporters at the White House provided he not be identified, indicated the open laboratory proposal would be part of an understanding on Star Wars that could clear the way for a comprehensive new arms control agreement that also would increase the resources in strategic offer save nuclear weapons. The official said he was still hopeful that arms control guidelines can be worked out for the Nov. 19-20 summit between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gor'kov. Reagan noted gloomy forecasts for results at Geneva, but said he was not pessimistic "There's a long history of meetings between our two countries, and many times without result," he said. "But I'm going to make every effort to try to reduce the mistrust and suspicion that seems to exist. As senior administration officials minimized the chance of a breakthrough on arms control, Reagan said the summit could end on a Thursday. He said the arms talks under way since March. One great measure of success, he said, would be a decision to continue meeting and discussing the problems between the United States and the Soviet Union. Senior U.S. officials have said that prospects are good for an agreement for more frequent dialogue, possibly in the form of annual summits. Reagan zeroed in on West European anxieties in suggesting movement could come in medium-range nuclear missiles; if he and Gorbachev agreed to divorce these weapons, they would be able to engage arms and space and defensive systems. "I know that the Soviets have talked about such things as a nuclear-free zone in Europe," he said. "And we're willing to engage them and will in conversation on that kind of subject." White House spokesman Edward Dijejrian said Reagan was not endorsing a nuclear free zone, of itself, but raised the issue only in the context of negatations on medium-range missiles in Europe. U.S.POST OFFICE SCANDIA, KS. 66966 Photos by Jo Black/KANSAN SCANDIA — Alvin Splainer, postmaster for 13 years, watches passersby downtown. Residents of the north central Kansas hometown of Deanell has been nominated for a federal judging Hometown friends remember Tacha By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff SCANDAI — When Deanell Tacha was nominated two weeks ago by President Reagan to the 10th U.S. Court of Appeals, her hometown was proud but not surprised The town's 500 people are close keeping track of each other's lives. Many of them knew Tacha as a young girl. And they always knew she would go far, said Tacha's mother, Mary Reece. The only question was how far. Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, grew up in Scandia, a small agricultural community in north central Kansas; where she went to a high school with an enrollment of about 100 students. "They weren't surprised." Reece said. "They thought she would do something like that." Vivian and Vernon Erickson, longtime friends of Tacha, said she was always "extremely peppy." Vernon Erickson said Tacha was good student who took the time to be friendly with everybody. He said that she was always fair to people around town and that he was always use that same attitude as a judge. Other neighbors, friends and family employees remember Tacha was honest and hardworking as a schoolgirl. Earl Melby, secretary of the Reeces' construction company. said he remembered Tacha as an energetic girl. "I knew she was gonna go a long ways," he said. "She was a sharp girl." The Reeces are one of Scandia's original families. The family construction company was one of the first businesses in the area and was responsible for much of the success in the town, Carl Larson, editor of the Scandia Journal, said. Now that Tacha is in the spotlight, Melby said, it's probable that people will try to find something dishonest in her past. He said he wished them luck with Tacha. "Here's one person they're not gonna find any dirt about," he said. "They might find some dust she kicked up though." "I've always felt that women should be educated and have something to do," said Reece, who received a degree in journalism from the University of Kansas. "I wanted them to be able to make choices. In growing up, I saw women in circumstances that they had nothing to do, and that bothered me." In high school, Tacha was active, involved in the marching band, cheerleading and playing the organ at church. Reece said she never tried to push Tacha or her three other daughters but did encourage them to take advantage of opportunities. See TACHA p. 5; col. 1 Maria M. Schoenberg SCANDIA — Mary Reece, Deanell Tacha's mother, says the portrait behind her is her favorite photograph of her four daughters. Tacha is second from the right. After the hype real work starts for KU senators This is the first in a series of stories dealing with Student Senate and the Senate elections scheduled for Nov. 20,21. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff A week from today, students will vote for student body representatives. But after the hype of the election dies down, many students may wonder what their representatives really do for them. "People don't know what we're doing because frankly they don't take the time to find out," William Easley, body president, said recently. "I don't think students understand that Student Senate has more than one arm." Senate finances more than 50 student groups and clubs by distributing more than $1 million in student activity fees each year. "Student Senate has a huge impact on the campus just by what they support with their funding," said Caryl Smith, dean of student life. Because of Senate financing, a student can hear alternative sounds on KJHK-FM, drop off his children at Hilltop childcare center, join a soccer, cricket or crew club, get free advice from Legal Services for Students, attend a jazz festival in Denver, participate in counseling experience from Douglas County Rape Victim Support Services. And the list goes on. "Every student, every semester pays $28 for Student Senate, and people say Student Senate is worthless," said Tim Henderson, chairman of the Student Senate Finance Committee. But every time he rides the bus, it is Student Senate. Every time they pick up a free paper, it's Student Senate." Amy Kincaid, Nunemaker senator and former Senate executive secretary, agreed. "Just because they aren't involved in one specific group, students think Student Senate doesn't do anything for them. Kincad said. "The system is a system that doesn't everything, but Student Senate gives him that opportunity." In addition to allocating money, Student Senate is supposed to be the students' link to the University administration. But it usually fails to make that connection, said Tim Boller, holdover senator and chairman of the Student Rights Committee. "A lot of bills we debated pertained solely to the Senate itself," Boller said. "If we hadn't done them, what difference would it make?" The Senate spends too much time revising and reinterpreting its own rules and not enough time addressing important student issues, he said. "Changes in the rules and regs have no effect on someone who's not on the Senate." Bolder said. "A student would say, 'I'm not in the Senate so what do I care whether you can speak for three minutes, five minutes, eight minutes or 12 minutes?' "The bulk of the things we did for students, we did during two meetings last April. We gave away the money." Not all senators agreed that rules changes wasted most of Senate's time. "I would say at least as many bills are spent for student special projects as are spent on rules and reams," said Amy Kincaid, Nunemaker senator and former Senate executive secretary. She said the rules changes were a form of checks and balances senators exercised on themselves to try to ensure sure everyone else acted fairly. Tony Arnold, chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee, said that some of the changes in the Senate rules that people called "internal" were important to students outside Senate For example, off-campus and nontraditional students will have more representation in Senate beginning in 2013. Senator Hill added Senate seats, Arnold said. "Long-term planning is a vital aspect of Student Senate," he said. "Just because it's not a short term student doesn't mean it isn't important." David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said Student Senate had problems deciding which issues it could realistically tackle and then pursuing those issues. "The Student Senate's ability to influence the nuclear arms resolve. I think, is rather minimal," Ambler said. "If they spend their time tooling on the kinds of issues they will continually viewed as ineffective by their peers." He said that there was nothing wrong with lofty resolutions but that if Senate claimed to be a representative body, it should represent primarily student issues in the University community. Ambler said the power of all University governance groups, including Student Senate, rested in the ability to influence. The administration, he said, takes Student Senate more seriously than most students do. See POWER p 5 cot 4 Stephan says 'business care' rule applies By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Attorney General Robert Stephan stated yesterday that the "business care" rule, not the "prudent person" rule, applies to universities and endowment associations, which. Stephan said, legally can divest from companies doing business in South Africa. The opinion was requested separately by State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence; State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence; and State Rep. Henry Helgerson, D-Wichita, at the end of September. The opinion said that cities and counties were subject to the "prudent person" rule. "Universities and charitable corporations such as endowment funds are subject to the 'business care' rule, which requires the exercise of ordinary business care and prudence, based on the facts available at the time," the opinion read. Although neither standard allows for divestment on moral grounds alone, the "prudent person" standard permits divestment on grounds that economic conditions in South Asia make investments "less than prudent". However, under the "business care" standards, political and economic situations in the country "as they affect the security of the investment" may be considered, the opinion said. Branson said yesterday that she was pleased to receive the opinion and appreciated the work that had gone into the eight-page opinion. She said she hoped people would pay close attention to the fact that universities were subject to the "business care" rule, which allows them to consider more than just financial aspects. Branson said she saw a difficulty in separating moral, political and economic aspects. "The morally repugnant situation in South Africa causes the political unrest which contributes to the economic problems." Branson said. "Further, the more liberal investment discretion enables trust administrators to exercise greater discretion in their investment decisions than is enforced by the traditional trust standards of the 'prudent person' rule. The "business care" standard is more flexible than the "prudent person" standard, according to the opinion. "As a result directors and trustees may legitimately consider both the political and the economic climate of the Republic of South Africa, especially if the present unrest there constitutes a change in circumstances threatening to defeat or substantially impair the accomplishment of the trust purpose. Branson said, "I think it was important to clarify the laws which universities and units of government are subject to." "If such a showing could be made, under the Uniform Management of Institutional Funds Act, the trustees of a university or the directors of an endowment association could defend themselves arising out of their decision to divest, even if some economic loss resulted from the decision." Todd Seymour, president of the Kansas University Endowment Association, released a statement yesterday that said the association agreed with Stephan's observations. "We apply these same standards to investments in corporations doing business in all countries, even those with whom we might have strong political or philosophical disagreements. "As the attorney general's opinion states, we cannot make blanket divestments of corporate stocks based exclusively on moral grounds; it can be made only on the basis of maintaining economic prudence." Jane Ungerman, Lawrence senior and member of the KU Committee See OPINION. p. 5. col. 1 2 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 News Briefs Companion files suit against actor's estate LOS ANGELES — A close companion of Rock Hudson yesterday filed a $14 million lawsuit which maintains that he now runs a high risk of contracting AIDS because the late actor lied to him when he denied he was suffering from the deadly disease. The man, Marc Christian, 31, said that he and Hudson began a love affair in March 1983 that lasted until the actor's death last week. The complications from acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Christian, an unemployed musical archivist, said Hudson learned in June 1984 that he had AIDS but withheld the diagnosis from Christian and continued to have sex with him. Cuban leads election MIAMI - Millionaire banker Raul Mavisl gravbed an early day yesterday over Xavier Suarez in a run-off election that will give the city its first Cuban-born mayor. In scattered returns from 10 of Miami's 85 precincts, Masvidal, making his first bid for public office, received 2,292 votes and Suarez, a lawyer educated at Harvard, in his second run for mayor, received 975 votes. Election officials said the turnout of voters was less than they predicted earlier — about 50 percent of the 114,173 registered. But few analysts could predict the effects of the lower response. GENEVA — Summit postcards went on sale yesterday and became an immediate collector's item because they gave the wrong dates. Postcards hot items "21-22 Nov. 1985" were printed as the Summit dates when it should have been Nov. 19-20. The Jaeger publishing company said it printed 20,000 of the cards, which feature color portraits labeled "Reagan" on the left and "Gorbachev" on the right, with both men pictured against the U.S. and Soviet flags, but was selling them anyway. From Kansan wires Liberian coup attempt fails From Kansan wires MONROVIA, Liberia — A former military commander attempted to topple President Samuel K. Doe in a coup yesterday but Doe said he crushed the revolt 13 hours after it began in this West African nation. Doe called on rebel holdouts to lay down their arms, ordered a dusk-to-dawn curfew and closed Liberia's borders and its international airport to aid in the search for rebels led by Gen. Thomas Quinowkpa. "I take this opportunity to inform the nation that the coup has failed." Doe said in a "special statement" broadcast on a Monovia radio station that had been taken over by rebel forces 13 hours earlier. "I am still the commander in chief The broadcast was heard at 7 p.m. (2 p.m. EST), about 17 hours after fighting started with an attack on Doe's exile mansion. of the armed forces of Liberia and head of state." Doe said. Diplomats in Monrovia had reported fierce fighting between loyal forces and rebel troops that left at least 16 people dead. It was not known whether the fighting had ended. Witnesses said at least a dozen bodies were seen being taken to a hospital. Qiwitunkpa had said that he seized power in the pre-dawn coup attempt. But Doe countered that loyal forces had crushed the revolt and killed 15 rebels. Doe said one loyal soldier was killed in the fighting. First word of the coup came when troops supporting Quiwonkpa seized and held the Elwa radio station and appealed for support. But hours later an announcer said the station had been "seized" again and he urged people to "combat General Quiwonkpa." Quiwonkpa, commander of the Liberian military since April 1980, was named secretary-general of the ruling People's Redemption Council in October 1983. He refused the post and was stripped of authority in the armed forces. Quiwonkpa also was part of a bloody military coup in 1980 that brought Doe to power. U. S. Embassy officials said many Liberians were dancing in the streets in celebration of the coup attempt. Doe has become increasingly unpopular because of his policies and elections last month that Doe won but that critics said were rigged. Liberia, became Africa's first independent republic in 1847 after being colonized by freed American slaves who returned to Africa with U.S. support. Doe was an army master sergeant on April 12, 1980, when he and a group of fellow sergeants killed President William Tolbert and seized power in a coup, shooting to death former government officials in a televised spectacle on a beach. Doe held presidential elections last month and was declared the winner with 51 percent of the vote, although opposition leaders and Western news agencies reported widespread fraud. Debt hike sought before summit United Press International WASHINGTON — With balanced budget negotiations still stymied, the House Ways and Means Committee approved a small hike last night in the national debt ceiling as a "falsafe" aimed at preventing a U.S. fiscal crisis during the Geneva summit next week. If approved by the full Congress, the $80 billion hike in the nation's borrowing authority — to a record $1.9 trillion — would tide the government over until Dec. 13, long after President Reagan returns from the summit. There were indications the full House would approve the small debt ceiling hike, though the Senate's position was in doubt. The move was necessitated by stalled negotiations on the balanced budget, which is tied to a one-year increase in the debt ceiling of up to $2 trillion. Without a debt ceiling hike, an empire faced default by tomorrow. Earlier in the day, Reagan and congressional leaders urged agreement on the balanced budget legislation by tomorrow to avoid a default in the midst of the summit. But as the day wore on and agreement looked elusive, the small hike appeared necessary. Assistant House Republican leader Trent Lott of Mississippi, who proposed the short-term hike, said he thought the White House "would approve this extension while we continue to work on it (the balanced budget) and avoid the potential chaos Thursday night." "The president made it clear this morning he wanted the (balanced budget)." Lott said, referring to a White House meeting with congressional leaders. "But he would be very much concerned if he went to the summit while we were shutting down the government." conference) at least the functions of government won't go out of existence. It's kind of our fallisae." Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-III, leader of both the Ways and Means Committee and the balanced budget conference, said he would have preferred "having our feet held to the fire" on balancing the budget but went along with the temporary hike because a federal default "could weaken (Reagan's) playing hand" at Geneva. Rep. Robert Matsui, D-Calif., said, "If we do reach an impasse (in the Reagan addresses the nation tomorrow night on the summit and leaves for Geneva on Saturday. Member of family spy ring sentenced NORFOLK, Va. — Convicted spy Arthur Walker, who told a judge "no one could be sorrier than I am for what I've done." was sentenced to three life terms and 40 years in prison after he brother run a Soviet espionage ring. Under the terms of the sentence, Walker, 50, could be paroled in 10 years. United Press International U. S. District Judge J. Calvitt Clarke Jr. also fined Walker $250,000. He told Walker the prison terms would run concurrently, thus allowing his parole in 1955. Walker's at torness said they would appeal. "No one could be sorrier than I am for what I've done. I have dishonored myself and devastated my family," said Walker, a retired Navy lieutenant commander from Virginia Beach. Walker, convicted Aug. 9, confessed he slipped confidential military documents to his brother, convicted spy John Walker, 48, a former Norfolk private detective and retired Navy chief warrant officer. The two-hour sentencing hearing shed new light on Arthur Walker's involvement in the spy ring, hinting he possibly played a deeper role than previously indicated. His wife, Rita, told the court that Arthur Walker was a kind man who was concerned about his younger brother and did not intend to hurt his sister. Arthur Walker had married her husband told her he had an affair with John Walker's wife, Barbara. Tommy Miller, assistant U.S. attorney, said the government was not convinced Arthur Walker had been "totally truthful." Arthur Walker's version of the family espionage ring "is not corroborated by other witnesses." Miller said. "There are other witnesses that have indicated further involvement by Arthur Walker." Miller also said John Walker had told his wife "you'd be surprised to know who got me into spying." Asked whether it may have been Arthur Walker who got his brother in spying — not the other way around as Arthur Walker's lawyers argued — Miller said, "Anything is possible." Cleanup is started at reactor Arthur's wife, Rita, testified that she did not like John Walker and considered him a "vulgar" man. Aided by long-handled tools and a closed-circuit video camera lowered into the water-filled core, workers placed a piece of fuel rod in a stainless steel canister, GPU Nuclear Corp. said. HARRIBURG, Pa. — Workers at Three Mile Island yesterday began the delicate process of removing the once-molten fuel and other rubble from the core of TMT's crippled Unit No. 2 nuclear reactor, the plant's operator said. United Press International Previously, only samples of the debris had been removed from the reactor. About 100 tons of damaged uranium dioxide fuel and 50 tons of reactor parts eventually will be loaded into canisters, GPU Nuclear said. The team has been preparing before shipment to train a federal research laboratory in Idaho. "The whole operation of defueling, the reactor is going to take 16 to 18 months," Franklin Standerfer, director of Unit 2, said at a recent news conference. "The fuel will start next spring. That should take about two years." Unit 2 was crippled on March 28, 1979, in the nation's worst commercial nuclear power accident. Up to 20 million people were identified at the base of the reactor core. The Unit 1 reactor at the nearby power plant was idle at the time of the accident and was not damaged. It was restarted Oct. 3 following a 6% year legal fight by anti-nuclear activists to keep it closed. The cleanup of Unit 2 is expected to be completed in three years at a cost of $1 billion, half of which already has been spent. The defueling, considered the heart of the cleanup, will cost up to $900 million. The defueling work is being done by reactor operators perched on a rotating platform above the reactor vessel, about 35 feet deep. 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BIG BOB'S USED CARPET SHOP LAWRENCE STORE NOW OPEN! 738 NEW HAMPSHIRE • (913) 841-BOBS BIG BOB'S USED CARPET SHOP Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 Campus/Area 3 University Daily Kansan News Briefs Firefighter expected to offer resignation Tommy Teague, a Lawrence firefighter who was suspended without pay after his arrest June 20 on suspicion of possession of cocaine, was expected to resign late yesterday or early today, Buford Watson, city manager, said yesterday. Norwood told him he had recommended that Teague, 35, resign and was attempting to contact his client at that time. Watson said. Watson said he received a phone call yesterday morning from Teague's attorney. Wes Norwood He originally had been charged with possession of cocaine, a felony, and possession of drug paranormalia a misdemeanor. Teague pleaded no contest on Nov. 5 to a felony charge of conspiracy to possess cocaine. District Attorney Jim Flory amended the charges in a plea bargaining agreement. Fire Chief Jim McSain said late yesterday afternoon that he had not received Teague's resignation. Scholar reception set Phi Kappa Phi honor society's annual reception for active and newly selected members will be from 3 to 5 p.m. Thursday in the English Room of the Kansas Union. The national honor society invites seniors who are in the top 10 percent of their graduating class to attend a convocation, where they merit distinction, to join James R. Rush of Universities Field Staff International will lecture on post-colonial Southeast Asia at 11:45 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, contact Neil Salkind, president, at the School of Education. Lecture on Asia set Rush was a lecturer in Southeast Asian history and dean of Morse College at Yale University from 1976 to 1984. He has traveled extensively in Southeast Asia and served in the Peace Corps in Malaysia. In 1982, he live in Indonesia while studying on a Fulbright fellowship. For more information, call 843-4933. Head tennis coach Scott Perelman was treated and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital last night after the car he was driving was rammed in a hit-and-run accident police said. Coach's car rammed Perealman said he was stopped at a traffic light on 23rd Street at Oustahl Road when the vehicle hit him from behind. Lawrence police said a white van was spotted by officers a few minutes later, and a 28-year-old Arkansas man was arrested on charges of driving while intoxicated and driving while under the influence, driving, leaving the scene of an accident and failure to report an accident. Weather Today will be cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain or drizzle. The high will be in the mid-tower up to 40% Winds will be from the northeast at at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain. The low will be around 40. Tomorrow will be cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain. The high will be around 40. Suspension brings positive results By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff A hazing incident that resulted in the two-year suspension last summer of Sigma Alpha Epsilon changed the lives of many of the almost 100 members of the fraternity. From staff and wire reports. Members felt the repercussions of the suspension, but say they have turned the blow into a positive experience. "It was a knock-down punch, but not a knock-out punch," Pat Walker, Tampa, Fla., senior and social chairman of the house, said yesterday. "When it happened, I thought it wasn't fair." Walker said. "But I decided we could do one of two things: we could get mad and dwell on the fact, or we could look at what the University told us we were doing SAE, 1301 W. Campus Rd., was suspended as an official registered campus organization June 19 by the University of Kansas for violations of University regulations on hazing. wrong and work on it, which we have." KU administration officials requested this summer that the national fraternity organization revoke SAE's charter. Instead, delegates from 180 chapters across the nation voted at the SAE national convention to place the chapter under the auspices of an alumni advisory committee. Edward E. Frizel, co-chairman of the 17-member commission and a Kansas City, Mo., attorney, said members of the commission worked with the officers in the house to monitor the fraternity. "Commission members get in touch with the officers at least once a week to make sure they are upholding their responsibilities." Frizzel said. "The committee has a formal meeting once every two weeks, and telephone conferences more often if necessary." Several changes have been made in the chapter, such as a mandatory minimum 2.5 grade point average each semester. Frizzel said. Other changes include the prohibition of the consumption of alcoholic beverages on the fraternity grounds, a program and a pledge education booklet. "We had a pledge program before, but it was not implemented," Frizel said. "We now have an absolute no-hazing policy in the chapter. Obviously, hazing was not part of the written program before, but some was going on." David Ambler, vice chancellor of student affairs, said the changes the alumni commission had planned were impressive. Jim O'Donnell, Chesterfield, Mo., senior and president of the fraternity, said the changes were made in response to the fact that would be lifted earlier, than planned. Ambler said, "The fraternity appealed the suspension this summer. At that time, we indicated that we may consider the reinstatement of the house as a registered student organization earlier than planned. It will be important that the progress they make and after it make an assessment of the house." Under the suspension, the fraternity cannot participate in Interfrater- nity Council's formal rush, but has continued to rush informally. Other activities barred to SAE this year are the Homecoming float competition and Rock Chalk Revue. "I was saddened that we couldn't participate in the float competition," Walker said. "I 'tink this is for the better, but I miss the old days. We used to have one or two parties a week. Now it's only one or two a month, if that." Steve Griswold, Overland Park senior and member of the fraternity, said the changes had pulled the members of the house closer together. "I see a lot of positive results," Griswold said. "It was a learning experience for us and for all the houses on campus." Lawrence awaiting new look By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff A Main Street Program official came to town yesterday to welcome Lawrence to the program and he said that Lawrence showed strong signs of revitalizing its downtown. Mac Nichols, a representative from the National Main Street Center, said yesterday during a news conference, "The problem for Lawrence, obviously, is establishing itself and maintaining its position in its market so that it doesn't continue to lose into those large areas. He said that Lawrence had good quality merchants, interested developers and a healthy economy, but Lawrence must "publicize those businesses to the man often" to keep shoppers in town and attract people from out of town. On Oct. 22, Lawrence, Hutchinson, Independence, Manhattan and Winfield were named Kansas Main Street cities. They will receive training and technical assistance for revitalizing their downstools. The five cities became members of the National Main Street Center which was established in 1980 by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Kansas became a Main Street state when the 1985 Kansas Legislature appropriated funds to the National Main Street Center, in Washington, D.C. The center uses a four-point approach of organization, promotion, design and economic restructuring to strengthen and maintain existing businesses and draw new businesses to downtowns. Nichols said. Lawrence's problems are of a smaller nature than most cities that apply to the Main Street Program and has a downtown to work with he said. The first step for Lawrence is hiring a downtown manager to coor- The first year of the program will probably be spent getting promotional and design projects together, Nichols said. Also, the downtown current redevelopment projects with the Main Street Program. The second and third years of the program tend to become more specialized for each city because towns develop at different paces and, often, specific economic issues are dealt with, Nichols said. Nichols and Loren W. Medley, coordinator for the Kansas Main Street Program, attended a luncheon with over 100 Lawrence businessmen and city officials at the Eldridge Seventh and Massachusetts streets. Paul Gillianh. Edgerton. was hoisted yesterday morning from a pit that he fell into at a construction site on the Haskell Indian Junior College campus. Gillianh, an employee of the Clean Water Construction Company, Padla, was listed in fair condition last night at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Firemen pull man from pit By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Douglas County Ambulance Service paramedics and Lawrence firefighters worked for nearly an hour yesterday morning to raise an injured construction worker from a 37-foot pit at the Haskell Indian Junior College campus. The man, Paul Gillhan, Edgerton, was in fair condition yesterday afternoon with cuts and scratches and was being observed for a possible head injury. He was also a share unit of Lawrence Memorial Hospital, a hospital spokesman said. Ken Hoffman, site supervisor for Clean Water Construction Company, Paola, said Gillianh was clearess concrete from the walls of a lift station which was under construction as part of the city's Wakarausa Intercept Sewer system. When complete, the system will span a large portion of the southern end of the city. He said Gillhan was standing on a 10-foot ladder at the bottom of the lift station when the ladder slipped in the water at the bottom of the pit and Gillihan fell. Jim Murray, Douglas County Ambulance Service paramedic, said an ambulance was sent to the construction site at the campus at 9:10 a.m. Murray said that although there was a crane at the construction site, the operator on duty was inexperienced so the fire department was called to help remove Gillihan from the pit. He said that while the fire department was preparing to lift Gillianh from the pit, paramedics administered basic first aid and placed him on a backboard. They then put Gillian in a specialized stretcher, which remains horizontal while the patient is hosted in a room with artificial respiration or rescue workers above to lower a rope. Murray said that by the time Gillihan was ready to be hoisted, the fire department had arrived with its new aerial ladder truck. He said a rope was connected to the truck and dropped from the end of the ladder into the pit. Gillian was then transported by ambulance to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Fire Chief Jim McWain was at the scene of the accident, as were two fire engine companies, the fire marshal, the shift commander and two ladder truck companies. Gillihan was hoisted to the top of He said the aerial ladder truck used to lift Gillian to the surface was a truck the fire department had purchased, then refused to accept when it was delivered in June, because it didn't meet the department's specifications. He said the truck was on loan to the department until another ladder truck was delivered. However, McSwain said there were no problems with the truck in this case. He said that although the weight limit was not a problem in this operation, a rescue that required additional weight to be lifted with the patient would not have been possible with the present truck. Sexes stay separated in Oliver By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff Men and women will not be able to live on the same floor at Oliver Hall next fall, though many of the residents endorsed a proposal that would allow them to do so. Men live on the lower five floors of 10-story Oliver Hall, and women live on floors six through ten. The proposal to allow men and women to live on opposite wings of the same floors at Oliver received the governor's endorsement. Wall's residents in a September survey The proposal was voted down by the Residential Programs Advisory Board when it met yesterday. The board struck down the proposal so that the hall's unique status in the housing system could be preserved. Oliver is the only one of the four residence halls for male and female students, whose sewers are segregated by floor. Men and women live on opposite walls at McCollam, Ellsworth and Hashinger halls. "I'm not disagreeing with the intent of the proposal, but I think we ought to have as many options as possible," said Ken Stoner, director of housing. Caryl Smith, dean of student life, said that some residents were attracted to University housing because of the large number of options. More and more female residents are requesting rooms in areas reserved for females only, she said. Drew Blossom, president of the Association of University Residence Halls, introduced the proposal, which was to cast the lone affirmative vote. The Oliver Hall survey was conducted Sept. 22, 23. Oliver Hall houses 647 residents and 435 of them — 67 percent — responded. The change was supported by 338 of those who voted. AURH passed the proposal unanimously Sept. 24, and Blossom presented it to the board for the first time Oct. 1. Residents supported the change because it would enhance social life, Blossom said, and hall staff supported it because participation of both sexes would improve programs on each of the hall's floors. Sub & Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! One motive behind the proposal was to reduce vandalism at Oliver Hall. AURH hoped that by mixing men and women, vandalism would decline. Although there is no way to determine whether this would happen. Blossom said, the perception of many AURH members was that most vandalism at Oliver occurred on all; male floors. Sub8Stuff Sandwich Shop Any way you want it, you can get it NOW, at... 1618 West 23rd Street S Select from a variety of sixteen delicious sandwiches, topped with your favorite vegetables and spices, fried in olive oil, freshly fished white or wheat Sub Roll. For large appeties, we ve got a 12 sub. 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WEDNESDAY Pork Spare Ribs with coleslaw and spicy garlic bread $525 Also: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540 the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-054 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 Songwriters and poets enjoy writing ballads about noble efforts that fail. Perhaps soon a young Dylan or Tennison will write a ballad about anti-apartheid protesters, the KU administration and a task force. 'Task Force Blues' Call it "Task Force Blues." The creation of a task force on South Africa and divestment, which includes faculty and administrators, seems nobile enough. No one should be faulted for trying to get people to talk to each other. But if the task force's purpose is to get the Kansas University Endowment Association to take its money out of companies that do business in South Africa, it probably will fail. First, the task force needs a specific purpose, a direction. One member of the Black Student Union said the task force's purpose was to "examine how to deal with aparthief." Participants have "agreed to disagree." Secondly, the man who is ultimately in charge of speaking for the University — Chancellor Gene A. Budig — has said he will not issue a statement on the matter. Finally, the protesters are talking to the wrong people. The KU Committee on South Africa needs to realize that the Endowment Association and the administration are not one and the same. The Endowment Association is a private corporation and can do what it wants about divestment. As of now, it uses the Prudent Man's Law not to divest. Obviously, a task force of Endowment Association officials and student protesters is needed, and both sides need to enter the discussion with open minds. Both sides must resist the urge to talk down to each other. Protesters and Endowment Association officials have met before, but the protesters left that meeting saying they got a lecture about how the Endowment Association works. Then perhaps another young poet can replace "Task Force Blues" with another, more upbeat song. A rash Colombian blitz The recent violence in Colombia pointed out the price that must be paid when governments react rashly against terrorism. Leftist guerrillas last week seized the Palace of Justice in Bogota. They took about 200 hostages, including 23 Supreme Court justices. Three hours later, Betancur sent in 300 government troops and police with machine guns, cannons and tanks. Twenty-five hours later, 109 people were dead: 12 justices, 17 soldiers and police officers, all 41 rebels and 39 others. The terrorists demanded that President Belisario Betancur come to the federal building to be "tried" for failing to make peace with Colombian insurgents. The government blitz did rescue most of the hostages. But one of the surviving justices said more lives could have been saved had Betancur agreed to halt the assault the next morning when the terrorists said they wanted to talk. The justices reportedly were killed after Betancur refused to negotiate. Betancur said the bloodbath was due to the rebels' refusal to surrender and accept his promises of safety and a fair trial. A policy not to negotiate with terrorists makes sense. But it needn't rule out a reasoned, cautious response to their demands. Perhaps lives could have been saved had the Colombian terrorists been given time to assess their situation. More time also might have allowed for a more precise plan by the government. Volatile situations should be defused, not detonated. Open to conversation Searching for signs of progress in the 19-month hostage ordeal in Lebanon can prove frustrating. Last week, however, a series of events — a stirring after months of public silence — offered a peg to hang some hopes on. On Thursday, an anonymous caller claiming to represent the Islamic Jihad told a news agency that the five or six U.S. hostages still held were being executed. But no bodies have been found despite instructions supposedly indicating their location. Perhaps the captors simply hoped to make something happen. The next day four of the hostages sent a letter, probably genuine, to the Associated Press in Beirut asking President Reagan to negotiate for their release. Late Friday. White House spokesmen delicately stepped around their own reiteration of U.S. policy not to negotiate with terrorists. One spokesman said the United States would talk to anyone who could help secure the safe release of the hostages — but not about making a deal. The United States is right not to negotiate with terrorists. It only increases the appeal of terrorism as a strategy. But the safe return of hostages still calls for open communication, which sometimes has been missing. Of course, endorsing openness does not solve all of the problems. At least in public terms, the exact identity of the captors is unknown, as is their place in the endless hierarchy of power in Lebanon. As long as the United States cannot determine who speaks for whom in Lebanon, it cannot be sure that words, threatening or conciliatory, mean very much from either side. But finding a basis for conversation is vital to hopes for release of the hostages, as it is in every part of the Middle East tension. Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager news editor General manager, news adviser Brett McCabe Sue Johnson *Retail sales* Campus sale Megan Burke *National/Co-op sales* John Oberzan *Sales and marketing adviser* **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.** **GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The** The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newroom, 111 Staffer-Fint Hall. The University Daily Kanan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kannan, 118 Staffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kannan, 6045, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kannan, 6045 or at the University of Kannan. Elsewhere, they cost $13 for six months and $33 a year. Student subscriptions cost $3 and are paid through the student activity fee. C. STATENWATER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 138 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 66045. STONEWALL ON STAR WARS. DON'T TRIP ON THE AIRPLANE RAMP WHEN YOU ARRIVE. SMILE A LOT. PLANT A BUG UNDER THE TABLE, JH, BUT THAT WOULD BE WRONG ... DON'T SLIP ON THE RUG WHEN YOU MEET GORBACHEV. TRY NOT TO SEEM LIKE A WIMP. DON'T BUMP YOUR HEAD ON THE PLANE DOOR WHEN YOU LEAVE. AND IF ANYTHING GOES WRONG BLAME THE (EXPLETIVE DELETED) MEDIA! PRAY. NEWSITEM REAGAN INVITES NIXON, FORD, AND CARTER FOR ADVICE ON GENEVA SUMMIT... Mailbox Protests have purpose "And once again the protesters have wasted their time and effort." Such were the words of Evan Walter, staff columnist. For you see, the protesters think that any creature claiming to be a I would ask Walter to re-evaluate his position. Let us first consider the purpose that the protesters had in "stepping out to protest the establishment." Their goal is to crush the apartheid system of racial oppression in South Africa, and ultimately, oppression in all shapes and forms throughout the world. Granted, this last protest did not finally convince President Botha to abolish apartheid, but it did take a step in abolishing such. member of humanity, when presented with the facts concerning what apartheid is, will wish to take whatever steps are necessary to abolish this system. In the United States, those who heeded the cries of the abolitionists fought a war against apartheid (oh, excuse me that's slavery). the protesters were successful both in making their cause known and in exposing the evils of apartheid to those previously unfamiliar with the injustices of the South African government. In fact, Evan, you were actually an integral part of the protest yourself, for your column, with its large audience, helped fulfill these two objectives. The distinguished Evan Walter, voice of the people, makes another statement of extraordinary insight, truly indicative of a man understanding of international politics and the human character: 'If none of that has worked, why would divestment cause the government to change?' Perhaps, and this is only a mere fasting thought, just maybe it is hearsay. Divestment would result in the privileged white class losing its economic advantage over the oppressed majority. Money can be a great motivating factor — the basis of our capitalistic economy — and those who hold it are, quite understandably, reluctant to give up what they have, regardless of whatever moral hypocrisy they might be guilty of. Money, not Afrikaans or English, is the language South Africa understands. Walter answers his own question in his statement. "Further outbreaks of civil disobedience could render South Africa's five million whites, already in grave danger, helpless in the face of angry mobs and in the ruins of a crumbled economy." Such is the impetus that divestment would provide the South African government to abolish apartheid. Finally, if the issue of wastedful protests is of such importance to Walter, why doesn't he go to another campus to live in peace, instead of inconveiencing my morality? Darrell Craig Topeka sophomore Other causes worthy for protest South Africa, the home of aparheid and oppression, has been the only important controversy on campus this semester. It is surprising that unrest in another part of our global village sparks protests here at the University. But although the campus protests against South Africa and the columns and letters supporting divestment have been valid, the anti-apartheid movement as a whole has fallen short of any significant goal except increasing the public's boredom. A few people are arrested, a few people march and shout, reporters write some stories, but for what? Pulling a few measly dollars out of multinational corporation stocks — big deal. Dwight Hunter The protesters' right to free speech is not the issue. The problem is that many causes exist in our world, problems that cannot simply be overcome by public protests and divestment. Concentrating on one terrible issue by protesting might make those who protest feel better, but it Staff columnist PETER LANE creates little action. Other causes exist that merit just as much attention. Contras in Central America, started with CIA training and support, continue to fight along the borders of Nicaragua. Hondurans and Costa Ricans watch the war without protection. Any KU protests about something so close to home? No, South Africa has more media appeal. In 1973, the United States supported the overthrow of Chilean president Salvador Allende. The International Telephone and Telegraph Corp., among others, convinced the National Security Council that the government of Salvador Allende supported policies that hampered sound business decisions. The CIA also helped Chilean army officers who bombed the presidential palace and took over the government. Any calls for divestment from Chile in 1973? Heck no, ITT is a sacred corporate institution. And besides, Chilians were and still are dying because of principles — not because of race. Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Israel have limited freedom of the press and have promoted state-sponsored terrorism. News reporters have been threatened and continue to be harassed by government officials. Any calls for a halt of Arab oil imports or an end to arms shipments to all Middle East nations? Nope. The anti-apartheid demonstrations have shown why protests against these major world problems are nonexistent. They have no purpose. Since 1963, 90,000 Latin Americans have disappeared, 39 percent of whom were Guatemalans. Yet no screams come when the United States sends thousands of dollars of military aid to Guatemala. Without purpose, hope cannot exist. Without a massive unification, demonstrations, protests and divestment do not work. Do they annoy? Yes. Do they accomplish anything? No. Annoyance only spurs the call for a tougher defense. Minute protests in the United States will never fundamentally change a system in another nation halfway across the globe. A sit-in in the KU chancellor's office is not going to send troubling trembles in the headquarters of multinational corporations. The nonviolent protest movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s died when the followers realized that they could not demand action if they had no clout in the world of power politics. Want apartheid to end in South Africa? Elect a president who will threaten that government with nuclear annihilation. Sound ridiculous? So are protests that do nothing but exacerbate hopelessness Red-faced in Washington Yurchenko defection embarrasses U.S. Sometimes I really feel sorry for the people who live and work in Washington. D.C. They seem to be far more sensitive and emotional than the rest of us out here. They're subject to extreme and sudden mood swings, from elation to deep depression. I've learned this over the years by reading the various pundits who regularly tell us about "the mood of Washington." Mike Royko Chicago Tribune embarrassed by . . . "'A high-level source said that this has caused great embarrassment to the United States." They were talking about Vitaly Yurchenko, the KGB spy who defected but has now decided to go back to the Soviet Union, or Big Mama Russia, as it was called in old Russian novels. There have been times when they've written that "the mood of Washington this week is one of deep melancholy." This can be brought on by the arrest of a congressman for incarceration or by a loss by the Redskins. NARRATI HANUGA It was only a few days ago that the mood of Washington was one of elation because Yurchenko had come over to our side. But only a few days later, you can read that "the mood of Washington this week is one of great elation." That can be the result of the blooming of the cherry blossoms or the passage of a bi-partisan bill to limit the import of foreign canaries. "No. I mean this embarrassing business with Vitaly Yurchenko." I've always felt grateful that those in Washington keep these emotional swings to themselves. They don't expect the rest of us to join in or even go out with them, and I was brought on by the resignation of an under-secretary of interior. She gave me a suspicious look and said, "I never been out with any guy by that name. And I went straight home last night." But now that seems to be changing, we're expected to share in their emoji sounds. I discovered that this morning, when I woke up feeling pretty good until I went through the papers and read the reports from Washington. Most of the stories had similar phrases. "The United States has been 'But now, not only Washington but the entire country is embarrassed because he has pulled the old switcheroo, as they call it in the intelligence community.' over to our country. But now, not only Washington but the entire country is embarrassed because he has pulled the old switcheroo, as they call it in the intelligence community. Well, I'm as loyal a citizen as the next guy. So as I shaved, I could see my face getting redder and redder from embarrassment. I even found myself averting my gaze so as not to make eye contact in the mirror. On the way to work, I stopped at the coffee shop for breakfast and I said to Yvonne, the countergirl, "I imagine you're feeling embarrassed this morning, huh?" she tugged at her skirt and said, "Samthin' showing?" "I'm talking about the Russian spy who defected and then said he's going back. It has caused this country, and all of us in it, great embarrassment." "In what way?" "Are you kiddin' Hey, I'm not embarrassed. I read about him, and he's the poor sucker who's embarrassed. I mean, he's really got a problem now." "It says in the stories that the real reason he defected was because when he was in this country before, he used to get it on with some married Russian woman who was here with her old man. And Vitaly wanted to get things with her again." "I read that." "Yeah, but when he went to see her, she told him uh-uh, the party's over. She got kicks from swinging with a spy. But now that he defected, he's just another DP in a baggy suit." "He made the mistake of retention." but, the pen. "Sure. And he can't go nowhere without some CIA guys tagging along. With all that working against him, how he's ever gonna get into a single bar and get lucky?" But that's not the worst of it. Now he's going home to his wife and kids. The poor guy is going to walk in and say, 'I'm home, Sasha.' She's gonna say, 'Where the heck you been, Vitaly?' "He's gonna say, 'Oh, it was terrible. The Americans drug me. Take me to States. Try to make me tell secrets. Then I escape and come home to you as fast as I can. I don't even stop to have with the ones we. Now, do you think any woman's gonna believe that?" "It is as little far-fetched." "Yeah. She's gonna say, 'Vitaly, I warned you about chasing skirts. I'm leavin' and taking little Boris and the color TV with me.'" "It's a story as old as man and woman." "Right. But it just shows how dumb the Russians really are. He could have saved himself all that grief he had done what any American man would have done before he defected." "What's that?" "He should have phoned his old girlfriend first. And if the old man had answered, upward." Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Tacha Continued from p. Continued from p.1 'Here's one person they're not gonna find any dirt about. They might find some dust she kicked up, though.' Scandia resident —Earl Melby Scandia resident Tacha, Reece said, has always worked hard, even as a child. "But I guess she played as hard as she worked."she said. Edna Robison, Tacha's first grade teacher who taught elementary school for 46 years, said she was a leader of her classmates and was a leader of her classmates. Reece said Tacha never needed to be told what to do. She had a knack for managing time. "She was really outstanding," Robison said. "You could just tell that from the very beginning. The students didn't resent her leadership. They just followed her ideas." "She'd always set her alarm and get up and practice piano before she went to school," she said. Despite working hard, Reece said, her daughter knew how to separate her work from her family. "She's a girl who's always been able to shut the door on work and go home." she said. Reece, who is active in politics and travels around the country and world as part of her work, said she thought her busy life could have something to do with her daughter's. Opinion "I suppose if you're active, that sort of rubs off on the kids," she said. Continued from p. 1 on South Africa, said the Endowment Association would continue to make money as long as it could. "They know that they can legally engage in a german man." They're sighingly chosen. "If there is a revolution, they will lose whatever assets they have there." Charlton knew of the opinion yesterday but had not read it. She said she had asked the attorney general whether the KU Endowment Association and the Kansas Public retirement System could legally divest. "From what I understand," Charlton said, "divesting would not be illegal. What it boils down to is the judgment of people investing other people's money. "The law leaves it up to the Endowment Association's judgment. I hope before long their judgment tells them to invest somewhere else." "The average student doesn't think about student government, unfortunately," Ambler said. "Many of them are very pleased with the University as they know it. They don't see becoming involved with those campus issues or the campus governing structure as critical to their purpose for being here. Power Continued from p.1 Arnold said that this year, a change machine was installed in Strong Hall after Student Senate petitioned the administration. For example, Ambler said, Wescoe Hall was built after student government conducted a referendum. Students voted overwhelmingly to build a much-needed humanities building, and paid extra fees for 10 years to do it. "You can say to them the same things you say to citizens out in the larger community. 'Who do you think got computer registration for you? Who do you think got the Robinson recreation center?' Who do you think got improvements in residence halls? Who do you think got this and that?' Those people who were interested enough to be involved." Although Senate has financing and Ambler said those things were not accomplished by Student Senate alone but were products of students voicing their concerns and then working with the administration. appointing powers, it does not have the final word. "Student Senate is not sovereign," said Alison Young, Student Senate executive secretary. "That is an obstacle in itself for the Senate because there are senators who would like to think that." "Unfortunately, we are, quote-unquote,'only students.'" Student representatives, however, present at man University meeting. Michael Foubert, graduate senator, said, "We have a view. We are listened to." "We're given an opportunity to speak on virtually any decision that's made concerning the University," said Jeff Polack, student body vice president. Senate appoints student representatives to nearly all University governing boards and to its own boards, such as such as the Transportation Board, which runs the campus bus service, KU On Wheels. Boller, who is also the coordinator of the 'Transportation Board,' said those boards, which were composed of the great strengths of the Senate. "One of the things the Student Senate really does for the students," he said, "is hands the ball over to another group of students and says, "Run with it." "We don't just set them free and never say anything, but we let someone else make the day-to-day decisions." Easley said Senate legislation must pass the student body president and the vice chancellor for student affairs. The chancellor receives the legislation, but usually reads only very controversial pieces before he carries them to the Kansas Board of Regents, he said. Ambler said he vetoed only one piece of Senate legislation in eight years. It was a resolution last spring about conduct of athletes. Easley said Senate could have tremendous power, but it had never worked up to its full potential. He said the administration addressed but did not act on all the Senate legislation, but said, "We have more wins than losses." Dennis "Boog" Highberger, former student body vice president, disagreed. He said student government had no real power, but because it had an illusion of power, students did not search for other ways to make changes. "Student Senate could try to abolish itself either by legislation or referendum, but the administration would veto it," he said. IBM PC AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! brother HP 10 ABSOLUTELY COMPLETE PERSONAL COMPUTER SYSTEM for only $1998. - Zenith ZF/148/42 computer This Includes: - Zenith ZVM/1230 monitor - Brother HR-10 Printer - Box of Disks - Printer Cable - BOX OF DISKS - Box of Paper - "Easy" Word Processor from the makers of Wordstar. - Box of Paper EZCOMP COMPUTER CENTER O. HOLIDAY PLAZA (913)841-5715 ZENITH data systems ENGINEERING MAJORS HAVE ENOUGH STRESS WITHOUT HAVING TO WORRY ABOUT TUITION. stu tuita to offer Ap scholars Recen of scholarshi majo CAT If one of the angles you've been studying lately is a way to pay your tuition costs, Army ROTC would like to offer some sound advice. Apply for an Army ROTC scholarship. Recently, we set aside hundreds of scholarships solely for engineering majors like yourself So if the stress of worry about tuition is bending you out of shape, get some financial support. Apply for an Army ROTC scholarship today. Each one covers full tuition, books and other supplies, and pays you up to $1,000 each school year it's in effect. For more information, contact your Professor of Military Science. ARMY ROTC. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. CONTACT CAPTAIN KENNARD Room 212, Military Science Building 913-864-3311/3312 Diamond Roberts Jewelry Presents... Gemstones and Jewels direct from Brazil The rare, the fabulous, the beautiful displayed for your enjoyment- Patricia will be at Roberts Jewelry Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday with fabulous gemstones from Brazil. Diamond Diamonds Patricia is the importer, so we bypass the wholesaler and you get the savings. Diamond November 14-17 Thursday noon-8:30 Friday 9:30-5:30 Saturday 9:30-5:30 Sunday 1:00-5:00 Beautiful Amethyst Gilstening Aquamarine Striking Rubellite Shimmering Chrysoberyl Rare Indocolite Brilliant Topaz Exotic Emerald Sparkling Amatrine Roberts Jewelry Splendid Morganite Glittering Citrine 833 Massachusetts BUFFALO BOB'S Smokehouse SMOKEY JOE SANDWICH SPECIAL Chopped ends of BBQ beef, ham, turkey and pork baked in a mild BBQ sauce. Served hot on a bakery fresh bun with tater curt fries and pickles. WHEEL LOG $2.75 Large Sandwich $3.50 Extra Large Sandwich ✧ THE TASTE THAT WON THE WEST --- NO COLUPONS ACCEPTED WITH THIS OFFER 719 MASSACHUSETTS OFFER GOOD TILL NOV. 30 Formerly Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse—Same nice people—Same management 6 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 Mark Mohler/KANSAN Southbound hundreds of Canada geese gather at a small pond near Kansas Highway 10 outside Lawrence. The geese are on their yearly fall migration to Kansas and other neighboring states. They fly from the northern extremes of the continent where they have spent the summer months. Commission defers peddler decision by Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Peddlers and merchants who may pass through Lawrence gained a reprieve last night when the Lawrence City Commission postponed voting on an amendment prohibiting their occupations. The commission put off adopting an amendment to the city's ordinance on peddlers and transient merchants at the weekly meeting. After public comment on the issue, the commission raised questions about the amendment. Mayor Mike Amyx then moved for a two-week deferral of the amendment and commissioners unanimously approved. Planning Director Price Banks said city staff initiated the amendment in response to citizen and merchant requests. Many merchants had complained because transient merchants that operate with a temporary structure don't have to meet strict building codes. The amendment eliminated transient merchants — merchants that engage in temporary sales — from erecting temporary structures on private property and from erecting temporary structures in parking lots that eliminate the minimum parking spaces needed for that lot. "If you restrict transient merchants from coming in, it's going to hurt us, it's going to hurt Gibson's, it's going to hurt K-Mart, the Malls, everyone who does promotional activities," said Midge Rembold, manager of Southern Hills Mall. "A lot of times we pay for those people to come in." she said. in, she said. Bud Jennings, Bud Jennings & Sons Carpets, Inc., 2851 Iowa St., said that allowing transient merchants "creates a precedent." "If floorcovering is to be sold out of a tent or out of a truck," he said, "then next year we'll sell it out of a tent or truck, if that's the way you're supposed to sell it. I don't think it is." Kim Griffin, who sells carpets throughout Lawrence, said the amendment made her sales illegal. She said her business was clean and orderly and didn't hurt the city. Senate elections to use voting machines By Frank Ybarra Special to the Kansan The Student Senate Elections Committee worked out final details last night for next week's Senate elections in which student will vote on voting machines rather than paper ballots. The committee assigned locations for the 22-24 voting machines that will be on loan from the Johnson County Elections Office and assigned people to work at each of the election sites. This is the first time students will vote at the machines since the spring of 1984. At last year's fall election and before the special '84 swing election, students voted on paper ballots. The boots will be in or near the schools in which students will vote on election days, Nov. 20 and 21. Students can vote between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. David Day, chairman of the Elections Committee, said that students had to go to the correct location to vote. All names and student IDs will COUPON Get a 60-minute KIS. 2nd Roll FREE Bring in 2 rolls of 110,126,135 or dic film and we'll process the 2nd roll free on genuine Kodak paper in less than one hour! Offer expires 11/30/85. 2104-C West 25th Holiday Plaza 943-5471 Student Senate will have to pay $95 for computer paper and about $500 to transport the machines, Day said. Day said he hoped to have at least one committee member present at each voting location. The Elections Committee is also trying to recruit students and other interested people to work at the booths. FREE KIS PHOTO be checked against a computer printout. KS PHOTO Frank Peralta, assistant machine programmer for Johnson County, will meet with the Elections Committee on Nov. 18 to explain how the booths operate, Day said. He also will be on campus during the elections to help with any problems. --junior; Lisa Rasor, Topeka sophomore; and Jane Ungerman, Lawrence senior. Amnesty International presents: The Hooded Men A video documentary examining torture in various countries, including Argentina, Nicaragua (pre-1981), N. Ireland, and South Africa, through the eyes of former torturers and torture victims. Wednesday, Nov. 13 COUPON 3:30 p.m. Lippencott Audio Visual Center (lower level) 7:30 p.m. Green Hall, Room 107 Admission: free Paid for by Student Activity fee. Apartheid protesters receive date for trial By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Five anti-apartheid protesters will go to trial Jan. 13, after pleading not guilty to charges of interference with the conduct of public business in a public place yesterday in Douglas County District Court. All five had planned to plead no contest, but Associate District Judge Jean Shepherd told them the only plea she could accent was not guilty. For charges that carry a potential jail term, the only plea that can be made without an attorney present is not guilty. The five, arrested Nov. 4 after refusing to leave Chancellor Gene A. Budig's suite, are Edward Jackson, Topeka sophomore; Ruth Lichtwardt, Lawrence junior; Michael Maher, Roeland Park The charge that the students face is a Class A middemeanor with a maximum penalty of up to one year in jail or a fine of up to $2,500. the students who were arrested, except for Jackson, are members of the KU Committee on South Africa and also were arrested in protests in May. The five were among about 50 people who invaded the chancellor's suite after a rally Nov. 4 protesting the Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in companies that do business in South Africa. Rasor said she wanted to plead no contest because, "I didn't want the hassle of a trial." Jackson said he wanted to plead no contest because of his situation. Jackson said he refused to leave, because he wanted to speak to Budig. "In the literal sense, there is no contest between me and the powers that arrested me," Jackson said. BORDER BANDIDO WEDNESDAY SPECIAL ALL YOU CAN $3.49 LEAT 5-9 p.m. All you can eat from our wide selection: - tacos - taco salad - chili - enchiladas - burritos - Spanish rice - tostada - refried beans 1528 W. 23rd - chili conqueso 842-8861 - salad bar Across from Post Office JOIN US AND HAVE FUN! DJ. Special Performances Middle Eastern & Malaysian Dinner Belly Dancer invites you to a Semi-formal Dance International Club Saturday, Nov. 16 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. at the Elks Club, Lodge Room 3705 W.23rd Street House of Hupei is Open Daily For Lunch & Dinner 2907 W. 6th Tickets sold at $3 members the SUA Office $4 non-members $5 at the door Pd. for by the Student Activity Fee Call UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY 843-5279 The best in party pics! PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL Free Consultation THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO 745 New Hamshire 841-5796 DOUBLE FEATURE Rent VCR & 2 Movies Overnight @ 14.49 SMITTY'S TV *n*:447 w:23w08-573a M-59:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun, 1-5 p.m. Almost 1,000 times included XXXX 4¢ Copies 818 Mass. Midwest Business Systems Inc. 842-4134 MISS. STREET DELL MAI MASSACHUSETTS Homemade CHOCOLATE,CHERRY LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake Offer good through Nov.30 No coupons accepted with this offer. 95¢ reg $1.50 WELL-KNOCK YOUR SOULS OFF! For the best in party pics! call 843-5279 UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY THE GRANDER MAY 704 Mass. Downtown we also deliver 843-7398 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY HOURS Mon - Thurs 11 a.m-2 a.m. Fri & Sat 11 a.m-3 a.m. Sunday 11 a.m-1 a.m. $1 OFF ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center 842-1212 EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 Insurance woes may persist United Press International TOPEKA — Insurance Commissioner Fletcher Bell yesterday predicted Kansans would experience the ill effects of problems in the property and casualty insurance industry well into 1986. Citing their "potentially hazardous financial condition," Bell announced he has suspended or revoked the authority of 15 financially shaky insurance companies to do business in Kansas and has taken other regulatory action against four others. The 19 property and casualty insurers — the total subjected to action so far in 1985 --- are not domestic Kansas companies, he said. The insurance commissioner noted that only six companies required formal regulatory action in each of the years 1983 and 1984. "The increased number of actions taken by my office on property and casualty insurers is due to several years of poor underwriting results experienced by the property and casualty industry as a whole." Bell said. He said many of the firms used "cash flow underwriting," in which policies are written at reduced premium amounts in the hope of making up the difference with investment income. "However, as investment returns dropped, property and casualty insurers realized the premiums they had collected were not going to be able to generate enough funds to satisfy policyholders' claims," the authority of other factors which have also contributed to the poor operating results of the property and casualty insurance industry." Bell predicted the public would feel the effects well into 1986, in the form of increased premiums, decreased insurer capacity and occasional company insolvency. Ex-legislator accused of fraud The Associated Press TOPEKA — An Overland Park woman told a state disciplinary panel yesterday that former state Sen. Paul Hess borrowed $100,000 from her mother, lied about the existence of liens on collateral for the loan and misused funds in a conservatorship. /Bridgitt Buchanan told the panel Hess pleaded with her mother, Ora Gillespie of Tonganoxie, to lend him $100,000 so he could survive financial problems facing him in the summer of 1984. The accusations were the second round of charges to be leveled at Hess, once one of the most powerful members of the Kansas Legislature. And the charges came without warning at the hearing. The uncontested charges could cost Hess his license to practice law in Kansas. The three-member hearing panel of the state Board of Discipline of Attorneys is considering the current complaints, along with a previous complaint filed by a Johnson County couple who testified Hess lost interest in their cases and would not pursue them after accepting retainer fees as their attorney. The panel took the earlier case under advisement, pending the current hearing. It could decide the complaints have no merit and dismiss all charges against Hess and his wife, Anne Oliver Hess. In the current complaint, taken to the board by the state disciplinary administrator, Hess and his wife are accused of "fraud, deceit and mistreatment and conduct adversely reflecting on" their fitness to practice law. Mrs. Hess denies any part in the dealings and fighting the Complainant. In addition, the complaint charges Hess "either neglected a legal matter entrusted to him or intentionally failed to seek the lawful objectives of his clients and intentionally damaged his clients in the course of a professional relationship." If the panel finds there was misconduct on the part of the Hesses, it could recommend no disciplinary action be taken, or recommend to the Kansas Supreme Court that either or both be disbarred, suspended from practicing law or publicly censured. Hess and his wife practiced law in the firm of Oliver, Hess and Hess in Overland Park. Hess reigned over the important Senate Ways and Means Committee until he moved his residency from Sedgwick County to Johnson County in 1984 and tried unsuccessfully to win the Republican nomination to the Senate from his new district. He lost in the GOP primary last year to Sen. Jack Walker, R-Overland Park. Plane crash kills two in northeast Wichita United Press International WICHTI - At least two people died and one was injured last night when a single-angine Cessna plane clipped a power line and crashed in flames less than two miles from its destination, authorities said. Visibility was significantly reduced in the area at the time of the crash because of fog and drizzle, authorities said. The names of the two victims and the survivor were not released. The survivor apparently was not seriously injured. A spokesman for the Sedgwick County Sheriff's office said the search for a fourth passenger thought to have been aboard the plane continued late into the night in a brushy, remote area of northwest Sedgwick County. The Sedwick County Sheriff's office received a report from an area resident at 6:50 p.m. that a plane had gone down about two miles east of Jabara Airport in northeast Wichita. Air traffic controllers at Mid-Continent Airport in Wichita confirmed that they lost radar contact with a plane at that time and indicated that the plane was on a flight from Olathe to the Jabara Airport. After about 30 minutes, searchers found part of the wreckage of the plane in a wooded ravine. One survivor was found a few minutes later. The man said he thought four persons had been aboard the plane, according to authorities. At about 8:15 p.m., authorities found the wreckage of the cabin with two bodies inside. On Campus The University Forum will feature James Rush, a physician from Universities Field Staff International, at 11:45 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Rush will speak about "Post-Colonial Southeast Asia." The University Placement Center will sponsor a seminar, "Summer Employment in Internships," at 13:30 p.m. today in Room 3, Lippincott Hall. ■ Amnesty International will show the video, "The Hooded Men," at 3:30 p.m. today in the audio-visual room of Lippincott Hall and at 7:30 p.m. in Room 107, Green Hall. Public Relations Student Society of America will meet at 4:30 p.m. to day in Room 202. Stauffer-Flint Hall. A meeting for psychology majors to be advised on admission to the graduate school will be at 4:30 p.m. today in Room 3139, Wescoke Hall. Computerark ZENITH STUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE Z-100 GEMINI BOARD Z-141-0094 1307. Mass phone: 843-1151 Computerark ZENITH STUDENT WITH FACULTY DISCOUNT AVAILABLE Z-100 GEMINI BOARD 841-0094 SAVE AT IMPORTS • DOMESTICS • EXOTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 We Deliver! The Grinder Man 843-7398 Call UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY 843-5279 The best in party pics! THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mass. phone: 843-1151 Computerark ZENITH STUDENT & FACILITY DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE Z-100 GEMINI BOARD 841-0094 SAVE AT IMPORTS • DOMESTICS • EXOTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 We Deliver! The Grinder Man 843-7398 Call UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY 843-5279 The best in party pics! WEDNESDAY 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Also: Spare Rib Special $525 the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY HOURS Mon - Thurs - 11 a.m - 2 a.m Fri & Sat - 11 a.m - 3 a.m Sunday - 11 a.m - 1 a.m $1 OFF any 2 pizzas or $2 OFF any 3 pizzas ANY PIZZA ORDERED Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY WEDNESDAY 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Also: Spare Rib Special $525 the Sanctuary & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540 WEDNESDAY 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Also: Spare Rib Special $525 the Sanctuary & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540 $1 OFF any 2 pizzas or $2 OFF any 3 pizzas ANY PIZZA ORDERED Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY EASY AS 1-2-3 The bishops called the tension that exists between the United States and the Soviet Union a "terrible threat to all humanity." They urged the suspension of all nuclear tests for one year, hailing it as "one step toward a climate of greater hope and trust." PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY HOURS Mon.-Thurs. - 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri & Sat. - 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Sunday - 11 a.m.-1 a.m. "The number of companies we have initiated action on represents only a small fraction of the total number of property and casualty insurance companies doing business in Kansas," Bell said. $1 OFF any 2 pizzas or $2 OFF any 3 pizzas ANY PIZZA ORDERED Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY EASY AS 1-2-3 Although 15 firms were subjected to suspension or revocation of their authority to do business in the state, the other four were the target of various regulatory actions, such as administrative hearings, special court cases, and court mandates or required reduction of the volume of business written in Kansas. tional body said in its letter to Reagan and Gorbachev. The letter won unanimous approval during opening minutes of the council's semiannual meeting, which has drawn about 100 of the church's active and retired bishops to Wichita. The council also approved a resolution calling on United Methodists around the world to pray for peace in advance of the Geneva summit, which begins Nov. 19. On the Record Bishops urge Reagan to ease world tension "Aware of our own responsibilities, we have called upon United Methodists around the world to pray for you before and during the summit, and to become actively engaged in the earnest search for global peace and justice," the bishops' letter said. "Our fervent prayer is that viable ways to a genuine and just peace may be found, and that human and material resources may be turned to the healing of human suffering," the interna- A student's backpack, valued with its contents at $280, was stolen Monday morning from a table in Watson Library. KU police said. Diamond earrings, valued at $400, were stolen between 10 p.m. Oct. 29 and 2 p.m. Friday from a student's room in McColum Hall, KU police said yesterday. The earrings had been hidden in a drawer. In its resolution, the council called on United Methodists to pray daily for the summit and, in a gesture symbolic of hope and peace, to turn on porch lights or to light window candles on the evening of Nov. 19. WICHITA - The United Methodist Council of Bishops yesterday approved a letter to President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev urging them to ease the tension between their two countries. United Press International WE MAKE SENDING CHRISTMAS PACKAGES Santa is carrying a box of gifts. - Daily Pickup by UPS - Convenient Location - Low UPS Rates - Free Parking EASY! - Open 7 Days during Christmas Season PS EXPRESS PACK & SHIP EXPRESS, INC. 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KU UDK Exp. 11-30-85 The Only Apartments On The Hill 1603 W. 15th Right On Campus! 1603 W. 15th Right On Campus! ·Furnished or Unfurnished Rooms ·FREE Cablevision ·All Utilities Paid ·On Bus Route ·As little as $119 a month Jayhawker Towers 843-4993 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 Nation/World Suicide driver kills four at monastery in Lebanon United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — A suicide driver in a bomb-laden car tried to ram a meeting of right-wing Christian leaders yesterday at a monastery. But guards opened fire, and the car exploded early, killing four people, police said. Among the 26 injured were the chief targets of the assassination attempt — 85-year-old former Lebanese President Camille Chamoun, Phalange Party chief Elie Karameh and former Parliamentarian George Saade. They have been critical of a Syrian-mediated peace plan designed to end 10 years of civil war in Lebanon among warring Christian and Moslem militias. It was the fourth bomb attack in Beirut in less than 24 hours. A car bomb in mostly Moslem west Beirut killed four people and wounded eight Monday night and was followed by a bomb that caused damage but no injuries. Police said those killed in yesterday's attack included the suicide driver, two army guards and a woman carrying coffee to the meeting of the Lebanese Front, an office of of covert-wing Christian political leaders. The powerful blast destroyed two wings of St. Georges's Monastery — where the Christian leaders were meeting — and shattered windows 300 yards away at the U.S. Embassy Annex, which was devastated by a suicide bomber Sept. 20, 1984. Three previously unknown groups — the Free Christian Youth, the Vanguards of Arab Christians and the Forces of All Arab countries each have been the bombing in anonymous phone calls. But Christian Voice of Lebanon Radio termed the authenticity of these claims "very dubious." Police said the driver of a Dodge station wagon entered the monastery compound by joining Chamoun's motorcade but veered off at the last moment and attempted to ram the rear of the single-story building. Two officers plowed as it headed for the building. "The soldiers averted a disaster," an army spokesman said. Bomb experts said it was unclear if the driver detonated the 880 pounds of explosives as he came under fire or whether bullets triggered the blast. The red and blue station wagon carried volatile hexogene and a lot of rockets and other explosive materials," an army investigator said. The blast tore a crater 6 feet deep and 40 feet wide in the ground, about 40 feet from the conference room where the Lebanese Front leaders had just started their meeting, witnesses said. The explosion wrecked the southern wing and triggered a fire in the other wing. Rubble crashed to the floor of the conference room, where a book entitled "The Lebanon We Want to Build" was blown off the table. The engine of the station wagon was tossed 100 feet away. The Lebanese Front was apparently targeted because it objects to the draft of a militia peace agreement, putting it at odds with the Christian Lebanese Forces, militia, Moslemi militias and Syria. The scheduled signing of the accord Nov. 3 was postponed when the veteran Christian politicians demanded the young leaders of the LF push for changes to retain some key Christian powers. The talks are currently stalemated. "This bomb was aimed at the Lebanese Forces as much as the Lebanese Front," the LF Executive Committee said. "It will not weaken our efforts to arrive at a solution to end the state of war." President Amin Gemayel, a Christian, and Moslem leaders also condemned the suicide attack. REEFERMADNESS! The Original Smoke Dream NOW IN 1/2" VIDEO! 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'12:50 '6:00 HILLCREST MAGGED EDGE Glenn Cline - Jeff Bridges Daily "4:45 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun" 2:30 INTRODUCING PREMIUM NIGHT ALL PREMIUM LABEL LIQUORS 1.50 ALL IMPORTED BOTTLE BEERS 1.50 WELL BRAND DRINKS 1.00 NO COVER CHARGE LET YOUR EXPENSIVE TASTES RUN WILD EVERY WEDNESDAY GAMMONS SNOWG Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 Nation/World University Daily Kansan 9 Egypt arrests Libyans in assassination plot United Press International CAIRO, Egypt — The Libyan regime of Col. Moammar Khadaly defended an alleged plot to assassinate Libyan exiles in Egypt and vowed yesterday to track down and "liquidate" its "stray dogs" anywhere in the world. One of the targets of the alleged assassination plot, former Prime Minister Abel-Hamid El-Bakoush, pledged to escalate his struggle to overthrow the "bloody regime" in Tnipoli. The Egyptian government announced Monday it had foiled a Libyan scheme to assassinate as many as 50 Libyan exiles and arrested a four-man Libyan hit squad. Egyptian authorities filed seven charges, including attempted murder, which is punishable by life imprisonment, against the four Libyans, described as agents of the Libyan intelligence service. The Libyan News Agency JANA, alluding to the arrests announced in Cairo, said, "The Egyptian regime yesterday alleged that a group of Libyans had been involved in an attempt to liquidate Abdel-Hamid El-Bakoush and other Libyans who are on the run in Egypt. "JANA's political editor comments that the Libyan people decided more than once to liquidate its enemies inside and outside Libya and will not retreat an inch from the implementation of this resolution. "This act is not directed against the country which shelters these stray dogs but against the enemies of the people." The Libyan agency said. El-Bakoush, who was the target of another assassination attempt about a year ago, was quoted by Egypt's Middle East News Agency as saying he and his colleagues "do not fear Khadafy's terrorism." "We will continue to struggle to get rid of Khadafy and his bloody regime," El-Bakoush said. "The collusion of Libyan intelligence with him to unpunished because the day will come when they pay a dear price." El-Bakoush, who heads the Front for the Salvation of Libya, urged the Libyan people to revolt against Khadaf "who is boasting about the terrorism he commits everywhere." The four Libyans arrested in Egypt were accused of "communicating with a foreign country, Libya, to harm Egypt's political position and from a foreign country to undermine Egypt's national interest." Other charges complicity to commit murder, possession of unlicensed weapons, possession of drugs and entering Egypt illegally. The Middle East News Agency said prosecution authorities ordered the four remanded in custody indefinitely after their arrest Nov. 6. Interior Minister Ahmed Rushidi said Monday the four were arrested near the Mediterranean city of Alexandria, minutes before they were to storm a farm where the Libyan opposition leaders were meeting. Photo World ONE HOUR SERVICE 50% OFF Process & Print with this coupon From 110.12, 35mm or Disc Color Print Film 14 x 1/4 c per print (26), 1cm and 2cm dev. charge ($2.98) Example: 24 exp. reg. $9.49.NOW $4.97! Good All At Locations Not valid with other offers Explains 11.25.004 FASHIONWORLD k113-139 30% OFF Photo Greeting Cards with this coupon Have your favorite photo made into a holiday greeting card! Quantity Reg. Amount Price 25 $29.99 $55.87 35 $14.99 $64.81 50 $27.99 $104.14 100 $51.99 $332.39 over 100 $51.99 $332.39 over 100, 120, 35mm and color print film From 110, 120, 35mm and color print film Envelopes include: Interfaces and copy tags. $3. 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While Chancellor Budig's answer may be considered a trifle timid by some, a few of us were elated to discover that merely by voicing our opinion in a public setting we now can play a more important role in this struggle than can he. However, we were surprised to learn that Chancellor Budig also finds "Racism in any form...not acceptable on this campus or in the larger society." A PAID ADVERTISEMENT Because supply-siders and other members of the hidebound set remain oblivious to the considerable difference which continues to exist between the white and black national rates of unemployment, functional illiteracy, infant mortality, and poverty, we'd concluded that many forms of racism still were acceptable. Perhaps Chancellor Budig never has denounced those bolsterous organs of racism—lilywhite fraternities—around which so much campus life revolves because he feels unacceptable racism isn't always wrong. "There's a lot of elk hunters up there, the snow is about 4 feet deep," he said. "It's pretty critical right now. They've been in there since Saturday. William Dann 2702 W. 24th Street Terrace One of the evacuated was Jerry Smith, of Seattle, who had a perforated ulcer that required medical attention. A PAID ADVERTISEMENT Snow, cold trap 300 elk hunters YAKIMA, Wash. — As many as 300 elk hunters were stranded in the mountains yesterday by heavy snow, including a woman who died of carbon monoxide poisoning in her pickup where she and her husband tried to escape the cold. One group that went into the Cascades on "There are hunters and camps everywhere and they're all stranded," said Yakima County Sheriff Jack Bartley. "We're talking to quite a few of them. Some of them want to come out and some of them don't." horseback refused to leave without their animals. A sheriff's spokesman said there was a request from the group to either drop in hay for the horses, or airlift them out of the mountains. United Press International Karen Dean, Yakima County Sheriff's spokeswoman, said 25 hunters were flown out by helicopter Monday and search and rescue crews were sent to the location. They spend the night in hoses of driving on their own. The couple apparently turned on the heat in their truck to try to stay warm in the cold, the sheriff's Search and rescue teams found Ida Winston, 60, Battleground. Wash., dead. Her husband William Winston, 60, was also overcome by the fumes. He was airlifted 20 miles to Yakima Valley Memorial Hospital, where he was listed in critical but stable condition. "I think it's going to be several days before everyone's out and it's going to depend on weather an awful lot," Bartley said. About 30 search and rescue personnel from Yakima county were coordinating evacuations on the ground, Bartley said. The National Weather Service said the low for the night was 7 degrees, breaking a previous record of 8 degrees set in 1978. led for the second day to the east slopes of the Cascade Range where a storm dumped more than 20 inches of rain. Army helicopters from Ft. Lewis were dispatch Senate votes to fix drinking age at 21 United Press International WASHINGTON - The Senate, eliminating a potential loophole in the law setting 21 as the minimum legal drinking age, voted yesterday to make the 21-year-old limit permanent. One of the other amendments approved requires the Treasury Department to reimburse the Social Security trust fund for approximately $1.3 billion in lost interest. The drinking amendments — and the rest of the reconciliation bill — still must receive final Senate and House approval before President Reagan for his signature. The voice vote came during consideration of a significant deficit reduction bill needed to put in effect the federal budget, and savers agreed to earlier this year. The current minimum drinking The Treasury was forced to borrow money from the trust fund to finance other government functions during age law requires the Transportation secretary to reduce federal highway funds by 5 percent in fiscal 1987 and by 10 percent in fiscal 1988 for states that fail to enact a minimum drinking age of 21. sidered yesterday, prompting Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete Domenici, R-N.M., to worry that the deficit-reduction bill, known as reconciliation, "may end up costing more than it saves." Some states have indicated that they will lower their legal drinking age after the law expires Sept. 30, 1988. The Senate-passed amendment will make the law and its consequences permanent. The drinking age limit was one of 19 amendments the Senate con- the present federal borrowing crisis. The Senate also agreed that low-income energy assistance should not be used in calculations for food stamp purposes. Since it is considered essential legislation which Reagan is unlikely to veto, many senators view it as an ideal vehicle for their pet legislation. Godfather's PIZZA PURSUIT Ridiculous facts concerning pizza and its origins... Very few pizza eaters partake of the delicacy while wearing a bag over their heads...except, however, for one area of rural Toledo where all girls are urged to wear brown sacks until the age of 18 ...and one small town in the wine growing region of Italy where everyone is "in the bag." Pizza Man Get a large (1 topping) Thin Crust Pizza for $5.99 OR a large (1 topping) Original Crust Pizza for $6.99 (You can always order extra toppings for a small additional charge) Dine-in, Carryout or Delivery Limit one pizza per coupon. 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SUA FILMS "Last Tango in Paris" 2006 (by Bernardo Bertolucci) ★Marlon Brando ★Maria Schneider (rated X) Tonight Only! 7:30 $1.50 Woodruff Aud. 10 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 Sweetener may cause seizures The Associated Press Then Colburn. In a letter in the latest issue of the British medical journal Lancet, Dr. Richard J. Wurtman described three cases in which people had their first epileptic seizures after drinking large amounts of soft drinks that contained NutraSweet. that contained Nattasewer. Wurtman theorizes that the sweetener, known generically as aspartame, lowers levels of chemicals in the brain that protect against seizures. In his letter, Wirtman said the three cases "can only suggest an association between aspartame and seizures." But he added that they are "compatible with evidence that high aspartame doses may produce neurochemical changes that, in laboratory animals, are associated with depressed seizure thresholds." Officials of G.D. Searle & Co., which makes Nutrasweet, said that Wurtman's research was not scientifically controlled, and that the apparent link could well have been due to chance. "and we have been due to such "We have every confidence in (NutraSweet's) safe ty, and our confidence is based on the research," Dr. John Heybach, Searle's director of medical and scientific affairs. He said Nutweet was tested more extensively before its approval than any other food additive in history. drive in history. Wurtman, a physician at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has been a frequent critic of aspartame since it was introduced in 1981 as the sweetener Equal. Now it is used in dozens of products, including pudding, chewing gum and diet soft drinks. using *clewings*, I agreed that the apparent association he reported could have been coincidental. But he said doctors should question patients with unexplained seizures about their use of aspartame. "It may turn out that when enough doctors ask enough questions, there'll be no correlation," he said. ought questions, there'll be no correlation," he said. One of the main ingredients of aspartame is the amino acid phenylalanine. Wurtman suggests in consuming lots of aspartame that levels of phenylalanine can interfere with the body's production of other chemicals, known as neurotransmitters, that protect against seizures. needed for assistance. "I think, but I can't prove it, that this will only happen in people who have a propensity toward having seizures," Wurtman said. United Press International LONDON — The archbishop of Canterbury's special envoy will fly to Lebanon today in a bid to secure the release of American hostages who had appealed for new efforts to win their freedom, the Church of England said yesterday. Envoy seeks hostages' release Terry Waite, Archbishop Robert Runcie's secretary for Anglican Communion Affairs, decided to make the trip to Beirut "after having had further contact during the past three days with the group holding the hostages," a church statement said. "Mr. Waite has received a message from the group which encourages him to believe that a visit to Beirut will be worthwhile at this time," the statement said. Waite helped secure the release in September of the Rev. Benjamin Weir, 61, a U. s. clergyman who spent 16 months in captivity in Lebanon. In Washington, a State Department official said the administration would welcome any effort that would result in the release of the hostages. But the official, noting previous unsuccessful bids, said he would wait to see what happened before becoming optimistic. Waite, a skilled negotiator, has been involved in the hostage crisis for more than a year, and the church statement appealed to news organizations to allow him to work outside the media spotlight because of the dangerous nature of his mission. A church spokeswoman said Waite's trip was in direct response to an appeal from four American hostages but that his mission did not rule out possible talks to secure the release of seven other Western captives, including at least two other Americans, three Frenchmen, a Briton and an Italian. Most of the captives are thought held by the Islamic Jihad organization, a fundamentalist pro-iranian group. The group claimed last month to have killed one American, U.S. Embassy officer William Buckley, but U.S. officials could not confirm that assertion. The spokeswoman said Waite had contacts with the group holding four of the Americans after Runcie received a letter from the captives on Saturday. The letter, one of several in a packet thrown from a speeding car; was signed by Terry Anderson, the Associated Press bureau chief in Beirut; the Rev. Martin Jenco, a Roman Catholic priest; and two American University officials, David Jacobsen, hospital administrator, and Thomas Sutherland, dean. A similar letter addressed to the White House appealed for President Reagan to negotiate in the hostages' behalf but the administration ruled, out any talks with terrorists. CALL NOW! To Receive The Lowest Air Fares & Best Available Flights For Your Thanksgiving & Christmas Travel TRAVEL CENTER LAWRENCE TRAVEL CENTER AIRLINE HOTLINE 841-7117 Southern Hills Center.1601 W. 23rd St. 9-5:30 Mon.-Fri. 9:30-2 Sat. Christmas Bonus. 12,345,6 78.00 HP-25C PV PMT FV CHS 7 8 9 + UX VT VA ER 4 5 6 X R/S R+ XY CLX I J K L 0 + - STO HCL HEWLETT PACKARD A $15 REBATE on the HP-12C Business Calculator. 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CHECKERS Coupon Dine In Carry Out WACKY WEDNESDAY SPECIAL 16” PIZZA - 2 TOPPINGS 4 SOFT DRINKS $7.99 One coupon per order 841-8010 2214 Yale Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11a.m.-2a.m. Friday & Saturday 11a.m.-3a.m. LEVI'S BUTTON FLY 501 $ BLUES $1499 - Slightly Irregular - If Perfect, Values to $30 - Over 200 In Stock, But Not For Long! - Waist 26-40 KING of Jeans 740 Massachusetts 843-3933 Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 Nation/World University Daily Kansan 11 Mexican may purchase UPI United Press International WASHINGTON — United Press International's chairman, employees union and a committee of its key creditors will urge a bankruptcy judge to approve the sale of UP1 to Mexican newspaper publisher Mario Vazquez-Rana, joined by rival bidder Joe Russo as a minority partner, it was announced yesterday. The agreement, achieved during marathon negotiations that began last week, appeared to clear the way for a turnaround for UPI, the nation's second largest news service, which has struggled against financial odds since requesting Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on April 28. UPI Chairman Luis Nogales said the $41 million sale proposal "guarantees UPI's future as a full-service, secure international news agency." The proposal includes a pledge of $30 million in working capital, but Vazquez-Rana has vowed to invest the money it takes to make UPI profitable. The alliance between Vazquez-Bana, president of the Mexican Olympic Committee, and Russo, a highly successful Houston real estate developer, broke an impasse which saw UPI executives seeking to choose among three competing bids. The third group, a seven-member institutional consortium headed by the Financial News Network, Inc., a cable television concern, sought to establish a news channel after Vazquez-Rana and Russo revealed they had joined forces. Company sources said Vazquez Rana, S3, one of Mexico's richest individuals, appeared to be winning the bidding war yesterday, but UPI reported earlier that reservations about foreign ownership of the 78-year-old news service. Sources said monetary proposals of about $40 million from both Russo and the FNN group were weakened by contingencies and uncertainties about their commitments of cash. Vazquez-Rana, owner of the El Sol group of 70 Mexican newspapers with a combined circulation of 2.1 million, persuaded UPI executives he could overcome worries about foreign ownership of the nation's second largest news service. He eased such concern among top UPI officials by accepting Russo, a highly successful Houston developer and civic leader, as a 10 percent partner, the sources said. Vazquez-Rana also pledged to place UPI's operations under an independent board to preserve editorial independence. He told UPI's senior editors in an interview last week, "News must not be manipulated. UPI will achieve profits by providing quality news reports. Independence is essential." His representatives have said he has sought for more than three years to acquire UPI, and has plans to build it into a dominant world news organization. Under the final settlement, Vazquez-Rana and Russo will pay $21 million in cash to free UPI from bankruptcy proceedings; $9.5 million, or 40 cents on the dollar to the unsecured creditors owed about $22.8 million; $3.4 million to the Internal Revenue Service and state tax authorities for employee withholding taxes and other taxes UPI failed to pay in 1984 and early 1985; approximately $4 million to cover all bankruptcy claims filed by current and former employees; complete payment to all small creditors owed $3,000 or less, and all administrative costs of the bankruptcy proceedings. Vazquez-Rana and Russo also reached a tentative contract accord with the Wire Service Guild representing 750 of UPI's domestic employees who were forced to accept temporary 25 percent wage cuts in 1984 to keep the company afloat. FREE ProtectaLens Scratch Resistant Coating $15.00 value FALL EYEGLASS EXTRAS SALE FREE Ultraviolet UV400 Plastic Lens Coating $15.00 value FREE Glass Lens Tints—Including Sunglass and Photo Grey Xtra SPECTRUM OPTICAL 4 E. 7th Downtown Lawrence 841-1113 PLUS ADD... 20% DISCOUNT to total sale. Includes Single Vision, Bifocal, Trifocal and Varilux II Limited time only Limited time only Not valid in conjunction with other promotions MASS. STREET DELI inc 941 MASSACHUSETTS Bread Basket WE WANT YOU TO TRY OUR ALL NEW DELI BURGERS "4 p.m. to close daily" Traditional Burger Swiss & Bacon Burger $1.99 $2.35 with lettuce and tomato Big Blue Burger $2.35 blue cheese and sauteed mushrooms swiss cheese and ranch style bacon Traditional Burger Basket and 12oz. soft drink WHAT A DEAL- $1.49 $1.49 50¢ COUPON 50¢ OFF OFF 4p.m. to close daily FIFTY CENTS OFF 4 p.m. to close ALL NEW daily DELI BURGERS 50¢ OFF 504 OFF OFF OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30,1985 OFF - All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef * Select a fresh baked deli bun . onion, kaiser or whole wheat * Served with potato chips, kosher dill spear and any small soft drink 843-5279 UNIVERSITV PHOTOGRAPHY CALL Benetton IS OPEN 928 Mass. Benetton United Colors of Benetton Come unfold the United Colors of Benetton & discover the latest fashions for men & women... - Sweaters in expressive colors & geometric patterns - Skirts & Pants made of the finest imported materials - Sweatshirts in racey colors and sporty styles - Gloves,Hats & Belts for the finest in finishing touches - Shirts to mix & match to fit your mood Come Unfold the Italian Look 1976 ...the classic trench coat... from 9185...exclusively from Mister Guy of lawrence...perfect for those holiday occasions. Mister Guy...lawrence's only complete specialty shop for the traditionally minded *man* and *woman* free refreshments on all home ku football games! Hours: M-T-W-F-Sat. 9:30 a.m. - 6 p.m. Thu.. 9:30 a.m. - 10:30 p.m. MISTER 920 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 842-2700 U 12 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 Royal couple honored at Florida society ball United Press International PALM BEACH, Fla. — Prince Charles and Princess Diana arrived if posh Palm Beach yesterday for polo and socializing at a $25,000-aplate royal ball that was tainted by revelations the hostess once posed nude for a British magazine. Charles and Diana landed at West Palm Beach International Airport at 12:30 p.m. EST aboard a Royal Air Force VC 10 and were greeted by Gov. Bob Graham and other dignitaries. A black Rolls-Royce whisked the royal couple to the Palm Beach Polo and Country Club, where they were to attend a private reception and rest before the princess watched her 36-year-old husband play a friendly game of polo. The climax of the Palm Beach visit was a black-tie charity ball at the Breakers hotel with a $2,500 a plate, seven-course dinner fit for a king. The couple will leave for London Wednesday morning. About 150 well-wisherwaved Union Jacks and American flags and chicked cameras as Charles and Diana descended from the plane to the sound of bagpipes and the outstretched hands of schoolchildren. The 24-year-old princess, wearing a pinstripe skirt and jacket, accepted bouquets of flowers from girls while the prince stood beside her, shaking hands. In 1880, the last time Charles played polo in Palm Beach, he was hospitalized for heat exhaustion. This visit is marred by reports that Palm Beachers were snubbing the ball and by revelations that the ball's hostess, Patricia Kluge, posed nude for a fleshy British magazine in the 1970s. The British press exposed the tainted background of the wife of billionaire John Kluge. She resigned as national co-chairwoman of the ball and reported she would be traveling abroad with her husband during the royal visit. The crowning blow came when the Palm Beach chairwoman of the ball, Mary Sanford, decided days before the ball she would have nothing to do with it and called the Kluge incident "hideous." Even the prince seemed aware that the visit had ruffled a few feathers. He asked West Palm Beach Mayor Carol Roberts at the airport if she was attending the ball. "I said yes, and he said, 'Aren't you brave to come.'" Roberts said. Although many of the Palm Beach old guard either boycotted or were not invited to the ball, organizers still proclaimed it a smashing success. They said they had raised $4 million for the United World Colleges double the goal. Men & Women's BOWLING TOURNAMENT Sunday, Nov. 17 1 p.m. Jaybowl, Kansas Union Entries: sign up and pay the day of the tournament at the Jaybowl Entry Fee: $3 No Tap 9 Pin Strike Tournament: 3 games, knock down 9 pins it counts as a strike 3-6-9 Strike Tournament: 3 games, everyone gets a strike in 3rd, 6th, and 9th frames Enter 1 or both! Awards: T-shirts to 1st & 2nd place (men and women) For further information call KU Recreation Services at 864-3546. Place an ad. Tell the world. Call the Kansan. 864-4358. Honey, have you seen my glasses? Same day Service 24 hour Service 48 hour Service Purchase two pairs of glasses at the same time and get 20% OFF the second. VISIONS Mon. Fri. 10:33:30; Sat. 10:3 806 Massachusetts 841-7421 Students try school boycott in Cape Town Mon.-Fri. 10-5:30; Sat. 10-3 United Press International JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Police guarded schools yesterday in Cape Town where, for the first time, radical students attempted to enforce a school boycott with a grusome form of murder known as the necklace. In Johannesburg, a government minister warned business leaders against pressuring the white-minority government to step up the pace of reforms of apartheid policies of racial separation. In a report yesterday on overnight violence, police said two black women were fatally shot and 25 people were arrested in black townships where crowds torched houses and cars. A spokesman said police fired into a crowd hurling firebombs at a squad car in a township outside Upington in the Northern Cape, killing a woman and wounding two men and a woman. In Mamelodi township near Pretoria, a crowd of blacks attacked the home of a black policeman, who fired his service revolver and killed a woman. Police said a 22-year-old pupil of the black Fezeka High School in Cape Town's Guguleta township narrowly escaped death or serious injury at the hands of radical students seeking to enforce a school boycott to protest apartheid. The youth, who had refused to join the boycott, was taken from his home to the grounds of a nearby school. A gasoline-soaked car fire was placed around his neck, but he managed to kick one of his attackers and flee seconds before it was set on fire. The attempt was only the second known use of the neckpiece of burning tires in Cape Town since political violence erupted there about three months ago. BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320 HOME EWIIENT ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS South Hills Hailing Center 160 W 29th, Sp 105 Lawrence, Kane County (913)824-8177 (913)824-8177 PICAFLIC KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 comprehensive health associates * free pregnancy tests * outpatient abortion services * alternative counseling * gynecology * cross-region care Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 yello sub delivers 841-3268 24 Hour Rental Buck Nite at Rustys Monday-Thursday RUSTY'SIGA. Rent 2 Movies and Video Player Only $5.00 or 2 Movies for $2.00 24 Hour Rental Fri.-Sun.: $3 Tape Rental (2 for $5), $6 Video Player WESTRIDGE • 6th & Kasold • 841-0144 HILLCREST • 9th & Iowa • 843-2313 NORTHSIDE • 2nd & Lincoln • 843-5733 SOUTHSIDE • 23rd & Louisiana • 843-8588 SIGA DISCOUNT DISCOUNT Prices good thru Nov. 19, 1985 (1) Fri.-Sun.: $3 Tape Rental (2 for $5), $6 Video Player Rental COLORADO AN JOU PEARS 10 FOR $1 BONELESS CHUCK ROAST LB. 1$29 GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS 4 LBS. FOR $1 FOLGERS COFFEE LIMIT ONE CAN WITH $10 OR MORE IN OTHER PURCHASES 1 LB. CAN $199 MT. DEW DIET PEPSI PEPSI FREE PEPSI COLA 2 LTR. BTL. $199 OHSE SLICED SLAB BACON .99 CITRUS HILL ORANGE JUICE 12 OZ. CAN .99 RUSTY'S COTTAGE CHEESE 24 OZ. CTN .98 T.V. YOGURT 8 OZ. CTN 4 FOR $1 CALIFORNIA BROCCOLI LARGE BUNCH .69 U.S. NO. 1 RED OR RUSSET POTATOES 10 LB. BAG .89 COLORADO AN JOU PEARS10 A plate of meat with potatoes and onions. BONELESS CHUCK ROAST GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS 4 LBS. FOR $1 Folgers Coffee Gers Coffee CITRUS HILL Select Orange Juice MOUNTAIN DEW Pepsi Free diet pepsi NOW PEPSI CITRUS HILL ORANGE JUICE 12 OZ. CAN OHSE SLICED SLAB BACON LB. .99 TAPENO Rudy's Coffee 0123456789 SHARED LABEL COFFEE PRESSES Strawberry Nonfat Yogurt Strawberry Nonfat Yogurt CALIFORNIA BROCCOLI Sports Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 University Daily Kansan 13 News Briefs Williams, Oswald won't play Saturday 'The Kansas Jayhawks, who have lost three consecutive games, will not have the services of tailback Lynn Williams when they attempt to break the loss strep Saturday against Nebraska in Lincoln, Neb., head coach Mike Gottfried said yesterday. Free safety Wayne Ziegler, who reinjured his right knee Oct. 19 against Kansas State, has been upgraded to probable for Saturday. Center Paul Oswald will miss third game with a strained knee Linebacker Willie Pless missed the one-and-a-half hour practice yesterday in Anschutz Sports Pavilion because he had an arm with removed. Gotfried said Pless was expected to play Saturday. Gottfried said he was undecided on who would kick against Nebraska. Jeff Johnson, who has been the No. 1 kicker for most of the season, missed two field goals in the Jayhawks' 14-3 loss to Colorado. Johnson's backup, freshman Chase Van Dyne, also missed a field goal against the Buffaloes. The early signing period for college basketball begins today and runs through Nov. 20. Head basketball coach Larry Brown said Friday that the Jayhawks could sign as many as four players. Signing day arrives Kansas running back Arnold Fields slashes through the Colorado defense. Field gainsed 29 yards on six attempts in KU's 14-3 loss to the Buffaloes Saturday in Memorial Stadium. By game's end, the Kansas offense had gone 11 quarters without scoring a touchdown. "Four kids have told me they're coming, but I'll wait until they sign," Brown said after Kansas' exhibition game against the Czechoslovakian National team. Volleyball team falls The Kansas volleyball team lost to Iowa State Monday night in Ames, Iowa, which dropped the Jayhawks' record to 2-7 in the Big Eight Conference. The Jayhawks lost 9-15, 11-15 and 12-15. JACKSON 13 The victory was Iowa State's first conference win of the year. "They were out for blood from anyone," KU head coach Frankie Abitz said after the match. From staff and wire reports. No quick-fix for offense Of the Kansan sports staff By Frank Hansel Eleven quarters without a touchdown and only four field goals have Kansas head coach Mike Gottfried searching for answers, but he said yesterday that the answers would not come from new sources. "It (the offense) is the same thing we were doing before," Gottfried said. "We're not doing anything different from (what we did) earlier in the season." Gottfried said the Kansas offense would not feature any quick remedies when the Jayhawks attempt to break a three-game losing streak against Nebraska at p.m. Saturday in Lincoln, Neb. Wide receiver Richard Estell said Kansas needed to re-establish the killer instinct it had earlier in the season, especially when the Jayhawks got inside an opponent's 20-vard line. Kansas quarterback coach Bob Valesente said some practice time always had been dedicated to working on offensive execution inside the 20-yard line, but lately it had been given more emphasis. "I know everybody thinks they're giving it their best, but when we're not scoring we have to give a little extra." Estell said. Quarterback Mike Norsehead said the one change from earlier in the season was the team's lack of extention. Javayhaws neared the end zone. Lack of execution and physical breakdowns hurt Kansas in its 14-3 loss to Colorado. Twice in the third quarter, Kansas had excellent opportunities to erase a 3-Colorado lead but was unable to do so. The first wasted opportunity of the third quarter was when kicker Jeff Johnson missed his second shot of the day from the 29-yard line. The next opportunity eluded the Jayhawks after Travis Hardy recovered Colorado running back Anthony Weatherson's fumble at the Colorado 26. A first down holding penalty moved Kansas back to the 36, but the offense moved the ball to the Colorado 17. Two running plays by Mike Rogers moved the ball to the 12 where Norseth's incomplete pass to Tom Quick ended the drive. Get- tried then elected to go with freshman kicker Chase Dyny, whose field goal attempt was wide left and short from 28 vards. With Kansas' pass-oriented offense, Gottfried said undue attention was placed on Norseth, and when the offense sputtered "We're talking about the possible all-time Big Eight leader in offense (season), and people fail to realize that he is having a great year," Gottfried said. One problem that has plagued the Jayhawks is injuries. The most recent injuries have sidelined center Paul Oswald and tailback Joffried said that losing Oswald and Jeffred said like a baseball team losing its car. cher and center fielder Valesente said some of the offensive troubles were caused by the better defenses the Jayhawks are playing each week. He said Kansas needed: something to help keep them off balance. Norseth said that the loss of Williams had hurt the running game, but Kansas had capable starters. Arnold Fields and Mike Rowes. 62 baseball players testing market United Press International NEW YORK - Sixty-two major league baseball players, including slugger Kirk Gibson and seven-time batting champion Rod Carwe, have filed for free agency and are officially for sale to the highest bidder. The deadline for filing for free agency was 12:01 a.m. EST yesterday, and 11 players sneaked in under the wire. Another player, pitcher Scott Sanderson of the Chicago Cubs, filed and then pulled out of the free agent market Monday by signing a three-year contract with the Chicago Cubs. McRae files for free agency This marks the first year that free agents are allowed to negotiate with all 26 clubs. Previously, a re-entry draft was held and players selected by three or more teams were limited to negotiating solely with the clubs that drafted them. However, under terms of the new contract neglected in August, there United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Hal McRae of the Kansas City Royals filed for free agency Monday in a move his agent said was taken so the player could protect himself while working out a new agreement with the club. Because midnight Monday was the deadline to file for free agency, agent Dick Moss said McRae went ahead and filed in the event that the 39-year-old athlete and the club found they were unable to work out a new agreement. Earlier, three other members of the 1985 world champion Royals — outfielders Lynn Jones and Dane lorg and catcher Jamie Quirk — filed for free agency. Last season, McRae was inserted into the Royals' lineup on a full-time basis as designated hitter. are no longer any restrictions on free agency. The amount of money owners are willing to pay for free agents, however, may be restricted. Most of the big name players on this year's list are old by baseball standards and far past their peak years. Peter Ueberroth, is attempting to curb its free-spending habits in the pursuit of free agents. The wild spending of some owners, such as George Steinbrenner of the New York Yankees, Gene Autry of the California Angels and Ted Turner of the Atlanta Braves in recent years, has sent baseball's payrolls skrocyketing and plunged the business into financial difficulty Additionally, baseball's ownership, following the advice of commissioner Among this year's crop of free agents, Gibson is by far the most attractive commodity. Gibson, who earned $685,000 this past season, will be seeking a long-term contract worth in excess of $1 million per year and probably escalating to nearly $2 million per year by the end of the contract. Other prominent names on the free agent list are catcher Carlton Fisk, pitchers Joe and Phil Niekro, pitcher Don Sutton, designated hitter Al Oliver and designated hitter Hal McRae. However, all are 37 years old or older and cannot command long term investments. Carew, who passed baseball's 3,000 hit mark this year, may be forced in retirement. His old team, the Minnesota Twins, has already told him they are not interested in signing him, and there would appear to be hitters for a 40-year-old singles hitter who can no longer play every day. AP puts 'Hawks fifth in early poll The Associated Press ATLANTA — Georgia Tech's No. 1 ranking in The Associated Press press conference college basketball poll is a double-edged sword because "a tremendous amount of pressure" comes with the recognition, Yellow Jackets Coach Bobby Cremins said Tuesday. Georgia Tech got 28 first-place votes and 1,192 points from the nationwide panel of 63 sports writers and broadcasters to edge out North Carolina for the top spot. Georgia Tech was ranked 57-64 in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament championship game last season. "To be honest, right now I don't know if we can live up to it," Cremins said. "It puts a tremendous amount of pressure on us. My expectations are usually very high, but they can't go higher than the ones that have been put upon us. "I just hope we can deal with it." Georgia Tech and North Carolina were among five ACC teams placed in the Top Twenty. In third place was Michigan, one of two Big Ten teams in the Top Ten. The Tar Heels got 13 first-place votes and 1,148 points. Michigan had 13 first-place votes and 1,141 points. The No. 4 team was Syracuse, one of two Big East teams in the Top Ten, with 936 points. No. 5 was Kansas, our first place votes and 921 points. The ACC's Duke got two first-place votes and 911 points for the sixth-ranking, and Illinois of the Big Ten got one first-place vote and 847 points for seventh place. Georgetown of the Big East, last year's national run-up, got one first-place vote and 824 points for eighth; No. 9 Louisville of the Metro Conference had 687; and Auburn of the Southeastern Conference rounded out the Top Ten with 670. Last year's national champion, Villanova, was not ranked, nor was St. John's, a fellow Big East school and Final Four participant. Both teams lost several key players to graduation. Georgetown has been in the NCAA championship game three of the last four years, but now faces life without star center Patrick Ewing. The Hoyas were the top team in last year's preseason poll and held that spot for all but five weeks of the season. The SEC is the only other conference to have more than two teams in the Top Twenty, with Kentucky ranked 11th and Louisiana State 14th. Kentucky will begin the season with a new coach, Eddie Sutton. Notre Dame, the only independent in the Top Twenty, was one of seven teams to receive first-place votes. The Irish finished 12th and received one vote for the top spot. Rounding out the Top Twenty behind Notre Dame were Oklahoma; LSU; Memphis State, a Final Four team last year; Alabama-Birmingham; North Carolina State of the ACC; Nevada-Las Vegas; and, tied for 19th, Maryland of the ACC and Navy, schools 25 miles apart. Preseason Top 20 The Top Twenty teams in the Associated 'resst' preseason college basketball poll, with number of first-place votes in parentheses, total bases based on 2018-19-17- 1968-1945 record Record Pts Pts 1. Georgia Tech (28) 27 - 9 114 - 9 2. North Carolina (13) 27 - 9 114 - 9 3. Michigan (13) 26 - 4 1141 - 12 4. Syracuse 26 - 4 1141 - 12 5. St. Louis 26 - 4 936 - 13 6. Duke (2) 23 - 0 111 - 10 7. Illinois (1) 23 - 0 111 - 10 8. Georgetown (1) 36 - 5 917 - 12 9. Leaville 19 - 10 697 - 10 10. Abburn 23 - 11 670 - 10 11. Harlem 15 - 11 670 - 10 12. Notre Dame (1) 21 - 9 459 - 10 13. Oklahoma 11 - 6 459 - 10 14. Louisiana State 11 - 6 459 - 10 15. Memphis State 31 - 4 292 - 16 16. Ala-Birmingham State 31 - 4 292 - 16 17. Alabama 25 - 10 695 - 10 18. New-Las Vegas 28 - 4 182 - 9 19. Mayland 25 - 12 153 - 9 20. Oakland 11 - 6 Others receiving votes: Indiana 11, DePaul 107, Washington 106, Iowa 104, UCLA 79, Arkansas 82, Texas 80, Tennessee 81, sturbridge 39, Tennessee 33, Georgia 21, Alabama 28, Villanova 25, Pepperdine 15, St. Joseph's 15, Texas-East 15, Arizona 10, Dayton 2, Fresno 6, West Virginia 6, Ohio State 5, Georgia State 5, Arizona State 4, Bradley 4, Loyola 3, III. Norwalk 3, Old Dominion 1, Oregon 1, Southern Cal 1 United Press International Kentucky officials impose strict rules LEXINGTON, Ky. — The University of Kentucky, under investigation by the NCAA for rule violations in its basketball program, has imposed new rules that are stricter than NCAA requirements. The new rules were distributed to Kentucky coaches last week following allegations of NCAA violations. The Lexington Herald-Leader reported Oct. 27 that 31 of 38 players interviewed knew of rule violations and 26 said they had participated. Some players have since said they were misquoted or their comments were taken out of context. The allegations included receiving cash from boosters in the locker room, selling free season tickets and receiving excessive payments for speeches. Athletics Director Cliff Hagan issued the rules, which include requiring players to make a written report of speeches, provide information on summer jobs and register their automobiles with the university. Those steps are not required by the NCAA. The new rules also require each head coach to ensure that players designate only relatives and fellow students to sit in their free seats and to confirm that only those designated are sitting in the seats. The new rules also ban boosters from the locker room, Wildcat Lodge or Wildcat Den, a lounge in Commonwealth Stadium, without "prior approval of the director of athletics." In addition, Hagan sent a letter to members of Kentucky's Blue-White Fund and warned them about giving payments or gifts to players. Golfers get low team score By Frank Hansel "Institutions with great fan support often find that overalcelous boosters can create problems," the letter said. "Boosters involved with student-atheles sometimes provide benefits not permissible within NCAA and SEC (Southeastern Conference) rules." Hagan added that the university might have to drop boosters who violated the rules from ticket lists Of the Kansan sports staff Kansas shot the low team round of the Hal Sutton International golf tournament yesterday in Shreveport, La, and moved into second place behind Southern Methodist after the second round. The Jayhawks, who shot a team score of 290 yesterday, trail the Mustangs by 10 strokes with one round to play. Kansas head coach Ross Randall said there was a chance to catch Southern Methodist today. "They told us that the course will be tougher tomorrow." Randall said yesterday. "They're moving the tees back and making the pin placements tougher, but if SMU is going to win, you need a SMU had a team score of 588 after two rounds K14." Chris Hutches made the biggest turnaround for Kansas by shooting a 70 in the second round. He shot 80 in the first round and is in 10th place overall with a 150 total. John Ogden is in 15th place with a 151 total after shooting 76 to go with his first round 75. Brian McGreeye shot 73 yesterday for a 152 total, and Dave Pettot shot an 80 in the first round and a 79 in the second for a 159 total. SMU had a team score of 588 after two rounds. KU's team score was 598. Goalie taken off life support Steve Madsen shot a 72 in the second round to move into second place. He has a two-round total of 145 and trails tournament leader Russell Beiersdorf of Southern Methodist by three strokes. "One more day of getting used to these greens really helped us." Randall said. "Shooting this well today should give us confidence for the final round." STRATFORD, N.J. — Hockey star Pelle Lindbergh, attached to life support systems since a weekend car crash, was declared dead last night after doctors removed his vital organ, the lungs, in the indelhicle Flvers said. Southeast Louisiana, which was in second place after the first round, slipped to third with a 606 total, followed by: Baylor, 608; North Texas State and Pan American. The 26-year-old goalie had been declared clinically dead 9:15 a.m. Monday after the necessary period of observation since the car accident in Samerdale, N.J., a team spokesman said. United Press International Lindbergh, declared brain dead hours after his Porsche crashed into Lindbergh, the Flyers' Most Valuable Player and the NHL's top goallet last year, will be buried in Sweden, a team spokeswoman said. The Pelle Lindbergh Memorial Fund for Cancer Research has been established for memorial contributions. the concrete steps of a school, was attached to life-support systems since the crash while his parents decided whether to donate his vital organs for transplant. Lindbergh, known to love high-performance cars and fast driving, was declared brain dead Sunday after he missed a curve and drove his "From a purely medical point of view, he's been dead since 5-40 Sunday morning," said Flyers team physician Dr. Edward Viner, who acted as a spokesman for the family. "They have accepted the finality of his condition." custom-built Porsche into the concrete steps of a school in Somerdale, N.J. Tests showed Lindbergh was legally drunk at the time of the accident with a blood-alcohol level of 0.24 percent, more than twice the limit for drivers in New Jersey. Two passengers in Lindbergh's car also were injured in the crash. Alan Hagem!KANSAN Passing fancy KANSAS BASKETBALL KANS BASKETBALL Kansas center Greg Dreiling tried unsuccessfully to prevent forward Danny Manning from dishing off a pass during yesterday's basketball practice in Allen Field House. 14 University Daily Kansan Classified Ads Wednesday, Nov. 13, 1985 The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 8.25 16-20 2.90 4.25 0.00 9.30 21-28 3.20 4.75 0.75 10.35 For every 5 words add: 30¢* 50¢* 75¢* 1.05 POLICIES AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 o'clock Tuesday Friday 4 o'clock Wednesday Monday 4 o'clock Thursday Tuesday 4 o'clock Friday Wednesday 4 o'clock Classified Display ... $4.40 per column inch Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues from this category are made. No overloads allowed in classified display ads. to The University Daryl Kantan • All advertisers will be required to pay in advance KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE - Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words * Words set in HOLIDAY.FAILD as 3 words * Dashline at 4 p.m – 2 working days prior to publication - Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. only * No responsibility is assumed for more than one in all cases of an advertisement. correct insertion of any advertisement * No refunds on cancellation of pre paid classified ad - Must be shipped to and received by only earned rate discount Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to publication of advertising. - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established. - Blind ads ais—please add a $4 service charge. * Checks must accompany all classified ads issued. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only * - Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount FOUND ADVERTISING MEENTS ns can be advertised FREE for a charge for not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed on our website. ENTERTAINMENT Dance to live fiddle music! Jayhawker Oldtime Bardache Company. Make your next party uni- gue. 841-6495. Floating is believing. Flat Connect now on new phone line. New Savings. Evening. Special for Nov. 10. Cal $49-7071. NIGHT LIFE Mobile DJ Dance Music. A mixture of New Rock and the classics presented over a 400 watt sound system. When it's time to dance, call NIGHT LIFE 798-4713 FOR RENT 1 Bedroom apt. apt. close to campus. $110/month plus utilities, utility 841-449 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 2 Bedroom apartment for rent. Close to campus. Rent starts at -101-86. 14:37pm for Lisa or Jack. Call (855) 423-8900. *apartment to sublease at University Terrace* Apartments, 1607 West 1st. One bedroom furnished, 3rd floor $225 plus utilities. Lease through 842-830-1439, price could be negotiable 842-830-1439. Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live in the sun! Head over to the afternoon at summer. Allow, leave, flee for next week. Altreative 2 bedroom condominium for rent. 1.2/4 micron, CA. FA, range, refrigerator, DW, DW hookups, paid cable T swimpool pool. WB, WB hookups, Available. Dec. 1. Lease amount: 369.750-849.9 Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Bath 842-4185. For rent. Great bungalow. Lg. 5 bedroom. 5 bath. For rent. Great bungalow. Lg. 5 bedroom. 5 bath. Available. Call 1-866-2195 or 1-866-2195. Available. Call 1-866-2195 or 1-866-2195. Furnished rooms from $100 with some utilities paid. Two bills from Kansas Union. No peta KU Basketball season ticket for sale. Best offer call 841-706- Lisa. Luxury townhouse, 2 bedrooms, 1/2 baths, garage, fireplace, solarium, Piano. Paxs & TVs. Apt. 543. 787-602-9300. Large one bedroom, gas heat, gaswater paid, $255, 749-720 or 841-250. LIVE HERE!! Two bedroom, fireplace, dishwasher, close to campus, low utilities, Sunrise Place 10.C $750/month. Call 749-0463 or 814-1297 (office). MUST SUBLEASE Gatehouse Apartments, 3 1265 W. 9th Street, Suite 400, lease to lease through May 15 for Sarah K. Nice Rooms $135.00 Utl. Paid. 842-4736 after 5 m. Non-Smoking roomate for spring semester. Call 216-493-7580, Bus Route. Call 214-841-918 after 9 p.m. One Bedroom Apt. for such-leasy effective Dec. 15 for spring semester or for 748-929-BALC. Honeymoon suite. Call 216-493-7580. Berkley FLATS 843-2116 11th & Mississippi NOW LEASING - Over 40 New Units - Great Location! THE FAR SIDE Walk Anywhere - Laundry Facilities - Gable T.V. - On KU Bus Route Leasing Office 1123 Indiana SUNFLOWER HOUSE. Spring openings, reservations for campus (401) - 763-2807 or center, keep for reserve. Spacious two bedroom unfurnished townhouse for rent close to campus. Includes garage, 1/3 bailey, halcony and new carpeting. Very economical and available as early as Dec. I call Spring semester opening for male at Nalismith Hall. Immediate reply needed. Call 749-0791. By GARY LARSON 19-13 © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate Eventually, Stevie looked up: His mother was nowhere in sight, and this was certainly no longer the toy department. BLOOM COUNTY Rooms for rent on the hill 1/10 mile from Union. 895 and 812. Call 641-6495. SUBLEASE. available immediately studio on bus line. Next to Sanctuary, 843-2725. Sublease-Affordable studio apartment in good neighborhood, 1938 - 1983 - paid- Avail. 799 - 1983 WELL? ARE THE MUNGAGES ALL OFF? THEY'RE OFF. SULELEASE. 3 bedroom Ap. On Bus Roads and Close to Campau Village, Village with Unused Plot. Utilize Unit #1428. Sublease at semester. Large, new, 2 bedroom, 1 block from. Union. Call 843-3208 Sublease 2 BR. Available from January. Close to warehouse in good condition. After a 6 p.m. call or mqs - 404-899-8098 for sale. Wanted: Roommate to share house with four others. Own bedroom, 215/1/8 units, close proximity. 1 bedroom apts. from $198 some utilities paid. Near downtown and the University. No plexes plus. HOW DO I LOOK ? DO I LOOK GOOD ? "GOOD" IS AN EVERY SUBJECTIVE TEEN! HEATWERED HEADY VALLEY: $200 OFF FIRST MONTH'S RENT. ONE & two bedrooms available beginning at $1,495. All apartments have a BW, PW, or RW room. On bus route B: 483-4754 for detail. MASTERCART offers a completely furnished two bedroom apartment available immediately! We also have sublease on 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments near 119 near KU. Call 0800-754-4626 or 754-4925. ANNOUNCEMENTS Dial Festival, November 23 6-10 p.m. Cormorant food, culture and dance Sponsored by the Food Foundation When you just need to talk to someone, you can call or drop by Headquarters We're at 1419 Massachusetts. Our number is 841-2345. It's free, confidential, and BRIEF CLOSE News and Business Staff Positions WE NEVER CLOSE. *FICAROON* **ADPI**-Pai Pal Road Rably Novi *mur Party afterwards at ADPI house* The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Monday, December 2, 1985. 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. Arts and Crafts Fair Lawrence Community Nursery School, 645 Abbats Avenue, Sat., Nov. 16 to 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Professional artists and crafts people, food, baked goods. A panel of three couples will discuss how they solved these and other problems. Questions will be encouraged. 1 COUPLE + 2 CAREERS ??? Two career relationships challenge traditional roles and raise such questions as: Who does the shopping? How should we divide household chores? Should we have one checking account or two? Do we want children? How will we juggle caring for them? Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. For more info, call Brenda at 864-3524. Wed., Nov.20 7:30-9:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room Kansas Union Aspen 861 USA Travel is going to beautiful Aspen College January 4-11 and you can be there. Trip meets up at Aspen, then every day of the week. everything, even lift tickets. Sign-up deadline is the last day of school in April. You must be the *Limus* or you oul-967-357 for details. Res-VCR/LF 2, w movies, overnight $14.48 Skippin's/Fly '14, 547 W, 293 C/931W, Mon, Sat, Sunday SKIKERS-Complete Colorado ski trip SKIKERS-limited special offer, call 840-6900 by November 18th 'C' Resort T.V. $29.95 a month. Smirly's TV 1447 W 243-827-5768, Sat. 9-30 noon Saturday. 12-11 noon. ELIMINATE special visitor. See the city council how to. WOOMPA FANS FANS FANS Time to calculate the six day plan for your event. Send details by Saturday, November 16. If you should be invited, you know whom to contact. AM I HUNGRY? BREAKDINKING? AM I A MAGNIFICENT SEXUAL POWERHOUSE? WELL, YOU'RE... UH... RIVETING. SKIERS: Complete Colorado aki. trip, 1299 Limited special offer, call 824-4000 by Nov. 15. bv Berke Breathed Paid Staff Positions Editor, Business Manage "KNOTTING!" COVER THE MIRRORS! The Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester Editor and Business Manager positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Tuesday, November 19. 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. PERSONAL Dear Gregorius, it's been 3/2 years since that night when I saw you in the dark. I lately, I dream of forever. I will always love you. Dumitted, unattractive, dumb freshman valley girl seeds part time pleasure with an indulgence in the outdoors. Guides, who lie and backtrack always get it in Guidez, who know if Nixon was a llower woman and he got it in Guidez. Remember that today is National Otk Day, happily and prosperous holiday. John says. Otk. Otk. Otk. Slender, mature, affectionate but shy male student seeks mature young lady for companionship and social interaction. Interests include dancing, music and nature. If you wish affection, attention and friendship, please send photo with school ID box 471, 119 Flint Hall, University Dalkan Kanaan. SUE. Swim games really help you on huh! Guess what a nunt, Rob. Thank you St. Jude for favorers granted. Three Our Fathers, Hail Mary's and Glory be.' This prayer has not been known to fail. Publication must be promised. Somewhat new to the area, certainly new to this and slightly apprehensive, I'm a successful professional, swim, 29, tall, nice looking, wirty and kind. You can see me taking a travel seeking bright, attractive gentleman whose sensitive and down to earth for companionship and warmer nights. Write to. Box 184, Rod, Thursday evening was a nice surprise. Surprise me, again? T. White male, 25, poor completion, dull personality, skinny and too bright, seeks winsome blonde with great looks, great body, family connections, class wardrobe and fantastic personality. Must be uncritical. Send sincerely replies to only 15, Box A14, RM 11, Stauffer-Pint Hall, University of New York. 2 attractive young men seeking me for social interaction CONTACT TODD or STREVE. YOU ARE NOT ALONE. Leshan/gay peer counsellor. For referral call 8124 or 864-391. Sponsored by Headquarters & GLOSK. Funded by Student Senate. BUS. PERSONAL 101-589 Weekly/Wpk Mailing Circulars! No quotes! Sincerely interested run self-addressed envelope: Success, PO Box 470CEG. Woodstock, IL, 60009. Agitated? Confused? Upset? Curious? Dissatisfied? It just takes Common Sense. > A SKT CULTUR RISING! Skateboards & Accessories QUALITY STUFF ONLY COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater health area. Call for appointment. 913-345-1600 UPTOWN BICYCLES 10 电话 A MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 *Hearth Court* "Holiday Sale 2170 Belle Haven Fri Nov. 15, 10-14 and 7-9 Sat Nov. 16-14" *Bell Harbor* "The library's annual agriculture through LOVELINE, the directory for educated singles. Write P.O. Box 2022, Lkwryen, Ka- tua." of the day's entrees & soups. The Union's recording if the day's entrees & soups NATURAL WAY O Let Your Body Breathe! NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING (doesn't have to be expensive. 820 Mass 841-0100 For all your winter clothing needs all the way (Party clothes, Topcats, etc.) shop at EVELYN'S VINTAGE CLOTHES. 811 New Hammond, Sall. & Su. 10-5 Health Insurance for Students. Short-term and long term plans available. Call Dutton insurance Rent' 18° Color T V $28.90 a month Curtis Mathen. Matte 10 W $37.40 a month Maturi 6-9 W $36.90 a month impatient passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, vita. I.D. and of course, finess. Must be a native of the U.S. You get your computer's heads on straight. Computer Repair - Alphabet Computer Services u has Students with Common Sense. Modeling and theater portraits-- shooting new, begins to professionals, call for information Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event! M & J Favors offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specialties plus speed and reliable delivery. You design it and get our tailored shoes. 220 W. 81th Street (Bloomingdale) New from California. Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure. 316-344-7943. PO Box 362, Wichita. 791-803, see in Mindy's Raman KU Hughes library. Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, jersey jerseys and cap. Shrink: by Swella Thousands of R & R Albums - 24 obras. Also collectors items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Quantrills 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all styles music CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for Chauffeur Driven LIMOUSINES For Any Occasion. 24 HOURS a DAY. 7 DAYS a WEEK Bike Sale 10% off, all Bianchi Models, Touring, Bicycle Sale 25% off, All Bianchi Bicycles Sugflower for Massachusetts WINTER BREAK skating at Steamboat Springs and Vail from 75%, or suning at South Padre Island and Daytona Beach from 890*. Harry, curate Sunseash Tours for more information toll free | 1-800-251-6848 or contact a Sunseash Representation. Our winter break counts. count on Sunseash! int'40" Color T. V. B$ 29 a month. Smarty's t'8- w B$ 37.50. Wrestle $425 a month. Smarty's t'8- THE PERFECT DATE... camera Repair now at One Hour Photo, Southern Hills Malls, 841-7205 In our private hot tub! $5.00 off Regular $15.00 Includes - Cable TV or - Optional Movie Rental SUN Optional movie night EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA + HOLIDAY PLAZA PHONE 841-8232 MATH TUTOR - Bob Mears holds an A. M in math from K, U where 602, 101, 116, and 138 are among the top students nationally; in 1975 and often tutors elementary school students. WEDDINGS: Videotalk Movies: 842-8058 HELP WANTED 2 Bedroom apartment for rent. Close to campus lunnt starts 1-01-16. 91-3706 asks for Lass or Miss. Please call 541-628-2133. BabySitter needed in my home for all home sensitive, responsible, no-smoker, with references. 814-0675. Drivers must, be able to work late night and weekend. Apply in person at Checkers Pizza, 1046 W. 29th St., Chicago, IL 60617. Fultine cook for fraternity house. Good salary. no holidays. Call 842-4637 interviewer in the travel industry' The nation's largest college tour operator is looking for a responsible campus representative to market the forest spring trips to Port Landruele or Bermuda. Students also gain experience while gaining great business experience. For more information, call 1-800-323-8001. Nanny/Au Pair for three year old child (10 months to 6 years) Room area, Room and board & FF apply Apply online at www.nannypartners.com Part-time permanent word processor; 28h/wk. days. Minimum 50 WPW. Call 769-3800. Manpower weeks. Position Available - Gift Shop Manager, Museum of Natural History. Require experience in retail sales, inventory and purchasing, bookkeeping skills; ability to deal with the public and to supervise customers; marketing and advertising experience, interest in retaining position for 2 years or longer. have a flexible schedule. $20/mo to start on brw/ksw. Position will start in January, 1986. To obtain an application, call Mary Ann Munsch, 922 Dyne, 844-5450. Applications accepted until New Year. Equal Opportunity Employer. RESEARCH ASSISTANT - WESTERN CIVILIZATION. Quarter-time position for six months in the investigation and evaluation of educational materials (audio-video, textbooks, etc.) to assist with the instructional staff of the program. Position will be for six months of service from August 15, 1986. Position requires a Baccalaureate in the Humanities, teaching experience in Western Civilization, and some evidence of reference/library/s research skills. Salary is $260 a month. Work-Study Body-Hour Position available with Bureau of Child Research, 10-20 hrs, per week. General office assistance, up-dating computer skills, data entry, reporting, photocopying, distribution of mailing information and filing. Must have good organizational skills and be willing to learn knowledge of computer entry and good typing skills necessary. Complete application at AA 319 Brentwood Terrace, [Meadowbrook] or, by November 18, 1988. *manatee. A.M.* 7:30-12:04; P.M. 10:12; rocketside. A49, 740-688. The University of Kansas Budget Office has two position openings for continuous half-time—time management during the summer. The first of these two positions will assist with the process of budget and time management, while the second person will gain a good exposure to fund accounting and have an opportunity to work within the financial services department. This requirement requires a minimum of seven hours of accounting. The second position is secretarial and involves managing budgets and proficiency with word processing and spreadsheet software. Both positions require senior or assistant position skills. Communications skills. $400.00 to $400.00 per month for half–time appointments. Closing dates vary. Flexible. For information call Jana Hinz. Budget Office 864-318. Applications available in 910 Wanted—Church Musician Gospel/Contem- palist Music Director/Music Commis- sioner/Money Communicate with ability. FOR SALE N. Nebraka KU football tickets for face value 'call 843.8500, ask Kath D.' 492. 7628 PC INTEGRATION: The most compatible at the lowest price. Full guaranteed. Systems starting at just $40! Hard disk spec: 3 MB in memory, SSD spec: 130MB, installed and test (full year guarantee). Baseball cards and sports nouns. Buy, sell Ballcars card, Sports card. Open 10-8 M-S. Ballw. 22rd Street. BASS AMP / Sum Beta Head, 100 Watts, Pearlman Belt, Like New, Sounds Great! 100 Watts Alofts Basketball Ticket for sale. Call 749-2232. BANKRUPT LAMPS. Buy out of a lifetime!® assorted lamps with 3 way, switch and shade. Your choice $10. Open to the public everyday! Midwest Furniture and Waterbed Liquidators. 785 New Hampshire, Waterbed, KS. Tools in R&S & R&S. Cumic Books, Playbys, Penthouses, etc. Max's Cumic Books, Playbys, Penthouses, etc. Tue., Fri., Sat. & Sun 10-5-81 New Hampshire FOR SALE-Sony D-5 Diskman, Brand new. Call 843-9035 25 p.m. CARPET 35,000 square yards in a rainbow of color and size. 114 BQRS. Used Carpet. 788 New York. BQRS. Bedding Closeout. A leading manufacturer has discontinued several covers. They offered this one time special, white hollow leather cost. While they have not yet been available, TERMS AVAILABLE. Open 7 days! Midwest, Furniture and Waterbed Liquidators. 738 New Hampshire, Lakewood, KS, 64251-0475 In士RS For sale - Hotpoint washing machine, 1 year old, excellent condition $300 Fender guitar guitar, $175/best offer. Beginner's drum set, some hardware, hardcover, slightly worn, slightly critterbed, excellent condition, very obedient, cute, friendly. Price negotiable. Call Kristin for sale. Sony receiver, $30 to turntable, Sanjo cassette. Books speakers, $30 for system, will be available. For sale: Yamaha receiver, sony turntable, KLH speakers. $250, $50, 749-2193 GIBSON LES PAUL, deluxe model, $850, les-paul 020, OBO, Calli 667, 1191-486-7337 Must Sell. Brand new compound bag with accessories. $130. Call J. Gessier 843-704-9625 Get a Real Student Season Basketball Ticket Best Offer Ballpark | Call 664-1138 or 864-1119 GOVERNMENT HOMES for $11U (repurchase) Also demand tax property Call (855)-847-6960 www.govofnc.gov/northcarolina Moped: 1840 Honda Spare. Only 900 miles, moving sale, $299. Call 843-3731. Must sell immediately! 1977 Mobile Villa suitable for 1:2 person, furnished with W/D negotiable furniture. KWALITY COMICS~Conic Books, Science Fiction, Hole. Playing and simulation games 118 MOPED: 10 Mahowny Town. Perfect condition 2 speed. Must sell. Call Arms at 843-322 between 7:30 and 9:30. ONKYO STEREO RECEIVER 70 watt channel, many features, excellent condition. Call One Student Basketball ticket. Call 844-1140. PASSPORT RADAR DETECTOR. New condi- tion. Gin, must sell to B&B. 649-762-6498 COLOR TV. Queen size waterproof. Call: 641-7083. phone answering machine, sumamp, jewelry, ski sweaters, desk study, tums, twin bedspread KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS Tired of looking everywhere for QUALITY TREES & WHEEKS at reasonable prices? Well, you don't have to anymore! At IMPORT PLUS, all major stores in the U.S. offer a variety of package with MAIL-ORDER). In come and check us out! 1630 W. 2x1rd (Beside Pizza Hut) 749-5437. The mount, 10 gallon aquarium set-up. THE MOST COMPATIBLE American PC/XT Computer from $295. Full year warranty. Authorized Dealer, Distributor. Think Micro, Inc. 843-325 Box 305, Lawrence, KS 60044 Waterbed mattress, 10 gallon Aquarium set-up HP 41 Printer, sterno system **Makes:** Male/Make! **Makes:** Male/Make! western Civilization Notes: New on Sale • Make sense to use them. 1) As study Guide. 2) For class presentation. 3) To be used in the Analysis of Western Civilization! available now at Town Crier. The Jayhawk Bookstore, and Zenith Terminal (modern & monitor) for off campus hookup to KU computer systems. Excellent performance. Collecter Stamps. Mint and used. U.S., U.S. Europe, and more open 10-5, Sat. Sun, onlBd 8/12 and Wednesdays. $3.95. MOTORCARKE 10 SPEED Model. Nomad Silver w/ Blue, like new, exceptional value $140 AUTO SALES **1935 Musingan.** Burgundy with cream interior; 42 wide, great shape; $2,499. Precnt McCall 44-6069. 191曼达 GLC, 2 door, HI, 3 speed, FWD, rear, defender, highway mower $1000 or take over $98 payments. Can’t afford both car and school anymore-must sell car as soon as possible. 1992 Chevrolet Chevette. dark blue metallic, dark blue automatic, A/C B C D Prestige 400 CHEVROLET 1984 BMW 310i. Low mileage, all electric, custom interior. Beautiful. Call 762-8548. Write ad here luxury latex-latticed 74,900 lm AC, PC, CR, luxury latex-latticed Cloth, interior, plastic insulation 841,900 lm 包裝 841,900 lm 78 Horizon, 64,000 miles 4 cyl. A/C Auto 4-dr. FWD. Hatchback. AM/FM. Clean body. Economic and dependable car in good condition. 442-3714 Phone: Classified Heading: Address: Dates to run 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks 1-15 words $2.60 $3.78 $5.25 $8.25 For every 5 words entered $30* $50* $75* $1.05 Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 1 Classified Display 1 col. x 1 inch = $4.40 Wednesdav. Nov. 13, 1985 Nation/World University Daily Kansan 15 1974 Ford Mustang Liftback, Runs good; some want or best offer Call 842-2833. Vega wagen 69,000 miles, AM/FM, snow tires included, 720 or best offer, call 814-0399 1977 Cippert 4' DF, 6F; 7F, 8P; 10000'R 908'R engineer, hp/cm³; Power AMF 908'R cassette, damage right rear quarter but runs well, driven daily $90 or be. 842 7137 Diatum F-10 A--C 4 Speed $1950 Preston Mc- Call (Se) 841-607-600 1972 MG Midget, 842-8352, late evenings. 1977 Mc Midget, 842 8532, late evenings. 1978 Chevette, runs great, 5p. 2 door, many warp sources. OWG Call Scott, 864-2942 1928 Toyota Celica. 5-speed. A-C, stereo. $1,995. Prestm Caltech B4. 641-8067. Classified Ads battery charger p480 Platinum Speed AM/FM Cassette @9058 Dessert Hall Bldg 116-6207 battery charger Alfa Romeo, 1979 GT Coupe. Limited edition. every extra 50k Silver. Silver in serien. in special edition. 1979 Baccal good condition for sale at a very good price. Call 842-1237 Fax mail to HIRE Cove DX, 24 hatch, 5 speed. For sale in a cassette, excellent condition, moving suitable. Call (312) 695-8000. For sale 24 Honda Civic 1000 DX, 2 drab hatch, speed with air cond. cabin, MOVING, Moving, MOVING, MOVING. Great student car' 78 Cutlass Salon A.M.-F.M. radio tape, new radials, great mech. and body condition, $1280 814-7433, ew and weekends. LOST/FOUND Found. A pocket calculator. Call to identify 864-4245. Ask for Brad. Computer Literacy Instructional Program (CLIP) booklet送来 campus mail from Hilltop Child Development Center to Dept. of Human Development, Carol Caldera 841-2547, 841-2818, Found - gold necklace in front of Watson Library Call to identify 864-4715 - Keys attached to caller below Spencer Museum *Stuart* 843-2086 or 844-4090 - documents and address and phone book Hall Department, please call 864-4213 782-3400 *please refer to SERVICES OFFERED STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Massachusetts, downown all haircuts. $60. No appointment. Haircuts $7, perm $30 at Channels, Contact Chris Max. Sat Mar 16 at 7:00a, Walk on melrose Mon-Sat at 8:45/7:00. Walk-ins welcome. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in San Francisco. BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling 843-8421. THEME & THESIS OUTLINED - enhanced with library RE. SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising, Victor Clark 842-8240 TYPING 1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ac 1:2:3 Dependable, accurate, professional. WORLD 1:2:3 Paper for the papers in papers, papers, papers, etc., data Word Bits 0101-0400. 24-Hour Typing All day, all night Resume, Recruiting, Job Search. Best campus, best and fastest service 841-506-9000. A2 professional typing. Term papers. Theses. HI information. etc. Use IBM HM SELECTIC HI information. 84-329-2500 AAA TYPE/ING: 842-1942. Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs, Law review articles typed by KC legal secretary, Generally, if in b y p. out j m. out p. same day. m A DIFFERENT Service. Tape TRANSCRIPT experienced. Experienced Joanette Shafat (83-877) A-2 Word processing Typing. Servers produce A-2 Word processing Templates. A- reasonable rates with quick service. File storage rates vary by company. Absolutely LETTER PERFECT WORD process (typing and bookkeeping HMH-05/6 8% M-F MP) *B* All Kinds of Typing; GOOD IMPRESSIONS and spelling punctuation errors correct 4202 AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Process- ing, Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics Wordart Document upgrading. Free estimates 749-118 1-Plus Typing law papers, resume, dissertation in paper form, and memory with memory 8434 or 8472 or 8475. 6 p.m. t. p. m. or w. p. DEENUABLE, professional, experienced JEANETTE SHAPFER - Typing Service TRANSCRIPT also; standard cassette tape 843-8877. DISSERTATION / THESES / LAW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphics, ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter paper papers up to 30 pounds. Mummy's Paper, 8437836 before 9 p.m. Please. 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 Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE! Birthright - Preparation & review of legal documents - Preparation & review of legal docs - Nomenclature of legal documents - Hotelization or legal assistance - Many other services available 8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday 117 Burge (Satellite) Ui84-5665 Legal Services for Students - Advice on most legal matters Call or drop by to make an appointment. 10th Annual Turkey Trot Saturday, Nov. 23rd., 8 a.m. Sponsored by KU Recreation Services Entry fee: $5 delivered or mailed to Recreation Services, 208 Robinson, KU Campus, 66045, or Lawrence Parks & Recreation Dept., South Park Center, 1141 Massachusetts, Lawrence, Ks. 66044. Lawrence Parks & Recreation Entry deadline: Before the day of the race, but you may show up and enter during the 7-7:50 a.m. registration time. Funded by student activity fee. English B.A. Tying or Tutoring Spelling and grammar corrected Overnight service Call ExactType. Quality for all your typing needs. Disk Storage. Reasonable Call. Military. 843-746-4900 Divisions: KU/Haskell Students men & women KU/Haskell Faculty/Staff men & women Open division men & women A.L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term > aps. 642 8857 10: 5:30. Awards: Division winners will receive turkeys, and the individual who comes closest to his/her predicted time will receive a turkey for each division. Dissertations. These, Term Papers, Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone 822-3109 after 5:30. Barb. Course- 3-3.5 miles. For further information call KU Recreation Services 864-3548 QUALITY TYPING Letters, these, dissertation resumes, application, Spelling corrected 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. IMR Correcting Selective I will correct spelling of words that are not standard. Firmally recognize the need for 2nd firmware Splite PC software (more than 10M) Firmly recognize the need for 3rd firmware TRIO WDoworking CONSCIENTIOUS CONVENIENT W will accept rush calls 842-3111 Female roommate wanted ASAP to bring new 2 new roomhouse. All modern conveniences include DW, microwave, AC, 1/2 bath, 3/bath. Furniture is 1/4 of rent and utilities, energy code: B4. 892-5844. Union — Patriotic Front, or ZANU-PF, won a landslide victory in the country's second general elections since the country gained independence from Britain in 1980. It said the arrests primarily were from the area around Bulawayo, the main city in Matabelieland, where there is widespread support for Nkomo. The organization said that more than 200 political detainees were being held at the Stops Camp in central Bulawayo. TOP-NOTCH professional word processing, themes, themes, letter quality print- ing, #85-682-062 O. T. student desperately needs female roommate to share a room with her. For spring term, prefer Room 824-6086. WANTED Female Roomeer Manted immediately to share two bedroom apt. Very nicely furnished, has a private bath and is conditioning, close to campus and downtown is on bus route, $140.00 and half utilities #8429.00 if you call 718-630-2424. Roostmate needed immediately to share a nice duplex at Trairidge with fireplace, etc. have own bedroom (unfurnished) $140 (negotiable) plus 1/3 utilities. #81-2602. fortune often appears to be aimed at extracting statements incriminating the victims or other people in alleged support of armed rebels who are active in Matabeleland and other areas," the group said. Roommatesfeedthefantasiticous.ibc $15 plus roommate to campus, parks 643-8925. keepros.com Male roommate Needed. Pets OK $160/mo plus 1/2 util. Day Dec. 1. Cell 843-3871. 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Come by or call your nearest Dillon Store. Master Card or Visa Welcome Travelers Express MONEY ORDERS 45c Only At 11 Dollars Dillons FOOD STORES THE BEST VIDEO SHOP IN TOWN IS NOW OPEN AT DILLONS! (1740 Mass.) Over 1200 Titles Available No Membership Needed $1.00 RENTALS on Tuesdays and Wednesdays FROM OUR SEAFOOD SHOPPE 120 — 140 ct. Cooked & Peeled SHRIMP Reg. 7.19 per lb. $4.59 per lb. AVAILABLE IN STORES WITH SEAFOOD SHOPPE ONLY 1 1 SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) 雨中 Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecution ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Mustgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the consecration ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial having nothing to do. "But of course, that's not the case now." My musgrav said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." college prince. Mustrague, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan A United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. raise money, approved an extension only to Dec. 6. Senate leaders said the stenation, combined with revenue-raising measures have the effect of covering' bills through about date as the House measure The Senate action was night on a voice vote with Because the bills are dll House and Senate will have the short-term extension a day, before the government of money. that Reagan himself was not to accept the one tension. The threat woll pressure on balanced-buried tied to a year-long in federal borrowing author an increase, the governmen of money at midnight to But neither deputy press secretary Larry Speakes, Treasury Secretary, Roger Foley. The KCC did agree with utility Ampersand Wolf Creek deni rehearing on rat VOL.IX, NO.2 1985 in an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued valued. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. United Press International Mr. John is a graduate of the University of Oxford and the University of Pennsylvania. He has served as a professor at the University of Oxford, where he taught the courses in Computer Science and Information Technology. Mr. John is also a member of the Computer Society of Australia and the International Computer Society of Australia. He has received many awards for his contributions to computer science and technology. William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, and their terms next Friday. The two say their greatest accomplishment was to "restore organization" to Student Senate. Suzy Mast/KANSA See WOLF CR TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. The commission with KCPL's argument incorrectly cost of nuclear fuel in the resulting e arguments that it mis- formula to allow the u nitually to recover the e investment through o over the life of the pla Gas & Electric Co. an- ytion Power & Light Together own 94 per plant — contended the mission incorrectly rate base upon which may earn a return. ENTERTAINMENT Douglas and Turner: The Romance Continues in "The Jewel of the Nile" Richard Pryor Does It All in "JoJo Dancer" ... "Rocky IV": War in the Ring Roots Rock Revival: From the King to the Boss Baryshnikov Leaps for Freedom in "White Nights" Calendar: Films, TV and Tours Musical Notes: - X-rated Rock? * Scritti Politti - Martha Davis, "Motels" Mama - New Releases A Star-Studded Holiday Film Lineup: Dan Aykroyd Chevy Chase Steven Spielberg Gregory Hines Al Pacino Nastassja Kinski Louis Gossett Donald Sutherland Dennis Quaid Whoopi Goldberg Danny DeVito SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." college professor Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Mmusgrave that foremost in his mind when he said about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the concession ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. But neither deputy press secretary Larry Speakes, Treasury Secretary. raise money, approved an extension only to Dec. 6 The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that tension never have tion's date The night Bec House the sh day, of mon But ing no tension pressi tion tion federa an inc of mon Wolf Creek rehearing o United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. in an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrately when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility argum formu- tually invest over I Gas & ty Po- together plant missie rate b may be The with I utility cost of The IF YOU COULD HEAR THIS TAPE, SOMERSET, NJ William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body and vice president, and their terms next Friday say their greatest accomplishment was to organization" to Student Senate 90 FURUS DIGITAL AUDIO/VIDEO RECORDING MEMOREX CDX II AIR FOR HIGH BAS CHO, SET TXS $ \textcircled{c} $1985 Memtek Products encies repro- SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Flexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this." Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Mustgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concretense ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 THE STAIRS House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International But neither deputy press secretary Larry Speakes, Treasury Secretary WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. raise money, approved an extension only to Dec. 6. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that Senate leaders said the tension, combined with revenue-raising measures have the effect of covering tills' bills through about date as the House measure The Senate action was night on a voice vote with. Because the bills are funded for the entire term, have the short-term extension i day, before the government of money. But Reagan himself was wing not to accept the one tension. The threat would pressure on balanced-budget tied to a year-long in federal borrowing authorize an increase, the govermment of money at midnight to Wolf Creek deni rehearing on rat United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper oil deposit. The plant has a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments that it miss formula to allow the ultimately to recover the investment through over the life of the plug Gas & Electric, Co. and power Light Together own 94 per plant — contended the mission incorrectly rate base upon which may earn a return. the commission with KCPL's argu utility incorrectly c cost of nuclear fuel The resulting William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body preside and vice president, and their terms next Friday. The he say their greatest accomplishment was to "reste organization" to Student Senate. Suzy Mast/KANS See WOLF CI 1986 Two men sitting on a couch in a room with a desk and framed artwork on the wall. YOU'D BUY THIS AD. 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Just send a dollar (to defray handling and shipping costs) to Memories CD II X PO, Box 424I, Dept. E, Monticello MN 96365, and we'll send you a new CD II X 60-minute cassette. Limit one per household. Allow 6-8 weeks for delivery (offer expires December 31, 1985) *Comparison of CDX II performance versus Compact Disc containing high-energy electronic music. Data based on independent laboratory tests and examinations. ISITLIVEORISITMEMOREX SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) UNDER THE SUN Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this." Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. “This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial,” he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the consecration ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Spcaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." college's Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Mustgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 Joseph K. House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. raise money, approved an extension only to Dec. 6. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. But neither deputy press secretary Larry Speakes, Treasury Secretary The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. Senate leader- tension, con-revenue-rain the offer's bills the date as the肝 The Senate civil rights Because the House and Seni the short-term day, before the of money. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that But Reagain not to accension. The pressure on bait tied to a y federal borrow an increase, the money at m Wolf Creek de rehearing on United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be refinished and planted. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments the formula to allu tually to reco investi tion the life Gas & Electric Power & together own plant — comm ince inc orate base up may earn a The com m unit of nuclear utility inc ocr cost of nuclei The res ule See W William Easley and Jeff Potack, student body pre- and vice president, end their terms next Friday. To say their greatest accomplishment was to "organize" to Student Senate. 1982 Editor's Note Ampersand's Holiday Entertainment Guide is here, our summary of what's happening in film, music, television and comedy, designed especially for college students. We hope you'll keep the Holiday Entertainment Guide as a handy reminder of upcoming events. Be sure to tell us about performers or happenings in film, music or television that you want to hear more about. Write: Editor, Ampersand, c/o Alan Weston Communications, 303 N. Glenoaks BL, Suite 600, Burbank, CA, 91502. Enjoy! CONTENTS Charlotte Wolter Editor-in-Chief (Left) C Barys "Wh Co EISHER ALEXANDER Avanceur EDITOR/IN CHIEFS *CITY OF NASHVILLE* NEW YORK **ASSISTANT EDITOR DIRECTOR JACKSON PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT LATION IMPRESENTA ROSSELL ADVERTISING OFFICES** N.Y.C. **NYP VACATION ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE (Left) Chuck Berry, (Below) Mikhail Bairyhakov and Helen Mirren in "White Nights." (Below) Brian Cox plays Dr. Watson as a boy in "Young Sherlock Holmes." 1970 (3) **PHOTO CREDITS:** COVER 2011 CENTRAL FOX TICKET FOUNDATION INSTITUTE MG INC. (REVIEW) COLUMBIA MG INC. (REVIEW) COLUMBIA (SPRINTING) RIGHTHAND R AARONTHUNDERT HAWK COLUMBIA PICTURES, NAM INC. INNANNAGTON PICTURES CO., WARNER BROS. CO., WARNER BROS. AROYRES, RCA RECORDS. MAGICAL MORE. RICHARD E. MAGICAL MORE. RICHARD E. 6 ○ JO JO DANGER Richard Pryor does it all-writing, producing, directing and starring-in this drama which parallels his own life. 7 WHITE NIGHTS Breathtaking dancing by Mikbail Barybnikov and Gregory Hines spark this drama of international intrigue. 8 ◇ HOLIDAY MOVIE PREVIEW 8 $ \circ $ HOLIDAY MOVIE PREVIEW This holiday vacation will see a bonanza of new film releases. 10 ◀ ROOTS ROCK REVIVAL These days a lot of bands are playing the music that made their forefathers famous. Don Waller examines this new trend in popular music. 14 MUSICAL NOTES Greg Paetch keeps tabs on what's happening in the world of music in this regular column. 18 ◇ YOUNG SHERLOCK HOLMES What would Holmes and Watson have been like as boys? Steven Spielberg, still a kid at heart, thought their story would make a great movie. 22 CALENDAR A complete guide to film releases, television programs of interest and upcoming concert tours. SHORT SUBJECTS BETTER THAN TV advertisers know that students, by and large, don't watch television. Consequently, companies have developed innovative ways to reach the college market. One of the most interesting is Kodak's touring multimedia show, Rock 'n' Roll Time Tunnel, from the Los Angeles Museum of Rock Art. It's scheduled to visit 80 campuses this year. On the other hand, even if students don't watch television, some of their classmates are putting themselves on the other side of the screen. Students at the Univer- HOME GROWN 0 city of South Carolina have begun what they claim is the first student- operated cable television channel. They broadcast swimming meets, body building contests and city council meetings one night a week through a local cable company. ROCK AID Rock Allike, a fund-raising contest developed by MTV for Students Against MS (multiple sclerosis), was used on 12 Midwestern campuses last spring to raise nearly $90,000 for MS programs. Competitors lip-synched to their favorites discs. Fundraiser Notre Dame was rewarded with an MTV-sponsored concert on campus, while individual winners DARE TO DIXIE appeared on an MTV special. This year the effort will include over 150 campuses nationwide, and MTV promises to repeat its awards. To get on the bandwagon, contact The MS Society, 100 Park Ave., NY, NY, 10017. I you enjoy playing a little jazz with some friends, you might consider entering the Southern Comfort Dixieland Contest, co-sponsored by the National Association of Jazz Educators. Audition tapes are due Nov. 15, from which three finalists will be chosen to compete at NAJE's conference in Anaheim, CA, in January Past winners include the official Disney Dixieland Band and one of Wynton Marsalis' sidemen. Send tapes to Liz Rytel, Southern Comfort Dixieland Contest, 211 East Ontario St., Ste. 1300, Chicago, IL, 60611 4 Ampersand FOR ART'S SAKE 0 Ohio State University's Gallery is the home of a very extensive collection of fine art, worth over $10 million. Now students and faculty can take a little bit of that treasure into their own homes on a rental basis, under the gallery's current policy that art works "should be seen, and not locked away in a vault." HIT THOSE BOOKS 0 One final word for those of you who are looking for yet another excuse to close those books and watch Dynasty. The results of a ten-year study recently concluded at Pennsylvania State University were that time spent studying had very little correlation to high marks. The factor most closely related to good grades was class attendance. Take notes on that. SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985.VOL. 96.NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) A WOLF Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. Musgareau said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan But neither deputy press secretary Larry, Speakes, Treasury Secretary United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. raise money, approved an extension only to Dec. 6. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury department actions, beat Senate leaders said the extension, combined with revenue-raising measure have the effect of coverage's bills through about 40 percent as the House measured. The Senate action was night on a voice vote with Because the bills are dri House, the bill's short-term extension is day, before the government of money. rut Reagan himself was not to accept the one-tension. The threat would pressure on balanced-budget tied to a year-long incident federal borrowing authori an increase, the governor of money at midnight ton ONLY THE MUSIC TELLS ME WHERE TO GO. The KCC did agree with utility Wolf Creek denie rehearing on rat United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. arguments that it mis- formula to allow the uiltu- tually to recover the co- investment through d over the life of the pla- gas Gas & Electric Co. and power Power & Light Co. together own 94 per- plant — contended the mission incorrectly to a rate base upon which may earn a return. A The commission with KCPL's argument incorrectly cost of nuclear fuel b The resulting c See WOLF CF Joseph E. Brennan and Robert M. Tucker Suzy Mast/KANSA William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body preside and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The to say their greatest accomplishment was to "resto organization" to Student Senate. I'M A PIONEER AND I'M PROUD OF IT. "When I hit the road, I'm gone. It's like I get this feeling nothing can stop me.It's just me, my machine and my music to the max. "Sometimes I'm gone for just a couple of hours. Sometimes it's for days. But whenever, or wherever, it's a feeling that's all mine. Alone." THE PIONEER® CDX-P1 CAR COMPACT DISC PLAYER. Stomp on it. Kick it. Test it. Under any circumstances, it always comes up with beautiful music. © 1985 Pioneer Electronics (USA) Inc. For your zenith dealer call (800) 417-4700. CATCH THE SPIRIT OFATRUE PIONEER. 0x08 PIONEER SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) H Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. Jonn Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Mustgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that ias worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." college gravel, who joined the peace Musgrave, who returned from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 CARROLLS House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. raise money, appo- only to Dec. 6. `\Senate leaders sati- nension, combine revenue-raising` have the effect of tions's bills through date as the House The Senate act night on a voice v The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. Because the bill House and Senate the short-term ext day, before the gt of money. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that But Reagan has not to accept tension. The three pressure on balan-tion tied to a year federal borrowin an increase, the of money at mid THE SONGS OF JIMMY JO JO DANCER Wolf Creek de rehearing on United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments that formula to initially to recov investment the over life of Gas & Electric Power & together own plant — commission rate base up may earn a r. The comm with KCPL utility income cost of nucle. The res. The Carlyle Foundation William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body and vice president, end their term next Friday say their greatest accomplishment was to organization" to Student Senate R icbard Pryor has been making his often-checkered life the basis of his art for many years. Gritty subjects like racism, drug abuse, sex and violence—they're all there in Pryor's legendary stand-up shows. But until now, little of the 'real' Richard Pryor has spilled over into his film roles. There can barely help but be plenty of Pryor in Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling, the new film Pryor wrote, produced, directed and in which he stars. Consider that *Dancer* is the story of a well-known entertainer "at the peak of his popularity and at the bottom of his self-esteem" who has a serious accident at his home. (Left, clockwise from top) Debbie Allen, Tanya Boyd, Barbara Williams and Fay Hauser as the women in JoJo's life. (Above) Richard Pryor. He is rushed to the hospital, and, as he lies in intensive care, reviews the events of his life. The parallels between the Pryor behind the camera and the Pryor in front of it become almost too close for comfort. Says Pryor, "when you mess up and you're talking to an expert in messing up ... the only way to put it behind you and get on with life is to be brutally honest. Self deception is one of the worst drugs there." Pryor is talking about his own accident, when he was seriously burned while preparing drugs (today Pryor no longer takes drugs and campaigns against drug use). Just as dancer director Bob Fosse used his own life and heart attack as the basis for his acclaimed film, *All That Jazz*, so Pry or feels *Jo Jo Dancer* is "my vision. It's not a documentary; it's not the story of my life. Like any writer or director or actor—or in this case all three" I've used what I know about to create something everybody can relate to. And these days, I think I finally say I know about myself Taking on twin acting and directing burdens was an education, Pryor says, since, "the two jobs take a different kind of energy. There were times when I was dead on my feet as an actor, but the other half of me, the director, was ready to go all night." To help him through the production, filmed on locations around Los Angeles and in the Midwest, Pryor had such experienced hands as cinematographer John A. Alonzo (Norma Rae, Chinatown) and production designer John De Cuir (Three-time Oscar winner for Hello, Dolly, The King and I and Cleopatra. Populating Pryor's "fantasy concept" which spans four decades from the 1940's to today, are Billy Eckstine as a showman, Carmen McRae as Jo 1o's grandmother, Diana Abbot and Scoey Mitchell as JoJo's parents and Debbie Bellar, Barbara Williams and Tanya Boyd as the very different women he has wooed and won. Carrand won. So, does JoJo learn from the experience that almost killed his creator? "You'll have to see the film to find out," says Pror, "but Richard never felt better." Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling opens nationwide this December. 6. Ampersand Ampersand SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) 雨伞 Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this." Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the consecration ceremony Monday. the connection. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. had honoring these men, "but of course, that's not the case now." Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank. Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 A House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan But neither deputy press secretary Larry Sneakes, Treasury Secretary United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. raise money, approved an extension only to Dec. 6. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that Senate leaders said the st stension, combined with revenue-raising measure have the effect of coveri tion's bills through about date as the House measure The Senate action was night on a xoice vote with Because the bills are dur Haitian-American for the short-term extension it day, before the governor of money. But Reagan himself was not to accept the one-tension. The threat would pressure on balanced-budget tied to a year-long long-term federal borrowing authori- an increase, the governor of money at midnight long Wolf Creek denie rehearing on rat United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments that it mis- formula to allow the uiltu- tally to recover the co- investment through de- velopment of the life of the plan Gas & Electric Co. and City Power & Light Together own 94 pere plant — contended the mission incorrectly re rate base upon which may earn a return The commission a with KCPL's argument utility incorrectly can cost of nuclear fuel in The resulting d See WOLF CRP I am very pleased to have met you in the office today. I have been working on a project that involves developing software for a company that provides medical devices. The company is looking for someone who can help them with their software development efforts. I will provide all of the necessary resources and support to ensure that your project is successful. Please contact me at [phone] or [email]. I will be happy to discuss any additional questions you may have. William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, and their terms next Friday. The two say their greatest accomplishment was to "restore organization" to Student Senate. Suzv Mast/KANSAN WHITE NIGHTS be worlds of int ternational politics and international dance collide in Taylor Hackford's "White Nights' when dancers become defectors across both sides of the Iron Curtain. "White Nights' is an action-adventure film, of high suspense Ballet star Mikhail Baryshnikov plays a Russian dancer who defends to the West but is brought back home by a plane crash in the USSR. Gregory Hines is an American entertainer living in Russia ordered by the Soviets to make sure Baryshnikov stays. and personal drama," says Hackford who directed the film. "Baryshnikov and Hines (whose sense of morality made him desert from the army during the Vietnam War) form a lay relationship," explained Hackford. "It's a totally hypothetical story, but one that every defector has imagined." "I've had nightmares," admits Bar- I am not sure if you are asking for a picture of me or just a photo. I'll provide the text as it appears. yshnikov of his real-life defection. Playing in his first film role since The Turning Point, Baryshnikov finds himself reliving the most traumatic events of his own life. All this and some of the best dancing in the world as well. But, as director for Hackford (whose Officer and a Gentleman and Against All Odds established his gift for intense romantic drama) asserts, "It is important to say that, although it stars Mikhail Bashnikov and Gregory Hines and has nine dancers, it is not a dance film." "Dance is used in an experimental way—to pick up the dramatic action and move it forward. The film explores defection from the point of view of two men: Baryshnikov, the Russian who gave up his politics for his art, and Hines, the American who gave up his art for his politics." "The "white nights" of the title—the long Russian summer nights—"are a stylistic point in the film," says Hackford. "The film takes place totally in daylight. There is no place to hide. Baryshnikov's character can't get away from the light." Pre-production rehearsals at the American Ballet Theater (run by Barysnikov), directed by Hackford and Mikhail Baryshnikov (left) plays a Russian ballet star who defects to the West, while Helen Mirren is a dancing partner he left behind. Isabella Rossellini (below) plays the wife of an American dancer (Gregory Hines) living in the Soviet Union. Baryshnikov says White Nights' plot recalls some of his own nightmares after his defection. I noted choreographer Twella Tharp, produced an innovative synthesis of ballet and tap, seen in White Nights for the first time. Also in White Nights are Helen Mirren (one of Britain's premier classical actresses and winner of the Best Actress Award at Cannes in 1985 for Cal) playing a retired Russian ballerina, Isabella Rossellini (Ingrid Bengman's daughter) and Geraldine Page. White Nights opens in selected cities in November and nationwide in December. "The film has critical things to say about both the US and the USSR," Hackford described. "It's about force and repression, regardless of where they come from. It makes a universal statement about individual freedom." ♦ Ampersand 7 SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) 2 Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Flexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this." Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. “This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial,” he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. The conductor musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial had boken in tears. "But of course, that's not the case now." Musgrav said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." Mustgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whover took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave said that formost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 THE STAIRS House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. HOLIDAY MOVIE PREVIEW I'll take the lead in this project. TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility (Clockwise from top) Dan Aykroyd as a bumbling agent in Spoke Lodge in Jewel of the Nile, Kathleen Turner and Michael Douglas peat their roles from Rowe on the Stone, Sylvester Severn on the Russians in Reidish suger Annie Lea Ewhynhils applaudios tiox. A popular to the screen from left Michealopher Lloyd, Michael from right Tim Curran HOLIDAY MOVIE PRE (Clockwise from top) Dan Aykroyd as a bumbling agent in Spies Like Us in Jewel of the Alle, Kathleen Turner and Michael Douglas repeat their roles from Romancing the Stars; Sylvester Stallone takes on the Russians in Rocky IV; British singer Annie Lennox of The Eurythmis appears in Revolution. A popular board game take to the screen in Clue, with (sailed from left) Madeline Kahn, Christopher Lloyd, Eileen Breonan, Michael McKean and (standing) Tom Curry and Colleen Camp. William Easley and Jeff Polack, student t and vice president, end their terms next F say their greatest accomplishment was organization" to Student Senate PHE JONATHAN GARY GARRETT arg form tua invo ove Gas ty tog pla mis rate ma T wil ti os Consequently, they've prepared a holiday feast of new feature films with blockbusters like Rocky IV and A Chorus Line, and interesting experiments like Revolution and Clue. Moviemakers seem to know that you're already thinking about the holidays and M planning to do *anything but study* on your vacation But easily the most controversial (and, therefore, certainly the most fascinating) of the upcoming releases is The Color Purple. They say—even he says—The Color Purple is Steven Spielberg's coming of age. According to Spielberg himself, directing the film of Alice Walker's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about a young black woman's personal odyssey, is "the biggest challenge of (his) career." It is also a break from the big entertainment machines audiences have come to expect from him. Indeed, The Color Purple is serious drama, albeit full of the emotions that made Spielberg want to film it. "I began reading the novel casually," recalls the 37 years young director. "I found I couldn't put it down. I got angry, I laughed, I cried. 'And as Celie's story came pouring out into the sunlight, I felt everything at once. It was a very strong, emotional read. I want the audience to feel every color in Celie's rainbow; the rainbow she makes for herself and (Continued on page 19) ▶ e: ule or that has dule packs city of any the most ancial pro math func e integrations, e value of overlays le. So you, or trans- ke to help Algebra nics. operating "equals" engineers 0) FORn tly give qual. ere's my Zip purchased marked taxed taxed file. Allow Trashy paintings SINCE 1889 Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. Police said they had no suspects. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Mustgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the consecration ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." mousgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan TREASURES TO GO TO THE STAIRS United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. raise money, approved an extension But neither deputy press secretary subject to Date. Treasury Secretary But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. Senate leaders said the st tension, combined with revenue-raising measure have the effect of coverin tions' bills through about date as the House measure The Senate action was night on a voice vote with Because the bills are bipartisan have we have the short-term extension it day, before the government of money. But Reagan himself was not to accept the one tension. The threat would pressure on balanced-bud tie tied to a year-long incumbent federal borrowing author increase, the governm of money at midnight (or 100 Wolf Creek denie rehearing on rat United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments that it mis- formula to allow the u-nti- tually to recover the c- investment through t- over the life of the pla- Gas & Electric Co. and ty Power & Light Co. together own 94 peri- plant — contended the mission incorrectly a rate base upon which mear earn a return. The commission with KCPL's argument incorrectly cost of nuclear fuel in the resulting d See WOLF CR ALEXANDER CLEARMAN William Easley and Jeff Polak, student body president and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The two say their greatest accomplishment was to "restore organization" to Student Senate. Sury Mast/KANSA HP--41 ON USER PRGM ALPHA Σ- yx x² 10 ex Σ+ 1/x √x LOG LN A B C D E CLE % SIN-1 COS-1 TAN-1 x2y R+ H COS I TAN J F G ASN LBL GTO BST XEQ K STO RCL SST K L CATALOG ISG RTN CLX/A ENTER N CHS O EEX P x=y? SF CF FS? -Q 7 8 9 R S x≤y? BEEP P→R R→P U 4 5 6 V W x>y? FIX SCI ENG X Y 1 2 3 Z x=0? π LAST X VIEW ÷ SPACE . R/S PG12511 *U.S. suggested list price Free. 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See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV.14, 1985,VOL. 96,NO.59 (USPS 650-640) Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Musgraw, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the congreseation ceremony Monday. The conductor said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Mustgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 ALEXANDRA AND JOHN House, Senate buy time to hash out United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. raise money, app only to Dec. 8. Senate leaders tension, comb revenue-raising have the effect 'tions' bills thru date as the House The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. night on a voice. Because the bit House and Senate the short-term or day, before the g of money. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that But Reagan have not to accept tension. The th pressure on ballet tied to a year federal borrow an increase, the money at mir Wolf Creek de rehearing on United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. in an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments the formula to al- tually to reco- vestment in the over life of Gas & Electric Power & together own plant — com- mission incorate base upe many earn a rn The comm with KCPS's utility cost of nuclear the resu 1987 William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, and their terms next Friday. The two say their greatest accomplishment was to "restore organization" to Student Senate. ROOTS ROCK 0 BY DON WALLER n one finger, the whole "roots-rock revival" is simply a predictable, pendulum-like reaction to the slick, videoge-nic acts that currently rule the upper reaches of the pop music charts On the other, it's a measure of how fragmented the audience for pop music has become that even the purist rock 'n' roll band these days requires clarification by hyphenation Hence the term "roots rock," which is as strangely, early close to redundancy any two pair of words can get. B-sides, how can rock 'n' roll be revived when it never died? Considering most of you reading this are college students and therefore don't have anything better to do until Letterman comes on, take 60 seconds out of your lives and subject Bruce Springsteen's music to some S.E.R. L.O.U.S historical analysis... Do you when it never died? Nevertheless, what is true—and germanne—is that a loose group of musicians, led by Bruce Springsteen and former Creedence Clearwater Revival mainman John Fogerty, most of whom had been playing the exact same music for years, has captured America's orbs' n ears of late. Now what have you got? Jr. Walker and the All Stars' "Shotgun?" Gary U.S.' Bonds' "Quarter to Three?" Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone?" Trashy white bands from Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels to the Young Rascals on down the Jersey shore? Just about every guitar-oriented British Invasion band of '64-65'. And, of course, the spectre of Phil hanging over the entire Linguini with-Varoline, dying Northeastern industrial base mess? roll bands for eleventy-sebenn years. So, when my future grandchillen climb up on my knee and say, "No, Poppa. Poppa. Straight us to the Great Roots-Rock Revival of 1985," what am I gonna say "Go away, kids, you bother me," that's what. Time's up! Blue books in! Whereupon, they will threaten to ask us these around? Yes, as you can tell, I was an English major. But right now, Ah m old and tired. Been interview'r rock 'n' roll bands for elebenty seben years. The Boss. use all my web-top Checker records for Frisbees, so I'll smile the slowest of slow-sad smiles, bum a fobilden cigarette and regale the tiny monsters with this do-wah diddy. "Fids are irrelevant. They change every three months. In the end, only the underlying restlessness matters." 10 Ampersand That was Nik Cohn, circa 1969, in MICHAEL DODS Elvie in Well, welcome to America. Where, as I write it is July 4, 1985. Independence Day. Fireworks. Bruce Springsteen on the radio at the 7:11, singing "Born in the USA," which the Iranian clerk behind the counter doesn't notice. His grandchildren, however, will grow up to be musicians. What'll they be playing? Why, roots rock, of course. his. 457 magnum opus, "Rock, From the Beginning." Wait a minute. Talk about your contradictions; I wish you could see mine. First, I tell you that this roots-rock music isn't a bad, that it's been around as long as rock 'n' roll itself. Then, I say that it's *only* a fad and therefore not to take it too seriously. What we're taking so long to say here is that a whole lota these cool-kats walking around in pear-belltoned shirts' in' toting vintage Telecasters were playing in a synth pop hairsalt combo two years ago, in a skinny-tie "new wave" band five years ago and in a disco lounge act three years before that. Anyway, here's the sanctified low down on the rock-rock sound that's going round. So open your mind, clean up your face, buy a few of these records or—better yet—go see these bands when they hit your college town and decide for yourself if they're jivin' or jammin'. Along with Springsteen and Fogerty, the roots-rock acts with the most impact have been Los Lobos and The Blasters. Los Lobos, the more successful on record, came to Hollywood as Blasters proteges, having played everything from authentic acoustic Mexican folk music to R&B to '50's rock n' roll in front of multigenerational crowds in East El Lay for the past ten years. The Lobos may look like they just got off work at the body shop, but they capture the ambiance of a small-time border town dance hall on a Saturday nite. This is party'n' music. Neither do The Blasters, who've been recording what they like to call "American Music" for the last six years. Blues, country, rock, gospel—it's all grist for these steel mill union leader's sons. Phil ("the Man of 1,000 Voices") Alvin and Dave, his penman/git-tar pickin' brother. As far back as the mid-'60's, the largest, most loyal audience for any single style of American roots music has always been the exalted brotherhood of blues fans. And there are an amazing number of good blues bands around: AOR guitar heroes Steve Ray Nuglan, a Texan who mates the bluesy side of Jimi Hendrix with the rockin' side of Buddy Guy and George Thorogood, a Delaware slide specialist who worships at the shrine of St. Elmore (James), are the current commercial champs. They are followed by the Fabulous Thunderbirds, who play amplified country blues à la Slim Harpo and spotlight Stevie's big brother Jimmy Vaughan, Roomful of Blues, a Rhode Island-based, multi horned jive, jive and jazz outfit, and LA.'s criminally underrated James Hirman band, whose duel guitars of Kid Ramos and Hollywood Fairs enable them to whip on just about any local blues band in the land. While the blues is such a traditional element of rock 'n' roll as it has been transformed into heavy metal—think about it—the recent groundswell of country-oriented roots-rockers represents a more significant shift in rock 'n' role models. Led by ex-punk rockers, brothers Tony and Chip Kinnan, Rank And File got there first. Mixing Everbly Marshall the announcement waiting collaborator for years before he sole survivor of the spaceship Nostromos How the © 1980 THIRTEENTH CENTURY PRESS SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) GENTLEMAN IN A UMBRELLA Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this." Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Mustrage, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to hold was stolen before the ceremony he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. Musgura said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that could result in death. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whover took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. Musgrave said that formost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 PARKSIDE House, Senate buy time to hash out United Press International But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. raise money, ap only to Dec. 6. Senate leaders tension, combi revenue-raising have the effect the bills thru date as the Hou The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that The Senate night on a voted Bicameral Senate and the Senate the short- term day, before the of the money. But Reagan ing not to accen- tension. The di- pressure on bait tied to a yel- feborary borrow an increase, the money at m Wolf Creek de rehearing on United Press International TOPEKA - The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. IVAL In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments the formula to ultimately to receive investment over the life Gas & Electrity Power & together own plant — commission rate base up may earn a rise The comm with KCPU utility income cost of nuclear The resis See The image shows two men sitting on a couch in a living room. The man on the left is wearing a white shirt and a dark vest, and he has short hair. He is smiling and looking at the camera. The man on the right is also wearing a dark vest and has long hair. He is seated slightly behind the first man and appears to be engaged in conversation or listening. Both individuals are facing the camera. There is a framed picture on the wall behind them, but the details of the picture are not clearly visible. William Easey and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, and their terms next Friday. The two say their greatest accomplishment was to "restore organization" to Student Senate. Suzv Mast/KANSAN Brothers harmonies with Leffy Priz well-made house rhythms. Led by the lovely and talented Maria McKee, Lone Justice has been the most-ballyhooed, although it's even money whether this bourbon 'n' branchwater voiced thoroughbred wouldn't be better off doing pure country material rather than the corporate rock she's saddled with. My money, racing fans, is on the Long Ryders, who take off from such second-generation country-rock acts as the飞龙 Burrito Brothers, the Gram Parsons-era Byrds, the Buffalo Springfield and the Band. And, if that ain't rock 'n' roll, or roots rock, or whatever you wanna call it, what is? And, if it isn't, then whadya call Zoo City's Fleshones, other than "the wildest band this side of Birdland?" Or how 'bout the Bangles, the Del Fuegos, Three O'Clock, the Rain Parade, the Del Lords, the Droops, True West or the Pandoras, all of which are bumped with varying accuracy under the generic heading of 60's influenced, semi-pseudochelle, boom-boom revivalists? After all, who would've thought that the biggest bands come out of the "punk rock revolution of 77" would be the Police and the Talking Heads? Only those hip enough to trap the rap of that great rock 'n' roller, Heraclitus, who said, "You can't steal in the same river twice." Or, let me put it to you another way. If Bob beger came out with his debut album this year and it sounded exactly like his 1976 "Night Music," would peopleh it as a "triumph of hauntings accessible roots rock?" And what about R.E.M., drawing on the Velvet Underground and Byrds for inspiration, and winding up the most successful act working this particular side of the street? Which means that guessing which of the aforementioned acts' songs will still be bar band standards in the year 2010 is a task better left to those with crystal balls. In the words of that ancient Greek philosopher, Lou Reed. Despite all the complications, You could still dance to a rock 'n' roll station." And it was all right... "Despite all the complications. DISCOGRAPHY 10 Hot Historical Tracks SAM COOK BALING You won't find Elise Presley, even Muddy Waters. Here, rather than roundup the usual list of seminal rocksters (Little Richard, Chuck Jenkins, Lee) or simply rehearsing the past glories of such household names as bank William B. B.B. King, what follows is a purposefully placed shook-up set of sights that will even the nomiest of dorms into the highest room in town. > **The Jackie Wilson Story.** Jackie Wilson (Epics / 2 Wkls). Aguagliy the greatest vocalist of his generation, the late Wilson is also among the most underappreciated. This package includes the tape with which his producers often satisfied him of love in their more than we say upworn” -performances gospel blues, BRS, soul, smiling like his lovely *Lovein' Illipards*. That sound at the end of Willem’s rendition of “Danny Boy,” in which he wring “24-cord” —more tense of the single subtlety —is your gift. Live at the Harlem Frost Cabin 1983. Sam Cronin / BCA (Tape). Lee Brad Lou Reed Close at his most useful. Playing a small Miami netsport, Cook reworks his then current hit with a gospel drenched intensity that sacrifices none of the ichh rone, fud pressing and calculus casuald that impired tame simulators from Olsen Reading to Rod Stewart. Finger popping soul never sounded better. **Grossein* the Blues, Ozrs Italiw (Righty English Import), industrinl strength guitar base from the beginnin of this singertificate is *i*staranced cover, when Jimmy Page taught "I Can't Dulcet Baby." Hair when Eric Clapton taught "All Your Love." Heir Rush takes sales soough if you don't have to shave them with a browchuck. Heer **Chicken Shack** Africa Milton (Righty English Import). ▶ V.U. The Velvet Underground (Peyramgaz) After sitting in the vaults for 15 years, this recently released album still sounds all its time. Univariate will find that this first, self-conscious board of art品的媒介 was not only capable of a wider range of styles as it is commonly understood, but also that leader Lou Reed once sang as she — or at least the character he portrayed — really meant all the tension, mystery and bright beauty packed into these grooves. Often imitated never duplicated. The monarch, *stormin* title track dates back to 49 and ought to conclude once and for all that rock 'n' roll did not turn up from Evis Presley's ducktail Miwanna from the brow of Jove, "Downthe Road Apiece" (inspectably not included theme) goes back even further to 1948, when *Miss Biodoom* blissed the West Coast jump blaze scene, whereas small, form-driven combo bobbed their wagons around such adult topics as rockesting and eyeballing highbailing. ▶ Nuggets, Vol. 1, Various Artists, (Rhino). This collection of Knickass garage-rock lots of the 60's bats 10 for energy, runch, suburban punk postings and vested references to taking tea with Mary Jane make you wanna tune it on and on dop, then join the Standale, the Leaves, the Seeds, the Count River, Music Machine, Chocolate Watch Band and many more in Wonderful Wig City, just under the Shadowline from Awyrenhey, U.S.A. * **The Johnny Burmese Rock 'n' Roll Trio** The Johnny Burmese Trio (CharlyEnglify, 2 I.P. import) the wildest, highest, slobberiest, most manic rockily ever recorded Diggastal Paul Burmeson's accidental zonation on the *Train Agent Kick* ("The Yardbirds and Amorid bird") done these redux, hot white and blue Memphis piccadillo colors, READ, gone. Clifton Chamber Clifton Chenier **> Hooker Up Midnight, Roller Up Dawn. Don & Drew (Special!) The dynamic duo of sound clinicians lam Sage Daw-Don not to mention the RighteousBrightons—everything they know. The爽酷 assent of a bar fight, this taped disc contéments contain the original 'the wrist ten'-versions of all off-couple classics as 'Justie Bigh Joe', 'Koko Joe', 'Farmer Joe', and 'Leaving All Up to You'. Whose **> Lunatical Blues and Zydeco, Cilton Charles (Antoine) You can substitute just about any of this accidental's several album for the 60s' or whether you're French in American or Japanese, playing swings IRB or smoother twieses, this legend has been the unquainted k歌 of zydeco, a highly rhythmic form of indigenous African music, from the 50s on tonus.** **> The Wild Tchoupichoutines, The Wild Tchuopichoutines, (Antilles). In honor of Indian tribes that helped Native Americans escape, it's a Mardi Gras tradition that certain African men dress up at Native American warriors. They have more—mournically—charts that have been harried down from generation to generation to go along with the spectacle. Pulsating with polythymic power and—again—a uniquely American expression, this music is the perfect antique for a hot summer day. You don't have to know that the Newbie Brothers are members of the tribe to believe that when the Wild Tchoupichoutines bring them "gone some bump from here," Jack, they back their way.** SWE SNEAK PREVIEW FROM Sigourney Weaver will also be back his summer as Warrant Officer Ripley, the sole survivor of the spaceship Nostroma's Marshall Brickman was Woody Allan's writing collaborator for years before he Favorite Movies How often do you go to the Movies © 1905 TWENTH CENTURY FOX SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) WINDY. Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this." Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial had boiling water and had nothing to do. "But of course, that's not the case now." Musgruza said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, any impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." musgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that raise money, approved an extension But neither duration only to Dec. 4 Sen. tensi reven have t tion's date at The night o'clock Beca House is the sho day, be of mone But if ing not pension, pressure tied federal an incre of mone The JEWEL of the Nile COMING FOR CHRISTMAS Wolf Creek rehearing or United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility Fox in 107 Fox in Focus Fox in Focus William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body preside and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The te say their greatest accomplishment was to "restor organization" to Student Senate. Suzy Meat/KANH Hostromos The last time we saw adventurer Jack Colton (Michael Douglas) and romance novelist Joan Wilder (Kathleen Turner), they were sailing off into the sunset after their hair-raising Latin American adventure in "Romancing the Stone." But romance doesn't always survive the final fade-out, and things are looking rocky for everyone's favorite screen couple... until they encounter the mystery of the Jewel, and embark on the wildest adventure of their lives. Jack and Joan are back, with their pint-sized arch-energy Ralph (Danny DeVito) still dogging their trail, in the sequel to 1984's blockbuster comedy-adventure: THE JEWEL OF THE NILE. Director Wolfgang Petersen was nominated for an Oscar when he launched "Das Boot," his tense drama about a German U-Boat in World War II. Now he tackles a world war II "relationship film"...with a difference: ENEMY MINE starring Dennis Quaid ("The Right Stuff") and Lou Gossett, Jr., who won an Oscar for his portrayal of the martinet in "An Officer and a Gentleman," as enemy space pilots fighting an interstellar war a hundred years in the future. Quaid, a human, and Gossett, a Drac from the planet Dragon, are marooned together on a deadly planet where they have to learn mutual trust and respect to survive. One of the most powerful and unusual films of this or any year. Screenwriter David Seltzer established himself as a force to reckon with in Hollywood by writing the blockbuster supernatural thriller "The Omen," but his first film as a director is in a very different vein. LUCAS (played by "Firstblood" Corey Hain) is a diminutive rebel who stands apart from his fellow high-schoolers and criticizes their strial in uel is s), and it up r James i'st year's tiring How often do you go to mil © 1928 TWENTIRTH CENTURY FOX SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) Bernard Meyer Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said they had no suspects, "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. hadinho to do. Well I had no "But of course, that's not the case now." Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." college prince. Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Mustgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5; col. 1 P House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But neither deputy press secretary Larry Speakes, Treasury Secretary But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. raise money, approved an extension only to Dec. 6. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that Senate leaders said the st tension, combined with revenue-raising measures have the effect of coercion's bills through about date as the House measure The Senate action was night on a voice vote with Because the bills are dff House and Senate will have the short-term extension i day, before the government of money. But Reagan himself was not to accept the one tension. The threat woul pressure on balanced-bud tion tied to a year-long ine federal borrowing author an increase, the governme of money at midnight ton Wolf Creek deni rehearing on rat United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a church. The commission was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments that it miscal- formula to allow the utilit- ually to recover the co- investment through de- velop the life of the pla- Gas & Electric Co. and Power Power & Light Co. together own 94 peri- plant - contended that mission incorrectly re- rate base upon which it may earn a return. The commission at with KCPL's argument utility incorrectly can cost of nuclear fuel inv The resulting de 1983 See WOLF CREI William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The two say their greatest accomplishment was to "restore organization" to Student Senate Suzy Mast/KANSAN activities as "superficial" until the girl he loves (Kerri Green of "Goonies") falls for a football star (Martin Sheen's son Charlie Sheen), prompting the desperate Lucas to a grand gesture verging on suicide: going out for the football team. Before turning to feature directing, Russell Mulcahy established himself as one of the premier directors of rock videos, with memorably eye-catching videos for groups like Culture Club and Duran Duran. In HIGHLANDER he brings his gifts as a visual stylist to a unique fantasy-adventure story about warring Immortals whose battle for a mysterious talismans rages down the ages from the highlands of 16th Century Scotland to the streets and alleys of present-day New York. Starring Sean Connery and Christopher Lambert, of "Greystoke" fame. American-born Bob Swain took an unusual route to directorial superstardom—he went to France, and made "La Balance" a tough-as-nails police thriller that set boxoffice records and cleaned up when it was time for the French to hand out Les Oscars. Now he returns to English-language filmmaking with MINE HALF MOON STREET. In this erotic thriller, Sigourney Weaver plays a government think-tank expert who moonlights as a paid escort, and Michael Caine is a diplomat involved in international intrigue who falls in love with her. From the novel "Dr. Slaughter" by Paul Theroux. Marshall Brickman was Woody Allen's writing collaborator for years before he turned to writing and directing features, and now he brings his wry sensibility to THE MANHATTAN PROJECT: a contemporary thriller about a resourceful high-school student who sets out to join the most exclusive club in the world...one whose members now include the United States, the Soviet Union, Great Britain, France and China. Christopher Collet stars as Paul Stephens, who builds his own atomic bomb as a science fair project, just to prove that it can be done. John Lithgow ("Buckaroo Banzai," "The World According to Garp") also stars as a sympathetic scientist who tries to help Paul and his girlfriend Jenny (Cynthia Nixon) when they find themselves the object of a very serious manhunt by foreign and domestic agencies. A summer camp for future astronauts? It exists already, in Alabama, and kids who want to attend have to have letters of recommendation from their math and science teachers. Then they can spend a summer doing everything from studying astrophysics to practicing their space-walk in a zero-gravity simulator. This real-life training center for tomorrow's space jockeys is going to be the subject of a movie from Leonard Goldberg, the producer of "WarGames": In SPACECAMP, youngsters at such a camp get more adventure than they bargained for when their capsule is launched into space—for real. Stars include Kate Capshaw ("Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom") and Lea Thompson, who sizzled as Michael J. Fox's mother-to-be in "Back to the Future." Before he changed the face of the horror film with "Halloween," John Carpenter made a non-stop actioner called "Assault on Precinct 13" that has become a cult favorite, and he showed what he could do with action again when he made "Escape from New York," starring Kurt Russell. Now he and Russell have re-teamed for BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA, about a tough truck-driver named Jack Burton becomes embroiled in a war in San Francisco's Chinatown, where bad guys and good guys alike have magical powers. The script is by top screenwriter W.D. Richter "Brubaker," "Invasion of the Body Snatchers"), who made his directing debut last year with the nutty cut classic "The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai." Sigourney Weaver will also be back this summer as Warrant Officer Ripley, the sole survivor of the spaceship Nostromo's encounter with a deadly extraterrestrial in 1979's blockbuster "Alien." The sequel is called ALIENS (watch out for that s), and it is being made under conditions of top secrecy in England by writer-director James Cameron, who was responsible for last year's sci-fi sleeper hit "The Terminator," starring Arnold Schwarzenger. When director Howard Zieff teamed with Goldie Hawn on "Private Benjamin", they made comedy history. Now Zieff is collaborating with the brilliant actress-comedienne Whoopi Goldberg—fresh from her first starring role in Steven Spielberg's "The Color Purple"—for KNOCK, KNOCK, a comedy-driller about a computer operator in a bank who starts receiving messages on her computer screen from a dashing American spy trapped behind the Iron Curtain. Besides being Hollywood's leading comedy actor-writer-director, Mel Brooks is also one of the most innovative producers around, with such off-beat films as "The Elephant Man," "Frances" and "My Favorite Year" to his credit. Now he is producing a remake of the sci-fi horror classic THE FLY about an unfortunate scientist (Vincent Price in the original) whose molecules get scrambled with those of a common housefly. Featuring state-of-the-art makeup effects that go far beyond the original, "The Fly" will be directed by David Cronanberg, who proved himself a master of surreal horror with "Scanners" and "Videodrome." Just complete and return the coupon below to keep up with the latest film release from 20th Century Fox. Send to: TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX, P.O. Box 900, Beverly Hills, CA 90213, Attn: Fox In Focus. Name Permanent Address City, State, Zip. School Name Date of Birth Class of 19 Favorite Music (Rock, Country, Classical, Other) How often do you go to the Movies per © 1980 TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX 图 SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) 雨伞 Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. Police said they had no suspects. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. having made a mistake. "But of course, that's not the case now." Mustgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." college professor Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whover took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 A House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that The Senat- night on a six day. Seat and Seat and the short-ten- day, before t of money. But Beapling not to accension. The pressure on tion tied to a federal borne an increase, an money of it Wolf Creek de rehearing on United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued at $17 million. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. opening The KCC did agree with utility arguments to formula to al- tuallty to recov- investment over the life Gas & Electric power & together own plant com- mission incore rate base up may earn a $ The comm with KCPL's utility incorr cost of nuclei The result FILM FESTIVAL William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body preside and vice president, and their terms next Friday. The he say their greatest accomplishment was to "recreate organization" to Student Senate. fAaY Behind The Scenes When They Say Rate the Records, They're Not Talking American Bandstand Can you imagine having records rated like movies? The idea would be laughable if a lot of influential people are making it happen. weren't mean on 45 record labels received a letter from the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) asking that lyric sheets be included on all new releases sent to radio stations. Over 800 TV and radio stations received a similar NAB letter requesting they censor sexually suggestive lyrics. Another organization, the Parents Musical Resource Center (PMRC), is currently lobbying Congress to force a ratings system similar to the one used by the movie industry. Among the members of the PMRC are Susan Baker, wife of Treasury Secretary James Baker, and Tipper Gore, wife of Tennessee Senator Albert Gore. For years, politically and religiously conservative have tried to censor music for being sexually explicit or satanic, but other than banning a Kiss concert here or there, they haven't had much clout. With political heavyweights involved in the new censorship movement, the tide appears to be turning MCA Records recently pulled a single called "Let's talk" ("Let's Talk about Sex") by One Way off the air. More substantial was the announcement by the Recordings Industry Association of America that 19 major record labels had agreed to put a disclaimer on the jackets of all records deemed "offensive." the censorship movement may also be gaining because it has alies in the recording industry itself. Smokey Robinson, for one, declared "Something has to be done about socially explicit lyrics." Dave Marsh said in Rock & Roll Confidential, the PMRC, the PTA and television evangelists are the descendants of the forces that tried to "protect us from Elvis, Little Richard, the Beatles and the Stones." TINA TURAN the beaches two months in late September, the PMRC, Fqnk Zappa, Twisted Sister's Dee Snider and RIAA President Stanley Gorikow testified against ratings before a Congressional committee. The ratings battle is healing ep. Tina Turner says she is negotiating with several producers for a "movie of my life." Turner will not act in the movie, but will choose the actress to portray her and retain creative control. The movie will presumably be based on her recent autobiography, "I Tina." Inside Track Quick Takes ... R Rod Stewart will finally launch his long-talked-about acting career with a starring role in a British soap opera. Stewart would not disclose many detritus, but by the way he describes it, the show is from the same laboratory that produced Dallas Dynasty. "There'll be plenty of cutting ties, lies and decept and passionate romance" Two songs on ex-Go Game Jane Wilin's solo album were written by her high school sweetheart—Kevin Hunter of Wire Train ... Jimmy Ciff says that Keith Richards and Ron Wood of the Stones are talking about doing a record project that would also feature Police McStewart Copeland on drums ... Boy George reportedly will be organizing a charity concert over the Christmas season to help fight AIDS in the U.K. He has already contributed some $20,000 to a British AIDS charity. · Mandy Meir, formerly of Kroken, has replaced Steve Howe in Ana's line up. Howe is told to be working with ear BY GREG PTACEK MUSICAL NOTES ly Genesis member Steve Hackett in a new group called GTR .. Master re-mixer Jellybean Benitez has pro-duced a demo tape featuring Madonna, and Ashford and Simpson tunes for a proposed contemporary musical based on the novel "Oliver Twist." 图 Record Watch Coming Soon To a Record Store Near You B Barbain Streisand (a duet project with Run D.M.C.,"Babs Baps"—just kidding!) Flock of Seamills, Red Hot Kel of Seagurs, Rokane Chili Peppers, Dance Society, Steel Pulse, Linda Rossstadt (first country album in years). The Eagles (yes, dummy, they have broken up; this is an anthology), Metalloid, The Triplets (they are what their name implies), Lindsay Buckingham (will we ever see another Fleetwood Mac LP?), Dokken, Peter Gabriel, Rocaez, Steve Winwood, Quincy Jones, James Ingram, The Ramones (compilation), Phil Alvin (of the Blasters), Harold Malefire, Van Halen, INXS, John Parr, Genesis (if they stick together, that is the Fixx, Guillfix, Oingo Boingo, Joan Jett, Boston but, then they've been saying this for 10 years). The Damned, Tom Watres, Thomas Dolby, Steve Miller, Julian Lennon, Twisted Sister, Sister Sledge, Graham Nash and Bad Company (Since recording artis are creatures not known for meeting schedules, consider this list advisory.) "When I got married at 15, I become an Air Force wife, to want Florida, and lived in a little shock in a little white ghetto of a runaway. No phone, no radio, no television. All I had to do was怀 baby. Marthe Davis, the sultry singer/songwriter of The Molets (currently on tour), at 34 has two teenaged daughters. No doubt, managing a career and a family was trying at times, but she wouldn't have had it any other way. "When I decided to do music, one girl was old enough to watch the other. I would take them to rehearsal, bring along a little black and white TV, and they'd curl up in front of it. They were never without me for a very long time... and they still aren't." Rock Rap Scritti Politti G In addition, Green and his band Scritti Politi (Italian for "political writing") produce some of the most original music on the market today. Green—just Green—the leader of Scritti Politi, is known for his musings on pop music and Western Civilization and is widely quoted in the British press. 74 About the photo of a piece of wrapped meat on the back of Scritti's latest album, "Cupid & Psyche," he says. "Artist Marcel Duchamp was asked to do a Vogue cover in the 1920's. He did a piece of meat, wrapped in cloth with paper stars, a portrait of George Washington. "See, a lot of people think that Scritti's music is very sweet, vaporous. I think there's an element of that, but at the center there's something more substantial, like meat at the center. And the butterfly represents the sweetness. Of course, it has a pin in its head, which means it's dead. Symbolic Yeah." "They said, 'This doesn't look like George Washington', but it did! It looked a lot like George Washington. They decided not to use it, but I thought it was a very beautiful thing." THE LONDONER Ampersand SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) 雨伞 Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. types of building. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3.p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said the yahoo hostess "I don't know why anyone would do something like this." Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. Joseph John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. “This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial,” he said. Mustgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concreto ceremony Monday. stusgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. not hobbing with her. "But of course, that's not the case now." Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank. Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whover took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. for a staff member. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Mustgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the 15 House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. raise money, approved an extension But neither density stress exposure But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. Senate leader tension, comb revenue-raising have the effecti'ts bills's day date as the Hour The Senate at night on a vole House and Senat the short-term e day, before the of money But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that But Reagan had not to accen- tension. The th pressure on bali- tion tied to a yea- federal borrow an increase, the of money at mid Wolf Creek de rehearing on United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rereaching to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also retested was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments that formula to allow tually to recover investment thre over the life of Gas & Electric C ty Power & Lt together own 6 plant content mission incorrate rate base upon may earn a retu The commite with KCPL's a utility incorrect cost of nuclear f The result See WOLF POLICE POLICE William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The two say their greatest accomplishment was to "restore organization" to Student Senate Suzv Meat/KANSAN We not only give you the money for college. We also give you the time. If you think the best way to pay for college is to put it off for a few years and join the military, you're half right. Because with the New GI Bill, you can join the Army National Guard and get a guaranteed minimum of $18,000 for college. But best of all, you serve two days a month and two weeks a year. Which means you can go to school full-time. Right now. On us. So the question you have to ask yourself is not, can you afford college. The question is; can you lift For more information about the Army Guard and the New GI Bill, fill out the attached coupon and mail it in. Or call 800-638-7600 The question is, can you afford to wait. *In Hawaii 737-5251; Phone: 721-8540; GSM: 747-9957; Virgin islands (St. Croix). **In Alaska you local your phone directory.** MAIL TO: Army National Guard, P.O. Box 6000, Clifton, NJ 07015 M F ADDRESS CITY/STATE/ZIP ___US CTIZEN □ YES □ NO CITY STATE ZIP US CITIZEN YES NO HOME ARFACODE PHONE SENIOR SECURITY NUMBER BIRTH DATE OCCUPATION STUDENT HIGH SCHOOL COLLEGE PROK MILITARY SERVICE YES NO YES ARMY BRANCH RANK AFM/MOS THE AFRICAN AMERICAN MEMBERSHIP FOR TECHNOLOGY, HARDWARE, ITS SERVICES, AND OTHER TRAINING FOR AMERICANS WHO WANT TO LEARN OR SERVICED IN THE AREA OF AFRICA. IT IS NATIONAL STATE NATIONAL UNION National Union www.nationalunion.org THE DEPARTMENT OF CONSTRUCTION ALL IMPLIED CONDITIONS HEREFORE Army Army National Guard A1AMMC**105NP 1 SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV 14, 1985. VOL 96. NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansas staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a #1flexugh and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a coneration ceremony, at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this." Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee said yesterday. John Minsgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Mustrague, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The poe drew the drawing was to honor the memory before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank. "But of course, that's not the case now." Musgrave said "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of college prince Masgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whover took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Mustgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the conscription ceremony. the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan PETER MCCOLLAND United Press International WASHINGTON The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and assert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. raise money. a only to Dec. 6 Senate leaders tension, corrupted revenue-raising have the effect's bills thrust date as the House The Senate act night on a voice Because the bt House and Senat the short-term e day, before the p of money But Reagan have not to accept tension. The th pressure on bali ties tied to a yea- federal borrowin an increase, the of money at mid Wolf Creek der rehearing on United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $1.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coalified tar. It applied a simple list of other arguments aimed at restoring the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments that a formula to allow it to recover investment threat over the life of Gas & Electric Power & Li-together own a plant content mission incorrect rate base upon may earn a raise The committee with KCPL's a utility incorrect rate of nuclear energy See WO PETER BROTHERTON William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body preside- and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The be- say their greatest accomplishment was to restr organization" to Student Senate Suzy Mast/KANS PLAYBACK: 2:17AM BEARSVILLE STUDIOS WOODSTOCK, NY SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY NOV 14 1985 VOL 96 NO 59 (USPS 650-640) A Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a concession ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Admir, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Diageo, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Mustrugra, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to hold was removed before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. Mustgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial "But of course, that's not the case now." Mustgrave said "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." college prince Mustrage, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the concession ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan 100 United Press International WASHINGTON - The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short term increase in the government's borrowing authority the issue was still unresolved. Bat the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. raise money. only To Dec. The Senate night on a vote Senate leader tension, comba revenue-raising have the effect tions's bills thror date as the hour Because the b House and Semin short the term e day, before the of money But Reagan had not to accept tension. The th pressure on bail tie tion to a yed federal borrowin an increase, the of money at mid Wolf Creek der rehearing on r United Press International In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal contract. The commission listed a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. The KCC did agree with utility See WOLF arguments that formula to allow tually to recover investment threat over the life of Gas & Electric Cty Power & Liity together own 9 plant content mission incorrect rate base upon may earn a return The commiss with KCPL's a utility incorrect cost of nuclear f The resulti f A William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, and their terms next Friday. The two say their greatest accomplishment was to "restore organization" to Student Senate. Grand MaustiKANCAN Miller MADE THE AMERICAN WAY. CONTAINS NO ADDITIVES OR PRESERVATIVES. SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) A man is playing with an umbrella. Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the confecration ceremony Monday. the consecrator Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." college pranks Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whover took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. for a scholarship in the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 A House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International raise money, approved an extension But neither deny press secretary only on Dec. 6. WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. Senate leader tension, con- revenue-rates have the citi- son's bill re- quired. The Senate night on a co- Because the House and Sen the short-term day, before it of money. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that But Reung not to accension. The pressure on bunion tied to a federal borrow an increase, t money at r Wolf Creek de rehearing on United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments the formula to alltually to recov investment the life Gas & Electric Power Power & together own plant — contract mission incore base rate may earn a re The comm with KCPL's utility incore cost of nuclea The result Joseph and Lloyd William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The to say their greatest accomplishment was to "read organization" to Student Senate. 10847280583 (Above) Nigel Stock as the curmudgeonly Waxfalter in Young Sherlock Holmes; (right) Nicholas Rowe and Alan Cox as the youthful Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. YOUNG SHERLOCK HOLMES W bat could Sberlock Holmes and Doctor John H. Watson have been like when (and if) they were boys? Steven Spielberg was intrigued by the idea and thought it contained great possibiliti- ties for a movie. He called in his young ace screenwriter, Chris Columbus ("Gremlins", "Goonies") and gave bim only the film's title, "Young Sherlock JOHN LENOX Hobbes, and the instruction, "Do what you like with it." Setting his story in 1870 London, and immersing himself in research on Victorian history and mores, Columbus spent nine months writing his script. "It required a lot of care because Holmes is a literary legend," he pointed out. "I did not want to upset his devotees, some of whom believe Holmes was a real person who actually lived." "It could have been young Sherlock in Los Angeles in 1985," said Columbus, "but I had been inspired by the stage version of Nicholas Nickley (and) loved David Lean's films of Great Expectations and Oliver Twist. I wanted to get that flavor back into films." The story involves its schoolboy heroes, not only in solving a mystery, but also in an adventure with elements of the supernatural members of Shellock Holmes and John Watson meet at school, an encounter in which Holmes proves he already possesses impressive powers of deduction: he describes accurately his new acquaintance Watson's every interest, and even his family background, just by observing him. The two quickly become friends. two quicky lessons. Soon after, the two pals set out to investigate a strange series of deaths of respected older London citizens, one of whom is a somewhat befuddled professor at their school. With the help of the professor's beautiful niece, they set out to solve the crimes, which seem to be linked to a menacing religious cult. Tall, dark-haired Nicholas Rowe, the 18-year-old son of a member of the House of Commons, was selected from thousands who auditioned Contract, round the edge. Barry Levinson—who had already received praise for a film about young people, Diner, is directing. His most recent film release, The Natural, about a baseball player with extraordinary talent, demonstrates he is equally at ease with a story having magical overtones. for the part to play Holmes. Two young cast members come from acting families: Alan Cox, son of British actor Brian Cox, plays Watson, and Sophie Ward, daughter of Simon Ward (Yung Winston) is Elizabeth, the pretty young niece of the deceased professor. A host of distinquished adult actors, including Anthony Higgins of The Draughsman's Contract, round out the cast. Young Sherlock Holmes has taken advantage of the authentic locations available in England, shooting many scenes at historic Eton. "When I went on the set to see Barry directing the scene of Watson meeting Holmes for the first time (shot at Eton)," said Columbus, "I felt as if I were Watson walking into that dormitory. It was precisely as I had imagined it." Columbus was also excited that director Levinson had filmed his screenplay with little rewriting. "This film is the one baby (of his projects for Spielberg) I can almost call my own," he said. Director of Photography Stephen Goldblatt says Young Sherrick Holmes makes, "No attempt at reality. The characters are almost Dickenman. It is 95 minutes, or thereabouts, of non-stop action set in mid-Victorian London." Young Sherlock Holmes, a Paramount release, will open nationwide in December. 18 18 Ampersand Trashy paintings SINCE 1889 Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) U Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the consecration ceremony Monday. musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. had learned that, not the case "But of course, that's not the case now." Musgrav said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whover took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Mustgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL. p. 5, col. 1 F House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. raise money, approved an extension But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that Senate leader tendens, comb revenue-raising have the effect the bills thre date as the Hou The Senate is night on a voice. Because the bishop has been the short-term or day, before the money. But Reagan be ing not to acc e n-tension. The th re pressure on ball tied tion to a yet federal borrow an increase, the of money at mid United Press International Wolf Creek de rehearing on TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. in an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments that formula to allow it to recover investment there over the life of Gas & Electric Power & Li together own plant — content mission incure rate base upon you may earn a yert The committee with KCP1's utility incorrect cost of nuclear The result See WC 1980 Suzy Mast/KANSAN MOVIES (Continued from page 8) dives into beadlist. The Color Purple's top black cast includes comedienne Whoopi Goldberg in her first film role as Celie and Danny Glover (Silverado, Places in the Heart). Hollywood will be watching The Color Purple closely—both as its director's attempt at a film "Sidney Lumet could make standing on his head," and as one of several new "black" films, after years in which black subjects were seen as box office poison. Mike Bygrave & Joan Goodman Rocky IV P Prior to the release of Rocky III, Syllester Stallone told an interviewer that "I love the character too much to do a Rocky IV" and have people go away disappointed and say we bled it dry. So this is it." After Rocky IV went on to outgross both of its predecessors, however, Stallone underwent a change of heart. The result is Rocky IV to be released November 27 by MGM/UA. Rocky IV marks the end of Carl Weathers' ongoing participation in the series, since Apollo Creed (whom Weathers portrays) is killed in the ring when he goes up against the Soviet giant. Since May, a record breaking 4200 traitters have been warning viewers to "get ready for the next world war." Of course, as most of us know by now, the "war" involves the confrontation between Rocky Balboa and Drago (who's played by Dolph Lundgren), his gargantuan Russian opponent in the ring. Will Rocky avenge his buddy's death and KO the Russian champ? One thing's for sure, the $12 to $15 million (plus a percentage of the gross) that Sly's receiving for writing, directing and starring in *Rocky* IV has already made Stallone the winner Alan Karp A Chorus Line Sir Richard Attenborough's "Wonderful, darling, that's lovely," rang through the Royale Theater in New York all day as 2000 "gypsies" auditioned for the movie A Chorus Line. "Broadway gypsies" are the chorus girls and boys who flesh out a musical. A Chorus Line is their story, and they love it. Sir Richard and his choreographer, Jeff Hornaday (Flasdance), watched with patience and encouragement as dancer after dancer did HAND IN HAND WITH HOWIE MANDEL W We caught up with comedian Howie Mandel on the set of St. Elsenburg, his weekly NBC series in which he plays Dr. Wayne Fiscus. Always a campus favorite, Mandel will be doing a tour of 17 cities this fall, in addition to filming a special for HBO. He has also just finished the film A Fine Mess due out in May, 1986. KYLE COUNTS. The word on your big break in comedy is that you were visiting California and performed at the Comedy Store. George Foster saw you and signed you for "Make Me Laugh." MESSAGE HOWIE MANDEL: When I went up at the Comedy Store, I didn't do anybody's jokes, not even my own; I just kinda made noises. HM: They started laughing and I didn't know what they were laughing at, and I went "What? What?" and they laughed even more. KC: Is that where your trademark line, "What?" born? guy who put a rubber glove on his head on the Merv Griffin Show. I thought I was gonna get sued by a rubber glove company. They asked if I was interested in being the opening act for their client in Vegas, who turned out to be Diana Ross. BY KYLE COUNTS MICHAEL JACKSON "Make Me Laugh," was a perfect opportunity for someone who didn't have a vast amount of material—60 seconds to make somebody laugh. How did you become a full-time comedian? **HM:** I did Merv Griffin and got a call from a law firm wanting to know if I was Wowie Mandel, the KC: Were props always in your act? IMA: Always. Even that first night at the Comedy Store, I was carrying a bag shaped like a hand. I always have a bag of toys and props. I just got a Julio iglesias cut-out. I haven't figured out what to do with it, but I already took it on stage. I just held it up and said, "I have nothing funny to say about this." And they laughed. KG: Your tour is going to a lot of college towns. weird to feel underdressed for your own show. HM: Colleges are my audience. I played Ohio State, Florida State, University of Montana and University of Utah. At Utah, the women were in full-length gowns and the guys were in suits. It's wet to feel undersized for your own size. KC: Psychologists say that comedians are desperately seeking the approval of others. HM: Definitely. Even if I play a 7,000 seat seat and I get two standing ovations, if I hear that one person didn't like me, it'll ruin my year. ♦ their turns. "In the end, we found a wonderful cast, a mixture of total unknowns and flying stars," said Sir Richard enthusiastically. The hardest role to cast was that of Zach, the director/choreographer who forces the 17 dancers in his cast to reveal themselves." Michael Douglas is magnetic in the role of this god-like but vulnerable character," Attenborough praised. The plum role of Cassie, the exlead dancer trying to start over again in the chorus, went to Alyson Reed who had portrayed the part in the national company of *Chorus Line*. "I have a lot of Cassie in me," she says. "All I've ever known is dancing." All I've been challenged to turn *A Chorus Line* into a screenplay without losing, "the theatricality that is its essence," says Attenborough. "I've been wanting to do a musical for a long time. What I particularly enjoyed about *A Chorus Line* was the ensemble feeling of the cast. The wonderful thing about this film is that everybody gets to be a star." Mike Bygrave & Joan Goodman Snies Like Us When you put three very funny people together you get a very funny movie. When the three W people are John Landis, Dan Aykroyd and Chevy Chase, respectively the director and stars of *Spies Like Us*, you also get a very funny film set. Off camera moments were filled with light bump jokes, sight gags and lightning repearce. Aykroyd originally wrote the script for himself and John Belushi. ("I play taller and a little lighter," says Chase.) "Chevy and I sat down for a week together and rewrote it. It was like Saturday Night Live. We could nighting of their lives, "I wanted to do a movie with Danny," says Chase. In the film that won him over, Chase and Dan Aykroyd play unwitting decoy spies. The rigorous qualifying tests are rigged, so our heroes aren't aware that they're not the real thing. "There's a lot of physical comedy, a lot of shapstick," says Chase. Chase plays a fast-talking goof off, and Aykroyd is his serious-minded sidekick. always write for each other." John Landis (Animal House) was the natural choice as director for the project. For Akroyd, Chase and the audience, this may be the best thing since Saturday Night Live. Mike Bygrave & Joan Goodman Jewel of the Nile Fes, Morocco-When last seen in Romancing the Stone, novelist Joan Wilder and her real-life hero Jack Colton were gliding down a New York avenue in Colton's sailboat. To the South of France for an illicil interude. toyline make Perhaps Jack and Joan would have lived happily ever after if audiences and 20th Century Fox hadn't clamored for a sequel. Instead, when The Jewel of the Nile begins six months after the couple has settled down to together, they're not getting along. Before Jack and Joan get too bored with each other, they find themselves in jeopardy again, this time in a nameless North African country where they're looking for another Ampersand 19 Ampersand 19 SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) A man in a hat and umbrella. Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. typical context. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said they had no reason to "i don't know why anyone would do something like this". Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. thing too frequently, and why they did it. Mustgrage, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the consecration ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college clark." college prince. Muscgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 THE STAIRS OF CHRISTIAN MARY House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But neither deputy press secretary But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that leverage lease tension, com revenue-raisin have the effect bills' bille date as the Hot night on a yacht Because the House and Sense the short-term day, before the of money. Wolf Creek de rehearing on But Reagan is not to accession. The tl pressure on bail tied to a yie, federal borrow, an increase, the of money at my United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments that formula to allow it to recover investment the over life of Gas & Electric Power & Together own plant — content incorrate rate base upon may earn a ear re. The commis with KCPL/ s utility increec cost of nuclear. The result See WCJ THE BROADCASTING EDITOR William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body preside and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The he say their greatest accomplishment was to "resta organization"" to Student Senate. Suzy Mast/KANS CLASSIFIEDS MEET FRIENDS FOR SPORTS, hobbies, travel, vacations, correspondence, conferences, meetings. Write Electronic Exchange. Box 88-A5, Manhattan Beach, Beach 90266. CAREER FEARS? The toughest decision you will ever make! Let the Career Guidance Manual assist you in determining your right for you! The C.G.M. is a practical and straightforward approach to career strength through an assessment of your strengths and weaknesses. General attitudes. Send $4.95 check or money order to MDB Care Consulting Group, P.O. Box 62, Redondo Beach, CA THE NATIONAL ACADEMIC UNITED STATES TOP CENTER PRODUCTS The only must read cataloging information company in the United States. A unique collection of art and un- limited fun. A unique collection of art and un- limited fun. TOP CENTER PRODUCTS INCORPORATED UNKOWN PRODUCTS, INCORPORATED FOX BANK 725 - M.A. WESTBROOK BRANCH, BROoklyn 17703 INSECURE? ELIMINATE Blushing, nudity stuttering/ sexual problems. Insecurey, Bad Memo- sion. Use Cordless Phone. $1.00 $1.00 for information. Leon Hardt Method (A) P.O. Box 42905, Tuson, A2 85733 SEMESTER IN SPAIN Live with a Spanish family, attend classes four hours a day, four days a week, four nights a week. Students seminars taught by U.S. colleges over a two-year period are enhanced by opportunities not available in a traditional school. Students language skills superior to students completing two years programs in U.S. colleges. BEGINNER OR ADVANCED: Cust has about the same as a laminate in a 16' lbs. furniture $3,300 or an upholstery in a 24' lbs. furniture $4,800. New York, room, board, and tuition combine government grants and loans may be paid off. Not just for Spanish majors, but everyone, beginners, "in between" students, and advanced. Put some excitement into your college career! Hurry, it takes a lot of time to make all arrangements. rangements SPRING SEMESTER -- Jan 30-May 29 FALL SEMESTER -- Aug 29-Dec 19 SEMESTER IN SPAIN 2442 E Collier S.E. M-5 Grand Rapids, Michigan 46008 (A Program of Trinity Christian College) college you attend SPRING SEMESTER — Jan 30 - May 29 FALL SEMESTER — Aug 29 - Dec 19 each year. FULLY ACCREDITED — A Program of Trinity Christian College For full information — send coupon to your name your present street address city state zip If you would like information on future programs give permanent address below. your permanent street address your permanent street address city state zip CORRECTED EDITION HOTOGRAPH BY GORDON PARKS (Clockwise from top) Whopi Goldberg in a pensive moment in Steven Spielberg's groundbreaking The Color Purple Speaks Like Us brings Chevy Chase face to face with a gun-toting Russian agent (Vanessa Angel); Broadway dancers get their moment in the spotlight in A Chorus Line, which features (inset) Nicole Fose (daughter of director/choreographer Bob Fosse) in a starring role. --- jewel. Ralph, played by Danny De Vito, also helps, when he's not falling off his camel. Like Romancing the Stone, The Jewel of the Nile provides a healthy dose of comedy along with the action. However, Douglas, who is also producing, promises Jewel will have a lot more action than Romancing the Stone, including a perilous train ride, a climb up the side of a mountain under enemy gunfire and a chase through the desert. Kathleen Turner is happy to be playing Joan again. She was reluctant at first because she, "didn't think the script was very good. Then Michael went to work, and now it's right in tune with *Romancing* People liked Joan and the spirit of the first film. She is probably the closest to me that I've ever played. She's got that mixture of cockiness and fear. She'll say, 'I'll try even if you can't handle it.' Nancy Mills Revolution " it was our war too," says English director Hugh Hudson (Chairman of Firestone) (Continues with the chronicle of the American Revolution, "and we lost it for precisely the same reasons that America lost the war in Vietnam. "We were 3000 miles across the Atlantic. It took 11 weeks for supplies to get to America. It was the first guerrilla war, and the Americans hid out much like the Vietcong did." Shooting took place in a remote town in East Anglia, England, where the architecture and harbor of colonial New York could be duplicated. "There wan't any place in America with enough period wooden build- Revolution, which stars Ai Pacino, Nastassia Kinski and Donald Sutherland is essentially the story of a father son relationship that is complicated by twin love affairs and political events beyond their control. mgs still standing," says Hudson, "so we in England." "The story is fictional, the history is accurate," says Hudson. Mike Bygrave & Joan Goodman Enemy Mine The time is 100 years from now, and America's enemy is no longer Russia but a distant planet named Dracon. Dennis Dquaplays an Earth space pilot and Lou Gossetton an alien "Drac." They both crash on a hostile planet during a dog-fight in the year 2085. Despite being marooned in alien territory, they continue hostilities. **Enemy Mine**, 20th Century Fox's $25 million science fiction film, "promises to be a combination Robinson Crusoe and Hell in the Pacific. "I'm not a real sci fi buff" admits director Wolfgang Petersen, best known for his 1982 film *Das Root*. SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) P Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. typical college picture. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. Police said they had no reason "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Mustgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the consecration ceremony Monday. the concerned Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." college pranks. Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whover took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Musgrave said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 2013 House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that raise money, approved an extension The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. Senate leader tension, com- revenue-raising have the effect the bills thre- date as the Hot The Senate a night on a vote House and Sena the short-term day, before the of money. But Reagan ling not to accension. The it pressure on bait tied to a yea federal borrow, an increase the of money at m! Wolf Creek derehearing on United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments that formula to allotually to recover investment the over the life of Gas & Electric Power & L together own plant - contemission incerrate base upon you may earn a ret The commis with KCPL's utility incorrect cost of nuclear The result 2 Suvy Meet/KANSAN R. D. B. William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The two say their greatest accomplishment was to "restore organization" to Student Senate. "At the beginning, Dennis is your typical American pilot who thinks he's great and others are nothing. There's a real hate between him and the Drac. Slowly they learn more about each other, and this turns into respect and eventually love. The story deals with prejudice against people who look and act different." about a German U boat in World War II "11. The reason I wanted to make this film was what takes place between these characters. Nancy Mills Clue "W ill Miss Scarlet meet Colonel Mustard and Professor Plum in the library? Purpose of the meeting--murder' Such were the sort of memes lying around Paramount Pictures during production on the film of *Clue*, the perennially popular board game business Analyst Guide FINANCE Get down to business faster. With the BA-35. If there's one thing business students have always needed, this is it: an affordable, business-oriented calculator. The Texas Instruments BA-35, the Student Business Analyst. Its built-in business formulas let you perform complicated finance, accounting and statistical functions - the ones that usually require a lot of time and a stack of reference books like present and future value © 1985 T1 calculations, amortizations and balloon payments. The BA-35 means you spend less time calculating, and more time learning. One keystroke takes the place of many. The calculator is just part of the package. You also get a book that follows most business courses: the Business Analyst Guidebook. Business professors helped us write it, to help you get the most out of calculator and classroom. A powerful combination. Think business. With the BA-35 Student Business Analyst. TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Creating useful products and services for you. which has taught three generations of children the conventions of the genteel, country house murder. "Of course, it's a dream come true—though I haven't had any time to think about it," said the cheerful director and writer Johnathan Lymn, as he maneuvered a top flight come dy cast including Eileen Brennen, Madeline Kahn, Martin Mull, Christoper Lloyd (Back to the Future), Tim Curry and Michael McKean (Spiral Tap) through the elaborate in door sets for the mysterious mansions "somewhere on the Eastern seaboard," site of Clue's night of mishaps, mayhem and murder Said Tim Curry (who plays the butler), "It's exhausting but it's the happiest film I've ever worked on. In fact, I wouldn't mind if I died tomorrow...but then, I may die tomorrow—Jonathan Lynn hasn't even told us how the film ends!" ♦ Ampersand 21 SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) U Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this." Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. “This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial,” he said. Musgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the consecration ceremony Monday. Musgrave said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." College students Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." Mustrugue said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 CORONAVIRUS House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that raise money, only to Dec. 6 to免密. Senate bail tension, revenue-rise have the offi- cion's bills date as the The Senate night on a nite House and be the short-term day, before lf of money. But Reagua ing not to acce- tion. The pressure on bond tied to a federal borrow an increase, lt money at r United Press International Wolf Creek de rehearing on TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a carbon stock and that it rejected a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments to the formula to allure to reco investment it over the life of Gas & Electric Power & together own plant — conte mission incorrate base upon may earn a re The comm with KCUP's utility incorrate cost of nuclear The result ALEXANDRIA MUNRO William Easley and Jeff Potack, student body preside and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The he say their greatest accomplishment was to "restor organization" to Student Senate. Suvv Mant/KANSA FILM OPENINGS NOV.15—FEVER PITCH This one is about the unhappy world of the habitual gambler. Ryan O'Neal is a sportswriter who investigates. NOV.15—ONCEBITTEN A horror spoof about a young man who falls for an older woman and realizes too late that her pointy fangs have nothing to do with poor orthodontics. Lauren Hutton is the vampires. NOV.27—ROCKY IV The odds-on favorite to be the most popular movie of the season, this one pits Rocky Balboa against a champion boxer from the Soviet Union. NOV. 27—WHITE NIGHTS DEC. 8--FOOL FOR LOVE An unusual, stylish "musical adventure" about a ballet star (Mikhail Baryshnikov), who has defected from the Soviet Union, only to have the bad luck to be on an airplane forced to land in Siberia. Gregory Hines is the co-star. Sam Shepard stars in this adaptation of his stageplay, which involves a confrontation between two old lovers, who happen to be half-brother and sister. DEC. 6----SPIES LIKE US Only two men can save the world from total nuclear destruction: Chevy Chase and Dan Aykroyd. Which means we could be in for some big trouble. The longest-running play in Broadway history comes to the screen. Michael Douglas heads the cast of this musical comedy-drama. Dennis Quail and Louis Gossett (under layers of "alien" make) as enemy flight plots from different worlds who crash land on an uninhabited planet. DEC. 11—ENEMY MINE DEC. 12—A CHORUS LINE DEC.13 Richard Pryor produced directed, cowrote and stars in this drama about a comic who nearly loses his life in a drug-related accident. JO JO DANCER, YOUR LIFE IS CALLING DEC. 13—YOUNG SHENLOCK HOLMES CALENDAR Steven Spielberg produced, but didn't direct. this mystery story about the supposed first meeting of Sherlock Holmes and John Watson, when both were just young schoolboys. DEC. 20—THE COLOR PURPLE DEC.13—THE MONEY PIT DEC. 13—REVOLUTION A big, lush drama about the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Al Pacino, Nastassja Kinski and Donald Sutherland star. DEC. 18—THE JEWEL OF THE NILE Steven Spielberg has decided to get serious, directing the film adaptation of Alice Walker's novel, The Color Purple, which chronicles the life of a poor, Southern black woman. Changes of pace don't come much bigger. DEC. 20—101 DALMATIANS Light-hearted adventure continues as Kathleen Turner, Michael Douglas and Danny DeVitio recreate their roles from Romancing the Stone. Tom Hanks and Shelley Long in a comedy about a couple who try to restore an old house amid much bad luck. A tongue-in-cheek version of the old movie classic, featuring Richard Chamberlain as an African explorer So, you think you've outgrown cartoons. Well, 101 Dalmatians is one of Disney's best, probably more entertaining than many real movies. DEC. 22—OUT OF AFRICA Ampersand Robert Redford. Meryl Streep. How's that for a big-time star combo? The story is based on a series of novels about the real exploits of a woman who ran a Kenyan plantation around 1900. DEC. 25—MURPHY'S ROMANCE A light comedy about the romance between a divorced mother (Sally Field) and an older, small town pharmacist (James Garner) 22 LATE DECEMBER—GLUE The most unusual movie of the season JAN.1—THE BEST OF TIMES may be this comic-mystery, based on the popular board game of the same name. Robin Williams and Kurt Russell star in this football comedy about a group of adult men who get one more chance to play that "big game" they lost in high school. TELEVISION EARLY NOV.—48 HOURS It's sweeps month, so NBC has brought out this 1982 hit movie. Edie Murphy is the convict who must help a cop (Nick Nolte) track down a dangerous killer. NOV. 3-10-NORTH & SOUTH (ABC) John Jakes, pulpy story about two families on opposite sides of the Civil War was made for a mini-series. MID-NOV.—BYNASTY II: THE COLBYS You thought those crazy Carringtons had problems? Wait until you meet their California in laws, the Colbyrs, in this spin-off. MID-NOV.—AN EARLY FROST This, television's first "AIDS movie," features Ben Gazzara and Gena Rowlands as parents whose son, Aidan Quinn) is dying from the deadly disease. (NBC) MID-NOV. NBC's 60TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION (NBC) 60 years ago NBC first went on the air as a radio network, and this special will look at the birth and growth of both radio and TV through the past six decades. NOV. 28—COMET HALLEY JOHN AND YOKO: A LOVE STORY There's a visitor coming. This documentary examines the history of Halley's Comet (PBS) EARLY DEC. (NBC) A three-hour movie about the marriage of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, from their meeting in 1966 to Lennon's violent death in 1980. MUSIC: THE RETURN OF PERRY MASON EARLY DEC. DEC.1—BLEAK HOUSE DEC. 9, 10—ALICE IN WONDERLAND (NBC) This seems to be the year of returns, including this fellow, the always-victorious attorney Perry Mason. Raymond Burr returns as Mason. Having trouble reading Dickens? Then why not try watching Dickens in this dramatization, starring Diana Rigg and Denholm Elliott on "Masterpiece Theater." Alistair Cook is even better than Cliff Notes. (PBS) Musical adaptation of Lewis Carroll's classic fantasy. Among the stars popping up as citizens of Wonderland are Steve Allen (who also wrote the songs), Scott Baio, Sally Struthers, Patrick Duffy, Ringer Starr and Jonathan Winters. (CBS) DEC.31 MTV 5TH ANNUAL NEW YEAR'S EVE ROCK 'N' ROLL BALL (MTV) Definitely the spot for the rock co-gnocenti-or anyone else-looking for a rockin' good evening. ANTARCTICA; EARTN'S LAST FRONTIER (PBJS) Yes, it's DEC. 31, and you know what that means. That's the night NOVA repeats its famous episode about the penguins and seals of Antarctica. Television worth paying for! TOURING IN NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER The Four Tops and Temptations (These original sounds from Motown still make good music and a great show), Air Supply (primarily East Coast), Oingo Boingo, Spyro Gyra, The Untouchables (many on-campus stops), R.E.M. (starts Nov. 1), The Truth, Sade (including a Dec. 10 stop at N.Y.'s Radio City Music Hall), Simple Minds, Blasters, Del Fuegos, Rough Cutt, DIO, The Roses. SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985. VOL. 96. NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) T Rain Details page 3 Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m Tuesday, KU police said. Police said they had no suspects "I don't know why anyone would do something like this." Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Minggrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing, too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Mustgray, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson director of facilities operations said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concrection ceremony Monday. Substitution he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial had nothing on what Wendy said. "But of course, that's not the case now." Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." Musgrave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Fat too often the Vietnam yet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we servied our country." Musgrave said that torestem in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the concession ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL p. 5, col. 1 House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. raise money approved an extension But neither deny press secretary raise money only to Dec Senate leader tension, co- mmerce riskse have the effect their bills on date as the bill is The Senate night on a voic night on a raid. Because the House and Sense the short term day, before the of money. But Reagan not to accen- tension. The if" pressure on a bation tied to a yea- federal borrow, an increase, the an increase at m Wolf Creek de rehearing on The KCC did agree with utility United Press International In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. The commis with KCPL's utility incorrect cost of nuclear The resulti ALEXANDER H. ROBINSON arguments that formula to alluily to recov investment the over the life of Gas & Electric Power & I together own plant - cont ermission incorate rate base upon may earn a ret Suzy Mast/KANSA William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The two say their greatest accomplishment was to "restore organization" to Student Senate I will wait for you. I can see you in the distance. True blue. What's a little paint between friends? Latch those drogs on Kodakcolor VR wip film. Sharp enough to capture the brilliant splatters, versatile enough to pick up the shades of detail. So even if the sunlight fades, you can still show off your school colors. Kodak film. Because time goes by. THE DOG Kodacenter Vr X40 --- SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as carvases See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV 14 1985 VOL. 96 NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the safe of the plained Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this can't be a typical college jeopardy. The drawing, in a 'Pixygloss' and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned institutional site during a conservation ceremony at 4 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Pacific police they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KI Victim Memorial Committee said costlessly. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thong too frequently, and why they did it "This is a cawfully act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidences of the memorial," he said. Mustrage who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. Mustragr said he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial. "Just of course, that's not the case now," Mustragr said. "Speaking as Vietnam veteran, a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank. college primers. Mmusgave, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country. wasgravis said that foremost in his mind when he heard about the theft were the faces of some of the people who had attended the consecration ceremony — the widow of a man who was killed while serving with the See VANDAL p.5 col 1 A House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan United Press International WASHINGTON. The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and assert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. rational tens relevant tidal data importing I Hotter the date of I important teaching position an of But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that Wolf Creek rehearing United Press International TOPEKA The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.00 billion Wall Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper oil deposit because it contained a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at revoking the rate case. arm tau inv over tog plas rat rate T wither util cill The KCC did agree with utility 100 William Emley and unit Polock, student b and vice president, and their terms next Fri. Say, their greatest accomplishment was organization to Student Senate CANADA ROCKY IV A ROBBIE CHAPTER 10 VINN WINNIE TRICKY MINE SAVVEST STATION 24 JAMES SHIRL BROOKLYN MOUNTAIN BRIDGE NASHUA MIKE PEELTONHILL WINNIE JULIA HILL BUTTER AMI D. BROBBLE 47 JIMMY CROWNWAN VINN WINNIE CHAPTER 1 BRIDGE CAPTURE SAVVEST STATION 3 ★ NOV E M B E R 27 t h rational thought. They know they can sit down and have a Crystal and Madonna hang over Polack's door. The gavel Maril KANSAN Mast/XANSAN B mail for a See story er Detroit of KU officials because of the devised game le this morning son to obtain announcing would have to seen arranged me would be mer the Rider season. "em," he said, game in Allen. first-minute differ apparently ties that come in awkward mistration for against. 50 or the year's x's financing we wanted to aging student inst it were been affected. Her." he bill failed I have revolu- ney. ad to vote in votes short as a very im- ie campaign it accomplish many students issues from average" for average" for See SENATE, p. 5, col. 3. SINCE 1889 Trashy paintings Art student finds dumpsters double nicely as canvases See page 3 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 59 (USPS 650-640) a Rain Details page 3. Vietnam vet angered over drawing's theft By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Within 24 hours of its being placed at the site of the planned Vietnam memorial Monday, an architect's drawing of the memorial was stolen. A Vietnam veteran says this isn't a typical college prank. typical college portrait. The drawing, in a Plexiglas and stainless steel frame, was placed on a metal pole at the planned memorial site during a consecration ceremony at 3 p.m. Monday and was discovered stolen at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday, KU police said. Sea said. Police said they had no suspects. "I don't know why anyone would do something like this," Lisa Ashner, a member of the KU Vietnam Memorial Committee, said yesterday. John Musgrave, a veteran of the Vietnam War, said he remembered a time when people did this sort of thing too frequently, and why they did it. "This is a cowardly act made by a person or persons wishing to make some sort of twisted statement about the war or the policies that led us there by attacking the first physical evidence of the memorial," he said. Mustgrave, who has worked for two years to see the memorial become a reality, said the theft had not been the first act against the memorial project. The pole the drawing was to be placed on was stolen before the ceremony, he said. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said his staff worked to replace the pole in time for the concession ceremony Monday. the connective he first considered the theft of the pole a random act that had nothing to do with the memorial "But of course, that's not the case now," Musgrave said. "Speaking as a Vietnam veteran, as a member of the committee that has worked for two years for this memorial, my impression is that this is not a random act of vandalism or a high-spirited college prank." college prince, who joined the peace movement after returning from Vietnam, said he thought whoever took the drawing was behaving in the same way some people behaved during the war — blaming the veteran for a situation he had not created. "Far too often the Vietnam vet has been held up to ridicule and to blame, when we did nothing more that what our forefathers had done — we served our country." House, Senate buy time to hash out budget plan See VANDAL, p. 5, col. 1 United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate yesterday approved different versions of a small increase in the federal debt limit to buy another month to work on balanced budget legislation and avert a U.S. default while President Reagan is in Geneva. But because the two houses failed to agree on how to approach the short-term increase in the government's borrowing authority, the issue was still unresolved. The House agreed to an $80 billion increase in the debt ceiling, up to $1.9 trillion, which they said was enough to cover the nation's bills through Dec. 13. But the Senate, citing routine Treasury Department actions that raise money, approved an extension only to Dec. 6. Senate leaders said the shorter extension, combined with regular revenue-raising measures, would have the effect of covering the nation's bills about the same date as the House measure. The Senate action was taken last night on a voice vote with no debate. Because the bills are different, the House and Senate will have to resolve the short-term extension issue by today, before the government runs out of money. But Reagan himself was threatening not to accept the one-month extension. The threat would keep the pressure on balanced-budget legislation tied to a year-long increase in the federal borrowing authority. Without an increase, the government runs out of money at midnight tonight. But neither deputy press secretary Larry Speakes, Treasury Secretary James Baker nor budget director James Miller would say flatly that the president would veto the short-term hike. Assistant Senate Republican leader Alan Simpson of Wyoming said Reagan must be allowed to go to the Geneva summit with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev-Saturday "in the essence of strength." "The ball is in Congress' court, not in the White House court." Baker said. Assistant House Republican leader Trent Lott of Mississippi said the overriding factor in favor of passing the short-term debt extension was that the president is going to Geneva and to have a government in default would be a weakening of his position. 1984 Under cover Treacy Knorr, Greely, Colo., sophomore, and Barbara Stokes, Tuisa, Okla., sophomore, escape the cold mist for a moment as they pass under an arch leading to the chancellor's fountain. Similar weather is expected today. See story page three. Wolf Creek denied rehearing on rates United Press International TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday denied a rate rehearing to utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, but did adjust its order to permit two of the firms to earn an additional $6 million. In an administrative meeting, the commission rejected utility arguments that it had acted arbitrarily when it declared $3.05 billion Wolf Creek plant should be valued like a cheaper coal-fired plant. Also rejected was a lengthy list of other arguments aimed at reopening the rate case. The KCC did agree with utility arguments that it miscalculated a formula to allow the utilities eventually to recover the cost of their investment through depreciation over the life of the plant. Kansas Gas & Electric Co. and Kansas City Power & Light Co. — which together own 94 percent of the plant — contended that the commission incorrectly reduced the rate base upon which the utilities may earn a return. The commission also agreed with KCPI's argument that the utility incorrectly calculated the cost of nuclear fuel inventory. The resulting depreciation See WOLF CREEK, p. 5. col. 1 N.J. college offers to postpone game KU set to play Detroit and Louisville By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff The on-again, off-again men's basketball game with the University of Louisville, proposed for Jan. 25 but never officially scheduled because of legal snags, apparently is on again. Ships, apperance is on June So is the game with Detroit University on Jan 6. Barring an unforeseen circumstances, the men's basketball team will play both the Detroit Titans and the Louisville Cardinals this season. Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, said last night. Hunter said scheduling both games became possible after officials from Rider College, Lawrenceville, N.J., offered to postpone until another season the KU-Rider basketball game scheduled for Jan. 8 in Allen Field House. Because of the 28 game limit imposed by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, the University of Kansas could not play both teams without dropping a game with another team from its schedule. schedule to U-Louisville game will be nationally televised by NBC TV. Hunter said. The network, which was "very anxious" to telewise the game, had informed Rider of the scheduling conflict. "In the spirit of cooperation and good sportsmanship, Rider College came forward and volunteered to reschedule their game with Kansas to a later date," he said. "This was not at the request of KU." An injunction issued Oct. 29 by Judge Susan D. Bordman of the Wayne County Court Court in Detroit prohibited KU from playing Louisville unless it also played Detroit. The injunction had been sought by Detroit officials to force KU to play ball. Detroit filed a breach of contract suit against KU after KU officials announced Aug. 27 that the Jayhawks would not play in Detroit this season. The KU announcement came after Detroit officials refused to postpone the game. KU officials had requested the postponement because of the chance to schedule the nationally televised game with Louisville. with Leonard. He said he would meet this morning with Athlete Director Monte Johnson to obtain Johnson's go-ahead before officially announcing the schedule change. Last night, Johnson said that he would have to check to make sure all details had been arranged before confirming that the Rider game would be dropped. dropped. "Assuming that there aren't any last-minute difficulties, I'm relieved that this matter apparently is resolved," he said. Hunter said he didn't know whether the Rider game would be rescheduled for next season. "I'm not sure when we'll play them," he said. "But we definitely will give them a game in Allen Field House in a future year." CHEMICAL ECONOMICS William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, end their terms next Friday. The two say their greatest accomplishment was to "restore organization" to Student Senate. Suzv Mast/KANSAN Easlev. Polack look back on their terms This is the second in a series of stories dealing with Student Senate and the Senate elections scheduled for next Wednesday and Thursday. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff William Easley and Jeff Polack, student body president and vice president, won their offices a year ago by the largest margin in the history of Student Senate. They promised a campus safety package and a revision of financing practices. financing practice. Their unspoken promise, however, was to return the Sustainable conservation – to bring back the gavel. That is the promise that students and administrators say Easley and Polack lived up to best. "William and Jeff restored a level of integrity and civility to the Senate, therefore adding credibility." David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said recently. Polack said that besides surviving the entire year, the biggest accomplishment of the term was settling things down. down. Easley said, "We've brought organization back to student government. I think we've also enhanced the communication between us and the administration. They take us more as a force now than they used to. They know that they can't pull the wool over our eyes or ignore us ... Polack added. "And they know that we are capable of rational thought. They know they can sit down and have a discussion with us without us breaking into chants." Easley and Polack's method of running the Senate, said Tim Henderson, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, was "very Machiavellian." "Machiavellian implies efficiency, political cleverness and expediency," he said. Efficiency, however, is not necessarily effectiveness, said Michael Foubert, graduate senator. He said the two worked well with the administration but did not always direct the Senate. he said, "the selves capture something" Foubert said, "you have to describe what to do with it. They never did that." Easley said political philosophy in the Senate swung back and forth like a pendulum. He said the Senate had been conservative until Carla Vogel and Dennis "Boog" Highberger, last year's student body president and vice president, put more liberal ideas into practice. Highberger said, "We came out of left field. We tried to take the Senate to the streets, to the students. I think their approach is to stay in the office." ideas into practice. The day after Vogel and Highberger were elected, they put a poster of Che Guevera, a revolutionary leader, on the Senate office door. a more liberal Senate. These days, John F. Kennedy stares down into Easley's office from a framed portrait on the wall. Posters of Billy Crystal and Madonna hang over Polack's door. The gavel Easley said the pendulum was now back in the middle. He said he and Polack were traditional leaders governing a more liberal Senate. sits on Polack's desk, not much worse for the year's wear. wear. Rayley and Polack say the responsibilities that come with their jobs have sometimes put them in awkward positions. They are accountable to the administration for Senate actions that they may have fought against. The Senate rejected Easley and Polack's financing plan early in their term. nor early in the day. "The votes weren't there," Easley said. "We wanted to make it so that Student Senate was encouraging student organizations to become self-supportive." "Some of the senators who voted against it were members of organizations that may have been affected. It would have made them work a little harder." It would have made the bill fail. He said they were frustrated when the bill failed because they thought the finance plan would have revolutionized the way the Senate distributed money. Two-thirds of the Senate would have had to vote in favor of the bill, Easley and Polack were five votes short. "There are sour grapes here because it was a very important bill and one we built our whole campaign around," he said. member said Enesley and Polack could not accomplish many of the things they wanted to because many students in the Senate could not separate issues from personalities. personalized added Easley and Polack "below average" for tangible accomplishments but "well above average" for See SENATE. p. 5, col. 3 2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 PHILADELPHIA $ ^+ $ A man who in 1984 donated sperm used to inseminate 19 women was found to have antibodies associated with AIDS in his blood in a recent follow-up test, a hospital spokesman said yesterday. News Briefs 50% more farmers bail out, bank says MINNEPOLIS, Minn. — The Federal Reserve Bank of Minnesota said yesterday that the number of upper Midwest farmers going out of business had increased more than 50 percent from a year ago. It was not known whether the man who donated the sperm was infected with AIDS at the time of the donation, said Ronald Bologneis, director of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Pennsylvania Hospital. In late September, the Federal Reserve Bank surveyed 100 bankers in rural areas of Minnesota, Montana, North and South Dakota and northwestern Wisconsin. "On average, the surveyed bankers said the number of district farmers who went out of business due to financial stress between April and September 1985 was up more than 50 percent from these months in 1984," the report said. The bankers said partial liquidations were up almost as sharply. Donor tests positive The sperm was collected before mid-1984, when no AIDS screening test existed. Lewis recuperating MEMPHIS, Tem. — Jerry Lee Lewis' doctors said yesterday that he was expected to fully recover from a life-threatening stomach ulcer. "They think he's going to make a 100 percent recovery. They think — I know, "Kerrie Lewis said at Methodist Hospital, where her husband was listed in satisfactory condition. Lewis' doctors told Tuesday's four-hour operation would probably prevent future stomach trouble for Lewis. From Kansan wires Israel's unity shaken by dispute United Press International JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Shimon Peres threatened yesterday to fire Trade Minister Ariel Sharon unless he apologized for criticizing Perez's peace overcruces to Jordan, throwing the future of Israel's fragile 14-month government of national unity into doubt. Sharon accused Peres Monday of meeting secretly with Jordanian and Palestinian officials. He also said Peres agreed to talks with Syria, failed to exclude the Palestine Liberation Organization from future talks and risked the peace with Egypt by being weak after seven Israelis were killed Oct. 5 along the Sinai coast by a disturbed Egyptian guard. Sharon issued an apology for the remarks, but Peres reported said the statement did not go far enough. Sharon refused to say whether he would alter further the tone of his statements. The dismissal of Sharon, the Jewish state's greatest war hero, could cause his fellow Likud ministers to leave the government, thus tapping the coalition government in which the nation's two main parties, the Likud and Peres' Labor Party, are united with an equal number of ministers. Also under the 50-month unity arrangement, Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir, leader of the Likud bloc, is scheduled to take over as prime minister in October 1986 when Peres will have been in the post 25 months. But Peres, according to Israel Radio last night, said he would hand Sharon a letter of dismissal unless the bully former general and defense minister issued an "explicit and unambiguous" apology for attacking Peres' peace policies. Israel radio said. Israel radio quoted Shamir as saying that Peres would bear responsibility for the dissolution of the national unity government. After the Cabinet meeting, Sharon said, "I express regret about serious things which insulted the prime minister personally, but certainly expressed my position on the fundamental and essential matters of Israel's existence and security." Peres rejected Sharon's apology at the meeting because, an aide said, it was "neither sicer nor an expression of confidence in the government," the radio reported. Peres' aides had caused some confusion earlier by telling reporters that the prime minister had given Sharon the letter of dismissal. But Sharon told reporters he had not been given a letter. At the Cabinet meeting, Shamir warned Peres that firing Sharon would destroy "the possibility of the existence" of the coalition. If Sharon is fired and the other Likud ministers follow him out of the government, Peres will be faced with replacing or forming a government with the smaller religious parties and leftist factions. Peres had apparently called the special Cabinet meeting to announce the firing of Sharon, then stopped short of dismissing the former tank commander who fought in Israel's first five wars and, as defense minister, engineered the sixth, in Lebanon. Trial begins for hijackers United Press International GENOA, Italy — Four Palestinians accused of hijacking the Achille Lauro luxury liner and an alleged accomplice will go on trial Monday on charges of illegal possession of weapons and explosives, prosecutors said yesterday. The Palestinians are expected to be tried early next year on the more serious charges of hijacking the Italian ship, kidnapping the 511 people aboard and murdering American passenger Leon Klinghoffer, 69, New York. Melioni said at a news conference that the alleged accomplice was Mohamed Kalas, 25, who was arrested in Genoa Sept. 28 for carrying two passports, one Iraqi and one Moroccan. Assistant state prosecutor Francesco Luigi Meloni identified the alleged hijackers who will go on trial Monday as Magied Al Molqi, 23, the alleged gunman in the Klinghofer killing, Ahmad Al Assadi, 23, Ibrahim Abdelatif, 20, and Bassam Al Ashker, 22. Investigators later determined he had also planned to board the Italian cruise ship at Genoa on Oct. 3 with the other hijackers, Meloni said. Court hears Miranda case United Press International WASHINGTON — A Reagan administration lawyer told the Supreme Court yesterday that its 1986 Miranda ruling listing the rights of the accused should not be used to thwart questioning of suspects at the stationhouse. The case will determine whether suspects who have waived their right to be silent must be informed of a lawyer's attempt to meet with them. "There is no constitutional policy against obtaining and using voluntary confessions." Deputy Solicitor General Andrew Frey said during hourlong arguments in a Rhode Island murder case. "There is no direct constitutionally-created right of a suspect to counsel during interrogation." murder confession was thrown out by a lower court. The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in January that Burbine's confession was invalid, because police failed to tell him that an attorney had asked to speak with him. Rhode Island officials appealed the ruling. Frey presented the administration's views on Miranda in the case of Brian Burin of Providence, whose Frey, elaborating on earlier statements made by Attorney General Edwin Meese, said the Miranda ruling was the court's way of giving detectives guidelines to insure that the rights of the accused were not violated. "The fact is police don't have to provide a lawyer even if he asks for one," Frey said. "They only have to cease interrogation." The Miranda decision requires police, before interrogation, to inform suspects of their rights to an attorney and to remain silent. Senate votes to limit imports United Press International WASHINGTON — The Senate, in a signal to the White House that it wants a more aggressive trade policy, yesterday approved a bill to protect the domestic textile and shoe industries from competition by cheap imports. The measure passed 60-39 — seven votes short of the two/thirds needed to override a presidential veto. It would cut imports from the three largest exporters — Taiwan, Korea and Hong Kong — and limit future growth of all textile and clothing imports. The bill now goes back to the House to work out differences with the version it recently approved. The Senate version limits shoe imports to 60 percent of the domestic market. The House bill does not limit shoes. At the White House, a spokesman said after the vote, "Our position has not changed. The president continues to oppose all protectionist bills." stern measures would be taken by this administration between the time the bill passed and the time it came back to the Senate from a presidential veto. Before the vote, Senate Republican leader Robert Dole of Kansas announced that he would support the measure, which President Reagan has strongly opposed as protectionist and has threatened to veto. Dole said that he still hoped some After voting overwhelmingly to take up the textile quota measure early yesterday, supporters knocked down a series of weakening amendments in fast order before the final vote. Future talks may hinge on summit United Press International WASHINGTON — Next week's summit between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev can be considered a success if the two leaders agree to future meetings, two experts said yesterday. "It if results in another summit . . . it is going to be of major significance," said Dmitri Simes, a Soviet emigree and expert on the Soviet Union at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Brent Scowcroft, White House national security adviser in the Ford administration, said the summit could be considered successful if the two leaders "could establish a pattern of routine heads of state meetings." That, he said, would eliminate the freency of preparing for irregular summits. Scowcroft and Simes spoke at a joint news conference arranged by Foreign Policy magazine. Snowcroft said the best that could be hoped for in the short-term from the summit was agreement on such things as increased consular and cultural ties or a joint communique of statement of principles on arms control. While future summits are important, Scowcrow said, the emphasis put on good interpersonal relationships between top leaders is one of the main fallacies of evaluating superpower relations. "We delude ourselves if we think personalities are going to transform this relationship," Scowcroft said. The two experts agreed that Reagan was correct to insist on discussion with his counterpart in Geneva next Tuesday and Wednesday of world trouble spots such as Afghanistan and Nicaragua, and not focus solely on arms control. "Arms do not produce wars, situations produce wars," said Simes. Scowcroft called arms control "the thermometer, not the disease." Scowcroft said the summit was only No. 3 on Gorbachev's list of priorities as he seeks to consolidate his power after taking over after the death of Konstantin Chernenko last March. ... Mister Guy's oversized tweed jacket perfect with skirts, slacks or jeans... Mister Guy...lawrence's only complete specialty shop for the traditionally minded man and woman... free refreshments on all home ku football games!! Hours: M-T-W-F-Sal. 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. 10:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Sun, noon-5 p.m. MISTER GUY 920 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 842-2700 UP IN THE AIR Coca-Cola ABOUT WHAT TO DO? WE PROMISE NOT TO LEAVE YOU HANGING IN MID-AIR. IT WON'T COST A DIME TO WALK THROUGH THE DOOR TO SEE THE EXCITEMENT THAT THURSDAY NIGHTS HAVE BEEN GENERATING. YOU THURSDAY NIGHT PEOPLE SIMPLY LOOK MAHVELOUS. $1.25 DRINKS ALL NIGHT LONG GAMMONS SNOW G GAMONS SNOWIES Baby BOOMERS Southern Hills Mall 23rd & Ousdahl BABY BOOMERS Southern Hills Mall 3 Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 News Briefs Campus/Area Firefighter resigns after cocaine arrest Tommy Teague, a Lawrence firefighter who pleaded no contest. Nov. 5 to a charge of conspiracy to possess cocaine, resigned yesterday from the fire department, Fire Chief Jim McSwain said. Teague was suspended without pay after his arrest in June for suspicion of possession of cocaine. McSwain said the resignation was accepted and was considered effective yesterday. He was originally charged with possession of cocaine and possession of drug paraphernalia. John Flory, Douglas County District Attorney, amended the charges in exchange for Teague's no contest plea. SUA position open Students interested in applying for public relations chairman for Student Union Activities may get an application at the SUA Office on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union Applications will be accepted until noon Nov. 21. Applicant interviews will be held beginning at 6 p.m. Nov. 21. or more information, contact the SUA office. The University of Kansas Collegium Musicum, an early music ensemble of instruments and voices, will present "Christmas Story" by Heinrich Schutz at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Spencer Museum of Art. Oratorio to be given Daniel T. Poltosk, professor of music history and director of the Collegium, said recently that "Christmas Story" was Schutz's most mature and elaborate example of a 17th century form of the oratorio. The performance celebrates the 400th anniversary of Schutz's birth in 1585. The concert includes several choruses, solos for the angel and King Herod, vocal ensembles representing the shepherds, wise men and high priests; and a tenor evangelist who tells the story of the birth of Jesus. The Kansan is accepting applications for spring semester editor and business manager. Kansan jobs open Applications are due by 5 p.m. Tuesday. They are available in the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, the journalism dean's office, 200 Stauffer-Flint, and the Student Senate Office, B-105 Kansas Union. Applicants will meet Dec. 2 with the Kansan Board, the governing body of the newspaper. The editor and business manager will be chosen afterward. Applications for other news and business staff positions are due by 5 p.m. Dec. 2 in 200 Stauffer-Flint. Weather Today will be cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain or thunderstorms. Highs will be in the mid- to upper 40s and winds will be northeast at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be cloudy with a 70 percent chance of rain or thunderstorms and lows around 40. Tomorrow will be cloudy with a 60 percent chance of rain or thunderstorms and highs in the mid- to upper 40s. Ruling sought on closed meeting University Daily Kansar The student body president and vice president Tuesday asked University general council for a formal opinion on whether the Student Senate Elections Committee violated the University Senate Code by closing a meeting on Nov. 6. By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Yesterday, the leaders of both Chrysalis and Common Sense coalitions said they would sign a document waiving their coalition's right to appeal the outcome of the elections based on "irregularities" that have occurred. night. Polack and William Easley, student body president, gave a copy of their request for a legal opinion about the closed meeting to each member of StudEx. They said they did not know when they would receive a reply. regularities. Common Sense leaders had already signed the waiver, and Chrysalis leaders plan to sign it, Jeff Polack, student body vice president, told the Student Senate Executive Committee in a meeting last night. "The bottom line is we've got a runaway subcommittee," Polack said, referring to the Elections Committee, "and no one has explicit authority to question it short of the Elections Review Board." Senate rules give the student body president the power to enforce the Code but do not specify how he is supposed to do that, Polack said. From staff and wire reports Easley did not comment on what, if any, action be planned to take. Alison Young, Senate Executive secretary, Sam Easley, as president, was in a difficult position. She said he would be criticized if he tried to stop the election, which could extend his term in office until another election was held. On the other hand, she said, he could set a dangerous precedent if he ignored the irregularities. The coalition leaders waiver, which was written by Polack, listed ten specific "irregularities" in the elections process that had occurred this semester, including: the decision by the Elections Committee to close its Nov. 6 meeting while discussing Senate seat apportionment. the Elections Committee's failure to provide Senate seat distribution figures until Nov. 6. - possible conflicts of interest for voting members of both the Elections Committee and StudEx. the decision by the Elections Committee and the Student Senate Executive Committee to use Oct. 21 enrollment figures rather than the full-time enrollment figures required by the Code. David Day, chairman of the Elections Committee, said all the irregularities did occur, but only the first two could be the basis for an appeal by coalition leaders or candidates. "Some of these are just Jeff and William reaching for something to put down here," Day said. "I don't mind if an appeal comes from the coalitions, but if it comes from within the Senate, it makes the whole Senate structure look bad." Med Center would like write-off By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff Marvin Burris, the associate director, said Med Center officials would ask the Regents at tomorrow's meeting in Topeka to authorize them to apply to the division of accounts and reports for permission to write off the uncollected money. The University of Kansas Medical Center is asking this week to have more than $3.3 million in unpaid bills written off as "uncollectable," the Kansas Board of Regents associate director for the budget said yesterday. Burris said that when efforts to collect overdue accounts failed, the last resort was to write off the loss, which is provided for by state law. While the Med Center writes off the accounts, Burris said, the state will absorb the actual loss, because the Med Center is a state agency. Keith Nitcher, KU director of business affairs, said the money the Med Center wanted to write off was from unpaid accounts beginning in 1800, from either delinquent accounts or accounts with individuals who had applied for bankruptcy. Before the University writes off unpaid accounts, Nitcher said, it makes several attempts to recover the money. He said the University would first try to collect the money on its own. If that effort failed, he said, the University would turn the matter over to the state. Nitcher said the state would try to get a payment from an individual's income tax returns. Even after writing off the loss, Nitcher said, 'the Med Center kept the names of people who did not pay their bills, hoping they eventually would pay. Burris said the delinquent accounts amounted to $2,850,325, and accounts with individuals who had filed for bankruptcy amounted to $341,133. Burris said that the Med Center wrote off uncollected accounts twice a year, in November and December. He said this year's write offs would surpass those of past years. In a normal year, Burris said, $3 million might be written off. He said that this year, the loss would be equal to about 10 percent of the Med Center's accounts. Burris said increased losses this year and last year were due to a recent change in a collection policy. He said the Med Center was attempting to clean up its backlog of overdue accounts. The Med Center wrote off losses of $3.7 million last November and $1.8 million last December. T. Wilfredo Lee/Special to the KANSAN Mike Stevens, Overland Park senior, wants to make trash dumpsters into works of art. Stevens is currently working on a dumpster behind McCollum Hall. Trash bins double as canvas By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff Some artists first envision their masterpieces in a flash of brilliant inspiration. Mike Stevens, a sophomore in the school of fine arts, conceived of his latest work during a walk to the grocery store. grocery store. "I saw those trash bins," Stevens, Overland Park sophomore, said Monday. "There's lots of surface there and it's not even being used." if it is not even ground. The result is that McColum Hall has been graced with a very avant-garde trash dumpster. stevens has smothered the sterile brown metal of the bin beneath a vibrant coat of fiery orange and cool turquoise paint. Box-like designs, in white, wreathe the trash bin like popcorn strung on a Christmas tree. And the creating continues. yellow fabric in 1977. Too many artists isolate themselves, he said, and bring out their works for viewing only when they are complete. However, he said, some of the public told him that his work — in short — was a mess. Is it vandalism, or artistic expression? "I'm trying to reverse that and do my work in public," he said. "The work isn't really complete. It's kind of evolving," Stevens said. Stevens takes his cue from the Burlington-born artist, Christo, who swathed the sidewalks of Kansas City's Loose Park in yards of "My view is that it's expression, and they think it's on a line between expression and vandalism," he said. "I guess maybe I am a borderline vandal. I get legal permission, but I'd love to have a bridge or subway to do my own thing with." Stevens got permission from the office of student housing and Max Shankard, Lawrence assistant director of public works. The trash bins are city property and Shankard said Stevens' request was the first of its kind that public works had received. "I don't think it will hurt anything as long as he doesn't cross out the cautions and warnings on the cans," Shankard said. Giving Stevens permission was easy enough, Shankard said, but a mood of similar requests might necessitate some sort of office policy. "There have been similar projects undertaken in cities across the country," he said, "and some of them have produced quite spectacular works." Dear Milroy, assistant d'lector of housing, said, "I guess I was receptive to his idea because I don't see anything attractive about the can anyway. I don't think anybody does." The designs on the bin looked much like graffiti when Stevens began, Milroy said, but as Stevens worked they began to take shape. "We have had some people who don't like it, but you can't please everybody," he said. The impressions Stevens' art leaves on McCollum kitchen staff include ghosts and skyscapes. Sheryl Kidwell, McCollum dietitian, said the bin brought an image of Daisy Hill viewed from the air to her mind. Stevers said, "It's not a picture of anything. There's no verbal connection; it's color." Congress considers cuts in aid By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff Financial aid for students, which has been eroded by inflation the last five years, may now be severely cut, as Congress struggles to reduce the federal budget deficit, a student lobbying organization said yesterday. Programs such as Pell Grants, College Work Study and Guaranteed Student Loans are in the middle of the current budget battle. Kathy Ozer, legislative director of the United States Student Association, a student lobbying organization in Washington, D.C., said yesterday that a proposal in the Senate, sponsored by Phil Gramm, R-Texas, and Warren Rudman, R-N.H., would result in massive reductions of financial aid. "This is the most drastic attack on student aid in the past five years," she said. "It would mean a dismantling of Guaranteed Student Loan and a cut of the Pell Grant by 15 percent." Yet the final result for students is difficult to determine in dollars and cents, said John Allen, director of legislative affairs for Associated Students of Kansas in Topeka. The many proposals in both the Senate and the House of Representatives will be amended and the houses need to reach an agreement before the final bill becomes a law. "A statute doesn't mean anything until it gets to the funding process. And there's no way of telling now how the statute will affect the funding," he said. Christina Bolton, legislative director for Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., said the United States Student Association were jumping to conclusions. Dole supports the Gramm-Rudman proposal. "Their figures are from a worstcase scenario," she said. "There's nothing in the plan that will affect students in a negative way." No conditions, such as requirements for eligibility, will change. Bolton said. "This plan will enable Congress to do something everybody doesn't want to do. The current system obviously isn't working." Bolton said. Ozer said the House passed an authorization bill to increase the maximum award for Pell Grants from $2,100 to $2,300 Tuesday. Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid at the University of Kansas, said he did not expect more money. The pot remains the same. Allen said that while Pell Grants had remained constant, the higher education price index, which includes cost-of-living and tuition changes, had increased 7 to 8 percent annually the last five years. College Work Study programs also have been eroded, Allen said, because the minimum wage has remained the same since 1981. Rogers said Guaranteed Student Loans had become more available because more lenders had entered the market. The GSL has picked up the slack when fewer students are awarded grants. Although lending money to students is labor intensive, it is profitable for banks because the government adds a special allowance of 3.5 percent on top of the interest. Bolton said the Gramm-Rudman proposal would save $200 million by reducing the lenders yield. Allen said reducing the lenders' incentive would threaten the GSL. "What's dangerous is that we're moving in the wrong direction," he said. "We're forcing over reliance on borrowing and increasing students' debt loads." 842-1212 Pizza Shuttle says: Get it together! 10—1 item 10" Pizzas $2500 Additional Pizzas $2 Additional items 50* 16 oz. Pepsis 25* Feed your fraternity, sorority, office, dorm floor, groups of any kind! PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FAST DELIVERY Pizza Shuttle 1601 West 23rd Southern Hills Mall 842-1212 MASS STREET DELL 041 MASSACHUSETTS Homemade CHOCOLATE,CHERRY LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake No coupons accepted with this offer. reg $1.50 95¢ £1.50 Offer good through Nov.30 THURSDAY Prime Rib Special $695 Also: 50° Pitchers 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $1 cover the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan 843-05 recip focal with over 300 clubs 843-0541 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Trouble in Lexington There's trouble in Lexington, the ol' Kentucky home of the basketball Wildcats. Last month, the Lexington Herald-Leader reported widespread payments to athletes from boosters and other violations of NCAA rules involving the University of Kentucky basketball team. Wildcat fans, who are downright rabid in their devotion to their team, didn't cheer the Herald-Leader's stories. And the paper certainly expected to get more than few pasty phone calls and letters. Since it published the reports, the Herald-Leader has received two bomb threats. More than 300 readers have cancelled their subscriptions. One man even threatened to beat his paper boy with a baseball bat if he tried to deliver the paper. But in this case, the fans went overboard. The newspaper's employees have been spat upon and verbally abused. Their front lawns have been covered with toilet paper, their cars sabotaged. Leader's reports. Some of the players interviewed in the stories have since said they were misquoted or their comments were taken out of context. In Lexington, the fans seem to object more to the paper's right to print stories critical of their basketball heroes, than to the facts included in those stories. But because of the newspaper's stories, the NCAA has begun an investigation into the Kentucky basketball program. On Tuesday, university officials imposed new rules on coaches, players and boosters that are stricter than NCAA requirements. The Herald-Leader's stories raise an important question: What happens when the press reports unfavorably on a popular public institution? Readers must remember that their right to comment goes hand in hand with freedom of the press. They may disagree with reporters, but should stay within the boundaries of fairness and human decency. There's a big difference, after all, between letters to the editor and bomb threats. Cutting ahead in line About 200 athletes streamed through the enrollment center in Strong Hall last week. KU officials bumped them ahead in line so they could enroll in spring semester classes that wouldn't conflict with practices. Their indignation was justified, their assessment accurate. The move upset many students who saw it as special treatment for athletes. But students who hold jobs or are involved in other time-consuming activities can't meet their commitments when they're in class, either. The University offers these students no pat solution to scheduling problems. They're left to fend for themselves. KU and Athletic Department officials say early enrollment for athletes can't be avoided. Coaches can't drill players in pass patterns and fast breaks, they say, if professors are drilling them in math and sneech. A chart labeled "Who gets to enroll first at Lawrence" appears inside the back cover of the Timetable. It explains that seniors and degree-seeking graduate students enroll first, followed by juniors and on down the line. Most upsetting about the athletes' enrolling early is that other students received no official word about it. It also tells how, to ensure fairness, students with the same class rank enroll according to the last three digits of their student numbers. Nowhere does the chart mention that athletes go to the head of the line on the first day of enrollment. For KU officials and coaches, bumps the athletes ahead probably prevented a few scheduling conflicts. But it compromised the University's reputation as a place of equal opportunity — where nobody supposedly gets special treatment. Rising cost of fake IDs The cost of downing a few drinks could go up for those who use fake identification to enter Lawrence bars. The ABC fined the owner for allowing an underage patron into his bar, so the owner sued in small claims court to recover his loss. Last week a Lawrence barowner received $500 in a civil suit against a KU student who had used a fake ID to enter the bar and had been caught by agents of the Kansas Alcohol Beverage Control division. When an owner tries to make sure customers don't use fake IDs to slip past the bouncer at the door, a fine can be unfair as well as costly. For those owners, any amount is too much to pay for someone else's illegal act. In some cases, bar owners are lax in their responsibilities and carelessly let in underage students out of greed or laziness. They are the real targets for the law that fines owners when minors are caught in a bar. But if owners scrupulously check IDs and are still fooled by believable — but fake identification, they are justified in trying to get back their money. Minors found guilty of using a fake ID usually face only a mild fine on their first offense. But the threat of a costly settlement in a civil suit could turn an apparently harmless deception into a expensive night on the town. Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/o-co sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.** **GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The** Sales and marketing adviser The Kansas reserves the right to re edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 113 Staffer/Fint Hall. The University Daily Kanan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 60643, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60644. In Douglas County, mail subscriptions cost $1 for six months and $2 a year. Elsewhere they cost $1 for six months and $3 a year. Student subscriptions POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kaanan, 118 Staffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 86045 Black conservatism no longer a rarity It was 1968, the year of riot and protest. The letter invited coverage of the first national meeting of black conservative Republicans in Washington, D.C. Intrigued by the potential counterpoint to the activities on the streets and the campus, I requested permission from my editor to cover the event. "No way," the editor responded. "I would no sooner have you cover that I would a convention of three-headed calves. It may be a phenomenon, but a representative trend it is not." Odd though it might be to some, the rise of black conservatism is now a decided trend among young blacks. It is startling to many other blacks to hear Murdock refer to affirmative action programs as "covert racism" or to hear him defend the administration's constructive engagement program. He is in favor of prayer in the public schools and the entire panoply of the far right agenda. Right. A harsh critic of Ronald Reagan, Murdock accuses the president of abandoning the conservative agenda. Deroy Murdock of Los Angeles is 21, a senior at Georgetown University and an evangelist of the New In a recent, lengthy profile in the Washington Post, congressional conservatives and their supporters were lavish in their praise of Murdock. He has attracted a great deal of attention. "Let me tell you something," said Orrin. Orrin R-Utt, for whom --- Robert C. Maynard Oakland Tribune Murdock worked as a part-time aide. "This young man is going to be a major leader in this country someday, He has that kind of personality. I think Derey is going to be a U.S. Senator someday, maybe even more than that. He can go right to the top. He's that good." To some degree, Murdock is regarded in some quarters as being about as unusual as a three-headed calf. Just the same, the reality is that the number of right-wing blacks in the United States is growing. And it is growing fastest among young blacks. AMRCDS HELLO?HELLO?——IT WAS REAGAN AGAIN,WARNING ME ABOUT THE GROWING INSURGENCY HERE. HE MUST HAVE HUNG UP WHEN HE REALIZED I HAVE EVERYTHING UNDER CONTROL! In 1980, public opinion polls indicated that only 10 percent of blacks approved of the job Reagan was doing as president. In 1985, that number he jumped to 30 percent for blacks to be appointed to 30 percent for those below the age of 30. Joseph Perkins, 26, an editorial writer for The Wall Street Journal, said, "Young blacks like us don't have the baggage of bygone years. We're role models to the extent that we're demonstrating that it's not just racism that's not a cultural malism of the liberal establishment to be successful." Two distinct factors help account for the emergence of a new, conservative middle-class black American: I'm a realist, Mr. Schneider, not a person who reads a couple of newspapers and thinks I'm Mr. It. You should look on the other side of Second, conservatism is where all the action is today, and it is natural that some bright, ambitious young black people will gravitate to that action. In doing so, they know the field is wide open because there are still few black conservatives against whom to compete. First, the opening of the doors of opportunity closed during the days of legal segregation. To the extent blacks are free to pursue the goals of American society, inevitably some will choose a conservative ideology. It also is important to keep in perspective the fact that the black communities of the United States historically have been more conservative and religious than many of their white allies in the old civil rights coalition. Indeed, until the advent of the New Deal in the 1930s, the overwhelming majority of black voters were Republicans. You called the way coach Gottfried handled it a "dirty flashe" and "an embarrassment to the University." Maybe that's the way you look at it. With a negative disposition always look at the negative side of the coin. For years, many of the legates of that old black GOP tradition have been arguing that blacks made a strategic political error by becoming so overwhelmingly and predictably Democratic. TV movie sugarcoats reality of AIDS NBG's Monday night movie, "An Early Frost," about a young man who contracted AIDS, accomplished some of its apparent purpose. It would have accomplished more had it risen above the syrupy formula of made-for-television movies. Now, to the astonishment of many political observers, conservatism is on the rise among young black people. And they are a lot more common than the three-headed calf. Clearly "An Early Frost," the first movie-length program about AIDS, intended to give information and correct misinformation. Because many people wrongly think that AIDS spreads through even casual contact, the movie properly emphasized the falsity of that idea. It also acknowledged the emotions likely to be found in AIDS victims, their families, their friends and others. In this purpose, the movie achieved less success, although it managed to sketch several viewpoints. Like most made-for-television movies, "An Early Frost" used stock characters and predictable scenes. A TV movie about AIDS was a good move, but it numbed its own emotional power by adhering to the weary pattern of most of its counterparts. Mailbox Second, the circumstances surrounding the situation concerning my eligibility go deeper than what you read in the newspapers. You're on the outside looking in, Mr. Schneider, and you shouldn't even comment on what you know so little or nothing about. It would have been extremely easy for coach Gottfred to turn his back on Dane Griffin and me and stand with the multitude. But he did what he honestly felt was right. The fact that I'm married, have a 15-month-old son and another on the way, might have played a role in his decision. But again I say, Mr. Schneider, he did what he felt was right in his own heart. Dan Howell Staff columnist How many men do you know who would dare go against everybody, just because what he feels in his heart is right? In defense of Gottfried I'm writing this letter in reply to one I read in the Tuesday, Nov. 12, Kansas concerning head football coach Mike Gottfried. First of all, David Schneider, the things that make coach Gottfried a great man, you could never understand. The Bible tells about a woman about to be stoned by a great multitude of people until Jesus said, "Let he that has not sinned cast the first stone." Here is the "doctor provides basic medical facts" scene. Here is the "mother isn't going to let family fall apart" scene — first played opposite father, then in a reprise, played opposite daughter. Reliance on formulaic scenes is safe, and they make a movie understandable. Even the fiction that people walk around ready to reveal and explain their emotions at any moment has its place. But the movie went even further in trying to make people more comfortable with the presence of AIDS in our society. "An Early Frost" may have gotten to a frost, but the rest was Indian summer. It never even got close to winter. It never皱直 straight on with the inevitable death of the main character. Even the movie doctors said it: As things stand, everyone who gets AIDS eventually dies. Usually it's within two years, but sometimes it takes five. At the end of "An Early Frost," the barely-changed hero is headed back to Chicago to resume near-normal living — fortified by a new acceptance by his parents. In other words, the movie provided some useful facts and humanized them. But its basic message — AIDS isn't so bad — was a whitewash. Made-for television movies must, by some law, be heartwarming. That's why "The Day After" almost didn't get on the air — even though many experts said it portrayed a much too hopeful outcome of nuclear war. These movies show almost every setback as reversible. The day that AIDS becomes reversible cannot arrive too soon, but it hasn't arrived. A realistic movie about AIDS should deal honestly with the death of the main character. This one didn't even try. "An Early Frost" also tided up the subject by making the main character a professional person with an exclusive love relationship and, in the end, a loyal and loving family. Minor characters faced different problems, but those were glued over. Even the acronym "AIDS" has a cute little neatness that masks dangerous power, like "MIRV" or "PAC." But people in our society are mistrustful of such packaging any more. People didn't believe it when officials said Three Mile Island posed no danger. They don't trust official reports on military spending, toxic waste cleanup or food inspection either. People can sense a sell job. Using a television movie to educate was commendable. Using it to make AIDS somehow more acceptable was not. It is ugly and the majority of cases arise from ugly situations — having homosexual relations with more than one person or sharing needles for using illegal drugs. In the long run, the cause of public education on any subject is best served by truth. "An Early Frost" gave us truth with a sugarcating. Home is where farm crisis is I have reached a definite milestone in my life. With a lot of struggle, persistence and conscious effort, I have come to grips with my heritage. I am no longer ashed of the fact that I was born and raised in Kansas. But it hasn't always been that way. Once in Amsterdam, I sheepishly had to admit to a New Yorker that I had spent a little time in Kansas. That was the end of intelligent conversation. The rest of the evening deteriorated into stereotypes. When I was living in Southern California, people there thought I was a native to the area. Maybe it was the blond hair that threw them. Last summer I met a French girl in Scotland. When I told her I was from Kansas, some dim light went off in her head. "I have heard of Kansas," she declared. "Yes, yes, that's it!" she screamed when I mentioned The Wizard of Oz. "You look like someone from Kansas." Her perceptions were astonishing when you consider that she had never seen Kansas and thought the whole world Tim Erickson Guest shot revolved around Paris Now I have come back home to a land and people I love. I have finally accepted that my heritage and life are inexorably tied to Kansas. And I've come to believe that this state will never be what many want. We want wine coolers by the billions, Las Vegas in Holton, the Kentucky Derby in Wichita, Silicon Valley in Lawrence, Boston culture in Manhattan and Texas oil in Neodesha. We deny the thing that makes Kansas a state — its farming. Yes, I mean the stop-pigs, milk-the-cows, plow-that-field agrarian living. Lorshan and Treflan and Pioneer Seed. John Deere and Hesston and International Harvester. Our heritage was formed under a blazing sun. Single-bottom plows turning the virgin prairie. Immigrants speaking broken English. Sod houses and bitterly cold winters. Traders on the Marais des Cygnes and outposts in Bourbon County. Yet we are letting the farm economy go to hell because Rachmaninoff isn't played in western Kansas. We think that Teakikovsky should be favored over the closing hog prices. Some will shout and scream if you confuse Johnson and Wyandotte counties. To my mind, they're the same place. We're a farm state. Lawrence is more an aberration than the norm. It is a great place to live, but it doesn't really represent Kansas. We need more land to want to the unparalleled number of foreclosures our farms are facing. We're a farm state. Our beleaguered Farm Credit System is ready to go belly up and all we want to do is go to the Plaza. We're a farm state, yet we turn our backs on the problem. Our banks are closing in record numbers and we don't care. Land prices drop 20 percent in one year and we shrug our shoes. We'll probably recognize on Pretoria than recognize the quickly approaching darkness. Our country cousins can't make a profit, and we say "Too bad." They are screaming for some sort of equity and we are plugging our ears. Their indebended continues to overtake their ability to pay, and all we want to do is slam dance to the Violent Femmes. We're a farm state. And we're bleeding to death. that coin, the positive side. If you do, you'll see an exhibition of courage. right is wrong, Again, Mr, Schneider, right is in your heart. Coach Gottfried is always trying to instill and implant into all his ballplayers that right is right and wrong is wrong. Turning your back on wrong because you're scared to do Coach Gottfried is an extremely visible person, doing a job that is becoming increasingly more difficult because of people like you. People like you sit back and watch, then criticize someone doing his best. Faceless cowards behind ink pens come a dime a dozen. Problem, visible people with courage are scarce. That's why 10 years from now I'll be proud to have known coach Gottfried and will have forgotten you. Lynn Williams KU running back Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 University Daily Kansan From Page One 5 Vandal special action forces; the father of a young Lawrence man, a former KU student, who was killed; and the father of a helicopter pilot who was listed as missing in action. Continued from p. 1 "What are they to think?" he asked. these are people who have had to deal with this sort of insensitivity during the war. The father of the helicopter pilot got phone calls from people who said his son got just what he deserved. His barn was burned. "This memorial has meant so much to the veterans of this community. I worked with disabled veterans who couldn't believe college students wanted to fund a memorial to their lost brothers." Musgrave said he thought the theft of the drawing would reinforce the stereotype that college students don't care about the men or families of the men who died in Vietnam. "We know that isn't true," he said. "The support of the people of the University has been outstanding. It has made me proud to be associated with them." Wolf Creek "It will be built," he said Continued from p.1 reserve adjustments gave KGE and additional $2.927 million, added to the third year of its three-year rate phase in. Instead of a 36.7 percent increase totaling $166.7 million, the Wichita-based utility will receive a 37.5 percent increase of $169.7 million. WHA demeaned said he was concerned about the destruction, but not enough to stop the memorial's construction. KGE had sought a 101 percent increase of $371 million. The depreciation reserve adjustments gave KCPL an additional $892,000, while the nuclear fuel adjustment gave the firm another $2.2 million, for a total $3.1 million. Instead of a 14.4 percent increase of $33.7 million, KCPL will receive a 16.2 percent increase of $36.8 million. KCPL had requested a 52 percent increase of $90.5 million. The commission's final order on the matter is to be issued by tomorrow, Haden said. influence in the administration and representing the student body. "I would call them effective student leaders," Ambler said. "I didn't want to use the word 'strong' because the internal problems in Senate seem to be increasing. Maybe a strong leader would have worked harder to get things resolved." Senate Continued from p.1 Easley said the same degree of internal fighting went on in the Senate last year, but last year was more political. political. arming to last year, Polack said. "Either you had the power to get something done, or you didn't. You didn't as a general rule scream to the paper without trying to resolve the situation. "It's the old thing that if you want to see something, done, try to do it. If you want to effect change, effect change, but don't bitch about it if you've never made the effort." ent. During their campaign last fall, Easley and Polack also revived the decade-old issue of campus lighting by leading a group of Frontier Coalition members around Potter Lake in the dark. Porter Lake, Wis. Easley and Polack said a $10,000 lighting study that Student Senate paid for was one of the biggest accomplishments of their administration. for travel, yield agreements. Fourth said spending that amount of money was ridiculous. Not everyone agreed. "We already had lighting studies," he said. "Why don't we just buy light bulbs?" Easley and Polak said the study was complete, but they had not released the results. Alison Young. Senate executive secretary, said "It is my understanding that lighting has never gotten this far before. You've got to start somewhere." Their entire campus safety plan included running buses until midnight instead of 10 p.m., coordinating a rape awareness program, installing more "blue phones" and creating an escort service. She said people couldn't expect instant results in a project as big as campus lighting. The bus service was extended. The rape awareness program went to several residence halls this semester. program went to several Resistance halls on campus. But there are no new blue phones on campus. Easley said the University already had an escort service that he had not known about when he was campaigning. Easley and Polack will turn over their offices to the new student body president and vice president next Friday, the day after the elections, scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday. They are tired and a little bit fed up, but Easley said they would be sorry to leave. "It was worth it," Polack said. "We're a year and a half, two years ahead of anybody on this campus who's done nothing but gone to school. "Meeting and dealing with the chancellor, the Legislature, senators and congressmen tends to have a maturing effect on you. You hit the big dogs in these positions." "I think every student body president and vice president who has left has, to a certain degree, been able to enjoy the after effect of being able to say, 'Yeah, you're the one who mottled off. You're the one who kept saying you could do it better, and now you are going through the same things,'" Easley said. Although they got a kick out of their year in office, Easley and Polack are ready to watch someone else take over the Senate. "I have a feeling we're going to enjoy it more than anyone." The Christian Science College Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel. On Campus Canterbury House will sponsor an Episcopal worship service at noon today in Danforth Chapel. The KU Men's Soccer Club will practice at 4 p.m. today at the fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The Mt. Oread Bike Club Racing Team will meet at 8 p.m. today in the Governor's Room of the Union. The KU Women's Soccer Club will practice at 4:30 p.m. today at the streets at 23rd and Iowa streets. - the Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Trail Room of the Union. On the Record A car, television, coffee maker, air compressor, shot gun and some tools were stolen Tuesday night, or Wednesday morning from Cardinal Motors, 932 W. 23rd St. Lawrence police said yesterday The car, valued at $5,300, was recovered Wednesday morning in a field in the 1900 block of West 31st Street. The other items, valued at $1000, were stolen from the office and were not recovered. Police said the office door appeared to have been kicked in. Sub8Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! Any way you want it, you can get it NOW, at... 1618 West 23rd Street S Select from a variety of sateen dessert sandwiches, topped with with chocolate sauce and served warm or cold on freshly baked white or wheat Sub Roll Bread. For large appettes, we've got a 12" sub. More moderate dinners can enjoy the 6" size and we've included a kid Try us today! We're open from 11 am until 2 am daily, and may dine in or carry out your convenience. 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STREET DELI in 941 MASSACHUSETTS I "4 p.m. to close daily" WE WANT YOU TO TRY OUR ALL NEW DELI BURGERS Traditional Burger $1.99 Swiss & Bacon Burger $2.35 swiss cheese and ranch style bacon with lettuce and tomato Big Blue Burger $2.35 blue cheese and sauteed mushrooms WHAT A DEAL— Traditional Burger Basket and 12oz. soft drink $1.49 50¢ COUPON 50¢ 50¢ OFF 4p.m. to close daily 50¢ OFF FIFTY CENTS OFF ALL NEW DELI BURGERS OFF OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30,1985 OFF 4 p.m. to close daily 50¢ OFF 50¢ OFF - All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef - Select a fresh baked deli bun onion, kaiser or whole wheat - Served with potato chips, kosher dill spear and any small soft drink MARTIN MALCOLM EVEN BEFORE FINALS YOU COULD FINALLY GET THE AMERICAN EXPRESS CARD. If you've been wanting the American Express* Card for some time, this is some time to apply. time to apply Because if you're a senior, all you need is to accept a $10,000 career-oriented job. Because it no strings. No gunmicks. That's no problem. (And even if you don't have a job right now, don't worry. This offer is still good for 12 months after you graduate.) Why is American Express making the Card a little easier for seniors to get? Well, to put it simply, we be lieve in your future. And this is a good time to show it - for we ALAMANDA DE BENZERIA 3712 95006 AUX. MARINA DEL CABO MAJ. 1947 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. work of a new business. The Card can also help you establish your credit history, which can help in your future. to call 1-800-THE-CARD 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.™ © 1989 American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday Features Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 Reward from art projects comes after they're stolen By Susie Bishop Of the Kansan staff Disappearing posters evidence the existence of one of the most valued and least recognized wheels of a KU fine arts production — The Arts. e from design to production, members of The Arts, a group of upper-level fine arts students, take care of all advertising and promotional designs for theater, dance, music and the Concert and Chamber Music series at the University of Kansas. These students receive academic credit, but little or no recognition for the consistently high-quality work they do for each production. Ron Willis, chairman of theatre and media arts, said recently. "They do a lot of work and see none of the glory." Willis said. The disappearance of posters from campus walls is no surprise to Charla Jenkins, director of public relations of fine arts. "People steal the posters like crazy," Jenkins said. The tape, glue and industrial- strength staples don't help deter the hunters from bagging their game, she said. People interested in owning a poster produced by The Arts can purchase one in the Murphy Hall box office for $2. "We can't afford to overprint so people can have them." Jenkins said She said sometimes the vanishing posters provided the only means of praise that a designer received. Taking posters compliments the designer, but hinders ticket sales. Jenkins said, because she doesn't always have enough posters to replace the missing ones. The Arts 11 designers have completed more than 40 projects this semester and have about 35 more to take care of before they finish, Jenkins said. She said each project could have six parts: programs, posters, advertisements, school fliers and window displays. The Arts team tries to conquer the difficult task of creating programs, posters and advertisements that complement and blend with the theme and atmosphere of the production. "It's sort of overlooked and taken for granted." Jenkins said. During the typical week, most of the designers spend 50 to 60 hours at the drawing table working on projects, she said. Designers spend from four to six weeks working on each project from beginning to end. The long weeks the designers put in are exchanged for six hours of credit. Because students spend so much time working at their drawing tables, their other schoolwork tends to suffer. Jenkins said. Karl Hirschmann, Wichita senior and student coordinator for the group, said he could attest to Jenkins's statement. "When you have a deadline, you have to meet it." Hirschmann said. "They're not going to postpone the production just for you." Chad DeShaev/KANSA These deadlines take precedence over any other classwork, he said. Everything else becomes secondary. But he said he thought most people didn't understand the amount of work that must be done to get the posters finished on time. RYOB "Outside of the art department nobody knows about The Arts," Hirschmann said. "The professors just think you're lazy." just thanked him. He stressed the experience gained from working on The Arts was quite an education in itself. Above, Cheryl Smith, Ottawa senior, recently worked on promotional material for the fine arts department in the Art and Design building. At right, Steve Schader, Chesterfield, Mo., senior, began work on a new project after putting the final touches on a poster he had completed. "It is a preview for the real world," Hirschmann said. Hirschmann combines being a designer and coordinating the efforts of 10 other team members. He said as student coordinator he took care of project assignments and made sure everyone had enough to do, but didn't overlap projects. Chad DeShazo/KANSA The Arts requires each of the designers to present two completely different ideas to each Murphy Hall client. The client then selects or rejects those ideas. "It's like a jigsaw puzzle," Hirschmann said. "There are a million different answers, but only one is right." "If they don't like it, you go back to the drawing board." Hirschmann said. "You've got to make them happy, but still maintain design integrity. You don't produce trash even if that's what the client wants." This spring The Arts will celebrate its sixth anniversary. "It's been interesting for me to see how the team evolved from a conversational idea to the birth of the concept," Jenkins said. He said most of the time the client and the designer came to a compromise by meshing the two presented ideas. The creation of the group satisfied the need for unity between the performing arts in Murphy Hall, she said. Before The Arts, the programs and posters for the fine arts departments were taken care of by one student hired for the semester. Each department relied on their own budget for production of the promotional materials. One department would have large, color productions and another would depend on the Xerox machine. The posters and literature produced by The Arts have a distinctly professional air about them, Jenkins said "It's a whole lot better than the stuff I'm getting from professional agencies in New York," she said. Each semester The Arts renews its personnel. Hirschmann said that Jerry Moore, associate dean of fine arts, judged the portfolios of upper- level fine arts students and then decided on the new members of the team. Jenkins said once on the team, students usually worked with The Arts for two or three semesters. United colors hit Lawrence Special to the Kansan By Abbie Jones The united colors of Italy have hit Lawrence. Benedett, the international chain of clothing stores which originated in Delluno, Italy, in 1968, opened a store in Lawrence last Saturday. Employees decket in vivid sweaters meticulously folded each bit of merchandise the night before and stocked at 922 Massachusetts St. Owners Doug Compton and Deric Stewart strolled around their new store finishing last-minute construction and paperwork. POLYVANO Mary Van Keppel, Kansas City, Kan., senior, set up a display of shirts in preparation for the ribbon-cutting ceremony today at the Benetton store, 928 Massachusetts St. Bryan Graves/KANSAN "I knew it was a good idea. It's time for Lawrence to get something like this," Compton said. "Everybody has their own taste, but how many stores have been like this? You have to go to Kansas City to get this." A ribbon-cutting ceremony will be at 11:30 a.m. today to kick off the official grand opening, he said. Benetton is known for its bright, multicolored sweaters, shirts, skirts and pants, and such accessories as belts, bags, hats and coats. Its united colors motto and advertisements depict kids and adults of every nationality dressed in Benetton clothes, wearing bold makeup on their faces and international flags and trinkets on their clothes. "It's fun to create. There are so many outfits to mix and match," said Kim Platt, Omaha, Neb., senior who works at the store. Sizes for the clothes are numbered about 10 sizes larger than the average in Europe, said Platt, one of the store's 15 employees. The idea to open a Benetton in Lawrence emerged after Stewart returned from vacationing in Europe, where Benetton stores got their start. He suggested to Compton that the two start a business, and after they discussed ideas such as opening a fast-food franchise, they decided on a Benetton store. Compton said they received about 300 applications from people who wanted to work at the store. After Stewart approached Compton in August, the two contacted midwestern representatives for Benetton and began working on negotiations and construction. Stewart said that they had talked to the owners of the four Kansas City stores and were told about things to expect in the business. They had warned Stewart and Compton about the high duty cost of shipping the clothes from Europe to the United States, Stewart said, which is one reason the prices are higher than at other stores. "We worked on a lot of things." Compton said, "We didn't just jump right in; we researched it. We talked in other store owners." "We've looked at a bunch of different investments over the last three years," Stewart said. "I thought about Benton in July." Bargains found in catalogs By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff While some KU students receive boxes of goodies from home, others get packages of merchandise from all over the United States — for a price. Glow in-the-dark star stickers, stripper ice cubes, personalized pencils and penguin thermometers are some of the items that fill boxes delivered to Greg Nelson's mailbox. Nelson, Lenexa junior, said he ordered things such as these from mail-order catalogs for several reasons. "I order cheapo, stupid gifts because they're neat and they're under $3," he said recently. "I'm never disappointed, but I'm always surprised." Nelson said that he either used the things he ordered or gave them to friends as gifts. "You wouldn't put some of the stuff in your house, but you know someone else who just has to have it in theirs," he said. Nelson said he and his roommate purposely set out to buy "trash" items about once a month. Many other KU students order clothes and high-quality merchandise from mail-order catalogs. KU students can also experience, sale and bargains. Katie Hughes, Omaha, Neb., junior, said she ordered clothes from Talbot's catalogs, based in Hingham, Mass., about six or eight times a year. "You can get stuff you can't get here," she said. "It's easy and they offer a good selection." She said that once she was on Talbot's mailing list, she began receiving about 50 different catalogs, especially around Christmas. Scott Rutledge, Leawood freshman, said he ordered a pair of shoes from an L.L. Bean catalog because of his large shoe size. L.L. Bean is based in Freeport, Maine. "I got a deal," he said. "I wear a really big shoe size so I can't always find the size I need in stores. If you order them through a catalog, sometimes it clamsper that ordering them through the door." Steve Mueller, Overland Park sophomore, said he liked clothes from Land's End catalogs, based 'I order cheapo, stupid gifts because they're neat and they're under $3. I'm never disappointed, but I'm always surprised.' — Greg Nelson Lenexa junior in Dodgeville, Wis., because he liked the quality, price, looks and variety of the merchandise offered. "As a boy, I'm not much of a shopper," he said. "My parents order stuff from it because it is convenient. Both my parents work and are really busy, so they order almost all their stuff from there." Mueller said his parents had been ordering clothes for him from the catalogs for about two years. He said his mother liked ordering from catalogs because all the charges came from one store on one bill. Jennifer Silies' family began ordering merchandise from L.L. Bean about 15 years ago when her father started buying hunting equipment from the company, said the Hutchinson junior. Stiles said that heavy sweaters, jackets and boots were the main items she bought from L.L. Bean because she thought the catalog offered shopping ease and better quality clothing than she found in stores. "My mom does about 85 to 90 percent of her Christmas shopping from the catalogs because it's more convenient," she said. "And we always get good gifts." He said he didn't mind waiting for his purchase to arrive in the mail. "I love to shop, but it's more convenient to buy from a catalog," she said. "They're nothing I needed right away," he said. Brian Rodkey, Overland Park freshman, said he recently bought a pair of flannel lounge pants from a mail-order catalog because he had never seen the pants before in a store. On Tap Nancy Haney Peegy Helsel BOWIE AND MATT TURNER CONCERTS: Indulge in home-grown rock 'n' roll with The Fanatix, the fourth concert in the Burge Bandstand; series, at 9 p.m. tomorrow at the Burge Union. The free concert is sponsored by Student Union Activities and KLZR-FM. - English rocker Nick Lowe and His Cowboy Outfit, with special guest Valentine and the Very Wealthy, will play at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Uptown Theatre in Kansas City, Mo. Tickets are $12.50 and can be purchased at all Capitol Ticket outlets, including Omni Electronics, 540 Fireside Ct. 图 PLAYS: **PLAYS** "Twelfth Night." a comedy by Henry Shakespeare, will be performed at 8 p.m. today, tomorrow and Saturday in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets for the play are $2, $5 and $3. KU students, senior citizens and other students can receive a discount. Tickets can be purchased at the Murphy Hall box office. - SUA FILMS: "Zarke" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union Tickets are $1.50 and can be purchased at the Student Union Activities box office in the Union "The Killing Fields" will be shown at 3:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday at Woodruff Auditorium. Tickets are $1.50 SUA will sponsor an All-Night Movie Night beginning at midnight tomorrow. "Urgh: A Music War." "The Decline of Western Civilization" and "'D.O.A.' all will be shown for $3 at Woodruff Auditorium. The midnight movie Saturday at Woodruff Auditorium will be "Bedazed." Tickets are $2. "The Times of Harvey Milk" will be shown at 2 p.m. Sunday and at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Woodruff Auditorium Tickets are $2. Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 1980 Makoto Kariyasu. Tokyo graduate student, demonstrates the speech spectrographic display terminal by making a spectrograph of his own voice. Kariyasu works at the speech lab, which is on the first floor of Haworth Hall. Wichita aircrash investigated United Press International WICHITA — A low-flying, singleengine airplane that crashed amid heavy fog and killed four men, including two prominent Republicans, plowed into trees before slamming into the ground, the sheriff said yesterday. Those killed were George Van Riper of Wichita, 35, a former executive director of the state Republican Party, former state Rep. Donald A. Bell of Wichita, 57 Joseph E. Kreutzer, 33, owner of United Securities Inc. of Wichita, and the pilot, James D. Gass, 48, Wichita. Gass was a captain on the Sedgwick County Fire Department. Their Cessna airplane went down in dense fog shortly before 7 p.m. Tuesday as they returned from a business trip in metropolitan Kansas City, officials said. City, officials said. A survivor, Stephen Shogren, 35, Wichita, crawled from the wreckage to the top of a ravine in a heavily wooded area, said Sedgwick County Sheriff Mike Hill. Shogren was in stable condition at Wesley Medical Center, officials said. CENTER FOR JURISPRUDENCE Van Riper was executive director of the state Republican Party from 1977 to 1979. Bell, also a Republican, was a state representative from 1965 to 1970 and House majority leader in 1969 and 1970. He was a municipal bond attorney and in partnership with former Sen. Norman Gaar of Westwood. Representatives from the National Transportation Safety Board were investigating the crash, but Hill said preliminary findings made it clear to him the plane was flying close to the ground and struck some trees before slamming into the ravine. It took searchers about 30 minutes to find part of the plane's wreckage in the wooded ravine. Shogren was found a few minutes later and told searchers there were four other people in the plane. Patterns reveal disorders Speech lab studies sounds By John Williams Of the Kansan staff Researchers in a small room tucked in the east wing of Haworth Hall aren't bothered by the sounds of children playing next door. Sound is their business. The researchers work at KU's Applied Communicative Sciences Lab, one of two labs used by the department of speech-language-hearing; sciences and disorders, to find new information about all aspects of speech, Kim Wilcox, assistant professor of speech-language-hearing, said yesterday. ASCL began last March as an idea, but within the past three months, the speech lab, with its modern equipment, has attracted attention from several programs, such as linguistics, music education and human development and family life. Wilcox said. "One of the interesting aspects of the lab is the wide range of topics studied here," Wilcox said. "We have developed most of the work in three months time and we expect demand for the lab to grow more as the potential is realized by other departments." The speech lab is used as a speech and hearing disorder clinic and for research dealing with speech and audiology, the study of sound. audiology. Projects at ASCL involve voice patterns of stutterers, changes of speech due to normal aging, intonation in deaf speech and sounds made by strumming or picking a guitar. Linguists also use the lab to analyze voice patterns in foreign languages, particularly Korean. "We are all over the board here and we are flexible enough to switch it around to different things." Wilcox said. Talking or sounds are recorded so a signal processing computer can analyze them, said Tony Seikel. Lawrence graduate teaching assistant. The speech laboratory also contains a spectrograph to measure the voice patterns and frequencies of a repeated word or sentence. With the computer and spectrograph Wilcox, Seikel, and Makoto Kariyasu, Tokyo graduate student, manipulate sounds by chopping words up, adding sounds, switching positions of words or sounds, or eliminating some of the frequencies and making some sounds louder. "We can see, or hear, when two similar sounds sound like each other and the minimal place where they differ," Seikel said. "With this information we can apply it to disorders in speech to see why some sounds different and how much deterioration can make a difference." ASCL is studying the speech of people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease. Slowed speech is sometimes a sign of the disease. By studying speech pattern of people with the disease, Seikel said, researchers may be able to offer a way to diagnose it earlier. defense for possible neurological problems when older people come into the lab and say they have problems with their voice," Seikel said. Sometimes we are the first line of Wilcox, who is involved in the research on Lou Gehrig's disease with another group in Kansas City, Mo., said he was "spending time on the time dimensions" of speech because when speech breaks down, timing is usually involved. Wilcox said ASCL's computer could detect differences in speech if the timing was off by only two or three milliseconds. "It can't be detected by the human ear, but the computer can distinguish the difference, helping in early diagnosis," he said. seikel said that the computer could break speech down into time increment of a 20 thousandth of second and that the lab was working toward smaller time increments of one 40 thousandth of a second. The more samples the computer has to work with, the more accurate the analysis can be. The lab is also working on a project in conjunction with the department of human development and family life. The project will analyze the differences among voices of parents talking to children when they play with dolls and when they play with trucks. Use Kansan Classified. Theta Chi's, Thanks to all of your hard work we pulled it off! Congratulations! Love, The Alpha Gams Louis Maues' "ZAZIE" "An exceedingly funny picture ... bold, delicate, freakish, vulgar, outrageous, and occasionally nightmarish." —Brendan Gill, The New Yorker. Summerland *“French with English Subtitles” Tonight! 7:30 p.m. $1.50 Woodruff Aud. MET MOBILE AUDIO SYSTEMS CX142E ETR AM/FM tuner receiver with auto-stop cassette deck, separate bass and treble controls, radio monitor and full electronic tuning system SUA FILMS WATFORD WATFORD Reg. $159.95 Special Price $99.85 Lawrence Custom Radio 914 W. 23rd (913) 842-5511 The Finest In Car Stereo Sales and Repair FREE CHINA CLUB presents Saturday, Nov. 16 Butterfly Kingdom — Documentary 2 p.m. Jade Love — A Widow's Love and Hatred 2:30 p.m. Dyche Auditorium Admission: $1 Paid for by Student Activity fee. DRESSFORSUCCESS. you're the man in charge. And you can handle it. Because the Navy has given you the management and technical training to get the job done. dollars worth of sophisticated equipment. A solid starting salary of $17,700, and up to as much as $31,000 in four years with regular promotions and increases. THIRTY MEN REPORT TO YOU. AND WHAT YOU DO INCLUDES THE CARE AND RESPONSIBILITY FOR MILLIONS OF At age 22 you can be a leader in the Navy. With all the decision-making authority you need to help you match up to your responsibility. The rewards match up, too. Responsibility and reward. It's the way you measure success in the Navy. See your Navy Recruiter or CALL 800-327-NAVY. NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST. 8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 KU to launch drive to raise MS money By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff Students at the University of Kansas and 149 other schools across the country this month are launching a campaign to "Bust MS," which will culminate in a concert for one of the schools, the chairman for KU Students Against Multiple Sclerosis said. Steve Vogel, Topeka junior and chairman of SAMS, said Tuesday that a campaign to raise awareness and money for multiple sclerosis would begin this month and gain momentum until a grand fundraising event was held in February. Multiple sclerosis is a neurological disease that usually occurs in people between the ages of 18 and 34. It can affect coordination, vision, hearing and speech and may result in paralysis. No cause or cure is known, and 200 new cases are reported each week in the United States. Pat Mamchah, education director of KU Students Against Multiple Sclerosis; Steve Vogel, chairman; and Colby Hall, executive vice chairman, laugh at a At two money-raising events in February, he said, students will dress up like rock stars they resemble, and the audience will vote for its favorite contestants. The Rock Alike Event, a rock star look-alike competition, is the key element of the SAMS campaign, Vogel said. A. D. SMITH AND JOHN WALKER In the final competition, the 5-10 contestants who receive the most votes in the first two events will lip-sync to rock songs. in September, Vogel attended a conference in Miami to help launch the national SAMS campaign. The conference brought together 150 students from universities around the country who were interested in becoming chairmen for SAMS on their campuses. On Oct. 29, the students appeared in a short spot on the opening Faces segment of ABC's Good Morning America show. Vogel said the five-day conference was hard work, but a lot of fun. "I had a really charged up week," he said. "When I saw how electrifying the Rock Alike Event was, I was convinced it could work at KU." Tammy Stude/Special to the KANSAN All the colleges with SAMS campaigns will have a Rock Alike contest in February, Vogel said. The campus that raises the most money will receive a concert which will be broadcast on MTV: Music Television. MTV also will sponsor a lip-synching competition between the Rock Alike winners from eight regions of the country. The first step of the SAMS campaign was the conference in Miami, which was sponsored by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and included seminars in leadership development, fund raising, public relations and recruitment. The society billed the campaign as business training besides a good cause, Vogel said. "This is a massive thing that people can put in their portfolios," he said. "We're giving the society all the money for our work, but we're getting something back. It's not monetary, but we're getting something." He said the campaign was organized similar to a corporation, so students would gain business experience. He has recruited 10 other students to serve on a board of directors. At a board meeting last night, almost all of the students said they were involved in the program to gain experience. question during a 'group dynamics' exercise. The three KU students discuss, plan for the newly organized SAMS campaign yesterday. "Let's be honest," said Colby Hall, Overland Park sophomore and executive vice chairman. "We're all here because it's a good resume filler." However, the students also said they wanted to benefit multiple sclerosis. "At first it was just a resume filler," said Mary Slaney, Wichita junior who is working on public relations. "But I know I'm going to learn a lot about MS and help people who have MS." Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY $1 OFF ANY PIZZA ORDERED ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS. DATE___ HOURS Mon .Thurs. 11a.m.2a.m. Fri & Sat. 11a.m.3a.m. Sunday. 11a.m.1a.m. 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY we Deliver! 843-7398 279 37 Give yourself a break for breakfast. Come into Burger King® for a Croissan witch with sausage. That's spicy, sizzling sausage, cheddar cheese and golden Grade A egg, all tucked into a light, flaky croissant. It's a delicious way to start the day. CALL The Grinder Man Please present coupon per customer. Pons or offers. Void where promo offer expires 11:30-85 at participating restaurants. Breakfast hours only. Aren't You Hungry? 99¢ Croissan'wich, 1107 W. 5th Street 1301 W. 23rd Street rent this coupon before ordering. Limit one .Not to be used with other cou- pies prohibited by law. This Croissan W. 6th Street 1107 W. 23rd Street Resumes We are only BURGER KING Burger King - Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off. © 1985 Burger King Corporation You can cross the line first with a typeset resume. National Electronic Type will help you choose the typestyle and offer advice on a format that will professionally present your message. We are only 5 minutes from campus at 932 Massachusetts, Lawrence or call Mary at net national electronic type, inc. Home of Award-Winning Team 932 Massachusetts - Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 843-7446. Big Bob's "Used" CARPET DORM ROOMS, APARTMENTS, WHATEVER THE JOB — WHY BUY NEW, WHEN YOU'VE GOT BIG BOB! BIG BOB'S USED CARPET BB BRING IN THIS AD FOR AN ADDITIONAL 10% SAVINGS! - Save up to 80% off new. - Yet so many rolls look "like new." MasterCard - Every roll twice-cleaned and - Every roll twice-cleaned and professionally sanitized MasterCard VISA Open Sunday and Holidays Monday - Friday 9-7:30 Saturday and Sunday 10-5:30 - Hundreds of styles, a rainbow of colors. - FREE doormat just for stopping by. BIG BOB'S USED CARPET SHOP LAWRENCE STORE NOW OPEN! 738 NEW HAMPSHIRE (913) 841-BOBS --- Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 9 Divestment decision given Both sides agree on ruling By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff The president of the Kansas University Endowment Association and a member of the KU Committee on South Africa both said yesterday that Attorney General Robert Stephan's opinion on divestment released Tuesday agreed with what each side had been saying all along. Since last spring, the KU Committee on South Africa has been struggling to make the Endowment Association divest from companies doing business in South Africa, but the Endowment Association said the "prudent person" state statute forbade it to do so. In his opinion Tuesday, Stephan said the "business care" rule applied to universities and endowment associations, not the prudent person rule, which he said applied only to cities and counties. Jane Ungerman, Lawrence senior and a member of the committee, said, "I'm really happy with the opinion. That is going to support what we've been saying all along. "The opinion strips away KUEA's legal argument. There is nothing stopping them from divesting. They are choosing not to do the moral thing and divest." Both the prudent person and the business care statutes require that money invested through organizations be handled in a wise manner Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, said he was aware of the business care rule. 'The opinion strips away KUEA's legal argument. There's nothing stopping them from divesting They are choosing not to do the moral thing.' — Jan Ungerman Lawrence senior and member Africa KU Committee on South Africa which Stephan said applied to universities and endowment associations "I don't see a great deal of difference between the two," he said. The business care rule allows the political aspect to be considered only as it affects the financial aspects, Seymour said. "That's exactly what we've always contended," he said. Seymour said most companies in South Africa were offering jobs and working, with the government to change the system of apartheid. A statement released Tuesday by Seymour said, "Consequently, unless and until such ownership is no longer economically prudent, the Association must refrain from divesting itself of all stock ownership in any corporations doing business in South Africa." Africa. Stephan's opinion stated that the business care rule required the exercise of ordinary business care and prudence, based on the facts available at the time. Neither standard allows for divestment on moral grounds alone, the opinion said. Divestment under the prudent person rule would have to be on grounds that economic conditions in South Africa make investments less than prudent. Under the business care rule, political and economic situations in the country, as they affect the security of the investment, may be considered in an investment decision, the opinion said. Stephan's opinion was requested separately by State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence; State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence; and State Rep. Henry Helgerson, D-Wichita, at the end of September. Chris Bunker, Prairie Village third-year law student and a member of the KU Committee on South Africa, said that according to the opinion, the Endowment Association had been wrong in relying on the prudent person rule. "My opinion is that even under the prudent person standard, the issue of political climate can be considered." Bunker said. "It's obvious to me that without aparthid, South Africa would be a good investment," he said. "With aparthid, there's just no safety involved with the investments." are angled at their Suzy Maet/KANSAN One float's demise Tau Kappa Epsilon members Lance Krankwainter and Jeff Schippers, both Hoxie sophomores, and Gary Workman, Cowlich sophomore, dismantle one of the last pieces of the fraternity's homecoming float. Arensberg's Moving Sale Entire Stock! 10. 20.30% off Men's Florsheim Rocsport Dexter Bass Sperry Women's Bandolino Van Eli 9/West Mia Capezio Children's Stride-Rite Jumping Jacks Little Capezio Boots and Athletic Shoes also included Arensberg's is expanding to a larger location to accommodate increased inventory. We will sell ALL of our existing inventory so take advantage of these tremendous savings! ARENSBERG'S SHOES Quality Footwear for the whole family since 1958. We're on the move '819 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 843-3470 WE'LL PAY YOU TO GET INTO SHAPE THIS SUMMER. 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. If you have at least two years of college left, you can spend six weeks at our Army ROTC Basic Camp this summer and earn approximately $600. But the big payoff happens on graduation day. That's when you receive an officer's commission. And if you qualify,you can enter the ROTC 2- Year Program this fall and receive up to $1,000 a year. Enroll in Army, ROTC For more information contact your Professor of Military Science. So get your body in shape (not to mention your bank account). ARMY ROTC. BE ALLYOU CAN BE. CONTACT CAPTAIN KENNARD ROOM 212 Military Science 864-3311/3312 Common Sense ...A Revolutionary Idea Bringing Student Issues Back to Student Senate BUFFALO BOB'S Smokehouse SMOKEY JOE SANDWICH SPECIAL Chopped ends of BBQ beef, ham, turkey and pork baked in a mild BBQ sauce. Served hot on a bakery fresh bun with tater curl fries and pickles. WHEEL LOG $2.75 Large Sandwich $3.50 Extra Large Sandwich $ THE TASTE THAT WON THE WEST --- NO COUPONS ACCEPTED WITH THIS OFFER 719 MASSACHUSETTS OFFER GOOD TILL NOV.30 Formerly Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse—Same nice people—Same management 10 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 Educators suggest stiffer standards By Jill White Of the Kansan staff A proposal presented this week by a group of education deans at a national meeting in Washington to make teacher education programs more rigorous is similar to KU's five-year program, the associate dean of teacher education said yesterday. The deans, known as the Holmes Group, appealed to the academic affairs council of the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges for support of a plan that is similar to KU's program established in 1980, Jerry Bailey, associate dean of teacher education, said yesterday. "In essence what the Holmes Group is advocating is very similar to what KU has," Bailey said. "All our students have academic majors or minors in specific fields." The Holmes Group wants to create a set of professional career teachers to work with regular teachers and would like to require all teachers to meet staff training standards. The tentative Holmes plan would require all teachers to obtain a bachelor's degree with "a" surious in depth grounding in an academic subject' other than education. ect" other than education. The Holmes plan also says students would have to complete a graduate year of study in teaching, including a "well-supervised internship." All teachers would need enough college credits to constitute a minor in each subject taught in elementary school or a major in each subject in high school. Two leaders of the Holmes Group, education deans Judith Lanier of Michigan State University and John Palmer of the University of Wisconsin, Madison, asked the academic affairs council to support their plan. KU, a member of the national association, is being represented by Richard von Ende, executive secretary of the University and associate executive vice chancellor; Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service; and Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs. The difference between the Holmes Group's plan and KU's program, Bailey said, is that the Holmes Group wants students to earn a bachelor degree in liberal arts and then work towards teacher certification. KU has a similar program where students with bachelors degrees can enter the School of Education as graduate students to work on teacher degrees. Bailey said KU undergraduates wanting to teach in elementary schools were required to complete two academic minors or one major. To teach in a middle school, students are required to complete one major or one major and one minor. Students wanting to teach in high schools have to complete two minors or one major and one minor. The 39 deans in the group, which was named in honor of a pre-World War II Harvard educator, are still putting the finishing touches on their plan. University vice presidents praised the plan but cautioned that it was a radical approach that would be costly for schools to implement and most likely would drive down enrolments in teacher education programs. education program Bailey said any program that extended the length of time to earn a degree would be more expensive for the student but enrollment in teacher education programs already had been declining for the past 10 years. "Our enrollment stabilized this year and will probably go up next year," he said. Murder trial jury sent from K.C. to St. Louis United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Jurors selected to hear the second murder trial of a southeast Illinois doctor accused of killing his son to collect $148,000 in insurance benefits took a 250-mile bus ride across Missouri yesterday. The jury was selected in Kansas City because of publicity in St. Louis, where the first trial was heard. The panel, accompanied by sheriff's deputies, was taken by chartered bus to St. Louis, where the trial is scheduled to open Thursday. Prosecutors contend Dr. John Dale Cavaness, 60, of Harrisburg, Ill., killed his son, Sean, 22, near the St. Louis suburb of Times Beach on Dec. 13. The younger Cavaness, who lived in St. Louis, had been shot twice in the head. The first trial ended in a mistrial July 14 after the judge discovered jurors mistakenly were allowed to view documents not entered as evidence. Prosecutors are asking for the death penalty. Cavaness became a suspect in the staying after authorities said he lied about being at Sean's apartment on Dec. 12. In the first trial, witnesses testified they saw the doctor and his son leave the apartment building that night. Defense attorney Arthur Margulis argued that Sean shot himself in the head while he and his father were together in a car and that Cavaness shot his son a second time so the death would look like a homicide. Cavaness said he did not want relatives to know his son had taken his own life. Segregation suit appealed Cavaness' former wife and a son testified the doctor had a "Jekyll and Hyde" personality. United Press International ST. LOUIS - An attorney for the Kansas City School District said Tuesday black students were "steered" into the district while whites were sent to suburban school districts. districts. Allen Schneider made the comments in oral arguments before the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The Kansas City Board of Education, the NAACP and a group of parents have asked the appeals court to overturn a lower court decision that found 11 suburban districts not liable for segregation in Kansas City schools. because they feared attending all- white suburban schools. Attorneys representing the state and the Kansas City suburban districts backed the ruling of U.S. District Judge Russell Clark in Kansas City, who in July said the 11 districts were not liable for the segregation in Kansas City schools. Schneider told the judges that action by the Missouri legislature and the Department of Housing and Urban Development set housing restrictions that forced blacks to live in certain areas and thus resulted in segregated school districts. He said blacks had remained in city schools The attorney said that resulted in a black enrollment of 68 percent in the Kansas City School District with more than half the students in allblack schools. He said the 11 suburban districts were predominantly white. "The state's violation not only prohibited blacks from living in white districts, but set up a comprehensive transfer system for blacks who were able to live in suburban school districts." Schneider said. "It steered the blacks into the KCMSD just as it channelled the whites into the suburban school districts." Bartow Farr, the attorney representing the state, said economic factors caused by the Depression and the two World Wars caused blacks to move to the city. He said the ratio of whites to blacks moving to the city then was 6-1. "The migration to the suburbs was a phenomenon that occurred through the nation," he said. "During that period the Kansas City schools changed from a majority of white districts to a majority of black districts." Farr quoted Clark's ruling which said, "actions now 30 years past have negligible effects" on the current makeup of the city's school system. Appellate Judge Gerald Heaney asked whether the state couldn't be faulted for its segregation practices of the past. Farr did not explain why whites moved to the suburbs and blacks remained in the city. "Isn't it because of something the state has directly done that the white voters in Kansas City refuse to support the black schools?" the judge asked. "How are we going to get a decent education for black children if the Kansas City voters won't vote a tax increase and the state says it's not its responsibility?" PRO TINT 842-0261 Automotive Window Tinting Specialist Pro Tint uses only TOUGH KOTE film so you won't be looking out through scratched windows. As long as you own your car we guarantee the tint from peeling, bubbling, or changing colors. CALL US TODAY, and find out how reasonably priced quality tinting can be. JuCo regionalization doubtful SAVE AT IMPORTS + DOMESTICS EXOTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 Hochamdel, chairman of a committee of the Council of Community College Presidents, said the administrations and boards of trustees of Coffeyville and Independence Community Colleges are adamantly opposed to continuing the investigation of possible regionalization. 2201 "D" W 25th St. PRO TINT 842-0261 Lawrence, Ks. However, he said his own Labette Community College board "is still vitally interested in regionalization," and has developed a long-term plan which could serve as the basis for a proposal. TOPEKA - A regionalization plan aimed at cutting down on duplication of efforts by state community junior colleges and broadening their financing bases has stalled, the Legislative Educational Planning Committee was told yesterday. The Associated Press The two Montgomery County colleges have been the main target of regionalization in the last two years. Hochanadel said officials of the Coffeyville and Independence schools see regionalization as a financing battle, and area legislators don't think now is the right time to try to impose such a plan on their schools. A study designed to lay the groundwork for development of a regionalization plan which the state Board of Education could take to the Legislature has reached a dead end mainly because of the opposition of Coffeyville and Independence Community Colleges, the panel learned. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM pater learned. "From this perspective, at this time, I am not sure it's going to occur," Gery Hochanadel, president of Labette Community College, said. "There is no support among the Montgomery County schools for continuation of the regionalization study." 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Tue, Wed, only thru Dec. 6, 1985 Godfather's Pizza. Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 Nation/World 11 University Daily Kansan Police commissioner resigns, is criticized United Press International ○ PHILADELPHIA — Police Commissioner Gregore Sambor resigned yesterday as head of a department harshly criticized for the May 13 MOVE battle that took 11 lives and burned down a city neighborhood. "There will be many who will second guess this decision and many who will deny that it is mine," said Sambor, who was rumored to have been close to being fired by Mayor Wilson Goode. "But the simple truth of the matter is that it is time." The resignation as head of the 7,000-member police department by Sambor, a 35-year police veteran who authorized the dropping of a bomb onto the roof of the MOVE house, will take effect at the end of the month. Deputy commissioner Robert Armstrong, 56, a 31-year veteran of the force, will temporarily assume Samber's position. Sambor, 57, appointed to serve as commissioner by Goode shortly after Goode became mayor in November 1983, submitted his resignation to Goode. resignations. The Sambor met with police officials early yesterday but later refused to comment to reporters about his resignation. He told officers at the meeting he would "begin an immediate transition effort" with his successor. "As I leave here today, I can say without reservation that I have never been prouder than I am today for the honor and privilege of having your commissioner and a member of Pennsylvania's finest." Sambor told his men. Sambor's department in recent years has been plagued by police corruption. A total of 26 officers, including a former deputy commissioner, were convicted of taking part in extortion schemes in which officers solicited payoffs in return for protecting illegal gambling and prostitution operations. resigning. "We want to emphasize that this man served our city with honor and dedication for 35 years," the FOP said. "To have him leave now under a cloud of created suspicion does a disservice to his record." Michael Lutz, vice president of the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 5, said the union was disappointed with Sambor's decision and blamed the news media for pressuring him into resigning. Sambor directed operations during the May 13 police battle with the radical cult MOVE. After a daylong siege, police dropped a bomb from a helicopter onto the roof of the heavily fortified MOVE house, sparking a fire that killed 11 MOVE members, including five children, destroyed 61 houses and left 250 people homeless. Former City Managing Director Leo Brooks and Mayor Wilson Goode testified before a special panel investigating the MOVE incident that it was Samber's idea to use the explosive on the roof of the radical group's house. The bomb was used with the intent of destroying a fortified rooftop bunker and blowing a hole in the roof through which tear gas and water could be dispersed. Sambor said he approved of the idea before it was mentioned to Goode because the head of the bomb squad assured him the explosives would not spark a fire. But once the fire started on the MOVE roof, Sambor recommended to fire officials it be allowed to burn in an attempt to destroy the bunker. "The plan for May 13 was the most conservative, controlled, disciplined and safe operation which we could devise." Sambor told a commission investigating the May 13 conflict. "I approved the details of the plan to the extent where it can fairly be called my plan." Brooks, a former Army general, announced his resignation from office nine days after the MOVE battle. Search for hunters resumes United Press International YAKIMA, Wash. — Yakima county officials declared a state of emergency yesterday, enabling the National Guard to resume its search for as many as 100 elk hunters thought to be stranded in the Cascade Mountains where two people already have died. The state earlier grounded the National Guard helicopters because no official emergency existed, said Col. Bill Watling of the state National Guard. said cow. Bill Wittings, Karen Dean, a spokeswoman for the Yakima emergency management office, said the mid- afternoon declaration followed a meeting between county and state officials and representatives of the Guard. She said the helicopters would be used to search for five known groups of missing hunters. Dean said, adding that the search of about 600-square miles could turn up still other hunters who have been stuck in the snow along with hundreds of others since the weekend. Sgt. Ken Irwin of the 'Yakima County sheriff's department said his crews wanted assistance from the National Guard helicopters for a third day because "we would like to go in and identify anybody stranded in this deep, deep snow . . . before they run out of food and there is a dire emergency." "Four of the groups have a total of 16 people in them, and we don't know how many are in the fifth group." The helicopter crews on Monday and Tuesday lifted 45 stranded hunters from the east slopes of the Cascades, where more than 4 feet of snow fell over the weekend. Hundreds of other elk hunters were contacted in the past few days but refused to leave their equipment behind. An estimated 200 hunters appeared to have dug their way out. U.N. urges Soviet withdrawal United Press International UNITED NATIONS — The United Nations General Assembly overwhelmingly passed a resolution yesterday calling for the Soviet Union to immediately pull its troops out of Afghanistan. The resolution "calls upon all parties concerned to work for the urgent achievement of a political solution, in accordance with the provisions of the present resolution, and the creation of the necessary conditions which By a vote of 122 to 19, with 12 countries abstaining, the General Assembly approved a resolution its seventh on the issue — demanding the "immediate withdrawal of the foreign troops from Afghanistan." would enable the Afghan refugees to return voluntarily to their homes in safety and honor." Last year's vote on a similar resolution was 119-20, with 14 abstentions. Yesterday's vote ended the 159-nation assembly's annual debate on the Afghan crisis. The resolution also reaffirmed the right of the Afghan people to "determine their own form of government and to choose their economic, political and social system free from outside intervention, subversion, coercion or constraint of any kind whatsoever." Soviet troops invaded the south Asian country in December 1979. The Soviet Union maintains an estimated 120,000 troops there who are battling Islamic rebels. Afghan delegate Mohammad Farid Zarif said before the vote was taken that the resolution "will in no way be binding" on his country. Zarir said the "Afghan people have already chosen the government and will continue with it despite the undeclared war launched against our people." Vasily Safronchuk, the Soviet Union's delegate, accused the General Assembly of interfering in Afghanistan's internal affairs and accused the CIA of using "unsavory devices" to subvert the Soviet-backed Afghan regime. Marcos' opponents discuss amendment United Press International MANILA, Philippines — Opposition leaders said yesterday they were discussing the possibility of amending the constitution to allow President Ferdinand Marcos to remain in office during an early presidential election. An agreement with the ruling party to amend the constitution by plebiscite would settle intense debate over the constitutionality of Marcos' call for a "snap" election Jan. 17 when his refusal to vacate the office. The constitution now states that an early presidential election can only be held if the president dies, resigns or is impeached or disabled. Marcos' current six-year term does not expire until 1967 but he has called early elections for Jan. 17 in an attempt to show his critics that he retains popular support despite a growing communist insurgency and political opposition. Marcos, who has ruled the Philippines for 20 years, Monday submitted a letter of resignation to the National Assembly. But it would become effective when it is delivered in the presidential election, which raises the constitutional question now being addressed by the two political parties. Opposition members of Parliament said they were hopeful of reaching an agreement to limit the ruling party on a governmental amendment by today. with ruling party officials concerned "whether we can agree on terms and conditions for the holding of snap elections with Marcos remaining in office." He said he expected the opposition to support the immediate convening of Parliament as a constituent assembly to add an amendment to allow Marcos, 68, to remain in office during an early election. Adaza said a plebiscite on the amendment could be held by mid-December. That would delay holding the election Jan. 17, but the ruling party already has indicated the date is negotiable. Former Sen. Salvador Laurel, a potential presidential candidate, returned from a two-week trip to the United States yesterday and was greeted by about 3,000 cheering supporters at Manila Airport. Homobono Adaza, an opposition Parliament member, said the tails "My co-defendants are ordinary citizens," Edwards, a lawyer, said in a statement that took about two minutes. "I, on the other hand, am governor of the state. There is more at stake than the important question of my guilt or innocence, that I must have the opportunity to refute the charges in this forum. "Against the advice of my attorneys, I withdraw my motion for accuital filed on my behalf." Edwards followed attorneys for his co-defendants, all of whom argued for directed verdicts of acquittal with the jury absent from court. The motions were filed after the prosecution rested its case Tuesday in the 8-week-old trial. Before Edwards spoke, U.S. Attorney John Volz rose to complain that the governor was not enrolled as an attorney of record in the trial and that no notice had been given to the prosecution. Livaudaais said he might call the attorneys back for further arguments today before making a ruling. He must rule on the motions before the trial can move to the defense phase. Edwards and the others are charged with taking part in an illegal conspiracy to obtain and sell state hospital and nursing home construction permits for $10 million in profits. NEW ORLEANS — Saying he had more at stake than his seven "ordinary citizen" co-defendants, Gov. Edwin Edwards yesterday withdrew his request for acquittal of racketeering and fraud charges. Representing himself before U.S. District Judge Marcel Livaudais Jr., the governor said he wanted the chance to refute the charges against him in court. COMPLETE DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER Serving Lawrence & KU Since 1973 United Press International Complete service and parts sales for most foreign cars BOSCH Automotive Parts *VW* *VOLV* *SUBARU* *MG* *DATUSN* *MZADZ* *TOYOTA* *HONDA* Governor wants day in court FULL LINE OF IMPORT CAR PARTS 841-4833 1008 E 12th M24 comprehensive health associates * free pregnancy tests * outpatient abortion services * alternative counselling * genetics * contraception + 0123 456 7890 Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-72-39 PICAFLIC HOME VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS Southwest 15th St. Shopping Center 160 W. 23rd St. Sp. 105 Lawrence, Kansas 60044 (913)642-1777 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DONALD DICKENS GENE MACKMAN MATT DILLON TARGET Fri. 1:50 Daily 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun. 2:30 8:00 VARSITY LIVE AT CA Fri. 1:50 Daily 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun. 2:30 8:00 VARSITY FESTIVAL FOR TEENAGE ADULTS THE LIVE AND DIE LA Fri. 1-5:00 Daily 7:30-2:40 Sat & Sun. 7:30-15:00 GRANADA MUSIC STUDIO GERMACKENN MATT DILLON TARGET Saturday Fri. 7:00 Daily 7:30-9:40 Sat & Sun. 2:30-5:00 VARSITY THE LIVE STAGE OF DER Saturday Fri. 9:00 Daily 7:30-9:40 Sat & Sun. 2:30-5:00 BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320 GRANADA MARTIN TARGET GENE MACKATN DILLON TARGET (N) 903-642-1050 Fd. *8:00 Daily 7:30-9:40 Rat. A Sun. 2:30-5:00 HILLCREST NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE WAGGED EDGE Glenn Clark. Jeff Bollman. Daily "4:46 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun" 8:30 Use Kansan Classified. has Sunday Evening Worship 5:30 pm followed by Supper ($1) We make our own Cream&Butter Fudge. 12 Flavors! Ecumenical Christian Ministers: The United Methodist Church The Presbyterian Church (USA) The United Church of Christ The Church of the Brethren 20-Flavors of Ice Cream. E C M Student Christian Center 1204 Oread, (1 blk. north of K Union) + + + + PENNY ANNIES Sweet Shops 710 Mission Avenue Tantalizing Treats. PENNYANNIES 20-Flavors of Ice Cream. Quarter pound dip on a HAND ROLED WAFFLE CONE only 69¢ a dip. Largest selection of Imported and Domestic Candy in Laurence. 10:30:5 30 daily, Thurs. until 8 p.m. 730 Mass. Dive into Harry's SHRIMP BASKET: 8 ounces of shrimp, cocktail sauce & Curly Q fries. Or, take on HARRY'S JUMBO: 10 oz. burger with Curly Q fries. 106 N. Park(formerly Campus Hideaway) 749-5246 Hungry? Head for Harry's! CINEMA 2 6 Fri. *8:00 Only, 7:30 9:30 Wil. & Sun. *8:00 $8.00 HARRY BEAR'S WEST BAY BREWING CO. MEL AMIGOS MEXICAN RESTAURANT HILLCREST 8 BRING ON THE NIGHT FIG. 10 Daily * 5:00 7:25 9:25 Sat. & Sun * 2:40 HILLCREST 3 CHARLES BROUNSON DEATH WISH 3 CANNON Daily * 5:00 7:39 9:30 Sat. & Sun * 2:40 CINEMA 1 "A wonderful surprise" American Flyers Fr. * 4:55 Daily 7:20 9:25 Sat. & Sun * 2:48 * 4:55 CINEMA 2 "Bargain Show" "TACOS" Tuesdays & Thursdays $2 All you can Eat. 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina 2600 Iowa "TACOS" SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! "50¢ MUNCHIES" includes: Burgers-Tacos Chill Sundays & Mondays after 5 p.m. HILLCREST 3 CHARLES BRISONN Death Wish 3 CANNON H Daily 8:00-7:00 9:30 Sat. & Sun. 2-46 fields the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187 MARSHALL YYYY CINEMA 1 "An wonderful surprise!" THE AMERICAN FLYERS Ft. *4:50 Daily 7:00 Eat 8:00 Sat. 8:00, 12:48 *4:50 DUKE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW Invites Prospective Applicants to Meet With Evelyn M. Pursley Assistant Dean for Alumni and Development Friday, November 15, 1985 from 9:00 A.M. - 11:30 A.M. on Sign Up With University Placement Office 223 Carruth PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY $1 OFF any 2 pizzas or $2 OFF any 3 pizzas ANY PIZZA ORDERED Expires 12-31-85 HOURS Monday - Thurs. 11 a.m. 2 a.m. Friday & Sat. 11 a.m. 3 a.m. Sunday 11 a.m. 1 a.m. NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY 12 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Hursday, Nov. 14, 1985 South Africa stops production of coins United Press International JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — South Africa halted production of its Krugerrand gold coins yesterday, and state-run television blamed the action on U.S. economic sanctions. on the action of the attack. Announcement of the halt in production by the television service and a spokesman for the Chamber of Mines came as new violence shook Johannesburg and other cities, and seven black activists testified that they were beaten, choked and given electric shocks while in a Soweto jail. The broadcast said the halting of Krugerrand production was the first direct result of U.S. sanctions imposed by the Reagan administration on Sept. 9 to underscore opposition to apartheid. The sanctions were followed by similar measures in European and other countries. A spokesman for the Chamber of Mines, which manages the production of the one-ounce gold ore that are collected around the world, confirmed that production stopped yesterday. The chamber said 10 black workers had been laid off. The Krugerrand, now selling at about $330, accounts for about 70 percent of the world market for gold coins, but sales tell about 25 percent last year, cutting earnings to about $1 billion. President Reagan included a Krugerrand embargo in a package of limited sanctions designed to pressure the white-minority commitment into reforming its apartheid policy of racial discrimination and segregation. The package also included a ban on trade in nuclear technology, bank loans and computer sales to South Africa. The announcement about the Krugererrands came after lawyers for seven black activists appealed to the Supreme Court to order a stop to torture in jails. Judge G.A. Coetzee said he would consider the request today. The former detainees and the mothers of three men still jailed said in court affidavit that the assaults were made at the Protea police station in Soweto, the nation's largest black township, located outside Johannesburg. back black. In Pretoria, police said the racial violence that had taken more than 845 lives in the past 14 months continued Tuesday and yesterday. morning committee A spokesman said scattered incidents of stoning and arson were reported in black townships around the country. At least one man was reported wounded, and four people were arrested. Revised Soviet Mazibuko, one of those who filed the afffdavits, said his head was shoved into a bucket of water, into which tear gas was pumped. He said he was made to strip naked and was shocked by electrodes wired to his wrists. "About 10 bricks were placed on my neck and back," Mazibuko added. "Two of the policemen stood on the bricks and then jumped up and down on them for about 20 minutes." Another former detainee, Doris Masenya, said in an affidavit that a hood was placed over her head, and an unknown substance was injected into her arm, making her weak and dizzy and restricting her ability to speak. In a landmark decision Sept. 25, J.P.G. Eksteen, a Port Elizabeth supreme court judge, issued an order prohibiting police from assaulting detainees at local jails. Cigarette tax passes House United Press International WASHINGTON — The House yesterday approved and sent to the Senate a bill extending the current 16-cent-a-pack cigarette tax, and several other laws, through Dec. 14. Without the temporary extension, the cigarette tax. Medicare payments to hospitals. Railroad Unemployment Insurance and the trade adjustment assistance laws would have expired today. Without action, the cigarette tax would have dropped to 8 cents a pack and payments to doctors and hospitals under Medicare would have been automatically increased. The House action, on a voice vote without much debate, continues a freeze on Medicare payments. Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-ILL, said the one-month extension of the laws would "minimize confusion and prevent economic distortion and allow time for subsequent enaction of permanent legislation." The permanent laws are hung up in the Senate as part of a budget-related bill, but passage is expected within the month. New Wisconsin law holds parents liable The Associated Press MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin has adopted a pioneering law that holds parents financially responsible if their minor children have babies. Under the measure, signed Tuesday by Gov. Anthony Earl, a welfare agency could take the parents of both the mother and father to court to make them pay for the expenses of raising the child. The law also allocates $1 million for pregnancy counseling, requires a girl's consent before a hospital or clinic can notify her parents of her abortion and repeals restrictions on the advertising and sale of contraceptives. State Rep. Marlin Schneider, who said no other state had such a law, said it was intended to reduce teen-age pregnancies by increasing discussion between parents and teen-agers regarding sex. By making parents financially responsible, "they may at least talk about the subject" before there is an unwanted pregnancy, be said. The legislator predicted the law could help promote understanding on abortion, but Barbara Lyons, an anti-abortion lobbyist for Wisconsin Citizens Concerned for Life, said it would only encourage teen-agers to have abortions. "Essentially, abortion is the easiest option in the short term," she said. "If the situation is going to be complicated by the boy's parents going to court to decide what the support payments should be, the girls won't tell their parents." Critics also questioned whether the law was workable. "How are you going to make the mother's parents responsible?" asked June Perry, executive director of New Concepts, a human service agency in Milwaukee. "Where are the mother's parents going to get the money?" "The Legislature passed the bill, but with no thought or effort put in to how it's going to be implemented," she said. Overtime bill signed United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan signed legislation yesterday giving state and local governments the option of paying employees overtime in either compensatory time or cash, a measure passed in response to a controversial Supreme Court decision. decision. Reagan said that without the legislation, which had broad support in the House and Senate, costs to state and local governments to provide police, firefighting and other services could have increased by as much as $3 billion annually. "This law once again permits state and local governments and their employees the flexibility to serve their citizens effectively." Reagan said in a statement. The legislation followed a Supreme Court ruling early this year that public employees must be paid cash for overtime work instead of getting time off. After the Supreme Court ruling, state and local officials lobbed Congress for a change in federal labor law to counter the effect of the ruling, saying it would substantially increase labor costs for their jurisdictions if they were forced to pay cash for all overtime. The bill will allow state and local governments the option of paying their employees overtime in either compensatory time off or cash, both at $1\frac{1}{2}$ times the regular rate. The arrangements will be worked out between the employee and employer. The measure imposes a cap of 240 hours on compensatory time that can be accumulated by each worker, except for police and firefighters who will be able to accumulate up to 480 hours. The employees will have to be paid cash for overtime beyond those limits. Reagan said that although the legislation did not restore state and local governments to their position before the Supreme Court decision, "it does recognize ... their special burdens, responsibilities and character." Several members of Congress and state officials were on hand to watch Reagan sign the bill. North Carolina Gov. Jim Martin said the state and local governments there would have had to come up with an additional $40 million a year if the legislation had not been enacted. "It gives us some flexibility we need." Martin said. "The court decision would have taken that flexibility away from us." Neo-Nazi is on trial in Seattle SEATTLE — FBI investigators found a cache of weapons in the house of a white supremecist just 12 hours after the alleged neo-Nazi shot shots at them as they crossed his property in rural Idaho, an agent testified yesterday. FBI agent Michael Johnston said he and two other agents assigned to monitor the activities of defendant Gary Lee Yarbaugh were fired on as they drove along a road on Yarbaugh's property near Sandpond, Idaho. Yarbrough is one of 10 members of The Order, an alleged neo-Nazi group, on trial in U.S. District Court in Seattle facing charges of violations of federal racketeering laws for conspiring to stage a right-wing revolution. United Press International Johnston testified that Yarbrough, dressed in a military-type jacket, suddenly appeared in a clearing as the agents drove away from his house on Oct. 18, 1984. "I saw him raise a handgun with both his hands and discharge it three or four times. It appeared to be directly at us." Johnston said. He added that none of the agents were hit. Under cross examination by Yarbrough's attorney, Johnston said he and the other agents — who were in a forest service vehicle — were not identifiable by the way they were dressed. He also acknowledged they drove by "no trespassing" signs, even though they did not have a search warrant for their first visit. Yarbrough was arrested a month later after a shootout with FBI agents at a motel in Portland, Ore. Asked whether Yarbrough was merely fired a warning shot, as the defendant maintains, Johnston said. "Both arms were extended toward us. It seemed that we were looking right down the muzzle." MILLER HICA'S QUALITY BEER 12 FL. OZ. Miller HIGH LIFE® The Champagne of Beers® ENJOY QUALITY. NOT QUANTITY. Miller contains no additives or preservatives. THAT'S THE AMERICAN WAY. Sports Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 13 University Daily Kansan Brown forced to look ahead By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff A Kansas men's basketball team without Ron Kellogg, Calvin Thompson and Greg Dreiling is not something Jayhawk fans want to start thinking about. But it is at the top of head coach Larry Brown's priority list right now. Brown and the rest of the college coaches are ready for future collegiate stars to commit to the college of their choice during the early signing period that began yesterday and runs through Wednesday. Brown said yesterday that Kansas' needs for next year included a guard, a swinger and a center to replace the three seniors. "I look for kids who are good athletes, but also for players who are versatile and can play more than one position," Brown said. Kansas has four scholarships to offer right now, and Brown said he had oral commitments that four players would sign during the early signing period. period. Brown said he wouldn't reveal names of prospective recruits, because it would be unfair to the athletes who hadn't decided on a school. "We expect to sign some players." Brown said. "I would be very disappointed if we didn't. Once a kid says he's coming that good enough for me. The papers (letter of intent) are for their protection." One of the players who has given an oral commitment to the Jayhawks is 6-foot-3 guard Carrick DeHart from Santa Monica, Calif., High School. DeHart averaged 15 points a game last season. DeHart's teammate, 6-foot-6 forward Keith Harris, is also considering Kansas along with New Mexico and Texas El-Paso. and Texas El Paso. Martin Howell, a 6-foot-9 forward from Ladue High School in St. Louis, had narrowed his choices to Kansas and St. Louis, but he has decided to simn with St. Louis. Doug Vance, KU sports information director, said the athletic department had not received any signed letters of intent in the mail yesterday. Coaches are prohibited by National Collegiate Athletic Association rules from actively recruiting athletes during the signing period, so all letters of intent have to be mailed to the schools. Schools Athletes who do not sign by Wednesday must wait until April before they can sign with a college. Brown said the players who signed in the early period were at an advantage, because they could then enjoy their senior years without worrying about college recruiters. The early signing period also benefits the schools. Brown said it allowed them to concentrate on high school sophomores and juniors. Once Kansas fills its needs for next year. Brown said he would concentrate on the younger players in high school. school. "With all the regulations set by the NCAA, the emphasis is to sign seniors early and concentrate on scouting freshman, sophomores and juniors." Brown said. There are also disadvantages to the early signing period. Brown said there was always a chance that a current player in the program could develop to fill the needs of the recruit. Teams also have gone after recruits that weren't their first choice. "I've seen teams take kids that maybe weren't their first choice." Brown said. "But they signed their second or third choice so they wouldn't be left out. Then their top choice is available later on, but they don't have a scholarship to give him." Norseth suffered mild knee sprain Sports editor By Chris Lazzarino Kansas quarterback Mike Norseth suffered a mild knee sprain yesterday in practice, but head trainer Lynn Bott said he should be able to play Saturday when the Jayhawks face Nebraska in Lincoln. The game was originally scheduled to be televised, but those plans have been canceled. Game time will be 1:30 p.m. As part of their radio contract, the Cornhuskers are limited to five regular season television appearances. ABC chose to televised the Oct. 26 Nebraska-Colorado game, which put Nebraska's TV total at six. Raycom Sports chose to drop the Nebraska-Kansas game to satisfy the Cornhuskers' radio contract. Norseth was rolling right on a practice play against the scout team when he was injured yesterday afternoon in Anschutz Sports Pavilion. He continued to play for a few minutes before leaving the field. Bott said that a doctor would take a closer look at the knee, but that it didn't appear to be serious. Gottried said that in the event Norseth was not able to play Saturday, Tom Quick would be KU's quarterback. Quick, also a wide receiver, spent most of yesterday's practice at quarterback Head, coach Mike Gottfried said that Norsesth wasn't hit very hard, but that he caught his toe in the artificial turf. The Kansas place-kickers are competing for the start job against the Cornhuskers. Regular starter Jeff Johnson missed field goals of 21 and 39 yards last Saturday against Colorado, and freshman Chase Van Dyne missed a 28-yard attempt. Administrative assistant Al Woolard, who also coaches the kickers, said that Johnson made 46 of 50 attempts yesterday in Memorial Stadium, and Mike Goldman made 45. Tailback Lynn Williams, center Paul Oswald and free safety Wayne Ziegler are all out with knee injuries and won't play against Nebraska. Woolard said the starting job would not be decided until game time Saturday. Suzy Meat/KANSAN KANSAS BASKETBALL Special K Kansas forward Ron Kellogg fired a pass during practice in Allen Field House yesterday, Kellogg and the rest of the Jayhawks are preparing for the National Invitational Tournament against Pepperdine next Friday in Denver. Kansas loses recruit war for prep star By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff Of the Kansan sports staff Kansas lost the recruiting war to Georgia Tech for the services of point guard Michael Christian of Mullen High School in Denver. Christian signed a letter of intent with the Yellowjackets yesterday and announced his decision at a news conference at his home last night. Stan Dodds, Mullen High School head coach, said Christian's interest in computer science may have been a big factor in his decision. He also said Christian wanted a program in which he could step in and play immediately or by his sophomore year at the latest. Christian is considered one of the top prep players in the country even though he is still recovering from a broken leg suffered during a basketball camp in June. Dodds said the break would keep Christian off the basketball court until January, at the earliest, but would have no long-term effect on his game. Kansas head coach Larry Brown said yesterday that he was notified of Christian's decision by phone about three hours before the official announcement. "it's a disappointment, but you have to hope it works out best for the kid," Brown said. Brown said Christian had narrowed his choice to Kansas and Georgia Tech. Illinois was also recruiting the 6-foot-3, 185 pound point guard, who has a vertical jump of 41 inches. Christian said he made his choice yesterday afternoon after talking to it over with his brother "I'm sure I can contribute something to the Georgia Tech program," Christian said. He will receive a full-ride four-year scholarship to Georgia Tech. "He can shoot the ball extremely well from the perimeter, and he has a good eye for shooting and passes the ball really well." Dodds said. United Press International supplied some information for this story. Christian averaged 21.1 points, six rebounds, four assists and three steals a game as a junior last season in leading Mullen High to a 16-3 record and the Centennial League title. Gooden wins NL Cy Young award The Associated Press NEW YORK — Soft-spoken but hard-throwing Dwight Gooden of the New York Mets became the youngest player ever to win the Cy Young award, receiving unanimous acclaim yesterday as the best pitcher in the National League last season. Gooden, who turns 21 Saturday, also became the first pitcher to win Rookie of the Year and Cy Young awards in successive seasons. The right-hander had a record of 24-4 and led the National League in earned run average, strikeouts, complete games and innings pitched. Gooden received 120 points, including all 24 of the first-place votes cast by the Baseball Writers' Association of America, becoming the seventh pitcher to receive the award unanimously. John Tudor of St Louis, 21-8 during the season, was second with 65 points, followed by Orel Hersheris of Los Angeles with 17, Joaquin Andu jar of St. Louis with 6, Fernando Valenzuela of Los Angeles with 4, Tom Browning of Cincinnati with 1, Jeff Reardon of Montreal with 1. The other unanimous winners were Sandy Koufax in 1963, '65 and '66; Denny McLain in 1968; Bob Gibson in 1968; Steve Carlton in 1972 and '77; Ron Guiry in 1978, and Rick Sutcliffe in 1984. Votes are cast by two members of the BBWAA from each National League city with a first-place vote counting five points, three for second and one for third. "I'm honored to have my name listed with the other Cy Young winners," said Gooden. "So much has happened to me in such a short period of time — Rookie of the Year last year and now this. Still, I would gladly trade both of these awards for one World Series ring. That's what I will be shooting for next year." The award came to Gooden three days before his 21st birthday, making him 13 years younger than Valenzuela when the Dodgers' southpaw won his Cy Young Award in 1981. Valenzuela was 10 days past his 21st birthday when he won the award on Nov. 11 of that year. Though he consistently downplayed his own ac-complishments in relation to those of the team as a whole, Gooden had the kind of season that made him stand out from the rest. His ERA of 1.53 was a team record, and he led the league with 276 2-3 inning pitches, 268 strikeouts and 16 complete games. He also had eight shutouts, second in the NL to Tudor's 10. Gooden was the first pitcher since Sandy Koufax in 1966 to lead the league in the pitching triple crown categories of victories, ERA and strikeouts. Six pitches besides Gooden — Koufax, Walter Johnson, Grover Cleveland Alexander, Dazzy Vance, Lefty Grove and Hal Newhouser — have led the majors in those categories, and all but Newhouser are in the Hall of Fame. Newhouse. With a 17-9 record in his rookie season of 1984, Gooden has a career record of 41-13. Gooden had the season's longest winning streak — 14 straight victories from May 30 to Aug. 25 — breaking the club mark of 10 by Seaver in 1969. He went 31 consecutive innings without allowing a run and put together a string of 49 consecutive innings from Aug. 31 to Oct. 2 without allowing an earned run. On Aug. 25, at the age of 20 years, nine months and nine days, he became the youngest pitcher in modern baseball history to win 20 games. Before Gooden, Bobby Feller of the American League's Cleveland Indians won 20 games at age 20 years, 10 months and five days in 1939. The youngest previous NL 20-game winner was Christy Mathewson, who won No. 20 in 1901 at age 21 years, one month and nine days. SMU defeats Hawk team by 10 strokes Bv Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff Kansas had three golfers, Madsen, Chris Hutchens and John Ogden, be for ninth place in the tournament. Hutchens shot a final round 75 and ogden shot 74. Brian McGreevy finished with a 231 total after shooting 79, and Dave Pettle shot 82 to finish the tournament with a 241 total. weredund in Kentucky in Kansas which trailed the篮筐 by 10 strokes after two rounds, was unable to erase the lead in the final round. The Mustangs led the tournament all three rounds. The Jayhawks final round of 308 placed them three strokes ahead of third place Baylor's total of 909. Southern Methodist shot a final team round of 308 and won the Hall Sutton Invitational men's golf tournament by 10 strokes over Kansas yesterday in Shreveport, La. KU's Steve Madsen, who trailed by three shots after the second round, shot himself out of contention with a final round 80. Southwest Louisiana finished in fourth place with a three-round total of 115 followed by, Centenary College of Louisiana, 917; Southeast Louisiana, 919; Pan American, 920; North Texas State, 923; McNeese State, 925; Southwest Texas State, 927; Louisiana Tech, 928; Northeast Louisiana, 934; Texas-San Antonio, 940; Tulsa, 960. Suzv Mast/KANSAN John Barr, Bethesda, Md., freshman, returned a serve during a game he and a friend played on the tennis courts behind Robinson gymnasium yesterday. forto Tongue-tied $4 million requested for site United Press International CLAYTON, Mo. — St. Louis County Executive Gene McNary will ask the county council to spend $4 million to secure a 100-acre site for a domed stadium for the football Cardinals. McNary said that today he would ask the council for permission to buy the site near Interstate 70 and the Earth City Expressway from the Swerdrup Corp., the developer of the site. Under the proposal, the county would spend $1 million on the land and $3 million toward the construction of a $7 million levy for the area. McNary announced his plan during a news conference Tuesday. He said the county could recover its $4 million regardless of whether the stadium is built by a group of private investors he has been courting. A decision to build the stadium is expected by the end of the year, after a final feasibility report on building a stadium is completed. William V. Bidwill, owner of the football Cardinals, has said he will move the team from St. Louis unless progress is made in building a 70,000-seat stadium. Bidwill said in a brief statement that he thought progress was being made. "We are pleased with the progress of the interim report and look forward to a final feasibility study" on the proposal for a stadium, Bidwell said. "Every step we've seen so far has been positive and in the right direction." McNary said ground for a stadium could be broken in six months and the stadium completed within three years. McNary said that for the stadium to be feasible, it would have to be used by four professional sports franchises — soccer, hockey, football and basketball — and by circuses, rodeos and conventions for a total of at least 160 events a year. McNary said if the plan fell through, the Sverdrup Corp. had agreed to buy the site back at a fair market value. If the investors decide to build, McNary said, the county can sell the land to them or "take a share" in the development. Cards replace third-base coach United Press International ST. LOUIS — Rich Hacker has been added to the coaching staff of the National League champion St. Louis Cardinals, replacing Hal Lanier, who resigned to manage the Houston Astros, the club announced yesterday. yesterday. Lanier was the Cardinals' third-base coach. St. Louis manager Whitey Herzog was not definite about Hacker's role on the Cardinal team next season, although he said the newly acquired coach would probably be at one of the bases. Hacker moved back to Johnson City last season and his club finished. Herzog said Nick Leyva, who coached first base for St. Louis this season, has been retained. However, it had not been decided whether Leyva would continue at first, or move to third. Hacker originally came to the Cardinals organization in November 1981 to fill the role of minor league manager and special assignment scout. Prior to his stint with St. Louis he managed at Johnson City, Tenn., in 1882, 1983 and 1985 and at Erie, Pa., in 1984. second, 10 games above .500. Although Hacker's major league career was short-lived, he was drafted and signed by the New York Mets in 1967 following graduation from Southern Illinois at Carbondale. He had a brief stay in the majors in 1971 as a shortstop for Montreal. hacker was a minor league manager and scout for the San Diego Padres in 1973 and 1980, and Midwest area scout for the Toronto Blue Jays throughout the 1981 season. Hacker, 38, is a native of New Athens, Ill., which is also Herzog's hometown. 14 University Daily Kansan Classified Ads KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 The University Daily Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 8.25 16-20 2.90 4.25 6.60 9.30 21-25 3.20 4.25 6.75 10.35 For every 5 words add. 500 500 $96 754 1.05 CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES For every 5 words add Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Friday 4 p.m. Friday Monday 4 p.m. Wednesday 4 p.m. Classified Display ... $4.40 non volume flash Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No reserves allowed in classified display advertisements except for legal displays. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS POLICIES KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE - Teenagers are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. access must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University, Dally Kansan. classified display advertisements. * Classified display ads do not count towards mon - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words * Deduction is a n.m — 2 working days prior to Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansai business office at 864-4358. !level fee! Check a student's please add a $4 service charge. Check a student's company all class admits males publication • Above rates based on consecutive day insertions - All lawsuits filed in court may be served until credit has been established. * Cases are provided for classified or - Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount. ANNOUNCEMENTS *only earned rate discount* *Samples of all mail order items must be submitted* plantation > Above rates based on consecutive day insertions Arts and Crafts Fair Lawrence Community Nursery School, 645 Alabama, Sat. Nov. 16 to a.m. — 4 p.m. Professional artists and crafts people, food, baked goods. Movies at the Hillel House 940 Mississippi 7:30 tonight - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement Hillel International Club Pd. for by Student Activity Fee correct insertion or any aktivemissions * No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified Club invites you to a Semi-formal Dance Saturday, Nov.16 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. at the Elks Club, Lodge Room 3705 W. 23rd Street Tickets sold at the SUA Office $3 members $4 non-members $5 at the door Rd for by Student Activity Fee Stop in for some popcorn $ F_{t} $ our great pick of flicks! Dial Festival, November 23 - 6 10 p.m. Cor-* nter Dial Conference and danse* Sponsored by the Kiola Club India * The University Daily Kansei 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. Paid Staff Positions Aspen 881 SUA Travel is going to beautiful Aspen Calendar Jan 41- and you can have a trip through it. You can book everything, even lift tickets. Sign-up deaidine is next week no hourly: Registration at the SAU of Aspen. News and Business Staff Positions The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; in and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Monday, December 2, 1985. 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. Editor, business manager The Kansas is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester Editor and Business Manager position. Please contact us and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200. StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., tuesday, November 19. CREDIT CARDS GUARANTEED To Working Student! 100% Approved. Charge $800. Pay $21 Month. Send For Application. National Credit Card, Box 3968. Shawne, Oklahoma 74002. 18" T. Color T. V. $32.88 per month. Smarty's TV Rent-W. 342.875/371.9 Mon, Sat, 9:30 to 10:00 Sun, Sat. Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight 11:49-14:39, Smylt's y/o (14:47 W 12:34 bd/823) Mon.-Sun. Locker room. SKIERS-Complete Colorado ski trip. $239. Limited special offer, call 824-4000 by 10am. SKIERS: Complete Colorado ski tour. $239 Limited special offer, call 842-8000 by Nov. 15 When you just need to talk to someone, you can call or drop by Headquarters When you just need to talk to We're at 1419 Massachusetts. Our number is 841-2345. It's free, confidential, and Our number is 841-2345. It's free, confidential, and Hilltop Fund Raster. Evening of piano blue and white, May 16, 2013, at the Hiltons, Saan and Joak Wincerick, Swimming, Nov. 17, 7-10 p.m. PICAROON *ADPI* - Pai Pin Road狂彩 NY, 17.3 p.m. Party afterwards at ADPI house 68, Taipei. WOOMPA FANS UNITE! Time to callate the 8th Annual "Anniversary of the Invention of Sex." Saturday, November 16. If you should be invited, you know whom to contact. ENTERTAINMENT Dance to live fiddle music! Jayhawkier Oldham Barnyard Company. Make your new party unit unique! Fanatix Free Dance Concert Friday Nov. 15 9 P.M. Burge Union Presented By SUA Special Events FOR RENT NIGHT LIFE Mobile DJ Dance Music. A mixture of New Rock and the classics presented over a 400 watt sound system. When it's time to dance, call NIGHT LIFE 749-4713. 2 Bedroom apartment for rent. Closet to campus. Rent starts at 149.66. call 860.7366 for Lion or Lion's Place. 1 Bedroom apt. ext to campus: call 810/month plus utilities; apt: 841-449 Jayhawker Towers - Limited Access Doors - Individual Contract Option - All Utilities Paid - For 2.3 or 4 persons for KU students Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 West W. One bedroom furnished, 3rd floor $25 plus utilities Lease through price could be negotiated 841-320, 843-1433 - For 2, 3 or 4 persons - Individual Contract Or - Air Conditioned ON CAMPUS 2-Br, Apts. - Swimming Pool - Furnished or Unfurnished Sublease-Affordable studio apartment in good neighborhood $125 all-framed. Available Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live BURKELEY FLATS. Vacations available now and at semester. Plan ahead, lease now for next year. 883-2116. 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Now leasing for spring **Sublease 2 BR** Available from January. Close to campus. Pursuit $95 per month. After 6 p.m., call (800) 743-3811. - Laundry Facilities Atrivative 2 bedroom condominium for reef, 1.3/m², bath. CA, FP, range refrigerator, microwave. DW,Hook盘,paid cable TV, swimming pool. DW,hook盘,Available. Available Dec. 1. Lease required. $795-749.809 **Wanted:** Roommate to share house with four owns. Own bedroom, $250 plus 1/2 room, clear closet. MASTERCRAFT APP offers a completely furnished two bedroom apartment available immediately. We also have two beds on 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms. We also offer a new chair. KU: Call 841-1212, 841-5250, or 749-8418. Cooperative living lovers your expenses while expanding your mind. Room available at Rainbow House for $110/month. Call 843-7970 after 5 p.m. to apply to become a member of our thriving community. Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. B48 142-4185. Excellent location one bedroom in studio basement apartment equipped with kitchen utensils at 180 phone 842-492-2312 phone 842-492-2312 For rent - Great land. Lg. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fenced yard, 600/month. Water and electric included. Available 1/86. Call 749-2193 or 1-642-7373, eat 32.4 (x4.30) Furnished rooms from $105 with some utilities paid. Two bike from Kansas Union. No pets allowed. patio MORE! HERE!! Two bedrooms, fireplace, dishwasher, close to campus, few utilities. Sunrise Place 10 C. $370/month. Call 749-0463 or 841-1287 (office). Large one bedroom, gas heat, water/water, e955, 749-7230 or 841-2501 Luxury townhouse, 2 bedrooms, 1/2 baths, garage, fireplace, deck, courtyard. Five bedroom apartment. MUST SUBLEASE. Gatehouse Apartments, 3 rooms, 2 baths, good location. Available end of semester, lease through May. Ask for Sarah 749-3841. HEATWEATHER VALLEY $200 OFF FIRST MONTH'S RENT. ONE & two bedrooms available beginning at $30/month. All apartments have Ca, gas heat, DW, FF refriger. Energy effi- cency. Non-Smoking female roomate for spring semester. 1 bdmr and 2 bath; 1/2 rent and 1/2 roommate. Booms for rent on the hill /10 mile from Union. 985 and 813. Call 841-6495. Nice Rooms $135.00 Util. Paid. 842-4736 after 5 p.m. SUBLEASE, available immediately studio on bus line. Next to Sanctuary, 842-7252. Spacious two bedroom unfurnished townhouse for rent close to campus. Includes garage, 1/4 bath, balcony and new carpeting. Very economical and available as early as Dec. 1. Call SUBLEASE 2 bedroom Ap On Bus Route & Close to Campus. Fits in VILLAGE Village. Spring semester opening for male at Nalsmith Hall. Immediate reply needed. Call 749-0791. Sublease at semester. Large, new, 2 bedroom, 1 block from Union. Call 843-3238. Found: A pocket calculator. Call to identify 864-4245. Ask for Brad. LOST/FOUND Found-Bracelet, Computer Center Auditiorum describe at Computer Center Information Found—gold necklace in front of Watson Library Call to identify 864-4715. LAST: Timun Square Digital Analog. Watch in room 8015 or call 740-8281 at 3:00 p.m. If found please call 740-8281 at 3:00 p.m. Lost documents and address and phone book, Lipstick Hall. Desperate, please! 644-8315-4211 Lok-folded, burgundy, flowered umbrella at Stadium Challenge game. Sentimental valuers. 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Equipment: $8.00 Two attractive young men seeking same for social interaction. Contact TODD or KIM. BUS. PERSONAL CHRISTMAS SPECIALS! 2 FOR 1 memberships -OR- $10 OFF non-member tanning packages (as low as $4 per session!) offers expire 11/23/85 EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA PHONE 841-6232 EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA *HOLIDAY PLAZA Creative, thinking singles, find kindred apprentices through LOVELINE, the directory for educated women in warfare. 760 6604. One-issue membership $4.00. FLOAT CONNECTION 18th e. Bth S. 671 6604. We get your computer's heads on straight. Computer Repair - Alpine Optima Computer Services Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Modelling and theater part-time-- shooting new beginners to professionals, call for information FEEL THE FLOW INC. MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 For all your winter clothing needs all the way (Party clothes, Topcoats, etc.) shop at EVELYN'S VINTAGE CLOTHES. 81) New Manhattan, Saint Haiti, Sat. & Sun. 10-5 The Union's recording of the dav's entrees & soups impatient passport, perfusion, resume, naturalization permit, visa and ID of course, furlough.签证, Sweedish passport, Swedish visa. CORPORATE COACH' Call 841-LIMO for Chauffeur Driven LIMOUSINES For Any Occasion. 24 HOURS a DAY. 7 DAYS a WEEK. new custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and price on printed imprinted specialties plus speedy and reliable delivery. You design it or it doesn’t. Books: 228. W. 304 (Berkshire College Press). 228. W. 304 (Berkshire College Press). New from California: Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure: 316-294-3742, PO Box 3026, Wichita, KS 66805; kansasandkusan.com KU Respectances needed. Opportunity for all single girls age (18-23) disparately receiving a $500 1000 loan or $750 2000 loan and ask me to Rent Unit Level 3. (Look for opportunity sign!) Rent Unit #49. *Color* 282.86 month Smith yurt. Say "I am ready." (Call by phone) SAY Say on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, shrink jersey sacks, cap shirt. Swaddle by Sweels. Thousands of & R R album$ — 42 unless. Also collectors items.桌, Sat & sun only. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Quintilis 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all stls up to 3 music. H2 sportswear CUSTOM DESIGNS FOR QUALITY SPORTWEAR We Make Ideas Come Alive 1023 Mass. 749-7471 WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from 75%, or sunning at South Padre Island and Daytona Beach from 899*. Hurry, call Sunchase Tours for more information tail-free Reservations! Get interactive TODAY! When your winter break counts. count on Sunchase! LOOK OUT LAWRENCE! THE KU KONNECTION has found a system of dating which works. COMPUTER DATING with a personable touch. THE KU KONNECTION has it!! Find out about us by simply sending us the KU KONNECTION P.O. BOX 3058, Lawrence, KS 66044 MATH TUTOR - Bob Meers holds an A. in Math at KU. where U02, 102, 116 and 123 were among the courses he taught. He begin tutoring preferably for Math classes, but he also works as statistician. #8 per 40 minute session: Call 843-903-8211. Camera Repair now at One Hour Photo, Southern Hills Malle, MA 7205. FOR SALE 1978 Yamaha SR-300. Runs well, needs some rebuilding best offer. Must well. 748-3301. GOVERNMENT HOMEFS from U1 (Reg U8). Also government homefs. Call 1-855-689-689. Government G794 for info. Get a Real Student Season Basketball Tournament Best Offer Ticket! Call 864-1132 or 866-1119 MOPED: 1984 Yanaha Towny, Perfect condition, 3 musts. Must call A Game at 864-3224 with 3 Nebraska-KU football tickets for face value Call 843-8005, Ask Kathy D. ONKYO channel. RECEIVER - 70 watts per channel, many features, excellent condition. Call (866) 251-9444. Must-Sell - Brand new compound with accessories. $130, Calibr J. Gadson 845-7848 Must sell immediately! 1972 Mobile Vault suitable for 1.3 person, furnished. AC, W/D vegetable. Wide range of appliances. ALPINE 7123 LiStereo presset FM -AM cassette, large features, 841-5661 for 9 a.m. 842-7628 PC INTEGRATION: The most compatible at the lowest price. Fully guaranteed. Systems starting at just $49! Hard disk special: 20 MHz Intel i3500, installed and tested (full year guarantee). One Student Basketball ticket. Call 864-1140 One student season basketball ticket for sale best offer; Alvarez accountual (cutaway) guitar (Christmas!) 864-2887 Alliport Basketball Ticket for sale. Call 748-2752. BANKRUPT LAMPS. Buy out of a lifetime!! 96 assorted lamps with 3 way switch and shade. Your choice #10. Open to the public everyday! Midstreet Furniture and Watered Bedroom 728 Midstreet Furniture, Lawrence, KS. Outside INDS & MS. HOMA. Baseball cards and sports nets! Buy, Sell and Trade. D.J.* BASEBALL Cards. Open 10 M-8 S. M-8 BASEBALL Cards. Open 10 M-8 S. Bass AMP / Suntra Beta Head, 100 Watt, Bass AMP / Sumitomo Beta Head, 100 Watt, Bass AMP / Like New, Like New, Sounds Great, 749-897-0123 Bedding Closeout. A leading manufacturer has discontinued several covers. They offered us this once special time at below wholesale cost. While we are still available, please call TERMS AVAILABLE. Open 7 days! Midwest Furniture and Waterbed Liquidators 738 New Hampton, Lawrence KS 842-2024. Outlets in USA. Comic Books, Penthouse, etc. Max- Comics. Open 11:30 Tue. Sat. & Sun. 10:5-8 Wed. CARPET 35,000 square yards in a rainbow of color and size. Big Bolt's Used Carpets 728 New Fender guitar garagr $175 best offer. Beginner's drum set, some hardware, make offer. 842-03243 For Sale: 14 X 70 Mobile Home. why throw your money away on rent when you can have equity when you graduate? 2 bdrms. 1 bath home to room or roommates or young family. 1-813-4677 For sale: Yamaha receiver, Sony turtleback, KLH speakers, 250; Call 749-2183 Fair Sale- Large weight set with bench, graphic equalizer, 11" BW TV. Call 749-2843 anytime. For sale. Hotpoint washing machine, 1 year old, excellent condition. $300. POVERTY SALE '13' Color TV, Queen size waterfall Call 841-7033 For sale. Sony receiver, be turntable, Sanjo cassette player, speakers, $30 for system, will ship. Call 718-542-9690. Phone answering machine, machine, jewelry, skin sweaters, lamps, tubs, twin bedspread, wall clock, milk pitcher THE MOST COMPATIBLE American PC/XT Computer from $95. Full year warranty. Authorized Dealer, Distributor, Think Micr, Inc, 8432-335 Boxes, Lawrence, KS 60044 Tired of looking everywhere for QUALITY TIRES & WHEELS at reasonable prices? Well, you don't have to anymore! At IMPORT PLUS, all major brand are at our everyday food prices (cooked or frozen) online and you can us out 1019. W23rd (Beside Pizza Hat) 749-5437. Waterbed mattress at 80-inch aquarium set-up. HP 41 Printer, stearo system. Call 843-8390 Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make BLOOM COUNTY Zenith Terminal (medium & monitor) for off-camp up to 100m and other system. Excellent installation. Tel: 798-2650. Western Civilization Notes: On sale on Sale! Make sense to use them. 1) An study Guide; 2) For class. 3) A video presentation. 4) Analysis of Western Civilization; available now at Town Cries. The Jayhawk Bookstore, and www.towncries.com. Collector Starter, Mint and used. Canada, U.S. Europe and more. Open 10-5, Sat, Sun. onbh 11h 12-4pm (excluding holidays). PASSPORT RADAR DETECTOR. New condition, must sell to best offer. 749-1927 AUTO SALES 1604 Instant. Bigurdy with cream interior. 4" speed, A/C; shape, $2.49$. McCann Caledon 3" 1974 Ford Mustang Liftback, Runs good, some, runs or best offer. Call 822-6532 500. treased, £78 or best offer, call 841-0599. 1927 Dumbo F 10 A - C *Speed 1959 Preston Mk* 1927 Dumbo F 10 A - C *Speed 1959 Preston Mk* 1977 MG Midjet, 842-8523, late eavesdens 1978 Chevette, great run. 4 great, 2 door, many warriors. 1979 Corvette, great run. Write ad here KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS 1809 Plymouth Airstow 5 Speed AM-FM Cassette $2795 Preston McCall Co. 841-6667 1978 Toyota Celica. 5 speed, A- C, steroid. $1,995. Preston McCall 614 - 841-6067. HELP WANTED Sale for B2 Hailer Cive 190 DX, 3 dRATCH, for Speed air hCIR, AM/M CIRM) for s Preston McCall Co. 841-6067 1920 Bobcat - good condition - for sale at a very 1982 Chevy Chevette. dark blue metallic, dark automatic; automatic, A/C 2025 Preston Mac 1986 Chevrolet Caprice. dark blue metallic. Name: 2 Bedroom apartment for rent. Close to campus: Rest starts 1-1 dcb 106 call 847-3706 for Lona Loma Vista Address Dates to run CHILD CARBESTOOD AREA We have many families looking for loving child care workers. We are committed to providing round trip transportation, Allene Fitch, Childcare Placement Services, 149 Buckingham Md., 803-626-7555. S. O'Reilly Relegated Limited 74,900 l. Ac. PC, CB. Clath Interior. $2500 881-7500 $1990 For sale, 84 Honda Civile DX, 2 dhr. catch, 5 speed, air, AM/FM cassette, excellent condition, moving abroad, must sell, one owner. 86200 749-2193 1984 BMW 310i, Low mileage, all electric, custom interior. Beautiful. Call 748-2348. 180 Mazda GLC, 2 door, HB, 5 speed, FWD, rear defender, highway mileage $3000 or take over $89 payments. Can’t afford both car and school anymore-must sell car as soon as possible. BabySitter needed in my home for all house- hold responsibilities for responsible, not noisy, with references to 846-2003. Tuesday - Thursday babysitter needed. Call 842-8766 A NEW NOSE! FEEL GREAT! REMAINDER! REBORN! Classified Heading: — Phone MAIN STREET MANAGER, LAWRENCE. $32,000-6,000 Responsible for Marketing Lawrence's Downtown Lawrence in coexistence with Downtown Lawrence Association. A degree in Downtown Lawrence Association and a degree in marketing and interpersonal skills. This person will be a full time advocate for Downtown Lawrence on campus. November 22, 1985 to November 22, 1987. Lawrence电话a.m. to 12 noon (913) 842-3832. Interested in the travel industry? The nation's largest college tour operator is looking for a responsible campus representative to market the finest spring trips to Port Lauderdale or Daytona Beach. Earn free trips, and good commissions while exploring the resorts. For more in formation, call 1-800-323-8661. 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks 1.15 words $2.60$ $3.75$ $5.25*$ $8.25$ For every 10 words added $30^*$ $50^*$ $75^*$ $1.05$ Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Classified Display 1 col x 1 inch = $4.40 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate "saaaaaay, aren't you a stranger in these parts? Well, I don't take candy from strangers." CORRANDI by Berke Breathed C NEED SIZZLIN' MOVIN' COME ON OVER HERE GLAM-UPHAIR RANCE IN YOUR FEETS MORE SELF- CONFIDENT. YOU ! Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 Sports University Daily Kansan 15 Drivers Wanted, must be able to work late night Drivers Wanted, apply in person at Checkers Pizza, 214 Vine Street Classified Ads NannyAu Pair for three year old child Aig/culturally oriented family, San Francisco after. Room and board & $7 per week. Apply thru agency aign. 913-825-4231 after tp. m. Part-time mornings, must be 21. Apply in person. Knol welding Supply, 1045 PEOE Part time permanent word processor 25 wk/h. minimum 50 WPW 6148-7800 Manpower office, minimum 25 WPW 6148-7800 Position Available - Gift Shop Manager, Museum of Natural History. Requires experience in retail sales, inventory and purchasing, bookkeeping/video/schedule hourly help. Preferred qualifications: merchandising and advertising experience; interest in teaching or mentoring students in at least a university course and have a Bachelors schedule $20/mo to start 30/mo. Applicant should demonstrate an application form, contact Mary Slade or Mary Ann Munsch, 022 Dyche 684-454 Applications may be accepted equally with Alternative Action Employer. RESEARCH ASSISTANT - WESTERN CIVILIZATION. Quarter time position for six months to assistant Director of Western Civilization Program in the investigation and evaluation of educational materials needed materials) in order to enlarge the resources available to the instructional staff of the program. Positions will be for six months of quarter-time employment in 1986. Position requires a Baccalaureate degree. Prefer academic background in the Humanities, teaching experience in Western Civilization, and some library research skills. Salary $855 a month. The University of Kansas Budget Office has two position openings for continuous half- time student assistants with possible full-time employment during the semester with the process of budget and account transfer for the University's budgets. This person will gain a good experience working with the university to work within the University's financial environment. This position requires a minimum of seven hours of accounting. The second position requires good typing ability and proficiency with word processing and spreadsheet software. Both positions require senior or graduate student training. Position requirements $1400; $400 to $480 per month for half- time appointments. Closing dates are November 15, 2015. Position start date is December 31, 2015. Budget Office #84 - 3136. Applications available in 319 Strong Hall Equal Opportunity Employer. *female* Ald. A. M. 7:30-12:00; P.M. 10:12 weekend also Ade. 708 *English Graduate* *Thinking of graduate school* Small is Beautiful. Graduate Assistancehips, Spring begins in班定生 12. Eighteen dept. Emporia State begin 12. K. 6900 Write or call w/ 318-345-1000 Ext. 211. SERVICES OFFERED Work-Study Hourly Position available with Bureau of Child Research, 10-20hrs. per week. General office assistance, up-dating computer skills, training on Microsoft Office photocopying, distribution of mailing information and filing. Must have good organizational skills and the ability to work in a team with knowledge of computer entry and good typing skills necessary Complete application at AA-132 EOE/AA/MSC (Mendoscow) Nov 19 to 18th EOE/AA/MSC Haircuts 7, perm 850 at Channels. Contact Chris Monat at Sat 6/42 7Walk-in walks. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in - contraprespective and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5728 - contraceptive services in Los Angeles 901-3648 STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1039, Manhattan, downtown all haircuts. $6. No appointment. BHRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 943-8421 THEME & THEIS OUTLINEED - enhanced with library RE-SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising. Victor Clark A27-8590 WANTED Female Roomate Wanted immediately to share two bedroom apt. Very nicely furnished, have a large master suite conditioning, close to campus and downtown is on bus route, $140.00 and half utilities 872-987 if you are interested. Female roommate wanted ASAP to bring new 2 story townhouse. All modern conveniences include DW, microwave, AC, 1/2 baths, 3 baths, 1/2 of r/m and utilities, energy eff. B44-85948. Male Roommate Needed: Peta OK $160/mo plus 1.2 u/l, Start Dec1, Cell 843-7817. NAIMSHIT replacement needs for second semester. Urgent: contact Ounat or Kurt 794-4819. Need Season Basketball Tickets Price Needed. 841-8342 6 p.m. O. T. student desperately needs female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment in KC for spring semester. Photographically attractive females interested in Lawrence's newest modeling agency. Inquire for appointments at 841-2588 between 6 and 10 p.m. ROOMMATS FOR TOWNHOUSE $3 / bib; fireplace in Trailridge Looking For 1 or more smokers $150 per month plus 7 1/2 habitats or less. Responsible and fun-loving female to share 2 bfrm for $100 a month on visual view and photos of the children. Bloomingtondunderdalefantasiathehouse. $153 plus 3 utitiles to campus, near balcony of University of Illinois. WANTED: Roommate for spring semester. Wonderful 3 Bedroom Bedroomwagowri Apt. Close to campus, Cable, A/C, Pool, 811 per month. We're nice, fun people. 842-825 WANTED Boomcase for spring semester Wonderful 3 bedroom Meadowbrook apartment. Close to campus, A/C pool, $115 month. We're nice, fun people. 842-3825 Wanted: Female roommate for spring semester. $80.00 rent. 3 itinities, and own room. On basis of availability. Wanted-Guitarist, director player for Motown band. Vocal capability needed. Prefer job with sound engineer or audio technician. Wanted: Roommate, quiet, non-smoking, responsible, serious student. West of Kaiser and Hardw. wd, DW, micro $200/mo., included 841-2282. Wanted: female roommate, new or spring semester, 215-642-1800, house $125/mo (plus meals) 931-642-1802 Wanted-- non-smoking female rostimate to share large 1500 square apartment. Call 843-291-1216 or visit www.usaa.com/4291. 843-291-1216 24-Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes, dissertation papers. Best university. Best business院校. 8169 campus. TYPING 3,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Adequate and affordable typing. Judy, 842-7945. A professional typing, Tern papers, Theses, Dissertation Resumes, etc. Using IBM Selectric Software. AMT TYPE/NB 842-1942 Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs. Law Review articles typed by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in by 6 n.m. out by 10 n.m. same day. A DIFFERENT Service. Tape TRANSCRIPTIONS a specially Experienced Jeanette Shatner A. L.SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, beses term phones. Paper 842-6857 after 5:30. A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality, resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available 843-1850. Absolutely LETTER PERFECT Word process. Sapping and typing are the most difficult tasks. 844 illitmus, 843/618. All Kinds of Typing: GOOD IMPRESSIONS Spelling and punctuation errors corrected 841/627 1: 2 Dependent, accurate, professional, WORLD 1: 3 Dependent, accurate, professional, papers. 1: 4 World War II digit B447 801. Alphabetium Computer Services - Word Process- ing, Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics, Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates. F49-1118 1-Plus Typing. law papers, resumes, dissection notes. 2-Plus Typing. law papers, with memory, 4724 and 8473 or 4744. 8 p.m. in lab. DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape 843-8877 Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers, Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone 822-310 after 5:30 a.m. English B.A. Typing or Tutoring, Spelling and grammar corrected. Overnight service. Call xatype Type for all your typing needs. Disk Reasonable Call Mgmt. 843-7446 or a1-9234 DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter paper papers (up to 30 papers). On Katie, Mommy's paper, 842-3878 PROFESSIONAL typist with 15 years experience. Fault accurate typing. Call Penghyat after 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., 842-909-3600. JUITALY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected TYPIING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resume. HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254 TRIG Wordprocessing CONSCIENTIOUS WORD processing CONSCIENTIOUS WRITING ACCEPT ruths Call 641-3911 TOP-NOTCH professional word processing, word processing, thesis, theses, letter quality print- ing, etc. 166-602 the WORDOCTORS—Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147 FIESTA, FIESTA, FIESTA FIESTA... TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: SPANISH DEPARTMENT, LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES AND S.U.A. COST: $ 2.50 IN ADVANCE $ 3.50 AT THE DOOR DATE: FRIDAY NOV.15 (FROM 8:30 TO 2:30) PLACE: MASTER'S INN (OLD RAMADA INN) CACO CASH BAR PAID FOR BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE $1495 COMPLETE High-Res Monitor, 256K, 2 Drives, Graphics Capability Enhanced Keyboard, Clock/Calendar, MS-DOS, 1 YR Warranty AND Batteries INCLUDED WINNER LEADING EDGE MODEL "D" "PC EDITOR'S CHOICE—Among the bargain-priced PC-compatibles tested, Leading Edge Model D is the clear winner. That's not surprising—it's the newest machine tested and was designed around lessons that were learned from some of the others. It combines all the features that you could possibly want as standard equipment with a price that you'd expect to pay for a stripped IBM machine." COMPUTER OUTLET PC Magazine—Oct., 1985 "Leading Edge is a registered trademark" Students and Faculty make the difference at THE tour computer connection at 843-PLUG = 804 N.H. Nabil's Restaurant Nabil's KU students get a 10% discount on Sundau nights with KUID. 9th & Iowa Open 11 a.m. 2 p.m. Hillcrest Shopping Center 5 p.m. 10 p.m. For parties of 5 or more, please call for reservations 841-7226. CHRISTMAS & THANKSGIVING FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST NO EXTRA CHARGE! AIRLINE COUNTER PRICES Make your reservations at todays prices. On campus or downtown. M Chiefs' kicker nearly perfect The Associated Press DON'T DELAY DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED CALL NOW! Maupintour travel service K. U. Union/900 Mass. 749-0700 Going into the season, Lowyed all field goal specialist with a career percentage of .747. After hitting 15 of 18 through last week's game, he had nudged his mark to a even loftier .756. From 50 yards in, Lowery has been successful 115 of 137 kicks. From 30 yards in, he has never missed. After four years we're quitting the sweater business to concentrate on our footwear... on Nobody in the history of pro football ever kicked a football more accurately more often than the Kansas City Chiefs' oft-rejected Ivy Leaguer. Sweater Liquidation "I like the clarity of being a kicker," he says. "If you're a blocker on the offensive line and miss a block, most people won't notice it. Or at least they're not sure. But everybody knows the second a kicker does his thing, and they know who made the kick." KANSAS CITY, Mo. — William "Refrigerator" Perry may be the most talked-about player in the National Football League these days, but Nick Lowery is the most nearly perfect. QUITTING THE SWEATER BUSINESS Entire Stock 25% to 60% off Few men in any profession can match Lowery's breadth of experience. How many have sat and discussed politics long into the night with a justice of the Supreme Court? Christmas Layaway available. Shop now while the selection is at its best. 841-7027 TOOTPRINTS 1339 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE, KS. 56044 One reason Lowery survived his ordeal was that he was honest enough with himself to see it coming, he says. Store Hours: Mon.-Sat. 12-5:30 "I almost was ready to give up on my quest and get a job on the professional staff of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee," he said. "I had been working on the committee on the off-season on deregulation and the Olympic boycott." How many have been fired by the first six NFL teams they tried to get on with? Dartmouth being no football factory, the thin, studious Lowery was ignored by the NFL when he graduated with a degree in government in 1978. Undeterred, he embarked on an odyssey from one sweaty training camp to another. First the Cincinnati Bengals took a look and said they did not want him. Then the Washington Redskins did the same. He also collected pink skirts in Baltimore, New Orleans, Tampa Bay and San Diego. Then in the summer of 1980, "It figured it would take me some time, and it did," he said with a grin. "It took a while to get used to the pressure and the large crowds. I finally learned that the way to do it is just to go out there and be yourself." destiny brought Lowery to Liberty, Mo., where former Chiefs Coach Marv Levy had a kicking institution named Jan Stenburd. But Levy also had a sharp eye for talent. And Chiefs fans were disbelieving when the popular team would tolerate a bomber for an unknown from Dartmouth who had been dumped, it seemed to them, by practically every team in the NFL. Politics and academics form the foundation of the background of this unusual professional football player. His father, one of the first Fulbright Scholars, worked for the State Department in Europe. His mother was one of the first women admitted to Oxford. Born in Munich, West Germany, Lowery traveled with his parents all over Europe until they settled in Washington, D.C., next door to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Byron White. The inquisitive youngster and the Supreme Court justice, an All-America football player at Colorado in his college days, became friends. They spent many evenings discussing current events, which led to an interest in government and politics. United Press International Former TU star put back on trial NEW ORLEANS — A state appeals court ruled yesterday the sports bribery charges against John "Hot Rod" Williams should never have been dismissed and cleared the way to put Tulane University's former basketball star back on trial. Connick said he hoped to have the star center back in court before the end of the year, even if Williams' lawyer appealed to the Louisiana Supreme Court. "I think it's absolutely a victory," District Attorney Harry Connick said at a news conference. "We didn't have our day in court. We're being given an opportunity to have that." Williams' trial in August was abruptly ended after two days of testimony when Criminal District Court Judge Alvin Oser declared a mistrial on the grounds of prosecutorial misconduct and dismissed the charges against him. A three-judge panel of the state's 4th Circuit Court of Appeals agreed in its decision yesterday that prosecutors' actions had been "deplorable." But the judges said Oser should not have dismissed the charges, and two of them said Oser should not even have declared a mistrial. Williams' career with the National Basketball Association hangs in the balance. The 6-foot-10 player was drafted by the Cleveland Cavaliers, but the NBA has refused to approve his contract until the criminal charges are resolved. Team officials in Cleveland had just learned of the rulings and had no comment, Cavalier spokesman Harvey Greene said. Williams is one of three former Tulane players charged with shaving points in two Metro Conference games in February in exchange for cocaine and almost $20,000 in cash. Oser said prosecutors had hopelessly botched Williams' case — the first of the defendants who came to trial — by refusing to share evidence with his lawyers, despite court orders to do so. The judge became so angry that he screamed and cursed at the lawyers and later was removed from presiding at the remaining Tulane trials. By withholding evidence, Oser said, the prosecutors had goaded the defense into asking for a mistrial. Three of the students and basketball player Bobby Thompson have pleaded guilty to the point-shaving charges, while player David Dominique and two alleged bookies await trial. 1/2 Price Buy one ice cream or yogurt & get the second one at ½ price with this coupon expires 11-26-85 CONE·A·COPIA The Magical Ice Cream Dream Machine! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1814 West 23rd (next to Command Performance) Beat the Blues with UNDERCOVER 21 W. 9th $5.00 Off ANYTHING BLUE! Bras, pantles, teddys, sleepware, cami/taps 1 coupon per person Good through 11-16 16 University Daily Kansan I V vic tole hea we pe Re Cdi pr ap ti Campus/Area Thursday, Nov. 14, 1985 APARTHEID HITS HOME Wilfredo Lee/Special to the KANSAN Kurtis Keyes, Chicago senior, joins other apartheid protesters in front of Strong Hall. The protesters, who marched yesterday, said they would begin weekly protests on campus. Protesters to retain visibility By a Kansan reporter Students against apartheid yesterday picked in front of strong Hall to maintain their visibility on campus, a member of the KU Committee on South Africa said yesterday. The committee member, Jana Ungerman, Lawrence senior, said demonstrators would picket in front of Strong every Wednesday. About 15 members from the committee and Blacks Against Apartheid, carried signs that said, "Stand Against Apartheid" and Freedom is coming in South Africa. They formed a circle from no to 13:00 p.m. "The pickets are to let people know the issue is still alive;" Ungerman said. "There are still people concerned about it." Dan Parkinson, Scott City graduate student, said the pickets would be peaceful and continue through the winter months when it would be too cold to rally often. The group chose to picket in front of Strong Hall because Chancellor Gene A. Budig's suite is there, Parkinson said. "He needs to continue to be faced with the fact that he's in disagreement with us," he said. Budget causes faculty, staff concern KU officials invite Carlin to speak on relation of economy, education By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff KU faculty members say they think cutting the University's budget is the wrong way for Gov. John Carlin to offset the state's revenue deficits, the University Senate Executive Committee chairman said yesterday. To get their point across, University officials have invited Carlin to KU to hear their concerns. Carlin will speak next Thursday at 4 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Carlin is expected to discuss economic development and higher education in his speech. Last week, the state consensus revenue estimating group said that Kansas revenues over the next 18 months will be 1.33 million from earlier projections. "It is a particularly crucial time to focus attention on the important interrelationship between economic development and a financially healthy University of Kansas," said Sidney Shapiro, SenEx chairman. With the revenue shortfall, Carlin will be seeking strategies to combat it. Carlin said that because of the shortfall, faculty members at Board of Regents universities and state agencies receive pay raises without tax hikes. "Many faculty members felt it would be short-sighted, in the extreme, by cutting university budgets," he said. If the University budget is cut, the state also loses, because economic development would be hindered without strong learning institutions and wide-ranging research programs, Shapiro said. Cutting the University's budget hurts KU because faculty members' salaries would be lower in comparison with other colleges across the country. That makes it harder to assessors to the University, Shapiro said. "In the last three years, KU has lost 26 faculty members who had research projects that accounted for $6 million in research," Shapiro said. Researchers at the KU have been successful in bringing millions of research dollars to the university. During fiscal year 1979-84, KU faculty researchers brought $127 million of research financing into the state. Also, economic activity stimulated by research creates nearly three times the revenue that was originally created, he said. That means the University generated about $60 million in research in the fiscal years of 1978-84. He said the governor had spoken often in the last few years about education's role in increasing economic development. "We want to give him a forum to speak about it," Shapiro said. Students Save 10% On Classifieds! coupon coupon Winter Tanning Special Ten 30 minute sessions for $25 must be prepaid Bring this coupon for a FREE tanning session HAIR AFFAIR 9th & Illinois 843-3034 Old Towne Square coupon "It's going to be difficult to live without," he said. "It means there will be no salary increases for unclassified staff and a minimal increase for supplies and expenses — which are already underfunded." Keith Nitcher, university director of business affairs said the University would suffer without the budget increase. coupon . "We're not looking at an increase. The governor's budget will reflect a decrease for the Regents. There will probably be no salary increases." A projected $133 million shortfall in state funds over the next 18 months would cause a virtual freeze on state support for the Board of Regents, the Regenss' executive officer said yesterday. LAST CHANCE TO HAVE YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT TAKEN "It's going to be difficult to maintain the quality of education without the increase in funding that is necessary." Back by popular demand! Senior pictures Thursday, Nov.14 through Tuesday, Nov.26 Call the Jayhawker Yearbook office immediately for an appointment! 864-3728 coupon PANIC BUTTON Last week a state revenue estimating group slashed $133 million from its earlier projections on its income over the next 18 months. By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff Shortfall to hit salaries, supplies "The overall budget will probably stay at about the same level as this year," Stanley Koplik, the officer, said. "We can try to improve our prospects, but right now they're pretty grim." Kopilik said the Regents' budget proposal for fiscal 1987 called for a 7 percent increase in salaries and an additional 7 percent increase in "We'd be lucky to get a small part of that," he said. other operating expenses. The $512 million proposal is a 10 percent increase over last year's budget. MEL AMIGOS MEXICAN RESTAURANT SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! OYSTERon ½ SHELL 50¢ each Fridays only 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina $1 MARGARITAS Wednesdays All Dav 1 WELL DRINKS Saturdays All Day 843-4076 2600 Iowa House of Hupei 2007 W. Sib Sunday Buffet $5.25 All You Can Eat House of Hunei '85 ALL STUDENTS AND FACULTY WELCOME COMPUTER FAIR SEE THE LATEST IN PERSONAL COMPUTERS SATURDAY, NOV. 16 REPRESENTATIVES FROM MAJOR COMPUTER COMPANIES WILL BE PRESENT JOSEPH R. PEARSON MAIN LOBBY 1-4:30 P.M. Idahoan convicted in death of trooper The Associated Press COLUMBIA, Mo — David Tate, an alleged member of a white supremacist organization called The Order, was convicted of first-degree murder yesterday in the April shooting death of a Missouri state trooper. Boone County Circuit Judge Frank Conley told the jury of six men and six women to return today for the penalty phase of the trial. The penalty phase is a minitrial in which jurors hear additional testimony and determine whether to recommend the death penalty to the judge, who hands down the formal sentence later. The jury deliberated less than two hours before returning the guilty verdict that could lead to a death sentence. First-degree murder in Missouri carries a mandatory death sentence, and a parole with no chance of parole for 50 years. About 100 spectators and reporters had packed the courtroom since the case went to jury early yesterday. In the early days, parents, were among the spectators. Tate, 23, of Athol, Idaho, sat quietly in his chair with his hands folded on his lap as Conley read the verdict and watched without emotion as Conley polled each member of the jury. Tate was convicted in the shooting death of Missouri Highway Patrol Trooper Jimmie Linegar, 31. Linegar and Trooper Allen D. Hines, 35, were shot with a silencer-equipped machine pistol after they stopped Tate's van in a routine traffic check in southern Missouri on April 15. Hines recovered and testified at Tate's trial. Tate's van was later found to contain what authorities called an arsenal of weapons. The same day Tate and 22 other alleged members of The Order were indicted by a federal grand jury in Seattle on racketing and conspiracy charges. Ten of those federal defendants are on trial in Seattle. Defense and prosecution lawyers told the jury in closing arguments yesterday that the case hinged on the issue of premeditation. The defense said during jury selection Monday that it would not deny that Tate shot and killed Linegar. Public Defender Patrick Deaton said yesterday that Tate had acted out of fear. The prosecution, however, contended in its closing statement that Tate had time to think about his actions and knew what he was doing. "David wasn't coolly reflecting. He was just getting more and more scared all the time," Deaton said of Tate's state of mind when he was stopped by the troopers. "Fear of going to jail for a long time would make most of us scared," said Justus, who asked the jurors whether they thought that was enough justification to let him off for murder. "The defendant was poised and ready to go," Prosecutor Jim Justus told the jurors. "His intentions and plans were already made. He decided on the 15th day of April I am not going to prison. I am going to kill those officers.' The judge told jurors in his instructions that they could convict Tate of first-degree murder, which carries a possible death sentence, or second-degree murder, which is punishable by 10-30 years or life in prison. The defense completed its case Tuesday with two witnesses — Tate's mother and a psychiatrist — after the doctor had called a total of 10 witnesses. ELOPE THE PERM THAT OUTSHINES THEM ALL CELLOPERM CURL WITH TRANSLUCENT CELLOPHANE SHINE Get Ready, for the Holidays at Joda & Friends Hair Salon 745 N.H. 841-0337 Perm Hair Cut & Condition Now $35.00 thru Nov. with coupon (long hair .5.00 more) ask for Peggy or Nancy The University of Kansas Theatre Presents William Shakespeare's Mirtful and Morrery Comedy The Charleston Theater Company Presents William Shakespeare's Mirthful and Merry Comedy TWELFTH NIGHT November 7,8,9, & 14,15,16,1985 HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS! 8:00 p.m. Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved; for reservations: 913-864-3982 VISA/MasterCard Accepted Twelfth Night is KU's entry in the 1986 American College Theatre Festival Partially owned by the KU Student Activity Team SINCE 1889 J. Hawks for life Two students share more than most with mascot See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN --- FRIDAY, NOV. 15, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 60 (USPS 650-640) Soggy Details page 3. Tacha appears before Senate hearing The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, told a Senate panel yesterday that her work as an administrator, teacher and lawyer had prepared her well for a judgeship on a federal appeals court Tacha, nominated by President Reagan for a seat on the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, also disputed allegations by a KU English professor that she has worked against equal employment opportunities for women and minorities at the University. University "As a matter of personal commitment as well as in response to regulatory mandates, Have placed a high priority during my administration upon attracting and retaining qualified women and minorities for faculty positions," Tacha said in a statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee. Most of the hearing was devoted to statements lauding Tacha. The exception was testimony by Myra Hinman, the English professor who is suing the University for sexual discrimination in its salary and promotion practices. The lawsuit was filed before Tacha became an administrator. Tacha, 38, has served since 1981 as vice chancellor for academic affairs and has been on the law school faculty since 1974. "It itens to me that Tacha's attitude toward civil rights matters suits perfectly her environment," said Himan. She contended that Tacha did not enforce equal employment guidelines in her role as an administrator. "Deaniell Tacha is obviously a woman, however, mere gender does not guarantee that any single woman will protect the rights of minorities and women," said Hinman. In her prepared statement to the committee, she called Tacha a paper person who was unqualified for a federal judgeship and who was wholly unfriendly to civil rights. "Dennell is, to my view, just the sort of person President Reagan would have chosen to aid in his campaign to turn the clock back on civil and constitutional rights," said Hinman. The Rev. D.D Miller, Wichita, of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, did not appear at the hearing although he also has lodged similar civil rights objections with the committee about Tacha's nomination. Tacafo's motto was Tacha noted that the percentage of women and minorities hired for new positions at KU had increased during her tenure as an administrator, and that affirmative action officials at KU had found remarkable progress in that area in 1983 and 1984. Richard Vone, KU executive secretary, told the panel that the allegations against Tacha were baseless and blatantly ridiculous. To further attack the allegations, letters were submitted to the com mittee from a number of University officials, including Chancellor Gene A. Budig, testifying to Tacha's support of affirmative action goals and her qualifications for a judicial appointment. Budig wrote that Tacha had been an aggressive advocate for the recruitment and retention of qualified minority and women faculty. Jacob Gordon, president of the University's black faculty and staff council, wrote that Tacha had done See TACHA p. 5, col. Reagan's wary of undue hope on summit eve United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan said yesterday that it was not an impossible dream that his summit meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail Grobache could begin the process of wiping out nuclear weapons. But he warned Americans that fundamental disagreements would not change. In a nationally broadcast speech from the Oval Office, Reagan said that his trip next week to Geneva for two days of talks with the Kremlin leader was a mission for peace and that his aim was to narrow the differences between Washington and Moscow. Moscow. He also said that he hoped to build new ties between the Soviet and American people with expanded cultural, academic and sports activities that would lessen the suspicions that have spurred the arms race. race. In light of the history of strained relations between the superpowers, Reagan cautioned against high expectations, but he did say that he thought the meeting could set a steady, more constructive course to the 21st century. "While it would be naive to think a single summit can establish a permanent peace." Reagan said, "this conference can begin a dialogue for Peace. So we look to the future with optimism and go to Geneva with confidence." With arms control at the top of the Soviet agenda for the summit, Reagan made clear his determination to emphasize the issues he sees as being equally important, particularly the Kremlin's role in regional conflicts around the world and their abuses of human rights. and then subject. Although there have been suggestions that Reagan and Gorbachev might agree on a framework for U.S. and Soviet negotiators to follow in arms talks, George Shultz, secretary of state, told reporters that such an accord was unlikely. accord was unlikely. White House aides have indicated that, even without an arms accord, Reagan and Gorbachev are expected to agree to further summits, perhaps with the next one to be held in Washington in 1986. They also were expected to announce accords on civil aviation and the opening of new consulates in New York and Kiev. Reagan said that he was going to Geneva with the realization that the arms race must be stopped, and he repeated his pledge of last week that the United States was willing to reduce comparable nuclear systems by 50 percent. by weep. Week reductions that would result in a stable balance between us — with no first strike capability — and verified compliance." Reagan also repeated his defense of the U.S. Strategic Defense Initiative - the multibillion dollar Star Wars anti-missile research program that has drawn sharp fire from Moscow and has been the biggest obstacle to the arms talks in Geneva. "If we both reduce the weapons of war, there would be no losers, only winners," he said. "And the whole world would benefit if we could both abandon these weapons altogether and move to non-nuclear defensive systems that threaten no one." "My mission, stated simply, is a mission for peace," said Reagan, who leaves for the Swiss city tomorrow. Reagan, at 74 the oldest U.S. president to go to the summit, used a broad, philosophical brush to paint the backdrop for his meeting with Gorbachev. GIBBONCE "When we speak of peace, we should not mean just the absence of war," he said. "True peace rests on the pillars of individual freedom, human rights, national self-determination, and respect for the rule of law... "In Geneva, our agenda will seek not just to avoid war, but to strengthen peace, prevent confrontation and remove the sources of tension." tertiary organization specifically cited conflicts in Afghanistan, Cambodia, Angola, Ethiopia amd Nicaragua as examples of conflicts that threatened to spill over national frontiers and bring the superpowers into confrontation. MUSIC BY FATIMA TURK AND MARCO ROTH JUNE 1973 Steve Goetz, a professional juggler from Santa Cruz, Calif., is protected from the elements under an oversized umbrella. Goetz is in Lawrence visiting his family, but says he would rather be back in California where the weather is better. Rain may leave; cold to continue By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff Unhappy, wet people trudged through rainy, cold weather yesterday as Lawrence endured its seventh consecutive day without sunshine. Students on campus were looking for any kind of relief. ing for any kind of relief Sheryl Hampton, Overland Park sonhomore, hoped for snow. "Anything would be better than this," she said. "This is the kind of weather that makes you want to climb into bed with an electric blanket. I wish I had a fireplace in my dorm room." Paul Charity, Boston, England, junior, said the wet, wintry weather reminded him of home. To combat it, he recommended "thermal underwear, flippers and a snorkel." Today, the dismal weather is expected to continue. Steve Kisner, a meteorological technician at the weather service in Topeka, said the first big winter storm of the season was expected to bring snow to most of the western half of Kansas. He said there was no chance for snow in the Lawrence area today, but rain was expected with temperatures remaining in the low to mid 40s. The heaviest accumulations should be about six to eight inches near Dodge City and Garden City. The snow will stretch as far east as Russell, where four to six inches are expected and as far north as Goodland, where one to two inches are expected. Kisner said the "mixed bag" of weather plaguing the area was the result of a cold front that stretched from El Paso, Texas, to the bootheel of Missouri. Travelers' advisories were posted for most of Kansas last night and will probably continue today, according to a spokesman for the Kansas State Police. "That front has combined with warm air from the south and moisture from the Gulf of Mexico to produce rain, snow and sleet over a four-state area," he said. for the Hassle. The sun may make a canoe appearance on Saturday as the clouds begin to break up, Kisner said. However, temperatures will remain in the low to middle 45s. football fans planning to follow the yahawks to Lincoln, Neb. for this Saturday's game should expect conditions that will be somewhat worse, Kisner said. Forecasters predict an 80 percent chance of snow or rain in the Lincoln area with temperatures in the mid to upper 30s. The wintry weather of the past week should signal motorists to prepare their cars for the cold months ahead, according to Officer Richard Jump of the Lawrence Police Department. "People should use common sense," he said. "Change your oil. Make sure you have enough antifreeze. It's also time to put on snow tires. People should also make sure they have a blanket in their car or in their trunk." Motorists should also keep a tin can and a candle in their cars, Jump said. Friends help schedule KU-Louisville By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Rich Hussey, NBC-TV director of programming, knows it pays to have friends such as John Carpenter, athletic director at Rider College. But Hussey also knows that friends don't come cheap. KU.Louisville game, jeopardized by KU's legal problems with Detroit, until he learned a heartening fact from Gary Hunter, KU's assistant athletic director. Hussey and knows that Rider, in Lawrenceville, N.J., recently offered to reschedule its Jan. 8 basketball game with the University of Kansas, so that KU could play the University of Detroit and the University of Louisville this season. "When Gary read me the list of teams KU had on its schedule and came to Rider, I thought 'Aha, there may be a way to save the KU-Louisville game yet,'" he said. KU plans to play Louisville at Allen Field House on Jan. 25. Hussey said the outlook had been bleak for the Hussey said he was optimistic because he knew that Rider had helped NBC solve a similar scheduling problem two years ago. At that time, he said, NBC wanted to television Ray Meyers' last game as basketball coach at DePaul University. NBC officials were trying to arrange for that last game to be between DePaul and Marquette University. Yesterday, Hussey said that Rider's offer helped NBC salvage one of the key games on its schedule this season — the proposed KU-Louisville game. this Basics. "The KU-Louisville game is very important to our schedule," Hussey said. "We have a basketball doubleheader series starting Jan. 25 that runs into See GAMES, p 5; col 3 SUPER MECHANICS LEAVENWORTH — Dean Braa, graduate teaching assistant in sociology, spends his Tuesday evenings in a different academic atmosphere — behind the walls of Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. Braa instructs a group of inmates working on bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees. KU offers classes behind bars By Jill White Of the Kansas staff By Jim White Of the Kansan staff LEAVENWORTH — The students in Dean Bras's class aren't typical junior and senior sociology majors. They classify as "non-traditional." The man in the third row is serving two life terms for assault and bank robbery, and extra time for attempted escape. The man in the back row is a convicted bank robber. Other students are embezzlers or racketeers. Braa's students are inmates at Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary, the second-highest security prison in the United States. But they are also KU students. Four nights a week they take classes from KU lecturers who travel to the prison. future. I was nervous the first time I came up, but I was never intimidated by any of them," Braa, a graduate student who first taught at the prison in 1982, said recently. "You forget that they're convicts." The inmates don't wear striped uniforms, they're clean-shaven and look like inquisitive and intelligent KU students. Daryel Garrison, supervisor of education at the penitentiary, said the benefits of that success, for the prisoners and the penitentiary, ranged from the obscure to the obvious. A federal contract, scholarships, grants and inmates' wages pay for tuition and books and make the program financially stable. The dedication of sociology and psychology professors make the program a success. offenses. In the past five years, almost 50 incarcerated men have benefited from the University's continuing education program. Since 1982, 12 inmates have received bachelor's or master's degrees in sociology or bachelor's degrees in psychology However, iron bars on the windows serve as a reminder that the men have been convicted of federal offenses. The penitentiary's Internal Disciplinary Court sees fewer cases invading inmates who are in the "The biggest benefit is the constructive involvement of the inmate," Garrison said. "We have many 'lifers' who are taking classes solely to have something constructive to do with their time." Scott McNall, chairman of the sociology department, who has been teaching at Leavenworth for nine years, said it was important for the students to develop some sort of self respect. Doing well in school is one way to do that, he said. "The inmates who attend college are least involved with internal crime activity such as drugs, homosexuality or violence," he said. "The people we have to lock up are the people who are less educated." educational program, Garrison said "It allows inmates to have that freedom of their minds that they don't get with their bodies," McNall said. Wallace May, associate dean of continuing education, is involved with the penitentiary's graduation ceremonies. From 1968 to 1971, before the degree program was offered, he taught basic speech classes in the penitentiary. May said KU began offering classes to inmates at Leavenworth in See CONVICTS, p. 6, col. 1 2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 News Briefs Romanian seaman gets asylum in U.S. HOUSTON — A Romanian seaman who slipped off a cargo ship to fulfill "a wish and a dream" to live in the United States was granted political asylum yesterday. Paul Firica, 44, is the second Romanian sailor to defect to the United States within one week. Firica, appearing nervous and frightened, told reporters that he feared for his wife and two daughters, ages 23 and 17, and hoped to bring them to the United States. FCC grants waivers WASHINGTON — The government, approving two significant broadcasting deals yesterday, will allow Capital Communications Inc. to take over the ABC network and publish Rupert Murdoch to buy a chain of independent TV stations. In giving the green light to the multibillion-dollar deals, the Federal Communications Commission granted the buyers waivers to federal broadcasting regulations, saying the transactions and the waivers would not violate the public interest. The Capital Cities-ABC deal is the first transfer of ownership of a television network since network broadcasting began. Guru to plead guilty PORTLAND, Ore. — Indian guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh has apparently agreed to change his plea to guilty to some of the immigration fraud charges against him, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office said yesterday. Marie Elliott, the spokeswoman, would not say to which crimes the guru will plead guilty or comment on reports that he will be deported under terms of a plea bargain. She also would not say whether any of the gurus' disciples also charged with crimes had decided to change their pleas. From Kansan wires Colombian volcano kills 4,000 United Press International MARIQUITA, Colombia — A snow-capped volcano erupted in western Colombia, unleashing floods and mudslides that buried an entire town in the world's worst erosion in decades. A U.N. agency said 4,000 were confirmed dead yesterday and up to 15,000 might have died. and up to 18,500 people. The powerful eruption was the deadliest since Mount Lamington exploded in New Guinea in 1951, killing 3,000 to 5,000 people. killing 3,000 to 5,000 it. It was also the deadliest in the Western Hemisphere this century. The worst previous volcanic catastrophe, the 1968 eruption of Mount Arsenal in Costa Rica, left 80 dead. The 1800 explosions of Mount St. Helens, Wash., killed 63. The hardest-hit town was Armero, 93 miles west of Bogota in Colombia's western coffee-growing region, which was buried under a sea of mud. Three other towns were flooded. "It looks like a bomb exploded," firefighter Chucho Melo said in describing Armero. "There are many deaths — too many deaths." The 17,716-foot volcano Navado del Ruiz, about 100 miles west of Bogota in the state of Caldas, erupted at about 11 p.m. Wednesday, spewing smoke, ash and rock, officials said. The heat from the eruption melted the volcano's snowcap, sending torrents of water down the mountain that quickly turned into devastating mudslides, smashing into homes, trucks and bridges below, officials said. "There could be 20,000 to 25,000 dead," said Gustavo Esquira, governor of the Colombian state of Cundinamarca. "But we hope that many of the missing people saved themselves by climbing nearby mountains. The U.N. Disaster Relief Organization said in a statement that "4,000 bodies have already been recovered and the eventual death toll may reach 15,000 in the town of Armero." "There was an evacuation in the town of Armero about 2 a.m. (yesterday) and many were able to climb the mountains." Esguera said. "The town was practically destroyed." In Washington, Darrell Herd of the U.S. Geological Survey said on a scale of one to 10, with the world's worst volcanic eruption at Krakatoa in 1883 rating a 10, the Colombian eruption rated a 5 or 6. Herd also said that, based on a Sept. 11 mini-eruption of mud and ash, he suspected that the mudflow traveled at avalanche speed — 20-30 mph — "bobsledding through turns" down the steep track from the volcano to Armero. Many Colombians refused to leave towns despite a warning last Friday that an eruption was likely. "The Colombians were attempting to become prepared," he said. "As best as I can tell, the eruption occurred before their plans and activities could be fully implemented." Armero, called Colombia's White City because of its crops of cotton and rice, was covered with water from the Lagonilla River and with brown mud. "God, what have you done to us?!" cried Armero resident Carmen Pantoga, who sought refuge in the town of Mariquita after her family was killed in the disaster. The BBC reported that Thatcher and Irish Prime Minister Garret Fitzgerald were to sign the document at a summit meeting, probably today. Historic pact to end unrest in N. Ireland United Press International LONDON — The British and Irish Cabinets yesterday approved a historic pact aimed at ending blood-shed in Northern Ireland, news reports and official sources said. Meanwhile, authorities stepped up security to guard against possible protests. There was no official announcement after a 90-minute British Cabinet meeting at Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's No.10 Downing Street office. But the British Broadcasting Corp. said the Cabinet "is believed to have put the final seal of approval on an Anglo-Irish agreement on the problems of Northern Ireland." In Dublin, the Irish Cabinet approved the pact after a two-hour meeting, according to an Irish government source. The British government kept secret all details of the Cabinet meeting and the location of the summit as a security precaution against the outlawed Irish Republican Army. Debt limit raised by House United Press International WASHINGTON — The House passed a bill yesterday allowing a three-week hike in the national debt limit, giving balanced-budget negotiators more time to work and staving off a U.S. financial crisis while President Reagan meets with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The bill, which was sent to Reagan for his signature, would boost the government's borrowing authority by $80 billion to $1.9 trillion, enough to last through Dec. 6. Without the hike, the government faced default at midnight yesterday. Reagan, leaving tomorrow for his summit with Gorbachev in Geneva, was expected to sign the measure later in the day. He also planned to sign a stopgap money bill, good through Dec. 12, to fund government agencies that have not received their regular appropriation because of slow movement through Congress. Senate Republican leader Robert Dole of Kansas said the Dec. 6 date would give House-Senate conferences enough time to work on the yearlong ceiling debt hike, which is being held up by a disagreement over legislation that would balance the budget by 1990. The Treasury said that it would have run out of money by midnight yesterday if the extension of the debt ceiling had not passed and that federal checks would not have been issued. Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger hinted he would recommend that Reagan vet the balanced budget legislation if it requires cuts in defense. Weinberger, who has opposed including military spending cuts as part of budget balancing efforts in the past, would not say what he would recommend. Envoy warns reporters in Beirut United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — The Archbishop of Canterbury's envoy said yesterday that he had contacted the kidnappers holding four Americans here but begged reporters to stop following him because it was endangering people's lives. Terry Waite, Archbishop Robert Funcic's special envoy, reacted angrily to the news crews that have been dogging his steps since he arrived Wednesday on a flight from London on a bid to free the hostages. "I'd like to make a particular plea that I'm not to be followed by anybody, because if that happens, then that will jeopardize my own safety and the safety of other people," Waite, visibly irritated; told reporters and photographers at the Commodore Hotel in Muslim west Beirut. Beirut. Waite, 46, came to Beirut in hopes of gaining the release of at least four of six Americans seized in west Beirut in a series of abductions since March 1984. The captors alleged that they killed one hostage, and one American is thought to be held by another group. "It is extremely important because of the great, great sensitivity of the situation that I am left totally alone, because anything I have to do beyond this point will have to be entirely by myself," Waite said. "We're in touch in several different ways. Progress is being made and we're moving forward. "A wrong move and people could lose their lives — including myself." Employees won't get AIDS tests United Press International WASHINGTON - The government yesterday announced new AIDS guidelines recommending no restrictions or regular screening for the disease among health care, personal and food service workers. The guidelines are based in part on those for hepatitis B, a disease that follows the same transmission route as AIDS but is much more easily contracted, said Assistant Health Secretary James Mason. "The evidence is overwhelming that except for rare cases of transmission by blood transfusion, or from an infected mother to her infant, or by accidental needle-stick injury, AIDS is transmitted only by sexual acts or by sharing drug-abuse equipment — not by casual contact," Mason said at a news conference. "For this reason, the Public Health Service does not recommend routine AIDS antibody screening for the groups these guidelines addresses." A committee of experts from the medical, business and food industries drew up the guidelines in response to new employers and public health officials. The guidelines were published this week in the U.S. Centers for Disease Control's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. The CDC and Public Health Service are branches of HHS. The report said food service workers known to be infected with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome virus "need not be restricted from work unless they have evidence of other infection or illness for which any food service worker should also be restricted." The guidelines said there had been no instances of AIDS transmission by food service workers but suggested they "should exercise care to avoid injury to hands when preparing food," and if any injury occurs the food should be discarded. For health care workers handling blood or bodily fluids, the guidelines spell out in detail such precautions as proper disposal of needles, and the wearing of gloves, gowns, face masks and eye coverings when handling contaminated materials. UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY 843-5279 WE HAVE GREAT MOVIES IN STORE FOR YOU. SONY AF SONY Video 8 AF Family or fantasy, sci-fi or suspense, humor or horror—you name it, you can create it with the most exciting video breakthrough in years. Sony* Video R. 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It's got everything built in, so just one thing comes out Great movies HILLCREST 916 Iowa • 841-8668 DOWNTOWN 1107 Mass • 843-4435 CHECKERS PIZZA Weekend Night Owl Special! Checker's Night Owl Special—Friday & Saturday 10 p.m.-3 a.m. only. 2 LARGE PIZZAS (1-Topping) 6-PACK OF SOFT DRINK All For $9.99 Delivery • Carry Out • Dine In 2214 Yale Hours Sunday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. 841-8010 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 3 Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 News Briefs Police have suspects in 9 arsons at Oliver The Student Housing Office reported Wednesday that nine cases of aggravated arson had occurred between October, 20 and Nov. 5 in the south wing of Oliver Hall, KU police said yesterday. KU police Sgt. John Brothers said four students were suspected of setting the fires. "There is an official investigation into it, and we don't know yet whether any charges will be filed." Brothers said. Aggravated arson is arson committed on a building in which a human being is present, he said. It is a class B felony and carries a maximum sentence of five years to life in prison and a fine of up to $15,000. Pianists to perform "An Evening of Piano Blues and Piano Dances" will be performed 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the Lawrence Arts Center. The program will be performed by Alice Downs, Rita Sloan and Jack Wierink, all area musicians, and is sponsored by Hilltop Child Development Center. Tickets are $5 and are available at Roberts Jewelry Inc., 833 Massachusetts St.; Stork's, 814 Massachusetts St.; Natural Way Fine Gifts and Exotic Jewelry, 819 Massachusetts St.; Hilltop Child Development Center, 1314 Jayhawk Blvd.; and at the door. Spring tutors needed Supportive Educational Services is taking applications from students interested in tutoring during the 1986 spring semester. mg the 2400 space. The positions pay $4 an hour for individual tutoring and $8 an hour for group tutoring. for group students. Tutors may be hired in several areas, depending on student requests. The subjects are biology, business, chemistry, computer science, economics, engineering English, foreign languages, math, philosophy and physics. Applicants must have a 3.00 GPA, 15 hours in the subject area, good communications skills and a schedule that allows 10-20 hours a week for tutoring. week for students to apply at Supportive Educational Services, formerly called the Military Science Annex, and include a current transcript with the application. The deadline for applications is Dec. 10. Second fatality occurs KANSAS CITY. Kan. — Connie M. Hutton, a 43-year-old Lecompont woman who was injured in a two-car wreck Sunday in Douglas County, died Wednesday at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Center Hutton's death is the second fatality from the accident. Pronounced dead at the scene was Deann E. Fowler, 18, Perry. was Death. Authorities said cars driven by Fowler and Hutton collided nearly head-on on a county road. Weather Today's forecast calls for a 60 percent chance of rain, with highs in the low to mid 40s. Variable winds will range from 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of rain. Lows will be in the mid 30s. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy, with highs in the mid 40s. Assassin game ends with real gun From staff and wire reports. A game of "assassin" being played by McCollium Hall residents ended abruptly early Wednesday morning after one of the players found herself looking down the barrel of a very real shotgun. By Karen Blakeman Of the Kansan staff Kim Bayer, Glencview sophomore, said she thought it was a joke by other players when she first saw two KU police officers, one armed with a shotgun, walking toward her down the fover of the residence hall. "I couldn't see who it was at first," Bayer said, "one kept yelling, 'Drop it! Drop it!' or something like that." Bayer was holding a toy pellet gun when police arrived. She kept it with her to protect herself from her assassin, the person assigned to "shoot" her in order to win points in the game, she said. Sgt. John Brothers, spokesman for KU police department, said officers were called to the hall shortly before 1 a.m., by another resident who thought Bayter's gun was real. who thought they were. Brothers said the caller reported a woman singing the hallowed in an emotional phone call. The caller said the woman was playing with what appeared to be a weapon with an abbreviated stock, and was dry-firing it. it Brothers said the term dry-fire meant pulling the trigger of a gun without ammunition. An abbreviated stock refers to a gun with a sawed-off barrel. "The caller said she didn't think the woman's gun was loaded, but she was concerned." Brothers said. He said the caller didn't say anything more about the nature of what she had referred to as an emotional phone call. He said two officers were sent to McCollum, and one brought a shotgun. Brothers said that when officers arrived on the floor, they saw a woman sitting on the floor and talking on the phone. She was holding what appeared to be a sawed-off shotgun, he said. The officer with the shotgun chambered a round of ammunition, and before pointing the gun at the woman, he gave her two commands to put her weapon down, Brothers said. to put her in Police don't always carry shotguns on calls, Brothers said, unless they think additional firepower may be necessary. In this case, he said, the officer took the shotgun because he thought the woman was similarly armed. tought the gun, and that when the woman did not put the gun down, but started to stand up with the weapon in her hand, the officer pointed his shotgun at her. "She dropped the weapon," he said. Bayer said that once she realized the two men were police officers, she was too shocked to respond rationally. 'I said, 'It's fake, it's fake,' and he kept say- ing, 'Drop it, drop it,' she said. Drop it, drop it, drop it. "I didn't point the gun at them, thank God." "I didn't point the gun at them, thank God." Bayer said that after she had dropped the gun and explained to the officers she was only playing a game, the officer who had not been carrying the shotgun told her she had almost been shot. "The one who had the gun didn't say a thing," she said. "I think he was pretty shocked, too." "I don't think it was appropriate for them to come at me with a cocked shotgun," she said. Bayer said the other policeman had told her they thought she was suicidal. "I was just sitting on the floor, talking on the phone and doing no harm to anyone, including myself. myself. "Also, all they would have had to do was to call security and it all could have been avoided." JOHN R. BROCKMAN John B. Bremner, Oscar S. Stauffer distinguished professor of journalism, will receive the Distinguished Teaching in Journalism award from the Society of Professional Journalists in Phoenix. Anz., today. Remembering their names a cinch, say two J. Hawks by Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Being a Jayhawk is a four-year stint for most KU students, but only two enrollees can say they are J. Hawks for life. The two students — who aren't related — said they often used their catchy name to help people remember who they were. HIKWs Joan Hawk, Gladstone, Mo., senior and John Hawk, Lindsborg senior; KU isn't the only association they have with the mythical bird. Their first initial and last name make it easy for people to remember them. "I explain to people that my name is J. Hawk, and they easily remember," Jean said yesterday. "that she who have only met me once usually remember my name even if I don't remember them," he said. member," Jean said. Jake John said he used the same trick "I've had no family at KU before," John said. "I was born in California, so of course my parents didn't think Both John and Jean said their parents didn't intentionally name them after the mascot. of it at the time. I also was a transfer here my freshman year." Classroom is still prof's stage Jean's mother, Lorene, and father, Marion, both attended KU in the 1950s. Marion, an independent engineering consultant, was the first person to wear the Jayhawk mascot costume when he was attending KU Jean also said her parents weren't thinking of KU or the mascot when they named her and her sister, Jan — although her family had a history at KU. "I always planned on coming to KU," Jean said. "But I didn't really notice the connection with my name until second semester my freshman year, when people pointed it out." By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff John B. Bremner, Oscar S. Stauffer distinguished professor of journalism, turns his back on his class and flings the window open. He waves a white handkerchief through the window as if surrendering. John said he didn't think about the mascot and his name being the same either, until he started classes and people commented on it. the window as a shurter "Help! Help!" I’m stuck in here with a bunch of idiots!” he shouts in desperation. "I've had it two years, and a lot of people just think I'm a big KU enthusiast." out "They have never even heard of the seven parts of speech!" the seventh grade. The students in Bremner's editing class are just as perplexed as those outside on Jayawk Boulevard. Then laugher rips the SHEET. For his unique but effective method of teaching, Bremner will receive the Society of Professional Journalists' annual Distinguished Teaching in Journalism Award in Phoenix, Ariz., today. He will retire at the end of this semester. outside on Jayhawk Boulevard. Then laughter rips the silence. "When I decided to go to KU, I was corresponding with the school, and I would just write J. Hawk on the return address." John said. "After I realized it then, I put a license plate that says J HAWK on my car. Marc Coan, a Lawrence senior in Bremner's Editing I class, says Bremner is a performer. Brehmer is a perplexed man. "You never have a fear of falling asleep in there," he says. "He's a real comedian. "He creates an image of harshness of himself. But you can see that he's got a good heart." Bremner, 64, with silvery white hair and a 6-foot-5, heavyset body, demands discipline and complete attention in the classroom. "You can't hold their attention for one hour and 50 minutes unless you inject a certain amount of enjoyment, entertainment and humor," Bremner says. "I couldn't find any other way to each." Bremner says he thinks class participation is important. Responses from the class carry the discussion along as Bremner questions the students on grammar, usage, etymology and general knowledge. "You all have heard of the famous novel 'The Grapes of Wrath' by F. Scott Hemingway?" Bremner bellows. If some students can't understand the humor — too bad, he says. Brenner paces around, crying and disciples. He says he thinks the accumulation of knowledge should be continuous. Learning doesn't stop after the test. Coan says, "He wants to make us intellectually curious." Another of Bremner's students, Lori Polson, Clay Center junior, asks during class how she can be expected to know everything. "I didn't know much when I was your age," Bremner says. "I thought I did, but didn't. It all comes from experience, experience and experience. There's no short cut." An editor is the guardian of the language. Bremner says. He has to know everything — or at least know where to look it up. Language is more than communication, he says. Grunts and nods communicate, but language requires clarity and precision to convey complex ideas. "Many words have a beauty of their own," he says. "Sonic beauty, romantic beauty, historical beauty, etymological beauty and visual beauty." Bremner should know about language. He has studied Latin, Greek, French, Italian, Hebrew and American. Bremner says he won't miss teaching. He received a bachelor's degree in theology from Propaganda Fide University, Rome, in 1941, a master's in journalism from Columbia University in 1952 and a doctorate in mass communications from the University of Iowa in 1965. Bremner says he has had three different careers. He was born in Brisbane, Australia, and was an ordained Roman Catholic priest from 1943 to 1968. From 1945 to 1957, he worked as a professional journalist on magazines, radio and newspapers. teaching, "I've enjoyed teaching," he says. "I'm awfully tired and I want to rest for a while. His American teaching career started in 1987 at the University of San Diego and continued at the University of Iowa before he came to the University of Kansas in January 1969. tor a wine: "I'm not saying that I'll never teach again, but at the moment I don't foresee it." Senate goal not to pad resumes Bv Bonnie Snyder This is the third in series dealing with Student Senate and the Senate elections scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday. Of the Kansan staff Being able to write "student body president" on a resume is helpful, says David Amble, vice chancellor for student affairs, but it is more important that the student body representatives meet influential people who can give them references. One week from today, a newly elected student body preside will move into the Student Senate office. For them, they will deal daily with University officials, regents and state legislators. But after that year, does the job and the connections that came with it mean anything? who can give help that using him or Chancellor Gene Ambiglio as a reference, which student leaders often did, carried a risk — that weaknesses as well as strengths could be exposed. He said the title "student body president" did not guarantee that the person did a good job. guarantee that the person they are "They're under more careful scrutiny than other student leaders," Ambler said. "The halo might be there, but the warts are there, too." The jobs, however, are not there to be used only as resume fillers, William Easley, student body president, said. There are other reasons for taking the office. office. it does look great, " Easley said recently. "Nobody would say that it doesn't. But for some reason when "If you were doing it for the prestige, then you would look and say, 'I can get this amount of money and this amount of attention, but I have to go through this,'" he said. "I have to be called all names. I have to take heat in the paper. I have to be accused of not being a true representative of the student body. I have to be lambasted by my peers in other schools who see what goes on here and just laugh at us." Tedde Tasheff, KU's student body president from February 1976 to February 1977, said that anyone who walked into the job expecting an easy reference was in for a surprise. Tashseh is an attorney at the Morrison, Hecker, Curtis, Kuder and Parish law firm in Kansas City, Mo. tis, Kuder and Parsifah have told us, "It's such a hard job that even if someone thought it was going to be a resume pad, they paid for it," she said. "Your normal individual is not going to be thinking, God, this is going to look good on my resume." There's an easier way to fill a resume pad, Easley said. you're putting all the money into it and making the house visitations and you're debating your opponents, and then you're battling for what you believe in, for some reason, that doesn't carry any weight. sad? Amber said most former student body presidents were president went into law. He wasn't sure why. Tasheff said, "We're just a litigious group. We're predictable as hell, and we're not that interesting." precurcursus don't student body president and vice president don't receive credit hours for their work, the president receives $275 a month and the vice president $250 a month. NATURAL WAY We believe that natural fiber clothing is more comfortable and healthier than synthetic clothing. Let your body breathe! We believe buying the finest quality is always the least expensive. Cotton, wool, and silk designs, and hand-made furniture are found in the world at reasonable prices make us unique. NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING We believe our customers are unique and our greatest asset in bringing quality clothes to Lawrence. UNIQUE GIFTS & EXOTIC JEWELRY SUNDAY HOURS 12-5 820 Mass. 841-0100 Silk Cotton Wool BURGE BANDSTAND FREE FRIDAY DANCE CONCERTS AT THE BURGE UNION • 9 P.M. the Fanatix nov.15 TONIGHT By Popular Demand: What was great, now is even greater! NEW FULL OUNCE SHOTS We are serving the BEEFIEST DRINKS in town. Try our new drinks... you'll say: WOW! the Sanctuary 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A careful way to divest Tuesday's ruling by Attorney General Robert Stephan offers the Kansas University Endowment Association a way out of its "to divest or not to divest" dilemma. The ruling still won't permit the Endowment Association to rush out, loudly condemn apartheid and put its money into less tainted investments. Stephan ruled that Kansas law, specifically the prudent man rule, would not stand in the way if the Endowment Association chose to divest from companies doing business in South Africa. But it can no longer hide behind the prudent man rule. The rule, according to the Endowment Association, only permitted investment decisions that were based on a stock's performance and not on moral judgments. The business care rule, which is the one Stephan says applies to the Endowment Association, suggests that the stormy political and economic climate in South Africa could be reason enough to divest from companies doing business there. KPERS decided to sell most of its holdings in companies that do business in South Africa. It retained stock only in those U.S. companies that abide by the Sullivan Principles, a voluntary set of guidelines providing for equal treatment on the job for blacks and whites. A similar action by the Endowment Association would signal its opposition to apartheid, call attention to its support for those U.S. businesses committed to improving the lives of South African blacks and still adhere to sound investment practices. Best of all, after Stephan's ruling, it would not be illegal. As the freighter Marshal Konev steams for the Soviet Union laden with American corn, it leaves in its wake the confusing tale of Miroslav Medvid. The 25-year-old Ukrainian sailor grabbed worldwide attention last week by leaping 40 feet from the deck of his ship into the Mississippi River, apparently in an attempt to defect. One alternative course was set by the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System earlier this fall. The Medvid mystery This should encourage the rising chorus of protest from student and faculty groups. And now that it is free of the more restrictive rule, perhaps the Endowment Association could gracefully reach some compromise with those clamoring for divestment. He was caught by another Soviet sailor and returned to the ship in handcuffs. Through a twisted series of events, U.S. border patrol officers sent Medivd back to the ship. But before he set foot on the Konev's gangplank, he jumped into the river again. State Department officials later interviewed Medvid. He told them, as his captain and two Soviet diplomats looked on, that he had merely fallen overboard. It's too late to determine Medvid's intentions. But U.S. officials should investigate why the border officers sent Medvid back, even, according to a translator, after she told them he clearly wanted asylum. Questions swirl over whether Medvid was sacrificed so as not to sour next week's Geneva summit. Other plausible scenarios fault the language barrier or incompetence for bungling the case. Once they returned Medvid, the border officers surrendered all U.S. options in the case. Detaining the ship was not the answer. Sen. Jesse Helms' subpoena ordering Medvid to appear on Capitol Hill was unenforceable. In any case, Americans need to know what happened to Miroslav Medvid. State Department officials need to get to work finding this out. Apathy in the assembly The College Assembly, on the surface, seems to model itself after the Athenian assembly of ancient Greece. As the governing body of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the assembly represents more than 600 faculty members and 11,000 students. Students make up 25 percent of the assembly, or 116 seats, and will be elected during Tuesday and Wednesday's Student Senate elections. But only 76 students are running for those 116 seats. And of those 76, it's doubtful that more than a handful will show up at the assembly's monthly meetings. Apathy is nothing new on campus, and the bylaws of the assembly reflect this. Only a 10 percent quorum is required to conduct business. This is unfortunate, because the assembly's business affects thousands of students undergraduates preparing to enter professional schools, and undergraduates and graduate students seeking degrees in the College. During the past year, the assembly has approved changes in undergraduate requirements in Western Civilization, math, foreign language, and English. Perhaps the College should wage an all-out publicity campaign to attract student representatives. It could raise the quorum to encourage more to attend. Or it could simply eliminate student seats if students continue to skip meetings. Even in ancient Athens, representation meant nothing without active participation. Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales Oliver Obzern Sales and marketing adviser LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and bometown, or faculty or staff position. GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The Sales and marketing adviser The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staffer-Fint Hall. The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, *Kann*, 18 Staffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 60645, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., 60644. In Doughtes County, mail subscriptions cost $1 for six months and $2 a month. In Lawrence County, you need a student subscription cost $3 and are paid through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KC, 60454 Mailbox The chancellor says that KU's antiapartheid protesters "do not understand the basic purpose of an institution of higher learning." The University's role I disagree. The activist students understand all too well the purpose of the university in American society. The university in its current form serves primarily to reproduce the system of exploitation on non-European people and of the Earth itself that this country's prosperity is based on. The university's role as an open forum is entirely subservient to its job of providing properly trained personnel to the corporate and government bureaucracies that oversee that exploitation. Apartheid is not an accident. Apartheid is just a particularly repugnant expression of an economic system that has no respect for the Earth or the people on it, and treats them as mere objects to be used in the pursuit of ever-increasing material accumulation. This industrial system has taken control in the capitalist and "communist" countries alike. Thus, the fight for justice in South Africa cannot be separated from the fight for justice for the native people of this continent. It cannot be separated from the struggle for justice of the people of Nicaragua, Afghanistan or Poland. It cannot be separated from the struggle to put an end to the threat of nuclear annihilation and environmental collapse. This is why the negotiations between students and the administration on the subject of divestment have focused on the relationship between the Kansas University Endowment Association and the University of Kansas. The students have realized that the people at the Endowment Association who pull the strings at the University are the same people who run the multinational corporations that profit from ravaging the Earth. We live in a time that is crucial for the survival of our planet. We no longer have the luxury of hiding in our ivory towers, of idly debating the correct positions on the "issues." Every day of business as usual here brings us another day closer to the brink of destruction. The Universi- ties in North Africa is just the tip of the iceberg. Those who would have us spend all of our energy arguing the fine points of the relative merits of total divestment, partial divestment, government sanctions and so on are doing the same as asking us to debate the placing of the deck chairs on the Titanic. We don't care where the chairs are the important thing is to change these chairs. Our struggle will not be over until the University is reconstituted as a democratic institution, and until the University begins to work for the oppressed people of the world instead of the oppressors. Dennis "Boog" Highberger Pleasant Grove graduate student As I passed 1116 Indiana St., I casually glanced at the house where I once had lived for a year. I have fond memories of that year, and of the great elm tree that spread its arms over most of the front yard and backyard. The tree was a friend whispering in my ear through many an nighther. I can let my laundry go for an extra week or so, and it won't bother me. But Sunday night as I drove down Indiana Street with a duffel bag of dirty laundry riding shotgun, I saw something that made me sicken with horror. I don't consider myself unusually squeamish. Dead animals along the roadside may give me a momentary pang, but they don't cast a shadow over my day. End of an old elm NO, I DIDN'T JUST COME OUT OF A COAL MINE ~ I'M READING THE KANSAN Wilder '85 UNIVERSITY DALLAS KANSAS And so I looked, almost involun- Writer not qualified to criticize Gottfried After reading Tuesday's letter to the editor about Coach Mike Gottfried and our University of Kansas football team, a strange feeling came over me. I could not figure what was angry, sad or embarrassed. I felt anger because I know Mike as well as anyone at KU. In my tenure here, nobody has been more supportive to our basketball program than Coach Gottfried. He shares the same concerns for his student-athletes as any responsible coach. He supported his players' legal efforts because he honestly believed they were misinformed and given inaccurate academic advice. As a direct result of this "misunderstanding," the careers of three football players were terminated. No one except Coach Gottfried, his staff and the team seemed to care about these young men. Why should they pay the penalty? Nobody cared enough to publicize when about 80 "regular" students were disenrolled from business courses because they were not properly advised of the prerequisites. All this did was to reinforce the contention that the academic advising situation on the Hill is shoddy at best. The football players weren't the only victims, but yet they received all the bad publicity. I am also angry at the "win at any cost". comment. Was it just a few short years ago that KU's football program was mired in the abyss of NCAA probation for recruiting violations and other irregularities? I can say for a fact that history won't repeat itself with Coach Gottfried. Now if he is not running a program with integrity, I don't know who is. the entire Athletic Department and the University as a whole. Things always haven't been the best for me here, and Mike was always there with a pet on the back. It really saddens me that someone who knows next to nothing about KU football would slam the program and try to pass himself off as a critic. I felt sad because I know how much this hurts Mike; however, it doesn't only affect him. These allegations have negative overtones for the present team, all of Coach Gottfried's former players, I felt embarrassed for the University Daily Kansan. Don't get me wrong, I am not a proponent of restricting free press. But I was disappointed that one of the nation's top university newspapers would print slanderous opinions questioning the coaching ability of Milton Griffin after knowing the source of the letter. I have three daughters, who will obviously never play college football, but if I had a son, I would be proud to him play for Coach Mike Gottfried. Larry Brown Head basketball coach tarily, expecting to see a dark yard and a lit house partly obscured by the tree's branches. But in the yard a spotlight glared on the hewn stump of the old elm. The cut, about 5 feet above the ground, was made at a steep angle that faced the street. Burned in huge letters on the cross section was the insignia of the fraternity that had recently taken over the house. I felt utter disgust, as might a war veteran upon seeing that a medic had amputated his buddy's legs, then branded the soldier's forehead to mark his handwork. Now, I am not so naive as not to realize that trees die of Dutch elm disease. I talked to a member of the fraternity who said the tree was dead and had to come down. I accept that. Ben Jones Lawrence resident He said that the fraternity members hated to see the tree go, but that because they had been advised that they could not leave it standing, they "did the next best thing." I don't buy that. The elm should have been destroyed completely, perhaps a new tree planted in its place. For the fraternity to make a grotesque, self-aggrandizing monument of it adds insult to injury. How long had the tree been in that yard? Most of a century. How long have members of Alpha Epsilon Pi lived there? A few months. It seems presumptuous that they should take a tenant whose lease had finally expired and mutilate it for their own glory. Necessary protests Evan Walter is wrong. Antiapartheid protests are not a waste of time. They serve a much-needed function as a forum for discussion of issues including racism here and abroad, sexism, prudent government, spiritual aspects of political responsibility and divestment. Walter's editorial is riddled with weak logic and inconsistencies. No one is suggesting that divestment will cure South Africa's problems. The question is not "Will divestment end aparheid?" but "Does investment support anaphrase?" Walter says divestment will not work because "voices of sharp disapproval" from "the free world" have not swayed the South African government." He then recommends "messages (be) delivered directly to the Botha government." In other words, he recommends the same course of action he condemns Walter does not understand violence in South Africa. He strongly suggests that Marxism is at the root of black violence. This is a ridiculous assessment. Violence is not just murder and mayhem, it is watching your family go hungry, being publicly degraded each day, having no future. Mistreatment of blacks by whites, not Marxist doctrine, is the cause of violence in South Africa. How could the blacks be influenced by Mars? The whites have denied them the right to read and understand his writings. What Walter objects to is the shift from violence against blacks to violence against whites. If a slave master is beating his slave and the slave strikes out in self-defense, are we to pity to slave master? In my heart, I cannot justify violence, nor can I feel么 sympathy for the slave masters of South Africa. John Bode Manhattan junior A tougher Jayhawk I am damn sick and tired of seeing Kansas football teams continue to pump up the already over-inflated ego of one Barry Switzer. It's embarrassing enough that Swiss dines almost annually on roast Jayhawk, but brother, he don't even leave no bones! But for the guy who had the foresight to schedule the likes of Hawaii, Indiana State and Eastern Illinois, KU could well be 2-8 instead of 5-5. Whoever he was, give the man a bonus. Our gladiators' performances of late have been entirely in keeping with the competitive persona of that happy (better, hapless), pixilated creature that adorns their helmets — you know, the one with the Little Lord Fauntleroy buckles on his boots. I think it's high time to bring back the Fighting Jayhawk of old with his contemptuous sneer and "don't mess with me" attitude. And players to match — meanies like Riggins, Cromwell, Sayers, Hadil, Jessie, Zook, the Shanklins, McClinton, Irvin and the like. Until then, it appears, Oklahoma and Nebraska will continue to trade off picking up all the oranges on New Year's Day. William Koester William Koester Kansan sports editor,1940 Kansan ties don't hinder them - or us This time each semester, a flood of "baby editors" invades the copy desk at the University Daily Kansan. The copy desk is where stories are edited and headlines for those stories are written. It is a semicircle of computer terminals in a room in Stauffer-Flint Hall. Hence its nickname, the rim. Baby editors are students in a journalism class, Editing, who have been chosen by their professors to work on the Kansan because they have displayed an early knowledge of grammar and style. They replace copy edits, so both Advanced Editing and work on the rim for credit. This semester, two baby editors presented a problem to the Kansas Amy Brown and Kris Turkenbach are baby educators. Brown also is the student body vice presidential candidate for the Common Sense Coalition in the Student Senate elections Wednesday and Thursday. Kurten- John Hanna Managing editor bach is running for an off-campus Senate seat and is Common Sense's camaign coordinator. People both inside and outside the news business say the appearance of a conflict of interest can pose just as many problems for a newspaper as a full-blown conflict. The Kansan makes a habit of covering Senate debates and probably will endure candidates in the election. Obviously, Brown's and Kurttenbach's positions on the paper raise questions about their roles in that coverage — questions about the Kansan's credibility. Rob Karwath, Kansah editor, and I had a tough decision to make when we learned that Brown and Kurten- bach were baby editors and had filed to run in the elections. That wouldn't be fair. But the Kansan is different. It is a newspaper, but it is also a laboratory for students. As students, we feel uncomfortable determining the academic fates of other students. Yet is it fair for candidates to work on a newspaper that tries to objectively cover the election and may endorse candidates? On one hand, their participation on the newspaper and their candidacies represent an appearance of conflict of interest. On some newspapers, Brown and Kurtenbach would be asked to make a choice Asking Brown and Kurtenbach to leave the rim would hinder their educations. It would ask them to stop doing something they pay money to do — learn. Brown and Kurtenbach, who both work two three-hour shifts a week, won't edit stories dealing with Student Senate. They won't work on the scheduled nights of voting. As copy editors, they work on stories that already have been read by two other editors. They check for spelling, grammar and style errors. Copy editors don't have much license to rewrite stories; they usually must check with other editors before making changes. Also, their work is checked by a copy chief, who supervises the rim. And copy editors have no say in where stories appear in the paper or which candidates are endorsed on the Opinion pane. Why bring up all of this now? An election is on, and the Kansan's readers should know that two candidates have a connection with the newspaper. As editors, we have taken steps to see that neither the Kansan's credibility nor the students' educations are hindered by that connection. } Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 University Daily Kansan From Page One 5 Tacha Continued from p.1 more than all previous people in her position to attract minority faculty position to attract minority faculty. Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., the committee chairman, told Tacha that she came highly endorsed and recommended. He said she would make an excellent judge. Sen. Paul Simon, D-III., a member of the committee, noted that a minority of an American Bar Association review committee had found Tacha unqualified for a post on the appeals court. That means objections were raised by no more than four of the 14-member screening panel, which reviews all judicial nominees. The judgehip is a lifetime appointment and requires confirmation by the Senate. The position has a salary of $83,200. The committee could vote as early as Thursday on whether to recommend confirmation of her nomination. The matter then goes to the full Senate for a confirmation vote. Games March. The KU-Louisville game kicks it off." NBC would pay Rider, Hussey said, for profits the school might lose by rescheduling the game. He declined to say how much. "It's only right that a school receive renumeration in a case like this," he said. "Rider is giving up a lot. A game with a team like Kansas is very important to a small school like Rider." Hunter said he had heard that NBC was offering a renumeration to Rider, but that the University was not involved with the agreement. "Rider College played a significant role in bringing that about," Hussey said. "It's an unusual thing," Carpenter said. "We understood everyone's position. We thought cooperation was in order so we stepped in." Rider has done the network a big favor, he said. Carpenter said that when NBC informed him of the problem, he knew Rider could help. Carpenter said he was working on getting another game on Rider's schedule to replace the one with KU. "We've got a couple of good leads, and I think we'll be able to find another game," he said. Hunter said he and assistant basketball coach Mark Friedinger would be getting in touch with Carpenter next week to reschedule the KU-Rider game for next season. Heed men's basketball coach Larry Brown said he was grateful for Rider's help. "It was neat of them to do that," Brown said. "I'm happy that it's finally worked out." "I hope it makes Detroit happy." Jack Tennant, Louisville's assistant athletic director, said Louisville officials were elated at the news that the KU-Louisville game would be played. "I just think that it's great for basketball that two such quality coaches, and also two good teams, are going to get together," he said. THE FINEST PROFESSIONAL INSTALLATION! 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The classes were mostly basic liberal arts courses such as English, algebra and history. algebra and calculus. "When the federal program got started in 1980, it gave the inmates a chance to work on a degree and guaranteed the opportunity for majors." May said. "It was fortunate that the dominant request was for sociology or psychology majors, because they require a minimum amount of laboratory course work. "Also, those courses have the potential for helping them when they get out and helping them to know why they got there. Their interest in sociology and psychology grew out of their situation." In 1980, KU signed its first contract with the U.S. Bureau of Prisons for about $20,000. By this year that had increased to $44,000. The federal contract, combined with additional grants and scholarships, which the inmates must obtain in order to pay for the courses, allow KU's departments of sociology and psychology to offer 10 classes a year to inmates at the prison. KU offers four classes in the fall, four in the spring and two in the summer. Kansas City, Kan., Community College also has been offering classes at the federal prison. When KU signed its federal contract, KCCK expanded its program to teach all the liberal arts college courses. This cooperation between the two institutions meant that KU only would have to offer classes in sociology or psychology. McNall said different courses were offered each semester depending on what had been offered in the past, what was needed to fulfill the degree requirements and which faculty members were available. This semester, for example, KU offers: SOC 304, Principles of Sociology; SOC 500, Sociological Theory; PSYC 492, Psychology and Social Issues; and PSYC 318, Cognitive Psychology. Classes are offered from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays in the educational wing of the penitentiary. Only inmates who are in educational programs may go into the wing, but once they get there, their movements are relatively unrestricted. In fact, the constant bustle is almost chaotic. Teachers may start classes with only half the students in class. Slowly the seats fill, but students constantly get up for a cup of coffee, a smoke or a stretch. "It's like the Twilight Zone," said Susan Winslow, a KU lecturer in psychology at Leavenworth. "All the rules for how you normally conduct yourself are left behind. I've gotten used to it." Winslow said she was nervous the first time she taught at Leavenworth because of warnings that guards gave to all new instructors. The guards warned teachers that the inmates were all "cutthroats" and "con artists." "I was expecting to see this class full of thugs with tattoos halfway up their arms and cigarette packs rolled up into short shirt sleeves." Winslow said. Then I walked into the classroom. and the guys looked just like anybody else. When I started teaching, I discovered that a lot of them were very smart. Once I realized I had control of the class, it was much easier. But it's like getting through culture shock." The loose structure has little relationship to students' preparedness for class, Braa said, and frequently the inmates are more prepared than regular students. "Generally, there's been a little more motivation to do well," he said. "More students are interested in class and in the lecture because they're older and have a vested interest to do something constructive while they're here." Garrison said the average age of the inmates was more than 36, and the average length of stay was 15 years. Nearly 300 of the 1,100 inmates are involved with the educational program this semester. Students pursuing the KU program must meet the same requirements as students on the Lawrence campus. The inmate may earn a bachelor of general studies in sociology or psychology, a bachelor of arts in sociology or psychology or a master of arts in sociology. McNall said the U.S. Bureau of Prisons paid $1,000 for the transportation expenses of professors teaching master's courses at Leavenworth. Salaries for the master's course teachers were not included in the federal contract. "We run the program out of our back pockets," McNall said, "We enjoy it. They're some of the best students we have. They're interested in learning, they're prepared for class and they participate in class. It's very rewarding." McNall said seven inmates took graduate courses this semester. Most graduate courses consisted of master's-level readings and conferences. Like any other college students, inmates may apply for Pell Grants to defray tuition costs. Inmates pay an in-state tuition rate, which is $615 this year. The requirements for Pell Grants are no different: they must remain full-time students with a 2.0 grade point average. About 85 percent of the inmates who apply for Pell Grants get them. Despite the federal contract, the grants and the scholarships, Garrison said, the biggest problem in the educational program is the cutback of funds on a national scale. "The critical element for society to be concerned about is inmates' education," he said. "About 90 to 94 percent of these inmates will be your neighbors and mine someday." Paul Forio, program manager for continuing education, sees the University's involvement tied to prison reform. "It is important to provide educational services to this segment of society." Forio said. "We are their tools to adapt to the future." Photos by John Lechliter ALEXANDER LEWIS LEAVENWORTH — Faced with two life terms and no possibility of parole, Larry W. Giddings spends his days in federal prison pursuing a bachelor of arts degree in sociology. 1987 By Jill White KU degree program to benefit prisoners LEAVENWORTH - Five years ago, Kenneth Gregory Rayford, a convicted bank robber, considered himself a social failure. Now he is working toward a bachelor's degree in sociology Of the Kansan staff LEAVENWORTH — Kenneth Gregory Hayford considered himself a social failure in 1980, a convuluted bank robber without a reason to return to the society he had failed. He faced a 25-year sentence at Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. An anecdote. Because the degree program the KU division of construction education offers at Leavenworth, Bayford and Giddick said last week that they anticipated a productive and fulfilling future. Larry W. Giddings, another tomate at Leavenworth faced a different problem — what to do with his time. Convicted of bank robbery and first degree assault, he received two life sentences and additional time for an at tempted escape. He never will be eligible for parole. live and run the nation, "It has changed my concept of the world," said An education has changed these men's attitudes. Rayford, who is eligible for parole in 1987 because his sentence was reduced to 15 years. "I came from a street-level environment and did everything that someone with a low socio-economical status would do. I dealt with things on a violent level." In May, Rayford completed his bachelor of arts degree in sociology and psychology. He is working towards a master's degree in sociology. He said the classes gave him a new level of awareness and helped him learn to deal with problems more effectively. "I've increased my self-confidence and learned how to meet and deal with new people," Rayford said. "I'm offering myself an alternate lifestyle." "I have a very long sentence and have to find something to do," he said. "Developing some kind of meaningful work is essential to having an effective community. I think education is the only way to do this Obligations hope to complete his bachelor of arts degree in sociology, then pursue a master's degree. He said it was important for him to develop research skills and pursue academic growth. "Hopefully, I'll be able to illuminate the conditions under which we are all living and come up with solutions or aids. We need help from the community — an awareness that the program exists and knowledge of what kind of limitations and pressures exist." Rayford and Gildings said the men in the college programs considered themselves the prison's elite. "There's a real contrast between the guys taking chapens and the open ones aren't," Gliddings said. classes and the tales who heard. Rayford said he expected the transition from Leavannworth to the outside would be difficult because of the digma associated with convicts. "I know we're in here to be segregated, but it's very crucial for people to remember that a lot of us are going to return to society," he said. "An an ex-con, I'll have to work doubly hard to get a job. But I think education should help open up some doors." 1 Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 KU observatory to open if skies clear Star gazers hope to see comet tonight By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff Halley's comet will be doing the riding while KU and Lawrence astronomers do the seeking tonight at Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory at Lindley Hall. The Lawrence Astronomy Associates, a group of amateur and professional astronomers, will try to view the comet tonight and Saturday night from 10 p.m. to midnight at the observatory. The public is invited to the observatory and there is no charge to view Halley's comet. The comet visits the Solar System about every 75 years. Last weekend, the group had to call off their late-night comet viewing sessions because of bad weather. If the weather will cooperate, Halley hunters should have some prime viewing time tonight. "It's going to be clear, this week and next week will be the best viewing times because the moon is rising earlier in the evening," said Bruce Twarog, assistant professor of physics and astronomy. "With the weather so bad, not much has been going on other than waiting to see the comet," Twarog said. Unfortunately, cloud cover hangs over viewers' chances to see the comet once again. The National Weather Service is predicting cloudy skies tonight and tomorrow. Mike Holmes, Lawrence graduate student and a member of the astronomy club, said, "If it's still cloudy an hour in advance, we probably won't do it." It takes about 15 people to set up the four to six telescopes used to view the comet, he said. Even if the clouds cleared up at the last minute, it would take too much time to set up the equipment. The group will decide about 9 p.m. whether they will open the observatory. If the weather provides a marginal chance of viewing success before the 10 p.m. start time, the group will set up a slide show in case clouds dampen the viewering. Twarog said. Weather permitting, the group will also set up a telescope outside the observatory for handicapped individuals to view the comet, Twarog said. The observatory is not accessible by wheelchair. People can call the observatory at 864-3166 to see whether the observatory will open. If the observatory closes on Friday that doesn't mean it will be closed on Saturday, Holmes said. If the clouds clear up, the comet will be visible on all the telescopes. Holmes said. Mara Whitacre, president of the group, said, "I've heard rumors of sightings with the naked eye. But I wouldn't recommend that people try that unless they are very knowledgeable about the sky." The comet should be visible just north of the Pleides, a star cluster in the constellation of Taurus. Look to the western overhead, at about 11 p.m. p.s., she said. Holmes has gone to, the observatory regularly to try viewing the comet because he is anxious to see it. He was the first member of the astronomy group to see Halley's comet. "It's a fuzzy spot, like a nebula." she said. "It doesn't look like a star. It's doesn't look like the comet pictures you've seen." "We finally spotted it in the first days of October," he said. "We photographed it on the 12th." Many people in Lawrence are finding their own way to view the comet. "Alan Cornelius, manager of Zercher Photo Inc., 1107 Massachusetts St., and Zercher Photo Hilltop, 919 Iowa St., said his stores' sales of telescopes and binoculars had increased 30 percent to 40 percent since mid-summer. Cornelius said the comet was brighter than astronomers thought it was going to be, making it bright enough to be seen through binoculars. "They provide a fuller field of vision to see the full head and tail of the comet," he said. To view the comet with binoculars, choose a cloudless evening, find a dark area away from the city lights, and look to the area of the sky that the comet is in. Cornellius said. Whitacre said the group planned to schedule more viewing sessions this February when the comet finishes its orbit of the sun. "If people don't get to see it, it's OK," she said. "There will be plenty of opportunities to see the comet. They shouldn't feel disheardened." 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With Iggy Pop The Clash The Dead Boys, Sly Batsors Rich Kids, X-Ray Specs generation X, Sham 69 Augustus Pablo and much more than meets the eye Assistant Director Chris Salmieri TONIGHT ONLY! Starts at Midnight $3 Woodruff Aud. 8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 Bakery to have new menu, hours By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff Homemade soup steaming in a pot, hamburgers frying on a grill and hot cakes toasting on a griddle have been tested for 58 years. But after more than half a century, it's time for a change. The Drake Bakery & Snack Shop, 907 Massachusetts St., was sold last month by Joe Drake, whose father started the business in 1927. Nghia Nguyen, who bought the bakery, said yesterday that she would not make any changes in the store — except that she would add Chinese food to the dinner menu and would keep the bakery open from 5 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. instead of closing at 3 p.m. "I bake just like Joe did and use the same recipes," she said. "It's still home cooking." Nguyen, who says she prefers to be called Nancy Wilson because it's easier for Americans to pronounce, said she had ordered the equipment she needed to make Chinese meals and would begin serving Oriental food as soon as the equipment arrived. Kelly Hogan, Kansas City, Mo. senior, said she used to go to Drake's on some Saturdays last semester for breakfast, but had not been able to go this year because of her job schedule. "It's a cute place for breakfast," she said. "It's cheap food and it's really good. They serve it family style, one big table or at the counter." Hogan said she would recommend the bakery to anyone, but she said she didn't think serving Chinese food was a good idea. "I wouldn't like to see them serve Chinese food," she said. "They mostly sell pancakes, hamburgers, chicken fried steak and stuff like that. Chinese food would take away from that. Besides, there are enough 中国 restaurants in town." Nguyen said many of the same customers that ate at the bakery before she bought it still frequented them. He said, even more people come in now. She will continue to operate Chinh's Food Company and will sell food at the Little Dragon stand when the weather allows. Nuguyen has operated the Little Dragon food stand at Eighth and Massachusetts streets since April. She also owns Chish's Food Company, 2321 Ponderosa Dr., which sells wholesale egg rolls and won ton/ "That's the reason I wanted this," she said. "When it's nice out I can sell at the stand, but when the weather is like this, I can't." NCR NCR—The PC-65 > 50% faster speed at the same price. 256K, 2 drives. A 20mb hard disk and tape backup can also be added internally. (Also PC-4 and PC-B). IBM® SPERRY® IBM—the Original—100%compat- able, 18% discount on 25K, 2 drive model. (XT and AT also available). S p e r r y — S p e r r y I— Power—50% faster than iPad 4mb hard disk for the PC, 4mb hard disk for the PC. The best office PC. 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Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area 9 Davis says goal of United Fund will be reached By a Kansan reporter Today's mail delivery may put the University of Kansas over its $70,000 goal for this year's United Fund Drive, chairman of the KU division of the fund said yesterday. "We expect to go over the mark when we get the morning mail," said Michael Davis, chairman and dean of law. "Right now, we are at 99-point-something percent of our goal." Davis said he found out yesterday that KU only needed $600 to meet the $70,000 set by United Fund. Last year, the KU division fell about $2,000 short of its $71,000 goal. The fund-raising drive ends today for all divisions, though money always comes in after the drive officially ends, Davis said. "It it's almost a certainty that we will make our goal," he said. The amount raised by KU is expected to be the second-largest amount raised by any of the Douglas County divisions. The largest portion of the county's $500,000 goal was set at $300,000 for business and industry. Visiting high school seniors get glimpse of schol hall life About 40 high school seniors are taking a break from their usual classes today to check out the University's scholarship hall system. By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff The All Scholarship Hall Council and the eight scholarship halls are conducting the fifth annual "speak-peek weekend." "It's a program we began about five years ago for recruitment to the scholarship hall system and publicity for the University as a whole." Steve Tilman, scholarship hall council president, said yesterday. John Miller, Fort Scott junior and Battiefen Hall resident, is in charge of the event. He said the council sent letters to high schools within 100 miles of Lawrence to inform students about it. Letters were sent to high schools in other areas if hall residents requested. Up to four students were accepted from each high school. The seniors arrived yesterday evening and are staying in rooms with scholarship hall residents. "Our room is one of the adopted ones," said Daren Robinek, Springfield, Mo., junior and Bat- man. Roubinek is playing host to one of the seniors and said he and his three roommates would introduce the senior to the hall system. Organizers of the event asked seniors which majors interested them and then tried to place them with hosts in the area of study each chose. Robinek said his guest may accompany him or one of his roommates to class today. Robinek also is there to field any of the senior's questions and encourage interest in scholarship halls. "it's direct sale," he said. "I hate direct sale, so I doubt that I am going to pummel this person into scholarship hall living." The event also gives seniors a chance to socialize with, residents of the halls. Alice Nichols, Salina sophomore and Sellards Hall resident, organized a Thursday night study break between Sellards women and Stephenson Hall men to give the guests and residents a chance to get acquainted. At 2:30 p.m. today in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union, David Paretsky, professor of microbiology, and Lawrence Sherr, professor of business, will join two scholarship hall residents in a panel discussion. Seniors will be able to ask the four panel members questions about the University. They also will be given tours of the campus, in including some professional schools. Miller said. PANIC BUTTON . LAST CHANCE TO HAVE YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT TAKEN Back by popular demand! Senior pictures Thursday, Nov.14 through Tuesday, Nov.26 Call the Jayhawker Yearbook office immediately for an appointment! 864-3728 Christmas Bonus. 12,345,678.00 PV PMT FV CHG 7 8 9 + PA MV X EX 4 5 8 x PHA PHA PHA PHL R/J SST R+ X/Y CLX ON 7 9 EFO RCL HEWLETT,PACKARD A $15 REBATE on the HP-12C Business Calculator. It's the gift that has no equal for business professionals — like you – in real estate, finance, banking and investments. That's because it has more built-in financial calculating power than any other handheld. And Hewlett-Packard is giving a $15 Christmas bonus on HP-12Cs purchased between November 6 and December 31, 1985. So now's the time to ask for an HP-12C! But if nobody lets the hint, the HP-12C for yourself from a dealer who has no equal. hp HEWLETT PACKARD req. $120.00 SALE $95.00 KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union KU Don't wait another 12 Years to see the Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series [Image of a large, multi-story building with a large dome and spires, surrounded by water] 8:00 p.m. Wednesday, November 20,1985 Hoch Auditorium Adam Fischer, Conductor Making Its First North American Tour Since 1973 Concerto No. 3 in D Minor for Piano and Orchestra Jeno Jando, Soloist Adam Fischer, Conductor Liszt Bartok Tchaikovsky HUNGARIAN STATE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved, call 913/864-3982 Public: $15 & $13; KU & K-12 Students: $7.50 & $6.50; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $14 & $12 VISA/MasterCard Accepted Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association **"An enormous orchestra with a positive and colorful personality. The.Guardian, London "A superb, highly disciplined orchestra." Daily Post, Athens MK HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS Symphony No.5 in E minor JOIN US AND HAVE FUN! D.J. Special Performances Middle Eastern & Malaysian Dinner Belly Dancer JOIN US AND HAVE FUN! D.J. Special Performances Middle Eastern & Malaysian Dinner Belly Dancer International Club invites you to a Semi-formal Dance Saturday, Nov. 16 8 p.m.—1:30 a.m. at the Elks Club, Lodge Room 3705 W. 23rd Street Tickets sold at CUA Office $3 mem $4 nor $5 at the door Student Activity Fee $1495 COMPLETE High-Res Monitor, 256K, 2 Drives, Graphics Capability Enhanced Keyboard, Clock/Calepdar, MS-DOS, 1 YR Warranty AND Batteries INCLUDED THE WINNER LEADING EDGE MODEL "D" "PC EDITOR'S CHOICE—Among the bargain-priced PC-compatibles tested, Leading Edge Model D is the clear winner. That's not surprising—it's the newest machine tested and was designed around lessons that were learned from some of the others. It combines all the features that you could possibly want as standard equipment with a price that you'd expect to pay for a stripped IBM machine." PC Magazine—Oct., 1985 "Leading Edge is a registered trademark" COMPUTER OUTLET Your computer connection at 845-PLUG * 804 N.H. SUA FILMS "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST" National Board of Review People Magazine "At The Movies" - Roger Ibert & Gene Sakel US Magazine - Stephen Schooster THE KILLING FIELDS "An extraordinary movie! So compelling and convincing you can't tear your eyes from the screen. It's not to be missed." — David Ansen, NEWSWEEK "Brilliant! THE KILLING FIELDS' is a brilliant, powerfully stirring, haunting story of friendship and war. It should be seen by anyone with a heart and mind." - Julie Salamon, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL Fri. & Sat., Nov. 15 & 16 3:30 p.m. & 8 p.m. $1.50 Woodruff Aud. SACRED SIXTH AVE. AT THE CENTER OF THIS MUSEUM, WHERE THE FIRST HISTORY OF THE ROBINSON NUNES ARE STORED. “Bedazzled” "An extremely funny film. The invirness is delightful." -New York Post - Peter Cook * Dudley Moore - Dudley Moore * Raquel Welch MIDNIGHT MOVIE Sat., Nov. 16 $2 Woodruff Aud. 10 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 Lights in halls, library burn late Campus bustles under cover of dark By Susie Bishop Of the Kansan staff The University appears to sleep, but under cover of dark the campus teems with activity. The night shift can be identified as the part of the evening when most KU employees have gone home to their families, and many students contemplate watching one last television program or heading off to bed. Looking out over glittering campus lights in the evening, KU police dispatchers keep eyes and ears on campus people who work the night shift. "It can be a lonely job," dispatcher Chris Keary said yesterday. "You don't have to be like me." Keary said that although he didn't have direct contact with many people during his evening shift, he had fun looking out the window and watching people walking, jogging or wandering about. "I can't say it does much for the social life," Keary said. "But I still like it. I wouldn't switch to another shift." He said he liked the evening shift because he finished paperwork from the day shift and started the work of the morning shift. Keary said it was impossible to guess how busv any shift would be. "Anytime you can be just sitting here not doing much, and then, bang! We're real busy for 20 minutes," he said. Besides monitoring the switchboard and directing KU police, Keary said, he maintains contact with campus security workers who have come in to make their rounds and checking for unusual happenings in buildings. If something is happening, it's usually in the buildings. But for some students, those happenings aren't so unusual. Karen Johnson, Lenexa junior, said that sometimes she had to spend long evenings studying at Watson Library. "I only come here when I have to," Johnson said. Johnson said she had four roommates. When they get too noisy, she said, she heads to Watson to work. "I usually come here," she said, referring to the stacks. "It gets quieter as the evening goes on." Joelle Batchceler, Milwaukee sophomore, said she also studied late at night in the library stacks. Batchelor said she especially enjoyed walking on campus during the evening. main room, and it's too distracting." Batchelor said. "It's peaceful," she said. "Not many people are around late at night. It doesn't matter." 'People walk by the tables in the Around 11:30 p.m., studios desert the stacks. Before long, the lights will flick off. The daylong whisper of the library silences. Soon, the only sound will be the whirr and whine of the copying machines waiting to be turned off. At midnight, the only remaining noise is a custodian's broom brushing dried and waste paper down darkened stairs. After the library boots the last student from its confines, many trudge out into the night to continue studying in deserted classrooms in Learned Hall or any other building offering quiet and light. But the campus doesn't sleep once the studium leave the library. Juggers still sprint by the couples walk in hand along Jayhawk Boulevard. In Marvin Hall, lights burn brightly, signaling the presence of architecture students busily working on projects due in the morning. Robert Porter, associate director of the physical plant, said, "I really think there is somebody on this campus 24 hours a day, seven days a Porter said he had been on campus at all times of the day and night. "There's quite a lot of activity up here at all times," he said. Porter said the physical plant had a preventative maintenance crew on duty at night. "There are a lot of things we need to do when the bulk of faculty and staff leave." The crew searches buildings and their heating and cooling systems to find the small problems before they become large breakdowns. The crew also maintains equipment, he said. Porter said he also had people working around the clock in the University's steam-producing power plant. Students Save 10% On Classifieds! KU vs. NEBRASKA Live Broadcast WZR 106 KU vs. NEBRASKA Live Broadcast KZR 106 11 a.m. Saturday Sponsored By Bum Steer Bar B Q Laird Noller Ford KU Bookstores Mister Guy Sunflower Cablevision Zercher Photo LAWRENCE BATTERYCO. Ed Marlings 903 N. 2nd 7 to 6 M-F 8 to 4 Sat. 842-2922 AUTOMOTIVE SALE Be Ready for Winter Don't Get Caught with your Battery Down! Batteries 3 YR. 400 AMP... $29.95 4 YR. 455 AMP ... $34.95 5 YR. 525 AMP... $39.95 5 YR. SUPER 650 AMP... $49.95 WEX to Fit Most Cars and Lt. Trucks Ten Minute Free Installations - Free System Check 5 YR. 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Listen to KLZR or stop by for details! PENNYLINE 844 Mass. 749-4211 Downtown Open 7 Days HOURS Mon - Thurs - 11 a.m. 2 a.m. Fri & Sat - 11 a.m. 3 a.m. Sunday - 11 a.m. 1 a.m. Stop By Today From Noon until Midnight and Help Celebrate. 20% OFF Marked Price on Your Favorites PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST & FREE DELIVERY NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 $1 OFF any 2 pizzas or $2 OFF any 3 pizzas ANY PIZZA ORDERED Expires 12-31-85 842-1212 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY --for only $1998. AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! brother HRC10 ABSOLUTELY COMPLETE PERSONAL COMPUTER SYSTEM This Includes: - Zenith ZF/148/42 computer - Zenith ZVM/1230 monitor - Zenith ZVM/1230 monitor - Box of Disks - Box of Paper - Brother HR-10 Printer - Printer Cable - "Easy" Word Processor O. from the makers of Wordstar. EZCOMP COMPUTER CENTER HOLIDAY PLAZA (913)841-5715 Zenith data systems Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 11 Former state senator missing, wife says TOPEKA — Paola attorney Anne Oliver Hess, called before a state disciplinary panel on professional misconduct charges, says her estranged husband, former state Sen. Paul Hess, has left the area with their three young sons. The Associated Press Mrs. Hess said Wednesday that she had filed a report on the children with the Paola police after she arrived home Tuesday night to find her children, all under age five, their clothes and their favorite toys missing Hess, once among the most powerful members of the Kansas Legislature, also cannot be found, she said. Hess failed to appear or offer a defense at a two-day hearing this week before the state Board of Discipline of Attorneys to respond to misconduct charges brought by the state's disciplinary administrator. Because of the complaints, Hess faces possible loss of his license to practice law in Kansas. The complaints include charges by an Overland Park woman, Bridgett Buchanan, that he mishandled clients' trust funds and lied about the existence of liens on collateral for a $100,000 personal loan. In one complaint, Hess and his wife, also his former legal partner, are accused of "fraud, deceit and misrepresentation and conduct adversely reflecting on" their fitness to practice law. Mrs. Hess denies any part in the financial dealings and is fighting the charges. She contradicted testimony by Buchanan regarding a disputed $100,000 loan. Mrs. Hess said the money was offered as a gift. Mrs. Hess said her husband placed her name and her mother's name on the loan agreement without their knowledge. Poola police are not actively searching for Hess or the children, according to Hand Goodman, of the police department, because "at this point, there's been no crime committed, according to our prosecuting attorney." On Campus A photo contest sponsored by the Student Union Activities fine arts committee will run until Monday at the Kansas University gallery. Certificates and cash awards will be given for the winning entries. Church, 802 W. 22nd Terrace. The topic will be "Friendship, Dating and Marriage." The KU Navigators will meet at 7 p.m. today at the Free Methodist - The KU Spanish Club will sponsor a lecture, "Everything you wanted to know about Ecuador and were afraid to ask," at 7 p.m. Monday in the Walnut Room of the Union. Farmers seek lien searches in wake of low crop prices The Associated Press TOPEKA — The fall harvest in Kansas has spawned a surge of requests for lien searches for the second time this year, Jack Brier, secretary of state, said yesterday. The number of lien search requests this week has been four times greater than at the same time last year, said Brier, who added that most of the searches are the result of farmers applying for federal commodity credit loans against their sorghum, soybean and corn crops. Before issuing the loans, county Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service offices check with the Uniform Commercial Code Division of the secretary of state's office to make sure no other liens have been placed on a farmer's crop. Agricultural officials have attributed the increase in lien search requests to poor commodity prices. Frank Mosier, state executive director for the ASCS, said more farmers would rather take out a commodity credit loan this year than sell their crops at depressed prices. YOU CAN HEAD THE PUBLIC RELATIONS PROGRAM FOR A MAJOR CAMPUS ORGANIZATION! Apply now for Public Relations Chairperson for Student Union Activities by picking up an application at the SUA Office. Deadline for applying is Thurs., Nov. 21 at noon. Five minute interviews will be held that evening beginning at 6 p.m. SUA --at 7:30 pm Sub8Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! Any way you want it, you can get it NOW, at... 1618 West 23rd Street Select from a variety of sixteen sweetened sandwiches, topped with yellow salad or cheese. Served warm or cold on neatly baked white or wheat Sub Roll and have an air temp of 12° For large appetites, we've got a 12" sub. More moderate dinners can enjoy the 6" size, and we've included a kid Sauce for our customers under 10. For most tots our sandwich is a complete, nutritious, pallet-pleasing meal, but there's a wide variety of "stuff" to help you with flavor and texture. salad baked beans, chips and chili soft drinks, milk or coffee. Try us today! We're open from 11 am until 2 am daily, and we may dine in or carry out for your convenience. Any way you want it...you got it! AT SUB & STUFF SANDWICH SHOP. The ecco CLOGS 1339 MASS. FOOTPRINTS WANT 842-0600 S The Friday Night CLOGS 842-0600 DELIVERED WANT PIZZA? "Tender Mercies" FREE MOVIE! at ECM (1204 Oread, 1 blk. N. of K. Union) Fri., Nov. 15 SANTA'S FIELD Christmas Open House Christmas Open House Sunday, November 17th 12-5 p.m. 20% Off all Christmas items 20% Off all 1986 Calendars 20% Off all stuffed animals 20% Off all Small World organizers, photo albums, scrap books, etc. Register for our special give-aways --organizers, photo albums, scrap books, etc. Register for our special give-aways. Before gift will be served Refreshments will be served. The Palace GIFTS CARDS M.S 9:30:5:30 Thur. 9:30:8:30 Sun. 12:5 mortgage www.mortgages.com 8th and Mass. 843-1099 FIESTA, FIESTA, FIESTA FIESTA... TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: OFFICE OF DEMAND TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: SPANISH DEPARTMENT, LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES, AND S.U.A. COST: $ 2.50 IN ADVANCE $ 3.50 AT THE DOOR DATE: FRIDAY NOV. 15 (FROM 8:30 TO 2:30) PLACE: MASTER'S INN (OLD RAMADA INN) CASH BAR PAID FOR BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE Minsky's PIZZA WIN a LARGE Minsky's PIZZA! Have Your Name in Lights Announced on 106 KLZR! PICK THE WINNERS BIG 8 GAMES Colorado ___ Iowa State ___ Oklahoma State ___ vs. Oklahoma Kansas State vs. Missouri Tiebreaker: Pick the Score of Pick the Score of vs. Nebraska_ s. Nebraska Rhone DEADLINE: Nov. 16 by 1 p.m. A WINNER EVERY WEEK! Your Entry Entitles You to $2 OFF a LARGE Pizza or $1 OFF a MEDIUM Pizza * Good at the time of registration * Good on delivery----842-0154 - We have FREE DAY DELIVERY! - Reserve our "PARTY ROOM" for your party! Minsky's PIZZA 2228 Iowa 842-0154 F I L L M O R E · R I N G · S O U S A · R I C H A R D S W A G N E R H O L S T A PARADE OF MARCHES Fall Concert 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, November 19, 1985 Crafton-Preyer Theatre Featuring The University Band John Grashel and Gregory Clemons, conductors and The University Wind Ensemble Robert E. Foster, conductor Free and open to the public Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee B E E T H O V E N T C H A I K O V S K Y A L F O R D G R A F U L L A V 湖北 Eat To Your Heart's Delight! Every Sunday House of Hupel serves a delightful buffet of delicious Chinese food. The All You Can Eat Buffet offers 14 choices of traditional favorites—appetizers, soup, fried rice, chicken, pork, beef, shrimp, vegetables, and dessert. Come See For Yourself! Served Sundays Noon-3 p.m. 2007 W. 6th - 843 8070 2907 W. 6th 843-8070 next to Ecolelogue House of HUPEL POLITICAL SCIENCE, ECONOMICS MATHEMATICS MAJORS: Fellowships up to $9000 plus tuition each year for four years of study toward a Ph.D. in Political Science Will train students in quantitative techniques; flexible program for those with good quantitative backgrounds - Rated among the top dozen departments in the United States * Considered "pound for pound" the best department in the country * Best placement record of any political science department * Presidents of the American Political Science Association - Two recent winners of the APSA's 'Best Book' of the year award * Small enough for personal attention UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER For more information write to: Director of Graduate Studies Department of Political Science Harkness 323 University of Rochester Rochester, NY 14627 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY HOURS Mon - Thurs 11 a.m - 2 a.m Fri & Sat 11 a.m - 3 a.m Sunday 11 a.m - 1 a.m ANY PIZZA ORDERED $1 OFF 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center 842-1212 EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY --- U 12 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 Provost from Boston selected Regents name KTI president The Associated Press TOPEKA — The state Board of Regents voted unanimously last night to hire Anthony L. Tilmans, presently provost at the private Wentworth Institute of Technology in Boston, as the new president of Kansas Technical Institute in Salina. Tilmans, 50, accepted the appointment immediately and told reporters that he was eager to take over the helm of the Salina school and had plans to improve its image and recruiting capability. Tilmans was hired at an annual salary of $66,000, and was given an additional $6,000 as a housing allowance because KTI is the only institution under regents' control that does not have a president's or chancellor's residence. He received his bachelor's and master's degrees in civil engineering from the University of Pittsburgh and his doctorate in civil engineering from Carnegie-Mellon University. He is a native of New Kensington, Pa. Regent Richard Reinhardt of Erie made the motion to hire Tilmans rather than a second unidentified candidate nominated by a KTI search committee. Dr. Bill Roy of Topeka seconded the motion, and the voice vote was unanimous. The regents interviewed Tilmans and the second candidate yesterday afternoon, then held an executive session last night to discuss the candidates' relative merits before opening a meeting at a downtown Topeka hotel to take the formal vote in public. Asked why he chose to leave Wentworth and the city of Boston to relocate in Salina, Tilmans said it was because he and his wife both came from small cities, he liked the challenge KTI offered and it was an opportunity for him to be the top administrator at a school, not No. 2. Tilmans said he believed KTI had a tremendous future, but said the school's stated goal of having 2,000 students by the year 2000 may be too ambitious. About 700 students are currently enrolled. "I don't think there is any question that, nationwide, the technical schools are selling," he said. Haskell searches for funds Special to the Kansan City Commissioner Sandra Praeger said yesterday that she returned from a New York seminar "full of enthusiasm" after speaking with corporate representatives who could be potential sources of money for a proposed cultural center on the Haskell Indian Junior College campus. No oral commitments were made by spokesmen from the Ford, Rockefeller, Equitable Life Insurance and Mobile Oil foundations, who were at the seminar, but they were interested in the idea, Praeger said. "This initial contact with them is very general," she said. "The whole idea is to match their interest and our need." The multipurpose cultural center, still in its planning stage, may include a museum, research capabilities, galleries, permanent and traveling exhibitions, a performance hall and a snack and gift shop, she said. Praeger is president of the Haskell Indian Junior College Foundation, which was formed last year to raise money for the college. She and Gerald Gipp, president of the college, attended the New York seminar, which was designed to let Indian philanthropic organizations from across the United States make presentations to national foundations. Praeger said the representatives were impressed with Haskell because it was the oldest Indian junior college in the country, it was multiribal and was close to the University of Kansas, which could be involved in the project. Hungry? Head for Harry's! Dive into Harry's SHRIMP BASKET: 8 ounces of shrimp, cocktail sauce & Curly Q fries. Or, take on HARRY'S JUMBO: 10 oz. burger with Curly Q fries. 106 N. Park (formerly Campus Hideaway) 749-5246 HARRY BEAR'S HARRY BEAR'S THE GARDEN OF THE BEST HOME BREWERY A ASPEN! Jan. 4-11. Five days of skiing with everything included for only $356. Sign-up now at the SUA Office in the Union. Deadline is Nov. 20, so hurry! Call 864-3477 for details. SUA TRAVEL COUPON COUPON Get a 60-minute KIS. 2nd Roll FREE Bring in 2 rolls of 110,126,135 or disc film and we'll process the 2nd roll free on genuine Kodak paper in less than one hour! Offer expires 11/30/85. 2104-C West 25th Holiday Plaza 843-5471 KIS PHOTO THE GROUNDER MAN KS PHOTO FREE kls PHOTO COUPON THE GRAVER MAN come in & see us. 704 Mass. Downtown we also deliver 843-7398 4¢ Copies 818 Mass. Midwest Business Systems, Inc. 842-4134 PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL Free Consultation THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO 745 New Hampshire 841-6796 TELL THE TOWN CALL THE KANSAN PRE-MED CLUB MEETING Mon., Nov.18 7 p.m. Help plan for spring semester Officer elections PIZZA SHOPPE 842-0600 DELIVERED Jayhawk Rm. Kansas Union PIZZA SHOPPE An emerald and diamond engagement ring valued at $5,500 and a gold wedding ring valued at $500 were reported stolen Wednesday from a home in the 2500 block of Ridge Court, police said yesterday. It is not known when the jewelry was taken, police said. On the Record COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DINNER 6:30 PM TELEPHONE: 817-5400 GENE MACKMAN MATY DILLON TARGET FR. 5:00 Daily 7:20 9:40 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN MATT DILLON 850-239-1640 GENE MACKMAN MATT DILLON TARGET R Fri. 5:00 Daily 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun. 2:30 5:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN MATT DILLON THE MUTILATOR R BLOYD COUNTRY F Fri. 5:00 Daily 7:30 9:30 Sat. & Sun. 2:30 5:00 HILLCREST DOWNTOWN MATT DILLON JAGGED EDGE Glenn Close Jeff Bridges VARSITY TELEPHONE THE MUTILATOR ONLINE SCHOOL Fri. 5-10, Daily 7-30 6:30 Sat & Sun. 12-3, Daily 10:00 R HILLCREST 1 TICKET NO. 2004 JACKED EDGE Glenn Close, Jeff Bridges Daily '4: 45 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun.'2:30 An AM/FM cassette stereo valued at $320 was reported stolen Wednesday from a truck parked in ally * 4:45 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun. *2:30 A video cassette record valued at $757 was reported stolen Wednesday from an apartment in the 2400 block of Alabama Street, police said. HILLCREST 2 HIGHLY ENJOYABLE" A MARTIN PICTURE Afterparty Daily '5:00 7:25 9:25 Sat. & Sun. '2:45 HILLCREST 3 THE PROGRAM Merrick Krantz just found out that his one night stay had cost him four hours of fun ONCE BITTEN Dalia '6-07-10-8-30' St. & Sun '2-44' Daily '5:00 7:26 9:35 Sat. & Sun. '2:45 HILLCREST 3 Mark Karnedy kindly fund our tour this once night and has been commended for contributions ONCE BITTEN Daily '5:00 7:30 9:30 Sat. & Sun. '2:45 CINEMA 1 Rainbow Brite Sue Stanley Daily '7:20 Sat.&Sun. '5:09 Daily '7:20 Sat.&Sun. '5:09 CINEMA 2 LIVE PHONE NUMBER 8 Fri. '5:00 Daily '7:15 9:20 Sat. & Sun. '3:00'5:00 *Bargain Show* CINEMA 1 Rainbow Write Sun Studio TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. Daily 7:20 Sat. Sun 2:09 5:08 Daily 9:15 CINEMA 2 375 S. 10th St NEW YORK THEM MOW Fri. '5:00 Daily 7:15 9:20 Bat. & Sun. '3:00 '6:00 the 1400 block of Prospect Avenue police said. Brown Nose Ball NOVEMBER 16, 1985 "to write call is to go right with you, also." S. S. PLADOGENSHIP BORDER BANDIDO CORREJO BORDER BANDIDO SUNDAY SPECIAL 1 TEXAS BURRITO ONLY $1.79 1528 W. 23rd 842-8861 Across from Post Office. A car stereo and cassette tape, valued together at $253, were stolen, sometime before 4 p.m. yesterday from a student's car parked in Lot 50 behind Joseph R. Pearson Hall, police said. --- 1/2 Price Buy one ice cream or yogurt & get the second one at 1½ price with this coupon expires 11-26-85 CONE·A·COPIA The Magical Ice Cream Dream Machine! The Magical Ice Cream Dream Machine! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1814 West 23rd (next to Command Performance) --- Good fortune awaits you at—House of Hupei 2500 W.6th 843-8070 THE TOTAL LOOK THE TOTAL LOOK TANNING 5 tans f plus 1 free THE TOTAL LOOK TAN THE TOTAL LOOK TAN TANNING SPECIAL 5 tans for only $16 plus 1 free Sauna Massage • Relax comfortably in private room with stereo • UVA bulbs used • No burning, aging, or wrinkling • Better & faster than the sun 9th & Mississippi 842-5921 Offer expires 11/30/85 ine inks? much. Drinking Myth of the Week THE BEST CURE FOR A HANGOVER IS... Everybody has his favorite. But they all have one thing in common. They don't work. What works? Preventive medicine. If you don't drink too much, you won't get a hangover. The Student Assistance Center TSU SCHOOL CARE SAC 817-849-3024 MISS STREET DELI 1041 MASSACHUSETTS Homemade CHOCOLATE, CHERRY, LEMON OR BLUEBERRY Cheesecake No coupons accepted with this offer. Offer good through Nov.30 95¢ reg $1.50 INSIDE NINTH AT MISSISSIPPI CENTER SHAMPOO AND HAIRCUT $10.00 FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUpon JUST HAIR II MODERN HAIRDRESSING STUDIO 842-4414 708 W. NINTH EXPIRES 12-31-85 INSIDE NINTH AT MISSISSIPPI CENTER SHAMPOO AND HAIRCUT $10.00 FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUPON JUST HAIR II MODERN WARDEN STUDIO 842-4414 708 W. NINTH EXPIRES 12-31-85 INSIDE NINTH AT MISSISSIPPI CENTER SHAMPOO AND HAIRCUT $10.00 FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUPON JUST HAIR II MODERN HAIR DESIGN STUDIO 842-4414 708 W. NINTH EXPIRES 12-31-85 PIZZA Shoppe PIZZA SHOPPING WITH 12 PIZZAS 842-0600 6th and Kaold Westridge Shopping Center WE DELIVER! DELIVERY SPECIAL! Two Topping King Size Pizza and 32 Oz. Pepsi— $7.95 plus tax Additional Toppings Only 90' Each. DINE-IN CARRY-OUT LIMITED DELIVERY UDK Exp. 11-00-85 Bring A Friend! MEAL FOR 2 Single Topping Prince Size Pizza, 2 Salads and 2 Pepsis $5.95 plus tax DINE-IN ONLY. UDK Exp. 11-00-85 PIZZA Shoppe PIZZA Shoppe PIZZA BATTER WITH 10 PRONGS! 842-0600 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center WE DELIVER! DELIVERY SPECIAL! Two Topping King Size Pizza and 32 Oz. Pepsi— $7.95 plus tax Additional Toppings Only 90% Each. DINE-IN CARRY-OUT LIMITED DELIVERY UKU UKU Exp. 11-30-85 Bring A Friend! MEAL FOR 2 Single Topping Prince Size Pizza, 2 Salads and 2 Pepsis $5.95 plus tax DINE-IN ONLY. UKU Exp. 11-30-85 Sports Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 13 University Daily Kansan News Briefs Women competing in final fall match The women's tennis team will begin its final competition of the fall season, today in Little Rock, Ark. The team will play dual matches against Southwest Mississippi State and Arkansas. The Kansas women have never beaten Arkansas. "Last year we lost three tough matches to them and each one went down to the final sets," said Scott Perelman, head coach. "The girls have had a good win, and wins this weekend would really give us some momentum for the spring." There was some doubt as to whether Perelman would be traveling with the team to Arkansas. He was involved in an auto accident Tuesday when the car he was driving was hit from behind while he was stopped at a traffic light. Perelman was treated and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital. But his brother Brett, an assistant tennis coach, yesterday said that Perelman would be able to travel although he was sore. No signings received The Kansas basketball office did not receive any signed letters of indent in the mail yesterday, according to Doug Vance, sports information director. High school senior basketball players who want to sign with a college or university during the early signing period have until Wednesday. If they don't sign a letter, the earliest they can sign is April. But Brown said he would wait until the players signed before announcing their names. After Friday's exhibition game with the Czechoslovakian National Team, head coach Larry Brown said, "Four kids have told me that they are coming." Brown said Tuesday that he would be disappointed if Kansas didn't sign any players during the early signing period. Runners at districts The Kansas men's cross country team, along with two members of the women's team, will compete tomorrow in the NCAA District V Championships in Stillwater, Oka. Women's coach Cliff Rovello said he was sending only Kim Sheridan and Shaula Hatcher because they were the only distance runners who were healthy. Hatcher will also be running in The Athletics Congress Junior National Cross Country Championships Nov. 30 in Raleigh, N.C. Chris McCool, a captain of the men's swim team, took a deep breath while practicing yesterday in Robinson Natatorium. The men's and women's swim teams are preparing for a meet with Southern Illinois tonight and a double-duet meet with Wyoming and Drury College tomorrow. Rigorous schedules continue By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff "We've got one of the toughest schedules in the country, and we are going to keep it that way in the future." Kansas head coach Gary Kempf said Wednesday. "This will be a good test for our team since we have never beaten SIU in the three years we have swum against them." The SIU women's team is ranked No. 5 in the country, and the men's team is No. 7. Both Kansas' teams are unranked so far this season. The Kansas swim teams will continue their rigorous schedules at 7 p.m. today in Robinson Natatorium in a meet against Southern Illinois. Kempf said he didn't know much about the Saluki teams other than their reputations and preseason rankings. He said he was more concerned with performance of his teams. Tomorrow, the men's and women's teams will host Wymong and Drury College in a double-dual meet. The meet starts at 2 p.m. in Robinson Natatorium. Kempf said that the Wyoming swim teams were almost identical to Kansas' and that Drury was not quite as strong. The women's team is coming off a split of a double-dual meet against Southern Methodist and Texas A&M in Dallas last weekend. In the meet, Karen Dionne set a pool record in winning the 100-yard breaststroke in one minute, seven seconds. KU needs to be error-free against Nebraska By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas offense, which has produced only four field goals in that span, took another step backward Wednesday when quarterback Mike Norseth suffered a slight knee sprain in practice. But before the Jayhawks can snap those streaks, there's another streak they will have to take care of — 11 quarters without a touchdown. Kansas head coach Mike Gottfried has a personal two game losing streak against the Cornhuskers, and Nebraska head coach Tom Osborne hasn't lost to Kansas in 12 seasons. The Kansas football team will be trying to stop several streaks when they play 2. no. ranked Nebraska at 1:30 p.m, tomorrow in Lincoln, Neb. The Jayhawks will be trying to snap a three game losing streak that has taken them from 5-2 to 5-5. Nebraska has won eight straight games since losing its opening game to Florida State. Norseth, who was assisted from the field at Anschutz Sports Pavilion, practiced yesterday. Gottried said Norseth looked fine, but he would wait until after practice today to name the starting quarterback for tomorrow. Tom Quick, Norseth's backup, has been at quarterback this week in practice. Quick is also a wide receiver. Strong safety Marvin Mattox, who injured his knee in the Oklahoma game and was said to be out for the The Jayhawks also will be without tailback Lynn Williams, center Paul Oswald and free safety Wayne Ziegler, who are sidelined with injuries. Nebraska Game 11, Nov. 16 Lincoln, Neb. entire season, will play against Nebraska. "He beat the diagnosis," Gottfried said yesterday. Gottfried said the Jayhawks would have to play error-free ball if they were to have a chance against the Big Eight co-leader. Nebraska is 8-1 overall and 5-0 in the conference. said. Pinekicker Jeff Johnson will retain his starting job against Nebraska, Gottfried said. Johnson, who was replaced by Chase Van Dyne after missing two field goals against Colorado, had to win his starting job back in competitions this week at practice. Oklahoma is 6-1 overall and 4-0 in the conference. "The thing for us to do is put ourselves in a position to be around in the fourth quarter. We have to we have to play aggressively and make things happen." Osborne said that despite KU's three game losing streak and 1-4 conference record, the Jayhawks were one of the better teams in the Big Eight. "I think there is a tendency on the part of some people to compare Kansas with Kansas State and Iowa. I think that is a mistake." Oshorne said. Osborne said the KU offense was similar to Iowa State, a team Nebraska defeated 49-0 last week, but the Jayhawks had better athletes. "I think the strength of their team is obviously Norseth." Osborne said. "If you get a hot hand and their quarterback plays well, and we don't play well defensively and offensively, we stand a very good chance of getting beat." Gottried said Kansas would have to stop the Nebraska running attack, which is led by Doug DuBose's 1,027 yards, in order to win. "We have to stop the run, but not fall prey to the play-action pass," Gottfried said. "They can hull you to sleep with the run and then spring the pass on you." On defense, Gottfried said Nebraska was strong at every position, and Kansas would have to execute better than in recent weeks in order to have a chance. If they don't, the streaks could continue. Top guard commits to KU Rv Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff Lisa Braddy has signed a national letter of intent to play basketball at Kansas next season, women's head basketball coach Marian Washington announced yesterday. Braddy, a 5-foot-9 guard from St. Teresa's Academy in Kansas City, Mo., chose Kansas over more than 20 other schools that recruited her, including USC, UCLA, Louisiana Tech, Long Beach State and Georgia. "I'm just ecstatic about Lisa's decision," Washington said. "Her natural ability makes her one of the best to come along in a while. She has the innate ability to see the entire floor and make special things happen. A player with her kind of talent will really make our program." "I'm just ecstatic about Lisa's decision. Her natural ability makes her one of the best to come along in a while.' - Marian Washington She became St. Teresa's all-time leading scorer last year with 1,300 points in two seasons. Braddy transferred to the academy from Schagle High School, where she averaged 16.5 points per game as a freshman and was picked as the national newcomer of the year by B-C Times, a national recruiting publication. Brady was picked twice to Street and Smith basketball magazine All-America teams, and has been named to USA Today's All-America team. Last year Braddy led St. Teresa's to a 29-1 record and to the semifinals of the Missouri A-4 state tournament. The Jayhawks are expected to sign two more recruits early next week, including Kerri Hawley of Rogers State junior college in Claremore, Okla. Hawley played at Kansas State last season. Football Predictions
CarothersConboyLazzarinoGraves
Kansas at NebraskaNebraska 52-6Nebraska 35-21Nebraska 45-24Nebraska 48-7
Iowa State at Kansas StateIowa State 10-7Kansas State 23-22Iowa State 24-7Iowa State 28-14
Oklahoma State at MissouriOklahoma State 34-13Oklahoma State 32-24Oklahoma State 31-3Oklahoma 31-17
Colorado at OklahomaOklahoma 30-20Oklahoma 28-10Oklahoma 35-10Oklahoma 54-10
Auburn at GeorgiaGeorgia 21-19Georgia 21-20Georgia 28-21Auburn 28-24
Air Force at BYUAir Force 100-99Air Force 28-24Air Force 41-35BYU 34-21
Notre Dame at Penn StateNotre Dame 28-24Penn State 28-17Penn State 17-13Penn State 21-20
Maryland at ClemsonMaryland 21-17Maryland 24-21Maryland 20-17Clemson 24-7
Mississippi at TennesseeTennessee 42-10Tennessee 27-10Tennessee 17-16Tennessee 28-14
Wisconsin at Ohio StateOhio State 35-14Ohio State 35-14Ohio State 24-10Ohio State 21-17
Season Totals53-34-3—.60960-27-3—.69063-24-3—.72452-35-3—.600
The predictors are James Carothers, associate professor of English; Bill Conboy, professor of communication studies; Chris Lazzarino, Kansan sports editor; and Bryan Graves, Kansan photo editor. Paul Goodman/KANSAN BOLT Mónica Spencer, a seller on the Kansas volleyball team, concentrates on a low shot. The Jayhawks were practicing yesterday in Robinson Center in preparation for this weekend's Kansas Tournament. Tourney to begin tomorrow By a Kansan reporter The Kansas volleyball team will end its season by hosting the Kansas Tournament this weekend in Robinson Center. Tournament play begins at 10 a.m. tomorrow and 11 a.m. on Sunday. Allen Field House between Kansas and Kansas State Sandwiched between tournament play tomorrow will be a Big Eight conference match at 7:30 p.m. in The Jayhawks, 15-11 and 2-7 in the conference, will play Texas-EI Paso, Tulsa and Illinois-Chicago in the tournament. Kansas will try to rebound from losses last week to Oklahoma and Iowa State. "We're going to come out with around a .500 season." KU head coach Frank Alberts said yesterday. "It would be nice to bring that record up and into the Big Eight and see what damage we can do." 1 14 University Daily Kansas Classified Ads KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 The University Daily CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-Day 0-15 2.60 3.75 16-20 2.90 4.25 21-25 3.10 4.75 After 5 words add... 304 504 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. Classified Display ... $4.99 Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and on more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues allowed in Classified Display ads. No noatrivures allowed in classified display ads. 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 5.25 8.25 6.00 10.00 6.75 10.35 754 10.50 POLICIES - Deadline is 4 a.m.—2 working days prior to nubification - advertising. · Bind box ads - please add a $4 service charge. - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words * Deadline is 4 m a.m. 2 working day prior to - Correct referral to allly involvement. * No infall on cancellation of pre-paid classified - Teamsheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 on TV * No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established Fifteen items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Those ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansas business office at 843-4538. - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only. - Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The Inner City Jolly Kannan. -牟利的 earned rate discount - Samples of all mail order items must be submit ANNOUNCEMENTS - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement. - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified Arts and Crafts Fair Lawrence Community m.a., m.p. Professional artists and crafts people a.m., p.m. Professional artists and crafts people Pro Christo per L'Acquista n la Collège Aspen 861 SUA Travel is going to beautiful Aspen 860 SUA Travel is going to beautiful Aspen Trip package, price includes a Trip package, price includes $256 and everything, every lift tickets, Sign-up deadline is next week on heli飞旅行: Registration at the SUA of Aspen. Odd Fridays at Canterbury Fri, Nov. 15 4:00 p.m.: Gather 4:30 Conversation/ Discussion News and Business Staff Positions CREDIT CARDS GUARANTEED To Working Students! 100% Approved. Charge $350 Pay $21 Month. Send For Application. National Credit Card, Box 306, Shawnee, Oklahoma 74023. Diavel Festival, November 23, 6 - 19 p.m. Courtroom, 8th Floor, Kansas City Sponsored by the Ku Indiana Club. $ The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Monday, December 2, 1988. 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. Hilton Fund-Rainer. Evening of piano music by Eddie Mendel, with orchestra. 7:30, 7:50, Saan and Jake Winkeropin. Sunday, Nov. 17, 7:30, Saan, and Nov. 18, 7:40. FICARON" ADPI- Pai Ps1 Road Rally Now 17, 5 p.m. Pizza Party afterwards at ADPI bus ground 18th 'R' Color T. V. $29.86 a month. Smarty's TV 147 W. 2d; 843.7531. Mon. Sat. 9:30-10:30 Tue. 11:30-12:30 Wed. 12:30-13:30 Thu. 13:30-14:30 Fri. 14:30-15:30 Sat. 15:30-16:30 Rent-VCV with 2 movies, overnight $14.99 Smith's TV #1447 W 312, bldr. 823/1821. Mon. Sat. $16.99 SKIERS-Complete Colorado alki trip 2199 limited special offer, call 824 4000 by month WOOMPAF A FANS UNITE: Time to celiate the 8th Annual "Anniversary of the Invention of Sex." Saturday, November 16. If you should be invited, know you whom to contact. The Summum. One bedroom Breckenridge room, do sleep, 4 color TV, fireplace, clubhouse with indoor porch/jacuzzi $75 per night. Owners (303) 421-1080. Ski the Summit. One bedroom, Breckenridge condo, sleep 4 colors. sleep 7 fireplace, clubhouse with indoor pool/jacuzzi $75 per night. Nightroom 3201-621-1000. Paid Staff Positions Editor, business manager The Kanas is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester Editor and Business Manager positions. These are paid position fees only. Please visit our application experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Students Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; in in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., tuesday, November 19. The University Daily Kanas 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. Editor, Business Manage SKIERS. Complete Colorado tkip. $29. GRAFIE- VINE (union) 1. A Vine on which grapes grow. 2. An informal, often secret means of transmitting information from plant to plant. 3. A vine used in the fruit-pit it. FOR RENT 1 Bedroom apt. close to campus. $110/month plus utilities, call 841-449. 2 bedroom apartment for close to campus Rent starts at -10.98 $, cell 641-736 Ask for LISA or JULIA Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 West Mkt. One bedroom furnished, 3rd floor. $225 plus utilities. Lease through 841-3230. Price could be negotiable 841-3230. 841-3230. Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at BERKELEY PLATTS. Vacancies available now and at semester Plan ahead, lease now for next year. 843-2116 Attractive 2 bedroom condominium for rent. 13/4 baths, CA, FP, range refrigerator, microwave, DW, WD hookups, enable ciel TV, swimming pool, Kitchen, Available. Dec. 1. Lease required. $35, 749-809. Beautiful, Spacious, Mendowbrook apartment for sub-lane. Close to campus, Great view, pool, tennis courts. Near town. Cooperative living lovers your expenses while expanding your mind. Room available at Rainbow House for $110/month. Call 845-7040 after 9 p.m. to become part of our thriving community. Efficiency aids amenities and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 842-4185. Excellent location one bedroom suite basement apartment kitchen to utilities at 1901 W. 67th St., Chicago, IL 60611 Jayhawker Towers ON CAMPUS 2-Br. Apts. for KU students. - For 2,3 or 4 persons - For 2, 3 or 4 persons - Individual Content C - Individual Contract Option - 10-Month Leases - Individual Contract Option * 10 Month Leases - Limited Access Doors - 10-Month Leases All Utilities Paid - Air Conditioned - Swimming Pool Round-Bracelet, Computer Center Auditorium describe at Computer Center Information - On Bus Line Found—gold necklace in front of Watson Library Call to identify 864-4715. LIVE HERE!! Two bedroom, fireplace, dishwasher, close to campus, low utilities, Sunrise Place 10.C $730/month. Call 769-0463 or 841-1297 (office) Furnished rooms from $10 with some utilities paid. Two bikes from Kansas Union. No pets. - Laundry Facilities 843-4993 HEATERWOOD VALLEY: THANKGIVING SPECIAL, NOVEMBER HIENT $300. Gone one & two apartments have CA, gas heat, DW, FF refriger- energy efficient and on bus route 814-875-474 - Furnished or Unfurnished MUS SU SURJEASE Galley House Architecture MUS SU SURJEASE Garley House Architecture for 3 Schmidt and Thaler Career through Mattei auf Saracho Luxury lowhouse, 2 bedrooms, 1/2 baths, garage, fireplace, deck, solar window. Five storages. Refrigerator. Gas stove. Sublease 2 BH. Available from January. Close to campus. Parked $800押金. After 6 p.m., pick up. (Directions below). Large one bedroom, gas heat, gas/water paid $255, 749-793 or 841-250. Spacious two bedroom furnished housewife for rent close to campus. Includes garage, 1/34 bath, balcony and new carpeting. Very economical and available as early as Dec. 1 call. LOST/FOUND Nice Rooms $135.00 Util. Paid. 842-4736 after 5 p.m. LAST: Timex Quartz Digital/Analog Watch in a Men's Restroom, 3rd level Kansas Union on 11/12. If you please call 749-4851 at 3:00 Weekdays / annvite weeks SUBLEASE 2 bedroom Ap. On Box Road and Close to Campau Village Comfort Apartment 4 Bedroom Fully furnished Wanted: Roommate to share house with four others. Own bedroom, $125 plus 1/2 utility, close proximity. Smoking roommate for spring semester. 2 bdm, and 2 bath. 1/2 rent and 1/2 utilities. Bus Route 749-6441 after 8 a.m. Rooms for on the hill on 1/1 mile from Union. SUBLEASE. available immediately studio on bus line. Next to Sanctuary. 843.725. MASTERCAFT AFFETS a completely furnished two bedroom apartment available immediately! We also have subleases on 1, 2 and 3 bedr room apartments. Call KU. KU Call 1411.-812. 1411 or 749-8145, or 749-8142. Spring semester opening for male at Nalshimh Subbase at semester. Larger new, 2 bedroom; Subbase at semester. Larger new, 2 bedroom; Sublease at semester. Large, new, 2 bedroom, 1 block from Union. Call 843-3238. Lost - Gold add- a bead necklace man Staifer- film, Woooos. Sentimental value. Call (312) 675-4088 Found: A pocket calculator. Call to identify 864-4245. Ask for Breed. ENTERTAINMENT Lost - Heart Shaped Amethyst Ring with two diamonds, at Robinson Gym. Call 864-1851. Lupe's documents and address and phone book, Lupeira Hall. Desperate, please call 864-4523. NIGHT LIFE Mobile DJ Music. A mixture of New Rock and the classics presented over a 400 watt sound system. When it's time to dance, call NIGHT LIFE 740-4713. Dance to live fiddle music! Jayhawk Oldtime Band. Company. Make your next part uni- lized! 414-692-3780 LADYHOUSE BLUES Sat., Nov. 16, 8:00 p.m. Lawrence Community Theatre 1501 New Hamn 843-7489 Sun. Matinee, Nov. 17, 2:30 sauence Community Theatre 1501 New Hamp. 843-7469 Season Ticket Holders: $1.00 General Admission: $2.00 THE OUTHOUSE Get Smart and SHORT NOTICE TONIGHT TOXIC REASONS NEXT ALL AGES Weekend Special TICKETS AT EXILE 3 Don't pay by the person, pay by the hour— unlimited bowlers! 2 Bedroom apartment for rent. Close to campus Rent starts at 1-896-7481. 814-3766 for Lisa or Alison. 00 an hour lane rental THE KANSAS UNION JAYBOWL Fanatix Position Ability - Gift Shop Manager, Museum of Natural History. Requires experience in retail sales, inventory and purchasing, bookkeeping vaults, and inventory management view/ schedule hourly help. Preferred qualifications: merchandising and advertising experience. Need to be enrolled at least in a university course and have a flexible schedule $800/mo to start up a small application form, contact Mary Slade or Mary Ann Munchee YOyche 684-480. Applicant must have a high level of equal opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Part-time permanent word processor. 20 hrs./wk Part-time permanent word processor. 749-3800. (500) Word processor EOE. Word processor EOE. Level 1 Call 864-3545 Free Dance Concert Tonight 9 P.M. Burge Union STUDENT HELP NEEDED. General labor and skilled trades assistants. Must be able to work 8-12 room or 1-3 p.m. Contact Colleen Wiers. Students are required to attend W. 15th, W. 18th. Bring your class schedule. RESEARCH ASSISTANT - WESTERN CIVILIZATION Quarter-time position for six months at the Program in the investigation and evaluation of educational materials (audio-video, textbooks, computers) in the resources available to the instructional staff of the program. Positions will be for six months of service from August 15, 1986 to August 15, 1988. Position requires a Baccalaureate degree or equivalent background in the Humanities, teaching experience, Western Civilization, and some evidence of reference/library/research skills. Salary is $490 per month. English Graduate! *Thinking of graduate school?* Small is Beautiful, Graduation Assistantship, Spring 1986. Selection begins Dec. 12. English dept. Freshmen - English III, K5-600. K5-600 call or l145-1000 Ext. 244. BioWave Technology, Inc. Drive Wireless™肌体 be able to check data via Wireless Watch™ must be able to check data via Wireless Watch™ HELP WANTED **STUDENT HELP NEEDED.** Clerk Typist available to work half days, either mornings 8-12 or 9-1 or afterrores 1-5, Monday through Friday. Ten key addition machine, math skills and good writing skills. Light Typing Companion Colleen Wiem. Students Housing Maintenance shop. 2303 W. 18th, 604-397. BabySitter needed in my home for all home basketball games. Top pay for responsible, no issues. Presented By S U A Special Events INTERNSHIP OPEN - KANASS RURAL CENTER, a non-profit research, education, and advocacy organization focusing on agricultural, environmental, social, and economic issues one year full time Internship involving research in "Alternative Agriculture: The Feasibility of Alternative Agriculture" Degree, writing and research skills required. 300 no. Send resume and written sample to: M. Kimberly Center, 494 Frost, Whiting, 800.6552 The University of Kansas Budget Office has two student assistants with possible full-time employment during the summer. The first of these two students will gain a good exposure to fund accounting transfers for the University's budgets. This person will gain a good exposure to fund accounting transfers for the University's financial environment. This position requires a minimum of seven hours of academic activity and a bachelor's degree in nature. It requires good typing ability with word processing and spreadsheet software. It requires graduate student status and good written and oral skills. Skills include $400.00 to $400.00 per week, graduation student status and good written and oral skills. Are November 15, 1985. Start date are flexible. For information call Jana Hill, budget office, 319.389.2544. New positions are available. Equal Opportunity Employer. Tuesday Thursday babyshitter needed. Call 842-8796 Part-time mornings, must be 21. Apply in person. Knoll Welding Supplies, 1495 MPN. EOE. Volunteer Position: Are you interested in heading the public relations program for a major campus organization? Apply now to be the Public Relations Chairperson for Student Union Activities at LSU. Please visit www.lsu.edu/teach. On Thursday November 21, Interviews will be held that same evening beginning at 6 p.m. Work-Study Hourly Position available with Bureau of Child Research, 10-20 hours, per week. General office assistant, up-sizing computer skills, information collection, photocopying, distribution of mailing information and filing. Must have good organizational skills and knowledge of computer entry and good typing skills necessary. Complete application at AA 313 Bristol Terrace (Meadowbrook) by Nov. 18, 1985. FOR SALE Female Aide A.M. 7:30-12:00 P.M. 0-12 Male Aide 728.988 1972 Vannaha SRK 500. Run well, needs some work. 480 best offer. Must sell. 749-5281 3 Nebraska-KU football tickets for face value 843-8506, call Kathy D. 1983 Dodge Colt Deluxe, 4-speed overdrive, A/C/AM/A/M case, Excellent condition, Great Gas MPG 842-7628 PC INTEGRATION: The most compatible at the lowest price. Fully guaranteed. Systems starting just $45! Hard disk spec: 20 MHz RAM, installed and tested (full year guarantee). ALPINE 7121 Car stereo preset FM- AM cassette great features, 841-5561 after 9 a.m. ANRURKP LAMPS. Buy out of a lifetime! $150 Your choice $10. Open to the public everyday! Midwest Furniture and Watered Liquidators. New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS. Sculptures in KS & NEPA. Baseball cards and sports nostalgia - Buy Sell JD's J Ds Baseball 10-16 M W 328, W 220 BASS AMP / Sum Beta Bass Head 100 Watts. BASS AMP / Sum Beta Bass Head, Like New, Sounds Great. 875-749-2670 Bedding Closeout. A leading manufacturer has discontinued several covers. They offered us this one time special at below wholesale cost. While the cover is new, we can still order TERMS AVAILABLE. Open 7 days! Midwest Furniture and Waterbed Liquidators. 738 New Hamphire, Lawrence KS. 824-2043 Outlets in KS CARPET 30,000 square yards in a rainbow of color and size. Big Bob's Used Carpets 738 New Cimic Books, Plainly Pens, Pentebuses, etc. Max's Comic Book, 10-11 Tue, Fri, Sat, & Sun 10-5-81 Monday through Friday Fairer Size -Large weight set with bench, graphic equalizer, 11" BW TV. TV call 749-848 anytime. For Sale Student Season篮球 ticket. call 749-5667. Mary Far Sale! 14 X 70 Mobile Home why throw your money on rent when you can have equity when you graduate? 2 bdrm.1 bath home when you roommates or young family. 1-813-4678 Fender guitar guitar, $175 best offer. Beginner's drum set, some hardware, make offer, 84-0324 Student Season Basketball Ticket for sale. Best offer. Call after 6:30. Keep trying. @412-845-1489. Computer from $99. Full year warranty. Computer from $99. Full year warranty. @412-845-1489. @412-845-1489. @412-845-1489. @412-845-1489. @412-845-1489. @412-845-1489. @412-845-1489. @412-845-1489. @412-845-1489. IOVERMENT HOMES (from $1 U/Repr). Also: * GUARDIAN HOMES (for $300) 800-657-6087 * GUARDIAN HOMES (for $99) 800-657-6087 Tired of looking everywhere for QUALITY TIRES & WHEELS at reasonable prices? Well, you don't have to anymore! At IMPORT PLUS, all may be available. You can get a parable with MAIL-ORDER) Come in and check us out! 610.2 wrd (Beside Pizza Hut) 749-5437. Waterbath matte, 10 bedroom aquarium set-up. Waterbed mattress, 10 bedroom aquarium set-up. - immediately 1877 Modula V suitable for J39 - immediately 1877 Modula V suitable for sale. make offer. M41-641211 Must Sell- Brand new compound box with accessories. $130. Call J. Gessler 845-704-204. MOPED: 1948 Yamaha T舟车. Perfect condition, 2 sphees. Must call. Cell Arral at 6432-5282 with Western Civilization Notes: On sale on Sale! Makes a great gift for anyone in need of preparation. For exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization available now at Town Crier, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and online at www.jayhawk.com. 1953 Mutang. Bungay with cream interior, 4 speed, A/C, great shape, $2,498. Prevail McCall. Zenith Terminal (medium & monitor) for off-campus hook up to KI computer system. Excellent performance. ONKYO STEREO RECEIVER: 70 watts per channel, many features, excellent condition. Call AUTO SALES Collector Stamps. Mint and used. Canada, U.S. 12 cents. New Hampshire, 14 cents. Second release. 16 cents. 1869 Rambler American Runs great. Stereo with surround. No elevator. No $400,叫 843 - 216 Rambler American Runs great. Stereo with surround. No elevator. No $400,叫 843 - 216 1974 Ford Mustang Liftback, Runs good, some worn or best offer. Bid 892-5633. Phone answering machine, kumlamp, jewelry, jewel- scenters, desk study lamps, twin bedspread, bed sheets. One Student Basketball ticket. Call 664-1140. 1978 Chevette, runs great, 4 sp 2 door, many war- riors, $1200 BOG. Call Scott, 864-2942. includes 870% or best offer, call 914-265-3777 1979 Dustman 10 A- C Jpeel Speed 919 Prestem M 920 Prestem M 921 Prestem M PASSPORT RADAR DETECTOR. New condition, must sell to best offer 749-1792. One student season basketball for sale-best offer. Alvarsan accounted (outway) guitar for sale. 1980 Plymouth. A驱.5 Speed AM-FM Cassette $2795 Preston McCall 61-846-6076 1881 Manda GLC, 2 door, IBH, 5 speed, FWD, rear defoger, highway miles. $3000. Can’t afford both car and anyone more sell car as soon as possible. 749-7532. BILT SALE -628 Louisiana. 12, 7 p.m. Friday. 13, 10-14. Sat. Nov. 16. 1982 Chevy Chevette. dark blue metallic, dark brown automatic, A/C B/Z 2,896 Preston MK II 1984 BMW 318, Low mileage, all electric, custom interior. Beautiful. Call 749-2842. 78 Buck Regal Limited 74,000 km. AC, PB, CB, Cloth. Cloth Interior. SPRING GRADS Owen a new Mercury Coquar now and make no payments until after graduation. Applicable on any Ford Mercury product. Call 834-6097. Ask for Cruit Bratsche. PERSONAL BILL—Ceer Up! "Things can only get better." Tenn–Jack Thank you StJ. Judge for lavers granted. Three Our Representatives have been granted the not been known fall. Probation must be present. Tail, sklender, slightly-biding, 11 law student of tall second class learner noerføl, social drink, sauce, smoothies, milk, flavored vino, voluptuous and curvacious blond that takes a drink and "likes to have fun"; reply la school student of second class learner noerføl Somewhat new to the area, certainly new to this and slightly apprentice, I'm a successful professional, swim, 29, tail, nice looking, witty and charming. I can travel well, travel seeking bright, attractive gentleman whose sensitive and down to earth for companion-couples. Write to: Book 1584, Lawrence, KS 6004 Guido says, "victory sure does taste sweet." P "S," Robert. R "M" , doesn't seem to be doing too hard right now, is this the end? if not, be careful it must be used for tuckstaching could be double bladed. Dearest, Amazing isn't it? Already 3 magical years! Thank God for Laundry Rooms KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS Charlie Brown. -- you know? Also, thanks for putting up with my wishy,washy-ness! I'm looking forward to the many years ahead. Happy 3rd, Pumpkin. OX & Kinks, A BUS. PERSONAL SKT CULTUR RISING! Skateboards & Accessorie: QUALITY STUFF ONLY COMPHEMENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidence assured. Greater area. Call for appointment 913-855-100 Write ad here. A 2. two attractive young men seeking same for contact. Contact TODD or STEVE, increase profile. $10-$35 Weekly /U/P Mailing Circulars? No. $40-$60 Weekly /U/P Mailing Circulars? No. Success, POS Bx 40cx26, Woodstock, Lakewood ALK-ATT Happy 3/12th! I love you! PAUL SIMULATIONS…Enjoy Effective. Join inholding of preceased quality adult looks for since the third semester (have we got a man for you). For info call 827-609-0010. Not obligation. New Connections Video in the library. Videos in Kansas City. Holidays are coming to give yourself the gift ever. Not an Excort Service videos in Kansas City. Holidays are coming to give yourself the gift ever. Not an Excort Service videos in Kansas City. Holidays are coming to give yourself the gift ever. Not an Excort Service videos in Kansas City. Holidays are coming to give yourself the gift ever. Not an Excort Service videos in Kansas City. Holidays are coming to give yourself the gift ever. Not an Excort Service videos in Kansas City. Holidays are coming to give yourself the gift ever. Not an Excort Service videos in Kansas City. Holidays are coming to give yourself the gift ever. Not an Excort Service videos in Kansas City. Holidays are coming to give yourself the gift ever. Not an Excort Service videos in Kansas City. Holidays are coming to give yourself the gift ever. Not an Excro UPTOWN BICYCLES 1337 Mass. 749-0636 BLOOM COUNTY Classified Heading: "Country Heart" Holday Sale 210 Belle Haven Fri Nov. 15-14 and 7-Sat Nov. 16-14. FLOAT CONNECTION - 14th E. B0, SL 749-0771 Mastercard and Visa. Name_ Address For all your winter clothing needs all the way (Party clothes, Toeats, etc.) shop at EVELYN'S VINTAGE CLOTHES. 811 New Hampshire, Sat. & Sun. 10-5 Phone: Creative, thinking singles, find kindred spirits through LOVELINE, the directory for educated singles. Write P.O. Box 3022KD, Lawrence, KS 6004. One-issue membership $4.00. Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 1-15 weeks $2.60 1 Day $2.60 2-3 Days $3.75 4-5 Days $5.25 10 Days or 2 Weeks $8.25 For every word added 30* 50* 75* $1.05 Classified Display 1 col x 1 inch = $4.40 THE FAR SIDE © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate By GARY LARSON © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate TAXI "Well, we just took the wrong exit. I know this breed, Morrison—you have to watch them every minute or wham, they'll turn on you." PORTINO... DIP YOU HEAR THE LATEST? NO. WHAT? - WE INTERNET INTERRUPT TO EVENVIEW THE WICKENS WHICH SEVERAL DEEPEANS HAVE NITROD AND OBSERVING THE SURGICALLY ATTERTED NODE OF THE SURGEONS CHARACTERS... by Berke Breathed } / WE NOW RETURN TO TO THE HILARIOUS COMIC ALREADY IN PROGRESS... THE U.S. GENEUS HI 55 DETERMINED THAT THE GRAPHIC BODY SUMMARY, LIKE ORIGINAL ROCK MUSIC, CAN POLLUTE THE MINDS OF YOUNG PEOPLE AND LEAD TO WORLDWIDE HELLOACTION, THE SCIOLAR THROUGH THE TWELF-COURSE. TURMPS! TURNIPS AND ANTIFREEZE! NOT WITH DONNY OSMOND HE WON'T! Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 University Daily Kansan 15 Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course fairs. We get your computer's heads on straight. Computer Repair Alpha Omega Computer Service Modeling and theater portfolio - shooting now Begins in Professionals, call for information * MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Union's recording The Union's recording of the dav's entrees & soups Health insurance for Students. Short-term and long term plans available. Call Dutton Insurance rcm91'91' Color TV T 282.570$ a month Curtis rcm91'91' Color TV M 824.570$ Mon - Sat 5am rcm91'91' Color TV T 824.570$ Mon - Sat 5am Opportunity for all single girls age (18-22) departually needing or interested in $600-1000 for next semester, come and ask me 9:1 a.m. at Burge Union Level 3. (Look for opportunity sign.) NATURAL WAY (doesn't have to be expensive.) NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING Let Your Body Breathe! 820 Mass. 841-0100 New from California. Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure. 316-294-3742. PQ Box 3628. Wilkshire, 6720. Stevenson's Monday's Roman. KU Rep尿需要. YOU CAN HEAD THE PUBLIC RELATIONS PROGRAM FOR A MAJOR CAMPUS ORGANIZATION! Apply now for Public Relations Chairperson for Student Union Activities by picking up an application at the SUA Office. Deadline for applying is Thurs., Nov. 21 at noon. Five minute interviews will be held that evening beginning at 6 p.m. Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, 1 t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event! 2 & M Favors offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specials plus other items. You'll be gifted our talented artists. 220 W. 25th. Behind Gibson's. 841-349-3920 Restaurant '12' Color T, V. $29.98 a month, Smiley's TV '13' Restaurant '14' Color T, V. $69.98 a month, 9:00-9:59, Smart TV NEW FEEL THE FLOW INC. Vitamins, Minerals & More 10-40% lower prices CALL 864-6027 Say it on shirt, custom silk screen printing, t- cap and caps. Shirt by Swetsl. 794-16116. www.swetsl.com Stage Pro Classified Ads Do you want your next party sound system and DJ to be professional? Call 841-1306 841-1306 Stage Pro 415 N.2nd Thousands of R & R albums — 42 albes. Also collectors items, Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Quantrills 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all styles music. McQueen JEWELERS, INC Compare how much larger diamonds look in TruBrilliant " earrings. COMPARE. Diamonds Pictured are Same Size Diamond Earrings TruBrilliant Diamond Farrines - TruBrilliant earrings are more - brilliant and look larger. - Matching diamond pendants also available - also available. * TruBriliants feature Secur-Lok - They push-to-lock-on, unscrew. - They push-to-lock-on, unscrew-to-remove. WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from $75, or sunning at South Padre island and Daytona Beach from $99. Hurry, purchase Tours for more information tall tree rentals. The Adventure Active TODAY! When your winter break counts. count on Sunshine! McQueen Quality Jewelers Since 1950 *Open Sundays - 1-8 p.m. til Christmas. 809 Massachusetts 845-5423 Camera Repair now at One Hour Photo, Southern Hills Malls, 841-7255 CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for Chauffeur Driven LIMOUSINES For Any Occasion. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK CORPORATE COACH call LOOK OUT LAWRENCE! THE KU KONNEXATION has found a system of dating which works. COMPUTER DATING with a personable touch. THE KU KONNEXATION has it!! It! Find out about us by simply sending a message to the KU KONNEXATION P.O. BOX 358 Lawrence, KS 6904 CHRISTMAS GIFT LIST Men's Hats & Caps Leather Flight Jackets Paradise-Found Hawaiian Shirts, Shorts, Long Pants Shirts, Shorts, Long Pants Formal Wear Wing-tip Shirts Silk Cummerbund Sets Studs & Cuff Links Ladies Hats Ladies Gloves Leather, Lace, Fashion New & Antique Jewelry For Fashion History Fun Fashion Hosiery Femilet From Denmark 100% Cotton Camisoles. Sleep & Exercise Wear 79 The Etc. Shop 732 Moss 843-0611 Mon.-Sat. 11-5:30; Thurs. until # Sun. 12-5 MATH TUOR. Bob Meers holds an M.A. in math from K.U. where 102, 116, 118 and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring prefeeder classes at K.U., then moved to CAMS where 88 per 40-minute session. Call 843-902-321. SERVICES OFFERED Hairecra 77, perm $80 at Channels. Contact Chris Mon-Sat at 842.7900. Walk-in ins. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841.5716 WE WANT YOU TO TRY OUR ALL NEW DELI BURGERS TYPING THEME & THESIS OUTLINED - enhanced with library RE-SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising. Victor Clark. 842-8240. BIRTHRIGHT= Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-8421. STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1083 Massachusetts, downstown. All haircuts. $6. No appointment. Swiss & Bacon Burger $2.35 swiss cheese and ranch style bacon A3 professional typing. Term papers, Thesis. I3 Professional typing. Use by IBM Thesis. III Reasonable. 84-2346 Big Blue Burger $2.35 24-Hour Ttyping All day, all night. Resumes. 24-Hour Ttyping Best campus. Best quality and fast service. 811-500-7900. AAA TYPEING/842-1942 Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs, Law review articles typed by RC legal secretary. Generally, if in b 6.p. out by 10 p.m. same day. 1-1000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable tutoring. Judy, 892-7495. POTATOES $1.99 1. Dependable, accurate, professional. WORD 2. Three Dependable, accurate, professional. papers, books, etc. Word Bord 81197 blue cheese and sauteed mushrooms A DIFFERENT Service. Tape TRANSPACH at specially. Experienced. Jean Shafer (teacher). MASS. STREET DELI INC 941 MASSACHUSETTS pA-Z Format A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service program to issue documents with plain dissertations, etc. for personal use with quick service. File storage available. 983-1600. DEFENDABLE, professional; experienced TRANSCRIPTION able; standard tape tape Absolutely, LETTER PERFECT Word processing, typing and bookkeeping. IBM-OS/6.5. M-F. Same day service available. 844 Illustrations. 643-6618. AlmaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing/Typing. Corrections. Proofreading. Graphics. Document uploading. Free estimate. 791-1188 A.L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term notes. Phone 843-2687 after 5:30. 1-Plus Typing law papers, resumes, dissertations, books and articles on memory with memory algorithms or 875-473 or 875-492. p.o. m.-l. p. i. m. with lettuce and tomato Traditional Burger 4 p.m. to close daily - All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef - Select a fresh baked deli bun .. onion, kaiser or whole wheat - Served with potato chips, kosher dill spear and any small soft drink FIFTY CENTS OFF ALL NEW DELI BURGERS F OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30,1985 TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 814-6254. TRIO Wordprocessing _CONCIENTIOUS TO CONVERTIVE WILL accept rush posts 849-3111 WANTED ExceType, Quality for all your typing needs. Disk size, Requiance (Car, Mail, 843-7446 or 80284) 50¢ OFF DISTRIBUTORS/ THESES/ LAW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphemes. ONE-DAY Service available on shorter student papers (up to 38 pages), Mommys Monthly, $48.59/set before 9 p.m. Please. Dissertations, Theresa, Tenn. Paper Pages. Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone # 422-3190; after 5:30. B.A. English B.A. Typing or Tutoring Spelling and grammar. Corrected. Overnight Service. Call All Kinds of writing: GOOD IMPRESSIONS 184-102 spelling/punctuation errors corrected 184-102 EXPERIENCED TYPET Term papers, these, IMC Correcting Specific with correct spelling and punctuation Wright PROFESSIONAL tprint with 15 years experience. Past, accurate, and reliable. Cipg Pepgy after 5 years of experience. QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations applications. Spelling corrected Cell Mail 862-7541 ENGLISH B.A. TYING for VITTORIA, SPRINGS grammar corrected. Overnight services Call THE WORDCOCTORS - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing* 843-3147 TOP-NOTCH professional word processing, manuscripts, resume, these, letter quality print- ing. Female Roomate Wanted immediately to share two bedroom bath. Very nicely furnished, have a separate bathroom, conditioning close to campus and downtown is on bus route, $149.00 and half utilizes #82-7861 for rent. WHAT A DEAL Traditional Burger Basket and 12oz. soft drink $1.49 50¢ COUPON 50¢ OFF 50¢ OFF 4p.m. to close daily Female to separate two bedroom apartment for parental appt. Close to campus. 749-5422 WANTED: Roommate for Spring semester. Wonderful I Bedroom Meadowbrook Apt. Close to campus, Cable, A/C, Pool, $115 per Month. We're nice, fun people. 842-2625 Business 249 tutor needed. Set your own rate. Call 749 - 0639 "4 p.m. to close daily" Wanted: Female roommate for spring semester. Telephone: 718-395-2011; Meadowbrack Ash. On bus route 789—102; Sedgwick, WA 98476. ROOMMATES FOR TOWNHOUSE 1/2 bdr. 2 bath. fireplace, in Trailridge. Looking for 1 or 2 non-smokers. $150 per month plus 1/3 utilities or less. 419-2399. WANTED: Roommate for spring semester. Wonderful 3 bedroom Meadowbrook apartment. Close to campus, A/C, pool, $115 month. We're nice, fun people. #428-285 Self-diciplined student to motivate and tutor seventh grade level boy in year old school Call (312) 456-7890 Wanted: Female roommate for spring semester. Preference: housekeeping, and own room. On bus call: 842-7342. Call 842-7340. Wanted- Guitarist and/or keyboard player for music production. Send resume to: Female. For more information call 842-3043. O. T. student desperately needs female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment in KC for spring semester. Roommate needs to share house price $135 needs to go to campus, near baseline $483-keep trying. Keep trying. Responsible and fun-loving female to share 2-dkm for $30 monthly. Beautiful view and easy access to golf course. 504 OFF 50¢ OFF NAISMITH replacements needed for second semester. Urgent: contact Dont or Kurt 749-8919. Need Season Basketball Tickets Price Negotiable. 814-6324 6 p.m. Wanted: Roommate, quiet non-smoking response. Required: ward vd, DWI, $200/mo, util included ward vd, DWI, $200/mo, util included Wanted: roommate, now or spring semester. sampler house, 824-952-6100; houseware, 824-952-6125 824-952-6125 Non-Smiling, Male Roommate for two-bedroom apartment. Move In January. $150/Month. 1/2 utilities. Close to campus. 842-1436. After six. Ask for John. Wanted: non-smoking female romatte to share large room with 2 other people. Large room with 1/2 utility. Call 825-4391. WE MAKE SENDING CHRISTMAS PACKAGES TELL ME A STORY Safety Pickup by CRS - Free Parking - Convenient Location - Low UPS Rates - Open 7 Days during Christmas Season - Daily Pickup by UPS EASY! PS EXPRESS 842-3413 Insured 2 Locations: PACK & SHIP EXPRESS, INC. - Overnight Delivery Available 2449 Iowa St. 609 Vermont St. CHECKERS PIZZA KU GAME DAY SPECIAL "Win or Lose Party!" KU vs. Nebraska 16" 2-TOPPING PIZZA $4.99 Dine In Only SPECIAL $1.50 Pitchers 11 a.m.-Midnight SUNDAY SPECIAL $6.99 Includes 14" 2-item pizza 4 soft drinks No coupon necessary Not good with any other offer $1.00 or $1.50 OFF OFF Any small pizza Any medium pizza $2.00 OFF Any large pizza One coupon per order. Includes delivery. Expires in 2 weeks FREE SOFT DRINKS 2 free soft drinks with the purchase of a small pizza or 4 soft drinks with the purchase of a large pizza. One coupon per order. Includes delivery. Expires in 2 weeks. Bring in your KUID and we'll take $1 off a small, $2 off a medium or $3 off a large pizza! Not good with any other offer. Dine In Only Not good with any other offer. 2214 Yale Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday & Saturday 14 a.m.-3 a.m. 841-8010 16 University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 15, 1985 BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320 PICAFLIC HOME VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS Southern Hills Shopping Center 160 W 23rd, sp. 105 Lakeview, Lawrence CO 80244 (913) 424-8177 (913) 424-8177 vello sub delivers 841-3268 delivers 841-3268 comprehensive health associates • free pregnancy tests • outpatient abortion services • alternative counseling • gynecology • contraception KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 SAVE AT IMPORTS & DOMESTICS EXOTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 607 Mass phone 843-1151 SIGMA K CHALET CHALET my Christmas wish list... 00:00.00 CLARION 8200 This latest entry from Clarion features digital tuning, 12 FM pre-sets, and better over all performance than the 8100 model it replaces. UA again leads the way with super savings on A BOX OF GIFTS List: $250.00 NOW $139.95 AKAI AAA-1 Slimline black receiver with 35 wpc. List: $180.00 NOW $99.95 □ LUXMAN R-404 Digital receiver with 33 wpc. List: $300.00 AKAI AAA-35 Digital receiver with electronic display and 48 wpc. List: $300.00 NOW $199.95 LUXMAN L-210 High quality integrated amp with wideband electronics and 40 wpc. List:$200.00 NOW $179.95 UHF-ADV SDI INPUTS OUTPUTS FM AM AUX BASS TREBLE MODEL UHF-ADV □ LUXMAN T-240 Digital tuner with 16 FM-presets. List: $200.00 NOW $179.95 □ AR 8BX Bookshelf speaker with 100 watt power capacity. List: $100.00 ea. NOW $69.95 ea. Discrete outputs and Duo-Beta circuitry are just two of the reasons Luxman is the finest line of electronics available today. One look and listen to his voice, and Luxman is truly "A touch of luxury," for your home. 'LUXMAN R-404 ALLISON CD-8 Bookshelf speaker with sound you must hear to believe. List: $180.00 ea. NOW $144.94 ea. AR-18BX Two-way bookshelf speaker with awesome bass response. List: $130.00 ea. NOW $94.95 ea. Improved version of the very popular TE-100. List: $150.00 ea. NOW $109.95 ea. EPI TE 100 PLUS AR-28BX Floor standing speaker with sound that AR is famous for! List: $199.95 ea. NOW $149.95 ea. List: $250.00 AKAI HX-A201 Dolby B & C cassette deck with black or silver finish. List: $169.95 NOW $79.95 AKAJ NOW $199.95 LUXMAN K-220 LUXMAN K-220 Dolby B & C cassette deck with quality Luxman performance. List: $200.00 NOW $179.95 □ AKAI HX - A101 Dolby B & C cassette deck with black or silver finish. List: $149.95 AKAI HXA-201 If you're looking for a quality cassette deck at a budget price, look no further. Dolby B & C with soft touch control make this deck a winner! List: $350.00 NOW $279.95 □ SONY D-5 Portable compact disc player complete with AC cord and home hook up cables. List: $300.00 NOW $219.95 SONY CFS-3000 Portable blaster with detachable speakers and 3 band EQ. List: $130.00 NOW $79.95 SONY WMF-17 AM-FM cassette walkman with record. List: $119.95 NOW $79.95 Basic cassette walkman with head- phones. List: $50.00 NOW $29.95 SONY WM-11D Basic cassette walkman with headphones. List: $50.00 SONY TCS-350 Stereo recording walkman with headphones and case. List: $169.95 SONY MDR-031 Walkman type headphones. List: $20.00 NOW $9.95 List: $169.95 SONY XR-33 Digital AM-FM cassette in-dash with bass & treble, fader ECT. List: $300.00 NOW $199.95 CLARION 4350/4300 Mini in-dash AM-FM cassette with 6 wpc. List: $120.00 NOW $69.95 NOW $69.95 NOW $79.95 SONY XR-20 AM-FM cassette in-dash with EQ and high filter. List: $180.00 NOW $119.95 CONCORD HPL 516 AM-FM cassette in-dash with 20-20,000 tape response and 25 wpc. List: $320.00 NOW $239.95 [ ] CONCORD HPL-520 Digital in-dash cassette with 20-20,000 response and 25 wpc. List: $420.00 NOW $349.95 ALPHASONIK A-255/PEQ7 55 wpc amp with discrete circuitry and matching 7 band EQ. 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Reg. $699.95 NOW $499.00 SANYO VCR 7250 Super Beta Hi-Fi recorder with cable ready tuner, wireless remote, 8 program 14 day timer, fantastic picture and sound. Reg.$749.95 NOW $449.00 TOSHIBA M-5400 SYLVANIA VC 2234SL Cable ready VHS recorder with 4 program timer, slow motion, freeze frame and wireless remote. Reg. $599.95 NOW $379.00 TOSHIBA M-5400 4 head HVCS recorder with CCD digital filter, wireless remote, special effects and 4 event/7 day timer. Reg. $599.95 NOW $429.00 HITACHI CT-2020B 20" Flat Square TV Monitor with random access 139 channel electronic tuning, infrared remote control and signal tracker system. Reg. $769.95 NOW $599.00 NEC CT-2610A NEC CT-2610A 26" FST Monitor with built in MTS stereo tuner, stereo speakers, external hook up, 139 channel electronic tuner, wireless remote and on screen display. 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Comet is fuzzy dot in skies By John Williams Of the Kansan staff The cloudy, rainy sky finally relented Saturday night, allowing about 600 eager people at the Clyde W Tombaugh Observatory atop Lindley Hall a peek at a fuzzy legend — Hailie's Comet. The last time Halley's Comet blazed in the skies over Lawrence was in 1910, and cloudy weather hampered viewing then as it has during the past two weeks, according to newspapers of the time. Bill Remmers, 501 Mississippi St. said that all of the comets he had observed, Halley's Comet excited him the most. Many people, some with their own binoculars, considered waiting in the 40 degree weather Saturday night rewarding. "It's nice," he said. "It looks like a Messier object, a nebula." A Messier object is named after Charles Messier, an astronomer who catalogued cometlike objects such as Halley's comet and masses of interstellar gas or dust. Saturday night, the comet was slightly south of a dipteral shaped star cluster called the Pleiades. The comet is moving south By next week, moving almost one degree a day, it be near the constellation of Aries. Annette Kiene, Topeka senior, said she expected Halley's to be "more confident." "It looks like, a cotton ball," Whitacre said "it not very comet-looking for the stereotypical comet that hasn't developed much of a tail veil." Mara Whitacre, president of the Astronomy Associates of Lawrence, said more people showed up than planned, resulting in the observatory staving open until about 2 a.m. Bruce Twarog, assistant professor of physics and astronomy, said he thought that the people who crowded the third and fourth floor hallways of Lindley Hall were impressed with a view of the comet. 41 Eran Yakar, Prairie Village senior, expected to see a tail, but did not realize that the best is yet to come. "I thought this was one of the last times I would get to see it, but I guess this is one of the earliest times to see it," he said. See COMET p 5 col 1 Alan Hagman/KANSAN The agony of defeat? Receiving the regular season trophy didn't please Michal Corey; 11 son of Eugene and Maggie Corey; 1515 Powers St.; because his team, the Cougars, had just lost the Little League football championship. The Cougars lost to the Colts 12-6 in overtime yesterday afternoon during the Toy Bowl at Haskell Indian Junior College stadium. Cuts in budget to hurt salaries of KU workers By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff Any hope for a budget increase at the University of Kansas was crushed Friday when the state's budget director announced severe cuts in the Kansas Board of Regents' fiscal 1987 budget. Alden Shields, the budget director, said Friday that the state budget office was cutting more than $17 million from the Regents' lowest budget request for the seven Regents schools. That means no salary increases for Regents' faculty or classified employees Shields, at a meeting with the Regent's Fiscal Affairs Committee in Topeka, outlined the recent reduction of $132.6 million from an estimate of state general fund receipts for the next two years. As a result, he said, agencies that have access to special revenue funds — such as fee funds — will be required to draw on those balances rather than receive additional money from the general fund. The general fund is fed primarily by state income and sales taxes. Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs, said that the slashing of the Regents' budget planned budget increase for KU "We are already underfunded compared to our peer institutions in the areas of salaries and supply expenses." Nitcher said. "We'll have no new programs and only a limited increase in supplies. We won't be able to catch up." In September, KU officials set the fiscal 1987 budget at about $195.5 million — a 7 percent increase over fiscal 1986. Budget officials said that at that time, the increase was an attempt to bring salaries at KU in line with those of other universities. Sidney Shapiro, University Senate Executive Committee chairman. said the salary freeze would widen the salary gap between KU and other schools. If the University continues to fall behind other schools in salaries for faculty, Shapiro said, it will be harder to catch up. Shapiro said the salary freeze would not help keep and attract faculty to the University. He said he thought that as long as the salary differences were not drastic, faculty members would not leave. SenEx will discuss the proposed cuts in the Regents budget during its regular meeting at 8 a.m. tomorrow. Shields said the reduction in recommended general fund money, offset by drawing from fee funds, would result in a cut of more than $17 million. The firm also budget request. He said the money saved at the Regents' expense would See SALARY p. 5 col. 1 Ed Manning is fine despite chest pains By a Kansan reporter Assistant men's basketball coach Ed Manning was treated for chest pains and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital last night. The Douglas County Ambulance Service responded about 8 p.m. to a call at Manning's home, 3120 W. 23rd St. A member of the ambulance crew said Manning had passed out, but conscious when the crew arrived. Manning was not in a lot of distress, he said, and the ambulance took him to the hospital's emergency room as a precautionary measure. He was released at 10:45 p.m. after tests were conducted, a nursing supervisor said. She said Manning had not suffered a heart attack. Head basketball coach Larry Brown said Manning had been at home after returning from a recruiting trip Brown said Manning had a bad chest cold. Manning joined the KU basketball staff in September 1983. He played professional basketball from 1967 to 1975, and his college coaching career in 1977. His son, Danny, is a starting forward on the KU men's varsity basketball team. Cocaine blankets Lawrence, dealer says By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff It snows every season at the University of Kansas. Line after line, mile after mile, the nose candy sweeps into the nostrils Chris, a senior who asked that his real name not be used, has dealt cocaine in Lawrence for the past 15 years. The majority of his income has between 3,000 and 4,000 users. Most of them are students, Chris isst, but he also says he has his customers in the KU administration in the Lawrence business community. Miamian arrested by FBI The snow white powder is poured into thin lines across a mirror. A straw can be used to follow the line through the snow. A dollar bill on $100 bill is more soothing. The FBI, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and the Douglas County Drug Enforcement Unit have been investigating a drug trafficking ring that has been responsible for bringing as many as 15 kilograms of cocaine into Kansas City and Lawrence each month, Davenport said. Cocaine is expensive. It is almost 10 times as expensive as gold. One gram, or 0.035 of an ounce, sells for $100 on the street. The amount of pure cocaine in an ounce lessens as baking soda or baby powder is added. Chris is putting himself through college by selling cocaine. Mauricio Posada, 24, was arrested on cocaine distribution charges as a result of a two-year investigation of narcotics trafficking in Puerto Rico. She attended Lawrence areas, according to Robert B. Davenport, special Posada was arrested yesterday afternoon when he attempted to sell cocaine to undercover agents in the city's shopping center, Davenport said. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A Miami man thought to be involved in a drug ring operating in the Lawrence area was arrested yesterday as he tried to sell one-fourth of a pound of cocaine to an undercover FBI agent, authorities said. Each month, he says, he distributes about a dozen ounces of cocaine. His gross sales range from $2,000 to $6,000 a month in profit. United Press International "And there are no taxes." Chris says with a smile. Chris says he can spend $50 to $100 whenever he feels like it in good restaurants and clothing stores Lori Cravens UDK Recently, at a restaurant frequented by students, Chris pointed out 15 of his customers as they walked by. "You wouldn't think they are coaine users," he says. "Coke use has increased a lot the four years I have been at KU." The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agen- agent in charge of the Kansas City FBI office. ey two weeks ago said cocaine use had increased 11 percent in the The network's surveys show an increase in cocaine use from 4.9 percent in 1983 to 6.7 percent in 1985 among 16,000 randomly sampled high school seniors. In the Kansas City metropolitan area, emergency advance to hospitals because of cocaine use jumped 37 percent from 1982 to 1984. Lorraine Ferguson, an analyst with the Drug Abuse Warning Network, Rockville. Md., says all cases of drug abuse can be cocaine use is increasing nationwide. "It looks like we're in a cocaine epidemic," she said. Chris agrees with the experts and says that for casual users, cocaine is more potent. Statistics for Lawrence or Douglas County aren't available. "Gays use it to get girls." Chris says, "The pick-up line of the 80s is, 'Hey girl, want to go do a few lines?'" Cindy, a senior who asked that her real name not be used, says that some men will give good-looking women a gift when they give hope for sexual favors in return. Cindy also says that women will use the same ploy on men — although less frequently — to arouse sexual interest. "Coke makes you horny," she says. "Having sex after you've done coke is the ultimate high." But the experts say cocaine may not be the best thing for a user's sex Marvin Snyder, a medical expert with the Drug Abuse Warning Network, says a user's sex drive depends on how addicted he is to cocaine. "Some like cocaine so much that they give up on sex," he says. Cindy has been snorting cocaine for six years. Along with doing coke two or three times a week, she also takes Valium and takes Vallum a tranquilizer. She does most of her cocaine at weekend parties. The high from one fourth of an ounce lasts as long as 45 minutes. Then she goes to a bathroom and gets out her mirror and straw "I do as much as I can afford," she See COCAINE n. 6. col. 1 says "In the beginning of the semester, when I had more money, that could be $50 to $75 a week. Now Tumbling is simple. clean and only costs a quarter. Daring students stuff themselves into Monday Morning It's 3 a.m. Taverns and private clubs are closed. But some students have discovered a unique way to amuse themselves in Lawrence when the monetory of normal nightlife sets in; tumbling. clothes dryers at local Laudromats, insert a coin in the machines — and away they go. The person in the dryer is in for a one- to three-minute ride, depending on how long they can take it. "There are two versions of tumbling," Jay Wagon, Wichita senior, said yesterday. "You can leave the door open, stick your feet out and someone holds the button down. Or you can get all the way in and go around. It is not scary unless someone closes the door." By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Students take rolls in dryers Wagnon, who says he has tumbled about six times, said that because it could get hot in the room, he had to rest and rest after about one minute. Joe Derks, Overland Park senior, said. "If you go around in a circle about six times, that's enough." Margie Best, Evanson, III., senior, said she first heard of tumbling three years ago when See TUMPLE I, vol. 4 See TUMBLE p. 5, col. 4 2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 18, 1985 News Briefs General is consulted before court rules MANILA, Philippines — President Ferdinand Marcos yesterday summoned armed forces chief Gen. Fabian Ver to a conference on reorganization of the military only two days before a court rules on his role in the Benigno Aquino murder. REDDING, Conn. - Stuart Chase, an economist and member of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's "brain trust" who coined the phrase "New Deal," died Saturday at his home. He was It was the first public announcement of Ver's participation in any military conference since he was recommended for trial 13 months ago. SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Vice President George Bush said the leak of a letter by Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger urging a hard-line position on key arms control issues will have little effect on the summit because the Soviets are "sophisticated America-watchers." Letter has little effect The letter was written to President Reagan and published in yesterday's editions of the New York Times and Washington Post. FDR adviser dies Chase wrote 33 books, including "A New Deal," published in 1932, the year FED was elected. Oman festivities set MUSCAT, Oman -- Delegations from more than 50 countries are gathering in this picturesque seaside capital to help Oman celebrate what one diplomat called a "coming out party" for this hermit of the Arab world. The five races of fireworks, camel races, parades, and laser shows scheduled to start today will officially mark 15 years in power for Sultan Qaboos bin Said, a British educated bachelor and one of the world's few absolute rulers. From Kansan wire reports. Soviets decrv U.S. discord From Kansan wires GENEVA — President Reagan, inspecting summit sites yesterday as he prepared to meet his Kremkin counterpart, sought to brush aside evidence of administration discord on arms policy, but the Soviets said the discord was an attempt "to torpedo the arms control process." Reagan's spokesman, Larry Speakes, said, "We are not changing our views one whit' as a result of the leak of the "Weinberger letter." In the letter, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, who was excluded from the U.S. summit delegation, warned Reagan against agreeing to several arms positions when he meets tomorrow and Wednesday with Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The letter, which warned against limiting Star Wars research and against ignoring purported Soviet arms control violations, was leaked to discredit Weinberger, administration officials said yesterday. Weinberger gave the three-page letter, "Part 1" of a report on the alleged violations and an executive summary to Reagan during a meeting in the Oval Office Wednesday. The letter appeared in The New York Times and The Washington Post over the weekend. Weinberger, described as "very unhappy," with the unauthorized disclosure of the document, called the White House Saturday and demanded an investigation into who may have leaked the letter to the two newspapers, Pentagon officials said. Officials think the letter was disclosed by someone in the State Department in an effort to discredit Weinberger and his tough stance against surrendering research on the Strategic Defense Initiative, as Star Wars is known officially. Weinberger has also opposed overlooking purported Soviet violations of the unratified SALT 2 accord and the 1972 ABM treaty. A key member of the American delegation, insisting on anonymity, said he thought the summit would produce some U.S.-Soviet agreements. He said that chances of periodic summit meetings were "more than 50 percent." But he said it was "highly likely" that the summit would produce an agreement for the two superpowers to guard against proliferation of nuclear weapons to other countries. Last volcano victims rescued From Kansan wires ARMERO, Colombia — The government said the last three victims trapped in the river of volcanic mud that buried this Andean village were rescued yesterday and it called an end to its emergency operations. "The last three survivors were rescued this morning in Armero and I believe they later died. There is now no one left to rescue," said Health Minister Rafael Zubiria. More than 20,000 people were killed in Colombia's worst disaster, the government said. U. S. officials at the site all trapped victims had been evacuated and the injured were being treated. A pregnant woman buried with her two dead children in waist-deep mud for almost three days gave birth minutes after volunteers pulled her free, rescues said yesterday. "Name her Hope," cried one onlooker after the baby girl was born. Doctors and volunteers worked for 60 hours to extricate Carmen Cecilia de Moreno, 25, from the mud and collapsed walls pinning her inside she wrecked home in Armero, 60 miles west of Bogota. The town was covered by a 15-foot-deep river of mud that rushed down the slopes of the Navado del Ruiz early Thursday. The eruption melted the volcano's ice cap, causing a river to overflow. Zubaria said Saturday night that Armero would be made into a cemetery, because it was not possible to recover the thousands of bodies. Zubaria said that today civil defense workers would begin burning decomposing bodies recovered from the mud flats to prevent disease. U.S., NATO denounced in Greece United Press International ATHENS - More than 100,000 leftwing demonstrators marched to the U.S. Embassy yesterday, calling for Greece to oust American military bases and leave NATO. Some demonstrators tossed Molotov cocktails at a foreign airlines office and outside the Athens Hilton Hotel, breaking a few windows but causing no injuries, police said. There were no other reports of violence. The marchers, mostly socialist ain't communist youths, chanted "Americans — murderers of the people," "the European Economic Community and NATO are the same syndicate" and "capitalism means unemployment, inflation and austerity." The group walked three miles to the embassy, starting at Athens Technical University, where a student rebellion, which led to a change of government, began 12 years ago this month. The repression of their rebellion was used as an excuse for the imposition of martial law and the overthrow of Papadopoulos by his military police chief, Col. Demetrius loanides. Before leaving the campus, the crowd listened to speeches by members the National Students Association of Greece and the Society of Imprisoned and Exiled Resistance Fighters, which organized the march. The speakers called for Greece's withdrawal from NATO, the expulsion of U.S. bases from Greece and for nuclear disarmament, police said. In November 1973, students at Athens Technical University occupied the downtown campus of their school and called for an end to the 6-year-long military dictatorship of George Papadopoulos. Papadopoulos, loannides and their closest lieutenants are serving life sentences imposed after the restoration of democracy in 1974, after the Turkish occupation of Northern Cyprus. Envoy says he met captors of hostages The Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon — Terry Waite, the archbishop of Canterbury's envoy seeking to free American hostages in Lebanon, said yesterday that he had met the hostages' captors at a secret meeting in Beirut and that positive steps had been taken. Before flying to London and Washington, he stressed at a news conference that the situation required very difficult and very dangerous. Waite left Beirut to brief Archibishop Robert Runicue of Canterbury, primate of the Anglican Communion, on the results of his mission and to consult senior U.S. officials on his contacts. Waite's meeting was seen as the first real breakthrough in the long-running hostage drama. It is thought to be the first contact between a Western intermediary and the kidnappers, thought to belong to Islamic Hijab organization Islamic Jihad, or Islamic Holy War. Four of the six Americans missing in Beirut appealed to the archbishop by letter nine days ago to help negotiate their release. Waite said he was satisfied that the four who wrote to Runcie were alive and well, but when asked whether he had seen any of them, he had no comment. Waite, 46, told reporters that his mission was not over and that he expected to return to Beirut to purge the sects that infiltrated mercy to free the captives. "During the past days I have had lengthy contacts. There is absolutely no doubt at all that I have got through to the right people and that a measure of trust has been established." Waite said. Waite would not say whom he met, what passed between them or where the meeting took place, and warned news media against speculating on any of these points. The hostages' message to the archbishop was one of 12 letters from the four captive Americans that an unidentified man delivered to the Beirut bureau of The Associated Press. Heavy security marks trial of ship hijackers United Press International GENOA, Italy — The four alleged Achille Lauro bjackers and a man accused of being an accomplice will go on trial on weapons charges today in a fortified courtroom guarded by 200 Italian paramilitary policemen and U.S. FBI agents. The fifth man, Mohammed Kalaf, 25, was caught before he boarded the ship. Italian newspapers have said his real name is Mohamad Issa Abbas and identified him as a cousin of Palestine Liberation Front leader The hijackers — Magied Al Molgi, 23, Ahmad Al Assadi, 23, Ibrahim Abdelatif, 20, and Bassam Al Ashker, 22 — are charged with smuggling into Italy four Kalashnikov submachine guns, eight hand grenades and nine detonators used in the Oct. 7 hijacking of the Italian cruise liner Achille Lauro. Abu Abbas, the alleged mastermind of the blacking Italian newspapers have also said Al Molqi was the leader of the four-man terrorist unit and the gunman who killed Leon Klinghoffer, an American Jewish passenger whose body was dumped overboard. If convicted on the weapons charges, the defendants could each be sentenced by Judge Carlo Maria Napoli to between three and 12 years in prison.The defendants are expected to stand trial early next year on charges of murdering Klinghoffer, hijacking and kidnapping. The defendants will appear in court inside three steel-barbed cages, flanked by FBI agents. About 200 Carabinieri paramilitary police will ring the "bunker" courtroom. Police arrested the four alleged hijackers Oct. 10 when U.S. jets forced an Egyptian plane carrying them to land in Sicily. PYRAMID PIZZA Brings Back By Popular Demand MONDAY GLADNESS *TONIGHT ONLY* Get a 16'' Large 1 Topping Pizza PLUS Extra Cheese PLUS 2 Free Pepsis ALL FOR ONLY $8.95 MONDAY Get a 16'' Large 1 Topping Pizza plus Extra Cheese plus 2 Free Pepsis GLADNESS ALL FOR $8.95 14th & Ohio Under The Wheel 842-3232 FAST FREE DELIVERY The Only Apartments On The Hill 1603 W. 15th Right On Campus! 1603 W. 15th Right On Campus! ·Furnished or Unfurnished Rooms ·FREE Cablevision ·All Utilities Paid ·On Bus Route ·As little as $119 a month Jayhawker Towers 843-4993 1 Monday, Nov. 18, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 3 News Briefs Armed man escapes after robbing station A wooden cross was burned about 2:15 a.m. yesterday on a lawn in front of a home in the 1600 block of Haskell Avenue, Lawrence police said yesterday. A man pointed a revolver at a 16-year-old gas station attendant Friday evening and escaped with more than $200 from the Jayhawk Oil Co. Inc., 902 W. 23rd St., Lawrence police站 yesterday. Police said the cross, which was constructed by nailing two boards together, was about 4 feet 8 inches long. The woman sailed, soaked with a flammable liquid. Police said the attendant gave the man a wallet containing about $200. The attendant told police that a man wearing a green vest walked around the east side of the building, pushed open the door, walked in and pulled a revolver from under the vest. Police said a 20-year-old black woman who lived at the home said she had been receiving harassing phone calls and thought the cross might have been burned as further harassment. The liquid burned off but the wood did not catch on fire, police said. The attendant told police that the robber was a white male about 27- to 30-years-old, was 5 feet 7 inches to 5 feet 9 inches tall, weighed about 150 pounds and had a long nose. 8 cars broken into Cross burned in yard Eight cars parked in Lot 106 on West Campus were broken into early Thursday morning and car stereo equipment with a total value of $1,800 was stolen, KU police said Friday. A national authority on women's psychology will give a speech, "Bitches, Nice Ladies and Other Angry Women," at 7:30 tonight in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Side windows of the cars were broken to gain entry. Damage to the cars was estimated at $1,100. Police have no suspects. Talk to be on women The speaker, Harriet Goldhor Lerner, is a staff psychologist and psychotherapist at the Meninger Foundation, Topeka. She wrote "The Dance of Anger: A Woman's Guide to Changing the Patterns of Intimate Relationships" and her work has appeared in publications such as Cosmopolitan and Nation's Business. The KU women's studies program is sponsoring Lerner's speech. Weather Today will be cloudy with a 40 percent chance for showers and thunderstorms. The high will be in the upper 60s to lower 60s with southerly winds at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be cloudy with a 50 percent chance for rain, becoming mixed with or changing to snow. The low will be around 30. Tomorrow will be cloudy and coldier with a 30 percent chance for snow and a high in the mid-to-upper 30s. Regents seek money to insure Med Center By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff From staff and wire reports The Kansas Board of Regents voted Friday to request that the Kansas Legislature appropriate more than $1.3 million for the University of Kansas Medical Center so it can purchase malpractice insurance for its residents. Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs, said yesterday that the Regents would request $217,427 for the Med Center for fiscal year 1986 and $1.1 million for fiscal year 1987. The Med Center's fiscal year begins July 1. The money requested for 1986, Nitcher said, would be for only the last quarter of the fiscal year because the Med Center officials didn't think the Legislature would be able to appropriate any money until April. Nitcher said that by purchasing commercial When the Med Center became a self-insurer, it essentially entered the insurance business. The Med Center, which became a self-insurer July 1 as a result of last-minute legislative action, was never granted the proper funds to serve that purpose. insurance for its residents, the Med Center would no longer be a self-insurer. Nitcher said Med Center officials didn't like the self-insurance status. "The Med Center would prefer to have a commercial-type insurance for the residents rather than be involved in self-insurance," Nitcher said. The Legislature, however, never intended the Med Center to become a self-insurer. Senate bill 362, which the Senate initiated at the request of University officials, originally would have put the residents under the liability of their supervisors at the Med Center, Kansas City, Kan. When the bill reached the House Ways and Means Committee, however, its intent was changed. The new version of the bill called for the Med Center to provide its own insurance for its residents, thus becoming a self-insurer. Legislators have said that neither the House nor the Senate was happy with the bill but passed it because they thought it was the best they could do at the time. The Legislature also was forewarned by officials from the Kansas attorney general's office that the bill left no provisions for equipping the Med Center with money to handle possible lawsuits against its residents. State Seen. Wint Winter Jr., R.Lawrence, said the Legislature would either act on the Med Center's recommendation or once again try to exempt the residents from liability. He said that through an emergency appropriation, the Legislature could give the Median House $200. Exempting the residents from liability. Winter said, was the original intent of the bill the Senate presented last session. He said the bill would have saved the Med Center money that could have been used in other academic areas. In other action, the regents said it planned to file a "friend of the court" brief in the KU Alumni Association's tax appeal case. The association is trying to overturn a Board of Tax Appeals ruling against Alumni Alumni Rules for Douglass County property taxes. The board ruled that the center was not exempt because the association allowed non-alumni to join. Gun law arouses public discussion By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff An ordinance that would establish a 72-hour waiting period to purchase a handgun hasn't been officially considered yet by the Lawrence City Commission, but the possibility of the commission passing such an ordinance already has created a lot of public interest. the ordinance became an issue when Commissioner David Longhurst asked city staff members at the Oct. 22 commission meeting whether the commission had the power to adopt a waiting period. Longhurst's comments were pro- promoted by the Oct. 17 suicide of a 21-year-old KU student who shot herself with a 22-caliber pistol two hours after she had purchased the gun. At the meeting, he said the waiting period might further prevent people from taking their lives at the spur of the moment. But others think the waiting period would be a nuisance and could easily cause irritation. Lawrence police officers are circulating a petition against the ordinance and Lawrence National Rifle Association members have called city officials stating their views on the proposed ordinance. Commissioner Howard Hill said yesterday that he had received a call from someone wanting to know whether the commission was going to consider the ordinance. The caller said he had a telegram from the NITA calling for him to be involved in bringing up the ordinance before it was on the agenda. "I also had a caller who said he had 300 signatures on a petition, and he said he was against any form of gun control." Hill said. Actual action on a gun ordinance might never be taken. No one will know until the commissioners receive a report from Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager. Wilden said his unfinished report detailed actions that the city could take toward adopting a gun ordinance. His report also contains copies of other cities' gun purchase ordinances. He expects to give the report to the commissioners this week. Mayor Mike Amyx, who has received calls on both sides of the issue, said, "Before any decision will be made to take action, it is of public discussion on the issue." After studying the report, the commissioners then would decide whether to put the ordinance on the commission's agenda. Even though the ordinance has not been on the commission's agenda, opponents and advocates of the ordinance have criticized the last two commission meetings. City Clerk Vera Mercer said she had received some calls about the ordinance issue. One caller that Mercer talked to Wednesday asked why Amyx had not allowed public comment on the issue. Mercer explained to the caller that Amyx had opened the floor for public viewing. Wilden said he couldn't understand why some members of the public were so quick to condemn Longhurst for asking a question. "The issue came up just because Commissioner Longhurst asked if we could do something. They do that all the time." he said. State statutes don't address a waiting period for the purchase of hazardous waste. Hill said that if citizens had questions about the ordinance and about when it might be considered by the commission, they should call the city manager's office or the commissioners. T Alan Hagman/KANSAN Psyching Up Chris Wright, Lincoln, Neb., senior, took a break and concentrated before competing in the women's 100-meter treasevel during Saturday's dual meet with the University of Wyoming in Robinson Natatorium. NCAA reviews KU probation By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Thomas said the meeting was requested by NCAA officials. KU officials met Friday with the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Committee on Infractions to review KU's football program, Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, said yesterday. "We received a letter asking us to meet to review policies and practices of the University because the end of the university period is coming up," she said. was placed on a two-year probation by the NCAA in fall 1983 for violating the association's recruiting regulations. The NCAA also imposed sanctions that prohibited KU from playing televised games and from appearing in post-season games during the 1984 season. No penalties were included for the 1985 season. The University's football program Thomas said she could not comment on issues discussed by the committee and KU officials. She did say the meeting was part of the normal process of the Infractions Committee. tending Friday's meeting at the Westin Crown Center hotel in Kansas City, Mo., were Athletic Director Monte Johnson; Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director; Del Brinkman, faculty representative to the NCAA and the Big Eight Conference; head football coach Mike Gottfried; and Dave Didion, administrative assistant to Gottfried. Besides Thomas. KU officials at- Johnson declined to comment on the meeting because he said it had been agreed that any statement would have to come from Thomas. Ten separate violations were cited by NCAA officials when the probation was imposed Nov. 21, 1983. KU lags in toxic waste control, official says By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff The University of Kansas is behind many universities in identifying and controlling hazardous waste, the chairman of the Institutional Biohazards Committee said last week. The chairman, John A. Landgrebe, who also is a professor of chemistry, said that until this semester, the University had no formal program to collect and dispose of hazardous waste and no policy on handling such materials. This semester, a temporary hazardous waste storage site was established and a lask force was formed to determine KU's position on hazardous materials. "A lot of it has been just sitting around in laboratories around the campus," he said. "Some of this stuff has come from faculty members who have left the campus and simply left dirty laboratories loaded up with shelves of who knows what, all kinds of things." A month ago, the University began storing hazardous waste in a trailer on West Campus, Landgrebe said. Before that, individual laboratories took care of the materials themselves. The Biohazards Committee, which is involved primarily with academic research and teaching laboratories, set up the trailer on West Campus and sent notices to various laboratories asking them to inform Landgrebe of any hazardous waste they had. A transporter will pick up the materials this month or next and take them to a hazardous waste site in Louisiana to bury or burn them, he "Then we simply went ahead and collected all of this stuff," he said. Landgrebe said that hazardous materials were any that were toxic, flammable, corrosive or highly reactive, excluding radioactive materials. Selenium, a toxic element, and hydrogen bromide, a highly corrosive acid, are two of the materials that are being stored in the West Campus trailer Radioactive waste is handled through Radiation Safety Service, which has clear-cut rules, he said. "Those things are very precise, everything is laid out and spelled out," he said. "So in a sense they are very easy to follow once you know what they are. "That's not really true for hazardous waste. It's too new, the regulations are very complicated and it's hard to believe what you're doing is 'right or wrong.' The newly formed Task Force on Hazardous Materials may help spell *hazard*. The task force was established this semester to examine problems with hazardous materials on campus, said Ross McKinney, chairman of the task force and professor of civil engineering. He said the University now had no comprehensive policy on handling hazardous materials, although several departments had developed their own. "There hasn't been an overall policy," McKinney said, "but there have been lots of bits and pieces, and everyone was doing his own bit and piece." The task force was set up to pull together the separate studies and programs and to make a recommendation for the University's position on handling hazardous materials, he said. BORDER BANDIDO MONDAY MANIA! ALL YOU CAN EAT TACOS $2.99 Make your own at our taco and salad bar 1528 W. 23rd 842-8861 Across from post office TUESDAY DIME DRAWS 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Wed. Special: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540 PANIC BUTTON LAST CHANCE TO HAVE YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT TAKEN - Back by popular demand! Senior pictures Thursday, Nov.14 through Tuesday, Nov.26 Call the Jayhawker Yearbook office immediately for an appointment! 864-3728 1 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Monday, Nov. 18, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Curtain rises on Geneva Like an audience packed into a movie house for an early showing of the first-run film, the world eagerly awaits this week's meeting of the superpowers. As the lights dim and the curtain rises on Geneva, the attention of the nations is riveted on President Reagan and Soviet Premier Gorbachev. The audience has been pled to the hilt with promotions and advertisements. It's time now for action. The meeting of the two leaders holds the greatest potential for patching relations between the two countries in the decade since detente. Both sides have flaunted their bargaining chips. Encouragingly, this time those chips carry names and numbers. Apparently we have something to talk about with the Soviets. And they with us. Gorbachev wants to talk about cutting both countries' nuclear arsenals in half. Reagan mentions sweeping Europe, or parts of it, clean of nuclear weapons. With hope, more will come of the two days of meetings than pictures in the papers and on the news of men in high-back chairs smiling nervously across shiny wooden tables. If so, improved trade agreements, exchange programs and a nuclear weapons accord likely lie on the horizon for the United States and Soviet Union. If not, the world will have fallen for another round of empty posturing — the equivalent in politics of a glitzy ad campaign for a dud of a film. Paring malpractice costs If a special committee's recommendations are heeded, the Kansas Legislature will have a chance in January to relieve some problems with medical practice. On Nov. 7-8, the interim Committee on Medical Malpractice decided to recommend a limit of $1 million for malpractice lawsuits and the same limit on payments from the state Health Care Stabilization Fund for one judgment. Current state law sets a ceiling of $3 million. The committee must give final approval to its proposals Thursday or Friday. High malpractice damage awards have raised costs of malpractice insurance, sometimes even scaring good physicians out of their profession. They also lead at times to overtesting of patients. All of this affects the cost and quality of medical care. Most lawyers oppose the limits on awards, and ideally none would be needed. But the best care for all means having limits and confronting malpractice in other ways. Fortunately, the special committee is recommending other useful steps besides dollar limits. The best way to reduce problems with malpractice is to end the so-called "conspiracy of silence" that harbors doctors who are incompetent or careless. The report requirement, which has the threat of a $1,000 a day fine and license revocation, gives hospitals incentive to speak up. Most important is one requiring hospitals and other licensed health care institutions to report alleged malpractice to the state Board of Healing Arts. The report would be made if an internal hearing determined that allegations had merit. Limiting malpractice damage awards is not an easy choice. But coupled with increased vigilance of possible malpractice, it can work toward providing good health care at prices people can afford. A measure of success Those who expect a better world to advance in giant leaps have few reasons these days to celebrate. But recent efforts to cool some of the world's hot spots cheer those of us who take heart at small steps. Great Britain's agreement with the Irish Republic last week is one such small step. It asks the Irish government to help peacefully resolve the bloody conflict between Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland. Since 1969, when the Catholic minority took to Belfast streets to protest discrimination by the Protestant majority, more than 2,000 people have died in political violence in Northern Ireland. Most of the deaths can be blamed on the gunners of the Irish Republican Army, who favor reuniting with the Irish Republic, and the Ulster Defense Association, the Protestant terrorists. Throughout the years of violence in Northern Ireland, Britain has treated the matter as an internal problem — sending in troops and imposing, in 1973, direct British rule. Last week's agreement expands the republic's influence in Ulster, although it remains only a consultant. The Irish Republic has remained merely an interested bystander. Most important, officials in both countries hope the agreement undercuts support for the IRA among Catholics while stilling Protestant fears that their province might be merged with the republic. But over time, this tiny step may be valued more because it started moving in the right direction than because of the distance it covered. In the short term, extremists probably will step up their violence in hopes of sabotaging the agreement. Rob Karwath Editor John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Duncan Calhoun Business manager Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sale Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.** **GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The** The Kawana reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kawana newroom, 111 Staffer-Fint Hall. The University Daily Kansan (UFS 695-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer/Fiell Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6043, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 6044. In Douglas County, mail subscriptions cost $1 for six months and $2 for a year. Student subscriptions cost £4 and are mailed through the student activity fee. FUSTMASTER: Sand address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan, 60045. “МИР?” * “НИН?” * “PEACE?” * “What?” Professor shares his relative philosophy "Just call me Tom, as my students "They look like pajama pants, Professor Narrowsea." "Forgotten my pants? Get your mind out of the history books and into the gutter. This is the 20th century. And these are my new pants." Strolling through the halls of Wescoe the other day, I heard the most unusual argument behind one of the closed office doors. It was between Tom Narrowsea, professor in philosophy of relative non-existence, and his new, stuffy receptionist. "Excuse me sir. I do believe you've forgotten your pants." PETER Evan Walter Staff columnist do. And these are pajama pants, I'm getting the look of the now, like my students. This summer, they all came to class wearing sweats and what looked like boxer shorts. So here I am, Joan." out with chivalry. Loosen up, drop in, and drop out." "Call me Mrs. Thompson." "Mrs. Thompson? You're too cold. Get into the groove. Formality died "Professor Narrowsea!" "Look, don't argue with me. I know what I'm doing. I've been teaching here for eight years with a Ph.D." I once had a class with Prof. Narrowsea — I mean Tom, and he did seem to know what he was doing. Only I don't think anybody else did. Although only 35, his long hair and his slow, philosophical- sounding voice made him appear 10 years older. I'm not quite sure why he speaks with an English accent. He supposedly lived in Kansas his entire life. Safer ways to have fun Mailbox Why must people write on subjects they know very little about? I am addressing the letter from Nov. 8. "Training bearsay." Obviously the author of that letter knows the training game very well, but he does not know very much of what happened to the young man who was killed a few weeks ago while participating in the game. I was a close friend of that young man and do not appreciate the implications that were made in the letter about that particular accli- dent. The author had some very good points, but they were not the most important points that needed to be made. Susan Bragg Lawrence freshman No one thinks that all of KU is "running in front of trains." I know that my friend did not intentionally run in front of the train to end his life. The answer is for everyone to stop, evaluate the situation and weigh the consequences. Are a few minutes of dangerous fun worth a lifetime of sadness over a lost friend? There is only one logical answer to this question, and that is no. to ask us question. We must next time any of us find ourselves with nothing to do, we'll stop and not include training as one of the options. Training is an extremely dangerous form of fun. It involves It was for a thrill, a variation of a game that has been around Lawrence for a long time. He made a mistake. Perhaps now the rest of us can learn from his mistake. thrills that can only lead to disaster. On the first day of class, I recall, he told the class that blind allegiance to theories and opinions was the biggest, fallacy of mankind. In the real world, only opinions and theories exist, he said. Any man who believes his theories or opinions to be absolute rules is a fool. "Any facts we believe now," he said, "chances are history will disprove them. So take steps ahead of your contemporaries — don't believe His own adamant belief in his theory was the evidence supporting his argument. He also wrote the class textbook, in which he dedicated the whole first chapter to that theory. In summary, he said society bound people with the deception of their own importance, and in truth everything was a fake. Meanwhile, Prof. Narrowsea continued his lecture to the receptionist. "Those who advocated the dress, codes were fascists, Joan." "Call me Mrs. Thompson!" "The best thing about the new styles is they allow pure freedom of expression. I'm not afraid to express my true identity." "Likewise, I don't believe in bouns daries between me and my students, but I'm sure I'll succeed." "Besides, formal dresswear is shallow and superficial. I open up. So what have you got to say for yourself?" "I quit!" Verbatim Welfare vs. workfare Welfare. It has been around since the 1830s, but many now want the structure of the program to change. The Reagan administration has brought a part of the program to the forefront through the catch phrase, workfare. Ann Weich, associate professor of social welfare, recently talked with staff columnist Kathy Flanders about welfare, workfare and poverty. What is the difference between welfare and workfare? WEICK: Workfare is part of the welfare program. Welfare is public assistance — a program offering support provided by tax dollars. Public assistance provides financial benefits and social benefits to people eligible. Workfare is the requirement that public assistant recipients participate in a work program or seek employment. How long has the workfare program been around? WEICK: The work requirement has been around as long as public assistance has been available to people -- it has been around since the beginning of the country. But in the past, when it has received increased attention. PETER BENNINGTON A new emphasis began when the states were allowed to include fathers as well as mothers on public assistance. One requirement many states made is that one unemployed parent seek employment. In 1967 the work incentive program came into existence — that indicated another attempt to require adults receiving public assistance to work as a condition of receiving assistance. The hope, of course, was that people would find employment and therefore not need public assistance. How do welfare and workfare differ? WEICK: The difference invariably is the stringency with which the work requirement is applied. The Reagan administration has renewed the concern to reduce welfare costs. One strategy is to place stricter guidelines on the work requirement. It is up to the states to define the way those requirements will be enforced, but Kansas, for example, requires adults who are receiving public assistance to participate in job searches and other avenues of employment. Ann Weick How do Social and Rehabilitative Service programs know whether someone is seeking employment? WEICK: The programs sometimes use the aunts of the employment services to register for employment. Kansas also developed a program called the Job Club, which attempts to provide work for those receiving assistance. Is workfare a good strategy for reducing welfare costs? WEICK: One important thing to understand about public assistance is that the majority of beneficiaries are children, the elderly and the disabled. We do not expect them to work. So the first problem with workfare is that it creates the illusion that there are many able-bodied persons on welfare. jobs pay very low wages and, in fact, offer no assurance that people will not be poor. The problem with this notion is that it (ails) to take into account that many The second difficulty of workfare as a strategy is the notion that work is the best solution to poverty. In other words, because of the strong work ethic in America, we believe everyone ought to work and people should jobs the problem of poverty would be greatly reduced. The central issue in workfare is whether people are being given opportunities for good jobs. The reality is that most attempts to require people to work require them to take any available job regardless of wage level. People who are receiving minimum subsistence on public assistance are often, through the work approach, being required to choose jobs which may lead to equal or even decreased income compared to what they are receiving on assistance. Are workfare and welfare just treatments for the symptoms of poverty rather than solving the root of the problem? WEICK: I think that's a fair statement. If we as a society are prepared to examine the structural aspects of poverty — for example the lack of good jobs — we would need to consider strategies that would change conditions for everyone affected, not just for a few of those. In what direction do you see the United States moving in relation to poverty and workfare? WEICK: The current direction, from my point of view, is a regressive one. The gains made in developing more adequate social progress in the 1960s have, in the last few years and particularly the most recent years, been reversed. Social programs are being cut, and an attempt is being made to make it more difficult for people to receive the assistance they need. This creates the illusion that people can get along without programs. However, the statistics are pointing in the opposite direction. Rather than solving problems, they are creating - by cuts - many more problems the American society will pay for in the coming years. The result of that is likely to be an increase in infant and health problems and problems in childhood development. Those who support the current strategy of massive cuts in social programs help support the illusion that we must be totally responsible for taking care of ourselves. The reality is that none of us really do that. Monday, Nov. 18, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Comet Continued from p. 1 Next week, because Halley's will rise earlier, it will be shown during normal observatory hours of 8-10 p.m., but the moon will begin to affect viewing, Whitacre said. The middle of December will be the next time the comet will be visible without interference from the light of the moon. She said the key to seeing the com et was knowing where to look in the sky. For those who are not familiar with astronomy, the observatory is selling a booklet for $1 that explains how to find the comet without having to know coordinates or constellations. Halley's Comet was named after Edmund Halley in 1759. Halley was the first man to establish the comet's orbit and to discover that it was the same comet that was seen in 1682. The comet had been observed by Jupiter for the earliest recorded sighting was in 239 B.C. by Chinese astronomers. Twarog said people got a good view of Halley's Comet through the 27-inch telescope in the observatory. Salarv magnitude — about five times fainter than a human eye can detect, he said. A person with good eyesight can detect stars as faint as sixth magnitude. The comet was at about the eighth "It was mostly just a furzy, plain white." he said. "It was definitely not white, and there was some detail." Two astronomers in California were able to see Halley's Comet with the naked eye. The astronomers were viewing under extremely clear conditions away from city lights, which can make observing more difficult. Twarog said the comet would slowly become brighter, but would not be visible to the naked eye until late December. Continued from p. 1 be used to finance prisons and mental hospitals. The 'Regents' budget proposal for fiscal 1987 called for a 7 percent increase in salaries and an additional 7 percent increase in other operating expenses The $512 million proposal to the 6 percent increase over last year's budget. Gov. John Carlin will review the proposal and recommend a Regents budget to the Legislature when it meets in January. Nitcher said it would be more difficult to attract and retain faculty without the proposed salary increases. The cuts also will affect KU's ability to contribute research and services to the economy, he said. Richard Mann, University director for institutional research, information services and personnel services, who would budget would put KU at a disadvantage "This is an unfortunate situation given where our salaries stand now, compared to other universities," Mann said. "If we went to a zero year, it would negatively affect the morale of all our employees. There is a good chance that some of our best people will choose to go elsewhere." Mann said classified employees would eventually be hit hardest. Neva Entrikin, Classified Senate chairman, said classified employees did not receive their salaries from the state budget but through the state budget. United Press International supplied some information for this story. senior women in her sorority house did it. "I've done it twice," Best said. "It didn't really hurt, but I had bruises all over my back in the morning. Two people can fit in one or two and be so small enough. It fun and different. A little excitement." Derks agreed. Continued from p.1 "I've done it about four or five times," he said. "I'll probably do it again. It's just something to do. It's better than training. It's not as dangerous." Tumble Training, a game that involves getting as close to a passing train as possible, is played by some railroad bridges near Lawrence. Most students try tumbling after a night of drinking "I don't think I could ever do it sober," Best said. "It's kind of scary if you think about it." Michael Everett, owner of Laundromat No. 777, 1827 Louisiana St., said he had heard for several years that students tumbled. "I remember doing it as a kid." Everett said. "I don't think it happens that often here, because we close at 10 p.m., and 90 percent of the time 1 or someone who works for me is here to curb that kind of behavior." Sgt. Don Dalquest of the Lawrence Police Department said that in his 20 years with the department he had never had any reports or complaints of people tumbling. "I've never heard of people actually getting in the dryer," Dalquest said. "I've heard of people drying marijuana in them though." He said a person caught tumbling probably would be charged with destruction of private property, which is a misdeanor. Dalquest said the penalty probably would be about six months in jail and a $500 fine, depending on the class of misdeanor. Everett said he didn't know how dangerous tumbling was for students but said the activity took its toll on the dryers. "I have some of the largest dryers in Lawrence," Everett said. "And they are only 50 pound dryers. If you get a 100- to 200-pound person in there, the odds are greater than it will break down quickly. It can destroy the motor and wreck the pulley and wheel. The danger depends on the individual." On Campus The KU Spanish Club will sponsor a lecture, "Everything You Wanted to Know About Ecuador and Were Afraid to Ask," at 7 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. The Strat-o-matic Baseball Club will meet at 7 p.m. today in Parlor C of the Union. The KU Committee on South Africa will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. KU Sword & Shield will meet at 8 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Union. by John Grashel, associate professor of music education, and the University Wind Ensemble, conducted by Bob Foster, KU director of bands, will present a fall concert, "A Parade of Marches," at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall. Admission is free. The University Band, conducted Pre-Holiday Basketball Tournament 5-on-5 Single Elimination 112 Team Limit Men's and Women's Divisions Entry Fee: $5 per person Entries due: by 5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 22 in 208 Robinson Play begins Monday, Dec. 2nd For more information, call 864-3546 By Popular Demand: What was great, now is even greater! NEW FULL OUNCE SHOTS We are serving the BEEFIEST DRINKS in town. Try our new drinks... you'll say: WOW! the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 841 0540 The Facts. HP NEWLETT PACKARD 41CX The powerful Hewlett-Packard Series 40 advanced calculators are expandable. Versatile. Reliable. Soft Facts Thousands of software programs are available. hp Hard Facts The most recent addition to the family, the HP-41CX, has built-in Timer Module Extended Functions Module Enhanced Text-File Editor And More! HEWLETT PACKARD HP-41 SERIES REG. SALE HP-41CX 325.00 259.00 HP-41CV 225.00 176.00 HP-41C 195.00 129.00 KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union ku KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union 9th Annual FALL SHOE SALE Entire Stock LUXURY 10%— 50% OFF Reebok * Converse * Puma * New Balance * Nike * Saucony * Tiger * Brooks * Avia * Turntec * Tretorn * Kaepa * Foot Joy November 18th - 24th 843-0112 MORRIS 20 UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY 1016 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN 843-5279 ECCO ANATOMIC DANISH CLOGS Ecco Clogs have sox appeal! '10 worth of socks free with each pair purchased 2,000 socks to choose from 841-7027 Store Hours: Mon.-Sat. 12-5:30 FOOTPRINTS 1339 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 EVEN STRAIGHT A'S CAN'T HELP IF YOU FLUNK TUITION. Today, the toughest thing about going to college is finding the money to pay for it. But Army ROTC can help—two ways! First, you can apply for an Army ROTC scholarship. It covers tuition, books, and supplies, and pays you up to $1,000 each school year it's in effect. But even if you're not a scholarship recipient, ROTC can still help with financial assistance—up to $1,000 a year for your last two years in the program. For more information, contact your Professor of Military Science. ARMY ROTC BE ALL YOU CAN BE. CONTACT CAPTAIN KENNARD Room 212, Military Science Building 864-3311/3312 1 6 University Daily Kansan From Page One Monday, Nov. 18, 1985 Cocaine it's more like $25 to $50 a week." Continued from p.1 It's more likely Chris says, "Coke is the ultimate in impulse buying. You want it, and you want it now. "Many people buy more than once in an evening. I sell a lot late at night, at 3 a.m., when they come back for more." Chris says he thinks employees or owners at most Lawrence private clubs either use or deal cocaine. "We have one or two dealers here every night," he says. "Most employees know who they are. The dealers easily get new customers as the word travels." John, who asked that his real name not be used, works at a private club patronized by students. Jack Colyer, a counselor at Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism, a center which also counsels drug users, says cocaine is a status drug — the "in people" do it. Cocaine users are found in various professions, he says, and the average user is under 40. In addition to students, Chris says, he has swnorted with or sold cocaine to about a half dozen teaching assistants, two administrators, many business owners and other prominent residents of Lawrence. "It should be a major concern for the country," Colyer says. "It is a drain on our financial resources and the productivity and talent of industry." Chris divides his customers into three categories: wealthy students, students involved in the business of drugs and established people in the community. "Many frat boys with rich parents have a lot of money they don't know what to do with," he says. "They come in their new BMWs, dressed in the latest clothes. They buy a gram at a time to use one night. "Their parents would never suspect that they are supporting their coke habit." Cindy says she gets money from her parents whenever she asks them. her p... whenever she asks them. Colyer says a heavy user's habit may cost between $35,000 and $50,000 a year. "Most students can't afford that," he says. "So they start dealing drugs to their friends to support their habit. They also turn to stealing or prostitution." These dealers fit into Chris's second category — users who become dealers to be able to afford their own habits. "Some sell pot to get money for cocaine," Chris says. "I supply the smaller coke dealers. They buy a quarter or an eighth of an ounce each time and can sell it in a single evening." evenings. In Chris' line of distribution, one of several in Lawrence, a half-pound or pound of cocaine is delivered to one or two contacts in town. Then a dealer buys it by the ounce from that contact. The cost is about $2,000 an ounce. The cocaine is distributed to other dealers in decreasing quantities and with decreasing quality until it reaches the average user. "Most dealers are students, paying their way through school," he says. "They're not professional criminals. That's why there's not too much violence. Organized crime only reaches down so far in the structure." When life in the fast lane becomes a bit too fast, and the white lines start coming too quickly, cocaine users lose touch with reality. Chris estimates that hundreds of people in Lawrence are heavy cocaine users, and their habits often exceed their resources. They start owing huge sums of money and have to turn to dealing to pay off their debts. "This is not kid stuff," Chris said. "I knew a guy who owed $14,000. Anytime you can owe that much money, you'll end up being you're in trouble. Where are you going to get that kind of money legally?" Colyer says a myth of safety surrounds cocaine. But evidence indicates that cocaine causes as much physical and emotional deterioration as other drugs. "Six months of cocaine use can do as much damage as 10 years of alcoholism," Colyer says. "It creates a strong psychological dependency. Addicts can develop symptoms very similar to a schizophrenic person." By Chris' standards, users are definitely abusers when they are freebasing - smoking the fumes of a heated cocaine base. "When you're freebasing, your brain turns to mush in a few weeks," he says. Even worse is injecting speedballs — a mixture of cocaine and heroin. It was an overdose of speedball that killed comedian John Belushi in March 1982. Chris doesn't know of any speedballers and says he doesn't sell heroin, only cocaine and marijuana. It's a major part of your life," he says. "It is easy to fall under its control and only be thinking of when you are going to do the next line." Chris also tries not to be involved with freebases. He says they can easily run up a debt of hundreds of dollars, and they still ask for more. Cindy says she doesn't think cocaine is controlling her life. "I'm never going to get addicted," Cindy says. "I don't go crazy if I don't get it. "It's foolish — but fun." Chris smoked marijana in high school and began snorting cocaine when he came to KU. His own habit can be as much as 5 to 10 grams during "a partying week." After a night of heavy use, he says, he finds it hard to conduct an intelligent conversation. Cocaine makes her more alert, more talkative and heightens all her sensations, she says. She can stay up late at parties or during studying. "I've had problems myself," he says. "But I'm not addicted now. "It's a question of will power. You get caught up into the excitement and the social circle. You forget there's a world outside the coke world." Chris says he doesn't have any qualms about selling cocaine. He argues that he isn't pushing it on anyone. "If they weren't getting it from me, they would get it from someone else," he says. "But I won't sell to anyone I think has a problem. If they are close friends, I say: 'Is this for you? You're doing too much.' " Life in the fastest of lanes has its risks. For Chris, dealing with cocaine is exciting. It's like a game, he says. "Arts, and they say that it is not a serious problem when You have a serious problem when "The circle forms around you," Chris says. "You know everybody. Some of it is phony, but some isn't. And they aren't going to mess with me if they want coke." Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, says the minimum prison sentence for dealing or possessing cocaine is three to five years, and the maximum is 10 to 20 years. Chris says, "I'm afraid of getting busted. Nothing is worth getting caught. It could ruin my whole life." "But once you're used to having the money and the social stuff — and to be able to have coke whenever you want to — it's hard to stop. "I can't buck the odds for too long. I've done it for a year and a half, and I'll have to quit soon." Week Ahead at KU Pre-summit film festival. Films on international event screenings.umn.edu. Visit UMN, Exhibit "Art and Social Comment," in Browsing Room, Room. Sponsored by political science department Today Nov. 18 Compiled by the office of University relations. Published as a public service by the Kansan. Nov. 18 Microcomputer workshop "Wordart Professional" a w.m. computer Room. Computer Room. African studies seminar. "From Migrants to Proliterators in Africa: Lessons from Colonial Tanzania." *Theodore Valentine, African Studies: Voen, Alcove D, Union.* Exhibit opening. Graduate art show, 1 p.m. Art and Design Building gallery. Through Nov. 26. Opening Thursday through Saturday. Registration by Government." Brian Bell, University of Missouri-Kansas City. 3 p.m., intermission. Harlart Symposium, Robert Andrew Parker, bariat; 8:30 p. m. Spencer Museum of Art 155 West 46th Street, New York, NY 10026 - SUA film. "The Times of Harvey Milk." 7:30 m.p. woodwulf Auditorium. and Other Angus, Women 101 Harriet Goldstein, Lerner Memorial Foundation 79 m. aelson. M. Alderson Curator's Choice. Tim Mitchell, art history; 7:30 p.m. art museum galleries. by reservation www.curator.org Tomorrow Grant proposal seminar: "Indirect Costs and conference room," Call 864-3294 for information p. m. Woodruff Auditorium. Linguistics colloquy, *Negation in Early and Modern Scandinavian*. Donald Watkins, Ger- many's Literatures and Literatures. 7:30 p.m. 207 Blake Hall. Inaugural lecture, "Some Moments in the History of America"—the History of the American Civil War. Dr. Keith M. Reed distinguished professors of journalism at Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall. Concert. University Band, John Grahel conducting; University Wend Ensemble, Robert Foster conducting 8 p.m. Craffon-Preyer Theatre Diana story hour. With Bibity Patton and Diane Tine for ages 4-16. 10 a.m. Museum of Holocaust History. University Former. "Silikwe: A Community on the Kansas Frontier." *The Economical Christian Ministries Center, 1049 Oread Ave Call 853-642-7200*. "The University of Oklahoma," *Ardian studies dorms.* "Doorn Africans have friends?" African studies semester. "Does Africaians have a future?" Junai Van der Walt, South Africa Affirmative Action workbox "EO/AA Update or Faculty and Staff" Jobbis Tables 1.p.m. to 5pm. Physics and astronomy lecture. "Conets." David Beard, University distinguished professor of physics and astronomy. i p.m. Council Hall, Union. **Women's Resource Center workshop." One Couple Plus Two Careers." 7 p.m. jayhawk Hall.** Wednesday - SUA Film. "The Red Shoes" 7:30 p.m. Jaybawk Room, Union. - 2 Concert, Hungarian State Orchestra. a p.m. Hoe Auditorium. Tickets on sale at Murphy hour office. All seats reserved. Call 641-982 for reservations. Thursday Nov. 21 Micrerecuper workbook *LOTUS* – University Applications. 9 a.m. micrerecuper Room. 8 a.m. Micrerecuper Room. Adult Development Collegium, "Evolutionary Explanations of Human Behavior." Kenneth Amtrage, Robert Holt and Glen Wimpey. Neurobiology department 11:39 a.m. Adele D. Union. E Nov. 20 University Senate/Faculty Senate, 4.p.m. Woodford Auditorium Mathematics collubium. Statements and Pro- ductions. Mathematics Department of Brown University, 4.19 m 119 Rose Hall. Volleyball and indoor soccer Hill championships in p. Robinson Gymnastics 604-856-3452 Recreation entry deadline. For squash and racquall ball doubles and mixed doubles, 5 p.m. on Sunday at the WCC. American Soldiery meeting, Film, Free Homeland and Death, & p. 168. Ecumenical Churches Education Bachelor of Arts in the American Past with Calder Pickett. 7 p.m. Ecumenical Christian Ministries. KAAN-FM 912. The American Past with Calder Wolbert Rubens, Ph.D. Senior Lecturer, "Canaa in the North Atlantic Triangle, Canadian, British and American Relations" J. L. Gransteinate, York University, Ontario. 8 p.m. Audition Advisor. Picket 1. 7:30 p.m. Woodford Auditorium. La Dolce Vita." 7:30 p.m. Woofrild Audioitrum. - Intrasquad preloadship basketball tournament. Deadline for entries, b.p. 8pm. 260 Robinson - *FM 82. "Opera is My Hobby" with James Seaver 7 p.m. - "Japanese Theatre. *Fujita,* *&* "Shimizu* No and Kyogen play in 8 p., m.schw. Rehearsal Hall, Murphy. Repeated on Saturday and Sunday. Saturday, Murphy box office. All statis- tical admission. - Observatory open house. If sky is clear, 8 p.m. Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, 600 Linden Road, Cary, NC 27531. (340) 299-2512. - SUA飞马, "Strange Behavior," midnight Woodruff Auditorium. Also Saturday. Nov. 23 Saturday KANI'L FM 92. The Vintage Jazz Show. 9:30 a.m. KANI'L FM 92. The Jazz Score. 10 a.m. Tarleton Truck. Cross country run. 8 a.m. West Campa, Recreation Services and Lawrence Recreation Services sponsors. Register until 7:50 a.m. Call 864 344 for information. Retirees Club coffee. Adam Lounge. Adams Ahmum Center. 10 a.m. at Music at 11 a.m. - Football. KU-University of Missouri. Last game of season. 11:40 a.m. Memorial Stadium. Women's basketball. KU-Utah University. Women's basketball. All-Penn State House. KU students admit free Sunday Nov. 24 Nov.24 Kansas orienteering championships. Sponsored by SUA, 10:45 a.m. Lake Park Register at Sloough Creek area. Call 864-367-497 for information. Squash and balltournament. Doubles KAUN-FM 8-72. The KU concert's 1:30 p.m. * *SIA film, "The Gift," 2 p.m. Woodruff Concert, Handel's "Solomon." Combined choirs, choruses and University Symphony Orchestra. James Ralston, conductor. 3:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium. Friday Nov. 22 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - SUA film. "Ghostbusters" 3:30 p.m. Saturday. Also 7 and 9 p.m. Some saturdays. Tickets $25. The next Week Ahead will appear Nov. 25 and cover through Dec. 1. The deadline for submitting entries for next week's calendar has passed. Entries for the Dec. 2-8 Week Ahead must be submitted in writing to the office of University relations by 5 p.m. Wednesday. Holidays and semester breaks may alter the schedule. An asterisk indicates an admission charge for an event. comprehensive health associates * our pregnancy tests * ourpatient abortion services * alternative counseling * gynecology * corpresentation Oueland Park, KS/913-345-1400 Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 WE MAKE SENDING CHRISTMAS PACKAGE PICAFLIC HOME EIGHTY ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS Southern Hills Shopping Center 160 W. 23rd. Sp. 109 Lawrence, MA 01875 (913) 824-8177 TINY BOX - Daily Pickup by UPS - Convenient Location - Free Parking - Open 7 Days during Christmas Season EASY! - Insured - Overnight Delivery Available PS EXPRESS PACK & SHIP EXPRESS, INC. 2 Locations: 2449 Iowa St. 609 Vermont St. Lawrence, Ks 842-3413 Pluck our Thanksgiving turkey and Save! Pick a feather off our Thanksgiving turkey to reveal your secret discount! One feather per customer. Discounts not valid on sale merchandise or textbooks. Offer good now through Nov. 22nd. LION Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd., Lawrence, Ks. 66044 (913)843-3826 HOURS M-F 8-5 Sat. 10-4 NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH CHECKERS PIZZA MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL SPECIAL New York Giants vs. Washington Redskins on "Our NEW big screen TV" Special LARGE 2 Topping Pizza $4.99 Dine In Only 2214 Yale 25C DRAWS 11 a.m.-Midnight Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. 4 841-8010 Monday, Nov. 18, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 Cherril Youngblood/Special to the KANSAN Wynn B. Rost, left, and Randall B. Sparkman, both members of the Southeast Missouri State University computer team, try to solve a programming problem. KU was the host of the North Central Computer Programming Contest on Saturday in Strong Hall. Computer contest tests skills By John Williams Of the Kansan staff While KU football players were battling on the field in Lincoln, Neb., University of Nebraska students were winning a different sort of contest at the University of Kansas Saturday. The gridron they competed on consisted of minds against computers, a clock and 19 other teams. Nebraska wowed with their programming contest. Nebraska finished four of 11 problems within the six-hour time period. The second and third place teams, Northeast Missouri State University and Kansas State University, both finished three problems. The competition involved 20 regional teams and was sponsored by the KU department of computer science and the KU chapter of the Association of Computing Machinery, a professional organization of people who work in computer-related jobs, Rose Marra, secretary of the KU chapter, said Saturday. The main goal of the competition was to have fun, but more importantly, it tested the teams' programming abilities, organization and speed of understanding an unfamiliar computer system. she said "They have never used the system," Marra said. "We sent them some background information, giving some general information about the Honeywell, but nothing is like the real thing until you can actually use it." KU's team, which placed second at a competition last week at the University of North Dakota, could not compete because of the unfair advantage of using its own computer system, she said. Ken Jordan, Lawrence senior and a judge of the competition, said the difficulty of problems ranged from very hard to very easy, but were not much different to problems assigned in CS 200 classes. Most problems, designed by computer science professors, were mathematical, while others were problems of business application. "The really tough problems, of which there are one or two, are to separate the good programmers from the really good programmers." Marra said. Jordan also helped prepare programs to make the computer more user friendly. "We had to make it so they could learn a lot about the system in a short period of time," he said. "We had to make it easy for them." With any computer system, he said, programming commands can be wrong and the computer will tell the programmer. One problem that would make the computer system harder to use, however, was printed in various, obscure places in the program. So Jordan and others had to come up with ways of printing all error statements in one place. Bob Dowling, a junior at Quincy College, Quincy, III., said learning the computer system was the easiest part of the competition, but waiting for print programs near the end of the competition was the hardest part. "But the system was still different," he said. "If it had been a system we were used to we wouldn't have had some of the errors in programs we had." Gary Krone, a junior at Quincy College, said it was human error and not machine error that was at fault for Dowling's errors in programming. Dowling had part of his program erased at one time, costing him about half an hour to retype the commands into the computer. Larry Stoll, a senior at Quincy College, said the team knew what to expect, and the key goal was just to have a good time. "But to top the fact that we only sent one program in completed and didn't place, we were also team 13," he said. KU considers Geneva talks Films depict arms race Summit fever is hitting the University of Kansas. By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff As President Ronald Reagan and Soviet party leader Mikhail Gorbachev prepare for their meeting tomorrow and Wednesday in Geneva, a science will show films and posters concerning the nuclear arms race. In Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union, students will be able to consider the same questions and arguments that Reagan and Gorbachev will be tossing across the negotiating table. "I'll show a series of films on this and hope that people will go away with a little more information," Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science at the showing, said yesterday. "It will increase the marketplace of ideas. the information against war and for disarmament." Eight films and filmstrips will be shown both today and tomorrow. They have been produced by diverse organizations to provide a wide variety of views. Ketzel said. "I hope to influence people to use "I tried to get more on the administration's side but couldn't," he said. The films range from promoting the Strategic Defense Initiative commonly known as Star Wars and peace through strength to promoting arms control, he said. "I have a slide show from an arms bazaar in Washington where soldiers shop for weapons," Ketzel said. "A military officer from the Warsaw prison was able to sneak in, although this was supposed to be very top secret." Ketzel also will display about 35 anti-war posters in the fourth floor lobby from a collection of 189 posters, "Art and Social Comment." Australian, Japanese, English, German and American posters are in the collection. Ketzel said none of the films or posters necessarily reflected the position of the department of political science. The films and filmstrips will be shown at the same times today and tomorrow as follows: ■ "Weapons Bazaar" and "What About the Russians?" at 8:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. ■ "High Frontier" and "A Critical Look at the Star Wars Defense System" at 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. ■ "Peace Through Strength" and "U.S. vs. U.S.S.R. Who's Ahead?" at 10:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. "No First Use" and "Ballistic Defense in the Nuclear Age" at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff The University of Kansas Wind Ensemble will take a musical march through the history of military bands when it performs a joint concert with the University Band at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall. Bob Foster, KU director of bands, said yesterday that the University Band, conducted by John Grashel, associate professor of music education, would present the first portion of the concert. The 40-member ensemble, conducted by Foster, will then present its musical chronology, "A Parade of Marches." Foster said the ensemble's portion of the concert would begin with two fife and drum pieces from the Revolutionary War performed by four piccolo players and a drummer. Foster said the drummer would play a rope-tension snare drum similar to the drums used in the late 1700s. Another group of ensemble members then will perform two marches that were performed in 1776 by the U.S. Marine Band, "Washington's March" and "The President's March." The Marine Band, founded in 1776, is the oldest continuous musical organization in the United States. Sheet music of the arrangements used in 1776 was obtained from the Marine Band archives in Philadelphia. "It's very interesting for me," he said. "This is something no one at KU has ever done before." Other marches presented by the ensemble will include "Military March," by Beethoven, "American Civil War Fantasy," by Jerry Bilk, "The Gladiator," by John Philip Sousa, "the Commando March," by Samuel Barber, and the official march of the U.S. Marine Corps, "Semper Fidelis." Foster said that each of the concert selections had an interesting story behind it and that the stories were part of the music's appeal. For instance, he said, many people might be surprised to learn that Beethoven wrote a march. Another composer better known for his symphonies also is represented in the concert, Foster said. "Commando March" was written by Samuel Barber as a contribution to the war effort during World War II and is Barber's only march. "He wrote 'Military March' in the 1830s for a parade in London," Foster said. "Not many people think of Beethoven when they think of marches." The University Band, conducted by Grashel and Gregory Clemons, Lawrence graduate student, will open the concert. The band will play a variety of concert band pieces, including "Jubilant Overture," by Alfred Reed, "Sine Nomine," by Ralph Vaughan Williams, and "Alvamar Overture," by James Barnes, associate professor of bands and music theory. Barnes said the overture, commissioned by the Wichita school district for use by its honor band, was popular in Janan. "A friend of mine who went to Japan to conduct said he'd done the piece five times in one week," Barnes said. He said the overture *its* underwent a transformation when the sheet music was printed in Japanese. "There's no such word as Alvamar," Barnes said. "Bob Billings, who developed the golf course, named it after his father and mother — Alva and Margaret. I got a call from my editor in New York who said he couldn't find the word in the dictionary. I explained that it was the name of a golf course." Some time later, he said, he was attending a band and orchestra clinic in Chicago, when he was approached by a Japanese band director who said he liked to play the "Golf Course Overture." BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320 yello sub delivers 841-3268 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA GENE BACKMAN NATTY BILTON TARGET Fri. '5:00 Daily 7:20 9:40 Sat. & Sun.'2:30'5:00 VARSITY THE MUTILATOR R Fri. '5:00 Daily 7:30 9:30 Sat. & Sun.'2:30'5:00 HILLCREST 1 AGED EDGE Glenn Chase Jeff Bridges Daily '4:45 7:30 9:40 Sat. & Sun.'2:30 HILLCREST 2 'HIGHLY ENJOAVABLE' A BOOK BY BRIEN WATER After Home Daily '5:00 7:25 9:25 Sat. & Sun.'2:45 HILLCREST 3 A FRIEND WHO LOVES TO SING A BRIDGE ON A ROAD HILL ONCE BITTEN Daily '5:00 7:30 9:30 Sat. & Sun.'2:45 CINEMA 1 Rainbow Drive Lisa Stroh Daily 7:20 Sat. 6:00 '6:05 CINEMA 2 TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. Daily 9:15 Fri. '9:00 Daily 7:15 9:30 Sat. & Sun.'2:00'5:00 *Bargain Show 708 W. NINTH SHAMPOO AND HAIRCUT $10.00 FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUPON JUST HAIR II MODERN HAND DESIGN STUDIO 842-4414 EXPIRES 12-31-85 KANSAS' FREEWAY SINGLES CLUB OFFERS A SMOOTH WAY TO GET YOUR LOVE LIFE IN GEAR Surely it's happened to you, and you've seen it happen to others. You're driving down the street at rush hour and in the lane next to you sits that special someone you would like to meet. The rest of the way down the street, you make darn sure that person doesn't leave your eyesight and you even try to navigate your way into a position where you can pull alongside that car at the next light. You exchange a few innocent glances and then ... ZOOOM! The person turns left never to be seen again. That's what happened to a California women who saw her "Prince Charming" disappear forever in a yellow Cadillac several years ago. That woman, Ruth Guilou, devised a solution she called the Freeway Singles Club, an organization whose singles members affx numbered stickers on the backs of their cars signifying them as single and available. The process is simple enough. To join members pay annual dues. That entitles them to a numbered decal that attached to the rear window of the car. When a member is spotted by an interested member, the spotters jots down the number and mails a letter with that number on the outside of the envelope to the Freeway Singles Club. The Club takes the number and matches it with the address of the person owning that number and mails the letter sent by the spotter. The Freeway Singles Club is now expanding throughout the United States. Each state is being licensed, many being purchased by former representatives of the Huntington Beach Club. Tion, members will be able other members throughEach state's decals will proceed by a state abbreviation for the Free-sas is "KS". To get things rolling in the Lawrence area we are offering regular $35 memberships for only $5 to the first 50 applicants. For more information contact Freeway Singles Club P.O. Box 3852 Wichita, KS 67201 (316) 264-3742 FBC KS250 NETWORK - GENERAL USE FSC KS250 For more information contact: Freeway Singles Club P.O. Box 3652 Wichita, KS 87201 (316) 264-3742 Kansas University Representatives needed PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY HOURS Mon.-Thurs. - 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri. & Sat. - 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Sunday - 11 a.m.-1 a.m. $1 OFF ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY --- $25 OFF With this coupon purchase a full pair of prescription eyeglasses (frame and lenses), and receive $25 off our regular low price! Minimum cost after $25 discount----$24.95 This ad cannot be used in conjunction with any other optical promotion. Some restrictions apply. This offer good thru Nov.30,1985 HUTTON 842-5208 Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. U 8 University Daily Kansan Student Senate Elections Monday, Nov. 18, 1985 Common Sense Candidates use strategy like Hart's Common Press Common Press John Lechliter/KANSAN By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff David Epstein and Amy Brown, presidential and vice presidential candidates for the Common Sense Coalition, say they will represent the average KU student. The student body presidential and vice presidential candidates for the Common Sense Coalition say that by electing them, students will get "a better return on their million-dollar investment." "The big difference between David and I and our opponents is we're representatives of the average KU student," Amy Garnett, Common Sense vice president candidate, said last week. She and David Epstein, presidential candidate, say students should vote for Common Sense because students will know what they are getting - ideas. They say they can put many of those ideas into action the day they take office. Some of their ideas include setting up a hotline to the Student Senate office, working with parking services to try to alleviate parking problems around some residence and scholarship halls, and starting a night-ride program, in which buses would run to and from Lawrence entertainment spots. "We're the Gary Hart of Student Senate elections." Epstein said. Brown and Epstein said they were not conservatives, but had a conservative image. Senate elections are to be held Wednesday and Thursday. tion of a liberal greek," Epstein said, referring to his membership in the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Epstein, Prairie Village junior, is majoring in political science and religion. He is a Nunemaker senator and was the assistant producer of last year's Rock Chalk "People don't understand the no- Brown, Paola senior, is majoring in political science and journalism. She is a liberal arts and sciences senator and was a Nunemaker senator for nearly two years. Chrvsalis Candidates plan to use experience By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff The student body presidential and vice presidential candidates for Chrysalis Coalition say that they can provide the ears that the student body needs. KU super South Africa "Milton and I, since we've been at KU, have cared about students' problems and we've worked to help solve them," Ruth Lichtwalt, Chrysalis vice presidential candidate, said last week. John Lechliter/KANSAN Presidential and vice presidential candidates for the Chrysalis Coalition, Milton Scott and Ruth Lichtwardt, say that their coalition will address concerns that have been ignored in the past. Students should vote for Chrysalis Coalition because she and Milton Scott, presidential candidate, will address students' concerns which other people have ignored. Lightwardt said. Scott, East St. Louis, III., senior, is majoring in both political science and communications studies. He is vice chairman of the University Senate Executive Com- munity, former president of Elsworth Hall. Some of the issues Chrysalis plans to begin with are printing professors' evaluations and course descriptions, printing a list of available financial aid and how to it, and pushing for a non-employee club to be included in the renovation plans for the Kansas Union. She said that because they both have had experience within the University system, they know how to get things done. He has been a senator for the School of Liberal Arts and Lichtwardt, Lawrence junior, is an English major. She is an off-campus senator and chairman of Sciences for two years and has been on the Social Responsibilities and Student Rights committees of the Student Senate. the Senate Minority Affairs Committee. She was a member of the Senate Finance Committee for several months. Lichtwardt also was director of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas. SAVE YOUR MONEY, CLIP A COUPON. Congrats to the 85½ New initiatives! We love you! Love, The Actives fields the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187 House of Hupei is Open Daily For Lunch & Dinner 2907 W. 6th THE GRUNDER MAN 704 Mass. Come in and see us! 843-7398 open till 9 p.m., Mon.-Sat. Right up the street! BASKETS WINE GLASSES BAG KIDS Call UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY 843-5279 The best in party pics! THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mass. phone: 843-115 YYYY Christmas is Coming! One-of-a-kind authentic jewelry and gifts The original Kenya Book bag $16 jewelry priced from $1 African Adorned 5 East 7th 4¢ Copies 818 Mass. Midwest Business Systems inc. 842.4134 ASPEN! Jan. 4-11. Five days of skiing with everything included for only $356. Sign-up now at the SUA Office in the Union. Deadline is Wednesday, so hurry! Call 864-3477 for details. Apply now for Public Relations Chairperson for Student Union Activities by picking up an application at the SUA Office. Deadline for applying is Thurs., Nov. 21 at noon. Five minute interviews will be held that evening beginning at 6 p.m. SUN TRAVEL SAVE AT IMPORTS & DOMESTICS EXTREC CARS Ralphis AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 HOURS Mon - Thurs. 11 a.m. 2 a.m. Fri & Sat. 11 a.m. 3 a.m. Sunday. 11 a.m. 1 a.m. YOU CAN HEAD THE PUBLIC RELATIONS PROGRAM FOR A MAJOR CAMPUS ORGANIZATION! --- SUA PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY Computerark ZENITH STUDENT & FAULTY DISCOUNT AVAILABLE Z-100 GEMINI BOARD 841-0094 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY $1 OFF any 2 pizzas or $2 OFF any 3 pizzas ANY PIZZA ORDERED Expires 12-31-85 湖北 湖北 The Perfect Place For Any Occasion Celebrate all your occasions at House of Hupei. Let us pamper you in the Chinese tradition with delicious food and great personal service. Come in soon! House of Hupei Open daily: Lunch 11:30-2:30 p.m. Dinner 4:30-9:30 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 'til 10:30 p.m. 2907 W. 6th next to Econolodge 843-8070 Bamboo V Monday, Nov. 18, 1985 Sports University Daily Kansan 9 News Briefs Tickets are available for holiday tourney Tickets for the BMA Holiday Tournament Dec. 27-28 in Kemper Arena, which features Wichita State, Louisiana Tech and Arizona State, are available at the KU Ticket Office in Allen Field House. Doug Dvance, sports information director, said the tickets, which permit attendance on both nights, and those on level and 818 or the upper level. A Big Eight spokesman said that fans who had tickets for the tournament last year would be given the option of renewing the same seats for this year's tournament. The deadline for renewal is Dec. 1. Vance also said tickets for the Big Eight Conference rost-game tournament in March were sent to the Big Eight office in Kansas City. Tickets for the tournament, March 7, 8 and 9 in Kemper, are $40 for upper level seating and $52 for lower level. The tickets allow entrance to all seven games. The tournament will be divided into four sessions. There will be two games each during the afternoon and evening sessions on March 7, two games during the afternoon session on March 8, and one game during the afternoon session on March 9. If there are still seats available, single-session tickets will go on sale at the Kemper box office on March 5. Rugby season ends All-American Peter Knudsen scored two tries to lead the Kansas rugby club to a 38-3 win over the Kansas City Rugby Football Club in a Merit Table Match Saturday in Kansas City, Mo. It was the last match of the fall season for the club side, which will carry a 6-1 overall record and a 3-1 Merit Table record into the spring season. The men's cross country team competed at the NCAA District V Championships in Stillwater, Okla., Saturday, but none of the KU runners qualified for the NCAA Championships. KU runners return BEN Welch was the top runner for Kansas. He finished 21st in 32 minutes, 14.6 seconds. He was followed by Gerald Harder, 43rd in 33:37.6; Craig Watcke, 45th, in 33:45.5; Matt Bell, 52nd, in 33:57 and Kyle Rose, 62nd, in 34:31.2. Arnold Fields, Kansas fullback, runs for a gain of six yards as Jeff Jamrog, Nebraska defensive end, attempts the tackle. Fields was the leading rusher Saturday for Kansas, gaining a total of 76 yards for the Javhawk in their 56-6 loss. 55 From staff and wire reports. NU programmed to destrov By Chris Lazzarino Sports editor LINCOLN, Neb. — The Nebraska Cornhuskers ran over, over, around and through the Kansas Jayhawks Saturday in Lincoln. What Nebraska wanted, Nebraska got. No questions asked. By the time 30 seconds had ticked from the game clock, it was obvious that No. 2 ranked Nebraska was a winner whose only intent was to destroy Destroy, annihilate, humiliate and hurt. The Machine did all of that and more in it's 56-6 thrashing of the hapless Jahwhaws. The Machine fumbled the opening kickoff, which was recovered by KU's C.J. Eanes on the Machine 2.yard line. Four plays, two quarter- and 50 seconds later, the Jayhaws had three points on the board. More than 75,000 fanatical fans, clad in what had to be millions of dollars, marched through the city second of it. No one seemed to care that the kieckoff was fumbled. All that meant was that they would see their awesome defense before they saw their awesome offense. They wanted their gladiators to toy with the Jayhawks before they would give the thumbs down, signalling time to kill But when the second quarter began, play time ended. The Machine delighted the Polyesters by thrashing them at a spacious field, showing not one iota of mercy. Machine wingback Von Sheppard and touchdown receptions of 35 and 41. When the bloodshed of the first half was over, the Machine had amassed 38 points. The Jayhawks still had three. Machine fullback Tom Rathman had 144 yards and a touchdown in six carries, and that was with eight minutes left in the second quarter. Kansas had 144 yards of total of offense and six points. That's right — in 21 minutes of play one Machine took five minutes of play by an entire offense. The Machine finished the game with 639 yards with an average gain per play of 9.1 yards. Kansas was 0-17 on third down conversions and was caught for two safeties. One month ago, Kansas was 5-2. Now, Kansas is 6-5 and 1-5 in the Big Eight and must win Saturday against Missouri in Lawrence to finish .500. And he does so, winning touchdowns. Now, Kansas is losing by going 15 consecutive quarters — most of four games — without a touchdown. Kansas head coach Mike Gottfried wanted to hold quarterback Mike Norseth out of the game for at least one series so he could see the defensive formations from the sidelines with the coaches. Gottfried has said that they had been ready before, but redshirting Mike Orth has left a sort of void behind Norseth. Tom Quick, who is also a wide receiver, started the game at quarterback, as was Gottfried's plan. But Gottfried didn't plan on the Jayhawks being so close to the end zone so early. Norseth was in the game for good on play No. 2, although it probably didn't matter who the KU quarterback was against the Machine. Two recruits sign basketball letters By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas men's basketball team received two signed letters of intent and got an oral commitment from another recruit Friday, the sports information office said. Kansas signed Keith Harris, a 6-foot-4 forward from Santa Monica, Calif., High School, and Jeff Guelder, a 6-5 guard-forward from Charleston, III., High School. The Jayhawks also received an oral com- ment from Robert Cone, a center from Denver West High School. High school seniors who want to sign basketball letters of intent have until Wednesday, or they will have to wait until April to sign with a college. Harris' teammate, Carrick DeHart, who has orally committed to Kansas, has not signed a letter of intent with any college vet. Head coach Larry Brown said Friday that he was thrilled that Harris and Gueldner were coming to Kansas. "These are great kids who come from great programs," Brown said. "They should be a real asset to our program." Harris averaged 17 points a game during his junior season at Santa Monica, which is rated as one of the top four teams in the Los Angeles League. He scored 35 rebounds and averaged 4.5 assists a game. He was named by Street and Smith magazine as an honorable mention All-American last season. Santa Monica head coach Cliff Hunter said Harris could play two positions in college. Because of his leaping ability, Harris can play close to the basket, or 20 feet from the goal. "Pound for pound, Keith had to be one of the top players in the nation." Hunter said. "He would be rated by all. He's been ranked if he had gone to summer camps. "He's got a great attitude and is one of the hardest workers I have ever had. Keith's an excellent dribler and a great leaper. He has the potential to be one of the best players I have ever coached." Instead of attending a summer basketball camp, Harris competed for Santa Monica on a team that finished 35-2. Guelder averaged 13.5 points and nine rebounds last season. Steve Simons, Guelder's head coach, said Guelder was a big guard with good court vision and he loved to give the assist. Last season Charleston High School finished 24.3, and Guelder scored 1.7 grade point average on a 8.0 scale. Like Harris, Coyne was named to Street and Smith's honorable mention All-America team last season. He was also named to the first team All-Denver metro team. Denver West head coach Bob Caton said Coyne, who averaged 23 points and nine rebounds a game last year. Cohen was not alone outside depending on the team's needs. "Like most high school kids, he needs to work on his rebounding and defense, but he has the talent." NU, OU steadfast in changing world The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — In this fickle word of unending change, give thanks for the steadfast Big Eight football race. Volcanoes and governments may blow their tops. And technological advancement may double and re-double every couple of years. But the Big Eight never changes. It already has Oklahoma, Oklahoma, Oklahoma and New York. This Saturday in Norman, the Sooners, ranked No. 7 last week but certain to move up this week, will meet the No. 2 Huskers at home in what will likely be the Big Eight title game. True, Oklahoma State is still alive in the 1985 title chase. But after mopping up on the opposition Saturday, the perennial powers in Lincoln, Neb., and Norman, Okla., seem no closer than ever to being dislodged from their positions of dominance. Oklahoma State's lone conference loss was back in October to Nebraska. And the Cowboys could claim a share of the title if Oklahoma beats Nebraska and then loses to Oklahoma State a week later. Nebraska applied its annual thrashing to the inexplicably inept Kansas Jayhawks Saturday, finally settling for a 56-6 trumpb. Oklahoma's overpowered defense gave Colorado a taste of Top 10 football by recording a 31-0 shutout of the Buffers. Tennis team beats Arkansas Of the Kansan sports staff Bv Heather Fritz Last year, thanks to a little bad weather, the Kansas women's tennis team lost to Arkansas twice in two days. Kansas and Oklahoma were to play dual matches against Arkansas in Fayetteville, Ark., but because of the weather, the Sooners didn't show. Arkansas' coach asked the Jayhawks to play a second time, and for some reason, KU coach Scott Perelman agreed. Kansas lost 4-5 twice. "We couldn't have been more depressed with life at that moment." Perelman said vesterday. On Saturday, the Jayhawks got their revenge. Kansas beat Arkansas 5-4 for the first time in the four years Perelman has been here, leaving Oklahoma State as the only team in the midwest region that Kansas has not beaten at least once. Kansas also beat Southwest Missouri State 9-0, losing only one set along the way. "To beat Arkansas really means we're going places," said KU's Tracy Treps, who won two singles and two doubles matches this weekend. "This has given us a boost to say we can beat these teams regularly." Marie Hibbard also won two singles and two doubles matches for Kansas. Treps and Hibbard won the three sets in three sets after going up 6-0, 5-3. After leading 5-3 in the second set, Treps and Hibbard lost 6-7. In the third set, the Arkansas team pulled even at 4-4 before the Jayhawks broke their serve and won the set 6-4 and the match. Kansas led 4-2 after the singles matches but foundered in doubles "Everyone played the singles matches with a lot of intensity," Hibbard said. "The doubles were a different story." Against Southwest Missouri State, Parr and Inman lost a set in doubles to Helena Olin and Tracy Williams but won 2-6, 6-2, 6-1. In six singles matches, Kansas lost only 19 games. Perelman called the doubles the worst he had seen the team play. "Our doubles was terrible," he said. "We played the best singles as a team that I've ever seen. I could not understand the letdown we had in doubles. We know how to play doubles and it has usually been our strength." In singles against Betsy Meacham of Arkansas, Christine Parr saved two match points to pull out a 2-8, 7-6, 6-3 victory. Barb Inman also won in singles, defeating Helana Norrby 6-2, 2-6, 1- Other NFL scores p.11. The defending 49ers' victory, combined with the first-place Los Angeles Rams' second straight loss, moved San Francisco, 6-5, within three games of the Rams. 49ers defeat Kansas City 31-3 Team vies for place in top 20 United Press International The Kansas women's swim team strengthened its case for a top 20 ranking with two victories in dual meet the weekend in Robinson Natoratum. The most convincing evidence came Friday night when the women easily defeated No. 5 Southern Illinois, 67-46. Saturday the Jayhawks completed the sweep by swimming past Wyoming 64-39. "The Rams helped us by losing once again. They still have to play us and the Raiders. Six-and-five is not a great record, but we have a lot of games left." "Hopefully, this will help make us competitive again," he said. "The season isn't over yet. There are still five games left." San Francisco coach Bill Walsh also was talking confidently about the future. "Anything can happen now," 49ers wide receiver Drew Clark. Said San Francisco quarterback Joe Montana threw two touchdown passes and ran for another. Montana, who has struggled this season, completed three of his touchdowns and two touchdowns before leaving the game early in the fourth quarter. The Chiefs lost their club-record seventh straight game and fell to 3-8. San Francisco wasted little time increasing its 17-3 halftime advantage. On the 49ers' first drive of the second half, Montana directed the team 72 yards to a score on a 22-yard pass to Clark. "I don't know if concerned is the right word." Kansas City coach John Mackovic said, "I don't know if frustration is the right word. We are a team that has had a lot of things go against it." Lendl edges Becker to win tournev By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff LONDON — Ivan Lendl upheld his No. 1 world ranking against the latest challenger to the crown when he edged past West German Boris Becker in the second round of a four-day win to the $75,000 Grand Prix tournament at Wembley Arena. "We are a top 20 team, there is not a shadow of a doubt," head coach Gary Kempf said of his unranked team Saturday. "I don't care if anyone else thinks so, just as long as we know it." Lendl, the U.S. Open champion, took three hours 46 minutes to beat the 17-year-old Wimbledon title holder, 6-7 (6-8), 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, in an exhilarating match that brought out United Press International He admitted that he missed a golden opportunity when he was ahead 4-3 in the fourth set and had Lendl at 0-30 on his serve. "I had a big chance, and maybe I got tired in my head," the West German said. "I had my mental down at the end of the fourth set. He was "I think it was a great match over the five sets, my best match so far. I don't think he can play any better than Jake. He's better. Becker, ranked fifth in the world." the best in both players. The 25-year-old Czech's hot streak started with an overrule by umpire Richard Kaufman of Seattle, Wash. He gave Lendil a—his sixth and last of the match — against the line judge's call, and Lendil then took the next seven points. down, but he somehow got 4-4 and broke me and started to fly. "He played three games like I never saw a guy play before to go 6-4 and 1-0 (in the fifth set)." The victory over Southern Illinois was the first ever for Kansas. The Jayhawks have never lost a dual meet at home in Kempf's 10 years as coach. Kempf said he reminded the women of those two facts during the week, and Susan Spry, who won the 200-yard freestyle and anchored the medley relay team, said the talk definitely inspired the swimmers. "It it put a lot of pressure on me when I found out we had never lost a dual meet at home." Spry said. "But it also got me excited to swim." Kempi said the rankings came out once a month, and wins over Southern Illinois, No. 15 Texas A&M, and Nebraska and a narrow loss to No. 8 Southern Methodist should propel the Jayhawks into the top 20. Kansas won nine of the 13 events, including the first five against Southern Illinois. Tarn Gaulen won three events for the Jayhawks while Tammy Pease and Marcie Herrold each won two. Kempf also said the men's team continued to make progress as the team became stronger. "Taryn swam the best 200 fly I have seen in a long time," Kempf said. THE BOARD Gaulian swain the third leg of the winning 400 medley relay, and she collected individual winn in the 200 medley compete Medley and the 200 butterfly. Erin Waugh/KANSAN KU's Lori Spurney executed a reverse dive off the three-meter springboard Saturday during the dual meet with Wyoming and Drury College at Robinson Natatorium. by winning both ends of a double dual Saturday over Wyoming and Drake. Wyoming defeated Drury in the third portion of the double dual. Friday the Jayhawks lost to No. 7 Southern Illinois 61-33. "We're becoming a better team by swimming against teams like Southern Illinois and SMU." Kempf said. "I still need to get something in our back yard, so we got two wins and that should help our progress." Mike Prangle won the three-meter diving with a score of 310.95 and qualified for the Zone D National Diving Qualifying meet next spring. The top four divers from each zone in both the one and three-meter events advance to the National Collegiate Athletic Association championships. "I think it's good to qualify early because the pressure is off of me, and I can work on new dives." Prangle aid. In addition to Prangle, Kemp said Kansas also got strong performances from Chuck Jones, Chris McCoal, Chris Cook, Glenn Trammel and Brian Sanders against Wyoming and Drury. 1 10 University Daily Kansan Classified Ads The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 8.25 10-20 2.90 4.25 6.00 9.30 21-29 3.20 4.75 6.75 10.30 For every 5 words add: 304 $ 754 1.05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. Classified Display ... $4.40 one column each Classified display advertisements can be only one width wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum height is one inch. No reviews allowed in classified displays. No overbusts allowed in classified display ads. POLICIES - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement - Decide if 14 p.m. - 2 working days prior to visit - Note state on competitive day insert - Words set in ALE CAPS count as 2 words. * Words set in BOLD MCE count as 1 words. * Deadline is 5 m - 2 workings given prior FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only. - Bind box ads - please add a $4 service charge. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed - Checks must be company all classified ads mailed to The University Daily Kalman - until credit has been established * Tear sheets are not provided for classified or - Classified displays ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount FOUND ADVERTISINGMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period exceeding three days. These ads can be placed on your website or social media. - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to publication of advertising correct insertion of any advertisement * No refund on cancellation of pre-paid classified ANNOUNCEMENTS Apenbein 814 SUA Travel is going to be beautiful Appen Colorado Jan 4-11 and you can be there "Trip of the Week" or "Everything, everything, even lift tickets". Sign-up deadline is next week to her. Registration at the SUA of Augusta is free. Monday, Nov. 18, 1985 News and Business Staff Positions Rent: $10.00 * T color: $8.00 * m ome: Smarty's TV 14rd: dr24 643-7531. Sat: March 9-10: Sun 14rd: dr24 643-7531. The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Monday, December 2, 1985. The University Daily Kansan is an Awarded University Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry. from Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight 814.49 Rent-VCR with 2 wdrs, 834.4751 Mon. 9:30 - 9:60, Sun. 1-5 Hillel לולאה Lunch 11:30-1:30 Alcove C Wed., Nov. 20 Rachel Weinberg The American Israel Public Affairs Committee will speak on political organization on campus CREDIT CARD GUARANTEED To Working STUDENTS. 100% Approved.charge $850. Pay $21. MasterCard, MasterCard, Card, Box Card, 5900, Shawnee, Oklahoma 74902. Forget "Forgit." The Answer is GRAPHINE. Forget "Forgit." The Answer is GRAPHINE. Paid Staff Positions Editor, Business Manage The Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester Editor and Business Manager positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Tuesday, November 19. FOR RENT 1 Bedroom apt, close to campus "101/mo" plus utilities, call 841-4440. 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. THINKING OF A LONG TERM RELATIONSHIP and wanting it to work? Then come to a special event at the Iowa State University campus 7:39 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room, Kansas University Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Center. VIDEOPAPTS OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT SERIES SRIES, November 2013 ENHANCEMENT SERIES SRIES, November 2013 Language Study Skills, 3-To-Tune Management FREE! Register to attend at the Student Center. You are tired of living in a dorm! Come and live at the campus. It's a place to relax and at home. Flip away, baise room for next week. Beautiful, Spacious, Mendowbrook apartment for sub-tenant to carman. Great view, pool, ten-bedroom. **REQUISITION:** Cooperative living lowers your expenses while expanding your mind. Room available at Rainbow House for $110/month. Call 843-7978 (after p. 11) to become part of our moving environment Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 842-418-4185. ecent location one bedroom studio basement apartment equipped kitchen low utilities at 1800 Furnished rooms from $100 with some utilities paid. Two bedrooms from Kansas Union. No pets. LIVE HERE!! Two bedroom, fireplace, dishwasher, close to campus, low utilities, Sunrise Place 10 C. $750/month. Call 749-0463 or '987 (office). Luxury townhouse, 2 bedrooms, 1/2 baths, garage fireplace, deck, selenium window. Pave staircase. Flat-paned windows. SINHLEASE **Gatehouse Apartment**, 268 Northwest Street, Seattle, WA 98104. See website through May 25. Or ask Sarah for a detailed description. HEATHERWOOD VALLEY: THANKGIVING SPECIAL, NOVEMBER HEN'S GIFT: one & two apartment apartments have CA, gas heat, DF, PFREFR. Energy efficient and on bus route. Bk4-834 754 Nice Rooms $135.00 Usl. Paid. 942-4736 after 5 p.m. Non-Smoking female roomate for spring semester. 2 bibs and 2 bath. 1/2 rent and 1/2 roommate. Room is private. Rooms for rent on the hull 1/10 mule from Union. $95 and $123. Call 841-6495. SUBLEASE. 1 bedroom Ap. On Bus Route and Close to Campus. Fits 3 Comfortable. Village Suite. Spacious two bedroom unfurished townhouse for rent close to campus. Includes garage, 1/3 bath, balcony and new carpeting. Very comfortable and available as early as Dec. 1.栋号: 740-7048. Spring semester opening for male at Nassimah Hal. Immediate reply needed. L749-7091. Sublease at semester. Large, new 2 bedroom. block from Union. Call 843-3228 Sublease 2 BR. Available from January. Close to campus. Furnished 1800 negotiable. After 6 p.m. (Monday). **Call** 954-783-6356. Sublease 1 bedroom furnished apartment, Tangapple Angle Apt. close to campus Call office: 080-746-3255 Wanted: Roommate to house with four owns. Own bedroom, $25 per room, clear room. Call 916-472-0808. MASTERCAFT AFFECTS a completely furnished two-bedroom apartment available immediately also buy subleases on 1, 2 and 3 bedroom units. Call us at (850) 749-9415 or KA114-1212, 850-749-9415, or KA114-1212. ENTERTAINMENT LOST/FOUND Dance to live fiddle music! Jayawhern Olderine Bardamone Company. Make your next party unforgettable. Last — Gold add a bead necklace near Stauffer— no space. Sentiment value Cal Bridge 840-392-6556 Lent Heart Shaped Amethyst Ring with 14 Diamonds, at Rohmston Hospital, Please call 864-145-1. Found. At Romanticists館, a gold class ring w/darlandon. From Pleasant Ridge 1883. Call Found - gold necklace in front of Watson Library Call to identify 864-4715 K U. I. D, with bus pass on it, lost on campus. Reward Call Melaleu at 864-6204 HELP WANTED Door to Door Subscription SaleSurvey. 2-3 eve- nings per week 5:00 8:30 $4 per hour plus commis- sion for students and moonghoppers. Call 749-8901 MANPOWER TEMPORARY SERVICES FOOD Drivers Wanted, must be able to work late night Applies. Apply in person at Pizza Piazza, 436 West 58th Street, New York, NY 10027. LADIES TIME, Quartz Digital Amosol. Watch in the room and call 785-961-3200 or 100/weekday. If found please contact the office at 740-861-3200 or 100/weekday. STUDENT HELP NEEDED. General labor and skilled trades assistants. Must be able to work 8-10 nite or 1-5 p.m. Contact Colleen Wien, Student Hearing Maintenance Shop. 204 W. 18th St. Babyssiter needed in my home for all home basketball games. Top pay for responder, mealtime and care. **STUDENT HELP NEEDED.** Clerk Typist available to work half days, either morning 8-12 or 9-14 on afternoons 1, 3. Monday through Friday. Ten key adding machine, math skills and good telephone skills required. Light Typing Contact shown. ZW 101. Light Typing Maintenance shown. ZW 101. 857-307-6077 INTERSHIP OPEN: KANASS RURAL CENTER, a non-profit research, education, and training center focused on natural resource and rural issues, is offering a one year full time internship involving research in "Alternative Agriculture the Possibility of Success," Degree, writing and research skills required. $900/mo. Send resume and writing sample to M. Kanass Rural Center; 284 Fruit, Whiting, Kc 65528. Tuesday - Thursday, babysitter: needed. Call 827-9766 Volunteer Position: Are you interested in heading the public relations program for a major education institution? Please indicate your interest to Chairperson for Student Union Activism at Thursday November 21st, interviews will be held on Tuesday November 24th. RESEARCH ASSISTANT - WESTERN CIVILIZATION SCHOOL, Director of Western Civilization Program in the investigation and evaluation of educational materials audiovisual, textbooks, videos, etc. Position will be for six months of the program. Position will be for six months of August 15, 1986. Position requires a Baccalaureate degree. Prefer academic background in education or related field. Western Civilization, and some evidence of reference/library research skills. Salary is $240 a month. Part-time mornings, must be 21. Apply in person. Koal Temple浇筑, 1045 PHD, EOE. Wanted—Church Musician. Gospel/Contemporary/Sacred Student/adult Interest,尝聘 841-6636 or 841-7107 M-F. Salary commensurate with ability. *Study-Work Hourly Position available with Bureau of Child Research. 10-20 hrs. per week. Office assistant position, up-dating computer information, data collection, photocopying, distribution of mailing information and filing. Must have good organizational skills and knowledge of computer entry and good typing skills necessary. Complete application at AA 313 Bristol Terrace (Meadowbrook) by Nov. 18, 1985. PERSONAL Female Age A.M. 7-30:12:00; P.M. 10-12 weekends also 749-0288 cal, slender, slightly-balding, l a student of second year class,畏惧 air-jet沸, social drinkers, adamant about tits and titties, titties and curvacious blonde that takes a drink and "likes to have" fun, reply law school obblique Freshman male, 18, tall, curly hair, knives everything, looking for the perfect movie movies. Must have deluxe model VCR with extensive movie collection for FUN parties. Send response to 119 212-565-4700. 1. A loud, discordant noise 2. a hangover 3. a state of depression or bewilderment. WORD OF THE WEEK katzenjammer (kat sen jum iu) n Thank you Jude. Jude for favors granted. Three Our Favorite Favors have not been known yet. Public malt must be not known yet. Public malt Brought to you by: Margarita Council of New Hampshire YO ARE NOT ALONE. Lebian/gayi peer counselors. For referral call 814-2345 or 869-301. Sponsored by Headquarters & GLSOK. Funded by Student Senate. SINGLES... Results Effective. Join hundreds of prescreened quality adults looking for sincere companionship. 1/2 price for women under 40 and 35 plus. No fees. 842-7944, No obligation. New Connections Video in Lawrence is an offspring of New Beginnings Video in Kansas City. Holdings are coming to give yourself the best gift ever. Not an Exec Service Team (with RID) get a FREE membership. BUS.PERSONAL $10-$500 Weekly Up Mailing Circulars? No. Sincerely interested! See rn self-addressed envelope: Success, PO Box 470CEG, Woodstock, IL 60098. A SKT CULTUR RISING! Skateboards & Accessories QUALITY STUFF ONLY mitiant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa I.D. and of course, faxing your resume to us. So we get your computer's on straight. Computer Repair - AlphaMega Computer Services. UPTOWN BICYCLES 1337 Mass. 749-0636 > Amyx Barbershop 842 / 1 Mass. welcomes all students. Full-time barbers, regular hair cuts, grooming services. Brake? Not enough money for college? You could be making out on thousands of dollars in financial aid. The National Bank of America of "A" Comprehensive Guide to Financial Aid (www.nationalbankofamerica.com) International 10255 Metcalfe Su 396, Belray Airport International 10255 Metcalfe Su 396, jewelry posters THE MUSEUM SHOP rocks hooks Check Us Out MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Union's recording of the day's entrees & soups. Museum of Natural History (next to KS Union) COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE- s and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidential assured. Greater health area (Call for appointment) 913-345-1400 reduced prices on some merchandise A All remaining T-shirts $4-$4.75 YOU for that special someone CAN HEAD THE PUBLIC RELATIONS PROGRAM FOR A MAJOR CAMPUS ORGANIZATION! CORPORATE COACH' Call 841-LIMO for Chauffeur Driven LIMOUSINES For Any Occasion. 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 1-5 Sun. **LOAT CONNECTION** - 14th E. 6th St. 748-0771 *bastarder and Vitae.* - frustrated with red tape? Use your Common Health insurance for Students. Short-term and long term available. Call bullet insurance. ten* '19, Color T V $ 20.80 a month; Curtis fatters t W 47 W zrnd 423-5751; Mon - Sat, 10-3 10-3 Apply now for Public Relations Chairperson for Student Union Activities by picking up an application at the SUA Office. Deadline for applying is Thurs., Nov. 21 at noon. Five minute interviews will be held that evening beginning at 6 p.m. Keep Warm with wool top coat hats, gloves and wraps. Shop 732 Main 843-6011 EVERY DAY EVERY DAY Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic caps, etc. for an upcoming event. We can also provide price aware on imprinted specialties plus other apparel items from our talented arrivals. 201 W 54th (Bendib Globe) Modeling and theater portfolio - shooting new movies, calls for information, Begins Studio 749 6131 New from California. Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure: 316-284-3742, PQ Box 362. Westitch, WA; the man's Monday. KU Representatives needed. Opportunity for all single girls age 18-23 Separately for come and ask me 9-14 at Burdon Union League 3. (Look for opportunity sign.) Rent '19* T. Color V-T $9.96 an month. Smarty's TV. 144 W.扎丁 842 7531. Mon-Sat. 9:30-10:00. Sun. 147 W.扎丁 842 7531. Mon-Sat. 9:30-10:00. Sun. 147 W.扎丁 842 7531. Mon-Sat. 9:30-10:00. Sun. THE PERFECT DATE... In our private hot tub! $5.00 off Regular $15.00 Includes FREE Includes FREE BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-8421. - Stereo HARPER - Optional Movie Rental LAWYER - Cable TV or WINTEIN BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs ski resort, West Tahoe. Call 609-724-5180; Island and Danaheim Beach from 1999; Hurry, surchase Sankshus tour (for more information toll free) tourists? TAOYI! When your winter break is over, call 609-724-5180. Thousands of R & R A Rumhain - 22 orders. Also col. thousand of R & R A Rumhain - 19 orders. Quidelines 81, N.Hambridge Hampshire, Buy, Sell, Trade, Sell, Buy, Sell. EUROPEAN SUNTANNING MOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA + HOLIDAY PLAZA PHONE 841-6232 - LOOK OUT LAWRENCE! THE KU KONNECNTO found a system of dating which works. COMPUTER DATING with a personable touch. THE KU KONNECNTO has it!! It find out about us by simply sending $2.00 to a self-addressed email address and then logging in. P.O. BOX 1853, LAWRENCE KS 60644 Camera Repair now at One Hour Photo, Southern Hills Malls, 841-795 FOR SALE 749-0117 **THEME & THEIS OUTLINED - enhanced with** library RE, SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising Victor Clark. 842.8200 MATH TUTOR - Bob Means holds an M. A. math from K U. where 102, 126, 116 and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professional students at 8:45 AM. statistics for 40 per 40 minute session - Bk 84-903 822. 1983 Dodge Cold Deluxe, 4 speed overdrive, A/C/M 1985 Dodge Cold Deluxe, Excellent condition, Great Gas Mileage 842-7682 PC INTEGRATION. The most compatible at the lowest price. Fully guaranteed. Systems starting at just $499! Hard disk special: 30 MB in storage, installed and tested, full year guarantee. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. B41-5716 Haircuts $7, perm $8 at Channels. Contact Chris @channels.com for appointments. SERVICES OFFERED ALPINE 7123 Car stereo present FM -AM cassette, great features, 841-561 one 9 a.m. STADIUM BARREER SHOP, 1833 Manassasauette, downtown. all haircuts. No appointment. (215) 641-7700. www.stadiumbarreershop.com BANKRUPT LAMPS. Buy out of a lifetime! 98 BANKRUPT LAMPS. Buy out of a lifetime! Your choice #10. Open to the public everyday! Midwest Furniture and Watered Liquors. 78 Nes Hampshire, Lawrence, RS: Outside in RS & RS: Inside in RS. Baseball cards and sports montagnal. Buy, Sell W 81.2 W 83rd Street. Open 10 M-5 S. W 81.2 W 83rd Street. CARPET 1/5 for the price of new, 15,000 square yards to charge from. Big Bob Uvides Carpet Shop. Bedding Closeout. A leading manufacturer has discontinued several covers. They offered us this one time special at below wholesale price. While we are pleased to offer these TERMS AVAILABLE. Open 7 days! Midwest Furniture and Waterbed Liquidators '78 New Rentals and Waterbed KS. RU-92-423. Outlets in RS, MG & WC CARPET 35,000 square yards in a rainbow of color and size. Big Rock's Used Carpet. 728 New York Ave. FREE KITTEN. Must part with beautiful long-hair cat. Very affective. Lifecert trained at www.ncpss.org Comic Books, Penthouses, et al. Comic Books, 14 Tue-Fri. Sat & Sun 10-51 New Hampshire Fender Jaguar guitar $757/best offer. Beginner's drum set, some hardware, make offer. 842-0324 For Sale, 14 X 70 Mobile Home. why throw your money on rent when you can have equity when you graduate? 2 bdmrs. l bath home is perfect for roommates or young family For Sale - Large weight set, bench, graphic equalizer, 11' BW TV. Call 789-4234 anytime. Student, Season Season basketball ticket, call 749-5667 Marv GOVEMENT HOMES from $(1$/uPure). Also GEHV (874) for information GEHVG74 for information to operate $900 best offer Mark 844-6251. One student season basketball ticket for sale - best offer; Alvarez account (cutaway) guitar (Christmas!) 844-6247 Exx Era F320 for intormat A Great for campus easy in over 8000 miles offer Mark 844-6251 STEREO) JVC system w/casette deck, tuns, mains, cable. Antenna still good; will go on sale m. odd. 841-359-700 p.m. Student Season Basketball Ticket for sale. Best offer. Call after 5. keep trying. B42-1436, John. Sylviaana CD player, made in Belgium Value $310, selling for $185. B42-3236 THE MOST COMPATIBLE American PC/TC Computer from $955. Full year warranty, Authorized Dealer, Distributor. Think Micro, Inc. 823-535 Box 3995, Lawrence, KS 60944. Tired of looking everywhere for QUALITY TIRES & WHEELS at reasonable prices? Well, you don't have to worry! These brands are at our everyday low prices (comparable with MAIL-ORDER). In come and check out the selection. The mattress is a gold mattress, ten gallon Aquarium set-up HP 41 Printer, sterno system. B84 435698 Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make a class preparation. 3. For exam preparation, class preparation. 3. For exam preparation, Analysis of Western Civilization' available now in The Jayhawk Bookstore, and Read Bookstore. VAMAHA Stereo Receiver, 50 watts, Digital Speaker, Tuner and Spatial Expander 725. Call 841-6398 or www.vamaha.com Collector Stamp, Mint and used. U.S. Europe and more. Open to土孕皂, not miniatures. Refundable. AUTO SALES THE FAR SIDE BLOOM COUNTY 165 Mustang. Burgandy with cream interior, 4 speed, A/C, great shape, $2,490. Procter McNichol MK7 1969 Rammer American Runs great. Stereo cassette with equalizer. No rust. $490, Call us 942-3179 1951 Flat 131. Rebuilt engine, runs good. $75-$150. 1973 MAVERICK, it runs, $200 or best offer. 849-5128 157 Fat 11:1. Rebuilt engine, runs good %40% 1973 Dodge F-10A 4 Speed 4.250 Prestom 697 1973 Dodge F-10A 4 Speed 4.250 Prestom 697 Call No. 841-6097 Toyota Celica, 5-seat A/C stereo $2,999. 1983 Maul GLC, 2 door, HB. 5 speed, FWD, rear defender, highway mileage $9000. *Can afford both car and school anyone—must sell car as soon as possible.* 749-7532 1975 Pontiac Bonneville, excellent condition, two days Mint. Very as soon as possible. Best offer available. 1869 Plymouth Aire 5 Speed AM-FM Cassette 1875 Preston McCall 64-8067 1982 Chevrolet Chevette. dark blue metallic, dark california A/c £2 096.00 Preston M. Call 81-649-707 Is it True you Can Buy Jeep for 444 through the facts (odds) or the facts (odds)? 1- 413-8251-BI, BNX 294 TYPING 1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable furniture. Indu. 839-7945 SPRING GRADS Owain a new Mercury Cougar now and make no payments until after graduation. Applicable on any Ford-Mercury product Call 843-607-957, Ask for Brandon Braitschie. 78 Buck Regal Limited 74.990肌 AP, CB, PB 82 Buck Regal Limited 62.990肌 Cloth Interior $2990 18 Buck Regal Limited 82.990肌 Cloth Interior $3990 openable, accurate, professional, WORD PROCESSING These, dessertations, papers, books, etc. Data Word 841-0720 A. L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers, pages 842-8575 after 3: 30. 24-Hour Typing All day, all night Resume, dissertation, papers. Close to campus. Best quality and fastest service 841-306. THE WRENCHS ON A MAY SUBJECT OF SUDEN? IT IS MY AND UNIMPLIED THEM IMPORTANCE. OWN! BUSINESS a1. Quality and训泰 A-1 professional typing. Term papers. Theses. Dissertations. Resumes, etc. Using IBM SelectR. Reasonable. 842-3246. Kansan Classifieds 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 Get Something Going! A-Z Wwordprocessing Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage, available. 843-1850 EAT Fresh of g Pasta salad The Italian Nice biscuits Custard dason 11-18 Absolutely LETTER PERPECT Word processing, typing and bookkeeping IBM-OS 6.4 M-F same day service data 444 Illinois 844 Illinois Gash. And carry. By GARY LARSON Cash in on shopping convenience without ever leaving home, and carry savings one step further. Many classified ads are placed near the store you want to value on you. Take advantage of quality merchandise at an affordable price with the best deals of shopping at home—read classified. $ \textcircled{2} $ 1985 Universal Press Syndicate "Whoa! This just looks like regular spaghetti ... Where's my earthworms Alfredo?" BETWEEN NOW AND 7:15 PM. DRAFT PLEASE DIAL: 1 1-800-555-6001 IF YOU HAVE AN INVOKED MODEL 1-800-555-6002 IF YOU PREFER THE OLD CLASSIC MODEL, ON 1-800-555-6003 THE ENGINEERED PART REDUCTION, WITH OR WITHOUT A HOOD, should BE UP WITH BRIANGRAN SHREVE RAINESH AND FORM A REPRESENTATION TICKET TO MOOSE. WHEN YOU REACH ON YOUR CHANCES, YOUR WILL BE INSTANTLY REGISTERED, AT WHICH TIME MESSAGES GROUND HERE WILL MANYTEAMED GIRL 'SORRY,' YOUR MOM, OR FRIEND WHO FOOLS THE PHONE TO WHAT INCOMING US WE FOR THE FAIL by Berke Breathed TOMORROW WELL RELEASE THE RESULTS. OFFICIAL SAFEBOARD 1 MY I WANT YOU THE FEELING THAT PEDROCITY THE NUMBER ASTINETICS? MAKE AN EXPLORE COMMUNICATION? 企鹅 Monday, Nov. 18, 1985 Sports University Daily Kansan 11 Classified Ads AAA TYPING/842-1924 Class papers, on- respondence, legal briefs. Law review articles typed by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in b p.m. out by 10 m. same day. All kinds of Typing GOOD IMPRESSIONS Fast. 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Disk storage Responsible Call Mary 8437446 or Mary 8437446 PROFESSIONAL tytpist with 13 years experience Fast, accurate, and reliable CalGap Pegs after a few months. QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resume, applications. Spelling corrected c:IO Wordprocessing CONSCIENTIUOUS c:IO Wordprocessing CONVENIANT Will accept rtu TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254 EXPERIENCED TYPINT. Term papers, theses IBM Correcting Selective. I will correct spelling Phone 843-9544. Mrs. Wright. TOP-NDTCH professional word processing manuscripts, resume, thesis, letter quality print materials the WORDOCTORS - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147 WANTED Business 249 tutor needed. Set your own rate. Call 749 - 6838 Female Roomeat Wanted immediately to share two bedrooms, apt 418 and 423, with a private pool,洗衣机, dryer, air conditioning, close to campus and downtown is on loan. Routing # 8400.00 and half utilities # 8427.98 (use your phone). Female to share two bedroom apartment for spring semester. Close to campus 749-5472 Female with 7 year old son needs roommate immature 842-701 after 6:30 NAISMITH, replacements needed for second semester. Urgent: contact Don or Kurt 749-4919. Need Season Basketball Tickets Price Negotiable. 841-8342 by 6 p.m. Non Smoking, Male Roommate for two-bedroom apartment. Move In January. $150/month. 1/2 utilities. Close to campus. 842-1436. After six. Ask for John. Non-Smoking female roommate for 2 bdrm. apt. Call 843-9509 O. T. student desperately needs female roommate P. O. Student desperately needs female spring roommate. Prefer non-smoker. 842-6881 Responsible and fun-loving female to share somen for the beautiful view and possession of a home on bus route 27. Roomate wanted to share 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 year old appl. Needed for 2nd semester Lab Roommate needed to share fantastic house. $350 plus 1/2 utilities. Close to campus, near busine- sphere. Free WiFi. Applicants must be employed by a local employer. Roommate to share house. Washer and dryer: your own room, on bus route. H44 823-8071. Self-distciplined student to motivate and tutor seventh grade level 13 year old after school. Call Wanted: Female roomite for spring semester. Share half time and halfitutes. Meadowbrook Wanted - Guitarist and/or keyboard player for Mottaband music. Volocal capabilites helpful. Prefer a Master's degree in Music. Wanted: Female roommate for spring semester. 80 bed rent: 185 units, and utility on. Bus room: 176 units. Wanted: Recompute, quiet, non-smoking, respon- sibility desk. Use wb, micro wb, um, util included. wdb wb. Micro wb, um, util included. Wanted: female roommate, now or spring season. Requires househouse #125/mo plus 1/2 utilities. 842-842-6432 Wanted - non-smoking female roommate to large apartment. Can move in any room. No pets. Unbeaten Bears capture division title In Irving, Texas, Richard Dent and Mike Richardson returned interceptions for touchdowns, keynoting an overwhelming defensive effort that delivered Chicago a 44-0 victory. Dallas held the NFC Central Division of the NFC Central Division. It was the Bears' first triumph over the Cowboys in 14 years, the first shutout of Dallas in 15 seasons and the most lopsided loss in Cowboys history. NFL Roundup Chicago rolled to its 111th victory despite playing without quarterback Jim McMahon and with leading rusher Walter Payton held in check until the outcome was decided. The Bears twice knocked Dallas quarterback Danny White out of the game, once rendering him uncontested in a 40-27 loss. The leeches lock on with a jammed neck. Results of Sunday's other games follow. In tonight's game, the New York Giants play at Washington. Bernie Kosar recovered from a shaky start to direct a 14-point second half, including an 11-yard touchdown pass to Ozzie Newsome and 11 left to help the Cleveland Browns break a four-game losing streak. Browns 17. Bills 7 Earnest Byner's 4-yard run at 12:07 of the third quarter put the Browns ahead to stay as Cleveland improved to 5-6 and Buffalo fell to 9 with its 14th straight road loss. Jets 62, Bucs 28 In East Rutherford, N.J., Ken O'Brien fired four first-half touchdown passes, three to tight end Mickey Shuler, to ignite the New York Jets to a 62-28 rout. O'Brien completed 23-of-30 passes for 367 yards and a personal-best five touchdown throws in three quarters as the Jets racked up their most points ever in a game. New York's Freeman McNeill, the NFL's leading rusher, left late in the first quarter with a bruised right leg. Falcons 30, Rams 14 NFC rushing leader Gerald Riggs ran for three touchdowns and 123 yards to the Atlanta Falcons to an upset over Los Angeles. Riggs, who now has 1.137 yards rushing this season, scored on a 3-yard run 6:03 into the first quarter after the Failures recovered a fumble at the Rams' 17, on a 1-yard run 6:47 into the second quarter, and on another 1-yard run with 1:51 left in the game. In Milwaukee, Lynn Dickey, returning to his starting job after two weeks as a sub, threw for 302 yards and two touchdowns. Packers 38, Saints 14 Dickey completed 22-of-35 passes as the Packers improved to 5-6. New Orleans dropped to 3-8 with its sixth straight loss During the week, Saints coach Bum Phillips said he would quit if he didn't win at least five games the rest of the season. In Houston, Frank Pollard and Steelers 30, Oilers 7 Walter Abercrombie each rushed for more than 100 yards and a touchdown to power the Pittsburgh Steelers to their third straight victory. Quarterback David Woodley sneaked over for a TD and Gary Anderson kicked three field goals as the Steelers raised their record to 6-5, helping them retain at least a share of the NFC Central Division lead. Eagles 24, Cardinals 14 In St. Louis, Earnest Jackson scored on a 51-yard touchdown run and Mike Quick caught two touchdown passes for the Eagles. Cardinals halfback Stump Mitchell rushed for 179 yards on 22 carries and caught four passes for 79 yards and scored two touchdowns for St. Louis. Noel Lomax completed 12-of-20 for 184 yards and was sacked six times. Raiders 13. Bengals 6 In Los Angeles, Marc Wilson hit Marcus Allen with a 7-yard shot, giving the Los Angeles Raiders a 11 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals. Allen, who rushed for 135 yards on 31 carries, was the catalyst in the 12-play. 73-yard fourth-quarter drive. He carried seven times and caught two passes, an 18-yarder on 4th- and 2 from the Cincinnati 31 and the game-winner. In Pontiac, Mich., Eric Hipple threw three touchdown passes, two to David Lewis. Lions 41, Vikings 21 Hipple threw touchdown passes of 4 and 3 yards to tight end Lewis and 5 yards to backfill James Jones. He also handed off to tailback Alvin Moore for a 1-yard touchdown. the victory pushed Detroit, unbeaten in five home games, into second place in the NFC Central Division with a 6-5 record while Minnesota slipped to 4-6. Broncos 30. Chargers 24 In Denver, Louis Wright returned a blocked field goal 60 yards for a touchdown 4:45 into overtime. The first-place Broncos improved to 8-3 and remained one game ahead of the Los Angeles Raiders in the AFC West. San Diego fell to 5-6. Patriots 20, Seahawks 13 In Seattle, Fred Marion returned an interception 85 yards, setting up Steve Grogan's 13-yard touchdown to Irving Fryar which gave New England the victory. New England, 8-3, remained in a first-place tie with the New York Jets in the AFC East, while Seattle fell to 6-5 and faces possibly missing the playoffs. Dolphins 34, Colts 20 In Indianapolis, Dan Marino completed 22 of 75 passes for 330 yards, and Lorenzo Hampton and Ron Davenport each scored two touchdowns to lead the Miami to victory. Miami improved to 7-4 while Indianapolis fell to 3-8 with its fifth loss in six games. JUNKYARD'S JYM JUNKYARD End of Semester Special Join Junkyard’s Jym 8 Weeks only $35.00 Nov. 1-Jan. 1 Nov. 1-Jan. 1 535 Gateway Dr. 842-4966 Specials This Week's Specials Monday Chicken Sandwich French Fries 16 oz. Drink $2.20 Chili Dog Onion Rings 16 oz. Drink $2.00 Wednesday Dbl. Cheeseburger Chips 16 oz. Drink $2.70 Thursday B.B.Q. Beef French Fries 16 oz. Drink Friday Cold Ham & Cheese Chips 16 oz. Drink $1.75 Friday 9-3:30 THE KANSAS UNION Level 2 HAWK'S NEST KU team seesaws to 2-2 tournev finish By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas volleyball team has been on a seasaw all season. It will win one match over a tough opponent or be to a team it should have beaten. Chervl Younablood/KANSAN The same has happened within matches. The Jayhawks will win one game easily then drop the next. This weekend at the Kansas Volleyball tournament, the team won five-five victory over Texas El Camino in a three-game loss to Kansas State. Against Illinois-Chicago yesterday morning. Kansas lost the first two games without winning a point, then came back to take two games before losing in the fifth. Kansas also beat Tula to finish the tournament 2-2. "I'm very concerned with our ups and downs." KU volleyball coach Frankie Albitz said yesterday. "I don't like teams like that because you don't have as much confidence in them." "I saw some good things." Albitz said after the loss. "But they just played better than we did. I hate to say we need more time. They just did some things to us." With the Big Eight conference championships coming up next weekend, this is a dangerous time for Kansas to be seeawing. Albiz said that he would either be hot and upset a good team, or play bad and lose well. Kansas is currently in fifth place The Jayhawks end the regular season with an overall record of 17-14, far better than last year's 5-30. And they could only get better. Kansas lost a lively first game 14-16, then lost the next two games 9-15, 3-15. But Albitz still said she thought it was a better match than when the Wildcats beat the Jayhawks in five games earlier this season. out of six teams in the conference, and will play Missouri if Oklahoma beats Iowa State this week. If Iowa State pulls off an upset of second-place Oklahoma, the Jayhawks will be tied with the Cyclones and will probably play Kansas State. "Now they're playing a collegiate game of volleyball consistently," said Kansas State coach Scott Nelson. "The last couple of years they haven't been. They've made incredible progress. They're going to The loss to the Wildcats was a conference match-up and dropped Kansas to 2-8 in the Big Eight. K-State is 4-5. be a pain next year. I'm not looking forward to that." MASIBA Members of the KU volleyball team watched the last game of Kansas' three-game loss to Kansas State Saturday night in Allen Field House. VOTE VOTE VOTE Student Senate Elections: Wednesday, Nov. 20 Thursday, Nov. 21 Polls Open—8 a.m.-5 p.m. You must vote at the designated location for your school. STRONG SUMMERFIELD LEARNED STAUFFER-FLINT BURGE UNION Officer Nunemaker Liberal Arts and Sciences Graduate Business Engineering Journalism Education Architecture Fine Arts Law Special 2 KANSAS UNION - Don't forget your Student I.D.! Paid for by Student Activity Fee. Pharmacy Social Welfare CLIP AND SAVE 12 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Monday. Nov. 18. 1985 Fine arts dean to step down By Jill White Of the Kansan staff James Moeser, dean of fine arts, has fulfilled most of the goals he set out to accomplish 11 years ago. Now it's time to step down, he says. "It's hard to articulate why I thought it would be the right thing to do at this particular time," said Moeser, who will stay at the University as a full-time professor of music. "But I've met the goals I set out to accomplish, and I think it's better to go out riding the crest of the wave and be remembered as an effective leader." Moeser announced his resignation in February and will leave his post on having been a professor at the University since 1966, Moeser accepted the position of dean in 1975 with a set of goals to accomplish. Those goals included improving the school's image,reorganizing the departments and integrating visual arts more fully into the school's structure. "I had the perception that this was an excellent school, but not too many people in Kansas realized that." Moeser said recently. Moeser wrote a weekly column in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World called "KU and the Arts" to "boost the image of the school using subtle cheerleading and PR attempts. In 1975, when Moeser became dean, the music division of fine arts comprised nine separate departments." That number was narrowed to four in his first year, and later to one department. Just this year, dance moved from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences' department of health, recreation and physical education to the music department of fine arts. "It was a budgetary nightmare then," Moeser said. "It offered no flexibility and heartily favored music because they had more departments than art and design. I think the school is much more democratically open than it was before the department is not favored against the other." Moeser said faculty in art and design may have felt disadvantaged, not only because they had fewer departments, but also because every dean of fine arts had come from the music division. He tried to compensate for that by picking associates from the art and design divisions. Jerry Moore, associate dean of fine arts and professor of design, said it helped to appoint someone from the arts and design division to the associate dean's position. Back in the old days, art and design didn't feel very well represented." Moore said. "When he picked professors from the art and design side, he gave that position a lot of power. The associate dean handles the budget, and art and design feel more fully represented in the dean's office." Moeser came to KU as chairman of the department of organ after receiving a doctoral degree at the University of Michigan. He initiated the doctoral degree program in music. At that time, KU was the only school in Kansas to offer a doctoral degree in music. Moeser also created a fine arts advisory board, Kansas Citizens for the Arts. The board, which meets twice a year, has been an effective fund raising and lobbying group, he said. "When I first became a dean, I experienced a sort of honeymoon," Moeser said. "I probably accomplished more my first year than any other year. I think the job isn't as much fun as it was 10 years ago. in also leaving because I have an honest belief that people in major leadership positions should not stay too long. When they stay too long, you have a beginning of diminishing effectiveness. One can become a total prisoner of the paper flow and never get anything accomplished. "I'd rather be remembered for my effectiveness." THE UNION James Moeser, dean of fine arts, practices the organ every day, but said he would devote even more hours to practice after he stepped down from the dean's position in July. He plans to continue teaching at KU. Jill White/KANSAN MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Come watch the game with Harry! FREE DRINK with any sandwich purchase HARRY BEAR'S CHAPMAN BROWN BOOTLEM when you ask for the Monday Night Football Special! 106 N. Park 749-5246 HARRY BEAR'S CHAGOS MARTIN & BOYLER Leon's Bug Barn Offering Leon's Bug Barn Offering *SPECIAL* 40 pc. combination Socket Set—$6.95 (includes spark plug socket) A COMPLETE LINE OF VW ACCESSORIES STOCK • CUSTOM • COMPETITION Parts • Sales • Service NOW AVAILABLE • Custom Painting and Body Work • Performance Engine. Work on all air cooled Volkswagens Dealer for Pro-Tech Sand Rail Frames 1226 E. 23rd 749-2360. Christmas Bonus. A $15 REBATE on the HP-12C Business Calculator. It's the gift that has no equal for business professionals - like you - in real estate, finance, banking and investments. That's because it has more built-in financial calculating power than any other handheld. And Hewlett-Packard is giving a $15 Christmas bonus on HP-12Cs purchased between November 6 and December 31, 1985. So now's the time to ask for an HP-12C. But if nobody gets the hint, buy the HP-12C for yourself from a dealer who has no equal. reg. $120.00 SALE $95.00 Leon's BugBarn Offering MasterCard Christmas Bonus. 12,345,678.00 HEWLETT PACKARD reg. $120.00 SALE $95.00 KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union KU DOUBLE FEATURE RVCE RVR 2 Movies $14.99 | $14.99 SMITTY'S TV |1447 W. 21-8442-3751 M-S-9:30 a.m. p.M. Sun. 1:5 p.M. Almost 1,000 selections including XXX PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL Free Consultation THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO 745 New Hamshire 841-5796 2 FOR 1 memberships —OR— $10 OFF non-member tanning sessions (as low as $4 per session) EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA * 841-6232 2 FOR 1 memberships —OR— $10 OFF non-member tanning sessions (as low as $4 per session) EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA * 841-6232 Sub & Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! Anyway you want it... you got it! 1618 West 23rd Street Introducing our new Soup of the Day A different soup featured each day Vegetable Beet Chicken Noodle English Clam Chowder Wisconsin Cheddar Cheese Tomato French Onion Cauliflower Cheese Cream of Broccoli Cream of Potato $1.29 12 oz. bowl Soup of the Day (cup) $2.69 & Large Salad Bar Vista RESTAURANTS 1527 W. 6th NEW AT VISTA Sub8Stuff Sandwich Shop Introducing our new Soup of the Day A different soup featured each day Vegetable Beet Chicken Noodle English Clam Chowder Wildcress Cheddar Cheese Tomato Prench Onion Cauliflower Cheese Cream of Broccoli Cream of Potato $1.29 12 oz bowl Soup of the Day (cup) $2.69 & Large Salad Bar Vista RESTAURANTS 1527 W 6th NEW AT VISTA Vista RESTAURANTS 1527 W 6th NEW AT VISTA TAXMEN ONLY DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER Special promotions! Use $90.00 Complete service and parts sales for most foreign cars COMPLETE - VW * VOLVO * SUBARU * MG * DATSUN * MAZDA * TOYOTA * HONDA BOSCH Automotive Parts WBA FULL LINE OF IMPORT CAR PARTS 841-4833 1008 E 12th O O PIZZA Shoppe pub Westridge Shopping Center 6th & Kasold WE DELIVER! 842-0600 MONDAY NIGHT football MONDAYS ONLY! $7 95 King Size Pizza 2 tappings and 32 oz. Pepsi plus tax Mention Monday Night Football Special when ordering and receive extra mozzarella FREE! SUA FILMS ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST DOCUMENTARY THE TIMES OF HARVEY MILK ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST DOCUMENTARY THE TIMES OF HARVEY MILK A Film by ROBERT EPSTEIN and RICHARD SCHMIECHEN A TLC Film International Release - 1964 Tonight!! Nov. 18 at 7:30 $2 Woodruff Aud. A Film by ROBERT EPSTEIN and RICHARD SCHMIECHEN SINCE 1889 Flight for life Helicopter takes to air in program designed to save lives of patients. See page 6. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, NOV. 19, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 62 (USPS 650-640) GOD Cold Details page 3. 100 Mark Mohler/KANSAN 四 Cleaning up Harold Rosson, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, demonstrates the procedure that will be used when fuel from KU's nuclear reactor is removed. Radioactive fuel will be unloaded from the reactor vessel by a South Carolina company and placed on a truck that will deliver the material to the Savannah River, Ga. Department of Energy Reprocessing Plant. Rosson demonstrated the procedure yesterday in the Nuclear Reactor Center, which is next to Learned Hall. Above is a view of the core of KU's nuclear reactor from the top of the reactor center. The reactor will be shut down permanently sometime in December or January. See related story on page 3 for more information. Investigation ends in arrest of KU student The former student, Maurice Posada, 24, was charged with cocaine distribution after appearing before a U.S. magistrate yesterday, said Robert Davenport, special agent of the Kansas City FBI office. A two-year cocaine-trafficking investigation that focused on Lawrence and the KU campus resulted in the arrest Sunday of a former KU student, an FBI special agent said yesterday. Posada was arrested Sunday in Kansas City, Mo., as part of an ongoing investigation that began in June and included the KU campup: By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff "I'd have to say it's continuing behind osseous. The former business was supported by a "We have reason to believe that Posada had brought large quantities of cocaine into the area in the last two years," he said. "Not only Lawrence, but Kansas City as well." Police records list Posada's current home as Miami. KU records indicate that Posada is originally from Bogota, Colombia and that he attended the University of Kansas from 1979 to 1983. More arrests may be made, he said. Posada is being held in the Jackson County, Mo., jail for a detention hearing at 10:30 p.m. Thursday. Bail for the detainee will be set at that time. Davenport said; Duane Acker, president of Kansas State University, also attended the dinner meeting with the governor in Topeka. He said each school was supposed to evaluate the effects of the proposed budget cuts and report them to Carlin. Robin Eversole, director of the office of University Relations, said Chancellor Gene A. Budig had no time to comment on the investigation yesterday afternoon. ment on whether other KU students or administrators were being tested. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said, "I have no personal knowledge that it's a problem here, but I know that it doesn't occur in Lawrence." "Each university will be responsible to the governor on the consequences of the the budget officer's requests." Acker said. "We will emphasize the need to meet the Regents' requests." Budig said his office was compiling an appeal for KU's budget request in response to the budget officer's pro- Davenport said he would not com- "There will be no meaningful economic development without the support and strength of the state to maintain its position and maintains the lead institution in the state." Davenport said the Lawrence Police Department initially began a criminal complaint in Lt. Wayne Schmille of the Lawrence Police Department said he preferred not to provide additional information on the investigation because he was not sure what information FBI officials had made public. Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory said, "I'm aware of the fact an investigation was taking place and an arrest was made." "They were not in on this arrest specifically, but they were involved n the investigation," he said. Carlin calls meeting on budget cuts Posada was arrested at 2 p.m. Sunday near the Ward Parkway Shopping Center after he attempted to sell methadone and cocaine to undercover FBI agents. The investigation, which began in 1983, included a drug trafficking ring that started in Colombia and went to Miami and then Lawrence. The investigation resulted in eight people being indicted for conspiring to distribute cocaine in 1984. He said he told Carlin that the effects of schools, especially the University of Kansas, on the state's economy and development justified the Regents' budget increases. By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff The meeting in Topeka came after the state budget director's announcement Friday that he would chop more than $45 million from the Regents' original budget request. He also deduced more than $9 million from the Regents' lowest alternative budget Gov. John Carlin, prompted by an impending budget crisis for the Kansas Board of Regents, summoned the heads of Regents schools to the governor's mansion Sunday to discuss ways to avoid severe budget cuts, Chancellor Gene A. Budig said yesterday. "The state's existing budget recommendations are unacceptable," Budig said. "They cannot be allowed to stand. See BUDIG, p. 5, col. 1 The discussions were productive, but no specific solutions were reached. Budig said the governor was disappointed to the proposed cutbacks. "The governor wants to help," he said. "He realizes that higher education must play a lead role if the state is to make progress." "It (the Regents' request) is a reasonable budget. It deserves to be considered. We will support the board's recommendations." Star Wars differences resurface at summit United Press International GENEVA — On the eve of their first encounter, President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev agreed yesterday to work on a way to curb the nuclear arms race at their summit, but differences over Star Wars resurfaced. - Sea related story Reagan has written down his own ideas on an arms control agenda and will present them to Gorbachev in their first face-to-face meeting this morning, national security adviser Robert McParlane said. In a brief airport arrival speech, Gorbachev expressed his willingness to work for positive "It will be vintage President Reagan," he added. results and then lit into Star Wars — the popular name for Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative. "First and foremost is the question of what can be done to halt the unprecedented arms race in the world and its extension to new spheres. Gorbachev said in an evident speech on April 21, 1985, Reagan envisions as a space-based defensive shield against incoming nuclear missiles. When asked to reply to Gorbachev's comments, Reagan said, "We both must have the same intention. If he feels as strongly that way as I do, we'll end the arms race." However, Reagan stuck by his Star Wars position — that it is not a bargaining chip in arms control negotiations. The two men will meet first for two hours this morning at the Villa Fleur 'd'Eau, a private chateau on Lake Geneva being used for the meeting the United States will host. A second two-hour meeting will be held this afternoon and the whole process will be repeated tomorrow at the Soviet mission. A top U.S. official said it was probable that the leaders might get together again Thursday before Reagan flies back to the United States to be with his son, Donald, at the McParlane said no decision had been made. Security was tight around the city. Armored cars and tanks sat on the runway at the airport. Soldiers bundled up against the cold and carrying automatic weapons surrounded the mansion where separate but almost identical Swiss military ceremonies were held for the two leaders. Three soldiers standing in the honor guard keeled over from the cold. Gorbachev, accompanied by his wife, Waisa, was greeted at the airport by Swiss President Kurt Furgler in a ceremony similar to the one that met Reagan Saturday — right down to the Persian rugs and yellow chrysanthemums on the speakers' platform. The Gorbachev then drove to the Soviet mission, where they will stay during the summit, and joked with employees in the driveway. As snowflakes started to collect on the brim of his fedora, the Soviet leader brought the employees up to date on news from home and compared the weather. "It's cold here but it's already icy in Moscow," he said. His wife agreed, saying, "It's freezing." Swiss first lady Ursula Furgler gave a tea for Reagan's wife, Nancy, who arrived at the mansion in a mink coat and matching hat. Disinterest common among voters Previous elections show low turnout This is one in a continuing series of stories dealing with Student Senate and the Senate elections scheduled for tomorrow and Thursday. By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff Complete Student Senate elections coverage A higher percentage of students cast ballots in the 1969 Student Senate But since those first elections 16 years ago, the percentage of students showing up at the Senate polls has fluctuated, reflecting a general decrease in the number of students indicating interest in their government. Some KU students, professors and administrators acknowledge the decline in the number of voting students and offer many explanations for it. The explanations include the fewer number of coalitions and candidates running for office, the fewer number of controversial issues and the existence of unconcerned, uninformed students. - One coalition gets help from an outside support group, p. 3. - Campaign nears end as the final debate disintegrates, p. 3. - Common Sense and Chrysalis leaders outline their ideas, p. 4. - Groups, not student government, interest many today, p. 7. - Seventy-five candidates for 58 Senate seats are listed, p. 8. - Polls are open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday. "The number decrease is of concern to me," David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said "I don't know the answers." Amber said he thought the number of students attending the University of Kansas affected voter turnout. He said that the smaller the student body was, the larger the percentage of students that voted. A small student body puts pressure on students No fool-proof remedy for the problem has been found, however. to be "good citizens" and vote. In fall 1969, 17,576 students were enrolled at the University. This semester, 24,446 are enrolled. Ambler also said the number of candidates, coalitions and issues made a difference in the number of students voting. Last year, 17.4 percent of the student body cast ballots — the highest percentage of voter turnout in eight years. David Day, chairman of the Student Senate Elections Committee, said that he didn't expect as high a turnout in this year's elections. “Obviously, the student body in recent years hasn't been as interested in issues as it has been in previous years,” he said. "Last year there were seven coali- tions running," he said. "This year there are only two. This year the candidates are listening to the student body rather than slugging it out over issues." Todd Tumbleson, Omaha seni- sa he said he never voted in a Senate "I haven't ever voted because I don't know anything about the candidates," he said. "I'm not informed and I've never been informed of the importance of it. "It hasn't spurred my interest." it hasn't spurned my interest. Alan Cigler, professor of political science, said interest in student government had decreased because students didn't think Senate policies affected them. "Most students simply don't believe student government is salient to their lives," he said. "The plain fact of the matter is that people are here to get an education. They are also concerned with having a social life. Politics are not high on their list of priorities." Cigler said he thought this was a trend at other universities. In the Big Eight Conference, student body voter turnout ranges from 6.5 to 25 percent: The University of Colorado — Ken Kutzler, elections commissioner for the University of Colorado Student Union, said a turnout of about 18 percent was average. He said 25 percent of the students voted in spring 1984, representing a record turnout. Iowa State University — Keith Stepp, president of the student body government, said voter turnout averaged about 14 percent. He said the 20-percent turnout in 1984 was the highest ever. ■ Kansas State University — Jenny Johnston, secretary of the Student Governing Association of the Student Government at Kansas State, said she had about a 12-percent voter turnout. The University of Missouri-Columbia — Gouy Conway, assistant director of student development, said 12 percent was a typical turnover. He turned out had reached 20 percent only once or twice in the past 10 years. The University of Nebraska-Lincoln — Kelly Kuchta, chairman for the government's liaison committee, said last spring's voter turnout was the highest ever. He said 15 percent of the students voted then. Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, said few students Oklahoma State University — Jon Starr, president of Oklahoma State's Student Government Association, said voter turnout was decreasing. In the 1983 election, 18 percent of the students voted, he said. This year, 6.5 percent of the students voted. The University of Oklahoma Blaine Wesner, president of the University of Oklahoma Student Association, said voter turnout was about 25 percent. Schedules affected by power loss The power failure at Bailey yesterday forced School of Education officials to cancel most classes and reschedule others. Watkins Hospital, however, continued operations with the help of emergency generators. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said yesterday that Bailey Hall, as well as Wakins Memorial Hospital, had lost electrical power Sunday evening because of breakdowns in two transformers. A power failure Sunday night in Bailey Hall couldn't prevent the dawn of another Monday, but it did give students and faculty of the School of Education a day off. By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff Anderson said facilities operation crews were working to install temporary generators that would provide power until the regular transformers could be repaired. The temporary generators in Bailey allowed electricity to come back on by late yesterday evening Anderson said that the generators in both buildings had broken before but that the reasons remained a mystery. Lightning, Anderson said, could have caused the transformers to See POWER, p. 5, col. 1 2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985 News Briefs New York to regain highest building title NEW YORK — Real-estate magnate Donald Trump announced plans yesterday to make New York City once again the site of the world's tallest building — a 150-story skyscraper 216 feet higher than the Sears Tower in Chicago. the building, a triangular-shaped edifice,1,670 feet tall, would form the centerpiece of a "city within a city" in a 13-block area bordering the Hudson River on Manhattan's West Side, he said. Protesters defv order HIANOVER, N.H. — Students demanding the immediate divestment of all Dartmouth College holdings in South Africa defied a school administration order yesterday to dismantle a small shantytown on the college green and built a third shack. More than 200 students rallied on the green before constructing the shanty of scrap wood. Robbers kill worker INDIANAPOLIS — A restaurant manager slain by robbers after volunteering to replace a worker as a hostage may have been shot because he insisted on turning off a freezer where the others were herded, police said yesterday. Dewayne M. Bible, 24, a McDonald's restaurant manager, was shot in the right ear and neck Sunday after he talked two men into leaving five women employees locked in a basement freezer at the restaurant rather than taking one as a hostage. Hendrix discs stolen SEATTLE — Thieves broke into the home of the father of late rock 'n' roll star Jimi Hendrix and made off with five of the singer-guitarist's gold records, police said yesterday. The burglary was reported by James Hendrix, who lives in south Seattle. From Kansan wire reports. Negotiator hopeful for hostages' release United Press International LONDON — Church of England troubleshooter Terry Waite briefed U.S. officials teryday on his efforts to free American hostages from their Muslim captors in Lebanon and headed back to Beirut to pursue his mercy mission. "I am going back to Beirut because I believe there is still hope." Waite told reporters outside Lambeth palace after reporting to Archbishop of Canterbury Robert Runicle. "And that is the message I think I could give to the families of the hostages at this stage. While we're talking, 'I'll keep the momentum going,' said Waite, who returned to London Sunday after a five-day mission to Beirut. A spokesman for Runcie announced that Waite, who said he had built up "a measure of trust" with the hostages' captors, left London's Heathrow airport at 8:40 p.m. for Paris and was expected to board a flight for Beirut this morning. Yesterday, Waite held secret talks with U.S. officials on his mission. A BEIRUT, Lebanon — A statement signed by Islamic Jihad said yesterday that one of four French hostages the terrorist group is holding is "pitifully sick" and warned the French government against stalling negotiations for release of the captives. One French hostage sick, terrorists say United Press International The statement delivered to Western news agencies in Beirut was the first indication the French government was holding behind-the-scene contacts with Islamic Jihad, a Moslem fundamentalist group believed to be holding captive a number of Westerners in Beirut. "It is important for us to explain to public opinion and the French government that one of the French hostages is in a pitifully sick condition that may expose his life to danger in spite of our great and thorough interest in the health of all the hostages and their safety." the Islamic Jihad statement said. The handwritten statement did not say which of the hostages was ailing but warned that the French government would be to blame if anything happened to the captive. "We warn the French government against the consequences of stalling in the current negotiations and hold it fully responsible for what may happen to the hostage as a result of the delay," the statement said. The four French hostages are French Embassy Vice Consul Marcel Fontaine and French Embassy attache Marcel Carton, both kidnapped March 22; journalist Jean-Paul Kaufmann; and Michel Seurat, a researcher in Middle East studies kidnapped May 22. The pro-Iranian Islamic Jihad, which also claims to have the American hostages, is demanding that the United States pressure Kuwait to release 17 comrades jailed in Kuwait for a string of bombings in December 1983 and the French government to stop its support of Iraq against Iran in the 5-year-old Persian Gulf War. U. S. Embassy spokesman confirmed the meeting but would not disclose where they were held and refused to say who Waite talked to or whether he was given any sort of American on BBC television. proposal or reaction to the kidnappers' demands. The shadowy Muslim extremist Islamic Jihad movement says it has at least four of six Americans missing in Beirut. "We're not prepared to make concessions to terrorists. However, we would welcome communication with them and look forward to whatever Mr. Waite has to report," McFarlane said. Waite launched his mission after four of the six American hostages wrote to Runcie asking him to intercede. The signature; on the letter were those of Rev. Martin Lawrence Jenco, a Catholic priest; Terry Anderson, Middle East correspondent for The Associated Press; hospital administrator David Jacobsen and university Dean Thomas Sutherland. Two other Americans, four Frenchmen, a Briton and an Italian who were kidnapped in a spate of abductions of foreigners that started in March 1984 are still missing. Waite has on previous missions helped secure the release of Britons held in Iran and Libya, and American hostage the Rev. Benjamin Weir from Beirut in September. Rare storm buffets Florida "Our policy has not changed." U.S. National Security Advisor Robert McFarlane, in Geneva for the superpower summit, said in an interview United Press International MIAMI — Hurricane Kate, a 100-mph late-season odor, barreled westward between the Bahamas and Cuba yesterday. Forcasters issued a hurricane warning for southern Florida and urged Florida Keys residents to evacuate. At the same time, the Bahamas government posted hurricane warnings throughout the 700-island chain. a special advisory, ordered hurricane warnings posted on Florida's Atlantic coast from Jupiter southward through the Keys and northward on the Gulf coast to Fort Mvers. Dr. Neil Frank, the director of the National Hurricane Center, said late reports from an Air Force plane indicated Kate might take a more northerly path, and for that reason he ordered hurricane warnings for southern Florida. The National Hurricane Center, in "If the center crosses the coast or Keys, tides of 4 to 7 feet above normal can be expected along and to the right of the center," forecasters warned. Forecaster Noel Risenychok said Kate's threat to Florida was unusual at this time of the year. "We've never had one hit the U.S. mainland this late in the season, but that doesn't mean this one won't." Rismychok said. Soldiers patrol buried village The Associated Press BOGOTA, Colombia — Soldiers patrolled the town of Armero with orders to shoot lotterors who roamed the sea of mud, stepping on the injured in his haste to rob the dead, officials said yesterday. Colombia's health minister said Five more survivors were found, including a 7-year-old boy, according to rescue workers interviewed by the Colombian radio chain RCN. two cases of typhoid fever had been reported in the Andes valley farming town destroyed by last week's volcanic eruption. He said the area would be fumigated to kill flies that carry the disease but the operation would not interfere with rescue operations. Officials say about 25,000 people were killed when the Nevada del Ruiz volcano erupted last. Wednesday, melting part of its snowcap and sending a 15-foot-high wall of mud down the Langunilla River, which buried Armero. The three-mile-high volcano was spewing out steam and ash 3,000 to 5,000 feet above its snow-capped cone, according to Darrell Herd of the U.S. Geological Survey team in Manizales, 25 miles west of Navado del Ruiz. He told the Associated Press a seismograph placed on the volcano recorded 10 shocks Sunday afternoon. Italian court finds Palestinians guilty United Press International GENOA, Italy — A court yesterday returned a guilty verdict and sentenced five Palestinians to prison terms of four to nine years on weapons charges that stem from the October hijacking of the Achille Lauro luxury liner. The terms, totaling 34 years and 10 months, were less than those requested by state prosecutor Luigi Carli. Carli had urged sentences totaling 37 years and six months for the hijackers of the Italian cruise ship. The criminal court also ordered the defendants to pay $4,124 in fines after it found all guilty of the charges. Carli recommended less than the maximum 12-year sentence, remarking that even though Palestinian "fight with terrorist methods," their cause "cannot be considered devoid of valid motives." One passenger, American Leon Klinghoffer, was killed during the hijacking and all five of the suspects face trial on more serious hijacking and murder charges at a later date. Judge Carlo Maria Napoli handed down the sentences after two hours and 20 minutes of deliberation in the one-day trial. The hijackers sat handcuffed during the trial behind the bars of three steel cages in a heavily guarded courtroom. After Napoli read the sentences, three of the five suspects raised their arms in a victory salute and sang, "We will defend our Palestine with our blood and our souls." Four of the suspects were arrested when U.S. jetfighters forced an Egyptian plane carrying them from Egypt to land in Sicily. A fifth was arrested before he could board the ship. Make it a Date at House of Hupei 2500 W. 6th MASS. STREET DELI inc 941 MASSACHUSETTS BREAD "4 p.m. to close daily" WE WANT YOU TO TRY OUR ALL NEW DELI BURGERS Traditional Burger $1.99 Swiss & Bacon Burger $2.35 swiss cheese and ranch style bacon with lettuce and tomato Big Blue Burger $2.35 blue cheese and sauteed mushrooms WHAT A DEAL Traditional Burger Basket and 12oz. soft drink $1.49 50¢ COUPON 50¢ OFF OFF $1.49 FIFTY CENTS OFF ALL NEW DELI BURGERS 4p.m. to close daily 50¢ OFF 4 p.m. to close daily OFF OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30,1985 OF 50¢ OFF - All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef * Select a fresh baked dell bun onion, kaiser or whole wheat * Served with potato chips, kosher dill spear and any small soft drink FREE COMEDY SHOP 1980 DAN CHOPIN We give him a "10". To remind those of you who have seen him; he ends his routine with fantastic humorous songs on an acoustic guitar (songs: "Drinking and Driving", "The Japanese Blues", and "My Geisha Girl"). He's an absolute killer. Superstar material. Look out, Eddie Murphy. NO COVER! (SHOW STARTS AT 10:00) SO MANY PEOPLE HAVE ASKED US TO DROP THE COVER FOR THIS POPULAR EVENT, THAT WE COULDN'T RESIST THE THOUGHT OF PACKING THE HOUSE IF EVERYONE COULD WALK IN FREE, AND SEE THIS GREAT SHOW. AND THE DRINKS ARE CHEAP. Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 3 News Briefs Topeka police find body of local woman The body of a 26-year-old Lawrence woman, who apparently had committed suicide, was found Sunday afternoon near a creek in Topeka, Topeka police said yesterday. Police said that the body of the woman, who had been staying with her boyfriend in Topeka, was discovered by a 12-year-old boy who was walking along the creek near the boyfriend's home. William Leifer, Shawnee County deputy coroner, said the woman apparently had shot herself once in the head with a 22-caliber gun. And been dead about four days before being found, he said. The death is being investigated by Topeka police detectives. Leifer said a four-page note addressed to her boyfriend was found near the body. Bar patron arrested A 20-year-old Lawrence man was arrested Saturday night at Cogburns, 737 New Hampshire St., after he waved a knife at two other tavern patrons, Lawrence police said yesterday. Police said the man pulled the knife on one of the patrons in an attempt to stop the patron from fighting with his friend. He also pointed the knife at the patron's girlfriend when she protested, police said. Police arrested the man on two counts of aggravated assault. The man is being held in the Douglas County jail in lieu of $10,000 bond. Pickett to lecture Calder M. Pickett will give his inaugural lecture at p.m. today as the Clyde M. Reed distinguished professor of journalism. Pickett will discuss "Some Moments in the History of America — and the History of the American Press" at 8 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. In his talk, Pickett will offer a sample of the chronicles of American life through slides, books and recordings of historic voices. The inaugural lecture series was established in 1980-81 by the office of academic affairs to introduce new distinguished professors and to focus on their scholarly accomplishments. The lectures are free to the public. Weather Today will be cloudy and much colder, with a 50 percent chance of rain possibly changing to snow. Temperatures will be steady or falling to the lower 30s. Winds will be north to northwest at 15 to 25 mph. Tonight will be clearing and very cold. Lows will be 15 to 20. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny but cold, with highs around 40. From staff and wire reports Correction Because of an editor's error, an item in the Week Ahead at KU calendar in Monday's Kansan incorrectly listed the time and place for a campus lecture. David Beard, University distinguished professor of physics and astronomy, will lecture on "Comets" at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in 3920 Mallett Hall. or cohn Mike Horton/KANSAN Roger Wilks, an employee of Lawrence Transfer & Storage Co. Inc., 2200 Delaware St., delivers two voting machines to Stauffer-Flint Hall. Twenty-four voting machines from the Johnson County Election Office in Olathe were delivered to campus yesterday for Student Senate elections tomorrow and Thursday. Candidate meeting pre-empted By Frank Ybarra Special to the Kansan A meeting that could have given student body presidential and vice presidential candidates an opportunity to answer voters' questions failed to materialize last night at McColum Hall. The question-and-answer session sponsored by McCollm Black Caucus never took place because McColm residents were having all-floor photos taken in the lobby where the event was to be held. Instead, candidates from the Chrysalis and Common Sense coalitions took advantage of the situation by having an informal "social gathering" to talk with students after a Monday Night Football game was turned off. David Epstein and Amy Brown, presidential and vice presidential candidates for Common Sense Coalition, talked with students for about half an hour before Epstein had told because he was losing his voice. Epstein said he thought that his coalition had a good chance of winning tomorrow and Thursday's elections if voter turnout was high "If people get out and vote we will be he said. 'It will mean tradi- tionalism.' Epstein said the issues be and Brown ran on were appealing to to students because they dealt more with Student Senate and other campus concerns. However, Milton Scott and Ruth Lichtwert, presidential and vice presidential candidates for Chrysalis Coalition, said that Common Sense was only trying to get elected and not really worrying about concrete issues Scott said that Common Sense's plans would be ineffective if it won "We're concerned about people," he said, "not just ideas that will get us elected." Support groups offer assistance during elections "There's no way they can implement them on the day they get into office," he said. This is one in a continuing series of stories dealing with the Student Senate and Senate elections scheduled for tomorrow and Thursday. By Bonnie Snyder Of.the Kansan staff Support groups are a new phenomenon in Student Senate elections. The first support group was Students for Frontier, which campaigned for the coalition led by William Easley and Jeff Polack, this year's student body president and vice president. Support groups are similar to political action committees, or PACs, which are interest groups that collect money to back candidates or platforms in local, state and national campaigns. "We resemble a PAC as much as the student body president and student body vice president resemble the president of the United States," said Tim Henderson, president of Students with Common Sense, a support group that is backing Common Sense Coalition, whose presidential and vice presidential candidates are David Epstein and Amy Brown. Henderson said Sunday that he began work on Students for Common Sense in April and the group registered as a student organization in September. Group members usually do workg, such as making posters and talking to people in different living groups. Henderson said. He said members of his support group did not have to pay dues but could give voluntary donations. He said Students with Common Sense's hardest job was just motivating students to go to the polls. "Our goal is to get people to vote," he said. "We feel confident that if people vote, we'll win." David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday that support groups were a good idea if students are recruiting students to cast ballots. "The only way Student Senate will have any credibility is if we get a large student voter turnout," he said. Epstein said that no one in the Common Sense support group, which has about 125 members, was running for office. Henderson said some members, however, might receive appointed positions if Common Sense Coalition tomorrow and Thursday's elections. Just as Frontier was the only coalition with a support group last year, only Common Sense has a support group this year. Ruth Lichtwardt, vice presidential candidate for the Chrysalis Coalition, said she and Milton Scott, presidential candidate, did not need a support She said that the coalition knew it had support and did not think it had to formally organize supporters into a group. Senate rules and regulations do not say anything about support groups, but David Day, chairman of the Student Senate Elections Committee, said groups had to stay within the rules that governed campaigns. That includes spending limits, he said. Each coalition can spend $400 for the presidential and vice presidential campaign. Senatorial candidates have three cents times the number of students in the school, whichever is more. KU ready to remove nuclear fuel from reactor By John Williams Of the Kansan staff The radioactive fuel from KU's nuclear reactor will be removed sometime in the next two months, the associate vice chancellor for research and graduate studies said yesterday. Chancellor Gene A. Budig signed a contract last week to allow a South Carolina company to remove the radioactive fuel from KU's nuclear facility. Richard Robert Bearse, the associate vice chancellor, He said Chem-Nuclear Services Inc., Columbia, S.C., would supervise the transportation of the weapons-grade nuclear fuel to the Savannah Department of Energy Reprocessing Plant. December or January. The exact time and day are kept classified by the U.S. government, he said. The shipment will take place sometime in "The reactor has not been used in over a year," he said. "It seems silly to continue to maintain the reactor in the face of government changes." The University of Kansas will pay Chem- Nuclear about $70 an hour to complete paper- work related to the removal project, Bearse said. The government will pay for the transporation of the fuel. Chem-Nuclear officials arrived at KU this weekend to begin work. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission requires all colleges and universities with highgrade nuclear fuel to change to low-grade fuel, he said. KU was one of 25 universities ordered in Oc tober to either remove excess nuclear weapons-grade fuel or show just cause why it should stay Harold Rosson, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, said the contract signaled an end to the use of the small reactor, which was shut down in 1984 after operating for 23 years. "It's not a particularly useful device to have around." Rosson said. "Each year it becomes more and more complicated with all the regulations." The reactor, which is in the Nuclear Reactor Center next to Learned Hall, produced its first nuclear reaction in June 1961. "We don't have the time or the expertise to move the fuel ourselves and still take advantage of the free transportation the Department of energy is providing," he said. "Chem- Nuclear has the experience of preparing the large amount of paperwork, permits, authorization and supervision." KU will save about $20,000 in transportation costs, Rosson said. The procedure will involve removing the 16 aluminum-uranium alloy fuel elements from the 20-foot deep reactor pool, which contains about 6,000 gallons of water. The stainless steel and lead encased reactor is protected by 610,000 pounds of concrete, which is stepped at the bottom to provide maximum shielding from the radiation produced by about 3 kilograms, or about 7 pounds, of the radioactive isotope U-235, he said. Schol halls have the stuff legends are made of Rv Roh Tinslev Of the Kansan staff Scholarship hall residents lead Spartan lives of studying and sharing chores to make their living arrangements work. One Pearson Hall resident, however, not only doesn't work, but lives in his own penthouse on the fourth floor of the three-story hall. Jarvis Lunt, a perennial Pearson resident, has become something of a Pearson institution. "He's the 35rd man who lives on the fourth floor." Dan Cunningham, Leneca graduate student and former Pearson resident, said Sunday. Pearson residents have enjoyed life with the mythical Lunt since at least 1976. That is the year Beulah Harding became Pearson resident director, a position she filled until 1982. often appears in the hall yearbook without a picture. Cunningham said, If Lunt is a wallflower, he has grown to tremendous proportions in the fertile imaginations of Pearson residents. Today, Harding is director of Lewis Hall, but she remembers Lunt well. Pearson Hall has space for 52 men. Lunt is shy by nature. His name "It was sort of like having a nook," she said. cepted the position at Pearson Minty's origins are shrouded in mystery. He was alive and active, and his legacy is still being explored. Despite his shyness, Lunt must be an adventuresome playboy at heart. Residents still talk about the day he was born and how his brand new Porsche was ready. "People had to do a lot of fast talking," said Jim Williamson, Topeka senior and Pearson resident. "The guy at the Porsche dealership wasn't real happy with us." Harding said, "I suppose the poor salesman was out a commission on that one." Lunt has lived at Pearson probably since the late 1950s, but no one is sure. Cunningham said. When he isn't tinkering with fast cars, Lunt is an avid reader. He has subscribed to nearly every national magazine ever published, Cuningham said. Lunt's favorite magazines include The Economist, Time and Newsweek. "He's got Playboy and Playgirl subscriptions, too, so we're still not sure about Jarvis," said Dave Adkins, Topeka graduate student and former Pearson resident. Lunt receives all sorts of mailor items, Adkins said. "Of course, he was never prompt in paying his bills," he said. If an imaginary man needs imaginary friends, Lunt should meet Wilbur Nether of Stephenson Hall. Nether must be aspiring to public office, but he doesn't know quite where his allegiances lie. "He's joined all kinds of organizations," said Jeff Bandle, St. Louis senior and Stephenson resident. "He was a member of the Socialist Party, the College Republicans and Young Democrats for Freedom, all at the same time." Nether also is a neo-Nazi and a card-carrying member of the Moral Majority. His interests include cooking. Once he ordered a wok set, said David, *Fonseca, Gardner senior and Stephenson resident.* Nether also receives survivalist magazines and communist propaganda in the mail. Bandle said. "Some years, Wilbur is a very quiet person," he said. "In other years, he raises all sorts of hell." Wed. Special: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover TUESDAY DIME DRAWS 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-054 TAKE A LUNCH BREAK TODAY! 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Malls Shopping Center 711 W.23rd 841-0094 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN McMurry's unpaid bills The state of Kansas has had a couple of accounting problems with Steve McMurry. Through creative bookkeeping, he embezzled more than $257,000 from KU on Wheels as its coordinator from 1978 until his arrest in September 1982. University officials acknowledged that budget controls were less than tight. The University may have been lax in accounting for its money, but the parole system must account for this sorry payment record. That's not the only flawed system McMurry has benefited from. After serving 17 months of a possible 20-year prison sentence, McMurray was paroled in December. His agreement with the Kansas Adult Paroling Authority required that he make a "reasonable effort" to repay KU. Reasonable was defined as about $275 a month. In 11 months he has repaid $60. McMurry's parole officer was supposed to supervise his payments. McMurry told his latest parole officer that no one ever confronted him with what would happen if he failed to keep his end of the deal. But if he didn't know before, he knows now. This month he was told that if he didn't start paying at least $200 a month by January, it might be goodbye parole, hello cell block. The KU Transportation Board plans to recommend this change of scenery if McMurry doesn't begin paying before his next parole review. The question is: Why wasn't McMurry called on the carpet sooner? Luckily, the University didn't rely on the parole authority's effectiveness and McMurry's promise. In the fall of 1984, KU received a civil judgment against McMurray. KU plans to collect the money by garnisheeing his wages after his parole agreement expires in 1988. KU has done what it can to recover its money, even though it's obvious that McMurry will never be able to settle the debt. Now parole officials must see to it that he at least tries. Two views of education Two recent studies seek to tell America about the state of the teaching profession, but only one examines relevant concerns. One federally financed survey conducted by the National Center for Education Information attempts to pry into the after-hours lives of teachers. That study asks such questions as how many times a week a teacher engages in sex or whether they pray regularly. It tries to predict the future of American education from the extracurricular activities of today's teachers. The correlation between teachers' private lives and their professional standards is questionable. What is even more questionable is how that information could be used constructively. The other study is a Carnegie Foundation report This study recommends stricter standards, higher salaries and government teaching scholarships to encourage good students to enter teaching. that reviews relevant statistics — such as teacher salaries and their SAT scores — to forecast the future of the teaching profession. The Carnegie Foundation report says teacher pay and recruitment has improved in the last few years. The Washington study simply seeks a few titillating details but furnishes no valid insight into the profession. In trying to fill the estimated need for 1.65 million additional schoolteachers by 1993, we are better served by studies that focus on salaries and test scores than those that tell us how many days a week teachers spend tending their gardens. Less toxic solution Some called it "Black Friday." At first, it seems a good idea that the EPA encourages less dumping and more burning. After all, toxic chemicals deposited in landfills and lagoons may drift through layers of soil and pollute underground water supplies. On Nov. 8, tougher Environmental Protection Agency standards for almost 1,600 toxic waste dumps went into effect. The new standards are likely to encourage less dumping on the ground and in water and more burning of toxic wastes. But those new standards may have another effect they may shut down more than 500 ponds, pits, landfills, lagoons and deep injection wells used to dispose of hazardous wastes. But the tougher standards for toxic waste dumps are not enough. Encouraging more incineration of waste is not enough. Burning waste is not a cureall. The EPA has managed to classify about 60,000 of about 66,000 chemicals used in the United States; some will break down into non-toxic components when burned. Other alternatives exist, such as the use of bacteria to break down toxic substances into their less toxic components. But that is not the point. The EPA must solve one problem and try to prevent another. Tougher standards and encouraging waste burning may help clean up the mess that exists. But the agency also needs to encourage recycling and it needs to have tougher standards for the type of materials used in production — to help cut down on the creation of toxic wastes. Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.** The title of the typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The "letter will be photographed." The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansen roomway, 111 Stauffer *Pint Hall*. The University Dialy Kanan (USP5 605-440) is published at the University of Kansas, 11 StafferFlint Hall, Lawrence, Kanu, 6045, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kanu, 6044. In Douglas County, mail subscriptions cost $1 for six months and $7 a year. Student subscriptions cost $3 and are paid through the student activity fees. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Staufer-Print Hall, Lawrence, KA, 6045. Senate elections Candidates rely on Common Sense Common Sense "We're mad as hell and we're not going to take it anymore!" It's time for a revolutionary approach to student government at the University of Kansas. Common Sense Coalition candidates Amy Brown and David Epstein. In the last few years, Student Senate has lost sight of its role as a provider of student services and has become a debating society plagued by political infighting. In response, Common Sense offers a chance to revitalize Senate by providing new services for students. We resisted the temptation of offering you tantalizing campaign promises we could never fulfill once in office. Instead, we initially asked students what they wanted Senate to do for them. Based on this information, we began researching programs to meet these needs. For more than three weeks, we have examined current resources at KU and investigated programs at universities across the nation. From what we determined what could be successfully sponsored by our Senate. Instead of presenting vague proposals, the Common Sense platform consists of service-oriented programs that can be implemented with our term. Here's a summary of the "big four" issues of our platform. Statistics. They don't lie. Last year in Lawrence alone, there were 125 alcohol-related automobile accidents, and six resulting deaths. We are working towards ending this tragedy. One of the issues that we've researched is drunk driving. Based on an extremely successful program at Iowa State University, we want to bring Night Ride to the KU campus. We think this would help you make better decisions about your class schedule and reduce the long add-ons at the start of each semester. Parking. Every year we hear about it, but nothing ever seems to change. We want to try a Common Sense approach — communication. Parking Services is willing to work with students, but they don't know what you want. We want to work with Parking Services to reduce the cost of permits and to increase the services provided to the students. Common Sense is tired of reading about who spoke at Kansas State University. K-State? Why not KU? KU has attracted quality speakers, but we can have even more. The system already exists, it only needs to be tapped. We want to establish a student-advised lecture series that would attract nationally prominent speakers from all areas of interest. We can do this by drawing on the University's vast system of financial and alumni support and contacts. Common Sense. Two small words with one powerful message. You've seen the posters in your classrooms, you see the platform ideas from your friends. The coalition, made up of 50 dedicated students, has worked hard over the past three months to prove ourselves worthy — now we're asking you for your support. We're not awe-inspiring gods, ready to revise every existing policy and procedure at KU. Instead, we're concerned, to novative people ready to take your concerns, your problems, your ideas, and put them to use for the sole purpose of benefiting all students. Our style is flexible — it's just Common Sense. We're here for you. We've worked hard to spread our ideas. Ideas that originated with students just like you. We care, and we hope you do too! Vote Nov. 20 and 21 at your respective schools and remember to use Common Sense. Thanks for your support. Chrysalis promises student growth A chrysalis, according to Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary, is "a state of being or growth." We of the Chrysalis Coalition are dedicated to helping the Student Senate grow to its full potential. We believe the Senate is capable of being a strong, effective student service organization — and we have the knowledge and the enthusiasm necessary to reach that goal. Our candidates come from diverse backgrounds, but we have several shared ideas. We know, for instance, that KU students cannot be lumped into categories and are individuals with individual concerns. We are good listeners. We know how to listen to people and to learn from them. We can then put this learning into action. We have participated in helping people in the past and wish to continue to do so. We appreciate the unique position the Student Senate holds as "the voice of the students" and we will make that voice work to your benefit. Last and perhaps most important. we believe that if you wish to be involved in student government, you should be able to do so. But if you choose to ignore the Senate, it should still be working to serve you. Chrysalis is unique. We have a flexible platform that allows room for growth. Our issues are not limited to four or five ideas. In fact, we have moved past issues that have already been solved and we have added issues that have been brought to our attention. Thus our platform is in a state of growth. KU cut of South Africa We are also practical. Local research shows that both the Transportation Board and the bus company think a drunk bus was too expensive in extra maintenance, insurance and wages to be feasible. We propose (and first brought it app to the Union administration last April) to support a non-alcoholic nightclub on campus. In three years, three-quarters of the student population will not be able to legally drink. We think that entertainment alternatives are needed now and in the future. We also propose publishing a guide to financial aid for students, publishing a list of who your senators are and how to reach them and publishing teacher evaluations or profiles. Our research shows that such evaluations used to be published here, but were discontinued because of the cost. Our idea would be both voluntary and cost effective. Chrysalis Coalition candidates Ruth Lichtwardt and Milton Scott We also support the posting of routes and scheduling information by the bus stops. Chrysalis has the experience to get things done and the willingness to do so. Chrysalis wants your ideas and your opinions. Chrysalis stands for taking Student Senate back to its original purpose. And Chrysalis stands for growth. In investigating other ideas, we discovered that some proposals that have been brought up are already in place. Two specific examples are a campus escort service and having campus policemen walk a beat. Services such as these need to be publicized, and we will do so. Above all, Chrysalis stands for you Mailbox On Wednesday, Nov. 13, a resident of McCollum Hall was nearly shot and killed by a KU police officer with a shotgun. This incident could have been avoided if KUPD would have used little composeur and common sense. Dangerous actions As with many other organizations on campus, some of McColburn Hall residents were engaged in playing the "assassin" game, in which residents try to assassinate each other with plastic dart guns. KU police stormed McCollum Hall, burst into the hallway where she was sitting and nearly shot Kim Bayer because they thought the gun was real. On Wednesday night, Kim Buyer was sitting outside her room talking on the phone and holding her dart gun, which resembled a sawed-off shotgun, while seeing the shotgun, called Kim police and said that a woman had a gun. It would seem that if the girl actually would have had a gun, it would have been more prudent to remain behind the protection of the doorway at the end of the hall, then call to the girl to drop the gun from their protected position. If she fired, then the officers would have been protected. Instead of doing this, the officers came face to face with the girl. The officer later admitted that he nearly fired. If out of shock KIM did not lower the gun, the officer may have fired. With a shotgun at that range, it would be unlikely that she would have survived. Why were such cowboy tactics used? Did the situation dictate charging the hall with shotguns? Why did these officers charge down the hall fully exposed? Why didn't the officers give any attempt to explain what was going on to hall security before rushing up the stairway to her floor? It seems that the officers gave no thought to the situation. I am not questioning the need for the officers to protect themselves, or to protect others, but I am questioning these types of tactics and the danger they present to innocent people. In addition, one officer was using a shotgun, which instead of firing a single bullet, fires several lead pellets. The hallways in McColum are very narrow. If a resident would have come out of a room behind Kirk, the resident would also have been killed by the blast. Pocatello, Idaho, senior No talking to terrorists I think an investigation should be made into the procedures used by KUPD in order to avoid a similar incident from happening in the future. Before writing about the political situation of a country, you might as well be informed about the history of those minor events that lead to major ones. In other words, saying that Colombia's government shouldn't have ruled out a reasoned response to the guerrilla's demands shows a lack of empathy in this group in particular operates. M-19 is a movement known, unfortunately, for breaking peace treaties. The same situation, in which the government has had to negotiate peace to save lives, has been common to many other occurrences. The purpose of M-19 is not to retaliate. M-19 has not, and lives have been lost just the same. Do you think making peace treaties with a guerrilla group that laughs in the government's face is going to fix things? "Volatile situations should be defused, not detonated," agreed. But sometimes it is better to cut the disease from the root. Angela Posuda Rockwood Bogota, Colombia graduate student } graduate student --- Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Budig Continued from p.1 posal. He would not be specific about the contents of the appeal but said it would be completed sometime this week. "We will make the strongest possible case to the legislative leadership in the weeks ahead." Budig said. The revenue issue must be addressed before the next legislative session." In September, KU submitted a budget proposal for fiscal 1987 that included a 7 percent increase over this year's budget. The increase included pay raises for faculty and classified employees that were designed to bring salaries at KU in line with those at other universities Budig said those increases were justified. "The salary increases are conservative ones," he said. "They are needed to attract and retain faculty. There is no doubt that they are necessary." The proposed budget cuts are still open for debate, Budig said. The governor will consider the University's appeal, as well as those from the other Regents schools. Power Continued from p. James Strobl, director of Watkins Hospital, said he was told the hospital would be on emergency power until sometime tomorrow and could then running on reduced power, the hospital would remain open. break down, but he couldn't be sure. He said it also was possible that the transformers had been damaged earlier and had just now broken. R. W. McClure, hospital chief of staff, said the power failure was causing problems for the hospital personnel. "Our efficiency is down because of the poor lighting," he said. "It's taking us longer to see patients." Strobi that students coming to the hospital could cut their wait if they came early in the morning. McClure said that the hospital also couldn't take X-rays and that physical therapy operations would be suspended until the hospital returned to full power. While Watkins managed to remain open for business, students and faculty at Bailey were left in the dark by the power failure. Tricia Peavler, Waverly senior, said that she was surprised to find that her early morning class in Bailey had been canceled. She said that if she had known the building would be without power, she would have made better use of the lost time. "I could have slept for two more hours." she said. Diana Pannone, Topeka senior. Lobbying activities jump dramatically said she was pleasantly surprised to find her class canceled. She said her instructor had scheduled a test, and it had to be canceled. Anne Meeker, graduate teaching assistant in music education and music therapy, said that usually a day off would be welcome — but yesterday it wasn't. "I had two guest speakers coming in from Kansas City and I couldn't contact them by phone to cancel," she said. The Associated Press TOPEKA — Lobbyist activity jumped dramatically in September and October as doctors and lawyers tried to influence the action of the Special Committee on Medical Malpractice, among other summer interim legislative committees. The Kansas Public Disclosure Commission reported yesterday that spending by lobbyists in the first 10 months of 1985 is $116,000 ahead of that at the same time last year, with the biggest increase in the health categories. To date, lobbyists have spent $415,444 in 1985 as compared to the $299,178 spent by lobbyists during the same period last year. The actual number of lobbyists working the halls of the Statehouse also has increased over last year. sude legislators to their point of view. In September 1984, 18 lobbies spent $4,044 and in October 1984, 13 lobbies spent $2,907 trying to per- In September 1985, 27 lobbysts dolled out $12,994 on food, drinks, gifts and advertising and in October 1985, 35 lobbysts dolled out $15,280 on such activities. The biggest spender in September was Ralph MeeG of the Kansas AFL-CIO, who ran up a $2,111 bill, mainly on food and drinks. James Maag, of the Kansas Bankers Association, was close behind on the ranking with $2,063 in spending — all food and drinks. Utility lobbyists spent $3,072 in September to lead all other groups. They were followed by labor and union lobbyists at $2,622, banking lobbyists at $2,280, business lobbyists at $1,946 and energy groups at $1,010. One group, the Kansas Medical Society, represented by Jerry Slaughter, dominated the October expenses with $8,134, or more half the spending last month by all lobbyists. 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Learning how to become an Army. CALL OR WRITE PROFESSOR OF MILITARY SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, AS 6045 PHONE (910) 864-3311 officer while you're working on your college degree. Earning an extra $100 a month, up to ten months a year. And two years later, you'll graduate with your degree, your commission as an Army officer, and some real experience at leading and managing people. The last two years of college mean a lot. Take the Army ROTC Two-Year Program and you can make them mean a lot more. MORE The Kansan Works. Let it work for you. Your business can realize increased sales by establishing a strong advertising program with the Kansan. Call your sales representative or the Kansan Business Office today. Discover how the Kansan can work for you. LairdNoller TOYOTA 1177 Main Street Lakewood, CO 80235 (719) 524-2716 www.lairdnoller.com The University Daily News 412-730-7350 www.usydailynews.com To March 16, New Chicago To a short note of apologies to thank you and your staff for the post感谢您之情. Thank you for your encouragement of those times past, recent or in­front of our staff. Give us a quick review of your service (just for our part) to advertise to our community. Please visit us at one of our posts with information. Meet your person (234) in our office next Tuesday at 10am. Welcome to the new program room. Make sure you have your phone number, name, and email ready. Allow me to send you your registration story. Along with your registration story, I will personally give you a work: https://www.telus.com/work.php?program_id=234&person_id=234 Service provided by: C. G. Willett KU The University Daily KANSAN 864-4358 6 University Daily Kansan Closer Look Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985 Life Flight N113SH The Spirit of Kansas City Life Flight helicopter is stationed outside St. Joseph Hospital, Kansas City, Mo. P. A. S. Jim Sineath, a pilot for Life Flight, flies near St. Joseph Hospital LIFE FLIGHT Independence freighters and Independence Medical Center physicians and nurses prepare to load a victim into the Life Flight helicopter bound for the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kan- KANSAS CITY, Mo. - The call may come at 11:57 p.m. Pushing one button, the dispatcher pages a pilot, a nurse and a respiratory therapist. The crew, running to the waiting helicopter, receives hurried instructions about the flight course and the patient's condition By midnight, the Life Flight helicopter is in the air; racing to save a life. The Spirit of Kansas City Life Flight air medical program, sponsored by St. Joseph Hospital and St. Luke's Hospital of Kansas City, responds to emergency calls 24 hours a day, seven days a week and can be answered three minutes, William Latimer, flight operations director, said recently. Barbara Ketter, one of eight flight nurses, said that flights took precedence over schedules. "You don't always get off work on time," she said, "but that's all right. Sometimes you find you're on your job when you are supposed to be off." Life Flight crews respond to emergencies of all kinds, and have Joplin, Mo., is at the edge of the helicopter's 150-mile response radius, she said, and a call from there could take three hours. even delivered a baby while airborne. But most flights involve transferring patients from one hospital to another. Latimer said. Bob Love, chief dispatcher, said many of the transfers were from Russia. "These small hospitals just don't have the finances to buy equipment for specialized care," Love said. "Occasionally they run into that patient who needs a little more than they can offer." "Survival is 52 percent higher by air than by ground," he said. "In emergency medical circles they refer to the 'golden hour.' If a patient can be taken to the emergency center of a hospital within an hour of an accident, there is much better chance of much better chance of survival. After that hour it really goes down." There is a high survival rate for all air medical programs. Laitmer said "Helicopters fit into that picture beautifully because we usually can get in there and back and save a lot of time in flight." Being faster than ground ambulances is just one advantage of Life Flight. It can also pick up patients in areas that may not be accessible to cars. Twice Life Flight has rescued people who fell into an area with concrete walls on two sides. Latimer said the walls were 60 feet apart, and the propeller span of the helicopter is 43 feet. "It's not an easy thing to do, but they can do it," he said. The three pilots, all Vietnam veterans, and the mechanic deserve credit for the program's half million accident free miles. Latimer said. Although Life Flight does not respond to calls that can be easily handled by ground ambulances, Latimer has even have made it a successful program. "Growth has been constant over the years," he said. "We started with one flight every two or three days. Now we average three a day." "You get to the point where you're banging your head against the ceiling." POLICE Life Flight is reaching that point, he said. Some calls are now turned down because the helicopter is on another call. A second helicopter may be added soon at St. Luke's, which in July join them on the job. Although St. Joseph had been the sole sponsor of the program since 1978, Latimer said, "From the very first day, it hasn't been St. Joseph's program. We've always considered it a community service." Wallace and mechanic Gale Williams load supplies into the Life Flight helicopter in preparation for the next flight. Below dispatcher Marty Nehl operates the Life Flight control board. A man sitting at a desk with a computer and speakers. The room has a wall with maps and other images. Story by Stefani Day Photos by Alan Hagman Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Budig Continued from p.1 posal. He would not be specific about the contents of the appeal but said it would be completed sometime this week. "We will make the strongest possible case to the legislative leadership in the weeks ahead," Budig said. "The revenue issue must be addressed before the next legislative session." In September, KU submitted a budget proposal for fiscal 1987 that included a 7 percent increase over this year's budget. The increase included pay raises for faculty and classified employees that were designed to bring salaries at KU in line with those at other universities There is no doubt that they are necessary." Budig said those increases were justified. "The salary increases are conservative ones," he said. "They are needed to attract and retain faculty." The proposed budget cuts are still open for debate, Budig said. The governor will consider the University's appeal, as well as those from the other Regents schools. Power break down, but he couldn't be sure. He said it also was possible that the transformers had been damaged earlier and had just now broken. James Strobl, director of Watkins Hospital, said he was told the hospital would be on emergency power until sometime tomorrow that despite running on recharge, the hospital would remain open. Continued from p.1 R. W. McClure, hospital chief of staff. said the power failure was causing problems for the hospital personnel. "Our efficiency is down because of the poor lighting," he said. "It's taking us longer to see patients." Strobl said that students coming to the hospital could cut their wait if they came early in the morning. McClure said that the hospital also couldn't take X-rays and that physical therapy operations would be suspended until the hospital returned to full power. While Watkins managed to remain open for business, students and faculty at Bailey were left in the dark by the power failure. Lobbying activities jump dramatically Tricia Peavler, Waverly senior, said that she was surprised to find that her early morning class in Bailey had been canceled. She said that if she had known the building would be without power, she would have made better use of the lost time. Diana Pannone, Topeka senior. "I could have slept for two more hours," she said. said she was pleasantly surprised to find her class canceled. She said her instructor had scheduled a test, and it had to be canceled. Ame Meeker, graduate teaching assistant in music education and music therapy, said that usually a day off would be welcome — but yesterday it wasn't. "I had two guest speakers coming in from Kansas City and I couldn't contact them by phone to cancel," she said. The Associated Press TOPEKA — Lobbyist activity jumped dramatically in September and October as doctors and lawyers tried to influence the action of the Special Committee on Medical Malpractice, among other summer interim legislative committees. The Kansas Public Disclosure Commission reported yesterday that spending by lobbyists in the first 10 months of 1985 is $116,000 ahead of that at the same time last year, with the biggest increase in the health categories. To date, lobbists have spent $415,444 in 1985 as compared to the $299,178 spent by lobbists during the same period last year. The actual number of lobbyists working the halls of the Statehouse also has increased over last year. In September 1984, 18 lobbysists spent $4,044 and in October 1984, 13 lobbysists spent $2,907 trying to per- sude legislators to their point of view. In September 1985, 27 lobbyists dolled out $12,994 on food, drinks, gifts and camping and in October 1985, 22 lobbyists dolled out $15,280 on such activities. The biggest spender in September was Ralph McGee of the Kansas AFL-CIO, who ran up a $2,111 bill, mainly on food and drinks. James Maag, of the Kansas Bankers Association, was close behind on the ranking with $2,063 in spending — all food and drinks. Utility lobbyists spent $3,072 in September to lead all other groups. They were followed by labor and union lobbyists at $2,622, banking lobbyists at $2,280, business lobbyists at $1,946 and energy groups at $1,010. One group, the Kansas Medical Society, represented by Jerry Slaughter, dominated the October expenses with $8,134, or more than half the spending last month by all lobbyists. AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! brother HAP 10 ABSOLUTELY COMPLETE PERSONAL COMPUTER SYSTEM for only $1998. This Includes: - Zenith ZF/148/42 computer - Zenith ZVM/1230 monitor - Box of Disks - Box of Paper - Brother HR-10 Printer - Printer Cable - "Easy" Word Processor from the makers of Wordstar. EZCOMP COMPUTER CENTER HOLIDAY PLAZA (913)841-5715 ZENITH data systems Pluck our Thanksgiving turkey and Save! Pick a feather off our Thanksgiving turkey to reveal your secret discount! One feath Disc merchandis Offer Nov Then it's back to school in the fall. Learning how to become an Army You start the program with six-weeks of Basic Camp (you'll be paid for it) between your sophomore and junior years. How to make your last two years of college mean even more. CALL OR WHAT PROFESSOR OF MILITARY SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KS 63041 PHONE (913) 864-5311 Take the Army ROTC Two-Year Program. If you've just about completed your second year of college, and you're planning on two more, it's not too late to take Army ROTC. Jayhawk Bookstore officer while you're working on your college degree. Earning an extra $100 a month, up to ten months a year. HOURS M-F 8-5 Sat. 10-4 And two years later, you'll graduate with your degree, your commission as an Army officer, and some real experience at leading and managing people. 图 1-23 1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044 (913)834-3826 The last two years of college mean a lot.Take the Army ROTC Two-Year Program and you can make them mean a lot more. MORE The Kansan Works. Let it work for you. Your business can realize increased sales by establishing a strong advertising program with the Kansan. Call your sales representative or the Kansan Business Office today. Discover how the Kansan can work for you. LairdNoller TOYOTA 1181 W 234A Lakewood, CO 80645 913-343-2197 The Internetally Daily Women 120 Fiction Business Studies To Write at My Creation. University of California, Berkeley San Francisco, CA 94108 Phone: (855) 263-8444 To Make an appointment: On a weekday or on interpretation to thank you and your staff. For further information regarding the pay statement requirements given to the interpretive staff for two weeks after their hire (238) in atlanta, georgia, mo, alabama, florida, indiana, north carolina, north dakota, south carolina, west virginia, wyoming, arkansas, missouri, louisiana and maryland, meet with the good work! Louisiana prepares: Robert H. Willett Richard M. Nelson Jason Niemeyer KU The University Daily KANSAN 864-4358 Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985 Student Senate Elections University Daily Kansan 7 Turnout Continued from p. 1 Percent of students voting in Student Senate elections 1969 30.2 1978 8.5 1970 26.0 1979 14.5 1971 28.0 1980 11.3 1972 22.0 1981 11.0 1973 14.0 1982 14.0 1974 13.2 1983 14.5 1975 14.0 1984 (spring) 9.8 1976 16.1 1984 (fall) 17.4 1977 19.6 Source: Kansan files 'Obviously the student body in recent years hasn't been as interested in issues as it has been in previous years.' David Ambler vice chancellor for student affairs participated in KU student government because Senate had no power "It if meant something, people would participate more," he said. "To participate in something, you must either feel good about what you're doing morally, or you must get some return. In student government, I don't know what that return is." Jeff Polack, student body vice president, said student government had power because it distributed $1.3 million collected from student activity fees. This money is distributed to the Kansas Crew team, the international Club and the Solar Energy Club. Polack also said the Senate was responsible for protecting student rights. "It's a matter of making what we can of it," he said. "We have the power of persuasion." Ambler said student government had the power to recommend solutions to common problems at the University, to influence administrative decisions that affect student life and to allocate the money collected from student activity fees. Michelle Bradshaw, Olathe sophomore, said she voted last fall and would vote again next year. But she didn't think the Senate had much power. "I haven't been able to see how student government directly affects me," she said. "I haven't seen any results from the government, but I vote because it's my right and my responsibility." Polack said he thought the reason for last year's high voter turnout was the number of coalitions that ran and the referendum that appeared on the ballot. The referendum urged the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest from U.S. companies doing business in South Africa. He said the two coalitions running in this year's election — Chrysalis and Common Sense — didn't offer much of a choice for voters. Despite the fewer number of coalitions running and the quiet campaign this year, some students, such as Dr. OcHee, still will show up at the polls. "There is nothing radically different between them, issue-wise, but there is some personality wise," he said. "There's not much of a choice. It's more of an issue of what went on in the Senate during the past year." "I vote because I like to know that I'm heard," said McGhee, Haven sophomore. "I like to have my say in stuff." She said she thought part of the reason voter turnout was low was because the Senate didn't encourage students to attend meetings and John Leuthold, Columbia, Mo. senior, said he had voted every year since coming to KU. David Hickman, Overland Park senior, said he didn't vote in last year's elections because he didn't get around to it. He said he voted in the previous year's elections, however. "My vote makes a difference within the context of an election," he said. "It requires a bunch of people like myself to vote to make a difference. But, if I don't vote, then I don't have the potential to make an impact." "The percent that actually votes is low," he said. "That's sad. They complain, but they don't take action by voting." didn't seem as if they wanted students to participate. Student involvement shows in interest groups, not polls By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff Students aren't apathetic about voting in campus elections but are instead expressing their political interests in other ways, a KU professor of political science says. Alan Cigler, professor of political science, says students are turning from casting ballots in student government to participating in special-interest groups. "Saying there is an election turnout decrease is not the same as saying student interest is down." Cigler said recently. "Students are involved in interest groups and are channeling their efforts in different directions. associations was increasing "Apathy is the wrong word because it implies that there was a great student interest and that now students are lazy or unconcerned. I am not interested in them, but they are putting more of their attention on specific interests." Cigler said he thought that student involvement on college campuses had increased — but not necessarily in student government. He said student involvement in such groups as departmental clubs, foreign student organizations and graduate student "People are getting smart because they exert more influence from groups than from elections," he said. London Bonds, assistant director of the office of student organizations and activities, which was formed in 1978, said the number of groups registering with the office was always rising. Groups that register with the student organizations and activities office are classified as academic, cultural, governmental, honorary, political, military, religious, recreational/sports, service, special interest, fraternities or sororities. Bonds said it was University policy for student groups to register with the office. By registering, groups gain benefits such as being able to request student activity fee financing, equipment, use University services and use the University's name in the group's title. The Senate allocates student activity fees to these groups. This year, the Senate received $1.3 million from student activity fees for distribution Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, defined an interest group as "people with similar attitudes working toward a goal or like-minded people trying to get something done." He said that because of the lack of power in the student government, students would be better off spending their time participating in interest groups than in working in student government. "Students would get more gratification if they became involved with interest groups — not necessarily political ones, but more like intramurals or sororities and fraternites." "Student government has no real power," Loomis said. "It's totally symbolic. It's a game that a certain small group of people play. Jeff Polack, student body vice president, disagreed with Loomis. "Government is as important as people make it," Polack said. "Professors and faculty don't care because they have tenure. We deal with the administration and they take us more seriously." David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the structure of Kris administration provided for research influence in the student government. Ambler said, however, that sometimes student government didn't take advantage of all the opportunities to exert its power. Ambler said that it's always been true that there are a lot of students involved with extracurricular activities related to academic work or social and recreational issues of interest. "It's not that it doesn't potentially have lots of power," he said. "It depends on how well and how much of this power is used. Ambler said these extracurricular activities included intramural sports, fraternities, sororites and special-interest groups. Ray Nichols, chancellor emeritus, said more student groups existed today than before the office of student organizations and activities was formed. "Student Senate doesn't do much in these areas because those groups are autonomous." Ambler said. "The groups aren't as active as they used to be, but there are more of them," he said. "They were advocacy groups supporting specific causes and used to march into the chancellor's office. "A small group can make a lot of noise." 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Candidates for the 58 elected seats are: For the School of Architecture and Urban Design (two seats): Kevin Bryne, Chrysalis; Laura Independent, Joon Joee; Chrysalis; Lailah Common, Common Steve; Viggo Common Sense. For the School of Business (three seats); Demin Enlightener; Chrysallis; Dycynn Hammett. For the School of Education (two seats): Charissa Birch, Chrysalis; Emmie Kennicott; Chrysalis; Alicia Lippert, Common Sense; Kristen Zeiler, Common Sense. For the School of Engineering (four seats): Robert Evan, Independent; Steve Gleishcrist, Common Sense; Renee Meech, Common Sense; Common Sense, Common Sense; Jiaochua Zacchae, Independent. For the School of Fine Arts (two seats) Eric A. Lauterbach, Common sense; Charles Munson, For the School of Journalism (two seats): The School of Law (one seat); no School for the Law (one seat); no For the School of Law (one seat): no candidates. For the School of Pharmacy (on seat) Terri Lum, Common Semester Social Social Welfare (on seat) For the School of Social Welfare (one seat) To represent special students (two seats): no candidates. Jennifer B. Balzer, Common Sense; Beth Hanna, Common Sense. To represent of campus students (one seat): Andrew Heins, Chrysalee; Kurt Giebartschen, Jonathan Rudolph; and Robert S. To represent Nunemaker students, or freshmen and sophomores in the College Art Arts and Sciences at UCLA, they will be represented by Sense Bety Bergman, Common Sense; Rich Beich尔r, Independent; Pamela B. Hoden; Common Sense; Richard L. Weiderman, Common Sense; Common Sense; Todd Cohen; Chrysalis; Coler, Chyralis; Angel Dick, Common Sense. To represent juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (eight seats); Martinez and his wife, Katherine, have Common Sense. (F.R. I.) Woody Browne, Common Sense. Fraser, Independent; Jill S. Gailhead, Commonwealth. David Eck, Common Sense; Allison Eldridge; Common Sense; Kevin Presson; Common Sense; Anis Haczczyknyl, Common Sense; Jason Krakow, Common Sense; Llandaffsgott; Common Sense; Chris O'Connor; Common Sense; Chrysalis; Kelly Milligan; Common Sense; Stephanie Quinney; Common Sense; Stacy Smith. Common Sense: Brady Starton; Common Sense: Braiden Starton; Common Sense: Army Sergeant; Common Sense: Army Sergeant Luca Jillinke, Common Sense; Charles Lawhorn, Common Sense; Claudio Molteni, Common Sense; Kristen Myers, Crysalis; Javan P. Owens, Independence; Julie Haggle, Common Sense; L. Lowe, Tom Shiver, Common Sense; Gordon L. Woods, Common Sense. To represent graduate students (12 seats): A Travis Cassidy, Common Sense; Chris Court-wright, Chrysler; Lysdon L. David, Common Sense; Eric Tuckman, Common Sense; Hardy Difficulty; Kary Alem, Common Sense; Glenn Michel Shirttail, Common Sense; James Rider, Common Sense; James Rider, Chrysler; 1 COUPLE + 2 CAREERS ??? 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Police said the woman had left the keys in the car because her mechanic was supposed to pick it up for repairs. She called police after discovering that the mechanic had never picked up the car. A car parked near Joseph R. Pearson Hall was broken into between 11 p.m. Friday and 6 a.m. Saturday and a stereo and spare tire; together valued at $25, were stolen, KU police said yesterday. A wing window was pried open and damage to the car was estimated at $30. ■ Tools valued at $160 were stolen between 5 p.m. Friday and 9:15 a.m. Sunday from a truck parked at the housing maintenance complex on West Campus, KU police said. No signs of forced entry were apparent, police said. A car parked in a lot near Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corinn Hall was broken into between noon Nov. 12 and 5:15 p.m. Saturday and a cassette player, valued at $75, was stolen, KU police said. The door was pried and KU police was estimated at $50. Becerros MEXICAN Unwind at Becerros Relax on our patio Rent it. 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In these days of high-pressure collegiate sports, there is still a sanctuary for Kansas athletes — the office of sports psychologist David Cook. Confidence gets boost By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff It is Cook's job to help athletes reach their potential by understanding the mental aspects of sport, stressing confidence and self-perception. Cook said most of the pressure on athletes was self-pressure. He said that an athlete's ability to handle the pressure of collegiate athletics was based on how he viewed the world and his sport. "Some people really tie their whole self-worth into sport," he said recently. "We try to separate those because sports is not going to last forever." Cook said it was important to understand that the physical and mental aspects of sport work together. "I want people to feel good about themselves. Just because they failed on the field doesn't mean they failed in life." "For years, coaches have more or less emphasized the physical." Cook said. "One is not any more important than the other. We look at what are the effects of sport on people and how 1 " deal with people that are normal who are concerned with performance problems. can we help people reach their potential. Cook works out of the department of health, physical education and recreation, and also teaches classes in sports psychology. He has an advantage over some sports psychologists because he actually competed in athletics. Cook won an athletic scholarship to Baylor University for golf, one of the most mentally demanding sports. The techniques Cook teaches are mental rehearsal, positive imagery, team building and goal setting. To build confidence, he said, there are four more techniques. Second is positive imagery -- athletes seeing themselves being successful. Third is goal setting and fourth is trust -- getting to the starting line and trusting yourself. First is self-enhancing talk, he said. Much of the time when athletes talk to themselves during a game, the talk is negative. Cook said athletes needed to talk positively to themselves. But Cook stresses that it takes work to build confidence. "Some athletes want you to wave a magic wand and make them better." he said. "The only magical answers are within yourself. A lot of people will kill themselves in the weight room, but when you try to get them to change the way they think in a pressure situation, it's hard. These are habits that take years to form." Head swim coach Gary Kempf said Cook conducted seminars with the whole swim team, and athletes also went to Cook individually. "David has definitely helped our team," he said. "I think the real success lies more in one on one — the individual thing." Kempf said that sometimes an athlete would get to the starting block and be afraid he wouldn't succeed instead of anticipating the competition ahead. "It's nice to go to an outside source and discuss the situation," he said. "As a coaching staff, we can only do so much. You end up saying the same things over and over." Williams, Ziegler to play Saturday Sports psychology grew out of studying great coaches, Cook said. People such as former Green Bay Packer head coach Vince Lombardi and John Wooden, former UCLA head basketball coach, knew how to motivate athletes and were sports psychologists, but didn't call themselves that, Cook said. The game will be televised locally on KMBC Channel 9 and KSNT Channel 27 as the Big Eight-Ravcom game of the week. Bv a Kansan renorter Despite a four game losing streak, Kansas can still finish with a better record than last season with a win against Missouri 11:40 a.m. Saturday in Memorial Stadium. Head coach Mike Gottfried said yesterday that the Jayhawks would scrimmage all weir to get ready for the Tigers, who are 1-9 overall and 1-5 in the Big Eight. Kansas is 5-6 overall and 1-5 in the conference. Last year Kansas finished with a 5-6 record. "Sometimes you don't execute, but when you don't do it for four weeks in a row, it's unusual," Gottfried said. Gottried said the lack of a running game and injuries had been the Jayhawks' main problems this season. Tailback Lynn Williams, who has missed the last two games with a shoulder injury, will play Saturday, Gottfred said. Free Safety Wayne Ziegler, who has injured the same knee twice and has been sideline since Oct. 19, will also return to the lineup. Penn St. still No.1 United Press International NEW YORK — Penn State, following its most impressive victory of the season, finished one vote shy of being a unanimous selection as college football's No. 1 team yesterday in the NFC division, voting by the UPI Board of Coaches. Nebraska, which grabbed the other first-place vote, appeared on 42 ballots and did not receive a selection lower than third in remaining No. 2. The Nittany Lions, who walloped Notre Dame 36-6 Saturday, received 41 of 42 first place votes and one second place vote for 629 points in remaining No. 1 for the third straight week. The Cornhuskers play at Oklahoma Saturday. If the Sooners win and then beat Oklahoma State in their regular season finale, Oklahoma will go to the Orange Bowl. UPI Top 20 First-place votes and records in parentheses, toal points (based on 15 points for first place, 14 for second, and last week's ranking) 1. Penn State (41) (10) 2. Nebraska (11) (9) 3. Ohio State (8) 4. Iowa (9) 5. Miami (Fla) (8) 6. Michigan (8-1) 7. Oklahoma State (8-1) 8. UCLA (8-1) 9. Auburn (8-2) 10. Alabama (10-1) 11. Ohio State (8-2) 12. Florida State (8-2) 13. Georgia Young (9-2) 14. Baylor (8-2) 15. Tennessee (6-2) 16. Arkansas (8-2) 17. Louisiana State (6-2) 18. Texas A&M (7-2) 19. Texas (7-2) 20. Wisconsin (7-2) Others receiving votes: Alabama, Army, British Green, Presidential State, Maryland, Maryland. Note: By agreement with the American Football Coaches Association, teams on NCAA or竞赛 level must participate in a pep rally and a pep game in a bowl game are insible for the Top 20 and national championship consideration by the UPI Board of Coaches. The teams currently in that category are Florida and Southern Florida. Theismann suffers open fracture United Press International WASHINGTON — Jay Schroeder, replacing injured Joe Theismann, threw a 14-yard touchdown to Clint Didier with 6:39 remaining last night after Washington's second successful onside kick, giving the Redskins a 23-21 victory over the New York Giants. Washington improved to 6-8 and moved within one game of NFC East. The Redskins survived three lost fumbles, a missed extra point by Mark Moseley and the loss of Theismann with a compound fracture of his lower right leg to end a four-game Giants' winning streak Theismann was injured on the second play of the second quarter when he was sacked by linebackers Lawrence Taylor and Gary Reasons. On 1st-and-10 from the Washington 46, Theismann handed off to John Riggins, who pitched back to the quarterback. But before Theismann could throw, Taylor nailed him from behind and Reasons hit him from the front. As Theismann fell, his right ankle turned almost completely under his entire 188-nound body. Theismann was rolled off the field on a stretcher and taken to Arlington Hospital. The preliminary diagnosis was a compound fracture of the lower leg. Theisman was taken to Arlington Hospital, where he underwent surgery for an open fracture of the tibia fibula and will remain hospitalized for 10-14 days. The leg will undergo a knee surgery, he will remain inactive for six months as a result of a sack by linebackers Lawrence Taylor and Gary Reasons in the second quarter. The injury was a painful ending for a frustrating season for Theismann, who entered the game as the NFC's second-worst rated passer and received much of the blame for the Redskins' troubles. Theismann completed 7-of-10 passes for 54 yards and one touchdown Monday. Joe Morris scored on runs of 56, 41 and eight yards for the Giants. Morris gained 118 yards on 17 carries and his three rushing TDs give him a club-record 11 for the season. This is the first in a series appear- g this week dealing with injuries suffered in intramural football. By Matt Tidwell Of the Kansan sports staff Eric Witcher knew he was hurt badly when he hit the ground — what he didn't know in the fall of 1983 was that he would go on hurting him for two years. "It was a rainy day and I was playing on the line," said Witcher, Elkhart senior and at the time a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon's intramural football team. "I had just finished blocking and fell hard on the ground after a play. I was in a lot of pain and found out later that I had a dislocated shoulder. In surgery the next morning, they put a $3 \frac{1}{2}$ inch pin in my shoulder. "I'm bitter about the injury. It still bothers me and I haven't really played any sports since then for fear of hurting it badly again." The KU touch football game allows full contact on the line of scrimmage between offensive and defensive linemen. Two-handed touch by a defender is, however, the only way in which an offensive ball carrier or receiver can be halted. No tackling is allowed. "When they call it 'touch' football, that's really not an accurate description. Witcher said. "It is just like the ball contact football without the pads." When an injury occurs, full contact between blockers is often the culprit. "We play touch football here and obviously most injuries happen in the blocking process on the line of scrimmage," he added, in Appell, director of Recreation Services. The possibilities for serious injury have at times caused Kansas and other schools with touch football to examine the possible benefits of switching to another, possibly safer, type of football. Other intramural football options used in college include flag football which is played at most other Big Ten games, and the touch football with protective pads. ferrent form of football. Recreation Services officials said they had to be convinced that the number of injuries would be large enough to warrant a change to a dif- Sports medicine specialists and Recreation Services officials said that injuries like Witcher were rare on KU intramural fields. During the 1984 season, four foot injuries were reported from all Rescue teams. There are three basic levels of intramural football at the University; trophy, which is the most competitive level; Rec.A, which is the intermediate level; and Rec.B. Within these two categories are dependent leagues, which are further divided into men's and women's divisions. Larry Magee, a physician and sports medicine specialist at Watkins Hospital, has treated KU intramural patients and classifies the majority as minor. Still, intramural chairmen from various KU living groups have said that serious injuries do occur from time to time on intramural football fields. Last year, a Phi Gamma Delta football player suffered a separated shoulder. This season, a Phi Delta Theta athlete broke his nose. to happen with any type of football," Magee said. "I see more minor injuries to fingers and hands than anything else." Chappell said a broken leg was the most serious reported football injury last year. 'Serious injuries like that are go- Even with the full contact line, even football players don't seem to be able to touch the ball. "We don't think it's rough enough," said Randy Bryson, Overland Park sophomore and trophy league football captain for Delta Chi. "Over the past two years we've all been minor, but they've both been minor. As far we're concerned, the officials call it too tight." "it's a rough game, but everybody realizes it's rough and they prepare here." Perhaps the best testament to the satisfaction of KU students is the popularity of intramural football, basketball and soccer ball at the top intraurban sport. Writers name McGee MVP "It's traditional that the guys here play touch football," Chappell said. "Most guys grow up playing touch and learn how to play pretty early NEW YORK -- Willie McGee, the National League batting champion whose all-round skills led the St. Louis Cardinals to the pennant, yesterday was named the NL's Best Batting Award by the baseball Writers Association of America. United Press International The 27-year-old center fielder received 14 first place votes and 200 points from the 24 members of the BBWAA — two from each NL city — to easily outdistance outfielder Dave Parker of the Cincinnati Reds, the league's RBI leader. Parker received six first place votes and 220 points. Outfielder Pedro Guerrero of the Los Angeles Dodgers was third with six first place votes and 208 points Each voting member of the BBWAA was asked to list 10 players on his ballot in order of preference and McGee, Parker and Guerrero were the only players to be named on all 24 balls. Points were awarded based on how well the ballots had to be in before the start of the post-season competition. Rounding out the top 10 votegetters were second baseman Tommy Herr of St. Louis (119 points), catcher Gary Carter of New York (116), pitcher Michael Briggs of New York (63), first baseman Keith Hernandez of New York, pitcher John Tudor of and pitcher Dwight Gooden of the New York Mets, winner of the NL Cy Young Award, was fourth with one first place vote and 182 points. Parker, a rejuvenated player since coming to the Reds two seasons ago from the Pittsburgh Pirates, led the NL with 125 RBI and batted .312 with 34 homers and 42 doubles. The fleet-footed McGee led the league in batting with a 353 average, in hits with 216 and in triples with 18. He also finished third in stolen bases with 56 and in runs scored with 114. In addition, he hit 10 homers, knocked in 82 runs and played superbly on defense. No changes in store for Chiefs McGee's selection as MVP marks the 14th time a member of the Cardinals has won baseball's most valuable player, and he was presented by the RWBA in 1891. St. Louis (61) and first baseman Jack Clark of St. Louis (20). KANSAS CITY, Mo. — While declining to give embattled head coach John Mackovic a vote of confidence, owner Lamar Hunt of the Kansas City Chiefs yesterday said that no changes would be made in his struggling National Football League team before the end of the season. The Chiefs are 17-26 under Mackovic, who was hired off the Dallas Cowboys' staff in 1983 to replace the fired Marv Levy. There The Associated Press The Chiefs broke training camp this season confident of making their first playoff appearance in 14 years. But a 3-13 loss to San Francisco Sunday dropped their record to 3-8 and left the team weak to break to a club record seven in a row. "In light of the Chiefs' losing streak, I am aware that there is speculation regarding our coaching situation on both a national and local level," said in a statement released through the team's public office. has been speculation for several weeks that Mackovic's job was in peril. "The Chiefs are struggling at the "We as an organization are deeply disappointed with our record and the team's performance over the last seven-game period. That disappointment is shared by coaches, players and management in equal portions. There is great emotion that goes into the preparation and conduct of a season and we, like the fans, are very deflated at our current status. moment and I'm sure John Mackovic, his assistants and the 45-man squad want to do everything possible to turn things around in the five games. We are working in that direction as a total organization. "I do not believe in votes of confidence in the middle of a season," the statement said. "They inevitably are distorted and misinterpreted and we would prefer to wait and evaluate the season as a whole." Hunt made it clear that he would have no further comment. "This statement must stand on its own and will not be expanded or elaborated on." he said. The Chiefs have played poorly in virtually every phase of the game since the onset of their losing skid. JUNIOR BASKETBALL Suzy.Mast/KANBAI Eyes have it Mark Dziadula, Girard freshman, sets his sights on the basket. Dziadula and friends played yesterday behind Templin Hall. 10 University Daily Kansan Classified Ads 101 Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985 The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 6.25 10-20 2.90 4.25 6.00 9.30 21-25 3.00 4.75 6.75 10.15 For every 3 words add: 304 504 754 1.05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Friday 4 p.m. Friday Tuesday 4 p.m. Wednesday 4 p.m. Classified Display ... $4.40 Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum display is one inch. No advertisement allowed in a classified display. No overbrakes allowed in classified displays ads. POLICIES I found cards can be advertised 30% of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed on person or simply by calling the Kawasaki business office at 804-4558. - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Works set in BOLD CAPS count as 3 words * Deadline is 4 p.m. – 2 working days prior to - and taught it to the University's Daily Kaiwan. All advertisers will be required to pay in advance. - Classified display displays do not count towards monthly earned rate discount. - In-Docs the notes. * Teams have the privileged for classified or locked information. - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only. - Blind box ads - please add a $4 service charge - Checks must accompany all ads listed as mall ads this earned rate the discount * Samples of all mail order items must be submitted ANNOUNCEMENTS Rent-10’ Color T. $28.88 on month. Smarty’s T. $14.99 Rent-34’ Color B. $32.43 on month. Mon.-Sat. $9.99 - Sun. T. $84.32 on month. upper 68! SUA Travel is going to beautiful Aspen bounce Jan 4-11 and you can be there! Trip will include free breakfast, lunch, everything, even lift tickets. Sign-up deadline is next week to worm! Registration at the SUA of arizona will be available on Friday. REDIT CARD GUARANTEED To Working students! 100% Approval. Charge $300. Pay £21 Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $14.49 Smity's TV, 1447 W. 23rd. 842.5751. Mon.- Sat: 9:30- 9:00. Sun- 1:5 Editor, business manager The Kanas is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester Editor and Business Manager positions. These are paid positions and newcomers receive experience. Applica- tions 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, Stuuffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, Stuuffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Tuesday, November 19. **REDICT Cards GUARANTEED To Working** **students! 100% Approved. Charge $300. Pay $21** *donth. Send For Application. National Credit* *box. Box 595. Shawnee. Oklahoma 74802* - No responsibility is assumed for more than one or correct insertion of any advertisement. * No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertisement. Paid Staff Positions 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 sun is setting over the pyramid while the GRAPEVINE grows. THINKING OF A LONG TERM BELATIATION AND wanting it to work. Then come to a special event on Thursday, February 7 at 3:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Center. Dance to live fiddle music! Jayhawker Oldtime Bardandre Company. Make your next party uniq- ue 841-6495. News and Business Staff Positions VIDEOS TAPEES OF ACADEMIC SKILL 10:Preparing for exams. 21:10-Preparing for exams. 30:Foreign Language Study Skills, 3:Time Management. FREEMT Prep to attend at the Student Residency Center. The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Monday, December 2, 1985. The University Daily Kansan is an Equity Research/Mitrion Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry. ENTERTAINMENT FORRENT Beautiful, Spacious, Meadowbrook apartment for small-loan. Close to campus Great view, pool fence, patio, yard. Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 1679 West 8th. One bedroom furnished, 3rd floor, $250 plus utilities. Lease through www.uarterrascapital.com. Price could be negotiable 843-832-1433, 843-833-1433. Afftractive 8 bedroom condominium for rest. 1 LAST bath, CA, PF, range refrigerator, microwave, DHW, WiFi hookup, TV swimming pool, TV cable, available Dec. 1. Laundry required. $359, 748-5099. Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at BREKERLE FLAT. VACANCES available now and at semester. Plan ahead, lease now for next year. RSVS 2116. Non-Smoking female roommate for spring semester. 2 bath and 8 bath/19 feet 7½ room. Apt. 3001, 4th floor. Available now. Small house, two blocks from line. Range, refrigerator. $250/mo plan utilities. Deposit and referees. 832—2954, evenings, weekends. Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 842-4185. efficient one-bedroom apartment to sublease in adventure $24/month, water paid, low unit rate, 80% down. Ficient one—bedroom apartment to sublease in adjacent. $436/month, water paid, low attl. $89/month, space for up to 15. Excellent location one bedroom studio basement at 1001 Mississippi. $175 me. call 842-4242 Furnished rooms from $100 with some utilities furnished from Kansas Union. No pets. MLS-26507. Limited spaces will be available at Naismith Hall next semester. Waiting lists are formed now so don't delay ^ for more information or call them at Naismith Hall, 1800 Naismith Drive 84 - 8539 MUST BRILLIEZE Catheterized Apartments 3, 5, and 7 of semester, leave through May for Arkansas. HEATWERED VALLEY: THANKGIVING SPECIAL, NOVEMBER RENT $800. One & two departments have a CA, gas heat, DW,FF refr. Efficient energy and on bus route B1-843 754 Nice Rooms $135.00 Util. Paid. 842-4736 after 5 p.m. Nice southeast location. New 2 bedroom duplex. Spacious living room with sliding glass door to patio. Eat - in kitchen w/dw, disposal range, refrigerator, laundry room, wall to wall carpet, central air. Available immediately, lease to hotel. Room rate: $45 per month. 1000. E 25th Terr. #82-269 Jayhawker Towers ON CAMPUS 2-Br. Apts. for KU students for KU students. - For 2, 3 or 4 persons - Individual Contract Option - All Utilities Paid - Limited Access Doors - On Bus Line - Laundry Facilities - Furnished or Unfurnished Now leasing for spring 843-4993 ROOMS FOR M/F STUDENTS AVAILABLE NOW. FURNISHED, Share Kitchen, bath, Walk to campus. 14th & Kentucky. $110, $115, $125 plus 7/9 gas. 841, 2065/841388 Spacious two bedroom unfurnished lowhouse for rent close to campus; Includes garage, 1/3-4 bath, balcony and new carpeting. Very comfortable and available as early as Dce. Call 749-2044. Rooms for rent on the hill 1/1 mile from Union. $85 and $123. Call 841-6495. SUBLEASE. 2 bedroom Apt. On Ban Route & close to Campus. 3 Bedroom & Comfortable Village Suite. 1 Bedroom Apt. Small house, available new, two blocks from bus stop. 20'x15' apartment with 3 baths, 2 bedrooms, Deposit and贷项, 833-293-265, evening calls. **Affirmative-Room for 4:** Spaces 2 to 5 Batha: Bedroom, Campus and residential; Bath: Local Location, Campus and residential. Sublease 2 BR. Available from January. Close to campus. Purchased $160承包. After 6 p.m., call (718) 359-7488. FOR SALE: 21" Zenith Color Television, Remote Control, Excellent Condition. Call 841-765-376 FREE KITTY: Must part with beautiful long-lasting leather jacket and train at trained an old man mid. 911-833-4309 FOR SALE Sublease 3. bedroom furnished apartment; Tangweled Aple. acre to campus. Call office. 1-800-545-6202. Spring semester open for math at Nathmith College. Sign up on the Nathmith Subbase at asteret. Large, new 2 bedrooms. 804 South Broadway MASTERCAFFE offers a complete furnished two bedroom apartment available immediately! We also have subleases on 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments for January! All near KU. Call (855) 426-7900. Want to live in Nahumah 7 need roommate for Spring 748-4805 CARPET 1/2 the price of new, 50.00 square yards for choosing from: Big Bob 300 Carpet Shop Carpet Shop 21. ZENITH COLOR TELEVISION, REMOTE CONTROL, Excellent condition. Phone: 843-7601. Baseball cards and sports nostalgia. Buy, sell, and trade your baseball cards. Open 10 a.m. & W. side street. CABEET 35,000 square yards in a rainbow of color and shape. Big Bold's Used Carpets™ New York City. 424-7628 PC INTEGRATION: The most compatible at the lowest price. Full guaranteed. Systems starting just $499. Hard disk spec: 32 MB/m², installed and tasted full wear guarantee! acoustic guitar, $175/best offer. Beginner's drum set, some hardware, make offer. 842-0324. For Sale: 14 X 70 Mobile Home why throw your money away on rent when you can have equity when you graduate? 2 bdrms. bath home is perfect for roommates or young family. SEASON BASKETBALL TICKET CALL 041-386-356 Cinema Booths, Playhouses, Pavilions, etc. *Max* Comics: Open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sat. @ 6:30 morning; Sun. @ 8 a.m., 4 p.m. For Sale - Large weight set with bench, graphic equalizer. 11" BWL weight. Call 749-7483 anytime. For Sale, Student Season Basketball ticket, call 749-567, Mary GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U1 repair). Also Call G-717 for information. Call G-859-609-609. G-717 G-859-609-609 Honda C7-50Cter (1981). Great for campus easy to operate 3000 best offer. Mark 644-6241 masters hunters harmon master Harmon Kardon 32nd Mini- edition, 1 year. $290 or best offer #B43 6012 1-year-olds $495 SKIS for sale. Head Master 2001's, w/Salomon 720b bindings, jones Book 622, ments' Best Mesh. (859) 334-8900. www.skiss.com Student Season Basketball Ticket for sale. Best offer Call after 5. Keep trying. Hold 843,146. John. Student SEASON BASKETBALL ticket. Call 749-3927 THE MOST COMPATIBLE American PC/TX Computer from $95. Full year warranty. Authorized Dealer, Distributor, Think Micro, Inc. 8423-535 Box 305, Lawrence, KS 60044 Sylvana CD player, made in Belgium. Value $310, selling for $185. 942-3236. Tired of looking everywhere for QUALITY THRES & WHEELS at reasonable prices? You don't dissipate your energy with expensive brands are at our everyday low prices (com- panions are up to 15% off). Visit us! 610.7.W22d | Bread Pizza Hut 749-5437 out! 610.7.W22d | Bread Pizza Hut 749-5437 Waterbed mattress. 10 galon Aquarium set-up. HP 41 Printer, storero system. Q43-8396 YAMAHA Stereo Receiver, 50 watts, Digital Quartz Synthesized Tuner and Expandable Expansion Head Western Civilization Notes: On safe on New Safe! Makes sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class preparation. 3) For exam preparation. "New Safe!" Booklet available at Town Crier, The Jayhawk Bookseller, and at Town Crier. Collector Stamps, Mint and used. Canaan, U.S. Europe and more. Open 10-5, Sat. Sun, only 811 New Hampshire. Booth 28 (Second Room). YAMAHA TUNNABLE P. 300, $19.99 1953 Mustang. Burgandy with cream interior. 4 speed, A/C, great shape, $2,495. Precnt McCall WC **Book No. 802487** YAMMIE TUNTABLE • $440 • Call: 890-7697. Great Christian Present. AUTOSALES 1908 Ramder American. Runs great. Stero cassette with equalizer. No run $5,000. Call Mike Smith. 1973 MAVERICK, it runs, $200 or best offer, 842-317-92 1987 Toyota Celica 5 speed A-C, stereo, $1,956 Preston McCall 61-4007-887 1975 Fiat 128; Rebuild engine, runs good 67% in 2014. 1976 Datsun 220; Rebuild engine, runs good 67% 1977 Datsun 220; 1A-C A Speed 15950 Preme Motors 1979 Pontiac Bonneville, excellent condition, two door. Must sell as soon as possible. Best offer on new models. 17:57 Datum F- 10 A- C 4 Speed $1585 Preston Mea Call M3.601 M497 1850 Plymouth Air 5 Speed AM-FM Cassette $2705 Prestm McCall Co. 841-6007 1983 Mariza GLC, 2 door, HB, 3 speed, FWD, rear defender, highway行李 $3000. *Moon* afford both car and school anymore-must sell car as soon as possible. 749-7532 1. 2018 Chevy Chevette. dark blue metallic; dark blue interior, automatic. A/C $2,950 Prestige M Motor. 1853 Dodge Cdl Deluxe. 4 speed overdrive, A/C motor. Fuel efficiency. Great Condition, Gas Mileage $3000-3247.4 71 Ford Ltd. RELIABLE. Runs well. New bat- tle tires, mixing K60. Call 843-2548. 12-hour run. 41 Pinto. Priced to sell, in good running condition. Call 749-2089. 78 Buck Regal Limited 74.900 l. AC, PB.CB. 2650 washable Cloth Interior. $250 petroleum #L750 IPHING GRADS A new a new Mercury Gougier Gougier is available on Applicable or any Ford Mercury product. 12800. 71 Ford LTD, LREB. Runs well; New Battery & Tires. Ask E20L, £59. 814-239, 12 noon— Sunday. LOST/FOUND Desperately seeking pet FERNET Lost near the brown Browns with face mask, friendly REWARD FOUND. Thursday November 14-Calculator in Hm 202 v2 Call to identify 7-80k Ask for response. LAST: Timex Quartz Digital/Analog Watch in Men's Restroom, 3rd level Kauai Union on 11/12. If please call 749-4861 at 3:00 Weekdays / Anytime weeks. found: Grey Striped Tab by Cat found on 4d Emery. Very Friendly Call 749 - 8670 to Found: At Homestias concerts, a gold clad ring w/diamante. From Pleasant Ridge 1832 Bell Museum. out - Heart Shaped Amethyst Ring with two diamonds, at Harpoons call 664-145-143; Rust colored umbrella on Earth; Rust colored umbrella on Earth; Rust colored umbrella on Earth; test)请告 Valerie at 864-1177 after test)请告 Valerie at 864-1177 after Lost - Gold add-a - bead necklace near Stuaf- wosco - Wearer - Sentimental value, Call bridge 48427 K.U. I.D. with bus pass on it lost on campus. Call received Callm at 865.4094 PERSONAL Tall, slender white male, 40, with brazen face, sense of humor and interests in weightlifting, racing, fitness training and inversion, wants to meet attractive young lady for a date. To be to 16a, UDK, 119 Stuaffer Flint Hault, Huitau. H to you who buy hasys cake rolls in Krogers Express Line On Tuesdays. BUS. PERSONAL Freshman male, 18, tall, curly hair, keeps everything looking for female, 16-20, who enjoys playing basketball and volleyball. Choose a deluxe model VCR with extensive movie collection for FUN parties. Send responses to 119 MARYNAY FROM MEST WHO CALLED AT 80 A.M. CAT WEST MACK RICK 810-2890 Weekly/Up Main Circulation? No 516-3700 Weekly/Up Main Circulation? No Businesss Success, Box 4076, Woodstock, WV 26115 78 Horizon, 64,000 miles 4 cyl. Auto 4t-ute 38 Horizon, 64,000 miles 4 cyl. Auto 4t-ute and dependable car in good condition. BD7174 电话 YOU Aerobics W/Style - Guga-Gua, good workouts a&'s weekly; Monday, Wednesday, Thursday evenings & Saturday morning. Enrol 2 friends- Free 4 week session. Tert 814.6337 A82.8048.8067 H2 sportswear CUSTOM DESIGNS FOR QUALITY SHOPPING We Make Ideas Come Alive 1023 Mass. 740-7471 New from California. Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way to join KU singles to meet. Free brewery. 361-264-7542. PO Box 262. Wirzita Monday, Monday at Ramanan KU IKFrequentia needed. MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Union's recording of the day's entrees & soups. MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Union's recording 1023 Mass. 749-7471 CAN HEAD THE PUBLIC RELATIONS PROGRAM FOR A MAJOR CAMPUS ORGANIZATION! Apply now for Public Relations Chairperson for Student Union Activities by picking up an application at the SUA Office. Deadline for applying is Thurs., Nov. 21 at noon. Five minute interviews will be held that evening beginning at 6 p.m. CHRISTMAS SPECIALS! Amya Barbershop, 842 1/2 Mass, welcomes all tourists. Four fall time barbers, regular hair and makeup services. 2 FOR 1 memberships -OR- 2 FOR 1 memberships -OR- $10 OFF non-member tanning packages (as low as $4 per session!) 图示人物在瑜伽姿势中,身体呈三角状,肩部放松,眼睛正对前方。 EUROPEAN SUNTANNING NOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA PHONE 841-6232 offers expire 11/23/85 Broke? Not enough money for college? You could be missing out on thousands of dollars in financial aid. Find out how to get your fair share. For your copy of "A Comprehensive Guide to Financial Aid," your name, address, and only $4.95 to Bel-Ray's address, 10523 Metcalf Street, Overland Park KS 62511 jewelry posters THE MUSEUM SHOP rocks rocks Check Us Out All remaining T-shirts $4-$4.75 Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, 4-ashirts, glasses, hats, plastic cup, etc. for an up-coming event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specialties plus speedy and reliable delivery. You design it or it by us. Contact J & M Favors 2291 W. Riland (Bibson Gibson) 811-649-4140. reduced prices on some merchandise for that special someone 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 1-5 Sun Museum of Natural History (next to KS Union) for AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK HELP WANTED COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care; confidence assured. Greater area call. Call for appointment. 933-454-1400 FLOAT CONNECTION 14th E. 8th St. 749-0771 Mastercard and Visa. CORPORATE COACH Babysitter needed in my home for all home, non-home jobs or for responsibility, with reference to job duties. Rent '18' Color T V $29 a month Curtis T V $26 w 3rd $42,573.81 M Sat; 9:30 Sat; 10:30 Sun Delivery Drivers. Need 10 people for campus area deliveries. Earn 25 and up per day a.m. and p.m. Apply 9-4 at 2222 W. sixth at the Master Inn Suite 112 A. Ask for Jov. first moment, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, T.D. and of course, flight. [3] We get your computer's on atraight. Computer Server AlphaMega Computer Services INTERNSHIP OPEN: KANSAS RURAL CENTER, a non-profit research, education, and training center that offers natural resource and rural issues, in offering a one year full time Internship involving research work in agricultural and cultural agriculture. Transition from college to agricultural "Degree, writing and research skills required." Drivers Wanted, must be able to work late night Drains Must be able to apply at Checkers Pizza, VIA Yale Road Transition from 'Conventional' AGrienture' Degree, writing and research skills required. Resume and resume and writing sample to M. Fund, Kansas Rural Center 590 Wt., Winfield, Ks 65523 **keep Warm with wool top coats, hats, and gloves** **Shop 722 Mac 8431 9601 OPEN** **EVERY DAY** Modeling and theater partition - shooting now called the stage, calls for information. Fresh Studio. 749-633. **OVERSEAS JOBS Summer yr round Europe.** **US JOBS Summer yr round Europe.** *Safeguarding Free Information w/ write LGC. Box P0 52 MS*. Part-time cocktail waitress needed Thurs, Fr. and sat nights. Apply in person Wed, 7-10 Mon-Fri. Call 631-258-4921. *STUDENT HELP NEEDED*. General labor and skilled trades assistants. Must be able to work 8-12 hour or 1-5 p.m. Contact Collegen Wins, Stuart, 306-437-9399 or Collegen Wins, 15th, W 15h, 864-9897. Bring your class schedule STUDENT HELP NEEDED. Cleek TYPist available to work half days, either mornings 8-12 or 9-1 or afternoons 1-5, Monday through Friday. Ten key adding machine, math skills and good telephone skills required. Light Typing. Contact maintenance. 2303 W, 1thh, 864-3097. Volunteer Position: You are interested in heading the public relations program for a major campus organization? Apply now to be the Public Relations Chairperson for Student Union Activities at the University. Please be noted that it is now Thursday November 12th, Interviews will be held that same evening beginning at 6 p.m. Wanted - Musician, Musician, Gospel/Contem- portant, Jazz, Adult, Teen, Elder $43694 or $814,707 M- F-M salary commensurat- ing Female Aide A.M. 7:30-12:00; P.M. 10-12, weekends ala. 748.0008 Hiring Today Have 15 positions available for students and Housewives for telephone office work. Earn a extra Christmas money. Go pay the teacher for meals at the Master In Suite 12 A.9. Ask for Joy. Opportunity for all single girls age (18-22) desperately needing or interested in 5000-2200 for next semester, come and ask me 9.1 a.m. at Burge Union Level 3. (Look for opportunity sign. Rent*18.4 Color T V. $28.8 m. Smiffy's TV 144 W. 147 B. 3437-517. Mon-Sat. 9:00-9:00. Sun- 14:59 on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, turtles and caps and shirts Back by Swell 16-11 Thousands of R & B aathm - 42 cirres. Also color catalogues of R & B aathm (1, 2, 3). Quarterly Quarterly 911. New Hartam. Buy, Self. Sell, Refund. WINTER BREAK skiing at Seambleau Springs and Vail from 75%, or sailing at South Padre Island and Daytona Beach from 899; Harry, curate Sunsplash Tours for more information to tell the story. Visit www.SunshinePrep.org/ TODAY! When your winter break counts, count on Sunshade. Camera Repair now at One Hour Photo. Southern Hills Malls, 814-795 BLOOM COUNTY THE FAR SIDE LOOK OUT LAWRENCE! THE KU KONNECTION has found a system of dating which works. COMPUTER DATING with a perionable touch. THE KU KONNECTION has it if !!! Find out about us by simply sending $20 to an self-addressed email address. CONNECTION P.O. BOX 258 Lawrence, KS 60644 MATH TUTOR - Bob Meem holds an M.A in math from K.U. where I, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professional students at K.U., statics - 80 per 40 minute session - Call 843-9023. SINGLES... Results. Effective. Join hundreds of presecondary quality adults looking for sincere companionship, 1/2 price for women under 40 (have we got a man for you?) For info call (843) 755-5000 or visit Lawrence is an offspring of New Beginnings Video in Kansas City. Holidays are coming to give yourself the gift ever. Not an Acord Service Teacher with 2nd with (84) KUD; get FREE membership. kinko's 5¢ No Minimum 23rd & IOWA 904 VERMONT 12th & INDIANA SERVICES OFFERED STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Massachusetts, downtown, all haircuts. No appointment. (948) 725-6258 BHRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling: 943-8421 Haircuts $7, perm $80 at Channels. Contact Chris Mon-Sat at 812-7900. Walk-ins welcome. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Iowa. M-5126 THEME & THEIS OUTLINED - enhanced with library RE SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising, Victor Clark. 842-8240 TYPING 1-3-3 Dependable, accurate, professional. WORD book, edt. Data Bank of Libraries, papered, books, edt. Data Bank 841 8779 1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Acquire and affordable typing. Judy. 842-7945 1—1. TROW ROOM PROCESSING Experiential Reliability. Rallah. Rash jobs accepted. Call 842-3111 **THE NOTMALT** I HAVE TOTAL PHONE IN FOLL PAYMENT IN THE REHERRING OPS’ INTELLIGENCE NEW NOSE IS OVER AND COMMON LETS GO TO THE NORSE SENSE COMPUTER ROW OF THE WORLD’S HEART THE WORLDTOCTORS - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 845-3147 --- Get Something Going! Make the cash flow. Get business back in the black by increasing sales with a hard-working classified ad. Many people shop classified daily and associate it with quality, value, and service. Among the profitable in classified. Make the cash flow in today. Place a classified ad. By GARY LARSON Kansan Classifieds 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4588 11-19 © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate 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 "Fuel ... check. Lights ... check. Oil pressure .. check. We've got clearance. OK, Jack—let's get this baby off the ground." 19 PAHM. THE RESULTS * ARE AD FOLLOWS... THE MANION OF ERROR IS PLAUS OR MISTAKES. THOSE LATTER VOTES ARE INSUDUMFIED bv Berke Breathed 1 & I WOOT FOR THE NEW AGE, 15 & I WOOT FOR THE OLD, CLASSIC "NAME," AND NBY WORE "VIDEO" FOR IMAGESLY REPLACING THIS COME STRIP with "PRINCE VOLUMT." PROGRAMMER THE MASSES HAVE SPKEEN THORSE STUMP HORSE-BRAWN MASSES SUNDAY Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area 11 Classified Ads 24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes, dissertations, paperwork. Close to campus. Best A t professional typing. Term papers, Theses, Information Resumes, etc. Using IBM Selectric IRI Corporation's database. AAA TYPING/821-1844 Class papers, car- port manuals, and other technical documents. by KT engraving. Generally, if by a person other than the author, please contact A. L SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers. Phone: 842-8657 after 5:30. A+ Word processing Service produces documents in Word Processing format. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage requirements vary. ARKInd of Typing: GOOD IMPRESSIONS Fast, reasonable spelling punctuation errors Absolutely LETTER PERFECT. Word process typing and bookkeeping TRUSTS @ $3,950 or less for a 12-month Accurate, affordable typing through holiday by former Harvard Medical School secretary. Call Alright! Omega Computer Services - Word Process- ing. Alright! Omega Computer Services - Word Document document upgrading. Free estimates. Omega Computer Services CLEAN Fast and Dependable Typing Service Call 841-6848 any time 1. Plus Typing, law papers, resumes, dissertations, letters, etc.Sharp ZX80 with memory card DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced, managed, and technical transfer in TRANSCRIPTION also, standard tape use. NESTERATIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/ *Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter paper papers up to 30 papers. Mommy's 8 month. 1492-3873 store #0 p. please. Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone 842-2301 after 3:30. Barb Elishish B.A. Taping or Tufering Spelling and corrected - Overnight service. Call 8-461-670. PROFESSIONAL typet with 15 years experience fast, accurate, and reliable. Call Peggy after contacting us. QUALITY TYPING. Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes; applications: Spelling corrected C # 812-274-7 T130 Wordprocessing CONSCIENTIOUS T120 Wordprocessing CONSCIENTIOUS Will accept rsp mail 844-721-3111 TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, textual writing, and drafting. dissertations, papers, letters, applications. postscript. EXPERIENCED TYPPI Term paper. terms theM Correcting Selecticr. I will correct spelling theM TOP-NOTH!T professional word processing manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality print- ing, etc. 843-3062 WANTED Business 249 tutor needed. Set your own rate. Call 749 - 8828. Rosemary Female Wanted immediately to share two bedroom app eve very moment have a baby. Have you had any issues with conditioning, closing to campus and downtown is on bus route, $410.00 and half utilities 842-787, if not online. Female roommate to share 2 berm apartment, $127 30 plus half electricity, great location (555) 468-9999 Female to share two bedroom apartment for spring semester. 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SHARE HOUSE, 3 dbrm 2 bath, deck, fireplace, washer/drier, dishwasher, disposal. Near Westridge and Junkyards Jym. Call 749-8058(wk) 841-1904(mh), BILL self-disch�udent student to motivate and徒 seventh grade level 12 year old after school. Call 609-488-7532. Wanted: Female roamate for spring semester, half race run and halffaithless. Meadowbrook Wanted. Female roommate for spring semester. $0 rent; 13,12 rooms, and own bus. On bus ride to campus. Wanted - Guitarist and/or keyboard player for Motorola Prefer to work with a Prefer For more information call 824-3521. Wanted: Roommate to share house with four others. Own bedroom, $125 plus 1/8 fees, close proximity. Wanted: Roommate, quiet, non-smoking, respon- sibility. Must be at least 20 years old. ward wD, dw mic $20/no, util, included. Hazardous materials on campus Task force chair calls for safety office A priority for KU officials should be creating an office of safety and hazardous materials on the Lawrence campus, the chairman of a KU task force on hazardous materials said last week. Ross McKinney, the chairman and a professor of civil engineering, said the University of Kansas was growing too large to continue handling hazardous materials in the "ad hoc" fashion it had been. By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff "Most good universities that have the potential to stay good have a full-time office of safety and hazardous materials," McKinney said. mittee, said an industrial hygienist was needed on campus. "Hazardous conditions and hazardous materials should be our number one priority, and we should have a full-time office." John A. Landgrebe, professor of chemistry and the chairman of the Industrial Biohazards Com- Although he has been acting as an adviser on hazardous waste, he said, someone should be hired to do the job full time. "The University of Kansas is way behind in this regard," he said. The University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas city, Kan, has had a safety office since 197 and an industrial hygienist since 1977, said Randy Porter, industrial hygienist at the Med Center. Porter said his job was to find and correct problems that could have adverse health effects on Med Center employees, patients, students and visitors and on members of the surrounding community. Besides being responsible for biological and chemical safety, he said, he is in charge of coordinating hazardous chemical waste disposal, excluding radioactive waste. Radioactive materials are handled by a separate division of the safety office, he said. The Lawrence campus didn't have a hazardous waste disposal program until recently. The Biohazards Committee, which is involved primarily with teaching and academic research laboratories, on Oct. 18 set up a trailer on West Campus to temporarily store hazardous waste, Landgrebe said. Before, he said, individual laboratories handteed the waste themselves. The Task Force on Hazardous Materials, which was organized this semester to develop a University policy, probably will recommend that an office of safety and hazardous materials be established, McKinney said. He said hazardous materials were those that were toxic, flammable, corrosive or highly reactive. On Campus The KU Wellness Center will be the host of an open house from 10 m. to noon and 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. today in 138 Robinson Center. The KU Men's Soccer Club will practice at 4 p.m. today and Thursday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The KU Women's Soccer Club will practice at 4:30 p.m. today and Thursday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. A Biblical seminar, "The Bible Today: A Basic Overview," will be given at 4:30 p.m. today at the northeastern Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. The KU Committee on South Africa will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. The Tau Sigma Student Dance Club will meet at 7 p.m. today in 242 Robinson Center. The University Band, conducted by John Grashel, associate professor of music education, and the University Wind Ensemble, conducted by Bob Foster, KU director of bands, will perform at the 4 p.m. Marches, "at 8 p.m. today in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall. Admission is free." The Strategy Games Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union. The KU Mecha Club will meet at 7 p.m. today in the International Room of the Union, J.Q. Rodriguez, a ■ University Forum will feature a presentation by Tim Miller, lecturer in religious studies, on "Silkville: A Commune on the Kansas Frontier" at 11:45 a.m. tomorrow at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries; Luncheon reservations must be made by noon today. Hispanic program specialist with the U.S. Post Office, will be the guest speaker. The German Club will show the German movie "Die Weisse Rose" at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in 2085 Wescoe Hall. **Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity and the Emergency Services Council of Lawrence will conduct a canned food drive through Saturday. Fraternity members will be collecting food during dinner today at Ellsworth, Hashinger and Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin halls. Food will be collected during dinner tomorrow at Joseph R. Pearson, Templin, McColum and Oliver halls. Collectors will be at all grocery stores from 8 a.m. to noon Saturday. The KU Dr. Who Appreciation Society will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Walnut Room of the Union. KU tops goal in fund drive By a Kansan reporter The University of Kansas surpassed its $70,000 goal for this year's United Fund Drive on Friday, the last official day to bring in donations, the drive's KU division chairman said yesterday. "We made it with plenty to spare," said drive chairman Michael Davis, dean of law. "At the end, we already were $500 over the goal. And there are still more KU envelopes that haven't been counted." Students, faculty and staff who want to see the completed Jayhawk signs that measure the progress of the KU drive will have to look quickly at the sign by the Chi Omega fountain because facilities operations took down the other four on Friday, Davis said. PANIC BUTTON --- LAST CHANCE TO HAVE YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT TAKEN Back by popular demand! Senior pictures Thursday, Nov.14 through Tuesday, Nov.26 Call the Jayhawker Yearbook office immediately for an appointment! 864-3728 Minsky's PIZZA WIN a LARGE PIZZA! Have Your Name in Lights & Announced on 106 KLZR! PICK THE WINNERS of these BIG 8 GAMES Kansas State ___ vs. Colorado ___ Nebraska ___ vs. Oklahoma ___ Oklahoma State ___ vs. Iowa State ___ Tiebreaker: Pick the Score of Kansas ___ vs. Missouri ___ Name ___ Phone ___ DEADLINE: Nov. 23 by 1 p.m. A WINNER EVERY WEEK! A Your Entry Entitles You to $2 OFF a LARGE Pizza or $1 OFF a MEDIUM Pizza * Good at the time of registration * Good on delivery----842-0154 - We have FREE DAY DELIVERY! - Reserve our "PARTY ROOM" for your party! Minsky's PIZZA 2228 Iowa 842-0154 Tomorrow Night DOWJONES and the industrials $1 Cover $2 Pitchers all night 25¢ Draws Tues & Thurs. Fri. & Sat. Nights Party with The Clique Cogburns CHRISTMAS & THANKSGIVING FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST 333333 NO EXTRA CHARGE! AIRLINE COUNTER PRICES Make your reservations at todays prices. On campus or downtown. DON'T DELAY DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED CALL NOW! Maupintour travel service KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 F ROLL OUT THE BARREL Every Tuesday and Thursday Refill Your "HAWK" Glass ONLY $1.00 2 P.M.-Close It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO K. U. Union/900 Mass. 749-0700 ecco CLOGS 1339 MASS. FOOTPRINTS THE MUTILATOR R Fri. '5:00 Daily 7:30 9:30 Sat & Sun. '2:30'5:00 HILLCREST 1 JAGGED EDGE Glenn Close Jeff Bridge Daily '4-45 7:30 9:40 Sat & Sun. '2-30 HILLCREST 2 "HIGHLY ENJOAVABLE" A MATRIX PICTURE AfterFour Daily '5:00 7:25 9:25 Sat & Sun. '2-45 HILLCREST 3 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANDA NATION STREET 510 GENE MACKMAN MATT DILSON TARGET (8) Fr. '5:00 Daily 7:20 9:40 Sat & Sun 2:30 '5:00 HILLCREST 1 9TH AND 10TH AUGUST JAGGED EDGE Glenn Claus Jeff Bridges Daily "4:45 7:30 9:00 Sat. & Sun" 2-30 HILLCREST 2 "HIGHLY ENJOYABLE" A MARTHA PETTINGTON PICTURE After hours Daily 5:00 7:25 9:25 Sat. & Sun. *2-45* HILLCREST 3 Heard it all and I love it. Maurice Kandel won the award for his music right back when he was young for the first time. ONCE BITTEN Daily '5:00 7:30 9:00 Sat. & Sun.' 2-45 CINEMA 1 Rainbow Brite San Jose Studio TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. Daily 7:20 Sat. 8pm 3:05 Daily 9:15 CINEMA 2 FIVE AND TWO OCTOBER THEN NOW Fri. '5:00 Daily 7:15 9:20 Sat. & Sun. '3:00 '5:00 INTRODUCING THE PERM THAT OUTSHINES THEM ALL CELLOPERM CURL WITH TRANSLUCENT CELLOPHANE SHINE Get Ready for the Holidays at Joda & Friends Hair Salon 745 N.H. 841-0337 Perm Hair Cut & Condition Now $35.00 thru Nov, with coupon (long hair 5.00 more) ask for Peggy or Nancy n 12 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985 Wet cycle reigns over KU Rains inch toward record By Bill Skeet Special to the Kansan Lawrence — trapped in a 22-year wet cycle — is on its way toward its second highest amount of precipitation in 117 years. Joe Eagleman, professor of meteorology, physics and astronomy, and Glen A. Marotz, professor of meteorology and geography, base their predictions on different theories, but both agree that the peak of the wet cycle that Kansas is now experiencing has yet to arrive. According to data collected by Chris Wikle the official Lawrence weather; observer at the University of Kansas Weather Service, moisture in the Midwest has been considerably above average over past years. The Lawrence area this year is 12.71 inches above normal precipitation. So far, about 51 inches of rain have accumulated. The wettest month was August during which 12.71 inches of rain fell in the Lawrence area above normal for that month. But Lawrence may receive snow today. The National Weather Service in Topeka predicts a 50 percent chance of rain, possibly changing to snow by night. Temperatures should dip to the 30s. Tonight, skies should be clearing and temperatures should drop to 15 to 20. the weather service said. Tomorrow should be mostly sunny but cold, and the high should be about 40. the weather service said. As of yesterday afternoon, the precipitation for the year totaled 51.31 inches — 31 inches shy of 1915's total of 51.62 inches. In 1973, 60.89 inches fell, the highest amount on record. Usually, such extreme precipitation amounts indicate a flood year. In 1951, when the Kansas River flooded and devastated low-lying areas in Lawrence, Kansas ended the year with 11.21 inches more than normal. But this year has not yet produced a flood of any magnitude, even though precipitation amounts in many areas have shattered old records, and state amounts have exceeded those of 1951. "The real telling factor when you have a bad flood is spacing of the precipitation." Eagleman said. "We've had wet weeks this year, but if you give the streams a couple of days to even out and carry the water a little farther away, then there's less likelihood of a flood." Eagleman said that data over the years have suggested that a correlation exists between sunspot activity and the cyclic precipitation amounts observed. He said that sunspot activity progressed in one direction for 11 years, then reversed for another 11 years, resulting in a 22-year cycle. Eaglemann said that scientists didn't know why a correlation existed between sunspots and precipitation cycles on earth. He said next year would be the peak year of the current cycle and theoretically would be wetter than this year. Marotz, however, says he prefers to use a more earth-based method for determining wet and dry cycles. His conclusions are based on the Palmer method, which uses a universal scale to indicate wet and dry periods. He said that the method was the most widely accepted method of looking at wet and dry conditions. He also said the method had a longer history of accurate predictions. For the study, Marotz said, he has charted data from Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa and Missouri. Instead of investigating sunspots, he looked at the number of low-pressure systems that passed over a region because they are closely related to precipitation. By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff Films on arms race draw few students Students showed little interest in the superpowers' hair-trigger nuclear arsenals, despite the summit between President Reagan and Soviet party leader Mikhail Gorbachev, a KU professor of political science said yesterday. The professor, Clifford Ketzel, said fewer than 100 people attended his showing of eight films and filmstrips on the nuclear arms race. "With so much at stake at the summit, it's disappointing that so few students are interested in coming here to learn about the issues," he said. "Perhaps they feel there's little they can do about it. They probably share this view with the Soviet students." Ketzel will show the eight half-hour films and filmstrips this morning and then again this afternoon. Students may walk in at any time, he said. Amy Adler, Lawrence graduate student, said the showing covered both sides of the issues. con," she said. "First, Star Wars sounds good in one film and then the second one brings out new things. "The films are both pro and "I like to have my views challenged to see if there are any flaws in my position" The films used similar images of national leaders and nuclear missiles blasting off, but came to opposite conclusions on everything from the Soviet threat and the arms race to the workability of Star Wars, Reagan's proposed missile defense system. In the films, opponents of Star Wars said a system stopping 95 percent of the Soviet missiles was not sufficiently effective. Proponents said it was. "For this format, it's as good as you can get it," said Eric Kilgren, member of the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice. Mark Goodson, McPherson graduate student, said the films made him think he should become involved in the peace movement. "Unless a whole lot of people get off their rear ends and make some noise, very little will change," he said. Group picks Hilltoppers By a Kansan reporter KU's seven Hilltopsters were chosen during a 4th-hr selection process Wednesday night, a committee member said yesterday. Mike Mainey, business manager of the Jayhawker Yearbook, said the seven outstanding seniors were chosen from 42 applicants. The selection criteria were involvement, leadership and unselfish service to the campus and community, respect of the nominee's peers and a minimum grade-point average of about 3.0. The 1985 Hilltoppers are Steven Chrzenowski, Kansas City, Kan., biology major; David Fidler, Amarillo, Texas, political science and English major; Brad Mazon, Kansas City, Mo., political science and French major; Shari Rogge, Lincoln, Neb. business administration major; Sandra Sandeen, chemistry department; John Secret, Rockford, Ill., geology major; and Maria Swall, Lawrence political science major. The honor was established in 1930 as a way of recognizing seniors who made a contribution to the University of Kansas and Lawrence. It was discontinued in 1974 and was revived in 1983, Mainey said. BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320 PICAFLIC HOME VIEW ENTERTAINMENT CENTER Southern Hills Shopping Center 160 W 23rd, Sp. 109 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 YOU CAN HEAD THE PUBLIC RELATIONS PROGRAM FOR A MAJOR CAMPUS ORGANIZATION! Apply now for Public Relations Chairperson for Student Union Activities by picking up an application at the SUA Office. Deadline for applying is Thurs., Nov. 21 at noon. Five minute interviews will be held that evening beginning at 6 p.m. SUA --- SUA FILMS 41 THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES 1946 Academy Awards (Directed by William Wyler) —with— *Frederick March *Dana Andrews *Hoagy Carmichael *Myrna Loy - Best Picture! - Best Supporting Actor! - Best Actor! - Best Director! Tonight 7:30 $1.50 Woodruff Aud. $1495 COMPLETE "Leading Edge is a registered trademark" PC Magazine—Oct.,1985 High-Res Monitor, 256K, 2 Drives, Graphics Capability Enhanced Keyboard, Clock/Calendar, MS-DOS, 1 YR Warranty AND Batteries INCLUDED THE WINNER LEADING EDGE MODEL "D" COMPUTER OUTLET "PC EDITOR'S CHOICE—Among the bargain-priced. PC-compatibles tested, Leading Edge Model D is the clear winner. That's not surprising—it's the newest machine tested and was designed around lessons that were learned from some of the others. It combines all the features that you could possibly want as standard equipment with a price that you'd expect to pay for a stripped IBM machine." Your computer connection at 843.PLUG *B04 N.H.* Budapest, the capital of Hungary. The city is known for its rich history and cultural heritage. It is home to several famous landmarks, including the Hungarian Parliament Building, the Hungarian National Museum, and the Szekesegyűtszer Középiána. Don't wait another 12 Years to see the CLIP AND SAVE Making Its First North American Tour Since 1973 8:00 p.m. Wednesday, November 20, 1985 Hoch Auditorium Presented by The University of Kansas Adam Fischer, Conductor Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Les pitués Concerto No. 3 in D Minor for Piano and Orchestra Jeno Jando. Solist Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office Liszt Bartok Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 5 in E minor Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved, call 913/864-3982 Public: $15 & $13; KU & K-12 Students: $7.50 & $6.50; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $14 & $12 VISA/MasterCard Accepted Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association "An enormous orchestra with a positive and colorful personality. The Guardian, London "A superb, highly disciplined orchestra." Daily Post, Athens K VOTE HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS! CLIP AND SAVE VOTE VOTE Student Senate Elections: Wednesday, Nov. 20 Thursday, Nov. 21 Polls Open—8 a.m.-5 p.m. You must vote at the designated location for your school. STRONG SUMMERFIELD LEARNED STAUFFER-FLINT Nunemaker Liberal Arts and Sciences Graduate Business Engineering BURGE UNION Journalism Education Architecture Fine Arts Law Special 2 Don't forget your Student I.D.! Paid for by Student Activity Fee. KANSAS UNION CLIP AND SAVE CLIP AND SAVE Pharmacy Social Welfare Nunemaker Liberal Arts and Science Graduate 1 SINCE 1889 Measure of success Design student now draws for audience of 150,000. See page 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, NOV. 20,1985,VOL. 96,NO. 63 (USPS 650-640) HILFIGER Cold Details page 3. Leaders plunge into discussion during summit From Kansan wires GENEVA — President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, agreeing that they must achieve decisions together, met for the first time yesterday and plunged into a series of "businesslike" discussions behind the curtain of a news blackout. Arms control issues were on the agenda for the first day of the summit, but there was no public word on developments. The day ended with Reagan and Gorbachev sitting down for an unscheduled 50-minute fireside chat. "I think we will have a good relationship." Swiss television quoted Gorbache as saying of Reagan. It was one of the few breaks of the blackout, which the White House said underscored the seriousness of negotiations between the superpower leaders. "We think it's useful to have face to face contact," he replied. When Reagan was asked whether the pair had made progress during the day, he said with a grin. "We're smiling." While posing for pictures at the beginning of a private dinner given by the Gorbachev at the Soviet mission, the Soviet leader was asked why he had spent so much time alone with Reagan. Because both sides agreed at the outset not to talk publicly about the deliberations until after they end, the content of the two leaders' discussions was not revealed. But spokesman for both sides agreed the talks took place in a "good atmosphere" and were "businesslike." Also yesterday in Geneva, the Rev. Jesse Jackson handed an antinuclear petition signed by more than 1.2 million Americans to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev during a surprise meeting. He received a lengthy lecture in return. The Soviet leader gave up much of his lunch break between summit sess- sions with President Reagan to have the unplanned 40-minute meeting with the civil rights leader and his 50-member American delegation of anti-nuclear activists, feminists and members of Jackson's Rainbow Coalition. Jackson asked for the meeting to give Gorbachev the massive petition that urges an immediate nuclear arms freeze. Jackson tried to give Reagan the petition yesterday but had to leave it with officials at the U.S. diplomatic mission in Geneva. Gorbache accepted the petition and delivered a lengthy lecture on Soviet desires for peace, a lecture one observer called "almost a Pravda editorial." The summit is scheduled to end today, with the possibility of a "public reporting session" tomorrow morning, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said. The time could be taken up by the signing of any joint agreements, or the leaders could simply use the opportunity to end the blackout with their views of the first superpower summit in six years. Yesterday, the leaders were scheduled to hold a 15-minute get-acquainted chat in the morning before joining six advisers from each side to begin the formal talks devoted to a two-hour review of U.S.-Soviet relations. Then they were to break for lunch and return for two more hours of discussions with advisers on nuclear arms control. And in what Speakes called a "clearly unexpected development," Reagan, who played host for the first day, ended the afternoon session by inviting Gorbachev to join him for a walk through the garden down to the shore of Lake Geneva. He said the two men put on their coats to ward off the near-freezing temperatures and took a five-minute stroll leading to a pool house, which they entered and sat down by a fire burning in the fireplace. Alan Hagman/KANSAN Cap, Larry Woydziak of the Lawrence Fire Department, left, points to a hole in the roof of Walkins Hospital as firefighters Bill Stark hurries to extinguish a Hospital fire fire caused by an overheated standby generator. The fire started yesterday afternoon. See story p. 3. KU players score academic points By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Four KU players were named yesterday to the Big Eight Conference's 32nd annual All-Academic football team. Senior quarterback Mike Norseth, majoring in personnel administration with a 3.08 grade point average, was named to the offensive squad. Senior linebacker Willie Pless, majoring in physical education with a 3.0 GPA, was named to the defensive team. Named to the secondary squad were free safeties Kevin Harder, junior in civil engineering with a 3.94 GPA, and Wayne Ziegler, junior in personnel administration with a 3.36 GPA. To be selected to the team, a player must have at least a 2.8 GPA on a 4.0 scale and be among the top 44 players on his team. Richard Lee, assistant athletic director for support services, said yesterday that the players' selection was one indication that the "dumb jock" stereotype was a myth. "These young men have achieved academic success while making a significant contribution to the team." he said. "This shows the quality of student athlete we have at KU. There's no way a person can be a dumb jock and participate in college football. and defenses teams use these days, you have to have a fair amount of mental agility. Norseth, Pless, Harder and Ziegler are among the 97 percent of KU's football players who are in good academic standing with the University but receive few accolades for their classroom achievements. Lee said "With the complicated offenses He said the minority, those with academic problems, received the majority of publicity. "There are many Norseth and Plesses on the football team who go not noticed," he said. "We have players enrolled in pre-med, architecture, business, engineering, education, journalism and fine arts. They aren't taking easy courses." engineering and academic adviser to four players majoring in engineering, said participating in college athletics while pursuing a degree from a professional school wasn't easy. The four players Mulnazzi advises are Harder; quarterback Mike Orth, who is redshirted this season, offensive tackle Jim Davis; and offensive tackle Bob Pieper. Tom Mulinazzi, professor of civil "As their adviser and as a professor, I'm just amazed that they can handle both," he said. "They're very committed to the School of Engineering. I'm very impressed." The only way players can handle the tough academic requirements of See ATHLETES, p. 5, col. 1 Elections for Senate open today STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS Students vote from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow for student body president, vice president and student senators. Students vote by field of study and must show their KU IDs. The six polling places are listed below, followed by the students who may vote there. Strong Hall: liberal arts and graduate students. Summerfield Hall: business students Learned Hall: engineering students. Stauffer-Flint Hall: journalism and education students. Kansas Union: pharmacy, social welfare, liberal arts and graduate students Source: Kansan news reports TOPEKA — Attorney General Robert T. Stephan announced yesterday that he had abandoned any plans of seeking the Republican nomination for governor in 1986 because the "pain level and the ugliness" of publicity generated by a sexual harassment lawsuit against him had become unbearable. Stephan decides not to run Stephan said during a news conference that he had given up any hope of becoming governor after nearly three years of anguish triggered by the lawsuit, filed against him in December 1982 by former employee Marcia Tomson. From Kansan wires "You can't continue to wrestle shadows and prepare for the race for governor." Stephan said. In a related development, Tonson's lawyer yesterday filed a $5.2 million lawsuit in federal court against Stephan and Bob Storey, a Topea attorney, who confirmed at a news conference last month that he had helped collect $24,000 in cash to settle the first suit. which Storey and Stephan revealed terms of the out-of-court settlement reached last March with Tomson. Following that disclosure, Tomson said a confidentiality clause of the settlement had been breached and that she would sue Stephan anew. The new lawsuit seeks $1.3 million in actual damages plus $3.85 million in punitive damages. In her original complaint, Tomson sought $750.000. The recent lawsuit stems from a news conference two weeks ago in Stephan refused to comment at his news conference on the new lawsuit except to say he would take "appropriate legal action" in regard to it. He did not elaborate, but implied he has no plans to file a counterSUIT. Stephan said that he had been unable to address, apparently meaning as a gubernatorial candidate, changes he thought were needed in state government, because of his preoccupation with the suit. “In the interest of wanting Kansas to achieve its full potential through a discussion of relevant political and philosophical issues, it is best that I remove my name from the 1986 gubernatorial campaign,” he said. with reporters and sad-faced staff. His wife, Bettie Nell, stood at the back of the room. The announcement came in Stephan's office, which was packed Stephan said the lawsuit was blown out of proportion in political circles, but he apologized for the way it and the out-of-court settlement were handled. "I if I have disappointed some in the manner in which the unfounded and ridiculous lawsuit alleging discrimination and harassment was handled, I apologize. I will be the first to admit that the settlement was a mistake. "I do question that it should have warranted the unrelenting and ugly attacks on my integrity," he said. Stephan said he does not intend to discuss the lawsuit again. He said he planned to finish his term as attorney general and as president of the National Association of Attorneys General. He would not rule out another bid for attorney general, but neither would he say if he is considering it. "I would like to relax and get back to things I think are important," he said. "You have to take life a day at a time. Tenure policies differ among faculty By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff This is the first in a series examining tenure at the University. Assistant professors have six years - six years to prove to the University of Kansas that their performance has reached a level of excellence. Their lives revolve around teaching, research and service activities as they strive to gain tenure - a virtual job guarantee. Most faculty and administrators say that the tenure process has been formalized in recent years, and many individual schools and departments have tightened their requirements for tenure and are judging faculty by higher standards. Karlyn Kohra Campbell, director of women's studies and professor of communications studies, said recently that the University Committee on Promotion and Tenure, departments and the professional schools had tightened their requirements for tenure. "In the past, if there wasn't great scholarly productivity, but if there was fine teaching and service, I think faculty may have been tenured. "I think that at the University of Kansas, faculty are being judged by higher standards of scholarship," Campbell said. Campbell served on the UCPT in 1975, 1976 and 1977 and on the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences promotion and tenure committee in 1982, 1983 and 1984. "Now every single person ought to show evidence of research productivity to receive tenure." quirements also have been tightened, she said. Recommendations from schools or departments carry a lot of weight, she said, but the final decisions are made from the faculty members' documentation. Most assistant professors now take the full six years before allowing their peers to judge their work. In the past, professors at KU had been tenured after two or three years. Good teaching is still necessary to receive tenure, and teaching re- June Michal, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that before the UCPT was formed about 20 years ago, faculty were tenured at departmental discretion. Today faculty submit documentation in three areas: teaching, research and creativity, and service. The three areas are evaluated at the departmental, school and University levels. After the UCPT studies recommendations from schools or departments, it sends its recommendations to Chancellor Gene A. Budig and the Board of Regents. An average of 20-40 faculty members receive tenure each year, and zero to five are usually denied tenure, Michal said. Anyone who doesn't receive tenure can stay at KU for one more year. If the University finds evidence of extraordinary performance in that one year, she said, the person may be able to reapply for tenure. Individual departments and schools set their own standards for judging work for promotion and tenure, which most professors said were more clearly defined today than in the past. James Seaver, professor of history and president of the KU chapter of See TENURE, p. 8, col. 3 Quantity replaces quality for some research writers Because publications can be judged and counted by peers, faculty and administrators say that numbers sometimes become more important than quality. This may limit in-depth research that takes a longer time, she said, but the University of Kansas still looks for publications of significant research. The journal that publishes the research also is evaluated during promotion and "When people have to be frequently evaluated, they may pick projects of a shorter duration." Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, said Monday. By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff tenure procedures, she said. Most KU departments and schools expect high standards in research and teaching for promo- tions. Students include signs of scholarly activity. The Carnegie Foundation, which has its headquarters in Princeton, N.J., surveyed 5,000 college and university faculty across the nation last year. The survey indicated that 64.8 percent of faculty at two-year colleges had never published a journal article compared to 22.3 percent in four-year schools. These results were published in the September-October issue of Change magazine. See PUBLISH, p. 8, col. 1 2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 News Briefs Searchers for MIAs dig up parts of bones YEN THUONG, Vietnam — U.S. officials digging in a Vietnamese vegetable garden for remains of missing American servicemen yesterday found human bone fragments and what may be parts of a B-52 bomber that crashed near Hanoi in 1972. Officers foil suicide Twelve Americans and several Vietnamese took part in the unprecedented joint excavation effort, which was described by one Vietnamese official as a turning point in relations between the two countries. NEW YORK — A detective posed as a television reporter yesterday to distract a man threatening to jump from atop an 18-story building. Other officers then dragged the man from the roof's edge. The daring rescue came at about 9 a.m., after Frank DelHart, 35, had been perched on the ledge of the midtown Manhattan apartment building for more than two hours. Apartheid protested judge fines student MUNICH, West Germany — A judge fined a 21-year-old student $460 Tuesday for faking his own kidnapping and demanding $134,000 ransom from his parents because he needed more money to support his mistress. The student told the court he received a monthly allowance of $322 from his parents but he gave his mistress almost $2,700 in one week. "My parents kept me too short of cash," the defendant said. The judge in a Munich court finished the man and gave him a one-year suspended jail sentence after he admitted the blackmail. From Kansan wire reports. Italians charge Abbas in hijack GENOA, Italy — International arrest warrants have been issued for PLO official Mohammed Abul Abbas and several of his top aides, charging them with murder and kidnapping in the Achille Lauro blacking, a prosecutor said yesterday. From Kansan wires The United States has accused Abbas, head of a faction of Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization, of masterminding the Oct. 7-9 Mediterranean ordeal in which an American passenger was killed and thrown overboard. Abbas, whose present whereabouts are not known, previously denied he was involved in the hiacking. Magistrates named Abbas, 37, and 15 others in a report formalizing charges in the case. The charges include murder, kidnapping, hijacking and membership in an armed band. Arrest warrants were issued. At an impromptu news conference, Luigi Carli, deputy prosecutor, also told reporters that one of the four accused hijackers had admitted killing Leon Klinghoffer, New York. Caril delivered the report to Gennaro Calabrese De Feo, Genoa chief public prosecutor. He will study the document before approving it and giving Caril the go-ahead to proceed with issuing indictments in the seizure of the Italian cruise ship off the coast of Egypt. Carli had given indications previously that Abbas, who was born in Afrin, Syria, was among those charged. But the report was the first direct identification of Abbas as one of those charged in the hijacking. Abbas was briefly in Italian custodial last month when an Egyptian airliner carrying the four hijackers from Egypt after their surrender was intercepted by U.S. jef fighters and forced to land at a NATO base in Sicily on Oct. 10. The four Palestinian hijackers were taken into Italian custody, but Italy released Abbas, saying there was not enough evidence at the time to warrant his detention as the alleged mastermind of the hijacking which was maintained by the United States at that stage. The release contributed to a great political upheaval in Italy and strained U.S.-Italian relations. On Monday, a court convicted five Palestinians among the 16 accused in the case on arms charges. During the hearing, Carli said Abbas, leader of the Palestine Liberation Front, was the instigator of the two-day hijacking. The Genoa criminal court sentenced the five, including the four hijackers, to prison terms ranging from four to nine years on charges of smuggling into Italy the arms and explosives used during the hijacking. Mayor plans to reorganize police force PHILADELPHIA — Mayor Wilson Goode unveiled a plan yesterday to reorganize the city's corruption-riddled Police Department, saying the problem "shames every honest police officer" on the force. United Press International "The pattern of corruption within the department has evolved over the years into a deep-seated problem," Goode said during a news conference. "Because of the nature of the problem, an institutional change is called for." "Corruption shames every honest police officer, who constitutes the vast majority of our police force," he added. Goode said his first goal was to hire a new police commissioner to replace Gregore Sambor, who resigned last week. Sambor, a 36-year veteran of the force, was criticized for corruption in the department and for the department's handling of the a fiery May 13 conflict with the radical group MOVE, which left 11 members dead and destroyed 61 houses. Kate kisses Cuba, eyes U.S. Goode indicated he might find a new commissioner from outside the department, saying, "My goal in that search is to find the very best person available, whether inside or outside of the department." United Press International KEY WEST, Fla. — Hurricane Kate slashed across 250 miles of Cuba's north coast with 110-mph winds and 20-foot waves yesterday and rumbled into the Gulf of Mexico, sparing the Florida Keys from their first hurricane in 20 years. Forecasters said Kate ended a 16-hour assault on Cuba late yesterday afternoon and entered the Gulf, where it could become the first November hurricane to reach the U.S. mainland in 50 years. "The radar at Key West shows the center of Kate has now emerged back over the waters of the southeastern Gulf of Mexico and is moving toward the west-northwest 15 to 20 mph." hurricane forecasters said. Neil Frank, director of the National Hurricane Center, said Kate was weakened by its rampage across Cuba, but was expected to strengthen gradually and turn to the northwest, possibly threatening Americans. to the mainland when Kate threatened to become the first hurricane to hit the island chain since 1965. In Key West, dozens of people awaited Kate's arrival in Duval Street bars, such as the Pigeon House Patio, where a "hurricane party" began Monday night and continued through the day yesterday. Patrons of the bar concocted a new rum-based drink they called "Kiss Me Kate," but bartender Bob Sumner said the drink was misnamed. About 10,000 residents and tourists fled from the Keys "It should have been 'Miss Me Kate,' " Sumner said. At 6 p.m. Kate was packing 106-mph winds and was in the storm for about an hour. While Florida Keys' residents breathed a sigh of relief, the Cuban government began to assess the damage from the storm that began about midnight Monday and ended about 5 p.m. yesterday. The Cuban news agency, Prensa Latina, reported that the government had declared a state of alert and had ordered 138,000 people living around Havana to evacuate their homes as Kate howled up the coast. Peres says U.S. may deal with PLO United Press International JERUSALEM — Shimon Peres, Israeli prime minister, leears that the United States has changed its 10-year-old promise not to deal with the Palestine Liberation Organization, Israel news reports said yesterday, but U.S. officials deny that any such change exists. organization first renounced terrorism and agreed to hold direct talks with Israel. U. S. officials denied any change of policy and Israel's Foreign Ministry, headed by Peres' political rival, Yitzhak Shamir, said it would oppose any such altered U.S. stance. The Israeli radio and newspaper reports said Peres told a parliamentary committee Monday that the United States had adopted a new policy permitting it to hold formal talks with the PLO as long as that The reports, appearing in such publications as the Jerusalem Post and the Haaretz newspaper, were based on leaks from Peres' testimony to a closed session Monday of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. as saying that the United States had changed its policy a few weeks ago at the request of Jordan's King Hussein, who is seeking to involve the PLO in a Middle East peace conference with Israel. Peres was quoted as saying that Israel does not care whether the PLO recognizes its right to exist and that the conditions were insulting, the reports said. They quoted government officials Israel Radio quoted Peres telling factory workers later that there would be no change in the Israeli attitude toward the PLO, even if the PLO did recognize Israel. Diplomat continues aid efforts BEIRUT, Lebanon — Church of England special envoy Terry Walter returned yesterday to resume efforts to win the release of four American and four French hostages, saying he had very important things to say to their Muslim kidnappers. United Press International Waite, 46, returned to Beirut after 48 hours of talks in London with Robert Runcie, Archbishop of Canterbury, and unidentified U.S. and British officials. He also spoke with French officials in Paris. "I have very important things to say to them (the kidnappers)," Waite told reporters upon his return to Beirut. He refused to elaborate. "I believe that last time a good step forward was taken," he said of the contact he made last week with the Muslim fundamentalist kidnappers while he was in Beirut. "I believe that it is now possible to take another step forward." Also in Lebanon, the wife of one of the captive French diplomats said yesterday that her husband had a heart condition and would not be surprised if he was the hostage reported by the Islamic Jihad to be "pitifully sick." Marcel Carton, protocol officer for the French Embassy in Lebanon, was kidnapped March 22 in Beirut with Vice-Consul Marcel Fontaine. Two other Frenchmen and six Americans are also missing after being kidnapped in Lebanon. A statement Monday by the Muslim fundamentalist group Islamic Jihad, or Holy War, said a French hostage, identified in news reports as Carton, was "in a pitifully sick condition that may expose his life to danger in spite of our great and thorough interest in the health of all the hostages and their safety." Carton's wife, Denise, told Radio Monte Carlo she would not be surprised if the reports were true. The kidnappers have demanded that, in return for the release of the hostages, the Reagan administration force Kuwait to free 17 of their comrades who were convicted and jailed for bombing U.S., French and Kuwaiti buildings in 1983. OLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOT LAWRENCE We're Playing Your Song.. Service, Convenience, and Dependability LairdNoller 1116 W. 23rd 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. 842-2191 Monday-Friday SERVICE EXCELLENCE AWARD WINNER $15.00 * *Inspect Brake Pads and/or Shoes, Rotors/Drums, Parking Brake and Adjust *Inspect all hoses & fittings, check Master Cylinder, Callipers/Wheel cylinders, and Brake fluid Brake Inspection Minor Engine Tune-up - **Add 1 parts & labor extra** * **Fuel injected cars slightly higher** *Replace Spark Plugs* *Replace Fuel Filter *** *Replace Points and Condenser (if equipped)* *Set End to Manufacturer's Sheet. $39.95 * * Toyota Vehicles only - Includes up to 6 qts. of Prem. Oil * Toyota Brand oil filter * Add'l Parts & Labor extra Within walking distance of campus Oil & Filter Change VISA MasterCard TOYOTA CLAREM 435 Includes all Japanese Imports Excludes Rotary Engine Please present coupon at time of write-up COUPON Winterization Special $21.95 * * *Add 1 Gallon of Permanent Type Anti-Freeze *Check Belts and Hoses *Check Condition of Water Pump *Add 'd parts & labor extra *Japanese imports only On the corner of 23rd & Neismith TOYOTA PARTS AND SERVICE THE REAL STUFF THE RIGHT PRICE LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER If the Pilgrims knew what we know about pizza They would have ordered PYRAMID PYRAMID'S HOLIDAY SPECIAL 16" Large 2 Topping Pizza w/ 2 Pepsis 14th & Ohio Under The Wheel 842-3232 FAST FREE DELIVERY H.I.M. SID PYRAMID PYRAMID 16" Large 2 Topping Pizza w/ 2 Pepsi All For Only $8.95 PYRAMID We Plie It On! Expires 11-22-85 Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 3 University Daily Kansan News Briefs Campus/Area January trial date set for accused gambler A trial date of Jan. 9 was set yesterday in Douglas County District Court for a Lawrence man accused of running an open saloon, allowing his premises to be used for gambling, possessing a gambling device and gambling The charges against the man, Burgess Rennels, 446 Maine St. stemmed from incidents that occurred Oct. 17 at 633 Vermont St. Bond was set at $500, but Burgess was released on his own recognition. Coors to honor twins Twins Brad and Kristen Claflin, Overland Park sophomores, will be honored at a reception Saturday as the Kansas recipients of Coors Veterans Memorial Scholarships. Metro Distributors, Coors supplier for an eight-county area in Kansas and Missouri, will honor the Kansas and Missouri recipients of the renewable $1,500 scholarships, which were awarded in August by the Adolph Coors Company. The recipients were chosen after applying last summer. The scholarships are two of 50 national scholarships awarded to sons and daughters of U.S. war veterans. Tim Miller, lecturer of religious studies, will speak about "Silkville: A Commune on the Kansas Prairie," at 11:45 a.m. tomorrow at the University Forum, sponsored by the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Commune talk set Miller has taught at KU for 17 years and visited many communes throughout the United States. His presentation will include slides of communes in Kansas. Monday is the deadline for applications for people interested in selling their wares at Student Union Activities' Annual Arts and Crafts Bazaar, Dec. 4-6 in the Kansas University Gallery. Bazaar forms due A hot lunch-will be served. The cost is $3. Applications may be picked up from the SUA office on the fourth floor of the Union and should be returned by 5 p.m. Monday. A variety of handmade items will be sold at the bazaar. For more information, call Robin Stevens, 864-3477. Weather Today will be mostly sunny but cold. The high will be between 40 and 45 degrees, with variable winds at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be increasingly cloudy with a chance of freezing drizzle and lows in the mid- to upper 20s. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of rain, possibly freezing. The high will be in the mid-40s. From staff and wire reports Corrections Because of a copy editor's error, a headline in yesterday's Kansan incorrectly said a KU student was arrested after an investigation into local cocaine trafficking. The person arrested is a former student. Because of incorrect information supplied to the Kansan, an item in the Week Ahead at KU calendar in Monday's paper incorrectly reported the time for tonight's Women's Resource Center workshop. The workshop, "One Couple Plus Two Careers," begins at 7:30 p.m. KU's employees remain uninsured By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff The search for a liability insurance policy for KU employees is continuing but the prospects are bleak that an insurer will be found, the University associate director of business affairs said yesterday. Martin Jones, the associate director, said that since KU's liability policy expired in June, it had been nearly impossible to find an insurer who would underwrite a policy for the University. "Because of the size of the claims that have been awarded recently, there has been a problem created across the country." Jones said. Liability insurance protects KU employees if they are sued for an action that occurs while they are on the job. Under KU's old policy, employees were protected from personal injury suits including libel, slander and defamation of character, according to Margaret Walters, an agent for the University's insurance company. "We've tried every suggestion that has come up," he said. "We've even contacted Lloyd's of London. They wouldn't handle the policy either. Jones said the search to find an insurer had become frustrating. "We are making every effort to obtain the insurance for the University. But getting the attention of insurance companies is difficult when you're talking about liability insurance." "I Insurance companies are not as willing to take the risk any more," she said. "We've been trying to find an insurer for the University but it's been very difficult." Walters said that uneasiness in the insurance industry has led to the scarcity of group liability policies. Jones said the few companies that offered liability coverage charged premiums that were five to six times more expensive than KU's previous policy. "It would be unreasonable to pay those kinds of prices for insurance," he said. "The situation is not too bad for it. It's not like we're not covered at all." The Tort Claims Act provides coverage from the state for KU employees if they are sued for an action that occurs within the scope of their job, according to Vickie Thomas, University general counsel. We are afforded protection by the Tort Claims Act." However, there is confusion among the faculty about how far the state coverage will protect them, said Sidney Shapiro, chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee. "There is some uneasiness on the part of the faculty." Shapiro said. "If the University would like them to undertake service activities that might incur liability, they would like the university to make sure that the necessary coverage exists. At this point, they don't really know." Arno Knapper, presiding officer of the University Council, said concern over the lack of insurance surfaced during last week's Kansas Board of Regents meeting. "There was some discussion among the presidents of the senates of the schools," he said. "They felt uncomfortable with the Tort Claims Act. There was some question as to whether it provided all the coverage that was needed." Prof killed flying plane near home By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff Leland Miller, a former KU professor of occupational therapy, died Sunday in a plane crash near his home in Lubbock, Texas. Mr. Miller, 58, was killed when an experimental plane he was flying crashed. Federal Aviation Administration officials are investigating the cause of the crash. Judy Bachelder, assistant professor of occupational therapy, remembered Mr. Miller as an ingenious and inventive man. "He could build anything," Bachelere said. "He developed some adaptive equipment for eating for children who have disabilities." Bachelorel said Mr. Miller used to build airplanes and once built a high-powered telescope. He also built a fugree, wigreed-iron car, she said. Student sketches cartoons for profit Alex Boyle, professor of design, said the car was built on a Volkswagen frame. "It was almost completely a lattice-type of thing put together with linear steel," he said. "It was quite an oddity. "He'd do things like that." Mr. Miller came to the University in 1958 and was the former chairman of occupational therapy. Boyle said he knew Mr. Miller more than 25 years. Mr. Miller was successful in building the KU occupational therapy program, he said. Mr. Miller did a lot of work with handicapped people to ease their lives. Bovle said "It's a real tragedy," Boyle said of Mr. Miller's death. He was a professor of occupational therapy in the School of Allied Health at Texas Tech University at the time of his death. Mr. Miller was involved with the department of design in his early days at the University, Boyle said. He won second prize in the Pacific National Exposition in 1963 for a woodcarving, "A Pocket Full of Posseys," which depicted his four children. Miller received a bachelor's degree in psychology from Park College, Parkville, Mo. in 1951. He earned a certificate of occupational therapy at Washington University, St. Louis, in 1953. He received his master's degree in 1955 from Bradley University, Peoria, III. He is survived by three daughters: Dianne Miller, Maripsima, Calif., Kim Miller McBride, Portland, Ore., and Shelley Miller, Washington, D.C.; a son, Byron Miller of Lawrence; his mother, Henrietta Miller, and a brother, Donald Miller, both of Ankeny, Iowa. Funeral services are pending and will be at Rix Funeral Home in Lubbock. THE ARTIST, PETER HOLLISON, WORKING IN THE GALLERY. Dave Uhig, Wichita senior, drew a caricature of President Ronald Reagan yesterday after completing an industrial/research presentation. By Bob Tinsley By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff A KU industrial design student with a talent for drawing has found a way to turn his talent into profit. Dave Uhlig, Wichita senior, draws cartoons for the editorial page of the Christian Science Monitor. Uhlig returned to the University this fall, fresh from an industrial design internship with Baugh-Deines, a Wichita consulting firm. "I was geared up from everything I did over the summer, and when I came back to KU, I got this call from the Monitor." Uhlig said yesterday. So Uhlig, whose work has been featured in the University Daily Kansan, began to contribute what work he could to the Christian Science Monitor. The Christian Science Monitor is published in Boston and has a circulation of about 150,000. "It's really an honor to work for a paper that size," he said. A friend told him last spring that a full-time cartoonist soon would quit at the Monitor. The friend encouraged him to send some of his work to Boston. Uhlig said he used to draw cartoons for his high school newspaper, and he submitted work last spring that was published in the University Daily Kansan. "I was just doing it to be doing it," Uhlig said. "I didn't really think I had any chance of getting a iob." But then he received a call from Richard J. Cattani, chief editorial writer for the Monitor. Uhlig's clear style and sense of humor are the qualities that the Monitor appreciates about his work, Cattani said. "I think it relates well to a general audience," he said. "Those are requisites for a successful cartoonist." Uhlig said the themes of his work were international and domestic political affairs. "I guess I take a little more liberal slant on my cartons," he said. "That kind of works against me at the Monitor because they don't really want to make anybody mad." The Monitor's editorial standards are influenced more by how an article or cartoon addresses an issue, Cattani said, rather than its ability to stir up a dispute. "We're radical on issues of principles, morality and ethics," he said. "We tend to be moderating where there are bitter public disputes." Uhlig sends four or five cartoons at a time to the Monitor for its consideration, he said. Cattani said he and the editorial board reviewed all material for the Monitor's editorial page The Christian Science Monitor board of directors also reviews the material, he said. The board is the top governing authority for the church and newspaper, he said. This is Uhlig's fifth year at the University. He will complete a bachelor of fine arts degree in industrial design in May 1987, he said. Richard Branham, professor of industrial design, said Uhlig brought sensitivity and emotion to his illustrations, and yet could remain objective and logical in his industrial design work. "Those students are hard to find," Branham said. "I've designed everything from cigarettes to gas stations to a J.C. Penney," he said. Industrial designers deal with the way people interact with machines, be said. They try to make them look appealing, yet serve a function. "Given his abilities and skills, he would qualify for a wide range of jobs." he said. Uhlig is too busy pursuing his degree to do much work for the Monitor this year, he said. Vent causes fire on Watkins' roof By a Kansan reporter A fire yesterday afternoon at Watkins Hospital was apparently caused when an emergency generator vent heated up and ignited the roof, a Lawrence firefighter said yesterday. Damage was estimated at $100 and no one was injured, Capt. Larry Woydziak, the firefighter, said. Firefighters were called to the hospital at about 3:45 p.m. and worked with axes and pry tools for nearly an hour to clear an area around the vent pipe and extinguish the flames, Woydziak said. He said a wooden frame that was built around the vent as part of the roof ignited when the vent became hot. Regents enter tax conflict The Kansas Board of Regents will submit a brief today to the State Board of Tax Appeals saying that a tax board decision last month contradicts legislation passed last year intended to exempt alumni associations from property taxes, the Regents general counsel said yesterday. Of the Kansan staff Bill Kauffman, the general counsel, said the six-page brief supported the University of Kansas Alumni Association on the issue of its membership. The 1985 Legislature granted property tax-exempt status to alumni associations status, but the Board of Tax Appeals in September denied the Association property tax exempt status in Douglas County. The 3-2 majority said the Association was not a true alumni association because its membership was not restricted to alumni. By Jennifer Benjamin That definition of an alumni association is contrary to the practices of alumni associations. Kauf- The tax board granted the Alumni Association a "The decision of the Board of Tax Appeals is contrary to the best interests of higher education," Kauffman said. "Other state schools most certainly would be affected by the Board of Tax Appeals' decision. "That's exactly why we chose to write the amicus brief. The implications go beyond the KU Alumni Association." When the tax board made its original decision, it stated that the Alumni Association used its building for non-alumni activities. The Regents voted Friday to submit the brief before the tax board made a decision on the rehearing. The decision is expected in January. "We're not making any statement as to the use of the building," Kaufman said. "We think it's appropriate for the KU Alumni Association to make its own policies." Nearly $65,000 in property taxes for 1984 and taxes for 1985 and the following years are at stake. BORDER BANDIDO EAT WEDNESDAY SPECIAL re-hearing last month after Bradley Smoot, attorney for the Alumni Association, appealed the September decision. ALL YOU CAN L $3.49 5-9 p.m. All you can eat from our wide selection: - enchiladas - refried beans - tacos • taco salad • burritos • chili • tostada - Spanish rice - chili conqueso 1528 W. 23rd 842-8861 Across from Post Office - salad bar - refried beans WEDNESDAY 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Also: Spare Rib Special $525 the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540 WEDNESDAY 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the PANIC BUTTON 6 LAST CHANCE TO HAVE YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT TAKEN Back by popular demand! Senior pictures Thursday, Nov.14 through Tuesday, Nov.26 Call the Jayhawker Yearbook office immediately for an appointment! 864-3728 1 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A Common Sense choice Two years of turmoil is enough. It's time for Student Senate to get to work. Today and tomorrow, students will elect a new student body president, vice president and 58 student senators. The president and vice president largely set the agenda for the Senate during the year they serve. Last fall, a more traditional student body president and vice president swept into office. They returned the gavel to Senate meetings. Two years ago, the Senate bridled under the peaceful revolution of leaders who dubbed themselves the Costume Party. After two years of extremes, the body charged with representing students needs to strike out on a course of compromise and concentration on issues rather than in-house squabbling. Too often, the student body president and vice president—the Senate's leaders—have become embroiled in those controversies. During the past two years, Senate work has been marred with fights over rules and personalities. The results were closed meetings, resignations and charges of stacking committees. Two groups of candidates want the job. The Common Sense Coalition appears better suited to handle it. David Epstein, Common Sense's presidential candidate, and Amy Brown, the vice presidential candidate, take a businesslike approach to Senate affairs. They seem less interested in politics and more interested in results. The Senate needs a dose of that mindset to restore its credibility with students, many of whom see the Senate as merely a ring for junior politicos to square off on Wednesday nights. The Senate needs to shake that reputation by proving over the next year that it can make students' lives better. Epstein and Brown offer the best prospects for leading the Senate in this direction. They are organized. Their platform rests on four principal issues: 3) Making campus parking cheaper and more accessible. 1) Starting a Night Ride bus route from bars to student living groups to curb drunken driving. 2) Publishing a guide to professors to help students choose classes. The Chrysalis Coalition has proposed issues, but it prefers to leave its platform "flexible." The intent is noble, but consequently, Chrysalis' priorities appear blurred. Common Sense has proposed more than ideas. Epstein and Brown have done their homework. They talk of executing their plans. They don't simply lay them on the table. The Night Ride idea is a spin-off of a similar program at Iowa State University. Epstein and Brown have a successful prototype from which to work. Marcos has "resigned" as the constitution requires, but he made his resignation effec In short, they have delved into the mechanics of their ideas rather than merely dishing them up. Over the years, the Senate has suffered for lack of such planning. They also have researched the best way to assemble a guide to professors, and found an attractive model at Arizona State University. And they have studied student government on other campuses, searching for ways to improve the Senate. If the Common Sense Coalition's campaign efforts indicate how its leaders intend to serve students, Student Senate may yet shake its bad habits and poor image. A Senate under Epstein and Brown finally may get down to business. Marcos' snap election Reacting to internal strife and U.S. pressure, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos recently surprised everyone by calling for national elections on Jan. 17, 1986. But whether this election would be free or fair is in doubt. The election itself is legal, but Marcos left only about two months for opponents to settle on a candidate and to finance and wage a campaign. The election commission is decidedly pro-Marcos, and many people think the military will intimidate voters unless steps are taken to prevent it. The snap election, as it called — it is 16 months before the scheduled election — is a legal attempt to catch opponents off guard. But winning alone won't restore credibility to the Marcos regime. He must win in an election acknowledged by all to be free and fair. tive only after the election — obviously a signal that he isn't putting all his eggs in the election basket. Wisely, the Reagan administration has said that credible elections must have an impartial supervisory commission, independent civilian observers and no military pressure. The United States should stick by those conditions and insist on international observers as well. The United States must have an ally in the Philippines, and so it must insist on a fairly elected government. Whoever wins this snap election probably will be in power when leases on two crucial U.S. air bases expire in 1991. U. S. interests here coincide with the interests of genuine democracy in the Philippines. Marcos deserves no trust that he will offer a fair election. The United States, along with other nations, should make sure he does. Rob Karwath Editor John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMilen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Duncan Calhoun Business manager Business manager Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall. The University Daily Kanaan (USP5 60-640) is published at the University of Kansas, Niles Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 66045, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., on Sundays for $15 for six months and $2 a week. Hereafter, they cost $14 for six months and $3 a year. Student subscrip- tions cost $3 and are paid through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Shafter Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan, 6045. Solo applauders can steal show The second most common fear intrinsic in humans is the fear of being the only person applauding in an audience. People attending concerts, plays or tapings of "Donahue" carefully avoid being the sole clapper. Even a proud mother at her child's first piano recital doesn't completely lose her self-consciousness when her child strikes the last sour chord of a long rehearsed number. Being the only one laughing at a movie isn't too bad. Coughing loudly during a church service is not unbearable. But the darkness of a theater can't conceal your embarrassment when your hands are the only two smacking together. It is not always appropriate to clap. The space between movements of a symphony or concerto, for example, is reserved for silence. Also, one should not be tempted to miscalculate the ending of a work. We need to break this phobia. It's usually perfectly fine to suspend a performance to show your appreciation. But watch out, because "usually" happens to be a loaded word. I participated in a performance of Handel's "Messiah" that was raped by the single clap of an anxious woman in the front row during the dramatic, final rest of the "Hallelujah Chorus." That's enough to make me take down my Christmas tree and Rick Zaporowski Staff columnist call off the whole thing. Or, the indecision can result in half the audience taking a chance by clapping and the other half angrily shushing up the first half. This interaction is most uncomfortable to the performers and the audience. holding in the burp. Often, the audience can't be blamed for not clapping when it's appropriate. It can be very unclear when there is a set of musical numbers being performed consecutively that are related but not 'Being the only one laughing at a movie isn't too bad. Coughing loudly during a church service is not unbearable. But the darkness of a theater can't conceal your embarrassment when your hands are the only two smacking together.' tor clos the orchestra's final notes, people's eyes shift around, trying to spot someone who looks as if he knows whether to clap or not. attended a rehearsal could be planted in the audience and directed ahead of time to lead the clapping at the appropriate time. This way, nobody would have to take the dreadful role of being the first and only one clapping. part of the same larger work This indecision causes one of two things. It can result in silence. Performers and the audience are left with an empty feeling because there is a screaming absence of aural appreciation. The feeling is similar to drinking an entire Coke at once then This problem could be solved if the person printing the program for a concert would insert a brief message saying whether applause should be held between musical numbers or whether it is permissible. Or the conductor could simply give a tiny nod of resolution when the performance was at a breaking point. If nothing else, someone who has Cultural programs can become tense if an audience is unsure about how much emotion it can release. At the more primitive events — say, a football game — we cheer at anything. We scream for touchdowns, interceptions, crushed opposing athletes, fallen referees and correct change from the vendor. But once we get to the indoor performances, where we're expected to tuck in our shirts, things change. Can you imagine Peter Serkin waving a white towel at the audience after a rousing piano concerto in Carnegie Hall? It just doesn't happen. However, the civility within a concert hall shouldn't restrain an audience from showing its approval of a good performance. Performers glady will hold a show for a minute to hear apause. Applause is much appreciated after a solo musical number, an energetic dance or a slapstick exit by a bit character. Take care to recognize when it's OK to clap, and then do it. Performers love to hear an audience clapping. Media shun criticizing the Soviets It's that solo applauder who stings Question 1: Is there a liberal bias in the media? Question 2: If not, why do the media display such contempt toward the Reagan administration in its dealings with the Soviet Union? Media criticism of the Soviet Union has been gravely lacking. Part of the reason is a lack of education among journalists. U.S. SENATORS TO SEE YOU IF YOU ARE READY, COMRADE GORBACHEV... COMMUNIST MANIFESTO by KARL MARX DAS KAPITAL -MARX THE SELECTED WORKS OF LENIN HOW TO WIN FRIENDS and INFLUENCE PEOPLE DALE CARNEY Victor Goodpasture Staff columnist Andrew Nagorski, Newsweek's bureau chief in Bonn, West Germany, says that foreign correspondents don't know much about the Soviet Union and that they rarely speak the language. He says most correspondents just repackage the propaganda handed to them by the Soviet government. The media treat the Soviet government and its new leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, as proponents of peace. The notion that "Hey, they're just like us," is media naivete at its worst. Since 1917, the Soviet government has killed between 20 and 50 million of its own citizens in the name of communism. Of course, the exact figures never will be known because most of the killings occurred in mass executions and the bodies were left to rot. This type of butchery goes on, but again, largely unreported by our so-called free and independent press. The 272 million Soviets are slaves, ruled by tyranny and oppression. About four million men, women and children are in forced labor camps, living in terror, not knowing whether they will live or die. Who speaks for them? Where are the protests in front of the Soviet embassy? What does it take to make people—and the media—realize that Soviet intentions of world domination are very real indeed? Ask an Afghan about Soviet peace. The Soviets invaded Afghanistan in 1979 and are involved in a genocide of the Afghan people. Women and children are bayoneted to death and entire villages are destroyed. George Will recently wrote that Patrick David, a physician with Aide Medicale Internationale, told representatives of Helsinki watch that Soviet troops arrested 40 civilians. "They tied them up and piled them like wood," David said. "Then they poured gasoline over them and burned them alive." Why doesn't this make front-page news? Meanwhile, Soviet involvement in Africa and Central America is growing rapidly. In Ethiopia, millions of people are starving to death — largely because the Soviet-backed Marxist government there is blocking food shipments to the masses. The Ethiopian regime will let the people starve, because some of them may be freedom fighters who oppose the regime. The media conveniently fail to mention this. The media act exactly the same way in Central America. They refuse to acknowledge that Nicaragua is a communist dictatorship controlled by the Soviet Union. They condemn the U.S.-backed freedom fighters in Nicaragua but are totally silent about communist terrorists in El Salvador. Is this fair and unbiased journalism? Certainly not. Again, it's all part of the Soviet benignancy. U.S. malevolence mentality. From all of this one can conclude that the world isn't always as the media report it. to practice unbiased, truthful, fair and accurate journalism. Is that too much to ask? Conservatives aren't asking for much. All they want is for the media The American public has become more conservative, yet the media remain decisively liberal on every issue. The media watch the government, but who watches the media? Conservatives want no special favors. However, they would like the editorial page to stay off page one. When will the media respond to and act upon the criticism they receive? The public must have faith that the powers that be listen to them. If the public loses faith in the accuracy and fairness of the media, this will translate into mistrust for the government itself. One only has to go to the Soviet Union to learn this. After eight vodkas. . . Royko seeks 'the right stuff' for space The reporter was calling long-distance and said he was taking a survey of journalists. "Are you going to apply to be one of the newsmen to go on a space flight?" Go on a what? "A space flight. They are going to be making applications available in a few weeks. And I'm surveying journalists in different parts of the country to see whether they are going to apply." You mean getting into a rocket and going to outer space? "Yes. The newsmen are going to be selected from five regions of the country." Well, I haven't given it much thought. But as long as you mention it, I'll check my schedule. If the space flight doesn't conflict with a Cubs-Mets series, I'm sure I'll apply Not at all, I said, concluding the interview. "Traveling through space wouldn't be a problem for you?" Later, I mentioned the call to someone I've worked with for many years. He laughed and said, "Why did you lie to him?" "But you don't fly. You have a phobia about flying. You've written about it many times." That's not entirely true. I flew from Washington, D.C., to Chicago as recently as 1976. "Sure, after somebody took you to the National Press Club, fed you 10 martins and poured you on the plane." An exaggeration. It was only eight. And they weren't martins. Just plain vodka on the rocks, with a lemon twist for my sunshine vitamins. "Whatever. But that's the only time I've known you to fly." Also untrue. In 1959 I rode a helicopter to cover a story. In my youth, I rode the Bobs in Riverview Amusement Park six straight times without getting off. And I recently went to the $5th floor of the Hancock Building for lunch. Bullying or violence: "That doesn't exactly make you Chuck Yeager. C'mon, you're deathly afraid of flying." Another misconception. I have never been afraid of flying. Flying, is perfectly safe. It's the thought of crashing that has restricted my air time. A. S. BALKAN It's obvious. It doesn't happen often, but airplanes do occasionally run into mountains, bridges, power lines or mrs runways and land in rivers, swamps, harbors or on somebody's roof. "I don't see the distinction." Mike Royko Chicago Tribune And though I accept that we all have to go sometime, I've always 'If the space flight doesn't conflict with a Cubs-Mets series, I'm sure I'll apply.' "Yes, but you're going so far up, beyond gravity." "But space shuttles take off and land, too." looked ahead to passing on quietly and peacefully, in my bed, surrounded by my children and grandchildren who dab their eyes and look mournful in hopes that I left them a little something in my will. Ah, but they go straight up. Whoops and they're on their way. And they land in remote wastelands where the runways are about 90 miles long and there's nothing to hit but a few lizards. Exactly. And what's out there to hit? No power lines. No mountains. No dumb birds to fly into the whatchaamcallit. No tiny planes getting in your way like a bunch of gnats. No lightning, no storms, no gusts of wind. And if a rivet falls off, it just floats there. The mechanic will just drift out, pluck it from the pothining and screw it back on. As far as I can tell, the only thing to worry about up there might be a strange spaceship carrying alien creatures who look like calamari. "But the question is, why would you want to do it?" Wanderlust, Curiosity. The desire to see what few others have ever seen. I've been to the Wisconsin Dells. I've been to the Fontainbleau in Miami Beach. So what's left? "I believe you're serious." You can bet on it. And when the applications become available, mine will be one of the first they'll receive. "But are you sure that when the time comes to put on the spacesuit and actually climb aboard the spaceship, you will really have 'the right stuff?' The question is whether the people running the operation will have the right stuff. "What do you mean?" About eight fast ones on the rocks, with a twist of lemon. Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Athletes Continued from p. 1 Continued from p.1 a professional school and play football is to schedule their time, Mulinazzi said. "They have to use every spare minute," he said. Offensive guard Pete Popovich, a pre-med student majoring in biology and chemistry, agreed. "I've learned to set a schedule," he said. "You don't necessarily have to make it rigid, but you have to plan out what you have to do." "Otherwise, you waste the whole night away." Davis said his typical day began at about 6:30 a.m. with weight training. Classes take up the rest of the morning. After lunch, football demands all his attention. Team meetings and practice last until 6 or 3:0p.m. Practice last 2½ to 3 hours, "depending on how the coach feels," Davis said. After practice and dinner, he said, he hits the books. "The hardest thing is studying when you're tired," he said. "But you have to study. You have to stay away from the TV, and you can't go messing around." Fifth-year senior fullback Harvey Fields, who is majoring in architecture, said he almost didn't play this season because he thought he should concentrate on academics. However, the close friendships he had formed with teammates and some goals not accomplished caused him to change his mind. "I had to give it one more shot to see if I could score a touchdown," he said. Fields now has accomplished that goal and is looking forward to completing his degree. He said he decided to major in architecture after taking a course in high school in which he had to design his "dream home." "I didn't stumble onto architecture until I was a senior in high school," he said. "I originally wanted to be a radio disc lockey." Lee said Fields was one of the exceptional student athletes who had prepared himself well for college. Pless' selection to the Big Eight academic squad is the second such honor he has received. Last week, he was named to the Region Seven All-Academic team, along with junior fullback Mark Henderson. "This is one honor I won't have to share credit for with my teammates," Pless said. "This is something I did on my own." Henderson, who is majoring in business administration with a 3.7 GPA, earned Academic All-Big Eight honors in 1983 and 1984. Doug Vance, sports information director, said college and university sports information directors from the region made the selections. Region Seven covers Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota and two provinces in Canada. To be a candidate for the team, Vance said, a player has to have a 3.0 grade point average. TOPEKA — Corrections Department officials predicted yesterday that the state's prison population will top the 5,000 mark during fiscal year 1987, at a time when state agencies are experiencing severe budget cuts. Prisons fill as budget drops United Press International In an appeal before the state Budget Division, Corrections Secretary Richard Mills asked for additional staff to handle a 40-a-month increase in prison inmates, as well as money for repairs of deteriorating, 19th century prisons. The secretary said the prison system has pressing needs in the areas of food service, education and vocational training, overcrowding and inmate idleness. Mills said the inmate population had grown 38 percent since fiscal year 1984. He said it would not be long before 5,000 inmates are in a system that considers its maximum capacity at a little over 4,900. "At least there's one growth industry in the state." Mills said. The corrections secretary predicted the system would have to hold more than maximum capacity through the year 2000 unless state officials act. He said the parole rate had dropped from 70 percent in the 1970s to today's rate of 51 percent. He said the parole rate would have to be 80 percent for the system population to hold its own. Mills said the workload and stress on security and clerical staff had been heavy. Deputy Secretary Richard Schultz said there had been no increase in clerical staff since the time the prison system held 2,500-3,000 inmates. Mills asked for restoration of 87 additional staff members at Kansas State Penitentiary in Lansing and 45 additional staff members at Kansas State Industrial Reformatory in Hutchinson. Gov. John Carlin's chief of staff, John Myers, told the prison officials what he has been telling all agency heads appealing their budget cuts, that state agencies will have to spend $56 million less in fiscal year 1987 than they are authorized to spend in the current fiscal year, 1996. " $56 million, " Myers said. " I get tired of saying that." Ex-legislator's conviction upheld KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A state appeals court upheld yesterday the conviction of former Jackson County Legislator Harold L. Holliday Jr., who was found guilty of stealing from a county-financed scholarship fund. Holliday, 41, was convicted in October 1984 of stealing $1,625 from the Leon M. Jordan Scholarship and Monument Fund Inc., of which he was one of three trustees and sole administrator. He was sentenced to five years of probation, ordered to perform 500 hours of public service work and assessed a $5,000 fine. every respect to support the conviction," the Missouri Court of Appeals wrote in affirming the judgment yesterday. Holliday said that the money was paid to him in return for legal services he performed for the not-for-profit corporation, which receives some financing from the county. Prosecutors, however, said he had not performed any legal services and had no intention of performing any. "The evidence was sufficient in "It would appear from the above evidence, if believed by the jury, that defendant did indeed 'appropriate by means of deceit' the sum of $1,625 from the Jordan corporation," the state appeals court wrote. Holliday resigned from the county Legislature Jan. 25 in the midst of civil proceedings to remove him from office. He had held the 5th District seat for 12 years. Holliday's license to practice law had been suspended in January pending the outcome of his appeal. In light of yesterday's action, Holliday faces a continued suspension with the opportunity for reinstatement after a certain period of time or disbarment. Millionaires going to jail in drug scam United Press International KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Two brothers described as millionaires have been sentenced and fined for conspiring to distribute cocaine from their home in the exclusive Kansas City, Mo., suburb of Mission Hills, Kan. Daniel Weindling, 30, and his 27-year-old brother, William, were sentenced Monday in federal district court by Judge Earl O'Connor. During the period when the men were dealing in cocaine, they distributed about 40 pounds of the illegal substance with a street value of $1.3 million in the greater Kansas City area, according to the U.S. Attorney's office. Daniel Weindling was sentenced to six years in prison and fined $25,000 on the drug charge and two years in prison and a $10,000 fine for evading more than $27,600 dollars of 1981 federal income tax — to be served concurrently. William Weindling, who was charged only with conspiracy to distribute cocaine, was sentenced to eight years in prison and fined $25,000. In passing sentence, O'Connor noted both men were educated and had demonstrated an ability to make money without resorting to illegal drug sales. NCR PC IBM® NCR—The PC-6-50% faster speed at the same price. 256K, 2 drives. A 20mb hard disk and tape backup can also be added internally. (Also PC-4 and PC-8). IBM—The Original—100% compatible, 18% discount on 25K, 2 drive model. (XT and AT also available). SPERRY Sperry Sperry Power 50% faster 18MH hard disk for the same price. The best office PC. CHOICE A Columbia - VP stands for very portable, 256K, 2 drives, built-in screen. (Also desktop and 30mb models available). COLUMBIA THE LEADING EDGE MODEL "D" Leading Edge="A Best Buy" and PC Magazine's Editors Choice. $1495 includes 256K, 2 drives, high resolution screen. The hottest PC in Lawrence. octa systems, inc. Corona--Compatibility and economy. $1695 buys a full system with a high resolution graphics screen. (Portable for $1495). Open Eve. & Sun. thru New Year's. COMPUTER OUTLET Your computer connection at 843-PLUG • 804 N.H. ©NCR IBM, Columbia and Corona are the registered trademarks of their respective companies. Leading Edge is the registered trademark of Leading Edge Hardware Products. MOTORCYCLES DON'T LEAVE SCHOOL WITHOUT IT. They often sit unwanted in the Bookstore shelves until end-of-the-semester panic sets in. Although it's unfortunate, most fall semester textbooks are returned to the distributors when spring semester books begin arriving. The switch all takes place while you eat Thanksgiving dinner. Textbooks are funny things. Don't be a victim of "book-buying procrastination." 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( ) SYSTEM 5 INSTAILED FOR $49995* *with the purchase of this system on *with the purchase of this system get a FREE alarm system! 12:17 RADIO DE MONTAJE VOLTAS FREQUENCIA PRESIÓN GENERACION SINUSIDAD Nakamichi 2019-03-28 16:45:27 ALPINE N.2.3 DENON Tuner/icatium TD-300 Nuker/cassette deck Denon DCA-3100 Amplifier Alpine, model 6217. 4 polyester dome 2- v component speaker system 60W. SYSTEM 6 SALE PRICED AT SOUND $59995 SOUNDS GREAT CAR STEREO GREAT 10-6 MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 12-5 SUNDAY O ALPINE --- 25th & Iowa 1 Block West of Kief's Gramophone Shop 842-1438 6 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 Hyatt ruling may cost jobs for engineers United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The new employer of two engineers found negligent in the 1981 collapse of the Hyatt Regency hotel skywalks has not decided whether to accept the two men's resignations, one of the engineers said yesterday. Jack D. Gillum, former president of GCE International Inc., said in a telephone interview from St. Louis that he and Daniel Duncan, the chief engineer on the Hyatt project, offered Friday to resign their posts at Ketcham, Konkel, Barrett, Nichol & Austin, an engineering firm based in Denver. Gillum said Michael H. Barrett, chairman of the board, had made no decision on whether to accept the resignations. Gillum said Barrett would await a Missouri regulatory board's decision on whether it will suspend or revoke the engineers' licenses. "They haven't been accepted or rejected," Gillum said of the resignations. Neither Duncan nor Barrett could be reached for comment yesterday. A spokesman for the Board of Architects, Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors said that the board met Monday and yesterday in St. Louis to schedule a hearing on the findings against Gillum, Duncan and the company. Actions that could be taken by the board include revocation or suspension of the licenses of the two engineers and the company, or the issuance of a reprimand. A state administrative judge in Jefferson City ruled Friday that the two men and their St. Louis-based company were negligent and guilty of professional misconduct in designing two sky walks of the hotel. The elevated walkways collapsed the evening of July 17, 1981, during a crowded tea dance, killing 114 people and injuring more than 200 others. Charges of negligence were brought by the state Board of Architects, Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors, and filed against Gillum, Duncan and the company in February 1884 by Attorney General John Ashcroft, now governor of Missouri. The board is a state licensing agency. Gillum said yesterday he was still shocked at the ruling issued by Judge James Deutsch of the Missouri Administrative Hearing Commission. Gillum and Duncan's firm, GCE International, no longer exists. Barrett said that on May 31, Ketcham, Konkel, Barrett, Nichol & Austin hired Gillum, Duncan and more than 50 other GCE employees in offices in St. Louis, Chicago, Boston and New York. He said engineering operations were continued in three of the same four locations, but under this firm's name. Gun proposal is drawing fire By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff A proposed ordinance requiring a three-day waiting period to buy a gun may be unconstitutional, an attorney said at last night's Lawrence City Commission meeting. "The problem we see here is if a law is passed, and is completely ineffective, its our position that that law would be unconstitutional," said Carl Black, a Kansas City, Kan., attorney representing Tom Ludwig, owner of JPL Firearms Inc., 2449 Iowa St. Black said Ludwig and other gun owners had asked him to speak to the commission regarding a proposed gun ordinance. However, Commissioner Ernest Angino said the commission wasn't currently considering a gun ordinance. "To the best of my knowledge, no ordinance has ever been proposed. It's only been proposed that we discuss it." he said. "I think that point has to be made over and over again. We keep hearing that the city is proposing an ordinance. It isn't proposing any ordinance." At the Oct. 22 commission meeting, Commissioner David Longhurst asked city staff whether the commission had the power to adopt a waiting period to purchase a gun. His remarks were prompted by the Oct. 17 suicide of a 21-year-old KU student who shot herself with a gun she had purchased two hours earlier. Commissioners will receive a report later this week from Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, on actions they can take toward adopting an ordinance. Black said the ordinance would be "onerous, unenforceable legislation. It won't do any good to have ineffective legislation." The ordinance would be ineffective because it wouldn't stop suicides or decrease crime, Black said. Instead, people that wanted to buy a gun would go to surrounding towns or Kansas City. Black said the city would lose sales, sales tax and franchise taxes because local business owners would have to close. In other action, the commission sent to city staff part of a text amendment dealing with off-street parking regulations. The section sent back to staff would have raised the parking requirements from $1\frac{1}{2}$ parking places for a two-bedroom or larger dwelling to one parking place for each bedroom in those dwellings. Jerry Harper, president of the Oread Neighborhood Association, told the commission that "it's a fight to find parking for yourself" near his home, which is on Tennessee Street close to the University. The planning department will conduct a study on the parking problems in Lawrence and will present that study to the commission before April 1. Since 1977, Newbern has given special attention to children's plans and goals of growth. He will plan the future of children by making it a world of wonder and fun between the hours and between the days. Our children are drawn to the diversity of the world from the landscapes in the Lions Gate have been inspired by Christmas decorations and come to enjoy the festive spirit with their friends and comfort in with each other's stories and moves during the holiday season. You are my joy and my company. We love you and everything you have done for me and everyone else in our City. We do all that can help you life your life. "Wondrously gripping theater..." San Francisco Chronicle DEVELOPED BY THE PROJECTOR Freedom Days A PLAY ABOUT THE CIVIL RIGHTS MCC 7TH JULY 2018 usily o Chronicle FREEDOM DAYS A PLAY ABOUT THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT TREEDOM DAYS hits home with strong and impactful displays and encouraging personal of Black and white actors in The New York Yankees. The action of FREEDOM DAYS gets activated by the play, which merely deeply moving, has powerful impact. Mary Campbell, Annie Press 8 p.m. Sat., Nov. 23, 1985 at Attention Yello Sub fans: The military in Baltimore, mahogany morning, his presence amidothy, deeply moving, his presence Alamy Lampard, Alaskan Press There is a correction on the Yello Sub advertisement that appeared in yesterday's paper. Central Junior High School Auditorium Lawrence Admission is free CORRECTION: Italian Week Special coupon good through 11-26-85 Sponsored by KU's Office of Minority Affairs. Partially funded by a grant from the Rice Foundation and donations from various KU and Lawrence organizations. 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. --- Baidu Place a Kansan want ad. 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For more information call Recreational Services at 894-3548 ** All participants must furnish an opened can of hooks at the tournament site *novice, intermediate, advanced at 864-3546. VOTE VOTE VOTE CLIP AND SAVE Student Senate Elections Wednesday, Nov. 20 Thursday, Nov. 21 Polls Open-8 a.m.-5 p.m. You must vote at the designated location for your school. STRONG Nunemaker Liberal Arts and Sciences Graduate SUMMERFIELD LEARNED STAUFFER-FLINT BURGE UNION Business Engineering Journalism Education Architecture Fine Arts Law Special 2 Don't forget your Student I.D.! Paid for by Student Activity Fee. KANSAS UNION CLIP AND SAVE CLIP AND SAVE Pharmacy Social Welfare Nunemaker Liberal Arts and Science Graduate Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 KU,county meet goals in'85 drive By a Kansan reporter The United Fund announced yesterday that Douglas County barely reached its $500,000 goal on Friday, the official end of the 1985 fund-raising drive. "We did make our goal on time." Jo Bryant, executive director of the United Fund in Lawrence, said, "Douglas County raised $501.026.05 at this point." Bryant said that she expected more donations to come in, although the official drive had ended. The University of Kansas raised $71,656 this year, 102 percent of its goal. "Everyone on the KU team worked very hard," said Michael Davis, dean of law and KU United Fund chairman. "I'm very pleased with our success." Even though KU surpassed its goal, next year's goal won't be automatically increased. Bryant said. The new goal, set in early June, will be based on many factors, including the number of people employed by the University. Hungarians ready for concert By Jill White Of the Kansan staff When Janos Ferecenck, conductor of the Hungarian State Symphony Orchestra, died last year, the Hungarian government recruited an award-winning conductor for Hungary's oldest and most prestigious orchestra. The orchestra hired Adam Fischer, a 1973 winner of the Guido Cantelli International Competition for Young Conductors, to conduct orchestra, which is sponsored and supported by the state. Fischer will perform with the Hungarian State Symphony Orchestra tomorrow at the University of Kansas in its first American tour since 1973. The concert, part of the KU Concert Music Series, starts at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. Tickets are $6.50 and $7.50 for KU and kindergarten through 12th-grade students, $13 and $15 for the general public and $12 and $14 for senior citizens and other students. Fischer, a former music director of the Freiburg Theatre in West Germany, is the conductor of the Vienna Philharmonic State Opera. His position with the Hungarian State Orchestra is temporary. As a Budapest native conducting a Hungarian orchestra that is performing Hungarian composers' music, Fischer said recently, the musical interpretation will be "truer. "We want to show how we play our own music," Fischer said. "The Hungarian language is very strange. You have to be able to read the Hungarian language to perform the pieces correctly because you cannot translate all the idioms that come from the language." Fischer said the orchestra was performing three programs during its tour, depending on what each management chose. Jackie Davis, director of the Concert and Chamber Music series, said she chose this program after consulting with faculty members in the department of music. The KU performance will include Franz Lisszt's "Les Presludes, Symphonic Poem No. 3," Bela Bartok's "Concerto No. 3 for Piano and Orchestra" and Peter Tcheikovsky's "Symphony No. 5 in E Minor, Opus 14." The featured pianist, Jeno Jando, has won top honors at such international competitions as the Dino Ciani International Piano Concours in Milan, Italy; the Concourses of Versailles, France; and Hungary and the Sydney International Piano Competition in Australia. Jando, a 1974 graduate of the Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest, is making his American debut during this tour with the Hungarian State Symphony Orchestra. Fischer studied piano and composition at the Bela Bartok Conservatory in Budapest. He studied conducting with Hans Swarosky at the Vienna Academy of Music. After he won the competition for young conductors, Fischer was invited to become principal guest conductor of the Helsinki National Opera from 1974 to 1977. During that time, he became the assistant conductor of the Helsinki Philharmonic. Fischer made his American orchestral debut in 1983, conducting the Boston Symphony Orchestra. In the same year, he made his debut with the Vienna Philharmonic State Opera. In the United States, Fischer has conducted the Boston, Chicago and Cincinnati symphonies, the Cleveland Orchestra, the San Francisco Opera and the Lyric Opera of Chicago. "We have every night a concert, and to have the same intensity and to play each one a little differently is difficult," Fischer said. "We have to improvise since each stage has different acoustics." The orchestra's performance at KU is supported in part by a grant from the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional financing is provided by the KU student activity fee, the Swarthout Society and the Kansas University Endowment Association. After four years we're quitting the sweater business to concentrate on our footwear... Sweater Liquidation Store Hours: Mon.-Sat. 12-5:30 TOOTPRINTS 1339 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 841-7027 25% to 60% off Entire Sweater Stock QUITTING THE SWEATER BUSINESS Buy one ice cream or yogurt & get the second one at ½ price with this coupon expires 11-28-B5 Christmas Layaway available. Shop now while the selection is at its best. $ 1 / 2 $ Price CONE·A·COPIA The Magical Ice Cream Dream Machine! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1814 West 23rd (next to Command Performance) CAROLINA BERNARD WEDNESDAY A Grand Tale of High Adventure as BESTSELLING AUTHOR OF PARSIVAL RICHARD MONACO BESTSELLING AUTHOR OF PARSIVA WEDNESDAY Pork Spare Ribs with coleslaw and spicy garlic bread $525 High Adventure as Thrilling as Raiders of The Lost Ark or King Solomon's Mines Also: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover JOURNEY TO THE FLAME A BANTAM SPEEZTRA BOOK I the Sanctuary 843-0540 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs Presents Canada in the North Atlantic Triangle: Canadian, British and U.S Relations The Center for Humanistic Studies JL Granatstein, Professor of History York University, Ontario, Canada November 21st,8 p.m. Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union. Reception Following Adams Alumni Center Bruckmiller Room All Welcome Sponsored by Hall Center for the Humanities Photo World ONE-HOUR SERVICE Photo World ONE HOUR SERVICE 50% OFF Good At All Locations Not valid with other offers expires 12-3-85 Photos Must 41.1.9.8 From 110, 126, 35mm or Disc Color Print Film 14% pre print (reg. $29) and 20% pre print (reg. $49) charge ($2.98). Example: 24 exp. reg. $0.94. NOW $4.97 Taint only one copy location Process & Print PhotoWorld ONE HOUR SERVICE Good At All Locations Not valid with other offers FREE VIDEO CASSETTE WITH THIS COUPON Receive a Free Video Cassette when we transfer your home movies, slides & photos onto VHS or Beta. Stop by any PHOTOWORLD location for details. PIZZA PIZZA 842-0600 PIZZA PIZZA DELIVERED SOUTHERN HILLS SHOPPING CENTER (Just East of Perkins) 841-7205 Mon. Sat. 8 a.m. 'til 9 p.m. Sundays 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! Ask about our video transfer service! 50% OFF Color Posters with this coupon 80x30 (reg $29.95) NOW $14.98 16x20 (reg $24.96) NOW $18.48 From 35mm negatives, Internegatives and copy negatives as required $3 Not valid with other offers explores 12-3-05 PhotoWorld Kodak PAYER December 4,5,6 1985 Persons interested in selling wares deadline Nov 2$ Contact SUA Office The Arts and Crafts SALE union gallery Get your can to the football game this Saturday. Beat the Tigers! Sponsored by Mortar Board, Emergency Council, and with thanks to KU Athletics. Help feed Lawrence's Hungry. Bring a canned food to the KU vs.MU game and give to our Thanksgiving Food Drive. Cans collected at the gate. BUDAPEST Don't wait another 12 Years to see the HUNGARIAN STATE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Adem Fischer, Conductor Making Its First North American Tour Since 1973 8:00 p.m. Wednesday, November 20, 1985 Hoch Auditorium Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Program Les Préludes Concerto No. 3 in D Minor for Piano and Orchestra Jeno Jando, Soloist Liszt Bartol Symphony No. 5 in E minor Tehaikovsky Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved For reservations, call 913/864-3982 Public: $15 & $13; KU & K-12 Students: $7.50 & $6.50; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $14 & $12 VISA/MasterCard Accepted Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association "An enormous orchestra with a positive and colorful personality." The Guardian, London "A superb, highly disciplined orchestra." Daily Post, Athens V K HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS! 8 University Daily Kansan From Page One Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 Publish Continued from p. 1 The same survey said that 72 percent of faculty at two-year colleges had never written or edited a book and 69.3 percent preferred formal teaching to research. At four-year schools, 54.8 percent of faculty had never written or edited a book and 31 percent preferred formal teaching to research. "It's so easy to publish, it's ridiculous," he said. "You can find articles that read almost like the diary of someone's notebook. It's comical and tragic at the same time." Three areas - teaching research and creativity, and service - determine promotion and tenure. Research and creativity includes publication, scientific investigation, artistic performance and creative writing. Robert Hanzlik, professor of pharmacy and medicinal chemistry, said that to benefit the state and humanity, professors had to do research. "We're not here to recite textbooks to students," he said. "We're here to show how new knowledge can be applied. Hanzlik said that the danger of trivializing publication exists. Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs and professor of physiology and cell biology, said research had to be published. "Publications are a measure of activity and success. Having a string of publications is important, concrete evidence of productivity." "If you don't publish, it doesn't do anybody any good," he said. "You aren't going to advance the state of knowledge without publishing. "If you publish in good journals, the journals won't let sloppy or trivial work be published." James Hartman, professor of English and linguistics, said he thought the University now placed more emphasis on research and publication than when he came in 1970. But the result hasn't been an increase in insignificant data published in journals. "There are institutions where teaching gets no support," he said. "The University of Kansas is not like that. Survival here isn't solely dependent on research." Marylee Brochmann, associate professor of social welfare, said the notion of "publish or perish" had damaged the quality of research. "I'm all for research and new knowledge," she said. "I don't see all that many good pieces of research as I read the journals." Long-term research is minimized when publication is emphasized. Brochmann said. Charles Berg, associate professor of theatre and media arts, said research, like most things in life, had a good side and a bad side. "More emphasis is put on publishing because it's a more tangible area to quantify," he said. "We are a society that likes to quantify. More seems to be better, more often than not." The intense pressure to publish, especially when a professor is on the tenure track, can lead to the publication of insignificant research, Berg said. YOU CAN HEAD THE PUBLIC RELATIONS PROGRAM FOR A MAJOR CAMPUS ORGANIZATION! Apply now for Public Relations Chairperson for Student Union Activities by picking up an application at the SUA Office. Deadline for applying is Thurs., Nov. 21 at that evening beginning at 6 p.m. SUA Tenure the american Association for University Professors, said he thought the University's standards were more concrete now than 10 years ago. Continued from p.1 "The department of history has tightened its restrictions in the areas of publication, teaching and service," he said. "The standards are spelled out in the departmental bylaws. I think it's a positive move. It's fair to everyone if you know the rules." Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science, said he thought research was more important for receiving tenure today than 20 years ago. "The University has made an effort to reward teaching, but it is not rewarded in the same way research is." "I could not be hired at the University today," Ketzel said. "New graduate students have more research than I have at the present time. The increased emphasis on research has been accompanied by a declining emphasis on service, Ketzel said. "I do almost no research. The rules have changed, and I haven't moved into research. Not all researchers are good teachers." Most professors interviewed said they thought research enhanced teaching. However, they also said it was not easy to excel in both areas as well as 'I could not be hired at the University today. New graduate students have more research than I have at the present time - Clifford Ketzel, serve the University, community or in national organizations. They said they often must decide where to spend their time and energy. professor of political science Marylee Brochmann, associate professor of social welfare, said she thought an increased emphasis on research left professors with less time for students. But to remain competitive with other schools and departments in publishing, she said, the school of social welfare demands more publication from professors. Teaching is the primary function of the School of Social Welfare, which places more weight on service than other schools. Brochmann said. "People are currently being judged by standards that their peers have never had to meet themselves," Brochmann said. Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said KU's standards for tenure always had been high. "I'm not sure the standards today are that much higher," he said. "I think people think they are. We're just maintaining the high standards. "In the past, people were more confident that their records were good enough. Now people are more worried about it." Burchill, who is also a professor of physiology and cell biology, said his department placed equal weight on research and teaching for assistant professors seeking tenure. Service is not as important, he said, but is necessary at a democratic university. Wakefield Dort, professor of geology, said documentation for promotion and tenure had become increasingly important because of the chance of lawsuits from faculty denied tenure. Faculty at the University need to be good researchers, Burchill said. "The people who are tops in the research field are the best teachers." he said. "They're excited about their field and do research. It carries over into the lectures. "Nobody is willing to make deci slons without something to back it up." he said. Dort said that although more of his time went into research, he would never give up teaching. Working in both areas is possible but excelling in both is impossible, he said. Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, service and graduate studies, said receiving tenure on fine teaching alone was hard, although not impossible. "A university has multiple missions," she said. "One is to teach, one is to discover knowledge, and another is to give service." Dean Stetler, assistant professor of biological science, said all three areas were geared toward students. "If I wanted to do just research," he said. "I wouldn't be here. "Research is what I teach. I give very current facts because I've just done work in my lab." Marna Goldstein, associate professor of design, said research in her department included exhibition of art and performance. "I think the University committees have a hard time evaluating it," she said. "Some schools almost go out of their way to deny tenure," Goldstein said. "If you have the credentials, KU won't deny you tenure." Tomorrow: Most professors and administrators oppose abolishing tenure. We Carry A Large Selection Of COLLECTOR'S PLATES Our Christmas Assortment Includes: Goebel Hummel Schmid Hummel Norman Rockwell Bing & Grondahl Royal Copenhagen Lowell Davis Free Gift Wrap 723 Mass. Collection Gift Store STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP Via Videotape Friday, November 22 1:15 Preparing for Exams 2:30 Foreign Language Study Skills 3:30 Time Management FREE! To attend, register at the Student Assistance Center Pre-Holiday Basketball Tournament 5-on-5 Single Elimination 112 Team Limit Men's and Women's Divisions Entry Fee: $5 per team Entries due: by 5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 22 in 208 Robinson Play begins Monday, Dec. 2nd For more information, call 864-3546 REDLINE & KJHK FM91 present Circle Jerks with special guest notz December 3 Kansas Union Ballroom University of Kansas Tickets: $6.00 in advance at all CAD locations, $7.00 at the door. "and Exile in Lawrence." Looking Good! If you haven't been by Naismith Hall lately, you're in for a big surprise! We're looking good and looking forward to seeing you next spring! JUST LOOK WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER: - Semi-private rooms w/ connecting baths * Great location (bus service from your - Great location (bus service from your front door to your classes) - front door to your classes) - Delicious all-you-can-eat meals - A fully equipped recreation area w/ swimming pool, fitness center,and game area. Limited Spaces Available for Spring Semester—waiting list forming now! For more information call or come by NAISMITH HALL 1800 Naismith Dr. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 (913) 843-8559 > Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 9 Senate misses final chance for action By a Kansan reporter Eight bills died because the Student Senate missed its last chance to take action last night. Only 19 senators came to the meeting in time for the roll call, and the Senate could not do business without a quorum of 23 of the 46 senators. Senate's final meeting before the elections, which are today and tomorrow, was supposed to have been Nov. 13. The Senate had nearly 20 pieces of legislation to wade through that night, so senators circulated a petition asking for another meeting to handle the nine remaining bills. Twenty-six senators signed the petition which required 25 signatures to be valid. Tony Arnold, chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee and author of three of the bills that were killed, said many of the senators had class conflicts and did not attend. Others, he said, had class conflicts but attended the meeting anyway. The bills that died included a proposal that would have given the KU students more control over the KU branch of Associated Students of Kansas, an attendance policy governing student members of University Council, conduct and attendance guidelines for Senate standing committee chairmen and a bill that required weekly Senate meetings. Arnold said he was disappointed that several of those who signed the petition to call another meeting did not attend the meeting. The date of the meeting was determined after the petition was completed. Arnold said, "We had important legislation which involved student interests and people didn't take their responsibility as senators seriously enough to come. The next meeting will be a joint meeting of the old Senate and the newly elected Senate on Dec. 4 at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. No legislation can be considered at this meeting. Missing former senator wanted for grand theft OLATHE — While police investigators said yesterday that former state Sen. Paul Hess may have taken his three young sons to Jordan, a newspaper reported that Hess is wanted in Johnson County for grand theft. Unidentified sources told the Olathe Daily News that warrants issued by Johnson County District Attorney Dennis Moore yesterday were for charges of grand theft alleging Hess converted proceeds from settlements or damage awards in civil suits for his own use. Moore also said that Hess might not be able to be extradited from Jordan to the United States. "It is my understanding that Jordan is not a signatory to the extradition treaty, but we are checking that out," Moore said. United Press International He confirmed that he talked with Hess' estranged wife, Anne Oliver Hess, for an hour Monday. "What I can say is that I talked for an hour to Anne Oliver Hess yesterday and she provided information on Paul that makes me want to talk with him," Moore said. Our three-year and two-year scholarships won't make college easier. Just easier to pay for. Even if you didn't start college on a scholarship, you could finish on one. Army ROTC Scholarships pay for full tuition and allowances for educational fees and textbooks. Along with up to $1,000 a year, get all the facts. BE ALL YOU CAN BE CALL OR WRITE PROFESSOR OF MILITARY SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS-LAWRENCE, KS 66045 PHONE (913) 864-3311 ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS --- Call the Kansan. 10th Annual Turkey Trot Saturday, Nov. 23rd., 8 a.m. Sponsored by KU Recreation Services Entry deadline: Before the day of the race, but you may show up and enter during the 7-7:50 a.m. registration time. Course- 3-3.5 miles. Lawrence Parks & Recreation Entry fee: $5 delivered or mailed to Recreation Services, 208 Robinson, KU Campus, 66045, or Lawrence Parks & Recreation Dept., South Park Center, 1141 Massachusetts, Lawrence, Ks. 66044. Divisions: KU/Haskell Students men & women KU/Haskell Faculty/Staff men & women Open division men & women Awards: Division winners will receive turkeys, and the individual who comes closest to his/her predicted time will receive a turkey for each division. For further information call KU Recreation Services 864-3546 PIZZA PIZZA 842-0600 PIZZA PIZZA DELIVERED On the Record A car valued at $8,000 was stolen early yesterday morning from the driveway of a home in the 2200 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence police said事. A 24-year-old Bonner Springs woman had parked the car in her friend's driveway about 1 a.m. A radar detector valued at $250 was stolen between 2:15 a.m. and 2:50 a.m. from a car parked in Lot 106, West Campus, KU police said. The side window was broken and damage was estimated at $200. COMMONWELTH THEATRES GRANADA TELFONLINE 843-217-5780 GENE HACKMAN MATT DILTON TARGET (R) Fri. '5:00 Daily 7:20 9:40 Sat. & Sun. '2:30 '5:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN THE MUTILATOR BLOody COURSE R Fri. '5:00 Daily 7:30 9:30 Sat. & Sun. '2:30 '5:00 COMMONWEALTH THEATRE GRANADA DOWNTOWN GENE HACKNAM MATT DILLON TARGET Fri. *5:00* Daily 7:30-9:00 Sat. & Sun. *2:30* 5:00 KANTISH TELEPHONE 818-450-7600 THE MUTILATOR BLOOD COMPANY R Fri. '5:00 Daily 7:30 9:30 Sat. & Sun. '2:30 '5:00 HILLCREST 1 927 WEST AVE NW FREEFLYING BAND JAGGED EDGE Glenn Close Jeff Bridges Daily "4:45 7:30 9:40 Sat & Sun" 2:30 WESTRIDGE • 6th & Kasold • 841-0144 HILLCREST • 9th & Iowa • 843-2313 SOUTHSIDE • 23rd & Louisiana • 843-8588 Above stores open 'til 3:00 p.m. Thanksgiving Day NORTHSIDE Closed Thanksgiving Day AYS HILLCREST 2 TWO AND A HALF MILE FROM WEST SIDE OF TOWN "HIGHLY ENJOYABLE" A MASTER PICTURE After Hours Daily '5:00' 7:25 9:25 Sat. & Sun. '2:45' HILLCREST 3 BETWEEN TWO TOWNS AMAZING KIDS JUST BARE FOR A DAY This bright night has been found for the ceremonies ONCE FITTEN Daily '5:00' to 7:30 9:30 Sat. & Sun. '2:45' Prices Good Thru Nov. 28 RUSTY'S IGA. FOOD CENTERS LAWRENCE KS DISCOUNT *Bargain Show CINEMA 1 325 W. 10th St. & 10th Ave. LOS ANGELES Rainbow Rite Star Studios TO LIVE AND DIE in L.A. Daily 7:00 Sat.Asun. $3.95 Daily 9:15 CINEMA 1 3125 AND IOWA 4907 AND IOWA Hinbow Brite and the Star Stealer TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. Daily 7:20 Sat & Sun. $3.05 Daily 5:05 Daily 9:15 CINEMA 2 3125 AND IOWA 4907 AND IOWA THE CINEMA Fri. '5:00 Daily 7:15 8:20 Sat. & Sun. '3:00'5:00 CINEMA 2 313 9TH AVE. LOAKE TELEPHONE 947 5600 THE TWENTY MONSTER MOW Fri. 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NEW CROP SUNKIST NAVEL ORANGES 15 FOR $1 HORMEL CURE "81" WHOLE BONELESS HAM NORTH CAROLINA SWEET POTATOES 6 LBS. $1 FOR TURKEY WITH GARLIC AND GRAVY. Coke diet Coke 100% COCOA Coke Coke diet COKE Coke 100% 8 ounces COKE, 2 LTR. BTL. DIET COKE, CLASSIC COKE .99 COKE, 2 LTR. BTL. DIET COKE, CLASSIC COKE MICHELOB Light need to produce the high quality beer in the city four clear brews we bring you here MICHELOB Light need to produce the high quality beer in the city four clear brews we bring you here MICHELOB Light need to produce the high quality beer in the city four clear brews we bring you here LET RUSTY'S DELI FIX YOUR THANKSGIVING DINNER LET RUSTY'S DELI FIX YOUR THANKSGIVING DINNER • 10-12 LB. (Precooked Weight) TURKEY • One QT. GRAVY • Two LBS. DRESSING 1688 Pickup from MICHELOB OR 6PAK MICHELOB LIGHT 12OZ. NON-RETURNABLE BOTTLES BEER RUSTY'S COUPON TV/ NEW CRAFT Whipped Topping TV/ NEW CRAFT Whipped Topping TV WHIPPED B OZ. BOWL CELERY STALK LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY TOPPING FREE BUY ONE AT .85 GET ONE BUD BRAND CELERY STALK LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY FREE WITH COUPON WITHOUT COUPON.49 FREE WITH COUPON WITHOUT COUPON.49 WELLS OL'FASHIONED ICE CREAM --- OCEAN SPRAY FRESH CRAN- 12 OZ. BAG .69 BERRIES 10 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 KU to assist in issues forums By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Citizens across the United States have formed groups to discuss national issues, and now the University of Kansas will assist citizens and students in Kansas eager to form discussion groups. The University of Kansas Alumni Association and the division of continuing education will sponsor sessions Dec. 7 and Jan. 4 at the Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave., to introduce the National Issues Forum to those interested in forming groups in their communities, Loren Taylor, director of alumni chapters and student programs, said yesterday. A group in Wisconsin began the National Issues Forum in 1981 to discuss and study political, social and economic issues. The daylong sessions at the Alumni Center will train citizens to be moderators for their study circles, which are unstructured and allow each group independence within the national network across the country, he said. Rose Rousseau, programs manager for conferences and programs in continuing education, said preparation to start a branch of the program in Kansas began about a year ago. The issues for the 1885 forums, are: "Welfare: Who Should Be Entitled to Public Help?" and "The Soviets: What is the Conflict About?" and "Taxes: Who Should Be Paving and Why?" Rousseau said the program was for people interested in the welfare of society. Citizens inform themselves on issues that affect their lives by creating study circles. Each year the group will receive information on the issues for that year. Issues discussed in the past have been inflation, retirement and social security, and nuclear arms and national security. Continuing education and the Alumni Association will contribute to the groups' activities by offering resources from KU libraries or by asking faculty to participate. Chancellor Gene A. Budig and three other University officials met with the Senate Executive Committee yesterday to explain how the state's fiscal problems could affect KU. By a Kansan reporter Budig told Senex members that the budget cuts suggested on Nov. 12 by Alden Shields, state budget director, would leave no room for progress at the University. KU pinched by cuts, Budig says Shields predicted that the state would collect $132.6 million less than anticipated in general fund receipts for the next two years. Because of the state cuts, the Regents could lose as much as $45 million from their original budget request. James Bibb, associate director of business affairs, said at the meeting The shortfall came about because of the nature of budget making, Bibb said. that the figure was discouraging and showed that the state should take a serious look at the budget problems. Late in each year, he said, an estimated budget is created by the state's Consensus Estimating Group. In early December, the group meets again and develops a final estimate. The amount of actual revenue the state receives often falls short of the estimated budget amount, he said. Bibb, who was the state budget director for 27 years, said that in the past few years the money held over from the previous year's budget had been less than usual. He said a carry-over balance of at least $90 million was needed if the state wanted to have enough of a cushion to handle shortfalls. Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop Sub & Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! Anyway you want it... you got it! 1618 West 23rd Street Bibb said that no matter what the state came up with in the final budget, he did not think that the University would get all that it asked for in its budget. WINTER WORDS AntlerWear has lots of great points... - Classic Norwegian riders design - Ski sweater style. sweatshirt comfort - A great Christmas gift for just about anyone - Easy care. Machine washable. Won't shrink. $1495 plus $2.00 shipping AntlerWear reindeer sweatshirts in red and green on white Size small (34-36), medium (38-40) or large (42-44). Silkscreen design. Order now, quantities limited. 2 FOR 1 memberships —OR— $10 OFF non-member tanning sessions (as low as $4 per session) EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA * 841-6232 Quantity ___ Size ___ Christmas Bonus. 12,345,678.00 HP ENVI MENU TABO PRNT FV CHS 7 8 9 + PV PMT ON OFF PREMTEXT ON OFF AUX AUX AUX RX 4 5 6 X PROM DELAY REG PREFMET REG RX/2 SET R+1 X1Y CLX 1 2 3 ON f 9 SEO RCL 0 - 2+ + HEWLETT.PACKARD Add $2.00 shipping. Allow 4 weeks delivery. Mail to: Prairie Mercantile LLC, PO Box 8631, Dept. A, Prairie Village, KS 66208 Name hp HEWLETT PACKARD A $15 REBATE on the HP-12C Business Calculator. City State Zin It's the girl that has no equal for business professionals—like you in real estate, finance, banking and investments. That's because it has more built-in features than most. And Hewlett-Packard is giving a $19 Christmas bonus on HP-12C5s purchased between November 6 and December 31, 1985. So now's the time to ask for an Address But if nobody gets the hint, buy the HP-12C for yourself – from a dealer who has no equal. reg. $120.00 SALE $95.00 KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union KU Legal Services for Students Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE! - Advice on most legal matters - Notarization of legal documents - Preparation & review of legal documents - Notization of legal documents - Many other services available 8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday 117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665 Call or drop by to make an appointment. Funded by student activity fee. Honey, have you seen my glasses? Same day Service 24 hour Service 48 hour Service Purchase two pairs of glasses at the same time and get 20 VISIONS Mon.-Fri. 10-5:30; Sat. 10-3 --- 841-7421 Mon.-Fri. 10-5:30; Sat. 10-3 806 Massachusetts --- Mad Hatter Wednesday Night Don't forget: 1. 25 WELL DRINKS All Night Thursday Night PENNY DRAWS SUA FILMS 1952 Academy Award Best Score HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSON'S The Red Shoes Tonight 7:30 $1.50 Woodruff Aud. DOUBLETREE'S HOLIDAY SHOPPER SPECIAL St & H macy's THE DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS IN KANSAS CITY RATE GOOD EVERY DAY 11/15-1/5 RATE GOOD EVERY DAY 11/15-1/5 $46 Here's your chance to get an early start on your Holiday shopping. Ask for the "Shopper's Special" when you make reservations any day of the week and you'll receive a deluxe double room. Let us provide complimentary transportation to and from the sensational Oak Park and Metcalf South Malls, only minutes away. End your day with a swim in our indoor pool, relax in a soothing hot tub, and enjoy the exquisite cuisine in Restaurant '85. Offer is valid November 15, 1985, through January 5, 1986, and is subject to space availability. For reservations, call (800)528-0444 or dial direct (913)451-6100. The Doubletree Hotel at Corporate Woods, 10100 College Boulevard, Overland Park, Kansas (I-435 at U.S. 69). DOUBLETREE HOTEL KANSAS CITY Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 11 History enlivens crowd Professor reveals past eras By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Several people took a walk down memory lane last night as they relied, through music, words and pictures, several eras in American history — from the Declaration of Independence and D-day to Elvis Presley and Patty Hearst. Calder M. Pickett, Clyde M. Reed distinguished professor of journalism, gave a presentation to about 150 people — including many of his colleagues and Reed himself — last night in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. After an introduction by Deanell Tucha, vice chancellor for academic affairs and one of Pickett's former students, Pickett entertained for almost an hour, recalling nine eras of American history and their coverage in the press. The speech, titled "Some Moments in the History of America — and the History of the American Press," was the 15th of a series of inaugural lectures established in 1881 by the office of academic affairs to introduce new distinguished professors and to focus on their scholarly accomplishments. A taped voice from each era, music characteristic of the period and mostly black-and-white photos of posters, propaganda, personalities and front pages revealed the American past as Pickett narrated. Ripples of laughter ran through the crowd as members recognized the voice of former President Richard Nixon giving his "Checkers" speech, Charles Lindbergh's words, and the music of the "Charleston" and "Yankee Doodle." The presentation was representative of Pickett's teaching style, so familiar to the students he has taught during his 35 years at the University of Kansas. "History for many people has been too much the dry facts," Pickett said. Pickett said he had found that artworks from the past — radio reports, music, pictures and historic front pages — gave a dimension to subject matter that he didn't have when he studied history. Pickett has written book reviews for the Journalism Quarterly and the Kansas City Star and is the host of a weekly KANU-FM radio program, "The American Past," which has won the Peabody Award for excellence in radio programming. During the American Revolution, Pickett said, the only role of the press was that of propaganda. That changed during the Civil War, although the propagandists were still at work. "The press of the 1920s, still mainly newspapers in our concern, was as wild, and as flamboyant, on occasion as you might guess." Picktell said. In the 1930s, Pickett said, radio brought a new dimension to the press. "The depression and the developing war in Europe and Asia helped to make radio, as the slavery crisis and westward expansion had helped to make the telegraph almost a hundred years earlier." PIZZA Shoppe PIZZA BATTER WITH YE PIZZERIE! 842-0600 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center WE DELIVER! DELIVERY SPECIAL! Two Topping King Size Pizza and 32 Oz. Pepsi— $7 95 plus tax Additional Toppings Only 90' Each. DINE-IN CARRY-OUT LIMITED DELIVERY UDK Exp. 11-30-85 Bring A Friend! MEAL FOR 2 Single Topping Prince Size Pizza, 2 Salads and 2 Pepsis $5 95 plus tax DINE-IN ONLY. 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WACKY WEDNESDAY SPECIAL 16" PIZZA — 2 TOPPINGS 4 SOFT DRINKS $7.99 One coupon per order Dine In Carry Out Home Delivery 841-8010 2214 Yale Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11a.m.-3a.m. Friday & Saturday 11a.m.-3a.m. 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 Campus/Area Student gains honor as top weatherman By John Williams Of the Kansan staff The ups and downs of weather forecasting were overcome by a KU student who was named last Wednesday as one of the top student forecasters in the nation. David Lehew, Lawrence senior majoring in atmospheric sciences, was named a top individual forecaster in the National Weather Forecasting Contest, Joe Eagleman, professor of meteorology, said yesterday. The contest, open to all university students, was based on 10 days of written forecasts in each of 10 different geographical areas - 100 total forecasts. Eagleman said. "It's usually a remote area, like Florida or Oregon, so the people won't be forecasting an area they are familiar with." he said. Lehew placed first for the first three areas forecast, or 30 days of forecasting. Eagleman said. "Major meteorological institutions, such as the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Missouri and Florida State, participate, so it is very competitive," he said. "Usually a lot of universities, especially the top ones in meteorology, compete, with a couple hundred students participating altogether." Eight KU students entered the contest and all did well, but no one has ever placed as well as Lehew, Engleman said. Lehew said it was a "hard and touch" contest. He forecast for Astoria, Ore., and Marquette. Mich. One period for which he forecast was disqualified after the weather-gathering station there was struck by lightning, he said. Lehew attributed his good performance to the fact that students in meteorology are required to take a maximum of four semesters of onhand training, during which students develop skills of forecasting and using mans. "The contest was made more difficult because we were forecasting for different parts of the nation than we were used to." he said. He said that working as a tutor as well as help from other students and professors prepared him for the contest, although he said the actual forecasting was an individual effort. Lehew is a weatherman for the Lawrence Report on Sunflower Cablevision Channel 6. On Campus ■ University Forum will feature a presentation by Tim Miller, lecturer in religious studies, on "Silkville: A commune on the Kansas frontier" at 11:45 a.m. today at the Ecumenical Christian Minstries building, 1204 Oread Ave. The German Club will show the German movie "Die Weisse Rose" at 3:30 p.m. today in Room 205 Wescoe Hall The KU Dr. Who Appreciation Society will meet at 7 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. The Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Trail Room of the Union. an Episcopal worship service at noon tomorrow in Danforth Chapel. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A group opposing a $198 million development project proposed for just east of the Country Club Plaza yesterday filed petitions bearing more than 20,000 signatures calling for a referendum on the plan. United Press International Development plan opposed The group, Citizens for Responsible Development, needed 8,901 signatures of eligible Kansas City voters to force the City Council to reconsider the project, which it approved in October. estimated to have more than 20,000 signatures, will be sent to the Jackson County election board today. Richard Brenneman, city clerk, said his office had been processing the petitions all day yesterday. He said the petitions, which he If the group does have enough signatures and the council again approves the project, the issue will go before voters citywide. The plan first was announced by R. H. Sailors & Co. on April 19, 1984, as a $300 million, 3-million-square-foot officehotelresidential project. Since then, furor over the the project has prompted developers to greatly scale down the project - to a $198 million endeavor including 2 million square feet and seven towers of nine to 19 stories. The K40 XK SUPERHET The K40 XK SUPERHET DASHMONT The only Radar Detector with a guarantee against speeding tickets Reg. Price $299 Sale Price $249 C The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor a seminar, "One Couple Plus Two Careers Equals ?," at 7:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. 914 W. 23rd (913) 842-5511 Lawrence ■ Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity and the Emergency Services Council of Lawrence are conducting a canned food drive through Saturday. Food will be collected during dinner today at Joseph R. Pearson, Templin, McCollum and Oliver Halls. There will be collectors at local grocery stores from 8 a.m. to noon Saturday. 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Yesterday, however, the team had to contend with the 20-degree temperature. The game will be televised locally as the Raycom BIG eight game of the week starting at 11:30 a.m. on KSNT channel 27 and KMBC channel 9. Kickoff is set for 11:40 a.m. This will be the fourth Raycom appearance for Kansas this season. The Jayhawks defeated Vanderbilt 41-6 and lost to Iowa State 22-21 and Oklahoma State 17-10 in the three previous television appearances. Gottfried said the injury situation was the same as yesterday. Tailback Lynn Williams and free safety Wayne Ziegler will play against the Tigers, and center Paul Oswald is doubtful. Receiver released WASHINGTON - The Washington Redskins yesterday released wide receiver Malcolm Barnwell, a five-year veteran who was acquired from the Los Angeles Raiders before the season for a 1986 second-round draft pick. Barnwell established himself as a dangerous deep threat in two years as a starter with the Raiders but had failed to impress Redskins coaches since his Aug. 26 acquisition. Promoter innocent NEW YORK — A federal jury yesterday found boxing promoter Don King innocent of all tax evasion and conspiracy charges against him but convicted his business associate, Constance Harper, on three counts of attempted tax evasion. The panel of eight women and four men considering the case in D.S. District Court in Manhattan deliberated two days before finding King innocent on all 12 counts of income tax evasion, conspiracy and filing false returns. "Only in America," was all King would say after the verdict, as he stood outside the courtroom waiting for the jurors to come out. As they filed out, he shook each one's hand and said, "Thank you so much, God bless you." Intramural football keeps full contact on line This is the second in a series appearing this week dealing with injuries suffered in intramural athletics. By Matt Tidwell Of the Kansan sports staff From staff and wire reports. By Matt Tidwell Full contact on the line of scrimmage has, in the past, forced Recreation Services to consider changing the form of intramural football played at Kansas. When the options were weighed, however, Rec Services officials decided to stick with the current form of intramural football. "That's an age-old problem and we have talked about it," said Rec Services Director Mary Chappell. "But there are two things you have to look at: safety and the needs of the participant. And what we gather here at the University of Kansas is that they want to play football." Chappell said the line of scrimgage, an area where offensive and defensive linemen are allowed full contact, was usually where most intramural football injuries happened. "Obviously, we play touch football here, and most injuries happen in the blocking process on the line of scrimmage." Chappell said. Other universities have switched to either flag football with limited blocking, which is the kind played at most Big Eight Conference schools, or touch football with players wearing protective pads to help prevent contact injuries. "My opinion is that there are more injuries in flag than in touch because athletes tend to leave their feet more and are injured that way." Chappell said. But Raydon Robel, the Rec Services director at Kansas State University, where flag football is plaved. disagrees. In fact, Robel said the reason K-State switched from touch to flag football was that play was becoming too rough. "From our standpoint, it (flag football) does prevent injuries." Robel said. "We were finding that touch football was more of a hit, bang, knock 'em as far as you can brand of football." Robel said K-State's version of flag football decreased the number of injuries due to blocking on the line because rules limited the amount of contact among blockers. One argument against switching to flag football at Kansas is KU intramural football's popularity. In fact, some find flag football less competitive. "We wouldn't favor a switch to a more non-contact game," said Randy Bryson, Overland Park sophomore and trophy league football captain for Delta Chi. "Last year I went over to K-State with the KU Greek intramural all-stars and most of us didn't like their game as well. The other option, allowing players the contact of touch football while playing in protective pads, also raises questions. "It wasn't nearly as competitive as what we have here. Their game is based mainly on quickness while ours is based on contact." Two sports medicine specialists, Larry Magee, a physician at Watkins Hospital, and James Marvel, a noted southern Kansas sports surgeon who once treated the Oklahoma State football team, have doubts about touch football with pads. "I would not like to see them go to a full pad game because I think it would increase injury," Magee said. "In a way there's some protection by not wearing any pads. The players tend to protect themselves more. With pads, they're more apt to go all out." Marvel, who played touch football extensively in the military, said players liked the full contact blocking in touch "because it's your bone against their bone." "You would think it (touch) is dangerous, but having played both ways, I would rather play touch," he said. "I personally think pads, especially around the shoulders, never did much good. To me they were cumbersome and ineffective." In support of pads, however, Marvel said that helmets and mouth guards would probably offered some protection. One former intramural football player said he would like to see KU players in pads. Eric Witcher, an Elkhart senior who suffered a dislocated shoulder while playing Rec $services football two years ago, said doctors told him pads would have prevented what turned out to be a serious injury. "My injury happened because my shoulder hit the ground, and if I had been wearing pads that would have never happened," Witcher said. When one aspect of a game, in this case the line of scrimmage in Kansas intramural football, is clearly the cause of the majority of injuries, it's no wonder KU Recreation Services has given thought to making a change. Assistant strength coach takes 2nd in lifting event By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff Graduate assistant strength coach Alan Jakubowski finished second in the Pan American Weightlifting Championships last weekend in Miami. Jakubowski made lifts of 303 pounds in the snatch, and 363 pounds in the clean and jerk in the 181-pound weight class to capture second. Teams from North and South America participated in the event, including, the 10-member United States team. Jakubowski said yesterday that he was selected for the team by the United States Weightlifting Federation, on the basis of his performances over the last year. Upcoming events for Jakubowski include the Mid-America Weightlifting championships Dec. 7 and the Missouri Valley Collegiate Championships in February. His top finish of the year came in Montreal last March, when he placed third in an international weightlifting championship. Jakubwikson also won the Missouri Valley Weightlifting Championships two weeks ago at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Jakubowski- said that he participated in five or six meets a year, and that he trained for them on his own. "There is only one other litter that I know here at KU, so I train on my own." Jakubowski said. Jakubowski is in his first year at the University after earning his degree in physiology at Michigan State. He did not participate in any other sport at Michigan State, but he was a freshman football and varsity assistant coach at a high school in Lansing, Mich. "It (weightlifting) was more than enough for me at Michigan State," he said. "I found out that weightlifting can apply to just about any sport." Jakubowski, who is doing his postgraduate work at Kansas, works with the football team and men's track throwers. He also serves as the volleyball team's only strength coach. "Since Anschutz was built, the nonrevenue sports have more time to lift in Parrott (Athletic Center)," Jakubowski said. Julie Ester, a blocker on the KU volleyball team, said Jakubowski's workout program was a major reason for the improvement of the team this season. "I have noticed a lot of difference this year." Ester said. "He is probably the best thing to happen to our team." Ester said Jakubowski was the first strength coach to take time and devote it entirely to the volleyball team. Ed Bielik, KU strength coach, worked part time with the volleyball team last year. Jakubowski's major change is the use of jump training to improve the women's vertical leap. "I don't want to pat myself on the back or anything, but I think the weight program this year has had a lot to do with their improvement." Jakubowski said. Last season the volleyball team finished 5-30. This season the Jayhawks are 17-14 going into the Big Eight conference tournament this weekend. Ester said the advantage of a full time strength coach was that he could keep better track of the team's workouts and progress. Lady Daybreaks Toni Webb, junior guard, directed her teammates during women's basketball practice yesterday in Allen Field House. The Jayhawks will be host to Drake at 3:30 p.m. Saturday in their season opener. JUCO star expected to commit By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff Women's basketball coach Marian Washington has already signed one prized recruit to the team. Lisa Brady of St. Teresa's Academy in Kansas City, Mo., and she expects to sign another soon. Kerri Hawley, whom Washington calls an outstanding outside shooter, is expected to sign with Kansas. Last year, Hawley played at Kansas State, and this season she is at Rogers State junior college in Claremont, Okla. "Getting Lisa was a biggie," Washington said yesterday. "With the kind of pressure we hope to apply, you need depth." Washington said there were two more top recruits she hoped to sign, and both were high school All-Americans. But Washington doesn't have much time to worry about next year, as the Jayhawks' basketball season begins Saturday against Drake. The game, originally scheduled to start at 4:30 p.m., has been moved to 3:30 p.m. in Allen Field House. "We've got a good nucleus now." Washington said of her team. "The girls have worked very hard this year. They understand better now the value of using practice time. "Our advantage right now is our determination. We feel that our future is good." Washington, in her 13th season at Kansas, said she was excited about the coming season. 85-86 Men's Basketball - Big Eight Conference Game TV1 *Big Eight Regional Telecast TV2 *CSB TV National Telecast TV3 *National Telecast DATE OPPONENT (84-85 Record; Tourney) LOCATION *TIME(CST) Nov. 8 CZECH NATIONAL TEAM LAWRENCE 7:30 p.m. Nov. 22 Big Apple NIT Washington (22-10, NCAA) Denver 8 p.m. vs. Arizona El Paso Kansas vs. Pepperdine (23-10, NCAA) 10 p.m. Nov. 24 Big Apple NIT Denver Nov. 29 Big Apple NIT — Semi-Finals New York TBA Dec. 1 Big Apple NIT — Finals New York TBA Dec. 3 SOUTHERN ILLINOIS — EDWARDSVILLE LAWRENCE 7:30 p.m. Dec. 4 WESTERN CAROLINA (14-14) LAWRENCE 7:30 p.m. Dec. 7 N.C. State (23-10, NCAA) TV2 Greensboro, N.C. 12:35 p.m. Dec. 9 SOUTH ALABAMA (15-13) LAWRENCE 7:30 p.m. Dec. 14 KENTUCKY (18-13, NCAA) TV3 LAWRENCE 8:05 p.m. Dec. 21 ARKANSAS (22-13, NCAA) LAWRENCE 7:30 p.m. Dec. 23 GEORGE WASHINGTON (14-14) LAWRENCE 7:30 p.m. Dec. 27 BMA Tournament Wichita State (18-13, NCAA) vs. Akron State (12-16) Kansas vs. Louisiana Tech (29-3; NCAA) 7 p.m. 9 p.m. Dec. 28 BMA Tournament — Consolation/ Finals 7 p.m. 9 p.m. Jan. 4 Memphis State (31-4; NCAA) TV1 Memphia, Tenn. Noon Jan. 8 Detroit (16-12) Detroit 6:35 p.m. Jan. 11 SOUTHERN METHODIST (23-10, NCAA) TV1 LAWRENCE 7:05 p.m. Jan. 15 *Nebraska* (16-14, NIT) Lincoln, Neb. 7:30 p.m. Jan. 18 'OKLAHOMA STATE' (12-16) TV1 LAWRENCE 1:05 p.m. Jan. 21 'OKLAHOMA' (31-6; NCAA) LAWRENCE 7:30 p.m. Jan. 23 'Missouri' (18-14, NIT) Columbia, Mo. 8:05 p.m. Jan. 25 LOUISVILLE (19-16, NIT) TV4 LAWRENCE 12:05 p.m. Jan. 28 'Iowa State' (21-13; NCAA) Ames, Iowa 7:30 p.m. Feb. 1 'Kansas State' (14-14) TV1 Manhattan 3:10 p.m. Feb. 5 'COLORADO' (11-17) LAWRENCE 7:30 p.m. Feb. 6 'Oklahoma State' TV1 Stillwater, Okla. 3:05 p.m. Feb. 11 'MISSOURI' LAWRENCE 7:30 p.m. Feb. 15 'NEBRASKA' TV1 LAWRENCE 1:05 p.m. Feb. 19 'Colorado' Boulder, Colo. 8:05 p.m. Feb. 22 'KANSAS STATE' TV1 LAWRENCE 1:05 p.m. Feb. 24 'Oklahoma' TV3 Norman, Okla. 8:30 p.m. Mar. 1 'IOWA STATE' TV1 LAWRENCE 3:05 p.m. Mar. 7-9 Big Eight Conference Tournament Kansas City, Mo. TBA * Big Eight Conference Game ALL GAME TIMES SUBJECT TO CHANGE "Through the years their quarterbacks have always been around 56-59 percent passers," he said. "This year I think they're around 36-39 percent. That's probably one area that's kept them from being another great Nebraska team." Pride on line for 'Huskers, Sooners United Press International Nebraska fullback Tom Rathman already has broken the school rushing record for fullbacks with 852 yards. NORMAN, Okla. — The Big Eight Conference football championship and the right to go to the Orange Bowl are on the line Saturday with No. 2 Nebraska visiting No. 3 Oklahoma. "This is the game," OU coach Barry Switzer said at his weekly news luncheon yesterday. "I'm not concerned that we have two after this. If we win this game, we're going to try very hard and stay in position to play Penn State for the national championship." Either Oklahoma or Nebraska has won the conference title outright 38 of the 40 years since World War II. The game also pits the country's two most successful coaches against each other. Switzer is 122-24-4 for a percentage of 827, and Osborne is 127-28-2 for 815. Switzer conceded that Nebraska had the better team last year, although Oklahoma won. He said he was confident that his Sooners had closed the gap. "I think we we're closer this year. I think we're as good as Nebraska this year." Switzer said. "Last year we were lucky to win the game, they were the better team." Switzer said the key difference between this year's Cornhusker team and past teams lay in the play of the quarterbacks. "The one area that has always separated great Nebraska teams is the quarterback," Swisser said. "When they had the great, talented quarterback, obviously they had the great teams." Texas Tech head football coach fired United Press International LUBOCK — Texas Tech head football coach Jerry Moore, after refusing to resign, was fired yesterday by athletic director T. Jones. However, a spokesman for the sports department, who asked not to be identified, confirmed he was fired. The spokesman said Moore was told Monday that Jones planned to make Jones said Moore would be relieved of his head coaching duties after Saturday's game against Houston but refused to say he had been fired. changes in the Red Raiders coaching staff. "He was asked to resign this morning, and was later fired when he refused," the spokesman said. Jones did not go into detail about Moore's dismissal, but said the team's losing record and falling attendance were factors in his decision. "I would like to see this university get itself into a consistent competitive position, so that whatever this school's fair share is that they win it, and occasionally get themselves into the Cotton Bowl." Jones said. Jones said he would conduct a coast-to-coast search, including current staff, and disputed rumors that Emory Bellard of Mississippi State, Texas Tech defense coordinator Spike Dykes and Tech offense coordinator Tom Wilson were leading candidates to replace Moore. "Regardless of what you've read, I have talked to no one, absolutely no one," he said. "Now that the decision is made, I will start compiling a list." Jones said he reached the decision on his 'own and would conduct the search for a new head coach alone "It's especially difficult in making this announcement when you're dealing with a person of Jerry Moore's personal integrity and the type person he is." Tech, 4-6, faces Houston Saturday. Moore's career total at Tech is 16-36-2. He came to Lubbock from North Texas State where he was 11-11. Moore, who has two years left on his contract, has the option to stay on at Tech in another position. Reuschel, Thomas UPI comeback players United Press International NEW YORK — Pitcher Rick Reuschel of the Pittsburgh Pirates and designated hitter Gorman Thomas of the Seattle Mariners, two veteran players whose careers were threatened by shoulder injuries, yesterday were named UPI's Major League Comeback Players of the Year for 1985. Reuschel, thought to be washed up after undergoing shoulder surgery in 1982, received 16 votes in a poll of 26 UPI baseball correspondents and won the National League award. Thomas, returning from rotator cuff surgery, picked up 12 votes to take American League honors. Atlanta first baseman Bob Horner, who hit 26 homers after coming back from head surgeen? pawned up four points in the NL voting. In the AL, Detroit's Darrell Evans, Milwaukee's Paul Molitor, Kansas City's Hal McRae and Chicago pitcher Brit Burns each collected two votes. Once considered one of the National League's premier right-handers, Reuschel was the Pirates' most successful pitcher this year at 14-8. The portly 36-year-old pitcher, who opened the season with Hawaii of the Pacific Coast League, compiled a 2.37 ERA. He made his first appearance for the last-place Pirates May 21 and combined with John Candelaria to shut out the Astros -1 on five hits. A former 20-game winner with the Chicago Cubs, Reuschel's career took a turn for the worse when, as a member of the New York Yankees, he experienced shoulder problems in 1981. He sat out the '82 season and was released by New York in 1983 after spending half the year at Columbus of the International League. The Cubs gave Reuschel a tryout in 1983 and they assigned him to Quad Citys of the Class A Midwest League. Chicago brought Reuschel up for the end of the season. He went 5-5 in 1984, but was twice placed on the disabled list. After the Cubs decided against re-signing him, Reuschel became a free agent and was picked up by the Pirates. Thomas, one of the AL's top home run hiters during the late '70s and early '80s, was restricted to the designated hitter's role after last year's surgery. The burly slugger took advantage of hitting in Seattle's Kingdom and pounded 32 homers while knocking in 67 runs. The 34-year-old Thomas, who batted just .215, also hit three homers in one game against Oakland. Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 University Daily Kansan Classified Ads 15 *Aerobics W/Style - Guyus-Gals, good workouts 9 & weekly; Monday, Wednesday, Thursday evenings & Saturday晨课. Enrol 2 friends- Free 4 week sessions. Teri 841 3253; Arial 842 0067* *Sewing & Alterations-all kinds, including sweaters by professional fashion designer or of b41 5363. Keep tryin' So you will be able to decision; make it with Common Sense. Finest Quality Skateboards & Accessories UPTOWN BICYCLES 1337 Mass. 749-0636 Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t-shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirtart by Swells. NATURAL WAY NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING (doesn't have to be expensive.) Let Your Body Breathe! 820 Mass. 841-0100 New from California. Freeway Singlesman套装, new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure. 316-284-3742. PQ Box 3825, Wichita. 67210. See also Monday & Kansas City KUHpreen- tance. CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specialties plus free shipping. You design it or are out of our talented artists. 2201 W. 2348. Beyond Glsn® 811. 943-4349. YOU CAN HEAD THE PUBLIC RELATIONS PROGRAM FOR A MAJOR CAMPUS ORGANIZATION! Apply now for Public Relations Chairperson for Student Union Activities by picking up an application at the 'SUA Office. Deadline for applying is Thurs., Nov. 21 at noon. Five minute interviews will be held that evening beginning at 6 p.m. Camera Repair now at One Hour Photo. Southern Hills Malls, 841-7205 Hey, want to know something? Yello Sub delivers every night starting at 5 p.m. Call 843-3268. Rent' 19% Car TV $2,990 a month Curtis W. Wird. B. Wird. 843-3781 Mon.- Sat. 9:30 - 10:00 Sum 15 Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course, fine cash. 2 FOR 1 memberships -OR- $10 OFF non-member tanning packages (as low as $4 per session!) CHRISTMAS SPECIALS! 2 FOR 1 memberships -OR- $10 OFF non-member tanning packages (as low as $4 per session!) EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & NEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA PHONE 841-6232 offers expire 11/23/85 EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUD & HEALTH CARE MATH TUTOR. Bob Meers holds an A in math from K M, where 092, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professionally in 1975 and often tutors elementary school students. McQueen JEWELERS, INC. COMPARE. Compare how much larger diamonds look in TruBrilliant " earrings. Diamonds Pictured are Same Size TruBrilliant Diamond Earrings - TruBrilliant earrings are more - brilliant and look larger. - Matching diamond pendants available - TruBrilliantts feature Secur-Lok - also available. * TruBrillants feature Secur-Lok - They push-to-lock-on, unscrew-to-remove. McQueen Quality Jewelers Since 1950 *Open Sundays to 1-6pm. *I'll Christmas. 89 Massachusetts 843-5432 Resize*19.7" Color T: V $2.99 on sale, Smiley's TV*14.7" Color W: T $2.99 on sale, Mozilla TV: 9:30-9:50 WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from 75, or sailing at South Padre Island and Daytona Beach from 899; Hurry,补 Sunchase Tours for more information toll free Contact a Sunchase hepres laative ON TOWARDS your winter break count..count ON TOWARDS jewelry posters THE MUSEUM SHOP rocks books Check Us Out All remaining T-shirts $4-$4.75 reduced prices on some merchandise Bring the whole family for a weekend of shopping and fun! Our package includes: Museum of Natural History for that special someone Gifts CHRISTMAS SHOPPING MADE FUN! (hear to Ks Onion) 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 1-5 Sun. Christmas shopping has never been this much fun! Call toll-free 800 527-0582 (outside Kansas) for reservations! - King or double room for two nights THE SHOPPERS' WEEKEND AT THE KANSAS CITY/LENEXA HOLIDAY INN SINGLES.. Results Effective. Join hundreds of preschool quality adults looking for sincere companionship. 1/2 price for women under 40 we give you a car. 1/2 price for girls under 40 we give you a New Connections Video in Lawrence is an offspring of New Beginnings Video in Kansas City. Holidays are coming so give yourself the best gift ever. Not an Excursion Service or an Adult with 20. With MUJD, get FREE membership. GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd Spend your days shopping at nearby Oak Mall or the famous Country Club Plaza. Then return to your custom furnished quarters at Holiday Inn and enjoy our Holidome Indoor Fun Center with indoor swimming, saunas, whirlpool, tanning beds, exercise deck, children's playground and more! We'll even include our delectable Sunday Brunch for two! *Offer good any Friday and Saturday or Saturday and Sunday through December 30, 1985, based on availability. Valid with one night stay. Not valid with any other offer Holiday Inn HOLIDOME Kansas City/Lenexa Kansas City,Lenexa 95th & 1-35 (913) 888-6670 - Sunday Brunch for two Nov. 20-26 children under 18 in same room as adults Christmas sh th. 800 52 for rese Thousands of R & R albums ~21 ores. Also collectors items, Sat & Sun only . 10.a.m. to 9.p.m. Quantitrals B11 New Hamphire Buy, Sell, or Trade all styles music. AT THE SERVICES OFFERED Opportunity for all single girls age (18-22) depending needy or interested in more books for next semester,去 conference or ask opportunity. at Burge Union Level 3. (Look for activity.) m. at Burge University. Wiedemann 12pk3.52 Busch 12pk3.98 Black Label 12pk3.52 Bud Light 6pk2.64 A $180.00 value for only $25.00 per person/per night double occupancy* k Park Hairecus 7, perm $30 at Channels. Chatria Mon-Sat at 6:42am. Walk-ins welcome. STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Massachusetts downtown all haircuts. $6. No appointment TYPING BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling: 843-4821 Nov. 27-Dec 3 THEME & THESIS OUTLINED - enhanced with library RE-SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising Victor Clark 842-8240 1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Awarded and affordable temporary jobs: 493,795 1-1-1 TRIWORD PROCESSING. Experience in Consulting, Reliable, Robust, job accepti cal. A-1 professional typing. Term papers, Theses, Recording Hospitals, etc. using IBM Selectric 8320. C++ Programming. 1. 3-D dependance, accurate, professional WOILD books, etc. Data Bank 841-7074 2. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Long Beach, MA 24-Hour Typing. All day, all night, Resumes, dissertations, paperbacks. Close to campus. Best location. TOP-NOTCH professional word processing, TOP-NOTCH professional theme, letters, letter quality printing, 83, # 50-62 Wiedemann 12 pk 3.52 Michelob 6 pk 2.87 Michelob Light 6 pk 2.87 Black Label 12 pk 3.52 Lowenbrau 6pk 2.97 EXPERIENCE MEDIATED TYPEIT. Term papers, theses Corrected TypeIT. Term papers, will correct spellings Planned TypeIT. Will correct spelling. THE WORDTOCTORS- Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147 1-Plus Typing, law papers, resumes, dissertations, dissertations, and memory. (e.g., 843 or 8437 268, p. 8·m·p·l·t·) DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced. JEANETE THAFFER - Typeing. Service. TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape. 843-8877 DISSERTATIONS: THESES/ LAW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-A-DAY Service for longer student papers (up to 30 pages) - online. Monday & Sunday, 482-378- 9 before 9 p.m. CLEAN Fast and Dependable Typing Service. 'Call 811-8668 any time. PROFESSIONAL training with 15 years experience. Fast, accurate, and reliable. Cat Puggy after 5 months of training. English B.A. Typing or Tutoring, Spelling and grammar corrected. Overnight service. Call 843-8643. Dissertations, Theses, Tern Papers. Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone 824-219 after 5, 30. kyr. QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations resume applications. Spelling corrected TRIO WDTPasswording CONSCIENTIOUS RELIABLE: CONVENIENT. Will accept rash password. TYPNING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254 Attention Meadowbrook experience, excellent typest nearby. APA format residence. Call Pat. AAA TYPING/842-1942 Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs, Law review articles typed by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in by 6 p.m. out by 10 p.m. same day. Alpha Omega Computer Services - Word Processing/Typing Corrections, Prereading, Graphics. Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates 748,118 Absolutely LETTER PERFECT Word processing, typing and bookkeeping. IBM-OS/B/8.3, M-F. Same day service available 844 Illinois, 843-6618. Accurate, affordable typing through holiday by former Harvard Medical School secretary. Call Nancy 841-1219. A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850. A. LSMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers. Phone 842-8657 after 5:30 All Kinds of Typing GOOD IMPRESSIONS Fast, Good performance and punctuation errors corrected 841 - 867 WANTED Self-disciplined student to motivate and tutor second grade level is year old after school. Call Two people need 1-way ride to Milwaukee/New York and share Share gas/driving 643-8351 or 848-0252 Wanted: Female rooteat for spring semester. Berkshire University, Meadowbrook. On bus route #263 - 769-801. Roommate to share 1 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 year old apt. Needed for 3nd semester. Call Wanted: Female roommate for spring semester. $60.00 rent: 1/2 utilities, and own room. Onlus payments due in January or February. freepossible and fun-loving female to share 2drm for $400 a month. Beautiful view and playground. Call 518-379-6792. Space available for female at Nassim Hall starting spring semester. Call 749-294. Female Roommate Wanted immediately to two bedroom apts very急需 furnished, have private bathroom and private conditioning, close to campus and downtown is on bus route 1400.0 and half utilitarian 842-796, if you need it. NAISMITH replacements needed for second room in the kitchen. Move in January; $150 Month, 1/2 time. Close room; 842-1436. After Six-Ax placement. SHARE HOUSE, 3 dBM 2 bath, deck, fireplace, washer/drier, dishwasher, disposal. Near Westridge and Junkyards Jm Call 748-856w(k) 841-1040hm). Bill Non-Smoking female roommate for 2 bdrm. apt Phone 813-9509 Roommate needed to share fantastic house. $135 plus 1.2 usd. Close to campus, near busine shed, parking lot, laundry room. Female roommate to share 2 bmr apartment $127.10 plus half electricity, great location 812.50 sqft O.T. student desperately needs female roommate O.E. student desperately needs male roommate or spring seminar. Fessler no-smoker. 842-0881 Fessler no-smoker. 842-0881 Female with 7 year old son need rommite immediately to marry duplex. $100 plus 1/2 utility HOURS Roommate to share house Washer and dryer: your own room on bus route. Call 843-3807. Female roommate wanted for spring semester. Solar powered split-level townhouse, spiral staircase. Close to campus. $135 a month 843-4745. Female to share two bedroom apartment for northeast. Wanted-Guitarist and keyboard player for Mendon band. Vocal capabilities predere Priden band. Mon - Thurs - 11 a.m. - 2 a.m. Fri & Sat - 11 a.m. - 3 a.m. Sunday - 11 a.m. - 1 a.m. PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY $1 OFF ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY Common Sense President: David Epstein Vice-president: Amy Brown Liberal Arts & Sciences Martie Aaron Woody Browne Jill Galbreath Luca Jellinek Charles Lawhorn Claudio Molteni Julie Riggle Tom Shaver Gordon Woods —Senators— Engineering Steve Gilchrist Renee McGhee Chris Shirling Journalism Russell Gray Pharmacy Terri Lum Education Fine Arts Eric Lauterbach Business Cindy Harnett Alicia Lippert Kristen Zeitler Nunemaker Craig Abraham Betsy Bergman Pamela Boden Cindy Cohen Angela Dick David Eck Allison Eldridge Kevin Fossland Ann Hiszczynskyi Jason Krakow Allison Langstaff Kelly Milligan Stephanie Quincy Stacy Smith Brady Stanton Susann Steiner Amy Varney Social Welfare Travis Cassidy Lyndon Davis Christina Gustafsson Aly Karam Glenn Shirtliffe Grant Steinle Guill Vidals Graduate Social Welfare Jennifer Balzer Beth Hanna Elec Architecture Laura Rohan Steve Vogel ...A Revolutionary Idea Elect Your New Student Senate TODAY paid for by Common Sense lea " 16 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 Now Thru November 28,1985... 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BONUS SPECIAL! $14.99 It's The Right Time for the Right Savings At Dillons! it's time to buy top quality Beauty monitors and Spartina counts at Onion. Check out our store, which matches with your privacy preferences, with each set of beauty monitors on her or for him at just $10. Then, check our favorite Spartina counts at Onion. Spartina counts at this room cost $79.99. We choose them. Special price + $20 in gift cards. Sprite Sprite Coca-Cola 2 Coke C 1 58 Free Coca-Cola or Diet Coke Ways Coca-Cola Classic, Coke, Cherry Coke, Diet Coke, Caffeine Free Coke, Caffeine Free Diet Coke, Sprite or Diet Sprite BONUS SPECIAL! $119 2 Liter Bottle Reggae man Nigerian student Jimmy Dread finds audience in Lawrence. See page 6. SINCE 1889 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN HURDY THURSDAY, NOV. 21, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 64 (USPS 650-640) Cold, wet Details page 3. NONEMAKER Vote 12.12.1986 Brian Hattaway, Stanley junior, takes the ID cards of students in the College of Liberal Arts and tions. Polls are open today from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at six campus sites. Today is the last day of Sciences at a voting booth. More than 1,000 students voted yesterday in Student Senate elect- voting. Problems plague first-day voting By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Polling places for Student Senate elections Confusion and problems with the voting process plagued the first day of this year's Student Senate elections. More than 1,000 students voted in Senate elections yesterday, but some students who wanted to vote discovered that the polls in their schools were closed. All polls opened at least a half hour late. Although most voting machines began recording votes by 10 a.m., polls for two schools opened seven hours late — only two hours before they closed. - Burge Union: architecture, fine arts, law and special students. - Kansas Union: pharmacy, social welfare, liberal arts and graduate students. Polls for four other schools closed more than two hours early. Learned Hall: engineering students. All polls were scheduled to be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., but booths for journalism and education students sat in storage in Stauffer-Flint Hall until 3 p.m. Stauffer-Flint Hall: journalism and education students. The booths for fine arts, law, architecture and urban design, and special students, which are in the Burge Union, closed at 2:30 p.m. Strong Hall: liberal arts and graduate students. Summerfield Hall: business students. - Summerfield Hall: business students. - Polls scheduled to be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. "How do you run an election when the polls are closed?" said Steve Vogel, candidate for an architecture seat from the Common Sense Coalition He said he didn't appreciate that the polls closed early or that architecture and urban design students had to go to Burge to vote. Charles Munson, candidate for a fine arts seat from the Chrysalis Coalition, said closed polls would hurt both coalitions because students wouldn't care enough to come back to vote today. At Strong Hall, the busiest voting location, many voters waited 15 minutes in line to cast ballots. David Day, chairman of the Student Senate Elections Committee, said he didn't have enough workers at the machines. Day said that a student, whom he wouldn't name, was supposed to run the machine at Stauffer-Flint but didn't show up. He said he had a core of eight committee members who were doing all the work. Some were at the polls all day. because few students worked at the polls, each poll worker had big responsibilities. Day closed the Burge Union polls at 2:30 p.m. so he could open the polls in Stauffer-Flint at 3 p.m. Michelle Roberts, Olathe freshman, manned four voting machines on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union. She had to mark IDs when students voted, find their names and classifications on an enrollment list, answer questions about the machines and try to make sure no one voted without having his ID marked. Some students said they thought poll workers had so much to do that they couldn't see everyone who entered the booths. A sophomore who didn't want to be identified because she had friends in both coalitions said she saw students walk into booths and vote without having their IDs checked. She said students bypassed the poll workers and voted - some more than once. "It's too easy," she said. "The workers were so busy concentrating on names that they couldn't see everyone." Other students gave similar accounts, but none would allow their names to be used. David Epstein, presidential candidate for Common Sense, said he heard rumors about people voting twice, but he didn't know for sure that anyone had. Epstein said he planned to have observers at some polls tomorrow as other coalitions have done in past elections. Senate rules allow coalition members to act as observers. Brian Hattaway, Stanley junior, handled all three booths at Strong by himself until about 2 p.m. He said he didn't think anyone voted more than once, but he said it was possible. See ELECTION, p. 5, col. 2 Final day of summit agreeable Two to announce reciprocal visits United Press International GENEVA — President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, finishing two days of intense talks, agreed yesterday to make a last joint appearance today to cap their "fireside summit" and to announce reciprocal visits. "The news is so good we're going to hold it until tomorrow," Reagan said last night at a dinner he held in honor of Gorbachev. White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes, making a one-sentence announcement of the 10 a.m. (3 a.m. CST) joint appearance Thursday, would give no hint of what the two men might say, noting that the news blackout imposed when the summit started would remain in effect until then. "The president's frame of mind is very good." Speaches said. "He will sleep well tonight." The president extended the invitation for a 1986 U.S. visit to Gorbachev during one of their private summit meetings and sources said the Soviet leader accepted. During the reception before last night's dinner, Gorbachev was questioned about the invitation. He said it had been extended but said only "We'll see" when pressed whether it would be next year. Gorbachev invited Reagan to visit the Soviet Union the year after and the sources said Reagan would announce at today's appearance that he has accepted. White House sources said the Americans had achieved what they wanted from the summit - a breaking of the ice between the two countries. The most that Reagan had sought, they said, was to convince Gorbachev that the United States has no aggressive intentions toward the Soviet Union. Reagan and Gorbachev made the decision on the final meeting sitting on a couch in front of a blazing fire, prompting Speakes to dub the superpower summit in six years the "fireside summit." The two leaders spent more than half of their nine-hour summit meeting alone together except for interpreters. Several of those private meetings were held before roaring fires. Reagan and Gorbachev held their fourth and final formal meeting yesterday afternoon. An hour into the meeting, ton aides from both sides See SUMMIT, p. 5, col. 1 Clock runs down on players' suit By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff The battle isn't taking place on the turf in Memorial Stadium, but it does involve KU football players — and it may run longer than the season itself. This battle pits Lynn Williams and Dane Griffin against the University of Kansas. The turf: the Johnson County Courthouse, Olathe. The latest scrimmage will be at 11 a.m. today. Williams, a senior tailback, and Griffin, a junior linebacker, filed suit Sept. 19 against the University, saying they were improperly advised by KU officials about the requirements of the National College Athletic Association's satisfactory progress rule. Williams and Griffin were declared ineligible Sept. 12 by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences for not making satisfactory progress toward a degree. But a court order signed by Judge Phillip J. Woodworth on Sept. 27 declared the players eligible to participate in practice and games at head football coach Mike Gottfried's discretion. If the suit hadn't been filed, Williams' college football career would have ended, and Griffin would have been ineligible to play this season. In a deposition taken this month, Gottfried said that college players' potential careers in professional football could be jeopardized by being declared ineligible. Although there aren't many spectators at the courthouse, at least one academic counselor at another Big Eight Conference school says he is watching the case. "Basically, I'm interested to see what's going to happen." Chuck Patterson, academic counselor at the University of Missouri-Columbia, said Tuesday. "I think all academic counselors should be aware of it." In court today, Woodworth will most likely dismiss the case or turn down the University's motion to dismiss the case and send it to trial. Ed Collister, Griffin's attorney, doubted that Woodworth would dismiss the case. "Although he has the right to dismiss on constitutional grounds, I think it's more likely that he won't," he said. "I think there are controverted facts . . . issues of fact that warrant a trial." Also, the KUKansas State University game, which KU won 38-7, could be forfeited later if the players are declared ineligible, he said. That is the only game KU has won since the two players were declared eligible. "That means the University has never had a decision on the matter of the players having a right to play football." she said. But Collier said Griffin's eligibility for next season might be leopardized. Rose Marino, assistant University general counsel, said the lack of a court ruling before the end of the season allowed the players to gain everything they sought in the suit: the ability to play football this season. "We've submitted everything," she said. "I suppose the plaintiff's attorneys could say something that would refute our motion, but they are arguing matters of law. I don't know what they could say." Marino said she thought Woodworth could make a ruling today. In the case, the players have never alleged that they had a constitutional right to play football, Collister said. "We have alleged that their due process rights have been violated," he said. In legal documents, the players say the two petition hearings before the College's Committee of Undergraduate Studies and Advising were insufficient because Williams and Griffin weren't allowed to be present. Even if Woodworth dismisses the case on the grounds that that the players have no constitutional right to play, Collister said, the players still have a case. The players' arguments that the College be kept from declaring the players ineligible, that the College was negligent and that the acts committed by University employees were "arbitrary and capricious" still stand, he said. The University general counsel's motion for dismissal is based on two key arguments: that Williams and Griffin have no constitutional right to compete in athletics and even if they do, their rights were denied after due process. "All we've done is say, 'Legally they don't have a reason to be in court.'" Marino said. No contract exists between the University and the players that entitles them to play football, she said. "It's a privilege, not a right," Marino said, "just like every student doesn't have a right to graduate." The general counsel cited legal precedents that say no constitutional right to play football exists because courts have denied that participation in interscolloidal athletics is a protected right or a guaranteed part of an education. The University says that due process was provided to the student-athletes because the College followed NCAA and Big Eight guidelines in declaring the players inelegible. Carlin speaks today at KU of economics and Kansas' budget By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff Gov. John Carlin will discuss the state's somber economic outlook and its effects on higher education when he speaks to the University Senate at 4 p.m. today, a speech writer for Carlin said yesterday. "The governor wants to stress that the state cannot afford just to spend money — we have to invest it." "He will emphasize the notion of competition," said Diane Prentice, a member of Carlin's staff. "There is competition for scarce dollars and there is competition in the economic development arena. All areas are facing an economic squeeze. There are legitimate needs all over." Earlier this month, the estimate for state general funds over the next two years was cut by $132.6 million. As a result, many recipients of state funds, including the Kansas Board of Regents, will face reduced budgets for fiscal year 1987. Today's speech in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union is part of the governor's plan to inform the public about the state's serious economic situation. Prentice said. Prentice said that Carlin had been meeting with civic groups, community organizations and government leaders since September to discuss the effects of the shortage of state funds. Arno Knapper, presiding officer of the University Council, said that Carlin was invited to speak some time ago, but that the recently proposed budget cuts for the Regents added significance to the speech. He said the most prominent issue for faculty was the proposed cuts in the Regents budget. On Sunday, Carlin met at the governor's mansion in Topeka with the heads of Regents schools. Sue River, an official in Carlin's press office, said the meeting was "part of an effort to stay in touch with the heads of the Regents schools." "The governor wanted to stress the seriousness of the budget situation," she said. "He was looking for input that could help lead him to a decision on the budget." She said the meetings would continue as Carlin attempted to piece together a state budget proposal for fiscal year 1987. 2 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 News Briefs Economic growth rises at rate of 4.3% WASHINGTON - U.S. economic growth spurted upward at a surprisingly rapid 4.3 percent annual rate from July through September, the fastest pace in more than a year, the government reported yesterday. While the Reagan administration hailed the increase as significant growth in economic activity, private economists were not as impressed, contending that the added growth during the summer may well subtract from activity in coming months. GENOA, Italy — One of the four Palestinian hijackers who seized the Achille Lauro cruise ship in October is only 17 years old and must be tried separately by a juvenile court, legal officials said yesterday. The Commerce Department said the gross national product — the total output of goods and services — grew at the fastest rate since a 7.1 percent increase in the second quarter of 1984. Hijacker too young The officials said the development meant that an arms conviction brought by an Italian court against the young hijacker Monday would be thrown out. The age of Bassam Al Ashker emerged during a three-hour interrogation by U.S. legal officials in Genoa yesterday. Rig hits monument WASHINGTON — The driver of an 18-wheel tractor-trailer was arrested yesterday after crashing his rig into the Washington Monument. Garrow Ernest Brigham, 36, of Savage, Md., drove across 500 feet of grounds and through fences and benches before hitting the monument, said U.S. Park Police Major Richard Cusick. Brigham's rig scraped against the obelisk, leaving a streak of green paint about four feet long across the northwest side of the structure. From Kansan wires. Senators offer measure on trade The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Twenty-six senators, setting aside 12 months of partisan squabbling, yesterday introduced sweeping legislation designed to spur the Reagan administration to step up action against unfair trade practices abroad. The president isn't going to like some of the things in this bill," Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., said in outlining the first bipartisan trade measure placed before the Senate this year. Comprehensive measures offered amid heightened concern over the estimated $150 billion U.S. trade deficit have until now been marked by partisan rivalries. Despite support from 15 Republicans and 11 Democrats, the measure arrives with built-in drawbacks. Sen. Robert Packwood, R-Ore., chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, and Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, top Democrat on that panel's international trade subcommittee, are missing from the sponsors' list. Senators ruled out action on the trade issue in the dwindling weeks left to Congress this year but said a serious effort to pass the bipartisan measure could come early in 1988. Moreover, Danforth, chairman of the international trade panel, made clear that disputes existed among the sponsors over specific provisions. These disagreements mean that the measure must be accompanied by 10 other bills, he said, to make clear which lawmakers are sponsors of which proposals. Major provisions of the proposal would: - Increase presidential power to shield U.S. industry against damaging imports but narrow White House leeway to reject recommendations of such action from the U.S. International Trade Commission. - Force the administration to initiate action against unfair trade barriers abroad and retaliate with tariffs and quotas within 18 months. ■ Renew presidential authority to enter into negotiations aimed at revising the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the main pact governing world commerce. President Reagan's authority to do so expires in 13 months. - Force the president to start negotiations within six months with the objective of reversing the ill effects of the increase over the last five years in the value of the dollar. Require a set of standards that would mean graduation of certain developing nations from the Generalized System of Preferences, an American program that provides preferential tariffs to products from developing nations. Advisers oppose apartheid United Press International JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — An economic government committee that advises President Pieter Botha yesterday recommended the abolition of racial segregation laws, which are considered pillars of the apartheid system. In Durban, a coastal city on the Indian Ocean, seven blacks were killed in tribal warfare between the Zulus and Pondos, authorities said. Police said they arrested 29 blacks for racial violence Tuesday night and yesterday in scattered incidents across white-ruled South Africa. The economic committee of the President's Council, established in 1980 to advise the president on political and economic policy, recommended the abolition of racial segregation laws that discriminate against non-whites. have urged the repeal of race laws that help make the government's policy of racial segregation, known as apartheid. The government is not obliged to accept the advice. In its report, the economic committee specifically condemned the Group Areas Act, which divides the nation into segregated residential areas, and the Black Urban Areas Consolidation Act, which is used to create segregated black townships, homelands and business areas. Other committees of the President's Council also The report said. "They are of extreme importance because they deny Asian, black and mixed-race businessmen and potential businessmen access to the economically dominant areas of the country. "The committee emphasizes that it supports the principle of full and free participation in economic activities by all population groups. Entrepreneurial talent in the informal sector should be nurtured, and not persecuted." Weather extremes hit country A bitter cold wave swept out of the Rockies into the Plains yesterday with temperatures as low as 21 below zero and raced eastward, chasing away springlike highs with record lows and blustery 60-mph winds. United Press International Hurricane Kate swelled to a 115-mph storm in the Gulf of Mexico after battering Cuba. A hurricane watch posted for the storm-weary central Gulf Coast prompted early evacuations from Florida to Louisiana. Kate was churning northwest at 15 to 20 mph and forecasters said it could reach land this afternoon, which would make it the first November hurricane to hit the U.S. mainland in 50 years. Hurricane forecaster Mark Zimmerm said that although Kate was most likely to hit Florida's Panhandle, there was a 10 percent chance it could hit all the way from New Orleans to the Tampa area. Showers and thunderstorms associated with Kate reached from the northeastern Gulf of Mexico across the southern Atlantic Coast! Nine people have died across the country in tornadoes, flooding and other weather-related accidents this week. The mercury plummeted to 21 below zero at Havre, Mont., and record lows were set in nine cities from the West Coast to Michigan. Mob attacks top official in Ireland Tides 2 to 3 feet above normal threatened to cause coastal flooding along the west coast of Florida. Wind chillies were 25 to 40 below zero from the Dakotas to Wisconsin. United Press International On the East Coast residents basked in a second day of warm weather with record highs in the 60s and 70s. BELFAST, Northern Ireland — Protestants angered by an Anglo-Irish pact on Northern Ireland attacked Britain's top official in the province yesterday and trapped him in City Hall for two hours before he was rescued by police. A visibly shaken Northern Ireland Secretary Tom King was punched and kicked as he was whisked to safety by police, backed by a British army patrol, with a mob of 50 Protestants chanting, "Traiter, traitor." An ashen-faced King called his attackers "thugs" and said "such violence and abusive reactions did not reflect the feelings of the vast majority of people. One witness said King, Britain's highest representative in Northern Ireland, was struck in the head by a flagpole draped with a British flag, but did not require medical attention. "If they are not capable of rational argument and resort to this method, then it can only hurt their case." Under the agreement, the predominantly Catholic Irish Republic will play an advisory role on matters dealing with the British province in a bid to help stem violence in Northern Ireland. Remarks criticized by women United Press International WASHINGTON — The Congressional Women's Caucus demanded an apology yesterday for White house chief of staff Donald Regan's comment that women were more interested in fluff than foreign affairs — and within hours it got one. Rep, Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo, co-chairman of the 23-member caucus, said the women members of Congress were drafting a letter asking President Reagan to fix the damage inflicted by the comments of his White House chief of staff about women's views of the Geneva summit. There was no immediate apology directly from Reagan, but later in the day a statement was issued by the White House press office in Geneva, where the superpower summit was in progress. "Mr. Regan's statements . . . were made in an interview several weeks ago for (an) article for Mrs. Regan's reagain at the summit," the statement said. "Mr. Regan meant nothing derogatory by his remarks and regrets if they were taken to be offensive." In the interview published Monday in The Washington Post, Regan said he thought women would be particularly interested in coverage of Nancy Reagan and Raisa Gorbachev, rather than the issues their husbands would discuss. Regan was quoted as saying, "They're not . . . going to understand throw-weights (or how much mass a missile can deliver) or what is happening in Afghanistan or what is happening in human rights. Some women will, but most women . . . would rather read the human interest stuff of what is happening." Reaction to the comment was cutting. "We're glad the president brought Bonzo to the summit," Eleanor Smeal, president of the National Organization for Women, said. "My feeling is that this administration is headed by men whose minds are frozen in the 1950s," said Irene Natividad, head of the National Women's Political Caucus. UP IN THE AIR JACKSON, WILLIAM JACKSON, WILLIAM ABOUT WHAT TO DO? WE PROMISE NOT TO LEAVE YOU HANGING IN MID-AIR. IT WON'T COST A DIME TO WALK THROUGH THE DOOR TO SEE THE EXCITEMENT THAT THURSDAY NIGHTS HAVE BEEN GENERATING, YOU THURSDAY NIGHT PEOPLE SIMPLY LOOK MAHVELOUS. $1.25 DRINKS ALL NIGHT LONG GAMMONS SNOWING 23rd & Ousdahl Baby BOOMERS Southern Hills Mall GAMMONS SNOWS Raby BOOMERS You're Right on Campus in the Jayhawker Towers Apts. Great view of campus, or of the Jayhawker Towers POOL! Closets: 11 feet wide, dresser built in. Walls: Solid, rich brick. Two Sinks: No waiting for your roommate! BATH BED RM 140 square feet Big Picture Windows Thermostat: All Utilities Paid! Location: On campus, on bus route. LIVING/DINING RM 240 square feet Paid Cable TV Hookup 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 Great view of campus, or of the Jayhawker Towers POOL! Closets: 11 feet wide, dresser built in. Walls: Solid, rich brick. Two Sinks: No waiting for your roommate! BATH BED RM 140 square feet Big Picture Windows Location: On campus, on bus route. Thermostat: All Utilities Paid! LIVING/DINING RM 240 square feet Paid Cable TV Hookup Private Entrance: Double locks on doors. Carpet: Wall to wall, several colors. INDIVIDUAL CONTRACT Lease On the KU Campus 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 3 News Briefs Canadian historian to speak at Union J. L. Granatstein, a Canadian historian and faculty member of York University in Ontario, Canada, will speak at 8 p.m. today about "Canada in the North Atlantic Triangle: Canadian, British and American Relations." Granatstein's lecture will be in Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. The speech represents the first in a series, sponsored by KU's Hall Center for the Humanities, about Canada and Canadian-U.S. relations. Granatstein has published books and articles on Canadian nationalism, foreign policy and education. His most recent book is "The Great Brain Robbery: Canada's Universities on the Road to Ruin." An informal reception will be in the Bruckmiller Room of the Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave., after the lecture. Everyone is invited to attend. Deadline is extended The College Honors Program and the department of political science will resume accepting applications for spring internships in Washington, D.C. Deadline for applications is noon Monday. The internships are open to all undergraduates from any major. Students are asked to submit a paper done for class, a current transcript and two letters of recommendation, which will be accepted until Wednesday. Internships are not paid but students will recieve 12 hours of credit. Application materials and questions should be sent to the honors program office in Nunemaker Center or Pete Rowland, spring internship director, 504 Blake Hall. Music profs honored Three members of KU's music composition and theory faculty have been selected as recipients of the 1985-86 American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) awards. The recipients being recognized for their contributions to contemporary composition are James C. Barnes, associate professor of music theory; Charles Hoag, professor of music theory and John Pozdro, professor of music theory. The professors were selected by an independent panel of judges whose decisions were based on each composer's catalog and on the performances of the composer's compositions. Judges were Frank Battisti, New England Conservatory of Music; Ainslee Cox, conductor of the Goldman Memorial Concert Band; Marceau Myers, North Texas State University; Ursula Oppens, a founding member of the Speculum Musicae and Paul Wohlgemugh, Oral Roberts University. Weather Today will be cloudy with a 40 percent chance for mixed freezing rain and snow. The high will be in the mid-30s and winds will be from the east at 10 to 20 mph. There is a chance tonight for freezing rain or snow mixed with rain early, but clearing later. The low tonight will be around 20. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the upper 30s. From staff and wire reports Profs say tenure is valuable to KU This is the last in a series of stories examining tenure at the University. By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff The Carnegie Foundation interviewed 5,000 college and university faculty last year. One-third said they thought abolishing tenure would improve higher education. While some KU professors and administrators say they can see some advantages in abolishing tenure, most say that abolishing tenure would be detrimental to higher education. Two-thirds said that receiving tenure on their campuses was more difficult now than five years ago. Tenure can allow professors to relax,they said. Tenure, in most cases, provides job security for the duration of a faculty member's life. It protects faculty's freedom of speech and ideas and allows them to work without worrying about their jobs, several faculty members said recently. Last year at the University of Kansas, 88 percent of faculty instructors in assistant, associate or full professorships had tenure, said June Michal, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs. On the other hand, some professors said that it could create a "tenured-in" situation in which little room is left for assistant professors and instructors to be hired. Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the tenure system at KU worked well 95 percent of the time. "We have it," he said. "We aren't likely to get rid of it. We've got to make it work." Although relatively few professors become "deadwood," the term Burhill used for those who cease to work after receiving tenure, the University has to reward faculty with tenure carefully, he said. James Seaver, professor of history, said he thought KU had approached the tenured-in situation, but said tenure.was too valuable to lose. Tenure allows professors to speak and write unpopular ideas, Seaver said, and not be attacked for their political, religious or social beliefs. "It tenure is protection," he said. "It shouldn't be taken lightly and shouldn't be given right away." Many professors say that the six years on tenure track are full of tension, stress and worry. But Dean Stetler, assistant professor of biological science who has been at KU three months, said, "I don't feel any pressure. I just do everything I can do anyway." Before coming to KU, Stetler taught at the Pennsylvania State College of Medicine at the University of "I've been on the other side," he said. "I wasn't on tenure track. You always wonder, 'Will I still be here next year?' " Pennsylvania, which doesn't give tenure. A university may not be able to attract good professors if it doesn't offer some security, he said, although some professors may have a tendency to slow down after being tennured. Professors at universities that don't offer tenure have to keep their eyes on the job market, he said. David Darwin, professor of civil engineering, said he didn't think abolishing tenure would change the quality of teaching at any university. "I think faculty would still stay in the same place," he said. "If you lose tenure, I don't think you lose all rights. I don't think there would be a large change in the level of effort of professors." Doug Houston, assistant professor of business, said the protection tenure offered benefited professors. But the long-term effects could damage the educational system, he said. "The tenure process potentially can prevent new and challenging voices from entering a university," he said. "A little competition, a little push keeps you going." The mixture of research, teaching and service doesn't drain professors on tenure track, Houston said. Instead, a lack of support services, such as research assistants, drains professors. Kartyn Kohrs Campbell, professor of communications studies and director of women's studies, said abolishing tenure wouldn't relieve tension for any faculty member —tenured or not. Campbell served on the University Committee on Promotion and Tenure in 1975, 1976 and 1977. She also served on the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences promotion and tenure committee in 1982, 1983 and 1984. "If the University had a contract system and reviewed faculty every few years," Campbell said, "the standards would be killing." She said she thought most KU faculty don't slack off after receiving lenure. "That's not the norm of this facul- tv." she said. Thomas Stidham, associate professor of fine arts and assistant director of bands, said most faculty members would always work hard because of their commitment to research, teaching and service. "Knowing that I have tenure, I'm not in a panic all the time," he said. "I knew a professor who said, 'To get tenure is everything. To have tenure is nothing.'" Man robs local bank By a Kansan reporter The University State Bank, 2546 Iowa St., was robbed by a lone gunman at about 9:30 a.m. yesterday, police said. An undisclosed amount of money was taken in the robbery, Lawrence police Sgt. Don Daquest said. "He came in the bank and had a small silver pistol and robbed two tellers," Dalquest said. "He put the money in his shirt and had them get down on the floor then went out the door." Dalquest said that the gunman was a white male, 6 feet 1 inch tall and weighed 170-180 pounds. He were a black-and-red plaid shirt, blue jeans and a brown full-faced ski mask, Dalquest said. He was still at large last night. KU police Sgt. John Brothers said that KU police stopped a man who matched the suspect's description at Iowa Street and University Drive about 10 a.m. The bank robbery was the first in Lawrence since April 1983 when the same University State bank branch was robbed. In another recent bank robbery, a Kansas City, Mo., man, Eric W. Styles, was given a 12- to 25-year jail sentence in the robbery in January 1983 of First National Bank of Lawrence. A victim said the man was not the suspect and he was released, Brothers said. A Gardner man, Larry Leonard Rice, was charged in the 1883 robbery at University State. THE TENNESSEE HERITAGE WEEKLY Mike Horton/KANSAN A higher education Edward Jackson, Topeka sophomore, spent Monday afternoon reading in a tree near Lippincott Hall. Senate approval pending Committee considers Tacha By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff A vote is expected today by the U.S. Senate Committee on Judiciary on President Reagan's nomination of Deanell Tacha to the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the press secretary for Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan., said yesterday. Brent Bahler, the press secretary, said the committee should make its decision sometime this afternoon. He said he thought the committee would probably approve the nomination of Tacha, KU vice chancellor for academic affairs. The next step in Tacha's confirmation, Bahier said, would be her review by the full Senate before its final approval. He said, however, that it wasn't known how long the Senate would take to make its decision. Tacha was nominated Oct. 30 by President Reagan to the federal judgeship. She originally was nominated by Dole in June. If approved by the full Senate, her University position would be vacant. Pending the Senate's decision, KU administrators are waiting to decide whether to appoint a search committee to replace Tacha or a five-year review committee on Tacha's performance at the University of Kansas. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said that if Tacha became a federal judge, the committee would try to replace he. He said he had a partial list of people who would serve on the 12-member committee if Tacha left her KU post. "We have a list of names but we're waiting on a list of students from the student elections." he said. Cobb said he wanted the new student body president to send him names of student candidates for the search committee. The names will be available after the Student Senate elections, which started yesterday and will end at 5 p.m. today. The other committee members will be chosen by the University's Faculty. ty Executive Committee. At the Oct. 30 FacEx meeting, Cobb suggested to FacEx members possible academic areas from which to draw nominees for the search committee. He told FaeEx that the 12-member committee should consist of four faculty members, one of whom should be knowledgeable about the needs of university libraries. The committee also should comprise members of the Academic Council, the Council of Directors of University Divisions, the division of student affairs and the Classified Senate Executive Committee, Cobb said. "If we should have a vacancy in the position of vice chancellor for academic affairs," Cobb said, "we would expect to have a suitable replacement by the end of this fiscal year or by the beginning of the fall semester at the latest." Fiscal year 1986 ends June 30. He said that if Tacha was given final approval by the Senate, an acting vice chancellor for academic affairs would be chosen. Cobb said he didn't know who that would be. 842-1212 Pizza Shuttle says: Get it together! 10—1 item 10" Pizzas $2500 Additional Pizzas $2 Additional items 50* 16 oz. Pepsis 25* Feed your fraternity, sorority, office, dorm floor, groups of any kind! PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY Pizza Shuttle 1601 West 23rd Southern Hills Mall 842-1212 THURSDAY Prime Rib Special $695 Also: 50° Pitchers 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $1 cover the Sanctuary & Michigan 843-0540 the PANIC BUTTON . LAST CHANCE TO HAVE YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT TAKEN Back by popular demand! Senior pictures Thursday, Nov.14 through Tuesday, Nov.26 Call the Jayhawker Yearbook office immediately for an appointment! 864-3728 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A harmless game The seemingly playful game of assassin almost came to a dead end last week in McColum Hall. A desperate caller tells KU police that a woman is sitting in the hallway talking excitedly on the phone, with what appears to be a sawed-off shotgun in her hand. And she keeps dry-firing it. Click. click. click. The caller doesn't know why the woman has the gun or whether it is loaded. One officer chambers a round of ammunition and points his gun at the woman. Two KU police officers rush to McCollum. They run to the floor where the woman still talks on the phone, still fiddles with the gun. From the end of the hall, the officers tell the woman to drop her weapon. The woman, startled, starts to stand up. The gun is still in her hand. And the real-life consequences of this popular predatory game suddenly become clear: The police officers think the gun is real. And they are ready to fire their weapons, which are real. Fortunately, the incident in McCollum ended with no shots fired. It could have ended in tragedy. Perhaps KU police could have avoided this confrontation if they had consulted hall security monitors or other staff members before storming into the hall. And when police respond to an emergency situation, every split second counts. But the person who reported the woman in the hall called the police directly. She apparently was frightened enough to call the police instead of the front desk. Assassin — played with dart guns, water guns and even cream pies — has its roots in TV fantasy. Its players think killing can be fun when there's no blood, no bullet holes. But in this case, the game of assassin almost became deadly. When people kid around with life and death, it's only a matter of time before the game backfires — and the close call turns to tragedy. A poorly timed letter Just as President Reagan was beginning his final ascent to the summit, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger saddled him with baggage that reminded some people of Reagan the Gunslinger's anti-Communist days. Last week someone leaked a letter that was from Weinberger to the president. Some White House spokesmen seem pretty sure Weinberger or one of his closest aides was the leaker. Weinberger implied that such cooperation would only limit Reagan's responses to Soviet cheating. The letter warned Reagan not to give in on certain issues at the summit; not to extend the unratified SALT II treaty, which expires Dec. 31, and not to limit Star Wars research and testing according to a strict interpretation of the 1972 anti-ballistic missile treaty. Whatever the merits of these concerns, this was an odd time for someone in the administration to make them public. For weeks Reagan worked to convince the world that he approached his meeting with Gorbachev willing to listen with an open mind. But this ABM — anti bargaining missive — fired from within Reagan's own ranks confirmed the Soviets' worst suspicions about the U.S. attitude. They pounced on the letter as proof that behind Reagan's words about peace and promising beginnings was a posse of hard-liners hell-bent on heading the Soviets off at the arms impasse. The letter gave the Soviets new ammunition in the propaganda skirmish that came to a head in Geneva. And it certainly didn't increase the life expectancy of SALT II. Whether the leak sprang from Weinberger's camp or his Defense detractors is immaterial. Either way, the Pentagon shot itself in the foot and wounded the peace process at the same time. A celestial link Comet watchers come in all sizes and ages. Some may live until the next return of Halley's Comet in 2011. A few were alive when it appeared in 1910. Comet watchers wear dress clothes, fatigues, pajamas and everything in between. Some talk in low tones, as if in the presence of a mystery, while others laugh or sing Christmas carols to pass the time in line. Saturday night, the weather finally allowed them to unite in their quest. They became part of history and the universe. It made no difference that the comet looked like a piece of lint. All of them seek an experience stated succinctly by the T-shirts on sale at the observatory: "I saw Halley's Comet." In this age, fascination with the comet no longer stems from terror. But the fascination persists because Halley's Comet satisfies a hunger for connection and certainty. Contemplating the orbit of Halley's Comet connects this disconnected age with centuries of wondering witnesses. It connects the imagination of Earth's inhabitants with the unimaginable reaches of space. Most important, perhaps, it connects the people of Earth with each other. No event since Apollo 11's moon landing has focused people's minds so much on this planet as a planet — modest, fragile and precious. The comet is worth seeing for the experience of seeing and being joined to millions of others in a curiously human claim: "I saw Halley's Comet." Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 11 Staffer-Flint Hall. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118-Staffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 66045, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 86044. In Douglas County, mail subscriptions cost $15 for six months and $2 a month. Students pay $25 for each student. Student subscriptions cost $1 and are paid through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045 Remembering the day Kennedy died Where were you on that day in 1963 when you heard that President Kennedy had been shot in Dallas? Anyone who remembers at all remembers that day. For me, it is a dual memory. The first president for whom I voted was killed. But something else happened that day — an event that marks for me the point between two different Americas. One was the old Jim Crow America, with its "white" and "colored" signs in the washrooms and other, subtler signs of segregation. Often you only found this out by challenging the barrier. That could pose the risk of physical pain sometimes and emotional pain every time. Being turned away from a restaurant on a hungry night always took a little slice out of your soul. As I entered adulthood and the newspaper business, those barriers were falling, but the pace then was slow. One of the problems posed by that slow transition was that some things were open to blacks (we all said Negro then) and some things were not. But I am getting ahead of my story. Coping with the shock of that November day had been difficult for us in the little town of York, Pa., where I was trained as a journalist. The story coming over the wire would not have been believable if it were not for television, which made it somehow seem more real. Finally, a little after midnight, the newspaper came out. It was confirmed in black and white. We stood around staring at the newspaper. Robert C. Maynard Oakland Tribune "Listen," he said, "I know this place in Baltimore. It's got great Greek food and fantastic belly dancers. It's just the thing to pull us out of this mood." My boss of that time was an adventurer, an editor who guided his institution on the general theory that the editor edits best who edits least. Higgins simply could not go home that night. (John Kennedy had been his Harvard classmate.) We were on the sidewalk outside the offices of the York Gazette and Daily. It was a few minutes past midnight. The chill of the night was nothing compared to the chill that came from thinking of a president shot dead. "It will do us both good to get our minds off of this," Higgins said. "Jim, do you realize you are inviting me to a nightclub that does not serve Negroes? You're putting me on." The first sign of trouble came when the headwaiter seated 10 people who came in after us and left us standing by the entryway, craning our necks to see the dancers. Perhaps 20 minutes passed. The headwaiter asked us what we wanted. Higgins said we wanted a table. The headwaiter said he had none. We pointed in unison to an empty one not 10 feet away. "That one is reserved," said the headwaiter. headwater. "For whom?" asked Higgins. "For a member of the club," said the headwaiter. "What club?" asked Higgins. "Oh, didn't you know? This is a private club. Members only." said the headwaiter. The headwaiter maintained it was a club now, even though it wasn't when Higgins had been there the week before, and even though a man sitting near us did not remember that he had joined that night. "Just tonight? He joined tonight?" "Yes," said the headwaiter. "Just tonight." "Terrific. We want to join tonight." "Oh sorry," said the headwaiter. "You can't. Not tonight." 'Why not? You just said the guy HOT POTATO KANSAS MISSOURI IDAHO ARKANSAS MISSOURI TEXAS MINNESOTA over there joined tonight." "Yes, but you see, the president is gone." gone: "The president is :one?" The problem is one: "Yes. Only our president can make you a member, and he has gone home for the evening." Higgins exploded. "If you still have a president, you are lucky. We lost ours tonight. So fine, we will wait for your president. Call your president." And before another word was said, we were sitting at that empty table "reserved for a member." The Baltimore City Police arrived in five minutes. As I saw the swarm of blue uniforms coming through the door, I asked Higgins whether he wanted to take another minute and review our position as journalists about to make news. He said he didn't give a damn. I said, fine. I was just a reporter. The owner emptied the joint. Soon, it was the two of us and the headwaiter and the police. Then all but one of the policemen left. The one who remained said he could do nothing for us or against us. He left. The owner appeared, a short and dapper man who said we had ruined his establishment and would be called to account shortly. Then he left. The headwaiter said he might as well go and get his topcoat. We had the joint to ourselves with nothing to eat or drink and no music or dancers. "I guess we should go," I said to Higgins. We decided we might as well go and face them. We came to the front door, and a roar went up from across the street. There stood perhaps 25 angry patrons. As we moved toward the corner, the mob moved behind us, and the curses sounded closer and more sincere. "There's a mob of men out there," he said When we reached the corner, we encountered the last officer to leave the establishment. "I'm sorry you gentlemen didn't have a nicer evening in Baltimore," he said, "but I hope you come back sometime and give us another chance." With that, he made an odd gesture. He tipped his cap to us. At the tip of the officer's cap, 50 sets of headlights came on at once. Uniformed police officers appeared from the rooftops and out of cellar windows — or so it seemed at the time. They surrounded us and marched us to my car. They escorted us until we were miles away. Anyway, said Higgins, it was a nice drive. Oread fitting name for hill of learning Mount Oread is a curious name for this mass of limestone up which and upon which we toil. It's curious partly because "Oread" comes from the Greek word for mountain. It's a bit like saving "Mount Mountain." In Greek mythology, oreads were nymphs of the mountains. I'm not about to suggest how that might apply to KU. Anyway, the connection is indirect. I became curious about the name through mistakes in its use. The mistakes that I know of have to do with addresses on Oread Avenue (not Street). Recently I saw a mailing label at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., that changed the "O" to "D" and thus read 1204 Dread Ave. Some days, that says a lot about studies in a university. I've also seen mail for Oreade and Orread. A telephone caller once asked me for confirmation that the address was on OH-reed. At Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave, a worker told me they got a call from a delivery service questioning an address at 12660 Read Ave. Oread just isn't an everyday name: And the oreads of Greek mythology, like most nymphs, were less than prominent as a group. The most famous by far was Echo. She was struck mute by Hera, queen of Olympus, to stop her from talking about the divine philandering of Zeus, the king of the gods. The stories vary, but in one Zeus gave back what he could — the power to repeat things others had said. When Echo fell in love with Narcissus, a self-centered youth, it led to tragedy, and she wasasted away until she had only a voice forlornly repeating others' words. Some days, that says a lot about studies in a university. The story may be classical, but its moral level hardly explains why a school in Worcester, Mass., was named the Mount Oread School. But it was, and about 30 people associated with that school established Lawrence on Aug. 2, 1854. Those people, sponsored by the anti-slavery New England Emigrant Aid Society, spent the night of Aug. 1 on the hill and named it after the school at home. Dan Howell Staff columnist NORTHAMPTON, VIRGINIA. The choice of site, based on an earlier trip, probably was made by Charles Robinson, who became the state's first governor in 1861. The hill had at least two other names, both derived from its shape. Clifford S. Griffin, professor of history, wrote in his history of KU that the hill once was called Hogback Ridge. Another report says it was known as Back Bone Ridge. Some days, that says a lot about studies in a university. As a plaque near Lindley Hall states, the Oregon and California trails probably came over the hill from the south at that point. Sydney Prentice, an 1896 graduate, collected reports of pre-settlement travelers for The Graduate Magazine in 1919. Prentice's accounts show travelers awed by the beauty and abundance of the Wakarusa Valley. Only if came out Warruzera, Wackarussi and Wakarruski at various times. Among other physical features, writers praised the Golden Valley to the east, where the Kansas, or Konza, or Kaw joined the Wakarusa. The name of the Golden Valley lives on in the alma mater: "Far above the Golden Valley. . ." But the University of Kansas didn't begin until 1866, after slavery-related wars and repeated arguments about the school's location with Lecompton and Manhattan. Famous visitors to Mount Oread always marveled at the expanse of land it made visible. Horace Greeley, on his 1859 tour of the West, wrote of "a magnificent view of the country for twenty miles in each direction." Walt Whitman, in 1879, effused on "that vast Something, stretching out on its unbounded scale, unconfined, which there is in these prairies, combining the real and the ideal, and beautiful as dreams. "How freeing, soothing, nourishing they are to the soul," Whitman wrote. Mailbox Some days, that says a lot about studies in a university. Need for conscience The letter to the editor by Katy Monk, Nov. 12, displays some rather odd assumptions regarding the purpose of a university and the role we, as students, are to play within its structure. Ms. Monk assumes that a "good working relationship" is in "diametric opposition" to exhibiting a social conscience. With reasoning such as this, one could hardly expect her to understand arguments based on the writings of Thoreau, Martin Luther King Jr., and Gandhi. One has such a relationship only where mutual respect is present. Who will the administration respect more — leaders who take a public stand and weather the criticism, or those who bushy dodge controversial issues to avoid antagonizing any faction of voters? Such a public stand does not preclude constructive criticism, but may encourage such efforts as occurred with the 1960s civil rights movement. Looking back upon that social movement, would Ms. Monk prefer student leaders who ignored suffering and injustice until after the election, or those leaders who speak out and -act when their conscience dictates? A university exists to encourage independent thought and personal growth. Sometimes that growth results in active, daily implementing of classroom lessons on social leadership. Leadership is a nebulous thing. One often finds it where it is least expected. This is not to say the leaders of the Common Sense Coalition have no social conscience, only that they've carefully hidden it from public scrutiny. Perhaps they should advertise "Conscience" on their buttons also, so we can all rest assured that they possess it as well. Andy Ingram Toneka senior Extremist opinions I really don't know how you let more than a paragraph and a half of Dennis Highberger's Nov. 15 letter slip past you. Mr. Highberger's letter was riddled with clichés and unsupported opinions. At best, this is an opinion. It should be stated as an opinion and not as an outright fact. he starts out with the advocate of all the anti-apartheid demonstrators by saying that they all know "all too well the purpose of the university in American society" and rails on for half a column about what he believes that purpose is. Very little of the letter has to do with the subject with which he started - anti-aspartheid demonstrations - even though he sometimes does get back on the subject. Mr. Highberger's letter gives the impression that the protesters are all fanatics wanting to overthrow the government. Mr. Bode's letter supports protests and diversion more Mr. Hiberger should speak for himself. I am insulted by his insinulation that my four years of study at KU were nothing but "proper training" to "oversee the system of exploitation on non-European people and of the earth itself." On the other side of the page is a much shorter letter by John Bode. It also supports the protests and divestment, but it does not contain the rhetoric in Mr. Highberger's letter clearly, concisely, coherently and probably more accurately. Furthermore, Mr. Bode brings up some logical points favoring divestment. Mr. Higgherger does not. What I had left after I cut all the rhetoric out of Mr. Higgherger's letter was the first paragraph, the first half of the eighth paragraph and the sentence, "I disagree." Instead of being printed, Mr. Highberger's letter should be clipped, framed and hung in an honored place in the Hack Hall of Fame. There is, I feel, no place in a newspaper, even on the editorial page, for such extremist rhetoric and outright bad writing. There is no place for it even if it is from someone with as much notoriety as Mr. Highberger, and especially if it is from a former student body vice president. I guess we need extremists on both the left and the right to keep those of us who are moderate from looking like extremists, but it's difficult to swallow. --- Spencer M. Simpson, Jr. Baltimore, Md. graduate student Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Summit Continued from p.1 were sent to confer with their experts on defense and foreign affairs and try to work out the differences between the two parties. No solution was reached at that time and the staff members were told to continue to work during the night. Reagan and Gorbachev were at dinner when the final arrangements were made. When word of the agreement came to the leaders, they went into another room and sat side by side on the couch and decided on the joint appearance. Officials said the personal rapport the leaders seemed to have developed over the two days may bring the "new beginning" both men said they wanted from the summit. Near midnight last night, U.S. security agents with bomb-sniffing dogs cleared the conference center that had been home to almost 3,000 journalists covering the summit so they could conduct a sweep of the area. The ceremony will occur at the conference center. Speakes said the appearance would be brief, and there were no plans for the two leaders to answer questions. Speakes repeatedly refused to answer questions about the nature of the appearance. A cassette stereo valued at $169 was taken from a car parked in the 800 block of Michigan Street between 8:30 p.m. Friday and 5:30 p.m. Saturday. Lawrence police said yesterday. A radar detector valued at $230 was reported stolen from a car parked in Dover Square at Meadowbrook Apartments, police said. On the Record - Stereo equipment valued at $362 was taken from an apartment in the 2500 block of Lazybrook Lane, police said. Panel votes to reduce malpractice limit TOPEKA — A state medical malpractice insurance fund would be limited to paying $1 million for any single judgment under a bill that a legislative study committee approved yesterday for introduction in the 1986 Kansas Legislature. The Associated Press The bill, as approved by the Special Committee on Medical Malpractice, would reduce the current $3 million limit that the state's Health Care The fund is designed to cover judgments in excess of the $200,000 minimum liability limits of a doctor's regular malpractice insurance. Stabilization Fund can pay to satisfy one malpractice judgment. The proposal also would reduce from $6 million to $3 million the amount that could be paid out of the fund during the course of a year to cover multiple judgments against any one doctor. Rep. Joe Knopp, R-Manhattan, the chairman of the committee, said the panel would consider a proposal today that would establish a $1 million limit on the amount of damages that can be awarded in any case. That proposal, if passed, would institute the most sweeping changes in years for Kansas medical malpractice laws. The committee began discussions yesterday on 21 proposals designed to deal with increasing medical malpractice insurance premiums. During hearings the panel held since the 1985 session adjourned, doctors have testified they are being forced to abandon high-risk procedures, such as delivering babies, because of what they consider to be the astronomical cost of malpractice insurance. The premiums can exceed $30,000 a year for doctors practicing in the highest risk groups. The 21-member committee approved 10 of the 12 proposals it considered. Election Continued from p. 1 Day said, "The only place I could even imagine someone being able to vote two times is Strong." Double-voting could be difficult to detect, he said, because poll workers didn't keep records of the number of students who voted other than the tallies the voting machines gave. Day said he didn't know these records were kept in the past, but would use poll registers today after receiving a written request from Charles Laworn, liberal arts and sciences candidate from Common Sense. Ruth Lichtwardt, vice presidential candidate for Chrysalis, said she didn't think long lines or closed polls would affect the turnout too much. She said a few voters might not wait in long lines, and some who found closed polls might not want to try again. "People who are determined to vote will vote no matter what," she said. Day said no polls opened on time because he had to unlock each of the 15 machines. Other committee members would have known how to do that if they had attended a meeting Tuesday night, he said. A complaint about possible campaign violations was filed yesterday morning with the Elections Committee by Chrysalis about several "Vote Common Sense" messages that were chalked on campus sidewalks and stairs. The markings may have violated a rule that says candidates can't put signs outside campus buildings. Coke called spermicidal United Press International BOSTON — Coke Classic is five times better than the new Coca-Cola formula as a contraceptive, a team of Harvard Medical School physicians announced yesterday, and Diet Coke is best of all. The physicians mixed sperm samples with three varieties of Coca-Cola - Diet Coke, Coke Classic and New Coke - and found that Diet Coke was the most effective at killing sperm, Coke Classic was next and New Coke was only one-fifth as effective as Coke Classic. The physicians said in a letter to the New England Journal of Medicine that Coca-Cola douches were a popular form of contraception at the turn of the century and were still used in developing countries. They wanted to test the effectiveness of Coca-Cola as a spermicidal agent. "Although not recommended for postcoital contraception, partly because sperm can be found in the oviducts within minutes after intercourse, Coca-Cola products do appear to have a spermicidal effect," said Sharice A. Umpierre of Harvard Medical School and three other physicians. They concluded, "Furthermore, our data indicate that, at least in the area of spermicidal effect, 'Classic' Coke is 'it.'" Sub8Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! fields the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187 Tray Wine Glass Champagne Globe VIEW FACE Anyway you want it... you got it! 1618 West 23rd Street 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 & Iowa Open 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Hillcrest Shopping Center 5 p.m.-10 p.m. For parties of 5 or more, please call for reservations 841-7226. PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL Free Consultation THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO 745 New Hampshire 841-5796 STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Mass. Downtown ALL HAIRCUTS $6 Quality Haircuts at Reasonable Prices No app. necessary - Closed on Mona. ZZZZ STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP Via Videotape Friday, November 22 FREE! 1:15 Preparing for Exams 2:30 Foreign Language Study Skills 3:30 Time Management To attend, register at the Student Assistance Center TOLL STRONG HAUL SAC DA RAP - VOLS Let us show you the finest CD players the world has to offer from our 106 lines of quality audio and video. pared to analog recordings, but some CD players offer superior performance compared with other CD's. You'll want to know which player can offer the kind of performance you're looking for . . . and which can't. Digital history began in 1972 when the world's first digital recording was made by Denon using their DN 023R PCM recorder. In 1977, the first optically read PCM audio discs were produced and four years later, in 1981, the first CD players were developed for commercial use. Now CD players are produced by many manufacturers throughout the world. All CD players offer extraordinarily powerful. 03 01 02 45. 04 DIGITAL SPOKEN HERE. 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If one of the angles you've been studying lately is a way to pay your tuition costs, Army ROTC would like to offer some sound advice. Apply for an Army ROTC scholarship. Recently, we set aside hundreds of scholarships solely for engineering you self. So if the stress of worrying about tuition is bending you out of shape, get some financial support. Apply for an Army ROTC scholarship today. Each one covers full tuition, books and other supplies, and pays you up to $1,000 each school year it's in effect. For more information, contact your Professor of Military Science. CONTACT CAPTAIN KENNARD Room 212, Military Science Building ARMY ROTC. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. 913-864-3311/3312 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday Features Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 Reggae man Island music sets beat for Dread By Lori Poison Special to the Kansan His appearance may not be that of a typical college student, but then again, Jimmy Effiwatt is not typical. Effiwitt, Calalare, Nigeria, sophomore, is better known by Lawrence reggae enthusiasts as "Jimmy Dread." He is the host for an hour of reggae videos from 11 p.m. to midnight every Sunday on TV-30. His show, "Reggae with Jimmy Dread," is just one of his involvements with the Jamaican-influenced music. "Reggae is an expression of feeling," said Effiwatt. "Its meaning is based on righteous living and love for one another." Eiffwatt also has a radio show, "Dread at the Control," from noon to 3 p.m. Sundays on KJHK-FM and is a member of a local reggae band, Common Ground. Effiwatt is majoring in media arts. He came to the United States during the summer of 1983 after attending the American University in Athens, Greece, for two years. Effiwatt said he left Greece when the government threatened to close the university because it was competing with other Greek universities. Effwatt decided to come to the United States after talking to U.S. sailors he met in Athens, he said. The sailors gave him the addresses of several universities in the United States, but the University of Kansas accepted him first. "When I was in Greece, I studied business administration," he said. "But I changed when I got here. Business made me feel too greedy. I thought I'd better take life step by step instead." Effiwatt said he was able to take only three hours this semester because of the time he spent working. When not playing in the band, o 'People react very weirdly to the way I look. They will come up and ask to touch my hair.I usually let them.' working on his shows, Effiwatt finds time to work nine hours a week in the mailroom of Watson Library. Calalare, Nigeria, sophomore Jimmy Effiwatt Effwatt is easily recognized by his mass of braided hair and his brightly colored, and often mismatched, clothing. Effwatt said he liked his unusual appearance and the stares he sometimes gets. "People react really weirdly to the way I look," he said. "They will come up and ask to touch my hair. I usually let them." "I think he looks pretty neat," Crider said. "He's different." Jarrel Crider, Wichita, junior, lists to reggae music and occa- sionally watches Effiwatt's show. Effiwatt said that Rastafariism, like reggae, originated in Jamaica. Rastafarianism, based on scriptures found in the Old Testament, is more a religion than a culture, than a religion, Effiwatt said. Its followers worship the late Emperor Haile Selassie Effwatt said he braided his hair two years ago when he became involved with the Rastafarian religion. The name for the style, and the source of his nickname, is dread locks. The term came from the Old Testament of the Bible. "It's sort of like Christianity because you live it every day," he said. "There's one destiny and one aim, 'Let love be the guiding light,' and that's cool." Effwatt she enjoys living in the United States and he especially likes Lawrence. The diversity of the people he has met in Lawrence fascinates him, and he says that the town is a close-knit community that reminds him of his home in Nigeria. "You can meet people of your own class or level here very easily." he said. One of the things that Eiffwat admires most about the United States is its agricultural system. He said that this country's method of farming was more efficient and more extensive than the agricultural systems in some of the other countries he has seen. “It’s great to realize that the wheat that makes bread here in Kansas feeds people in countries all over the world,” he said. However, Effiwatt has run into a few problems since he has been in the United States. "I's hard living here from a foreign country," he said. "There aren't many jobs to go around. The jobs are so competitive and they go to the people who were here first." Effwatt said that after he earned his degree he would like to stay in the United States and work for about a year and then return to Nigeria. There are many opportunities for people interested in television and film in Nigeria, he said, since the industry is just starting to develop there. "There is so much talent here already," he said. "I think there will be many more opportunities in Nigeria." A. S. KIPRU Store property often carted off By Susie Bishop Jimmy Effiwatt By Susie Bishop Of the Kansan staff But everyone knows that carts don't walk away by themselves, so store managers point the finger at the shoppers. The anatomy of grocery carts has changed. In addition to four wheels, some shopping carts seem to have sprouted two legs and walked away, local grocery store managers said Monday. "Usually people take them and leave them on a sidewalk or in Naismith Hall and then we have to come pick them up," said Al Long, manager of Kroger Super Store, at the intersection of 23rd Street and Naismith Drive. "That's why we don't like it. It would be different if they brought them back." Long said students and others abandon the carts after getting their groceries home. Jack Leatherman, manager of Food 4 Less, 2525 Iowa St. said that only a few people took carts. "Generally, people who do take carts are habitual offenders, and the carts end up in the same places," he said. "Most people don't steal the carts. They're just too lazy to bring them back after using it to push their groceries home." Leatherman said that shopkins who did not have cars or some form of transportation took the carts to help them get their purchases home. After arriving home, the shoppers sometimes discard the cart, but usually not in front of their own home. Wayward carts usually end up on sidewalks outside apartment complexes, in alleys or the front yard of a home somewhere close to the store. He said that someone called and reported the unusual location of the cart and that he never would have found it. Sometimes carts travel farther from home. Leatherman said one of his store's carts was found in the middle of a field near Sixth Street and Dragstrip Road, approximately five miles from the store. Usually the carts are found by a man who Leatherman has hired to search three times a week for the missing carts. The recovery mission brings in about 30 carts a week. Leatherman said. The grocery carts at Food 4 Less cost $164 to replace, he said. If the carls are not returned, the store could lose almost $5,000 a week for the 30 carts. If a person is caught stealing a cart, he or she can be prosecuted for a criminal offense, Leatherman said. "Flat out, taking a cart is shoplifting," he said. "It is a criminal offense and punishable by law." Leatherman said the first time the store caught someone walking away with a cart, they would not prosecute, but the police would be called in if a person was caught a second time. Sgt. Don Dalquest, Lawrence Police Department, said he had not heard of anyone being prosecuted recently for the theft of a shopping cart. He said that police officers often found grocery carts in alleys in Lawrence. If a cart is found, police notify the store so it can be picked up. Dalquest said most carts have the store identification on the handle or plastic child seat, but those that did not were left where they were found because ownership could not be proven. Carts turn into portable laundry baskets, trash cans, wheel barrels full of leaves or as a receptical for aluminum cans. Local grocery stores often find the competition's shopping cart during a neighborhood prowl to recover their own. A quick call notifying the manager of the whereabouts of his cart promotes the cooperative effort to return carts to their proper residence. Marvin Hauschild, manager of Rusty's Food Center, 2300 Louisiana St., said few shopping carts disappeared from his store. Rusty's policy of having employees help shoppers carry their groceries to the car reduces the number of carts leaving the store. He said he trained his employees to return carts to the store quickly and to be aware of people leaving the store with them. "On the average a cart is left in the parking lot fewer than five minutes." Hauschild said. R Tammy Stude/Special to the KANSAN When the bad weather hits, Hauschild said he sometimes could be persuaded to allow shoppers to push their groceries home, provided they returned the cart immediately. He said he always took down the name of the person before he allowed them to take the shopping cart off the premises. Six grocery carts were found abandoned recently in a vacant lot at the corner of 23rd and Iowa streets. Shopping carts range in value from $150 to $270 each. X 111 180M Smokeout to help puffers end habit By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Park your pack That's the invitation being offered smokers today by the Douglas County unit of the American Cancer Society during the organization's ninth annual "Great American Smokeout." Marian Montgomery, coordinator of Smokeout activities for the Douglas County unit, said Monday that 5,000 to 7,000 Americans nationwide would observe the day by giving up cigarettes for good. Brenda Burnham, York, Neb., junior, said she approved of the Smokeout, although she said she might have difficulty going without cigarettes for 24 hours. "It's a great idea for those who can do it," Burnham said. "Most likely, I'll have problems. I think I could quit if I really wanted to. Balloons will be released to kick off the activities at 10 a.m. During the day, drama students from Lawrence High School will present skits with anti-smoking themes. A booth will provide information about nutrition to those smokers who are afraid they'll gain weight if they quit. Smokeout activities aimed at motivating smokers to quit will take place from 10 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. today at Southern Hills Shopping Center, 1601 W. 23rd St., Montgomery said. No activities are planned for the KU campus, Montgomery said, although a "park your pack" box and anti-smoking literature will be available at Watkins Memorial Hospital. Americans kick the habit; smoking is less respectable By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Warning: The Surgeon General has determined that cigarette smoking is dangerous to your health. That message, or one of several similar messages warning of specific health problems related to smoking, appears on every pack of cigarettes sold in the United States. Despite the warnings, many Americans still light up. However, available data indicate that cigarette smoking is losing its social respectability. The first. Surgeon General's report on the dangers of smoking was released on Jan. 11, 1964. In the 21 years since, surveys indicate, cigarette usage has declined steadily. According to statistics from the Office on Smoking and Health, 52.1 percent of all men in the United States and 34.2 percent of all women smoked in 1965. In 1983, 34.8 percent of all men and 29.5 percent of all women smoked. Janine Cox, assistant professor of health, physical education and recreation, said recently that the declining popularity of cigarettes was apparent in the attitudes of students in her health education classes. "I can't see anything good or socially redeeming about smoking," she said. "I think a lot of students have reached the same conclusion." cousin. Cox, who quit smoking in 1973 after teaching a health unit on cancer, said she thought smoking had lost its appeal as a symbol of acceptance. "At one point, you were 'in' if you smoked," she said. "But I don't think smoking is cool anymore." Tom R. Thomas, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation, said he thought the changing attitudes toward smoking were linked with the fitness and exercise boom. "It's very difficult to smoke and exercise," he said. "Students tell me getting into an exercise program is a pretty strong incentive for putting." Cox said that some students told her they smoked because their parents did. However, she said, other students told her they didn't smoke because of being around family members who did. Diane Sharon, an assistant kindergarten teacher at Hilltop Child Development Center, said she came from a large family that was divided almost evenly between smokers and non-smokers. "My dad doesn't smoke, but all three of my brothers do," she said. "On the other hand, my mother does smoke, but my three sisters and I don't." Nanette Rosen, Lawrence graduate student, said she thought she probably never began smoking because of the negative image she had gotten about it from her grandfather. "He was a heavy smoker and later developed lung problems related to his smoking," she said. Cox said there was one distressing exception to the downward trend in cigarette usage. "The late teen-age category for women is still increasing," she said. "This is important because of the negative effect of smoking during pregnancy. These women, are in their prime child-bearing years." John Darrow, Overland Park senior, said he began smoking when he was 21 because he wanted to, but at the same time set a date to quit. "I knew it was bad for me when I started," he said. "I told myself I would stop smoking on my 25th birthday." Darrow will be 25 on Dec. 5, and he said he still intends to stop smoking. He didn't think it would be difficult. "I've quit before for about a month at a time," he said. "It's not hard. All you have to do is avoid substituting smoking with something else, because then you're not really giving up a habit." For smokers who ignore the warnings on their cigarette packs, signs requesting them not to smoke may have little effect. However, they might find the sign in Cox's office hard to overlook. "No smoking," it says. "Anyone caught smoking on the premises will be hung by the toenails and pummeled into unconsciousness with an organic carrot." On Tap Nancy Haney Peggy Helsel I am so grateful to you. CONCERTS: PLAVS: City Light Orchestra will perform at 9:30 p.m. today, tomorrow and Saturday at The Jazzhaus, 926% Massachusetts St. There will be a $3 cover charge. SUA MOVIES; "La Dolce Vita" will be shown at University Theatre will present "Booth," a play that portrays John Wilker Booth in a sympathetic manner, at 8 p.m. Dec. 4-8 in the Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. General admission tickets for KU students are $1.50. Tickets for other students and senior citizens are $2 and are $3 for the public. All tickets are available at the Murphy Hall box office. 7:30 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium. Tickets are $1.50 and can be purchased at the Student Union Activities box office in the Kansas Union. "Ghostbusters" is scheduled to be shown at 3:30 p.m., 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday in Woodruff Auditorium. Tickets are $1.50. The midnight movie for tomorrow and Saturday in Woodruff Auditorium will be "Strange Behavior." Tickets are $2 Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 Thursday Features University Daily Kansan 7 Graduate recital asks musical question By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff When students return from When students return from Thanksgiving vacation next week, many will face the back-to-school blues. But a group from the University of Kansas is offering a remedy for the post-vacation pre-finals colddrums. Mark Ferrell, assistant professor of music, prescribed a cure; a vocal performance called "Is It Broadway or Is It Opera?" "It's a perfect pre-study break before finals begin," Ferrell said. "It'll pick up anybody who has the blues after Thanksgiving break." The performance will incorporate selections from operas and musicals such as "West Side Story." "Show Boat" and "Porgy and Bess." The show will be performed by eight graduate students and seven of their friends at 8 p.m. Monday, Dec. 2 in the Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. The graduate students all are enrolled in VOIC 420, graduate vocal coaching. "It's a means for the students to have a performance experience," said Ferrell, who is coaching and accompanying the performers. "Mostly, it's fun. I selected the pieces to point out the fact that it's enjoyable." Sarah Taylor, Kansas City, Mo. graduate student, will be performing in the show. She said the idea for the program developed from a group of people who met weekly to listen to operas. "It was very spontaneous," Taylor said. "It's nothing really legitimate. The performance precedes next semester's production of "Sweeney Todd," which some agree is an opera and others say is a musical, Ferrell said. This is part of a larger debate among music enthusiasts concerning the difference between operas and musicals. "It's intended to demonstrate new and innovative ideas in recitals. It'll really lift you up." nresses emotions "Music is music," he said. "The difference is in the function of the music. In operas, the music carries the main bulk of the story and ex- "In musical theater, the music helps along the story and shows feeling, but the main bulk of the action is done by acting and by dialogue, not by music." For instance, Ferrell said, the music in "West Side Story" is operatic, but the show is described as a musical because there is no aria at the end when the character dies. Ferrall said that besides the variety of music, some surprises would spice up the Dec. 2 show to help cure students' blues. “There are a few surprises,” he said. “We'll do a few things that have never been done on the Swarthout stage before.” He would not say what the surprises were, however, because he didn't want to spoil the effect. Also, he said, he was afraid that if someone knew what the surprises were, he wouldn't be allowed to do them. Chad DeShazo/KANSAN Stefane Humes, Lawrence graduate student, practices her part in the vocal performance "Is it Broadway, or is It Opera?" The show will be performed at 8 p.m. Dec. 2 in Swarthout Recital Hall by eight students from a graduate vocal coaching class and seven of their friends. THURSDAY 50¢ Pitchers 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $1 cover Also try our Prime Rib Special for $6.95 the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs. 843-0540 CHRISTMAS & THANKSGIVING FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST --for him: leather flight jacket with removable moutan collar shown here... with shetland wool argyle sweater and stonewashed brushed cotton slacks...and a waxhide kilted tasseled loafer from Cole-Haan. free refreshments on all ku home football games!! --- NO EXTRA CHARGE! AIRLINE COUNTER PRICES Make your reservations at todays prices. On campus or downtown. DON'T DELAY DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED CALL NOW! Maupintour travel service Hand with a fist K. U. Union/900 Mass. 749-0700 Sweater Liquidation After four years we're quitting the sweater business to concentrate on our footwear. . . lon QUITTING THE SWEATER BUSINESS Entire Sweater Stock 25% to 60% off Christmas Layaway available. Shop now while the selection is at its best. Store Hours: Mon.-Sat. 12:5:30 841-7027 TOOTPRINTS 1339 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE KS. 68044 One test where only you know the score. (Check One) Yes No Do you want to be the only one who knows when you use an early pregnancy test? 1985 Warner Lambert Co. Would you prefer a test that's totally private to perform and totally private to read? □ □ Would you like a test that's portable, so you can carry it with you and read it in private? □ □ e.p.t plus Early Pregnancy Test Simple to perform. Easy to read color change. Fresh, accurate results. 1 PORTABLE TEST BOTTLE And how about a simple, one-step test with a dramatic color change that's easy to read and is 98% accurate? If you checked "Yes to" the above, EPT PLUS is for you. Use it, and only you will know your test score. Looking Good! If you haven't been by Naismith Hall lately, you're in for a big surprise! We're looking good and looking forward to seeing you next spring! JUST LOOK WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER: JUST LOOK WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER * Semi-private rooms w/ connecting baths * Great location (bus service from your front door to your classes) * Delicious all-you-can-eat meals * A fully equipped recreation area w/ swimming pool, fitness center, and game area. Limited Spaces Available for Spring Semester—waiting list forming now! For more information call or come by NAISMITH HALL 1800 Naismith Dr. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 (913) 843-8559 R: DAD'S HOME Hours: M-T-W, F-J-Sat. 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Thur. 9:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Sun, noon - 5 p.m. MISTER GYW 920 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 842-2700 42 小 8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 Chiefs player indicted 31 indicted in cocaine case United Press International WICHITA — A $3 million, yearlong investigation into illegal drug activity resulted yesterday in the indictments of 31 people, including defensive end Mike Bell of the Kansas City Chiefs. Also indicated was the halfbrother of a Kansas Supreme Court justice. A federal grand jury meeting the past two days in Wichita returned the 48-count indictment. Mike Bell, 28, Overland Park, was arrested at 11:20 a.m. at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., by agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration and the FBI. He is charged with use of a communications facility to distribute cocaine and attempted possession of cocaine. The first charge carries a maximum penalty of 4 years in prison and a $30,000 fine. The second charge could result in a 1 year imprisonment and a $5,000 fine. Also indicted was Bell's - twin brother, Mark, a former professional football player. He is charged with the same offenses. Mark Bell, a Wichita resident, has played defensive end for several NFL teams, most recently with the Indianapolis Colts. He is no longer with the team. Mike Bell, also a Wichita native, made his initial court appearance yesterday before Magistrate Gerald L. Rushfit. Rushfit set bond at $5,000, which Bell paid. His next court appearance is set in Wichita federal court Nov. 27. The U.S. Attorney for Kansas, Benjamin Burgess Jr., yesterday said the indictments stemmed from a big drug investigation conducted by local, state and federal authorities. Wichita was one of eight cities the federal government targeted for investigation. Members of the business community and some Wichita residents involved with nightclubs also were charged. In addition, state warrants were issued for 16 people Tuesday in connection with gambling and cocaine charges. Coleman Lockett, half brother of Kansas Supreme Court Justice Tyler Lockett, was charged with conspiracy to distribute cocaine and distributing cocaine. Another person indicted was James Walker, a former Chiefs player. Wichita Police Department and Sedgwick County Sheriff's Department, in conjunction with the FBI, DEA, Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Internal Revenue Service and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. The Kansas Narcotics Task Force investigation was conducted by the "I am pleased with the results today, but it's not enough," said Wichita Police Chief Richard LaMunyon. "We have identified others who deal in drugs within our city. To them I simply say, 'We will get you, if not today, tomorrow. If not tomorrow, in the future.' We are committed to this goal and we have coordinated all available legal resources to accomplish it." Sedgwick County Sheriff Mike Hill said that as a result of the investigation, the sheriff's department, the Wichita Police Department and the KBI have entered into a written agreement with the DEA to establish a permanent drug task force for the Wichita-Sedgwick County area. Hill and LaMunyon said the city and county together spent about $1 million to conduct the investigation. He said 78 full-time officers were involved in the investigation, and 120 officers were used yesterday to round up the indicted. Bills would let WU enter state system The Associated Press TOPEKA — Washburn University of Topeka would be allowed to join the state university system in July 1987 under the terms of two proposals that a special legislative committee has voted to introduce in the 1986 Kansas Legislature. One of the bills, which the Special Committee on Washburn University voted to introduce Tuesday, would allow the municipal school to join with six present state universities under the control of the State Board of Regents with no particular strings attached. The second measure would carry out a plan proposed by House Speaker Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, which calls for Washburn's entry into the state system if Shawne County voters approve a half-cent local sales tax. The tax would raise an estimated $7.9 million to support the school in place of the current 15-mill property tax in Topeka. Hayden's plan also would limit future enrollment of freshmen at Washburn to the number of freshmen who enroll for the fall of 1986, and freeze tuition at levels in effect during the fall 1986 semester. The panel approved introduction of the legislation that would allow Washburn's unconditional admission to the state system on a 4-2 vote while Hayden's proposal received a 3-2 vote. Hayden acknowledged that the decision to have legislation introduced that would carry out his ideas did not constitute an endorsement of the plan by the committee. The committee defeated, 3-2, a proposal offered by Senate Minority Leader Mike Johnston, D-Parsons, which called for imposition of a half-cent countywide sales tax to be used in place of the Topeka property tax but not for admitting Washburn as a state institution. Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topeka, a member of the committee and a prime backer of efforts to make Washburn a state school, said he would support a bill that substituted a local sales tax for the property tax, even if it did not provide for taking the school into the state system. On Campus Canterbury House will sponsor an Episcopal worship service at noon today in Danforth Chapel. The KU Men's Soccer Club will practice at 4 p.m. today and Tuesday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The KU Women's Soccer Club will practice at 4:30 p.m. today and Tuesday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union. The Christian Science College Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel. The Mt. Oread Bike Club Racing Team will meet at 8 p.m. today in the Governor's Room of the Union. The KU College Republicans will sponsor a speech by Charles Wiley, a U.S. journalist who was detained by the KGB, at 7 p.m. today in the Javahwk Room of the Union. The KU Biology Club will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Sunflower Room of the Union. The KU Honor Students Association will sponsor a trip Sunday to the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Mo. A bus will leave, Numemaker Center at 2 p.m. Call 864-4225 for reservations. The Strat-o-matic Baseball Club will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Parlor C of the Union. 1/2 Price Buy one ice cream or yogurt & get the second one at ½ price with this coupon expires 11-26-85 CONE·A·COPIA The Magical Ice Cream Dream Machine! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1814 West 23rd (next to Command Performance) PENNY ANNIES Sweet Shops 730 Mamaroneck Road PENNYANNIES has Tantalizing Treats. We make our own Cream&Butter Fudge. 12 Flavors! 20-Flavors of Ice Cream. Quarter pound dip on a HAND ROLLED WAFFLE CONE only 69¢ a dip. Largest selection of Imported and Domestic Candy in Lawrence. 10:30-5 30 daily, Thurs. until 8 p.m. 730 Mass. 843-5544 106 N. Park (formerly Campus Hideaway) 749-5246 Dive into Harry's SHRIMP BASKET: 8 ounces of shrimp, cocktail sauce & Curly Q fries. Or, take on HARRY'S JUMBO: 10 oz. burger with Curly Q fries. 1720 W. 23 11-11 SHELTH 1720 W. 23 9th & Indiana 11-11 SUN-TH 11-12 F, S TACO GRANDE 50c TACOS All day/Everyday Our 3/$1.00 taco special on Sundays and Mondays is great—but our new special of 50¢ TACOS all day/everyday is unbelievable! PC 1000 AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! --- AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! brother HP 10 brother HR 10 This Includes: Hungry? Head for Harry's! - Zenith ZF/148/42 computer • Zenith ZVM/1230 monitor • Box of Disks • Box of Paper ABSOLUTELY COMPLETE PERSONAL COMPUTER SYSTEM for only $1998. - "Easy" Word Processor from the makers of Wordstar. - Printer Cable HARRY BEAR'S BRANDS MARSHALL - Brother HR-10 Printer EZCOMP COMPUTER CENTER HOLIDAY PLAZA (913)841-5715 ZENITH data systems From Warner, Elektra Atlantic, And Kief's THE REPLACEMENTS Tim THE REPLACEMENTS CASSETTE MFG $0.98 Kief's $5.99 Get the record at Kief's. See them at Parody Hall Nov. 20 DIRE STRAITS Brothers in Arms DIRE STRAITS CASSETTE MFG $0.98 Kief's $5.99 C.D. 10% Off Philip Glass mishima N Mishima CASSETTE MFG $9.98 Kief's $6.74 Choose LP or Cassette White City MFG-$0.98 Kief's $5.88 Two from the WHO ROGER DALTREY UNDER A RAGING MOON Includes After The Fire The Pride You Hide ROGER DALTREY UNDER A RAGING MOON CASSETTE MFG $0.98 Kief's $5.99 KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO - VIDEO shop Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 9 Battenfeld might lose 6 members at break By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff By Bob Tinsley The addition now being complete west of Battenford Hall is supposed to alleviate crowding in the hall's study rooms. Addition could be completed next week But when the men of Battenfield return for the spring semester, they may find that they have more room than anyone had anticipated. John Miller, vice president of the All Scholarship Hall Council and Battentfeld resident, said yesterday that the hall could lose as many as six residents at semester break. Battenfeld has space for 52 residents. "We have 45 living in the hall at the moment," said Miller, Fort Scott junior. "This has fluctuated because we have had people coming and going during the semester." The loss of residents will cut the hall's food budget, Miller said. But Battenfeld residents won't have to tighten up their belts just vet. "The housing office said, 'Eat what you need to and do what you need to do, and don't worry about starving.'" Miller said. The amount the hall's food budget will be cut depends on the number of residents, he said. Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said the office of housing would underwrite any budget shortage. The hall opened in August with fewer residents anyway, Stoner said, to ease the burden of living with the "we could have filled it and pu them in if we had wanted to," he said addition's construction. Battenfeld residents originally were told the addition would be completed Oct. 9. Ground was broken last semester, Construction, however, was delayed during the summer by rain. Stoner said that Kurt von Achen, the project's architect, told him Tuesday that the addition would be completed next Friday. The $276,000 addition will contain four study rooms and a laundry room Residents had hoped it would be completed for an open house that will be given Saturday for Battenfeld alumni. "We will remove the barricades so the guys can let their guests wander in and see what it looks like," Stoner said. In the meantime, the men of Battenfeld can yawn, stretch and enjoy their extra space. "It would be nice to fill them, there's no doubt about that." John Corvin, Fairway junior and Battenfed prector, said, "It's going to be nice because there won't be as many people in the rooms. Mark Denke, assistant director of residential programs, said losing residents at semester break in scholarship and residence halls wasn't unusual. The office of residential programs won't know before Dec. 10 how many vacancies will exist in the eight KU scholarship halls, Denke said. "That is when we told residents who are leaving to tell us," he said. None of the seven other scholarship halls expect a significant loss of residents, hall spokesmen said. Chris Dalleger, director of Stephenson Hall, said his hall might lose a few residents, but he hadn't heard for sure that anyone was leaving. "We'll want to fill those spots," Dalleger said, "but I imagine they'll be trying hard to fill Battenfeld." The office of residential programs will accept spring applications for the scholarship halls through tomorrow. Researchers study reactions to sexual assault Beginning this week, women who have been sexually assaulted will be interviewed as part of a pilot study being conducted by two researchers in the department of psychology. By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff Six women have responded to a classified advertisement placed last week by Sara Gutierres, assistant professor of psychology, and Patricia Schoenrade. Detroit fifth-year graduate student. The participants are women who responded to the ad or who were referred by the Sexual Assault Counseling Program, Topeka. done in the past. She worked as a counselor in an Arizona rape crisis center for two years. United Press International BURLINGTON — A make-believe "unusual event" at the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant yesterday escalated into a fictional general emergency and state disaster declaration during a regularly scheduled staff drill. False crisis tests plant The participants will be paid a small fee to complete a questionnaire and participate in an optional interview. In the interview, the participants will answer questions similar to those on the questionnair "We're trying to find out the victims' reactions to the event of sexual assault," Gutierres said Tuesday. "We are looking for the relationship between the perceived causes of the event and the subsequent coping." "I have some crisis experience," Gutierres said. "I've worked with victims in the past, and it's something I've been interested in for a long time." The researchers hope to interview 20 victims for the pilot study, which Gutierres said was part of the preparation for a grant application to conduct a statewide study. She said she hoped the pilot study, which began about eight months ago, would be concluded in May so they could apply for the grant this summer. "The purpose of a statewide study is to better understand the phenomenon of the trauma of sexual assault," Guierries said. "Then we can make recommendations to people who have clients who have been sexually assaulted, so they can help people cope." "It's a sensitive issue," Gutierres said. "Some people are reluctant to talk, and it's also hard to get the information that we're doing the study to the people whom it applies to." Although a simulated evacuation was ordered in areas around the atomic plant near Burlington, the Wolf Creek staff brought the make-believe emergency under control by late afternoon. The drill's scenario began as an "unusual event" — the least serious event at an atomic plant — when a fictional plant worker named Joe Scully was injured in a fall. the interviews, they are preparing to talk to the women. Although the two have not begun "I've given a good deal of thought to the nature of the interview," Schoenrade said. Gutierres said the study was part of her research at the University of Kansas and was something she had The worker sustained head injuries, a broken right leg and some radiological contamination. He was reported in satisfactory condition at Ransom Memorial Hospital. Even though the researchers have had only a small response, they said they hoped that more women would come forward. Spokesmen for Kansas Gas & Electric Co., operator of the plant, said the daylong exercise involved fictional incidents at or near the plant and escalated through the various stages of "alert," "site area emergency," and the most serious, "general emergency." WE HAVE NEW GIFT LINES Arriving Weekly we're gearing up for Christmas Now! Layaway Free Gift Wrap ORNAMENTS are being displayed as they arrive Collections 723 Mass. St Gift Store SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! MEL AMIGOS MEXICAN RESTAURANT "50C MUNCHIES" includes: Burgers-Tacos Chili Sundays & Mondays after 5 p.m. 843-4076 "TACOS" Tuesdays & Thursdays $2 All you can Eat. 5-7 p.m. in the Cantina 2600 Iowa BE READY FOR FINALS! Attend the FREE! Wednesday, Dec.4 7-9 p.m. 300 Strong Hall Presented by the Student Assistance Center Preparing for Exams Study Skills Workshop 2 FOR 1 memberships —OR— $10 OFF non-member tanning sessions (as low as $4 per session) EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA * 841-6232 Presented by the Student Assistance Center Of course, the American Express Card will prove to be a great help to you in your career—for travel and for entertaining. And, to entertain your sense, you can use it to buy some new clothes for your vacation or for home. In addition, the Card is also a great way to help you begin to establish your credit history. FOR this is the best way we know to prove it So call 1-800-THE-CARD and student Application sent to you. Or look for one on campus The American Express Card Don't leave school without it™ ALSTAHLER AGENTS TELP 95200 LK 73816 So call 1-800-THE-CARD and ask to have a Spee STL STRONG LAKE CLUB OCT. 24, 2016 0 EVEN BEFORE YOUR NAME IS ON THE DIPLOMA, YOUR NAME COULD BE ON THE AMERICAN EXPRESS CARD. Give Thanks FASHION It's not too long until you'll be walking up to get your degree. But there's something you could get right now that will help you in any walk of life. The American Express Card. That's it. No strings. No gummicks (And even if you don't have a job right now, don't worry. This offer is still good for 12 months after you graduate.) This is a special offer from American Express because, as graduating seniors, we think you're kind of special. In fact, we believe in your future. And Give Flowers Because if you're a senior and you've accepted a $10,000 career-oriented job, you could get the American Express Card. Owens FLOWER SHOP INC. 9th & INDIANA STREETS LAWRENCE, KANSA 66044 75 YEARS HOURS Mon.-Thurs. - 11a.m.-2a.m. Fri.Sat. - 11a.m.-3a.m. Sunday - 11a.m.-1a.m. PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY $1 OFF ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Expires 12-31-85 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ 842-1212 1601 W.23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center EASY AS 1-2-3 PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST • FREE DELIVERY TOASTIES! GLOVES AND MITTS IN WOOLS, LEATHERS, GORETEX AND THINSULATE TO KEEP THOSE DIGITS FLEXIBLE... SUNFLOWER 804MASS. 1. 1984 American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. 10 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 Pain is eased at Med Center By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Chronic pain is a complicated problem with no right or wrong answers, the director of a pain clinic at the University of Kansas Medical Center said last week. The anatomy of pain, where it comes from and how to get rid of it, is much studied but little understood, said Kasumi Arakawa, director of the clinic and an anesthesiologist at the Med Center. Arakawa said that chronic pain, which he defined as pain that lasted for more than six months, might have multile origins and a variety of associated problems. "The problem involves not only suffering and pain, but also emotional distress," he said. Because of the many factors that are involved in chronic pain, he said, health professionals don't agree on the best way to treat it. "For instance, with pneumonia, the treatment is fairly well set. If the bacteria is sensitive to penicillin, probably the only treatment will be penicillin." "But physiology pain is so difficult. I don't think we have any idea for easing it." When Arakawa established the clinic at the Med Center in 1977, it was one of the few in the country. Although there are many pain clinics now, he said, they vary widely, some being headed by anesthesiologists, others by orthopedic surgeons, neurologists or navchiatrists. When Arakawa first sees a patient, who is usually referred to the clinic by another physician, he spends about an hour evaluating the problem and deciding on treatment. Sometimes he will decide that the patient also needs to consult with a neurologist, psychologist, orthopedic surgeon or physical therapist. Occasionally he will recommend acupuncture,he said, although it usually is a last resort because most insurance companies will not pay for it. The primary treatment, however, is talk, Arakawa said. The basic treatment at the clinic consists of an hourlong session once a week for six weeks. Often, Arakawa will give the patient a local anesthetic to temporarily dull the pain. "As anesthesiologists," he said, "we have a rather gifted skill to cut off pain — even temporarily — very well. That will give them hope. "I found out that when pain eases, depression eases too." The initial, although temporary, easing of pain helps put a patient in a more positive mindset, which is part of the battle, he said. "When we repeat the easement of pain, somehow they do very well," he said. "Even if we're not able to cure the pain completely, if we reduce the pain 50 percent, it's easier for them to cope with." Another important aspect of treatment is drug guidance. Arakawa said. Patients go from one physician to another looking for relief of pain, he said, and often they end up with a medicine chest full of drugs. He said the worst drug that physicians prescribed was Valium. "The Valium depresses them more. They are depressed already and they get more depressed. Also, it tends to accumulate and when that happens, the patient becomes more sensitive to pain. "I have a couple of patients I didn't do a thing for but but off those ugly medications." By Susie Bishop Of the Kansan staff 70 years of changing uses Building's history is varied The purposes of many campus buildings have changed during their existence, as years and needs also have changed. One building with a long history of change is the former Oread Training High School, now home of the office of University Relations, situated next to Hilltop Child Development Center. From 1915 to 1950, students in the School of Education remained in the high school setting. They attended school at Oread Training High School, which opened its doors in 1915 to give professional training to prospective high school teachers and administrators. Students in Education taught one hour a day for a semester to obtain teaching practice. Oread High, which changed to University High School in 1941, offered high school students the same curriculum and training as the public high schools did. But the high school students' teachers were students too. Loda Newcomb, retired professor of business, taught岸hardn and typing at University High School in 1942. She also supervised the student-teachers and taught KU business courses. Newcomb said yesterday that the high school students used many of the on-campus facilities, including University classrooms. Gerald Pearson, retired faculty member in continuing education, said he filled in as a part-time principal for the school for one year in 1945. That year, the student-teacher staff and 15 supervisors taught 79 students. He said the school's supervisors were KU faculty members, from the School of Education, and representatives from other University disciplines. "When the students went to gym class, they used the physical education facilities in old Robinson," Pearson said. "When they wanted to do a play they used the theater in old Fraser." But in 1950, after 35 years of service, the doors of the four-year high school closed, because the University couldn't afford the extensive additions that the school needed when enrollment increased dramatically after World War II. Besides the problem of lack of funds, the School of Education began to realize that the concept of the University High School had become more idealistic than realistic. "It turned out there were two kinds of students," said Thomas C. Ryther, University Archives volunteer and retired professor of journalism. "Most were kids of faculty members, and a few kids who weren't getting along where they were." In the successful new program students taught full time for a six week period in Lawrence, Kansas City and Topeka public schools. The building became the new home of the Faculty Club in 1951. Roy A. Roberts, who then was president of the Kansas City Star and Times, purchased the furnishings and equipment for the new faculty club, where members could gather to relax, or eat. The club was dissolved in 1967. The old faculty clubhouse remained empty for a short period while it was being decorated for the new occupant, the Kansas University Endowment Association. The Endowment Association took up residence in the building in 1968. "It was a nice setup for the Endowment Association, but they quickly outrewed it." Rvther said. In 1976, the Endowment Association moved to larger quarters in Youngberg Hall on West Campus, its current home. University Relations moved in when the Endowment Association vacated the building. The Holiday Guy Special Our versions of: Aramis J.H.L. 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Store Sale Ends Wednesday, Nov.27th DISCOUNT CENTER MasterCard VISA AFTER REBATE Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 11 כאשר יוצא החזירה בעץ השניים מודרת ל- WU Juggling tall Steve Mingle/KANSAN Junior varsity cheerleader Kimberley Twiggs, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, and yell leader Art Tusabi, Lawrence freshman, work on adding juggling to their list of stunts. The junior varsity cheerleaders practiced yesterday in Robinson Gymnasium. L McCall's Shoes Put Yourself in our Shoes 829 Mass Downtown Lawrence Est. 1961 You'll flip over Dexter boots. Julie There are boots for dress up. And boots for casual wear. Dexter puts them both together in a dress casual boot for you. It goes to work. Or to play. Or a night on the town. Dress Casual boots. From Dexter. Bootmakers to America. All men's & women's 10 Janie Until Dec. 1st Dexter Expanders to America Hours: Mon.-Sat. McCall's Shoes Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. 9 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Sun. till 5 p.m. By Jill White Of the Kansan staff R Orchestra performs precisely The orchestra performed Liszt's "Les Prehudes," Symphonic Poem No. 3, Bartok's Concerto No. 3 for Piano and Orchestra and Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 5 in E Minor, Opus 44. Several audience members praised the performance for its technical perfection and subtle power. About 850 people attended the Concert Series performance by Hungary's oldest and most prestigious orchestra in Hoch Auditorium. "It's a first-rate orchestra," said Zuohuang Chen, director of the University Symphony Orchestra. "Technically, it's very good, clean and very precise." From Liszt's prelude of life to pianist Jeno Jando's signature piece and a passionate Tchaikovsky finale, the 100-piece Hungarian State Symphony Orchestra performed last night with intense compassion and precision. Adam Fischer, the director, is a Review The slow, soft introduction of the Liszt piece developed gradually to a vigorous ending with cymbal crashes and brass fanfares. Liszt built his work on the 15th of Lamarentine's "Poetic Meditations." Lamartine's theme, mimicked by Liszt, builds on the idea that life is a succession of preludes to death. native of Budapest and is also the conductor of the Vienna Philharmonic State Opera. In 1973, he won the Guido Cantelli International Competition for Young Conductors. The Bartok concerto features pianist Jeno Jando, a 1974 graduate of the Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest, who is making his American debut during this tour with the orchestra. Alice Downs, assistant professor of piano, said, "He plays with such delicacy and such subtle power. The whole orchestra sounded like a chamber group." After the exquisite expressiveness of Jando's performance, the applause prompted an encore. With the flair of a talented artist, Jando played a short version of Bartok's "Ostinato" from the "Mikrokosmos." The final piece, Tchaikovsky's symphony, displayed the most outstanding strengths of the orchestra. Stringed instruments carried the first movement to an intense middle section and decreased gradually to a calmer second movement. The Facts. HP HEWLETT BACKMORE HDCX After the climactic third and fourth movements, the audience assumed the performance was complete, but a surprise encore kept them slightly longer. The encore was a piece by Brahms. A second encore of a Liszt piece escalated the applause. The powerful Hewlett-Packard Series 40 advanced calculators are expandable. Versatile. Reliable. Hard Facts The most recent addition to the family, the HP-41CX, has built-in ■ Timer Module ■ Extended Functions Module ■ Enhanced Text-File Editor ■ And More! Soft Facts Thousands of software programs are available. hp And More! HP-41 SERIES hp HEWLETT PACKARD HP-41 SERIES REG. 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Lutheran Campus Ministru paid for by students with Common Sense 1204 Oread Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m. 843-4948 Vote with Common Sense ❤️ L --- 12 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 By John Williams Of the Kansan staff Toys mav aid language development Toys may keep children out of their parents' hair for a while, and may play an important part in children learning a language, the coordinator of the KU Infant Laboratory says. Marion O'Brien, the coordinator, said yesterday that a study conducted last year by the laboratory in Haworth Hall indicated that certain toys, such as dolls, stimulated better learning environments than other toys, such as trucks. For the study, families were put into a play setting in which they had three stereotypical toys to play with: trucks, dolls and neutral toys, such as tops or figures. The families did not have a choice of which toys to play with. Twenty children and their parents participated in the KU study. All children were 18 to 24 months old "Something unique about the experiment was watching fathers and sons play with dolls, something you would not see in a home," she said. The transcripts of the play sessions have not been analyzed yet, but O'Brien said that it seemed that when trucks were being played with, almost no language was used. Ten percent of the noise in the room consisted of truck-motor sounds simulated by the parents and children. More language was used with dolls, however, including the naming of toys, colors and other objects in the play area, she said. Children generally choose certain toys to play with by 18 months of age, and those choices become wider with age. she said. "Labeling helps children learn language, so it appears that girls playing with dolls have chosen an environment that is more stimulating to develop language," she said. Keith Nagle, St. Louis senior and a research assistant for the study, said that parents also talked slower and varied the pitch of their voice more with the dolls. Children would pay more attention to a voice that varied, compared to a voice that was almost monotone. "Our impression is that the change in stimulus helps in the child's perception," Nagle said. The study's findings cannot be substantiated until information and voice samples are analyzed by the computer in the department of speech- "It's very limited so far," she said. "It's hard to draw big generalizations when you're just beginning." language-hearing: sciences and disorders, O'Brien said. O'Brien said she had no immediate plans to do more studies, but more could be done by moving the study into homes and out of the unfamiliar environment of a small room. "In doing our studies, we need to think about the educational components, so the selection of toys may be an educational factor." She said the experiment was an offshoot of another study to answer questions on whether mothers and fathers talk differently to children when they play. Most experts think that the father gives orders, while the mother gives more suggestions to children. To find differences in the parents' speech, O'Brien examined language to find the number of nouns and verbs used and the length of sentences. "What we got was something unexpected," she said. "There was almost no difference between the way mothers and fathers talked to the children when they were playing." More money needed for state, panel says The Associated Press TOEKA — Income shortfalls, financing cuts, tax increases and exemptions all were discussed yesterday by the Legislative Budget Committee, and a consensus seemed to form that increased revenue will be needed to finance state government in the coming year. Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topeka and chairman of the panel which is composed of legislative leadership, said he was convinced that the state would need more money to pay all its bills in the coming year. He said he formed his opinion after reading recent state reports that indicated that tax-generated revenues would fall $55 million short of original expectations in this fiscal year, which ends June 30, 1986. The report projected that revenues would drop alr-ost $133 million below original expert predictions during the next 18 months. Bunten suggested that lawmakers could sufficiently prop up the ailing general fund with additional revenue by creating a state lottery, allowing additional drilling of natural gas wells in existing fields in southwest Kansas and by closing existing exemptions to the state sales tax. The committee is formulating its final report to be submitted to the 1986 Legislature when it convenes in January. Dedicated endowment trustee dies at 84 By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff On the last day of his life, Riley Burcham displayed the total dedication to the University of Kansas that he consistently had shown over a 40-year span, the executive director of the University of Kansas Alumni Association said yesterday. Mr. Burcham, a former banker and well-known community leader, died Tuesday afternoon at Lawrence Memorial Hospital after suffering an apparent heart attack Mr. Burcham, 84, had been taken to the hospital Tuesday morning after becoming ill at his home, 1624 Stratford Road. "At a time when most people would be thinking only of their own health problems, he was more concerned Fred Williams, the director of the Alumni Association, said he received a message from Mr. Burcham's wife, Alberta, at about 10 a.m. Tuesday. "His wife called at Riley's request," Williams said. "The message was that he had suffered an angina attack and would not be able to attend an alumni development committee meeting Saturday. However, he wanted us to know that we could still count on him doing everything he could in the coming year. On Oct. 4, Mr. Burcham was awarded the Fred Elworth about not being able to keep his commitment to the University." Although he was not a KU graduate, Mr. Burcham was an associate member of the Alumni Association and had been an active supporter of the University since moving to Lawrence in 1943, Williams said. A member of the Kansas University Endowment Association's board of trustees for almost 40 years, Mr. Burcham was chairman of the board's finance committee at the time of his death. He also was a member of the board's audit committee. Medallion, the highest honor the Alumni Association can bestow on an individual. It is awarded for outstanding service to the University. Mr. Burcham was born March 7, 1901, in Fulton. He is survived by his wife, Alberta, of the home, and a son, William C. Burcham, Overland Park. Services will be at 1:30 p.m. Friday at the First Christian Church, 1000 Kentucky St. The Rev. Ron Goodman will officiate. Burial will be at the Memorial Park Cemetery. Lawrence Masonic Lodge No. 6 will conduct graveside services. The family suggests memorials in his name to the Endowment Association or to the First Christian Church. 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KANSAS UNION CLIP AND SAVE Pharmacy Social Welfare Nunemaker Liberal Arts and Science Graduate CLIP AND SAVE 1 Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 Sports University Daily Kansan 13 News Briefs Kansas basketball televised tomorrow Tomorrow night's Kansas- Pepperdine first round Big Apple NIT basketball game in Denver will be televised by the Mizlou sports network, Doug Vance, sports information director, said yesterday. Broadcast of the game will begin at 10:30 p.m. CST, with the game host likely being joined in progress. The game is scheduled to begin at 10 p.m. CST, but it follows a game between Texas-El Paso and Washington Tomorrow's winners will play at 9 p.m. CST Sunday in Denver. The semi-finals of the Big Apple NIT are Nov. 29 and the finals are Dec. 1 both in New York. Hard work goes on The Kansas football team continued to brave the recent cold weather with a one hour, 45 minute workout in Memorial Stadium yesterday in preparation for Saturday's game against Missouri. Kickoff is scheduled for 11:30 am, in Memorial Stadium. The game will be the Big Eight/Raycom Network game of the week, and can be seen locally on Channels 9 and 27. This will be the Jayhawks' fourth television game of the season. Kansas is 1-2 on television this season. The Jayhawks continued scrimmaging yesterday in preparation for the Tigers, as they have done all week. Head coach Mike Gottfried said the Jayhawks were going through one of their harder weeks of game preparation. KU women in Utah Four members of the women's tennis team will begin play today in the Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches Association indoor qualifier tournament in Provo, Utah. Tracy Treps, Christine Parr, Barb Inman and Marie Hibbard will compete in singles. Treps will play with Hibbard, and Parr will pair with Inman for doubles. The singles winner and runner-up and the doubles winners will advance to the national tournament in Houston in February. KU's Mike Wolf has qualified already in singles, and Wolf and Michael Center have qualified in doubles for the national tournament. "This is such a big step for the team," said Treps, who is seeded 12th in the tournament. "If one of us could get there (to the national finals) it would show us that we really do have a good team." From staff and wire reports Pless' glamorous KU career nears end 60 PITTSBURG By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff Defensive back Travis Hardy and linebacker Willie Pless, both seniors, combined to bring down Vanderbilt quarterback Mark Wrache against Vanderbilt on Paul Goodman/KANSAN "Tackle on the play by Willie Pless." Those words will echo through Memorial Stadium for the last time when Kansas plays Missouri at 1:30 a.m. Saturday in the final game of the season for both teams. Pless, who now holds the Big Eight Conference record for career tackles with 618, will finish his collegiate career at Kansas along with 14 other seniors. The seniors include defensive players Travis Hardy, strong safety; defensive end Robert Tucker; and Bill Verchiarella, who plays on special teams. "Losing players like these is hard when you spend so much time with them," head coach Mike Gottfried said Tuesday. "But like anything else in life you have to move on, and I know they will be successful in whatever they do." Pless will be finishing out a banner career as a Jayhawk. In addition to his tack record, he has now gone 28 straight games with at least 10 tackles, and has been named one of the 12 finalists for the Lombardi Award, which is awarded annually to the top lineman in the country. Tuesday, Pless was named to the All-Big Eight Academic team. "I'm just going out and trying to have fun this week," Pless said. "I'm going to relax and just enjoy myself." Part of Pless' fun is his new appearance — a Mr. T haircut. He said it was something he always wanted to do and this week was the perfect time to do it. Gottfried said Kansas could never replace a great player like Pless, but he said the Jayhawks had several good linebackers to take over for Pless next year. Hardy, who is Pless' roommate, said the four years seemed to fly by. and he said didn't think his last game would arrive so quickly. "I wish I could have redshirted my freshman year, so I could play one more year," Hardy said. "But I wouldn't change what I've been through for anything." This year Hardy has had to start at three different positions in the defensive secondary. He has all three of his career interceptions this season along with 56 tackles and two fumble recoveries. foundation for a winning football program at Kansas. He said the senior class had set a "My freshman year we won two games, my sophomore year we won four games, last year we won five games and I am hopeful that this year we will win six," Hardy said. "This program is just going to get better and better. Viechiarella also said the senior group had helped start a winning program. But it was going to take time, and eventually people would see all the hard work pay off, he said. Sept. 14. The two, along with other Kansas seniors, will play their last game with the Jahawks against Missouri at 11:30 a.m. Saturday. Vechiarella, who is listed as a wide receiver, has been limited to special teams play this season. He said he had to make the most out of any opportunity presented to him. Vechiarella has made four tackles on the special teams this season. Tucker, a junior college transfer from Los Angeles City College, chose Kansas over Illinois and several "It's a sad feeling because my football career will be coming to an end, and I know I'll start missing it," Veechiarella said. schools in California. Tucker was converted from tight end to defensive end when he arrived at Kansas last season. Gottfried said the team was in trouble at defensive end and Tucker was the most likely candidate for the job. Tucker has 31 tackles and two quarterback sacks to his credit this season, and he, along with the rest of the seniors, will have one last chance to leave their mark on Kansas football history. Four sign in early period By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas men's basketball team ended the early signing period by receiving two more letters of intent, Kansas head coach Larry Brown said yesterday. The Jayhawks signed Robert Coyne, a 6-foot-8 center from Denver West High School, who had orally committed to Kansas last week. Also signing was 6-9 forward Mark Randall from Cherry Creek High School in Englewood, Calif. Randall averaged 23.8 points, 12.7 rebounds, 5.8 assists and 4.2 steals a game last season. He was selected first team all-state last year off a team that finished 15-10 and was eliminated in the first round of the Class 4A state playoffs. orado. Cherry Creek assistant coach Tom Weston said Randall played center last season but would be moved to forward this year. He is listed as one of the top 30 players in the nation and one of the top five small forwards. Randall was selected high honorable mention and All-Denver Metro by Street and Smith magazine. "I know people like to compare him to Bobby Jones, and the comparison is favorable," Weston said. "He handles the ball extremely well and we'll even have him bring the ball up against the press. He has a quick first step and is an excellent shooter from 15 feet." Randall chose Kansas over Duke. Arizona and Col- Coyne averaged 23 points and nine rebounds a game last season, and was named all-league and all-state. He was also named by Street and Smith to the honorable mention team. West High School head coach Bob Caton said Coyne could play well both inside and outside, but he needed to improve his defense and rebounding. Kansas had four scholarships to offer and the two signings brought the early signing period total to four. Last week the Jayhawks signed Keith Harris, a 6-4 forward from Santa Monica, Calif., High School and Jeff Gueildner, a 6-5½ guard-forward from Charleston, Ill., High School. Yanks' Mattingly named AL's MVP United Press International NEW YORK — Don Mattingly, of the New York Yankees, a slugging first baseman who had a season reminiscent of past Yankee greats such as Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle, yesterday was named the American League's Most Valuable Player by the Baseball Writers Association of America. Mattingly, 24, led the AL in five offensive categories. He received 23 first-place votes and 367 points from 28 members of the BBWAA. two from each AL city, and beat three baselman George Brett of the Kansas City Royals for baseball's most coveted individual honor. Brett received five first-place votes and 274 points. Playing in 159 games, Mattingly led the major leagues in RBI (145) and doubles (48), and topped the AL in total bases (370), gamewinning BRI (21) and extra base hits (86). He also was second in the AL in hits (211), slugging percentage (.567) and multiple-hit games (86). Steve Mingle/KANSAT In addition, he batted .324. HILARY JOHNSON Anthony Rothman, Chicago freshman, hits an underspin backhand. Rothman was playing tennis yesterday on the courts behind Robinson Center. Take a spin UPI picks Jayhawks No.4 United Press International NEW YORK — Michigan, with center Roy Tarpley the deluxe model on its basketball assembly line, yesterday was named the preseason No.1 college team by the UPI Board of Coaches. The Wolverines went 26-4 last season and return all five starters plus a recruiting class deemed one of the best anywhere. Tarpley, a 6-foot-11 senior, has recovered from knee surgery and may be the best center in the country. The 42 coaches on the UPI Board awarded Michigan 19 first-place votes for $586 points in a close decision over Georgia Tech. The Yellow No. 3 went to North Carolina with 9 first-place votes and 529 points. No. 4 was Kansas with 368 points while No. 5 fell to Duke with 1 first-place vote with 385 points. Jackets were No. 2 with 12 first-place votes and 556 points. Georgia Tech features playmaker Mark Price and 7-0 John Salley, North Carolina has center Brad Daugherty and is exceptionally deep, Kansas is powered by Danny Manning on a bruising frontline. Duke boasts an outstanding backcourt with All-American Johnny Dawkins. The merits of the teams will be tested early when the two meet Nov. 30 in the Hall of Fame game at Springfield, Mass. UPI Top 20 First place votes and last year's records in parentheses. (Total points based on 15 points for first place, 14 for second, etc.): | | | | :--- | :--- | | Michigan (18-6) | 586 | | Georgia Tech (12) (7-18) | 556 | | North Carolina (9) (7-19) | 529 | | Kansas (8-6) | 398 | | Texas (8-6) | 398 | | Syracuse (22-9) | 398 | | Illinois (26-9) | 330 | | Georgetown (19-3) | 294 | | Louisiana State (19-10) | 247 | | Utah (22-11) | 247 | | Auburn (22-12) | 206 | | Kentucky (1) (18-13) | 159 | | Notre Dame (21-9) | 163 | | Iowa (10-11) | 143 | | (tie) N.C. State (21-10) | 85 | | Alabama-Birmingham (25-9) | 59 | | Washington (22-10) | 51 | | Nevada Las Vegas (24-9) | 50 | | Delaware (19-10) | 48 | | UCLA (21-12) | 47 | Injury discrepancy apparent This is the last in a series appearing this week dealing with injuries suffered in intramural athletics. By Matt Tidwell Of the Kansan sports staff Recreation Services received 18 reports of injury - serious and minor - from its estimated 11,000 athletes during the 1984-85 school year. But intramural chairmen from some Kansas living groups have said that the number of reported injuries was not representative of the number of actual injuries occurring on intramural fields. They say that many more athletes are injured in intramural sports but do not report their injuries to Rec Services. "I would say we had at least five injuries from all the sports in our house alone last year," said Richard Hayes, Wilmette, Ill., senior and intramural chairman for the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity. Hayes said that none of the five were reported to Ree Services. Hayes, and other intramural officials from various living groups, said that Rec Services either didn't notify them that injuries could be reported or they simply wanted to take care of injuries themselves. men's and one women's living groups, all five intramural chairmen gave estimates as to the number of athletes from their group who were injured in intramural sports during the last school year. In a random sampling of four "There are probably houses that have had that many injuries in a year," said Randy Bryson, Overland Park sophomore and member of Delta Chi. "But those are reported injuries and we never report our injuries. We think there is no reason to report them. There are people in our house who are just as qualified to handle the situation as Ree Services." The total was 20 Although no figures were available for last year, Raydon Robel, K-State's Recreation Services director, said that there were 106 reported injuries at K-State during the 1983-84 intramural season. The discrepancy between reported and actual injuries becomes even more apparent after looking at the situation in Kansas State, which has an intramural system comparable in size to KU. "We keep a very close watch on injuries," said Robel. "I would say that we catch the majority of them." Mary Chappell, KU Rec Services director, said that game officials were instructed to notify the field supervisor if they suspected an athlete had been injured. Supervisors, who are trained in first aid, then are responsible for looking after the injured athlete and officially reporting the injury. Chappell said that athletes were urged to report their injuries but that many simply don't want to be attended to. She also said that the majority of Rec Services injuries were minor and not always easy to spot by officials. "I'm sure there are some (unreported injuries)." she said. "Sometimes injuries are hidden and you don't realize you've been hurt until you get home. Also, some people just don't like to be attended to. They take an 'i' can take care of myself attitude' but we try to watch that very closely." Chappell said that team managers were instructed in manager's meetings and Rec Services literature to report injuries. Still, some participants remain unaware of the policy. "I was injured last year and I can say that nobody at our house is aware that the University has a policy as far as reporting injuries. They never notify us," Hayes said. 0 14 University Dailv Kansan Classified Ads The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 6.25 16-20 2.90 4.25 6.00 9.30 21-25 3.20 4.75 6.75 10.35 For every 5 words add: 30¢ 50¢ 75¢ 1.05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. Classified Display per column inch Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No recoveries allowed in classified display advertisements except for logos. No overtravel allowed in classified display ads. Classified Display ... $4.40 new column inch POLICIES FOUND ADVERTISING IMAGES fund items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period extening three days. These ads can be placed - Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE as 3 words * Words set in m - 2 working days prior to publication * Above rates based on consecutive day insertions * No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement * Advertising classified advertising * Blind ads—also add a $5 service charge * Company all classify ad classified mailed to The University Daily kansas * All advertisements will be required to pay in advance * Tearsheet are not provided for classified or displayed advertisements * Advertising towards monthly earned rate discount * Samples of all mail order items must be submitted ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE or charged at a pretax plus tax. In person or simply by calling the Kauai business office 804-8359. Aspen 801 SUA Travel is going to beautiful Aspen January 4-11 and you can have three. Trip starts on Saturday, January 27. Everything, even lift tickets. Sign up deadline is next week no May. Registration at the SUA of- fice 525 S. Third Avenue. When you just need to talk to someone, you can call or drop by Headquarters by Headaquartzs We're at 1419 Massachusetts. Our number is 841-2345. It's free, confidential, and CLOSE WE NEVER CLOSE Rent*18" Color T. V. $2,98 a month. Smiffy's T. V. 48"轧 bd-342 7513. Mon.- Sat. $1,99 a month. Sun- $2,98 a month. KU=MU Hillel Lox & Bagels Brunch Sun., Nov. 24 12:30 Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Dr. $3 non-members, $2 members Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight 814-40 Smitten 1447 W. 321; 842-431 Mon., Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. DOGS FEATURING at the National Guard Armory 200 Iowa St. (across from the Holidone) $6.00 advance $7.00 day of show For ticket info call Scott (913) 749-0364 MUST BE 19 YEARS OF AGE MUST BE 19 YEARS OF AGE FRIDAY NIGHT Nov. 22 8:00 p.m. **Item VCII:** 2 movies, overnight $18.99. Samsung's TV (1947; W117; dur34; 808g) Mem- *man* $49.99. BE READY FOR FINALS! Attend the Preparing for Exams Study Skills Workshop. Topics covered: time management, memory, reviewing, test taking strategies, anxiety, and more. Free workshop in the Ballroom at Fairmont Hall. FREE! Presented by the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-404-6. News and Business Staff Positions Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall by p. 5.m., Monday, December 2, 1985. 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 age, age, or ancestry. This time please, vote for Todd Cohen for Nominaker Senate so that next week we elect senators by living group. Failed for by candidate who will need to will hear it through the GRAPHIC WINDOW. VIDEOGAPTS OF ACADEMIC SKILL VIEWING (2 hours): 3:10-4:15 *Preparing for:* Foreign Language Study Skills; 3:10-Time Management. FREE! Together to attend at the Student Workshop. ENTERTAINMENT Dance to live fiddle music! Jawhynik Olderine Bardance Company. Make your next party inter- vene. Pre Thanksgiving Party "85" Dance featuring TORCH The hottest band in the midwest and Ken The Master Blaster spinning your favorite sounds Sat. Nov. 23 at the MASTER'S INN 6th & Iowa Ballroom 9 p.m.-3 a.m. Cover Charge Sponsored by: Class Act hair stylists Tom Jones Productions Donny Cameron Jerry Dowdell AWS Promotions Rock Disco Funk FOR RENT AWARD-WINNING 2 BR. Energy Efficient TOWNHOUSE, All appl. Air Condition, W hookup, 5 minute walk to campus. Sublease. Call 749-3290 or 841-0697. Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 107 West 9th. One bedroom furnished, 3rd floor. $225 plus utilities. Lease through 842-830-1433. price could be negotiable 842-830-1433. Are you tired of living in a dorm? Came and live at BERKELEY FLATS, Vacancies available now and at semester. Plan ahead, lease now for next year. 843-2116. By to sublease at Red 603, Abkhamsa Two by 600 plus intitling Cable TV paid Lease with a contract. Available now. Small house, two blocks from bus line. Range, refrigerator, 5200 sqft plus utilities. Deposit and references. 842-3954, evenings, weekends. Cooperative living lovers your expenses while expanding your room. Room available at Rainbow House for $18/month. Call 843-5708 after 5 p.m. to become part of purifying environment Demand for Naimish Hall has never been higher—inure yourself, space more by more and realize how important you are to next semester. Drop by for a tinted today and see our "new look" for yourself. Naimish Hall, 1800 Broadway. Available Jan. 1-3 or 4 bedroom apartment 1 from union sunny remodeled 372 month plus lease Naismith Hall Contracts Available for Spring Semester $100 Pre-Paid 842-4637 Beautiful, Spacious, Mendowbrook apartment for sub-louse. Close to campus. Great view, pool, tennis court, and gymnasium. Efficient one--bedroom apartment to sublease in Cedarwood. $25/month, water paid, low utilities. Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 842-4185. HEATHERWOOD VALLEY; THANKSGIVING SPECIAL, NOVEMBER RENT $850.00 One & Bess apartment with balcony, parking space, apartments have CA, gas heat, DW, PF refr. Energie efficient on bus route. Café 643-494-654 Excellent location one bedroom studio basement apartment equipped kitchen few utilities at 100 ft. of room Efficient one-bedroom apartment to sublease in Cedarwood $24/month water paid, low until May 31. Furniture rooms from $100 with some utilities paid. Two bills from Kansas Unist. No pets. Must substitute SPEACIAL OFFEEI January through May 2 boardroom, 1/1/2 boardroom on or before the closing date. NAISMITH HALL: Spring school openings for male. Security deposit will be paid. Immediate admission only. Nice southeast location: New 2 bedded duplex. Spacious living room with sliding glass door to patio. Eat - in kitchen w/dw, disposal range, refrigerator, laundry room, w/wall to wall carpet. Kitchen immediately, linen closet, 31, 1986, 42nd per month, 1300 E 35th tmr, 842-259. Large one bedroom, gas heat, gas/water paid, $255, or $141-250. Nice Rooms $135.00 Uui. Paid. $42.875 after 5 pice. m. Limited spaces will be available at Naismith Hall next semester. Waiting lists are forming now so don't delay! For more information call or come to Naismith Hall, 1909 Naismith Hall, 843-8599. Non-smoking roommate for spring semester. DupLEX behind. Madowkowrowe MUST SIBLURE. Gatehouse Apartments, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, good location. Available end of semester, lease through May. Ask for Sarah 749-3041 Room in home for young University woman, nice location now, spring semester and on. Need transportation call 843-0368 before 9 a.m. or evening. ROOMS FOR M/F STUDENTS AVAILABLE NOW. Furnished, Share Kitchen, Walk to campus. 140 and Kentucky, $110, $115, $125 plus 1/9 @ 841-200-1700 Room 8. No lease, furnished, all utilities paid, color cable TV, phone, maid service, laundry facilities, kitchen privileges, on KU bus route. Ecole Adm. 843 6611 Rooms for rent on the hill 1/2 to mile from Union. 805 and $12. Call 841-6495. SUBLEASES. 3 bedroom ApL. On Bus Route and Apartments. Apt. 1008-1012. $425-$600. Apartments. Apt. 800-Pilion Ullmith. $425-$600. SUNFLOWER HOUSE. Spring openings, reserve now. 30 students, private rooms; close to campus and golf course. Small house, available now, two blocks from town, refrigerator, $250/month plus unit. Deposit and references: 842-2654, evenings and weekends Spacious, two bedroom furnished housewife for rent close to campus; Includes garage. 1/74 balcony and new carpeting. Very spacious. Also includes Dec. CALL 789-7244, 841-1200 (days) Gena Sublease 3 bedroom furnished apartment, Tangshan Zhuangxi Home close to campus Call office: 010-6547-2899 Sublease through M. Village Square Apts. 2 bedroom, Large kitchen and living room. Nice and quiet. On Our route $25/month. 749-2378 or office. 842-3040. Sublease. Available immediately on bus line. Next to Sanctuary. Phone #862-7255. Subsidy 2 bedroom apartment until May. Option to sublease 2/1 security deposit paid, demand KD 40,000 for KD 100,000. NEW Apartment—Room for 4; Spaces 2 Bedrooms, ;Microphone; Fireplace; Garage 1/2; Baths: Available Location; Campus and residential; Available午夜, I call now 749-2825. Trainer for sublease 1 BR, close to KU. $175/month, low utilities Call nights, 843-8736. Want to live in Naimth 7 Need female roommate for Love 749-4855 MASTERCRAFT offers a completely furnished two bedroom apartment available immediately! We also have subleases on 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms. Call (806) 975-4018 for year end. Kcall 812-1412, 812-1512, or 794-2915. PERSONAL Sublease. Nice big room with bath in b ifroom house. New neighborhood 2 blocks from campus. **ARTHUR:** you've made the past 6 months the happiest of my life. I love you more every day Happiest of Birthday? Love Always, Elizabeth. Besh, Happy 21st Birthday? You are very special DAIRMAN FROM WEST WEST CALLED AT 30 A.M. CALL ME BACK RICK Dear Andrew, Happy 22 birthday habe and thanks for a great year. Love, Miazy. Fun. Here's to the best roommate one could ever have, "for everyone man. Hope you have the best roommate." 2nd Birthday Wilmers, Have had a many more with you. Thank God for Country Club many more with you. Thank God for Country Club Schenkioidesdö—You are my Kartoffelknel, i ich liebe Duck. Hikchucker Tall, slender white male, age 20, with brazen sense of humor and interests in weightlifting, racing, cross-country skiing, and horticulture; vocation, wants to meet attractive young lady for companionship and entertainment. Replies to Xox on Facebook. There was a very wonderful person we all loved so well. Daddy went to Heaven two years ago today, 11-21-83. Mom and us kids him but one of these days, with arms wide open, we will see his smiling face as we walk on that beautiful shore of the sea. There were always but never forgets. Mom and Kids, Lola Whiteitse, Pat McLain, P.S. I’m glad I’m a coal miner’s daughter. 28 YOU ARE NOT ALONE. Lehany灰/peer counselors. For referral call 814 2454 or 864-3011. Sponsored by Headquarters & GLSOK Funded by Student Senate. H7 Herinion 84,000 miles 4 cyl. Auto. 4-dr. F4 Hatchback 62,000 miles 4 cyl. Auto. 4-dr. G3 Hatchback 61,500 miles 4 good condition. 6 $198-$360 Weekly Up/Mailing Circulars? No qoats! Sincerely interested reuph self-addressed envelope? Success, PO Box 470CEG, Woodstock, IL 60098 BUS. PERSONAL Happy 22nd Drew! Love, 电话 MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Times. Aerobics W/Style - Guys-Gals, good workouts sc's weekly: Monday, Wednesday, Thursday evenings & Saturday lessons. Enrol 2 friends Free 4 week session. Tetr 841-6327, Arid 842-9877 THE PERFECT DATE... In our private hot tub! $5.00 off Regular $15.00 Includes FREE The Union's recording of the day's entrees & soups - Optional Movie Rental Include H2 sportswear COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care; confidential assured. Greater area. Call for appointment 913-845-1000 - Stereo Amy Barberchow, 842 1/2 Mass, welcomes all students. Four full-time barbers; regular hair cuts $ 9. Hours: 8 a.m., 5:30 a.m. (Closed Mondays. Broke? Not enough money for colleges You can contact the barber at 612-227-8888 Find out how to get your fair share. For your copy of "A Comprehensive Guide to Financial Aid" send your address, and only call 954-227-8888. International Mail Overland PK.LS 69211 1023 Mass. 749-7471 Optional Movie Rental We Make Ideas Come Alive EUROPEAN CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK All remaining T-shirts $4-$4.75 MATH TUTOR - Bob Meers holds an A. M in math from K.U. where U, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He taught tutoring professors and students in grades 7-12. statistics - 80 per 40 minute session. Call 843-789-6520. Check Us Out reduced prices on some merchandise for that special someone jewelry posters THE MUSEUM SHOP rocks books Museum of Natural History (next to KS Union) Museum of Natural History 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 1-5 Sun. Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and design with speed and reliability. You design it or let our talented artists. 2201 W. 92th (Behind Gibson's) 841-4349. BATTENFELD HALL cordially invites All Alumni and Friends to an FLOAT CONNECTION - 14th E. 8th St. 749-0771 Mastercard and Visa. Hey, want to know something? Vello Sub delivers cables in Atlanta. Open House Hey, want to know something? Yello Sub delivers every night at 8 p.m. @ call 841-3688. GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd Wiedemann 12 pk 3.52 Nov. 20-26 Busch 12 pk 3.98 10 p.m.—7 p.m. on Saturday, November 23 Black Label 12 pk 3.52 Bud Light 6 pk 2.64 Nov. 27-Dec 3 Wiedemann 12 pk 3.52 Michelob 6 pk 2.87 Michelob Light 6 pk 2.87 Black Label 12 pk 3.52 Lowenbrau 6 pk 2.97 Keep Warm with wool top coat, hats, and gloves from The Ft. Shop 725 Mass. 843-6181 OPEN Modeling and theater profile—shooting now Begins in Professionals, call for information CHRISTMAS GIFT LIST Men's Hats & Caps Peradise-Found Hawaiian Shirtz. Shorts. Lana Pants Leather Flight Jackets □ Shirtz, Shorts, Long Pants Wing-tip Shirts Silk Cummerbund Sets Studs & Cuff Links Ladies Hats New & Antique Jewelry Leather, Lace, Fashion Fun Fashion Hosiery Femilet From Denmark 100% Cotton Camisoles Sleep & Exercise Wear Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration visa, f. i.d. and of course, fitness card. The Etc. Shop TM Vintage Formal Wear & Classic Clothing Kent '16" Color $ T . 208.00 a month, Curtis Mallard, 147 W. 712, 042-5734, Sat. 9:30 Mon. 10:30 732 Moss. 843-0611 get your computer's heads on straight. Compete with Alpha-008 Computer Services www.alpha-computer.com Mon.-Sat. 11-5:30; Thurs. until 8 Sun. 12-5 New from California. Foster's Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure. 316-284-7542. PO Box 3052, Wichita, 67201; sent in Monday's KU magazine. KU Reporter. Opportunity for all single girls age (18-22) departimately needing or interested in 800-1000 for next semester, come and ask 9 a11 m. a4 Burge Union Level 3. (Look for opportunity sign.) THE FAR SIDE BLOOM COUNTY 19.47° T. color T V. 828 n 88 m Smarty's T. 1487 W. 842 d 3751-3751 M: sun 9:30 a-m Sun: 9 Say it on a shirt, custom ink screen printing: I always and cap, Shirt strip! By Swelling 16 Soon you will be making a decision; make it with Common Sense. Sewing and Alterations-all kinds, including sweaters. by professional fashion designer Krystyna. 843-697 or 841-583. Keep trying! Soon you will be making a decision; make it with Thousands of R & R Albums -¢2 orres. Also collector items. Lets & Sat sun only. 10 a.m. to m. Quintillus B11. New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all styles music WELL | FRENCH CHIMNEY AND PAIR PRIME BENE GAME FOR A MORE NOW, BUT GLESS I DON'T HAVE TO JUST CHOOSE THE NURSES ARE STILL WORKING. Camera Repair now at One Hour Photo. Southern Hills Malls, 811-795 YOU WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from $75, or sailing at South Padre Island and Daytona Beach from $89. Barry, Sunsuit Tours for more information toll free 1-800-423-6940 or visit www.sunsuitsupportive.TOAY! When your winter break counts. count on Sunsuites! CAN HEAD THE PUBLIC RELATIONS PROGRAM FOR A MAJOR CAMPUS ORGANIZATION! SINGLEES. Results Effective. Join hundreds of preselected quality adults look for since companionship, 1/2 price for women under $6 (have you got a man for you). For in cash or online, see our website. Lawrence is an offspring of New Beginnings video in Kansai City. Hotels are coming to give yourself the best gift ever. Not an Excort Service! Just go with 2nd, with 18th, GUIT; get a FREE membership. SERVICES OFFERED Apply now for Public Relations Chairperson for Student Union Activities by picking up an application at the SUA Office. Deadline for applying is Thurs., Nov. 21 at noon. Five minute interviews will be held that evening beginning at 6 p.m. Haircuts $7, perm $80 at Channels. Contact Chris Mon-Sat at 829-7900. Walk-ins welcome. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lonepine, MD/2126. BIRTHRIGHT-- Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-4821. THEME & THEISM OUTLINEED - enhanced with library RE-SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising. Victor Clark 842-8340 STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1032 Massachusetts, downstairs, all haircuts, $6. No appointment. 1,100 pages. Job no too small or too large. Cure and affordable typing. Judy. 842-7945. 1--1--1-- THIO WORD PROCESSING Experience satisfactory. Reliable. Truth jobs accept Call REPS. TYPING NEVER GLOVE YOU 1-1-1-1-TRIO WORD PROCESSING Experience 1-1-1-1-1-TRIO WORD PROCESSING Experience Job Location: Job location is not provided. Please contact the company directly. If you are interested in a job position at this company, please click on the "GET A QUOTE" button and fill out your information. 24-Hour Typing All day, all night. Resumes. Best quality typing. Best.com quality. 81-500-7363. 81-500-7363. 1-2-3 Dependable, accurate, professional WORD PROCESSING. These papers, papers, A2. professional typing. Term papers, Thes. Dissertations, Rememes, etc. Using IBM Selectric. AAA TYPING/F8-142-192 Glass papers, correspondence, legal briefs, Law review articles typed by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in by 6 p.m. out by 10 p.m. same day A-Z Warehouse/Typeing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc.reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850. AL SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, thesis, term papers. Phone 842-8697 after 5:30. THE WORKDOCTORS - Why pay for typing you can have wordprocessing! 845-3147 Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yr. experience. Phone 842-3190 after 3:30; a80. By GARY LARSON © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate PING THE WOMAN HAS BECOME A TYRANT. SHE'S GIVEN THE ROOT TO ALL OF CHILDREN'S FRIENDS. SHE TROUPS SLIPPERIES AT HUM, SPRINGS ALL HIS MONEY ON CLUTTERS, THOUSHS HIS STEP, MAKES HIM EAT EGGS AND SWINCH DAILY...AND NEVER PRESSES HIM LIKE "BOY GEORGE". WITH SHE PRANCES TO "WHAM!" IN LEFTHAND-SON TIGHTS! QQ! I'll go to bed. by Berke Breathed 6 4 OVERV. I MORE THEN LAST ONE UP! BUT THE SHOCK- WAVES ARE STILL REVERBERATING! 1 Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area 15 Absolutely LETTER PERFECT Word processing, typing and bookkeeping. IBMS/OS-II, 9-M-F. Same day service available 84 Illinois, 843-6181. Accurate, affordable typing through holiday by former Harvard Medical School secretary. Call Nancy 811-1219. All Kind of Typing: GOOD IMPRESSIONS Fast, reasonable, spelling/punctuation errors cor- nective AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing- Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics, Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates 749-1118 CLEAN Fast and Dependable Typing Service Call 841 6048 any time Attention Meadowbrook academy, excellent typifier nearby APA format experience Call Pat. B4-Plus Typing. law papers, resumes, dissertations, 8-bit Plus. law papers, resumes, memory 8-bit Plus or 847-836 or 847-837. p. 11 p.m.午 11 p.m. BREPENDABLE, professional, experienced, JEANETTE SHAFFER—Typing Service. TRANSCRIPTION also, standard cassette tape. 345-8677. DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/ Ftyping, Editing and Graphics, ONE-DAY Service available on shorter student papers (up to 30 papers) from Dommy's mommy's, 847.4888 prior 9 p.m. before plex. *English B.A. TYing or Tutoring Spelling and Grammar corrected, Overnight service. Call **PROFESSIONAL** typist with 15 years experience. Fast, accurate, and reliable Call Peggy after 5 years of experience. QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, applications, Spelling corrected B62-724-310 TRO WORDprocessing CONSISTIENTIOUS TRO Wordprocessing CONSISTIENTIOUS ENVIVERANT will accept rush hours Bc4-821-3111 FYTING PLUS assistance with composition, writing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications,umes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254 **XPERIENCEKED TYPET.** Term papers, theses **MICR Correcting Selective I.** Will correct spelling **MICR Correcting Selective J.** Will correct spelling TOP-NOTCH professional word processing, написи, графические, тезии, letter quality print- ing. WANTED Female Roentle Wanted immediately to share two bedroom agen very quickly turn have female room agen in dormitory conditioning, close to campus and downsit on is bills road 14100, road and halls 8423-796, if you need Female rommate invited for spring semester, powered派level-window, spiral state staircase, and pool area. Classified Ads sample to share two bedroom apartment for prnr semester. Clone to campus 749-5427 Female with 7 year old son needs roommate immediately to share duplex. $150 plus 1/2 utilities. Non-Smoking, Male Roommate for two-bedroom apartment. Move-In January; $150/month/1/2 utilities. Close to campus: 842-1436. After six, Ask for John. Responsible and fun-loving female to share knowledge of the visual view and spaces. On bus route 841, D.C. O. T. student desperately needs female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment in KC for spring semester. No more need to share fantastic house. $135 plus 1/2 utilities. Clearn to campus, near beach, park, shopping center. Roommate to share house. Washer and dryer. your own room, on bus route. 843-1897-3081 SHARE HOUSE, 3 bdm 2 bath, deck, flippe, washer/drier, dishwasher, disposal. Near Westridge and Junkyards Jym. Call 749-8698(wk), 841-1904(hn). Bill Self-disciplined student to motivate and tutor four grade level 10 year old after school. Counselor for students. Wanted: 1 or 2 female roommates. Now or second semester. Beautiful 2 bedding Eddington AmpL EP, Cable (HBO) SHO, on busline B317-847/690 use utilities. Call 443-8527 or 841-4363. Keep away **Wanted:** Female roommate for spring semester. **Location:** Suite 10, hardfield, Middlebrook **Abs. on bus routes:** Wanted—non-snorking female to share a large bedroom apartment. Can move in any way. $150/month. Two people need 1-way to Milwaukee/Ni Chicago for Thanksgiving SharP gas/driving Space available for female at Naimish Hall start- ing spring semester. Call 749-2004. Non-Smoking female roommate to bdrm. apt. Call 843-9269. MISCELLANEOUS Available immediately: Secure, accessible, weatherlight garage close to campus $40/mo. FOR SALE 78 Chevette 2-door hatch back, good for getting around to town. Interior wirl worn. Well Mim. Slim. 7628 FC INTEGRATION: The most compatible of the lowest price. Fully guaranteed. Systems starting at just $450! Hard disk special: 30 MB in- firmware; $250, installed and tested (full year guarantee). Baseball cards and sports nostalgia. Buy, Sell 84-H 210 North Street. Open 103 M-S. 84-W 210 West Street. CARPET 1/5 the price of new, 35,000 square yards to the front. From big Bod's Old Garage 'Tarp Shop' CARPET 35.00 square yards in a rainbow of color and shape. Used in Carpeted Upholstery. 789 New York. #410-285. Comic Books, Playbills, Penthouses, et al. Mac comics, 1-3 Sun - Tue; Sat & Sun 10-5 Mon - Fri Electronic typewriter, 1 year old, $130-Kniseel G19 SCm K14M, Gze binding, 80-Skirt, gutter mount, locks, $23 call-841-6407 by 5 p.m. Keep trying. FOR SALE: 21' Zenn Color Television, Remote Control. Excellent Condition. CHM-1410 - 765 FOR SALE Mountain bike, $200. Sold new for $500. Call Brian. 843-229-295. Fender Jaguar guitar $175.80 best offer. Beginner's drum set, some hardware, make offer. 842-6324 For Sale: 14 X 70 Mobile Home, why throw your money away on rent when you can have equity when you graduate? 2 bdrms, 1 bath home in room or roommates or young family. 1-831-4678. For Sale, Student Season Basketball ticket, call 749-5667, Mary For Sale- Student Basketball Ticket. Best Offer 841-242. Andy. For sale Baird new song D-5 Diskman $190 or bette offer, Call 643-9085. GOVERNMENT HOMES from $(U|repair). Also delinquency tax property. 1-800-657-6897 http://governmenthomes.us.gov KU SEASON BASKETBALL TICKET for sale Call 842-8800 SEASON BASKETBALL TICKET B41 845.386 SKIS for sale. Harden 309's, w/saharon 727 binding, poles, Nordica knots SZ 13, men's. Best wift. Call 811.209 Leave message Stereoreceiver Harman Kardon 300. Mint condition, 1 year old. $900 to do best for 845-601. Student Season BASKETBALL ticket. Call after a兴起. Six keep trying. 842-1496, John Student SEASON BASKETBALL ticket. Call 749-3027 Tired of looking everywhere for QUALITY TIRES & WHEELS at reasonable prices? Well, you don't want to spend all your money on brand names at our every low price (comparable to most brands) but you want a brand out! 180 L. 23rd Place Hauppauge Hall 747-956-3333 Western Civilization Notes. *Note on Sale* Maize soil used in rice. 1. Aa7g9m7. 3. Fn3c6r. Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Mr.zen sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For a Cautionary Note. 3) A Case Study. Analyst of Western Civilization 'available now at Town Clerk, The Jayhawk Bodstore, and VAMAHA Stero Receiver, 50 watts, Digital Quartz; Synthesized Tuner and Digital Expander Collectors Stamp, Mint and used. U.S. C., N.Y., New York, Booth 215. Sun, July 31. New Hampshire, Booth 208. NIKON A1, Lenses. 105 mm F3.8/4200 5mm F4-775 B475 at 864 nm 1998 YAMHA TURTABLE P-300, $140 Call 785-697. Great Christmas Present AUTO SALES 1976 Fiat a 1/9 convertible, Runs well. Leaks Call 814-2580 after 8 p.m. Asking 1595. Email: info@fiat.com 71 Ford Lid, RELIABLE, Runs well. New battery & tires, asking $69. Call 800-234-1290, 12 noon to downtown. 1975 Flat 131, Rebuilt equipment, rune good, $675 or best offer. For info call John 8412-3500. 1978 Mercury Capri, $2,000 miles, one owner, A/C. Starting $3,000. Call 841-2447 after 7 p.m. sharp. Call 841-6380 2 a.m. p. Amis, Ask $159. 1979 Mercury Capri, 52,000 miles, one owner. A/C 1969 Rambler, American. Runs great. Stereo cassette with equalizer. No rust. $400.00 Call. 78 Buck Regal Repair 74,900 lvn AC, PC IB, $2600 Cloth Interior. Cloth Interior. $2600 Magazin Limited 41-756-3750 - rrring GRADS Own a new. Mercury Cougar now and make no payments until after graduation. Applicable on any Ford-Mercury product. Call 843-6697, Ask for Brad Crutchie. 1979 Pontiac Bonneville, excellent condition, two暖 Must sell as soon as possible. Best offer on 20% off 1835 Dodge Coulter Deltace, 4 speed overdrive, A/C, Power Maximum, Great Gas, Great Mileage $3069.84 CAD Mileage $3069.84 CAD 1983 Mazda GLX 2, door, HB, speed 5, FWD, rear defender, highway miles $990. Can't afford both car and school anymore-must sell car as soon as possible. 749-7532 47 Pinto. Priced to sell, in good running condition. Pitto 740 - 289 17 "Ford LTD, Reliable, Wuns well," New Battery, Tires. Asking $56; Call 812-433-1200. 12 "room," Bedroom. LOST/FOUND FOUND 6 - mo. old shearp puppet lake on West Campus Campus Contact Humanite Society or Chris at humanite@utexas.edu FOUND-Now 19. Behind Row Hall-Young men calf Black, White; Call Sara 894 400 days weekday. Found: Gray Striped Tie by Cat found near 91st and Fanny Very Friend. Call 240-670-670 FOUND- Thursday November 14-Calculator in Rm 6209 West Call to identify 7909 Ask for Answer Found. KU all sports basketball ticket in front of Yelu Sub. Please call 841-1733. Lost: Folded, badded, flowered umbrella at 2:40 p.m. Retrieved: Sentimental value at 8:41 a.m. Beward, 841 - 409 before 7 a.m. Lost — Heart Shaped Amethyst Ring with 86 diamonds, at Trobisongym. Please call 864-1451. Lost — Keys near Carruth-O'Leary, Reward, 864-4385 or 863-0929. Rust: rusted umbrella on Wed. Nov. 6 (last physics test). Please call Valerie at 841-177-1277 Lost-brown male dog, white on nose and chest. Wear blue collar. Call 842-9727. Ten Haracatu raincatet, birthday gifts from wife: In leave Blake eve of Wed, 13 Nov. 13 Reward for return to family Babytower needed in my home for all home basketball games. Top pay for support, no equipment. HELP WANTED Delivery Drivers. Need 10 persons for campus delivery. Contact Katrina Barker at 9-522-8762 W. 6th at the Master Inn Parking. Apply 9-522-8762 W. 6th at the Master Inn Parking. Door to door subscription safey/survey, November 26 & 28, 5:30-8:30 a.m. Paid training given from 4:50-3:10 p.m. Nov. 36. Pays $4 hour plus $10 hour for primary and $20-290 Manage- mentary Primary Services EQE Do you enjoy cleaning? You may qualify to be a part of our hard-working team. Call BUCKINGHAM PALACE Housecleaning between 8 am - 9 pm, 842-6284. Large Lawrence law firm taking applications for word processors to work 2-4 hours during evening. Must be non-smoker. Please send resume, resume to 710-352-8766 or have heard of HO to PO Box 66, Layer 9, KS 9040. Enjoy a safe adventure in Boston. Families seek a child-care help. Year commitment. In-depth knowledge of home care. Mother and her baby manage this employment or have her maternity and baby management at 38H Street, Chestnut Hill, MA. 02176 INTERNSHIP OPEN: KANASS RURAL CENTER, a non-profit research, education, and advocacy organization focusing on agricultural, rural development, and community one year full time internship involving research in "Alternative Agriculture" The Feasibility of Transition from Conventional Agriculture" to Sustainable Agriculture $800/mo. send resume and writing sample to M. Fund, Kanatsa Rural Center, 304 Prith, Whalting. Macro Programming. We're looking for someone to do some 1/72 Macro programming for custom software applications. We describe it as an easy job for a good programmer, and then give the job contact Susan Tinkman, KNUC-988-9977. OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, yr, round. Europe. S. A., Amer. Arena, Alla. Fields, 900-300 mo. sightseeing. Free info. Write LC, PO Box 52-KSI Corona Del Mar, CA 92825. NANNIES NEEDED-Midwest agency places line in nannies in all parts of U.S. Many openings January 1. Room, board, $135 and up per week. Carefully screened. 91-823-6521 after 1:30 p.m. Part-time cocktail waitresses needed Thurs., Fri. and Saturdays. apply in person Wed.-Sat. 7-10 noon and Saturdays. apply by Monday. time research assistant position in analytical chemistry requires strong background in general chemistry and good laboratory skills. Duties include the preparation of analytical tests, analysis of bioactive substances and the preparation of technical reports. A bachelor's degree in science or biological sciences is helpful but not required. Salary varies. Pedigree. salary dependent on qualifications Send application letter together with curriculum and description of requirements. Inc., 2006 Constant Avenue, Lawrence, KS 65049. Application deadline is 12/2/22. WRS Laboratories are an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer. STUDENT HELP NEEDED. General labor and skilled trades assistants. Must be able to work 9-12 hours or 1-5 p.m. Contact Colleen Wiens, Stuart K., 840-397-6941, www.stuartkwenn.com, W 184h, 840-397-6941. Request your class schedule. Volunteer Position: Are you interested in heading the public relations program for a major campus organization? Apply now to be the Public Relations Charpisoner for Student Union Activities at University of Illinois. Applications are not on Thursday November 21st. Interviews will be held that same evening beginning at 6 p.m. STUDENT HELP - NEEDED. Clerk Typist available to work half days, either morning 8-12 or 8-14 or afterternoins 1-5, Monday through Friday. Ten key adding machines, math skills and good typing skills. Light Typing. Contact Colleen Wien. Students Housing Maintenance shop. 230 W, 194, 867-3097. KANSAN Wanted-Church Musician, Gospel/Concentrated/Sacred, Student/adult, Interested, call 843-6638 or 841-7107 M-F. Salary commensurate with ability. CHILD CAREBOSHT AREA We have many families looking for loving child care worker. We offer a variety of round trip transportation, Alfene Rose, Childcare Placement Service, 149 Buckminster Rd., Waukee, WI 53208. *female Aide. A.M. 7:30-12:00; P.M. 10-12; weekends also 749-0288 Hiring Today Have 15 positions available for students and housewives for telephone office work. Earn extra Christmas money. Good pay. Send resume to Master's in Hospitality, W.4th at the Master's Suite I12-4. Ask for Job. CLASSIFIEDS Classified Heading. Write ad here: Phone UP TO 50% OFF FALL ITEMS All coats 25 TO 40% OFF Dresses UP TO 50% OFF Fisherman knit sweaters 30% OFF Selected fall sweaters UP TO 30% OFF Jr. tops 20-30% OFF Cotton turtlenecks Req. 19.00 $9.99 THANKSGIVING SALE 711 W.23rd 10-8:30 Mon-Thur 10-6:00 Fri-Sat 1-5:00 Sunday carouse SUA FILMS THE GENIUS LA DOLCE VITA *Frederico Fellini *Marcello Mastroianni *Anita Ekberg —Subtitled— —Subtitled— Tonight 7:30 Computerark Woodruff Aud. ZENITH STUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE Z-100 GEMINI BOARD 841-0094 $1.50 - comprehensive health associates * free pregnancy tests * free abortion services * alternative counseling * gynecology * concussion therapy --phone: 843-1151 Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 SAVE AT IMPORTS • DOMESTICS EXOTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 DOUBLE FEATURE Rent VCR & 2 Movies Overnight #14.49 SMITH $35,000 #34234731 M-9:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Sun-1:5 p.m. Almost 1,000 selections for XXX THE CASTLE TEA ROOM KU Baha'i Club Invites Interested Students and Faculty to Attend Our Meeting Thursday, Nov. 21 7:30 p.m. Oread Room Kansas Union Topic of Discussion Topic of Discussion Equality of Men and Women Featured Speakers: Ed and Marlene Thornton Christmas is Coming! Christmas is Coming! One-of-a-kind authentic jewelry and gifts The original Kenya Book bag $16 jewelry priced from $1 4¢ Copies African Adorned 5 East 7th 818 Mass. Midwest Business Systems, Inc 842-4134 Speed. Computerark Service Knowledge Education At a price that has the competition running scared. *$499 Brother's compact M-1509 136-column dot matrix printer is setting the pace for fast, affordable printing. With a racy 180 cups. Or Near Letter Quality printing at 45 cups. Guess that's why our competition's running scared. And more people like you are running with Brother's new M-1509. It outpaces more expensive printers with a list of refinements you wouldn't expect in this price range. And incredibly quiet operation that keeps your office humming — not clanking — along. brother ZENITH data systems *SF40 sheet-feeder optional. Courtesy discount for students, faculty. Zenith Full Service Center staff,and state employees Malls Shopping Center 711 W. 2nd 841-0094 yello sub delivers 841-3268 Thanks for all of your help with Picaroon! You guys are great! We love you, ADPis Hey Phi Psis: The Arts and Crafts SALE December 4, $ , 6 198 $ Persons interested in selling wares deadline Nov 23 Contact SUA Office 11 uniongallery 11 16 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 21, 1985 WE MAKE SENDING CHRISTMAS PACKAGES - Daily Pickup by UPS SANTA CLAUS'S BOXING CLUB - Convenient Location - Free Parking EASY! - Open 7 Days during Christmas Season Insured PS EXPRESS - Low UPS Rates 2 Locations: PACK & SHIP EXPRESS, INC. 2. Locations: 2449 Iowa St. 609 Vermont St. Lawrence, Ks 842-3413 Overnight Delivery Available 842-3413 Make it a Date at House of Hupei 2500 W.6th mangrove forest DON'T LEAVE SCHOOL WITHOUT IT. Textbooks are funny things. They often sit unwanted in the Bookstore shelves until end-of-the-semester panic sets in. Although it's unfortunate, most fall semester textbooks are returned to the distributors when spring semester books begin arriving. The switch all takes place while you eat Thanksgiving dinner. Don't be a victim of "book-buying procrastination." Buy the books you'll need for finals before you leave for break. KU KUBookstores Kansas Union Level1 for him: prime down jacket with removable vest from Nautica featured with a hudson bay striped sweater from Cricket...the stonewashed pleated corduroy slacks as well as the oxford striped button down shirt are both from Polo by Ralph Lauren. free refreshments on all ku home football games!! Hours: M-T-W-F-Sat. 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. 10:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. Sun. noon - 5 p.m. MISTER GUY 920 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 842-2700 Call the Kansan. Kief's Jazz Sale The classics of Modern Jazz are on OJC .. ORIGINAL LASSE CLASSICS OJC Lps only $3.99 or 4/$15.00 titles like these . . . Dr. CFD .24 Cloudy Clear .28 Rain .30 Clear PAUL GONSALVES Gettin' Together! 图 LARGE SCREEN LUCKY THOMPSON QUARTET Lucky Strikes RED GARLAND TRIO All Kinds of Weather PAT MARTINO EL HUMBRE PAT MARTINO PAT MARTINO El Hombre GENE BLUE GENE GENE AMMONS Blue Gene COLEMAN HAWKINS At Ease with Coleman Hawkins The past, the present and the future of Jazz . . . it's all on Blue Note. it's STANLEY JORDAN MAGIC TOUCH Y MFG $8.98 Kief's $5.99 McCOY & JACKIE TYNER McLEAN ITS ABOUT TIME ITS ABOUT TIME OTB OUT OF THE BLUE MFG $8.98 Kief's $5.99 MFG $8.98 Kief's $5.99 DEXTER GORDON NIGHT AT THE KEYSTONE CARROSE CARALE BURNS RED BOO BOO BOO 2 RECORD SET MFG $11.98 Kief's $8.49 All Blue Note titles are Sale Priced at Kief's Now All Jazz 15% Off Thru Christmas at Kief's KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE 1 SINCE 1889 One thing missing Season records of KU, Mizzou dampen rivalry this season. See page 13. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRIDAY, NOV. 22,1985,VOL. 96,NO. 65 (USPS 650-640) TURKEY Brisk Details page 3. Campus has Common Sense By Bonnie Snyder Of the Kansan staff Common Sense Coalition's presidential and vice presidential candidates grabbed the biggest victory in Student Senate elections history as two days of voting ended last night. David Epstein and Amy Brown were elected student body president and vice president by 1,109 votes. They received 1,601 votes, or 76.5 percent of the ballots cast, according to unofficial results. Their opponents, Milton Scott and Ruth Lichtwardt of the Chrysalis Coalition, received 492 votes. Results are unofficial until the Senate Elections Committee audits campaign spending. Common Sense candidates also won 44 of 58 open Senate seats. Chrysalis candidates took five seats, independents won two and seven seats are unfilled. Some of the unfilled seats will be filled after write-in candidates are confirmed and ties resolved. Fifteen minutes later, there was no 'probable' about it. For Common Sense members, news of the landslide came at 8:45 p.m. when the phone rang at Phi Delta Theta fraternity, 1621 Edgehill Road, and an unofficial source proclaimed a "probable landslide." A house full of Common Sense senators and supporters chanted "Common Sense! Common Sense!" after a phone call from the ballot counting headquarters at the Burge President/vice president RESULTS: Common Sense 1,601 David Epstein, pres Amel Robyn, a.p. Chrysalis 492 Milton Scott, pres. Ruth Lichwardt, v.p. Senate seats ■ Common Sense 44 ■ Chrysalis 5 ■ Independents 2 ■ Undecided/unfilled 7 Union sent corks flying. Source, Student Senate Elections Committee SALVATORE MARITA Common Sense senatorial candidates had to wait about an hour longer than Epstein and Brown before they knew whether to break out the champagne. "I've been stressing out all day," said Stephanie Quincy, victorious candidate for a Nunemaker seat. "My roommate hates me." But no Common Sense candidate waited for results of individual races to start celebrating. They all celebrated with Epstein and Brown. John Lechliter/KANSAN "I'm just so damned happy!" yelled Martie Aaron, even before she found out that she had won a liberal arts and sciences seat. Beer and champagne doused the candidates and soaked the floor soon after the first calls came in. See WINNERS, p. 6, col. 1 Complete elections coverage, p. 6 Chrysalis candidates intend to stay active in campus politics. David Epstein and Amy Brown, new student body president and vice president, clasped hands after learning that their coalition, Common Sense, won in a landslide. Their victory party last night was at Phi Delta Theta fraternity. 1621 Edgehill Road. - Chrysalis candidates intend to stay active in campus politics. - Winners, losers and vote totals of 51 Senate seats listed. - Write in, ties have been seven Senate seats temporarily vacant. Write-ups, we keep seven Senate seats temporarily vacant Wednesday's polling problems weren't repeated yesterday. Students support Epstein, Brown at all six polling places. 8. 5 percent turnout ties Student Senate record for lowest. Request to dismiss players' suit denied By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff OLATHE — The University' motion for dismissal of a lawsuit filed-by two football players was denied yesterday by a Johnson County district judge, leaving the suit unresolved a day before the season's last football game. Because tomorrow's game against the University of Missouri is the last season, it is uncertain whether tailback Lynn Williams and linebacker Dane Griffin will continue their suit against the University. The suit alleges that the players were academically misadvised, which led to their being declared ineligible. Lynn Williams said after practice yesterday that he planned to continue the suit but that he might change his mind over the weekend. An injunction issued Sept. 27 has allowed Williams and Griffin to practice and play in games at the discretion of head football coach Mike Gottfried. The two players were declared academically ineligible Sept. 12 for failing to make satisfactory progress toward a degree. Ed Collister, Griffin's attorney, was not sure what action the players would take. He and J. Stewart McWilliams, Williams' attorney, will have to make a decision whether to continue the suit, he said. Johnson County District Judge Phillip J. Woodward denied the motion for dismissal, filed Oct. 8, by saying there were still unanswered questions in the players' suit. "The thrust of the defendant's motion has missed the point of the lawsuit." Woodworth said. Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, said, "We thought the motion was entirely appropriate and raised the appropriate issues of law." Thomas has until Dec. 6 to file an answer to the players' allegations. Rose Marino, associate general counsel, said in court that the general counsel had addressed the pure legal issues in the players' suit because the University thought the suit could be dismissed on those grounds. "As of this Saturday, the case becomes moot, because there are no more games for the plaintiffs to participate in." Marino said. "That's why it's imperative for the court to decide today or by Saturday whether to dismiss or not." McWilliams called the last three hearings "futile" because he and Collister have had to travel to Olathe to argue the same motion. the players have never said they had a constitutional right to play football, McWilliams said. Marino said the players' lawyers were contending that the players had a constitutional right to play football because due process sprung directly from the Constitution. Judgeship is delayed by senator By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff An objection yesterday by a Delaware senator over judicial appointment procedures has delayed for two weeks a vote on President Reagan's nomination of Deanell Tacha to the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals. The Senate Committee on Judiciary was expected to vote yesterday on the appointment. The committee's vote is needed before Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, can be considered for final approval by the full Senate. Brent Bahler, press secretary for Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan., said yesterday that the delay was caused by a disagreement among Democrats and Republicans over the procedures used to review federal judge nominees. He said Sen. Joseph Biden Jr., D-Del., posted the objection. "He asked that the vote be delayed for one week," Bahler said. The delay, however, will amount to two weeks, Bahler said, because of Congress' Thanksgiving recess. Bahler said several appointments besides Tacha's were delayed. He said any senator had the right to ask the committee to delay action. "We understand that Sen. Biden has nothing against Mrs. Tacha," Bahler said. "She just happened to be in the right place at the wrong time." Peter Smith, Biden's press secretary, also said that the senator's decision had nothing to do with Tacha. Instead, Smith said, the decision dealt with the time it took to review judicial nominees. Smith said the committee had 90 judicial nominees under review. He said that in order to handle the large number of cases, the review time had been shortened. "A review is now taking 24 days," he said. "In the past, before President Reagan was president, the average was 60 days." Laurie Westly, chief counsel to Sen. Paul Simon, D.-III., said Biden's argument had been brought up about three months ago. "The Democrats and the Republicans on the committee had for some time been trying to work out procedures that were workable for all of them," she said. The problem, she said, finally was bad enough that both sides decided to stop and do something. "Finally everyone put their foot down and said, 'No one is moving until we get this straightened out.' " Gottfried will stay put despite hard times KING OF KINGS Despite a season filled with frustrations on and off the field, KU head football coach Mike Gottfred says he has no intentions of coaching game," he said. KANSAN file photo By Jeff Cravens Special to the Kansan "Some guy wrote that I was going to take the Memphis State job," Gottfred said recently. "That is the furthest thing from the truth. Their athletic director came here and asked me to help put together a package for a coach. I recommended Ray Dempsey, a good friend of mine." KU players' academic problems during the past two seasons supposedly have been too much. And after tomorrow, the football team will lose 14 seniors, most of them key performers on a squad currently struggling with a 5-6 record. Then there is Gottfried's history of changing jobs. Notre Dame, USC, Memphis State. Rumors have had Mike Gottfried coaching football at any of these universities next season. The KU head football coach has heard the rumors. All he can do is shake his head. Tomorrow's game against Missouri won't be his last on the sidelines in Memorial Stadium if he has anything to say about it. But Gottfried has heard all the rumors before. Kansas is his third rebuilding job since he took over at Murray State in 1978, followed by the University of Cincinnati in 1981. His contract at KU runs through 1988, and he says he is not about to start a fourth job. "I've been in three tough jobs, and they've taken their toll," Gottfried said. "To go to another college situation would not be in my best interests or the best interests of my family. "When I first came here, I said that the only place I would go would be to the pros, and I "When I first came here, I thought it would take five to seven years. I knew it would be a long job, and that's what I committed myself to. still think that's where I'll end up. But I don't think that time has come yet." Gottrud has had plenty of opportunities to leave. Missouri and Louisville called and wanted to know whether the "football fix-it man" would be interested in a job. He says he also has been offered two jobs as a professional assistant. "I haven't applied for one job since I've been here." Gottfried said. "I think I'll be here to see Kansas go to a bowl game. I've got a long-term contract, and right now I'm thinking about recruiting and how close we were and being a little frustrated. But I know the job is going to get done." He points out that those people always have come to him. Gottfried thinks this way because he always has pushed himself to be a winner. "He's a driver," said Gottfried's brother Joe, athletic director at the University of South Alabama. "If you beat him, he wants to come back and get you the next time. He's that way in everything he does." Gottfried admits it. "From the day I pitched my first ball game or shot my first basket or played my first football game, I felt like that was what you were supposed to do — you're supposed to win," he said. "I've always been competitive." --- Gottfried is no different with his two daughters, Marcy, 13, and Mindy, 14. He often battles Marcy in a game of gin rummy. "People say I ought to let her win, but I'm not going to do that," he said. "She's got to learn like everybody else that she has to play well to win. I'm not going to give her a win. If she beats me, then that bothers me." It is that competitive spirit that thousands of people see in Gottfried on game days. They see him on the sidelines, berating officials, slamming his program to the artificial turf See COACH, back page, col. 1 2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan News Briefs Pact may allow Irish to gain advisory role Newborn gets heart DUBLIN, Ireland — The Irish Parliament yesterday ratified by only 13 votes the historic pact with Britain giving the country an advisory role in Northern Ireland just hours after gunmen opposed to the pact killed a businessman in front of his twin daughters. LOMA LINDA, Calif. — The surgeon who last year transplanted a baboon heart into a baby girl has performed another daring operation by transplanting the heart of one newborn into another but declined to comment yesterday on the child's condition. The operation on the unidentified infant was performed late Wednesday by Surgeon Leonard Bailey at the Loma Linda University Medical Center. South attracts blacks DURHAM, N.C. — More blacks are moving into the South than are leaving the region in one of the most historically and culturally significant migrations since Reconstruction, a new study shows. Job opportunities, desegregation and other factors that contribute to a higher quality of life in the South play a role in bringing blacks back to the region that most of their ancestors left in the late 1800s for the "promised land of the North." Issac Robinson, sociology professor at North Carolina Central University, said. Dancer complains HOUSTON — A "moral and responsible" topless dancer has complained to the city that nightclubs hire dancers to mingle and smooch rather than bump and grind. "The whole thing is immoral," Virginia Schrang, 47, said Wednesday to the city council. "Once I come off the stage, I put my clothes back on and act like a lady," she said. Summit yields no solid accord From Kansan wires United Press International WASHINGTON — Sounding a triumphant note, President Reagan told the American people last night that his "fireside summit" with Mikhail Gorbachev, while short on substantive agreements, gave them "a better understanding" of one another and declared, "That's key to peace. "Yes, this summit was worthwhile for both sides," Reagan told Congress minutes after his return from Europe. "A new realism spawned the summit. The summit itself was a good start. And now our byword must be: steady as she goes." Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 intensive personal diplomacy that marked the first superpower summit in six years, Reagan said his five hours of one-on-one talks with Gorbache reaffirmed fundamental differences but also yielded progress. "I am, as you are, impatient for results," he said. "But goodwill and good hopes do not always yield lasting results. Quick fixes don't fix big problems." He cautioned against expecting immediate results. Back from more than two days of Reagan, whose advisers had taken pains to keep expectations low before the summit, acknowledged Gorbache proved to be "an energetic defender of Soviet policy," but said he had been equally forceful in pressing the Soviet leader on "the great issues of our time" and "expressing our peaceful intentions." The summit produced an agreement for future summits and brought a half-dozen secondary accords to fruition. But the two leaders failed to narrow their wide differences on arms control and reinforced their opposing views on Reagan's Star Wars missile-defense program. "I made clear before the first meeting that no question would be swept aside — no issue buried — just because either side found it uncomfortable or inconvenient," he said. "I brought these questions to the summit and put them before Mr. Gorbachev." The result, Reagan said, was a frank exchange of views that made progress in advancing dialogue on halting the spread of chemical and nuclear weapons, reducing East-West tensions and expanding personal contacts between the American and Soviet people. On the touchy issue of his Strategic Defense Initiative, which has emerged as the major point of contention in the arms talks, Reagan said he welcomed the chance to make his case for why the superpower powers should move away from deterring war through the threat of massive retaliation. House OK's harsher tax for wealthy WASHINGTON—The House Ways and Means Committee approved a new, toughened minimum tax for corporations and the wealthy yesterday and confidently closed in on a complete tax reform bill. United Press International The minimum tax provisions are designed to raise about $36 billion in five years — $7 billion from wealthy individuals and $9 billion from corporations. Committee aides said the plan would crack down on investments in tax shelters and was much tougher than a proposal submitted by President Reagan, which would have raised about $12.5 billion. At least in theory, the alternative minimum tax will prevent wealthy taxpayers and businesses to have so many tax breaks that they avoid paying any taxes or receive refunds. Currently there is a minimum tax, but it allows so many breaks that it is considered ineffective. The committee's plan, in addition to tightening loopholes, would increase the corporate minimum tax rate from 15 percent to 25 percent and the individual minimum tax rate from 20 percent to 25 percent. Because of the complexity of the issue and corresponding political concerns, many tax experts believe it is nearly impossible to write an airtight minimum tax. Kate assaults Florida coast United Press International PANAMA CITY, Fla. — Hurricane Kate made a historic 100-mph assault on Florida's Panhandle yesterday, wrecking homes and businesses, triggering a tornado blitz and plunging cities into howling darkness." Kate's 20-mile-wide eye crossed Florida's coast at 5:45 p.m. EST near the papermill town of Port St. Joe, becoming the first November hurricane since 1935 to strike the U.S. mainland. At least 100,000 have fled the late-season storm, which killed 10 people in a Tuesday raking of Cuba. Kate spawned at least nine tornadoes in Bay, Calhoun and Washington counties. The late-season storm's shrieking winds and pounding tides crumbled beachfront homes and businesses, uprooted trees, undermined highways and tore boats from their moorings like toys. Apalachicola's 100-foot water tower fell within minutes of the storm's landfall. State Emergency Management spokesman Jon Peck said Kate's primary damage was along 80 miles of coast between Panama City and Carrabelle. core winds began pounding Panhandle resorts and fishing villages about an hour before the eye crossed the coast. "What you worry about is what happens before the eye. It's the inner 50-mile core where all the action is." said National Hurricane Center director Neil Frank. "It's like the world is coming to an end right before your eyes," said Annie Laurie Rivers, the wife of Apalachicola's civil defense director. "Phone booths are flying around like balsa wood. We have already lost the water tower." the storm's deadly 50-mile inner 2 sentenced in Greenpeace attack United Press International AUCKLAND, New Zealand — Two French secret service agents were sentenced today to 10 years in prison for manslaughter in the bombing of the Greenpeace protest ship Rainbow Warrior. Major Alain Mafart, 34, and Captain Dominique Prierur, 36, who faced possible life sentences, pleaded for leniency in the New Zealand High Court, and received the lesser sentences. The French agents pleaded guilty three weeks ago to charges of manslaughter and willful damage in the July 10 mine attack on the Rainbow Warrior as it was moored in Auckland Harbor. tached to the hull of the 419-ton former Scottish fishing trawler killed Greenpeace photographer, Fernando Pereira, 33. Tight security was mounted around the courthouse and in the courtroom of New Zealand Chief Justice Sir Ronald Davison before the sentencing. The explosion of the two mines at The Rainbow Warrior was sunk as it prepared to lead a fistilla to protest French nuclear testing about 3,000 miles northeast of Auckland. Under New Zealand's law, a manslaughter conviction carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. agents would receive a light sentence. Prime Minister David Lange has denied persistent speculation that New Zealand and France secretly worked out a deal under which the The speculation heightened last week when New Zealand's minister of overseas trade, Mike Moore, refused to tell Parliament whether he had discussed the agents' future with French ministers during a recent trade visit to Paris. French lawyer Daniel LaRiveire returned to New Zealand earlier this week for the sentencing of his clients, who will be represented in court by New Zealand defense attorney Gerard Curry. Curry was expected to plea for leniency for his clients, pointing out that the agents had already spent five months in New Zealand prisons awaiting the outcome of the case, court sources said. Farm aid House bill approved WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration yesterday renewed its opposition to an immediate federal bailout of the ailing Farm Credit System, but welcomed parts of a House bill to reorganize the nation's largest farm lender. The Associated Press Officials of the Treasury and Agriculture departments reaffirmed the administration's position that reforms of the FCS are needed before federal rescue money can be considered. "The system does not now need the government's financial support in any fashion," Charles Sethness, an assistant treasury secretary, said. Donald Wilkinson, governor of the Farm Credit Administration, which oversees the farmer-owned lending system, embraced the legislation even though financial aid provisions do not guarantee the up to $6 billion that is needed to keep it afloat over the next three years. Their remarks came during hearings on legislation introduced Wednesday by a bipartisan group of farm-state lawmakers to boost the faltering FCS, a network of 37 cooperatively owned banks that holds about a third of the nation's $214 billion agricultural debt. Drawing objections from Sethness and Frank Naylor, an under secretary of agriculture, was a provision in the legislation for a backup line of federal credit for the FCS. Any amount of money could be provided at the discretion of the Treasury secretary if it was found necessary to protect the financial stability of the farm lending system. When the bill was first unveiled, it provided for up to $3 billion in federal aid. That was changed before it was introduced to provide the administration with complete discretion to determine the amounts of aid. Although Naylor recommended the committee approve the legislation without the financial assistance provision, he made it clear that the administration's opposition to an immediate FCS bailout does not eliminate the possibility of such aid later if it is needed to avert a collapse of the lending system. CHECKERS PIZZA Weekend Night Owl Special! Checker's Night Owl Special—Friday & Saturday 10 p.m.-3 a.m. only. 2 LARGE PIZZAS (1-Topping) 6-PACK OF SOFT DRINK All For $9.99 Delivery • Carry Out • Dine In 2214 Yale Hours Sunday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. 841-8010 Help us celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday season with our... ANNUAL CLOTHING TRADE-IN SALE!! The sale begins Sat., Nov. 23rd and continues through Sun., Dec.1st. How many times have you wished that you could trade-in worn out or out-of-style clothing on something new? Well, this week you can...come in and TRADE-IN your old clothing and outerwear for new, and get big discounts on fresh, exciting items from our regular stock. Some selected items are withheld from this sale. 1980 SUITS Trade-in value $50.00 SPORT COATS Trade-in value $40.00 LINED JACKETS Trade-in value $30,00 ALL WEATHER & TRENCH COATS Trade-in value $40.00 DRESS TROUSERS Trade-in value $10.00 LIGHT JACKETS Trade-in value $20.00 A BARACUTA jacket FREE with purchase of BARACUTA coat "Trade-in value" means you will receive a direct reduction of that amount on your purchase of the new item listed. One for one trade. Clothing traded will be donated to the Salvation Army and the Plymouth Thrift Shop. WHITENIGHT'S the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5785 Come on in...this event is great fun and you help others by putting your used clothing back into circulation...Alterations extra at cost. Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 Campus/Area 3 University Daily Kansan Court files charges against KU gridder News Briefs Misdemeanor charges of disorderly conduct, battery of a police officer and obstruction of the legal process were filed Tuesday in Douglas County District Court against Timothy M. O'Neal, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., sophomore and a walk-on with the KU football team. A 21-year-old Lawrence woman was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital Wednesday after an apparent overdose of an unidentified drug, Lawrence police said yesterday. A hospital spokesman said she was released yesterday. A date for a jury trial will be set at 11 a.m. on Dec. 5. Police said the woman told them she had smoked a marijuana cigarette. Drug abuse inferred After the woman returned home from a visit with a friend and became sick, her roommate called police and an ambulance. O'Neal was arrested Nov. 9 outside the Jazzhaus, 9261 Massachusetts St., after he allegedly caused a disturbance then refused to give police his name, resisted being handcuffed, and pushed an officer twice, once into the side of a doorway. O'Neal was booked into jail on Nov. 9 and bail was set at $1,750, but he was released on his own recognition. Trophy on the line Police said no charges had been filed in connection with the incident. The Ninth Annual Deaner Cup, named for the late KU trainer Dean Nezmith, will be up for grabs at 1:30 p.m. Sunday in Memorial Stadium. The competition pits KU sports trainers against KU football managers in a game of touch football played by eight-man National Collegiate Athletic Association rules. The game will be refereed by senior football players. The managers' team has a 7-1 lead in the series Food drive planned The stadium will be open for spectators. The senior honor society, Mortar Board, has planned a Thanksgiving food drive to be conducted at the KU-Missouri football game Saturday at Memorial Stadium. The group asks that those attending the game bring cans of food to be collected at stadium entrances. The donations will be given to the Emergency Services Council for distribution in Lawrence at Thanksgiving. Bringing a can of food is not con- sidered as admission to the game. Weather Today will be mostly sunny, with highs around 40. Winds will be variable at 5 to 10 mph. The sky will become increasingly cloudy tonight. Lows will be around 20. Tomorrow will be sunny and cold, with highs around 30. From staff and wire reports. Dismissal of charges sought By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Members of the KU Committee on South Africa asked during a meeting yesterday that administrators drop charges against five anti-aparthief protesters arrested Nov. 4 in Chancellor Gene A. Budig's Strong Hall suite. The five are charged with interfering with the conduct of public business in a public place, a Class A misdemeanor. They pleaded not guilty to the charges Nov. 12 at a hearing in Douglas County District Court. Yesterday's discussion was the second formal meeting between students opposed to apartheid and two administrators and a faculty member appointed by Budig. Representatives from the Black Student Union also attended. As in the first meeting earlier this month, the group failed to agree on a subject for their discussions. At the first meeting, members of the KU Committee on South Africa said they wanted to discuss divestment by the Kansas University Endowment Association. The administrators and faculty member said they wanted to discuss educational activities. Members of the KU Committee on South Africa said the charges against the five protesters should be dropped so they could work with the administration to establish conversation between the University and the Endowment Association on divestment. Protesters have been struggling to convince the Endowment Association to divest from companies doing business in South Africa. In addition to this proposal, the members outlined three other proposals during the 12-hour meeting. The KU Committee on South Africa will present the proposals in writing to the administration Monday, Heather Cusick, Salina junior and a member of the Committee on South Africa, said. The proposals discuss the relationship between the Committee on South Africa and the University and problems the committee faces, Cusick said. David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said he would not comment on the proposals until he read what the members of the KU Committee on South Africa formally proposed. Ambler said yesterday's meeting was frank. "I think that whenever you're talking, something is accomplished." he said. In addition to the proposal to drop charges, Cusick said, another proposal asks Budig to call for discussion between the University and the Endowment Association on divestment in light of Attorney General Robert Stephan's recent interpretation of a state law regulating investments. In that ruling, Stephan said divestment in companies doing business in South Africa was not The other two proposals deal with protesters being photographed by KU police during their demonstrations and concerns of committee members that information about their political activities should not be kept by the University or the Endowment Association. "Competition is going to be the key word as we look toward the next legislative session." Gov. John Carlifn said yesterday, referring to the tight budget looming for Kansas next fiscal year. Carlifn spoke in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Universities face cuts, Carlin says By Dave Silverman Of the Kansan staff Gov. John Carlin brought his budget campaign to KU yesterday emphasizing stiff competition for scarce state funds and the importance of education in the economic future of Kansas. Carlin spoke to about 150 faculty and students in woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union as part of the University Senate会议. "Competition is going to be the key word as we look toward the next legislative session." Carlin said. "The question, in terms of competition for dollars, will come down to one significant issue. Will we, as a state, understand and appreciate the difference between spending tax dollars and investing tax dollars?" Earlier this month the state's budget outlook for 1987 worsened when the estimate for state general funds over the next two years was cut by $132.6 million. For agencies that receive state funds, the decrease has meant significant budget cuts. "It's a competitive situation that we face. There are great demands in many areas with, quite frankly, very limited resources." Carlin said substantial cuts in the Board of Regents budget, announced last week by the state's budget officer, were a reflection of the economic realities the state faced. "The budget director's responsibility is to live within the resources available." Carlin said. "He is communicating, by his cuts, the facts of life. He's not any more supportive of those cuts than I am. But he cannot recommend dollars for higher education that do not exist." He said that education was a priority for the state and that he would emphasize that point to the Kansas Legislature. Carlin said he hoped his investment theme for the allocation of state money would impress legislators to look toward the long-term effects of next year's budget. Education is the principal responsibility of state government," Carlin said. "It represents two-thirds of the budget." A final budget proposal for fiscal year 1987 would be presented within the next two weeks, Carlin said. He would not reveal the elements of his proposed budget or whether it would include a revenue generating device, such as a tax increase. Chancellor Gene A. Budig attended the Senate meeting and said that Carlin's message was an encouraging one. "I commend the governor," Budig said. "He wants the state to invest in the future. I'm confident he will attempt to be helpful towards education, budgetarily." Budig said speculation on Carlin's intentions for the Regents 1987 budget was premature. "There is no doubt that he is receptive," Budig said. "That is apparent. We must emphasize the investment aspect of the governor's message." Garbage heaps offer treasures By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff A civilization often is measured by the quality of its achievements. Perhaps a study of what it casts aside might be just as good as a yardstick. The items that Lawrence sanitation workers salvage regularly from the city's garbage could fill a Christmas list that would bring tears to a shopper's eyes. "We find all kinds of things for our homes." Wendy Reed, an employee of the sanitation department, said Tuesday. Last week, Reed rescued a beanbag chair from the 805 tons of garbage that sanitation workers had removed from Lawrence homes and businesses. However, discarded furniture is just the tip of the garbage heap of treasures that sanitation workers find. and live ammunition are among the surprises sanitation workers encounter among the garbage. "One man's junk is another man's treasure," David Pentil, Lawrence, said yesterday. "That's what I've always heard Televisions and telephones, radios and dishwashers, jewelry, bicycles, tools and chain saws, wads of cash "You would be surprised at what people throw away." Pentlin has been a sanitation worker for about five years. "It took my toes in there and just cut them off," he said. Sanitation workers also must "I found a $40 Mickey Mouse phone." Crane said, "I plugged it in and it works." The sanitation business seems to have all the elements for a 1930s adventure serial except Flash Gordon or a beautiful woman in peril. Danger a plenty lurks in the heaps of garbage along with buried treasure. Crane stooped over and bent his left tennis shoe up into a nearly perfect right angle. His foot was caught in the jaws of a garbage truck's compactor one day. dodge the early morning rush-hour hordes securing jobs and classes "You've really got to watch, Pentlin said. "When people are going to work, they just go to work." Sanitation workers also must Sanitation workers don't need calendars to mark the changing of seasons. They just watch the garbage. When the student exodus from campus begins each May, many students cast items aside to lighten their loads. Students sometimes toss mattresses, televisions, radios and cameras onto the rubbish heap, he said. "I got one 35-millimeter camera with a zoom lens on it," said Ivan Ray. Lawrence sanitation worker. The summer brings tons and tons of grass clippings and quite a few dead fish. Apparently most of the city's fishermen live on the north and east sides of Lawrence. "out on the west side of town, you don't run into any fish," said Sonny Tarpy, sanitation supervisor. Christmas tree. he said. Many electrical appliances are tossed on the garbage heap with the "I got a dishwasher out there that only cost $25 to fix up," said Jim Pentil, sanitation supervisor and brother of David. "I got a stove that didn't cost me anything, and it works." Crane recently found a video cassette recorder with a broken "stop" button. It will cost $40 to fix, he said. One day a worker found a purse containing $500 in cash. "We find quite a bit of money," Tarpy said. Such finds are reported to police, he said. Occasionally someone throws something valuable away by mistake. When that happens, the sanitation office tells the landfill operator, and the truck that picked up the item unloads its offal burden away from the other garbage. The customer sifts through the day's haul for the lost item. "Some of them find it, and some of them don't." Tarpy said. By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff Fraternity volunteers take brand Voluntarily branding a fraternity's symbol into the skin of members is a tradition for at least two black fraternities at the University of Kansas. Omega Psi Phi and Kappa Alpha Psi both perform the branding on members that request it, according to the presidents of those fraternities. Terrence Anderson, Kansas City, Kan., junior and president of Omega Psi Phi, said yesterday that the majority of the 12 men in his fraternity wore the horseshoe-shaped Omega brand, although there was no pressure to do so. Anderson said he decided not to get the brand for the same reason he wouldn't get a tattoo. "It's just a matter of personal preference," he said. "Anyone can choose to have one or not to." Stanley Diggs, St. Louis sophomore and a member of Omega Psi Phi, said he was branded after he pledged the fraternity. "It's not something I want to have on my body for the rest of my life," he said. "If you don't have it, it doesn't mean you're not part of the fraternity." "I decided that after all the stuff I went through to get into the fraternity, I wanted something to show for it." He said none of the five other people who were initiated with him chose to receive the brand. "There wasn't any pressure," he said. "It was stricty my own judgment. Even when I said I wanted to do it, they tried to talk me out of it. But it was something I wanted." Clifford Franklin, Lawrence junior and president of Kappa Alpha Psi, said that a few members of his fraternity wore brands. But, he said, "It's not the norm. I think it's more popular in the South." Although there is no certain ceremony that accompanies branding, Anderson said, only certain members of Omega Psi Phi can administer it. Those members know how to do it properly and take specific precautions so someone won't be injured. A member slaps the spot to be branded for about ten minutes and ices it for about 20, Diggs said. "I felt a little pain, like a pinch. It feels like a tight rubber band on your arm." "You take the branding iron and sterilize it," he said, "and you use peroxide on it afterwards, about three times a day. Diggs' brand, which is about three inches high, is on his right bicep. Others brand their legs, chests, hips or calves. He said that although all the brands were of the Greek letter Omega, some members added their own touch, such as a lightning bolt or a number in the middle. The tradition, which also occurs at Kansas State University and Wichita State University, dates back to 1911, Diggs said. Veryl Switzer, assistant vice president of minority affairs at Kansas Sate University, said he was branded a member of Kappa Alpha Psi at KU in 1951. "I was branded in Lawrence because we didn't have a branding iron at K-State then," he said. "It's been going on for years." The Associated Press supplied some information for this story. NATURAL WAY We believe that natural fiber clothing is more comfortable and healthier than synthetic clothing. Let your body breath! NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING We believe our customers are unique and our greatest asset in bringing quality clothes to Lawrence. We believe buying the finest quality is always the least expensive. Cotton, wool, and silk designs, and hand-made sweaters from around the world at reasonable prices make us unique. --- UNIQUE GIFTS & EXOTIC JEWELRY SUNDAY HOURS 12-5 820 Mass. 841-0100 Silk Cotton Wool By Popular Demand: What was great, now is even greater! NEW FULL OUNCE SHOTS We are serving the BEEFIEST DRINKS in town. Try our new drinks... you'll say: WOW! the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843 0540 KU BIG BROTHER BIG SISTER PROGRAM WE NEED VOLUNTEERS... WE NEED YOU! JEFF 749-2784 JOLANE 749-0625 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A dubious glamour drug Though not as easily accessible as beer, the costly glitter drug — cocaine — is leaving its trail in Lawrence. An unidentified KU student who puts himself through college by dealing cocaine estimates the number of Lawrence users at between 3,000 and 4,000. Besides students, he said, local users include members of the Lawrence business community, KU administrators and staff members. Dubbed as the drug that "in people" use, cocaine has become the status symbol of the '80s. A heavy user's habit costs between $35,000 and $50,000 a year. Users too often barter with sex or resort to selling drugs or stealing to obtain money for their fix. Some parents unknowingly finance their children's cocaine habits with money they send to cover college expenses. Users find themselves wallowing in debt as they borrow money to support their habit. In addition to the financial corrosion that results from heavy cocaine use, one local drug dependency counselor says it also causes rapid physical and emotional deterioration. Cocaine use is not a harmless game players can casually walk away from. Cocaine is against the law. Despite the immediate thrill, cocaine use can create a strong psychological dependency that leaves heavy users to cope with symptoms of schizophrenia. This week a former KU student was arrested and charged with cocaine distribution. In another case, more than 30 people across the state were indicted with cocaine possession or distribution. Cocaine use may be a sign of status and wealth. But the dubious glamour is not worth any of the risks. Pulling the right strings What hours of pleading by Athletic Department officials in a Michigan courtroom and on the telephone couldn't do, a snap of a television network's fingers did last week. The University of Kansas will play the University of Louisville in basketball this season. And KU's game with the University of Detroit won't suffer because of it. KU's date with Rider College is another story. But don't pity any of the 3,050 students at the small New Jersey school just because their basketball Broncs won't match prowess this winter with the Jayhawks, ranked in almost everybody's preseason top 10. Soon after the game was canceled, Rider officials were wiping their tears with a hefty check from NBC-TV. How much the KU-Louisville game was worth to NBC, the world may never know. Network officials refused to say what they paid Rider to drop KU. But students, faculty and alumni at three universities saw their basketball teams' schedules hang in limbo for weeks as NBC jockeyed to set up the dreamy KU-Louisville match. Doubtless, for most KU, Louisville and Detroit fans, the wait was worth it. And indeed, no losers appear left in the wake of NBC's ploy. But the episode clearly showed who's pulling the strings these days in major college athletics. Community college glut The problem with higher education in Kansas is not that it spends too little for its colleges and universities. The problem is that it pays for too many schools. Nowhere is this more evident than in the southeast corner of the state. One county — Montgomery One county has boroughs — supports two community colleges, one in Independence and one in Coffeyville. Neighboring Labette County has a community college in Parsons, 30 miles from Independence. The three schools have discussed merging since last year, but those discussions stalled last week mainly because of opposition from Independence and Coffeville. The two Montgomery County schools are worried that merger talks might spark a battle over money, particularly during a year in which the state faces a painful shortfall of revenue. State budget makers are sharpening their axes, and officials don't wish to put their schools on the block. Although these officials are worried about how the budget pie is divided, the state needs to ask whether all the schools should be at the table. Kansas can be found consistently near the bottom of the rankings for teacher pay. But it stays near the top of the list for the amount it spends, per person, for higher education. The reason is too many schools and too many duplicated programs. Community colleges are not themselves the problem. They play an important role in the state's system of higher education. The community colleges offer courses to many who can't attend one of the four-year state universities because of jobs or other commitments. But the programs offered at Independence and Coffeyville Community Colleges are not so different that the state would not find savings in a merger. Bring in the Labette County school, and the savings could be substantial. Officials at Labette have developed a merger plan. If legislators fail to consider the plan, the state will be forced to stretch an already thin budget to feed largely unnecessary mouths. Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager Editor John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMullen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sale Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.** **GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 113 Stauffer-Flink Hall. The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Fulton, Kan., 66045, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and final periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., 66044. In Douglass City, mail subscriptions cost $15 for six months and $27 a month. Students are required to pay a student. Student subscriptions cost $14 and are held through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045. Three little words: 'I'll kill you' I just glanced through a new book about the late Murray "the Camel" Humphrey, a prominent Chicago gangster with whom I once had a brief conversation as he was coming out of a courtroom. I said, "Murray, can I ask you about the . . ." And he said. "Bug off, punk." When I got to the part of the book that described Humphrey as a financial and political wizard, and told how his genius had led to the successful expansion of the Crime Syndicate, I passed the book on to the literary scrutiny it deserved — the wastebasket. The authors aren't content with appreciating these men for the rare quality that brought them great financial success: their willingness to maim, maul and kill. That's the trouble with most of the writing and reporting that been done about people like Humphrey, Al Capone and the other names in organized crime. Instead, they portray them as men who are really not much different from other successful businessmen. And they often give them titles like "chairman of the board," "operating director" and so on. But all you have to do is follow the dying confessions of Roy Williams, the former president of the Teamsters union who is squealing to stay out of prison, and you'll see that it's never been executive skills that made the mugs successful. But there's nothing to that. Any sharp CPA or lawyer can structure a deal if all the parties are willing. Mike Royko Chicago Tribune Oh, they were involved in payoffs, kickbacks, rigged union votes, huge loans from the Teamsters' pension funds and other deals that sounded sophisticated. And that secret can be described in three little words: "I'll kill you." It's persuading everybody to be willing that's the secret of the mugs' success. When you think about it, the willingness to say those words and the sense of purpose to follow them up can give a person one heck of a business advantage. If you're a salesman, you have to depend on your charm, glibness, knowledge of product, energy, powers of persuasion and sense of timing to close a deal. And you still might not make it. How much simpler to say: If you're a businessman, you probably have competition. To beat your competitors, you might have to improve the product, think of new and "I don't think so. "I'll kill you." better-marketing strategies, research and develop, innovate, expand. And even then, they might outdo you. But Cerones and Accardos and the others don't bother with all that. Somebody wants to compete and they say: "Find another line of work." "I'll kill you." "Come to think of it, I'm due for a midlife career change." If you're in business, you might have to deal with people who don't pay their bills or fulfill agreements. So you have to nag them, deal with collection agencies, or take them to court. Not these guys. They just say: "My check is in the mail." "I'll kill you." "Let's go to the bank." When there's a corporate takeover attempt, we see proxy fights, lawsuits, buy-outs, buy-backs and all the other strategies. But when Jimmy Hoffa decided that he was going to come out of retirement and try a takeover of the Teamsters, they just said the three little words. Then did it. Disgruntled or unreliable employees are a chronic problem for corporations. To cope, the corporations hire personnel experts and psychologists, and pipe in the sound of tropical rain. When Allen Dorfman became an unreliable employee, his associates didn't bother with personnel directors or psychologists. They sent in the guys who wear ski masks in the summer. And how else could they be expected to do business? That's the way they learned it. Businessmen think in terms of hedges against inflation, hedges against shortages, hedges against inventory. Most of them came out of the West Side of Chicago, and as mere lads developed an appreciation for the law of supply and demand. If you had a supply of something they wanted, they put a gun to your ribs and demanded it. When these guys speak of hedges, they mean some foliage next to a driveway from which a shotgun can be fired. So, don't be taken in when you read about the business acumen and financial wizardry of that crowd. Just remember what the Chicago police captain said when he was approached by an economics student who intended to do a deep, scholarly study on how the mob achieved its wealth and power. Student decries five-year program He asked the police captain for sug gestions on where to start his research. Then the teacher popped the question: "How do you like the five-year program?" He told him: "A gun shop. I recently had an interesting conversation with a cooperating teacher in my Curriculum and Instruction 320 class observation. I was sitting in the Lawrence High School lounge before I had to give that ob-sc terrifying first lecture to a class of juniors. Gulp. Shall I speak the truth? I said, "are you sure?" I said She didn't look at me funny or ask me why. Another teacher in the lounge jumped right in and said, BROOKING 1985-GREYWOOD TIME-DYNAMICS TEACHER LICENCING TEST (NO TALKING!) YOU HAVE FIFTY MINUTES...ANY QUESTIONS? THIS FIRST ONE IS 'N-A-M-E',FOLLOWED BY A BLANK...IS THIS A 'TRUE-OR-FALSE' QUESTION?... Michael Mills Guest columnist --to further the quality of teacher's education. I am very sympathetic toward your feelings and I will assist you any way that I can." "Really, how many times do they tell you how to make up a lesson plan?" I started taking off my shoes to count. And so the conversation went between the three of us, all complaining and moaning about the program, each of us telling our particular horror story. I was struck by the fact that I was the only one present who was in the five-year program. These two teachers went to KU, but before the School of Education switched to its five-year program. "Oh, they have been having trouble ever since we've been there," one of them said. Some of you might think that it's unprofessional for me to be spewing "louge gossip" all over the Kansan, but the truth is that the five-year education program at KU is a mess. Kaput, Silly. Everyone knows and admits it, including some of my teachers. I transferred from Emporia State University last year, because I wanted a better professional school with more to offer, and that is what the KU program bills itself as. What I received was a lemon the size of a basketball, and the darn thing was sour to boot. Can't make lemonade out of that stuff, but God knows I'm trying. They tell the students things like, "The program will see better days. Not everyone is happy with it." Or things like, "Now students, I hope you are not bitter at the thought of being used in a progressive experiment To those of you unfamiliar with this circus, the five-year program was put into effect in 1983. The goal was to improve the quality of teachers by requiring them to have more professional experience and to begin working toward a master's degree. Students are required to take 60 hours of general education classes—including 12 credits of science and math, two of which must be lab sciences. I believe in knowledge, but two lab sciences? But those 30 hours include 10 credits of educational psychology — a full third of the entire education requirement. Not that I have anything against educational psychology, but if I'm going to take 10 credits — four classes — of it, they should be worth it. Or at least I expected as much at a school like KU. There's more. Students must complete 30 hours of education courses, which I didn't mind much when I first heard of it. I wanted to learn, to work and graduate from a respectable institution. the same material. There are 19 credits of Curriculum and Instruction, and many of these classes overlap with each other. For example, there are two classes called "Introduction to Curriculum." Two three-hour classes that meet twice a week for an hour and a half just to introduce you to curriculum. During all this repetition and silliness, more than a few students want to stand up and say, "OK, we get it! Do we look stupid?" Don't get me wrong, expanding the program to five years was a noble attempt to change things for the better. But there is a good amount of debate and infighting over the future of the program. The majority of the students feel alienated and disgusted by the repetition of material and quality of teaching. And everyone hates the real zinger — the fifth year. Now, I don't know what philosophy is behind this, but students are supposed to take 15 hours of graduate-level education courses. These credits can be used toward a master's degree, if you want or can afford to get one. This seems to be an attempt to railroad education majors to get master's degrees at KU. Without these 15 hours, students already have bachelor's degrees in education. To be certified to teach in Kansas, the state requires only that education majors student-teach for one semester, and take one three-hour graduate-level class. But with KU's five-year program, students must take 15 hours of graduate-level work. And the student-teaching is spread out over two semesters. A noble idea, sure. But the five year program only has changed the quantity of time that education majors spend at school—not the quality of their education. And what's the reaction from the field? Well, I received a little bit that morning in the Lawrence High teacher's lounge: "They don't listen to their students up there." It's time to change before it's too late, and the only answer is to start with something new — like a four-year program and only a half-year of teaching. The students are tired of being taught as if they just fell off the banana boat. Michael Mills is a senior from Overland Park majoring in secondary education. Mailbox Spirtual technology Our world has reached a very interesting and pivotal point in its history. Our achievements in medicine, space technology and computer science, to name a few, are staggering. Our understanding of physical reality has greatly advanced, especially in the past 25 years. Why then do we see the threat of nuclear war causing people and governments to live and act in fear? Why does racial violence in South Africa consume the thoughts and activities of hundreds of thousands of people? Why is poverty and famine destroying the beauty and sustaining ability of our earth? Because we have not grown up yet! We have been so focused on our physical reality that we have all but completely ignored our spiritual reality, which exists in as much validity as our Lowenbrau, shoes and socks, and thermonuclear warheads. It is time for us to advance our spiritual technology, or our race as such will not endure. Our spiritual technology is now severely limited by a number of belief system conflicts. Religious dogma is perhaps responsible for much of this. It has been said that "all wars are holy wars," and any in-depth study of wars, or of any significant political controversies, will reveal moral and religious roots feeding the conflict. The first step toward world peace and harmony will involve extensive reflection and study of our existing religious beliefs and practices. All religions have similar intents and purposes, and they begin to look more and more alike the more advanced they become. We are all climbing the mountain, and as we reach the top we will understand that religions are only pathways, not ends in and of themselves. As we truly begin to understand our relationships with each other, with ourselves, and with the con- We all have sprung from the same consciousness, and we are all a part of that consciousness. Realizing that we are connected in that way helps us to seq that when we create problems or allow problems to exist for others, we are hurting ourselves. For the future of our civilization, we have to bring our sense of spiritual responsibility and understanding up to the level of our science and technology, or our seemingly smart little politicians and religious leaders will help us to destroy this particular corner of the universe. Rich Niebaum Lawrence senior seiousness making us all one, we will no longer find it necessary or acceptable to fight and kill each other; to let each other go hungry, be cold, be alone; or to plunder our own back yard with chemical waste and pollution. Three cheers for Rick Zaporowski and his column in the Nov. 11 Kansas, "In a hurry to read this? Just wait." It is almost comical watching people hurry around like so many ants in a farm, knowing full and well that no matter how fast they go, there are still only 24 hours in a day. Setting a (slow) pace It is amazing what one can get done in 24 hours. I haven't gotten in a hurry in almost five years and have not had any trouble finding enough time to do all of the things I need and want to do. I strongly recommend chewing each bite of food 30 times. Depending on one's foresight, it can be quite thrilling. So, too, can many things, if one is going slow enough to notice. Richard Worden Leawood junior Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 5 Director helps athletes mix books, field By Liz Maggard Of the Kansan staff Promently displayed on an easel outside Richard Lee's office in Allen Field House is a chart he calls the "achievement board." The chart lists all of the student athletes in KU's competitive sports programs who achieved a 2.5 or higher grade point average last semester. There are 166 students listed on the chart, including five who earned 4.0 GPAs and 77 whose GPAs were between 3.0 and 3.99. Lee, assistant athletic director for support services, said yesterday that the chart exemplified his basic philosophy and approach to his job. "My job isn't to keep student athletes eligible," he said. "My job is to see that they have every oppor- unity to progress through the University and hopefully attain their degrees." Lee, who also is director of supportive educational services in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, was appointed to his part-time position in the Athletic Department in November 1984. Lee has been involved in SES since he came to KU in 1975. During that time, he said, the program has been expanded greatly. "During my first year, there were 75 or 76 students enrolled." he said. "As of last Friday, there were over 800 students participating in the SES program this semester." Athletic Director Monte Johnson said Lee was hired to provide the same sort of educational support services for student athletes that was being provided to other students participating in the SES program. The program was designed to provide academic support to students with disadvantaged backgrounds. Johnson said Lee had made real progress in setting up the type of program that best would help student athletes achieve academic success "In this business, you seem to have challenges every day," Johnson said. "Richard has had to deal with problems constantly. Whatever expectations other people may have had of him, I think he's done an exceptional job." Norman Yetman, chairman of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board's academic committee, said he thought it was important for someone in Lee's position to establish legitimacy and credibility "I believe Richard has done that," Yetman said. with the academic faculty. William Hanna, Newton junior and member of the KUAC board, said he thought Lee was realistic about what he could accomplish. Lee said someone who was talented in the books and on the field was an exceptional person. "He realizes that he's not going to have a lot of student athletes to work with who are exceptionally gifted academically," Hanna said. "He's not expecting them to go above and beyond the call of duty as far as academics. He'd be looking through rose-colored glasses if he was." "If a student athlete has a GPA of 3.0 or better, he or she is a super-exceptional individual," he said. athletes fared well when compared academically with the rest of the student population. Lee said the average GPA of student athletes in fall 1984 was 2.51. The average GPA for all students for the same period was 2.68. Only 3.5 percent of the student athletes who come to KU are unprepared to meet the University's academic challenges. Lee said his goal was to help such students as freshmen and sophomores so that by the time they were juniors they would be able to succeed academically with little or no assistance. However, Lee said KIL's student He said his immediate goal for the Athletic Department support program was to establish a monitoring system that would help him keep track of whether student athletes were maintaining satisfactory progress. "We want to ensure that the courses they are taking will lead to a degree in their respective schools," he said. "We also want to plug the hole that allows them to add or drop classes at will without an adviser's approval." Lee said he also wanted to strengthen the study skills and career guidance services offered to the student athletes. Rather than being overwhelmed with the task facing him when he joined the Athletic Department, Lee said, he enjoyed the challenge. "I'd be disappointed if a job wasn't 'challenging.' he said. Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop OPEN 'TIL 2 AM! Anyway you want it... you got it! 1618 West 23rd Street 708 W.NINTH 106 N. Park (formerly Campus Hideaway) 749-5246 Hungry? Head for Harry's! Dive into Harry's SHRIMP BASKET: 8 ounces of shrimp, cocktail sauce & Curly Q fries. Or, take on HARRY'S JUMBO: 10 oz. burger with Curly Q fries. HARRY BEAR'S BARRIERS BREWING MILK & WINE --presented by Doreta's Decorative Arts Lawrence Community Building 115 W. 11th Bazaar is on both levels of bldg. Sat. Nov. 23 9:30a.m.-5p.m. Over 150 exhibitors from all over the midwest. Do your Christmas shopping early at the 9th annual Holiday Bazaar COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA GENE HACKNAM MARY DILLON DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-5784 Daily 7:20 9:40 Fri. '5:00 Sat. & Sun. '2:30 5:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1085 Daily 7:30 9:30 Fri. '5:00 Sat. & Sun. '2:30 5:00 HILLCREST 1 DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1600 Glenn Close Jeff Bridgey Daily '4:45 7:30 9:25 Sat. & Sun. '2:30 HILLCREST 2 DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1600 A TASTY COMEDY, ONCE BITTEN Daily '5:00 7:40 9:30 Sat. & Sun. '3:00 HILLCREST 3 DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1600 A Spectacular 3-D Adventure STAR WARSER THE FORCE IS DOL Daily '5:00 7:25 9:20 Sat. & Sun. '2:45 CINEMA 1 DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1600 King Solomon's Mines DANNON Daily 7:15 9:20 Fri. '5:00 Sat. & Sun. '3:00 5:00 CINEMA 2 DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1600 Rainbow Brite Star Stealer Daily 7:20 9:20 Fri. '5:00 Sat. & Sun. Daily 8:15 Burberry Street... November 28 - November 30 show times will also be in 1. SHAMPOO AND HAIRCUT $10.00 FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUPON JUST HAIR II MODERN HARDEN DESIGN STUDIO 842-4414 EXPIRES 12-31-85 The Friday Night FREE MOVIE! at ECM (1204 Oread, 1 blk. N of K. Union) “Jesus Christ Superstar” at 7:30 pm Fri., Nov. 22 HILLCREST 1 812 W. 104W TELPHONE 812-690-8000 JAGGED EDGE Glenn Close, Jeff Bridges DAILY "4:45 7:30 9:35 Sat. & Sun." 2:30 FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS WITH THIS COUPON JUST HAIR II MODERN HAIR DESIGN STUDIO 842·4414 EXPIRES 12-31-85 COMMONWEALTH THEATRE DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 541-738-1788 GRANADA GENE HACKNAM MATT DILLON TARGET Daily 7:20 9:40 Fr. *5:00 Sat. & Sun. *2:30 *5:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 541-1085 BAD MEDICINE National Association for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Daily 7:30 9:30 Fr. *5:00 Sat. & Sun. *2:30 *5:00 Lite BEER Lite BEER WinterBreak SWEEPSTAKES Lite BEER WinterBreak Drop the books and hit the slopes during National Collegiate Ski Week January 4-11, 1986. SWEEPSTAKES CONTENTS PART I INTRODUCTION THE HISTORY OF THE MUSIC BEGINNING MIDDLE END PART II THE MUSIC AND ITS CONSOLES PART III THE MUSIC AND ITS PERFORMANCE PART IV THE MUSIC AND ITS AUTHORITY PART V THE MUSIC AND ITS INTERNET PART VI THE MUSIC AND ITS REFERENCES PART VII THE MUSIC AND ITS SUCCESS PART VIII THE MUSIC AND ITS REVENUE PART IX THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-1 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-2 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-3 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-4 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-5 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-6 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-7 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-8 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-9 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-10 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-11 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-12 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-13 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-14 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-15 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-16 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-17 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IX-519 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-520 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-521 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-522 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-523 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-524 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-525 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-526 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-527 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-528 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-529 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-530 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-531 THE MUSIC AND ITS RECORDING PART IX-532 LITE AVIREISER BEEF 3GR Steam GRAND PRIZES: Expense paid trip for two to Steamboat Springs, Colorado. 50 FIRST PRIZES: Sun Ice Ski Parkas 75 SECOND PRIZES: Vuarnet Sunglasses 100 THIRD PRIZES Obermeyer Ski Sweaters TRAVEL ASSOCIATES Lite BEER NCSA SKI HURRY, ENTER TODAY AND GET YOUR FREE ISSUE OF SKI MAGAZINE WHILE SUPPLIES LAST BETWEEN ENTRY BLANK LITE BEER WINTER BREAK SWEEPSTAKES NAME PLEASE PRINT ADDRESS (NO PO. 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Travel prizewinners and their companions must be of legal drinking age in their state of residence as well as in the state of Colorado. No substitution of prizes permitted. Grand prizewinners may be obligated to存 and return an affidavit of eligibility within 10 days of notification. In the event of noncompetition within this time period, an alternate winner will be selected. Any prize returned to the sponsor will be awarded a second prize. The prize for an alternate winner is $2,500 each; first prize is $100 each; second prize = $75; third prize = $250; each bonus prize = $2.00 each. 6. For a list of major prizewinners, available after February 7, 1986, send a separate, self-addressed, stamped #10 envelope to: Lite Beer Winter Break Winner's List, P.O. Box 4893, Blair NE 68009. 6 University Daily Kansan Student Senate Elections Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 Winners Continued from p.1 Some members cared as much about the margin of victory as the victory itself. A few Common Sense supporters had predicted a three-to-one margin, but they said they could not believe it had happened. When someone said it was, Shaver velled. "That's all we care about." Tom Shaver, another liberal arts and sciences seat winner, immediately asked, "Was it a bigger margin than Frontier.last year?" Epstein made his first announcement as a presidential winner to people gathered in the house dining room, which served as a dance floor through the night. People screamed once again, but not everyone was surprised. "Our candidates swept Nunemaker!" he said, referring to senators who represent freshmen and sophomores in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Allison Eldridge, Nunemaker seat winner, said, "Inside, I thought we would, but outside I knew it would be close." Epstein's second announcement was, "We are going to do it all in Senate this year, guys." Eric Vanderhoe, a Common Sense supporter, said Common Sense won because the coalition got issues from the students and chose issues that could be acted on right away. Tim Henderson, president of the support group Students with Common Sense, said Common Sense won because it was better organized. "I think students want to see Student Senate do something besides argue," he said. "Now it's up to us to carry through with the promises we made, and I'm confident that we will." During their campaign, Epstein and Brown promised to start a night-ride bus to and from popular entertainment spots, publish a guide to professors, create a Senate hotline and work with parking services to try to solve some parking problems around residence halls and scholarship halls. Common Sense candidates agreed that most of their votes came from traditional students. "We won because we gave students issues," Brown said. "They knew what they were getting." Epstein said he had heard rumors that Common Sense would lose the election. That made the coalition campaign harder, he said, and made more students vote. Scott Swenson, a. Common Sense supporter, said the coalition won because it was balanced. He said the coalition represented scholarship and residence hall residents and off-campus students as well as fraternity and sorority members. David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, called Epstein and Brown about an hour after the candidates received the final election results. "He said congratulations, and he was looking forward to working with us." Brown said. At 8 p.m., before Common Sense supporters and coalition members got to the house, Epstein and Brown were tense but not frantic. "I think the turnout was low enough that it will be close," Brown shid. Epstein and Henderson even watched the first few minutes of President Reagan's speech on television. However, Henderson kept one hand on the phone. Epstein and Brown invited Scott and Lightwardt to join their party. Scott and Lightwardt did not attend but sent a representative, Charles Munson, victorious candidate for a fine arts seat, to congratulate the winners. KU out of South Africa Paul Goodman/KANSAN Ruth Lichtwart and Milton Scott, Chrysalis Coalition candidates for student that they lost. Despite the bad news, some Chrysalis candidates and their body vice president and president, relax at Lichtwart's home after learning friends had a slumber party at Lichtwart's home last night. Defeat not bitter,say losers By Sandra Crider Special to the Kansan Milton Scott and Ruth Lichtwardt, Chrysalis Coalition presidential and vice presidential candidates, said last night that their campaign had been a positive experience despite their lopsided loss to the Common Sense Coalition candidates. Scott and Lichtward waited for the results at an informal slumber party with about 20 other candidates and friends at Lichtward's home on Kentucky Street. "I don't see it as something we lost," Scott said. "It's just this race we lost. I think we did a good job." Lichtwart said that they were beaten by "a slick political machine." Kenneth Coker, Chrysalis campaign manager, said. "I congratulate them. They had a very organized campaign. I learned a lot from watching them." He said he was disappointed with the low turnout and thought problems with the polling booths could have affected the outcome. "I was really distressed with the way the elections were run," he said. "The first day would have been a big turnout, but people weren't able to vote in some places." The two candidates would not comment on how they thought the incoming Senate would fare. "We know some of the promises Common Sense were running on won't work locally," Lightwardt said. She said that Chrysalis' late start on the campaign, its low budget and its members' busy schedules affected the results. "We should have started six months earlier," she said. "Then I think we really could have done it." The coalition still plans to try to accomplish some of its goals, such as looking into the food system in the residence halls and working to get a night club in the Kansas Union for students, although it will be more difficult without their holding the top positions in the Senate, she said. They will also offer advice to students trying to get projects accomplished in Senate by explaining the system. Lightwardt said. She said she planned to go to all the Student Senate meetings to keep abreast of what goes on there, although she would not be directly involved. But Lichtwardt expressed discouragement about how the Senate had been operating this year. "I'm getting tired of beating my head against the wall," she said. Scott said the campaign had given him the chance to meet some great people and renew old acquaintances. "I was glad to see that I had made an impact on them and they made an impact on me," he said. He said that now that the campaign was over he wouldn't have as many headaches. He said he could stop staying up late and get back to "business as usual." Lichtwardt said she had promised herself that if she lost she would buy her herself a puppy. She and Scott made tentative plans to go to an animal shelter tomorrow. "I'll stay for the slumber party or Ruth will hate me for years to come," Scott said. Candidates chalk wins to tradition By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff Common Sense presidential and vice presidential candidates not only swept the entire student body election but also took the majority of votes at every voting site. Students in the School of Business and Nunemaker voters, freshmen and sophomores in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, cast the highest percentage of votes for David Epstein and Amy Brown, Common Sense candidates who are now the newly elected student body president and vice president. Eighty-six percent of the votes cast by students in the business school and 85 percent of the votes cast by freshmen and sophomores in the college were for Epstein and Brown. Epstein said last night that the high support from these two groups was because Summerfield and Strong halls and the Kansas Union, where these students cast their ballots, were areas where typically traditional students voted. Epstein said Common Sense candidates were not necessarily traditional students but the coalition was traditional because it ran a full slate of candidates in every Senate division. "Having full slates in every race was the key," he said. "We had a full slate of Nunemaker candidates and Chriversis didn't." Many students who voted for Common Sense didn't seem to consider the number of candidates for each coalition to be important. Brenda Stoldt, Topika sophomore and Nunemaker voter, said she voted for Common Sense because she thought they had the best ideas. and Nunemaker voter, said he voted for the Epstein/Brown ticket because he belonged to a fraternity. "I'm in a frat and so is the Common Sense candidate," Fox said. "I voted for the senators pretty much by coalition for the same reason." Ruth Lichtward, vice presidential candidate for the Chrysalis coalition, said she thought having a full slate of candidates was only a small factor influencing the election results. She said she thought her coalition had appealed to older students, causing fewer Nunemaker voters to pull the lever for Chrysalis. Chrysalis took 44 percent of the votes cast at the Kansas Union, with the exception of Nunenaker voting, and 40 percent of the votes cast at the Burge Union — the two polling places where the coalition had the most support. Pharmacy, social welfare, liberal arts and sciences and graduate students voted in the Kansas Union. Architecture, fine arts, special students and law students voted in the Burge Union. George Fox, Leawood freshman "We did better at the Burge and at the Union because that's where older students vote." Lightward said. "We appealed to older students more because we didn't run a real slick campaign. A lot of the older voters know our record in the Senate and agreed with our past actions." Augustin Gonzalez, Valencia, Venezuela, sophomore and Numemaker voter, said he voted for Chrysalis because of their Senate experience. Epstein said he thought that Chrysalis had more support at the Burge Union than at most of the other polling places because of the greater number of law students voting for Lichtwardt and Milton Scott, Chrysalis' presidential candidate. Officials say voting process runs smoother on 2nd day By Bonnie Snyder and Theresa Scott Off the Kansan staff Rumors of students voting twice were squelched by placing the poll workers' tables in Strong Hall and in the Kansas Union in a position facing the voting machines instead of sitting next to them. Voter turnout equals lowest ever All booths opened within 30 minutes of the scheduled 8 a.m. starting time. Polls opened hours late Wednesday because not enough people showed up to run the machines. Election results NUNEMAKER (17) David Eck (cs) 806 Brady Stanton (cs) 804 Kelly Milligan (cs) 803 Angel Dick (cs) 799 Allison Eldridge (cs) 799 Stacy Smith (cs) 799 Cindy Cohen (cs) 799 Ann Hiszczynski (cs) 794 Craig Abraham (cs) 791 Allison Langstaff (cs) 791 Kevin Fossland (cs) 790 Jason Krakow (cs) 790 Stephanie Quincy (cs) 788 Amy Varyne (cs) 779 Pamela Boden (cs) 776 Susann Steiner (cs) 772 Betsy Bergman (cs) 766 Todd Cohen (ch) 162 Rich Belcha Jr. (i) 153 Kurt Level (ch) 150 Laura Cannon (ch) 140 January Layman (ch) 138 Millicent Williams (ch) 136 Kenneth Coker (ch) 131 "A lot of it's due to the fact that there were only two coaltions running." Day said. 3:30 p.m. because no one was there to run the machines. Workers who were counting paper ballots for the off-campus Student Senate seat found about 200 McCollum Hall election ballots in the Summerfield off-campus box. The Student Senate Elections Committee smoothed out some of the wrinkles that occurred in the voting process Wednesday, poll workers and committee members said yesterday. By a Kansan reporter One last problem arose yesterday not long after the voting was completed. David Day, Student Senate Elections Committee chairman, attributed the low turnout to the few number of coalitions running and the few number of concrete issues debated. Day said ballot boxes were not necessarily checked for other ballots before being locked and used for voting. But he said there was no possibility that Senate ballots had been put in the boxes before voting officially began. LIBERAL ARTS (8) Jill Galbreath (cs) 251 Woody Browne (cs) 224 Luca Jellinek (cs) 223 Julie Riggle (cs) 223 Charles Lawhorn (cs) 218 Tom Shaver (cs) 218 Claudio Molteni (cs) 197 Martie Aaron (cs) 194 Gordon Woods (cs) 186 Brett Frazier (i) 133 Kirsten Myers (ch) 132 Javan Owens (i) 122 Stacey Rolfe (ch) 116 Curtis Baxter (cs) 100 Although David Epstein apd Amy Brown won this week's Student Senate election by the largest margin in the Senate's 17-year history, voter turnout equalled the lowest ever at 8.5 percent. David Day, chairman of the Elections Committee, said that he had workers scheduled for every polling place throughout the day, and that nearly everyone showed up on time. Day said the fact that voting machines were not set up on time Wednesday did not make a difference in the number of students voting. Polls had been scheduled to be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, but no polls opened before 8:30 a.m. Wednesday and one did not open until 3 p.m. Caryl Smith, dean of student life, who emptied the ballot box, said the McCollum Hall ballots were damp and stuck to the bottom of the ballot box. She said she thought these ballots were cast about two years ago in a hall government election. (ch) Chrysalis (cs) Common Sense (i) Independent (w) Write-in Some of the more than 90 percent of students that didn't vote had many reasons for not going to the polls. Dale Romme, Hays senior, said he didn't vote because he wasn't interested. These are the unofficial results of this week's Student Senate elections for 58 Senate seats. Only one poll closed early yesterday— the booth in Summerfield Hall, where business students voted. The poll closed between 2:30 p.m. and FINE ARTS (2) Eric Lauterbach (cs) 28 Charles Munson (ch) 18 Workers either checked off names on enrollment lists or had people sign poll registers when they voted, so that the number of voters could be checked against the number of votes the machines recorded. Day said the second day of voting ran much more smoothly than the first. He said the voting machines were efficient once voters and workers learned how to handle them. ARCHITECTURE (2) Laura Rohan (cs) 70 Phillip Duff (1) 61 Steve Vogel (cs) 56 Joe Ogier (ch) 28 Kevin Byrne (ch) 27 EDUCATION (2) Alicia Lippert (cs) 14 Kristen Zeittler (cs) 14 Clarissa Birch (ch) 7 Emmie Kennicott (ch) 7 "I don't see any evidence that they do anything that affects my life at KU enough to be upset about it," he said. BUSINESS (3) Cyny Harnett (cs) 111 Dennis Enslinger (ch) 34 One unfilled seat An extra Nunemaker machine was opened in Strong Hall to cut down on the long lines. JOURNALISM (2) Russell Gray (cs) 88 One unfilled seat ENGINEERING (4) Renee McGhee (c) 140 Steve Gilchrist (c) 128 Chris Shirling (c) 125 Robert Evans (t) 110 Jackie Zoucha (i) 67 GRADUATE STUDENTS (12) Travis Cassidy (cs) 78 Aly Karam (cs) 67 Lyndon Davis (cd) 63 Christina Gustafsson (cs) 62 David Hardy (ch) 59 Glenn Shirliffe (cs) 57 Grant Steinle (cs) 57 Guill Vidalts (cs) 57 Chris Courtwright (ch) 56 James Wilder (ch) 56 Two unfulfilled seats LAW (1) One unfilled seat OFF-CAMPUS (11) Unavailable SOCIAL WELFARE (1) Beth Hanna (cs) 12 Jennifer Balzer (cs) 6 PHARMACY (1) Terri Lum (es) 6 SPECIAL STUDENTS (2) Two unfilled seats Source: Student Senate Elections Committee. Write-in ties plague elections officials By Frank Ybarra Special to the Kansan Kim Robinson may have won the write-in election for the School of Law's Student Senate seat, but then again, it may have been Kim Robinson, election officials said last night. David Day, elections committee chairman, said the seat was left officially unfilled because of confusion last night over a write-in candidate's name. Six other seats, he said, also remained officially unfilled because of other problems with write-in candidates. The name Kim Robinson was listed on a number of ballots filled out by law students. The problem, Day said, is that two Kim Robinson are apparently enrolled in the school. Some of the ballots, according to Day, had the name Kim H. Robinson, while others had the name Mr. Kim Robinson. Kim H. Robinson, reached by phone last night, said he was the person drafted into a write-in campaign sponsored by some of his friends. He said he would accept the seat if it were offered to him. situation. Day said the Elections Review Board would meet within the next week to decide what to do about the Election officials announced the off-campus seat winner, Kris Kurttenbach, but said that the number of votes she received was unavailable. In addition to the School of Law seat, one School of Business seat, one School of Journalism seat, two graduate seats and two special student seats remained unfilled late last night. The School of Business seat was undecided because of a six-way, write-in lie. The graduate seats were not decided because several write-in candidates were tied for the remaining seats. The journalism seat and the special student seats were filled with write-in votes but had not been confirmed last night. In the cases of the ties, Day said, he will try to contact the write-in candidates within the next few days and ask them whether they were seriously seeking a Senate seat. He said he hoped that a few candidates could be eliminated because their write-in votes were a hoax. If enough write-in candidates can not be eliminated this way, Day said, then Senate rules require that the write-in names be pulled from a hat to decide the winner. Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 7 Canadians donate money to KU By Susie Bishop Of the Kansan staff The Canadian government, in an effort to encourage KU faculty to take academic interest in Canada and its resources, gave a $6,000 grant yesterday to the University of Kansas to sponsor a five-part lecture series on Canadian-U.S. relations. Christopher Pearson, Canadian deputy consulate general for the southwestern region of the United States, and Mary Williams, Canadian director of public affairs for the southwestern region of the United States, opened the lecture series last night with the presentation of a check to Theodore Wilson, director of humanistic studies. Pearson said he came to the opening of the lecture series to encourage the United States to inspire interest in what Canada was all about. "The long-range goal is to foster a better relationship between Canada and the United States through knowledge," said Pearson. Dan Ruettlmann/Special to the KANSAN J. L. Granstein, a Canadian historian and faculty member of York University, Ontario, spoke last night in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union about Canadian-British-American relations as the first in a new series of five lectures on Canada. The grant for the lecture series represents the first of its kind, Williams said. KU applied and was the first selected to begin the program. He said the United States government sponsored similar programs in Canadian universities. David Gahan, a research associate at Hall Center for the Humanities at KU, said "The Canadian government is trying to get American universities to pay attention to Canada and its studies. "Together we are trying to get more people interested in the north Atlantic region." Eventually, Gahan said, he hopes the United States and Canada will join to do cooperative teaching and research about Canadian history, politics and culture and establish a Canadian studies research institute at KU. Pearson said in spite of some differences, the United States and Canada were friendly neighbors. The lecture series will work to strengthen the relationship between neighbors, he said. J. L. Granatstein, a historian from York University, Ontario, presented the first lecture of the five in the series. He spoke on "Canada in the North Atlantic Triangle; Canadian, British and American Relations." Granatstein said that Canada, the United States and Britain, the sides of the triangle, were interrelated in developmental, political and economic terms. When one side of the triangle changed, the other sides would adjust to accommodate the difference. He focused his examples on how World War I and II changed Canada's economic structure and made Canada dependent on the United States and Great Britain, Canada's mother country. "Canada lost any chance of independence because it tried so hard to assist its mother country in the wars," said Granatstein. The second lecture in the series will be presented by George Baum, a sociologist from the University of Toronto, Feb. 6. He will speak about religious and social change in Canada. Elsbeth Cameron, of the literature department at the University of Toronto, will talk about Canadian literature on March 20. Urban politics in Canada will be discussed by Warren Magnusson, of the political science department at the university of Victoria, British Columbia, Sept. 25. The final lecture in the series will be Oct. 30, 1986. Ian Jarvie, professor of philosophy at York University, will speak about the societies of Canada and the North Atlantic. KLZR joins network, gains new sound By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Before the end of this year, most of the voices KLZR radio station listeners hear on the radio will no longer be local voices. Instead, experienced diac jockies in Dallas will introduce and talk about the music, Bob Newton, general manager for KLWN-KLZR, said yesterday. The network will leave several minutes each hour for local programming. Newton said. The station will still broadcast local weather, news and commercials and will retain one of its local afternoon shows. In a move to increase listeners and bring crisp, clear sound to Lawrence and the surrounding area, KLZR has joined the Satellite Music Network. KLZR's disc jockeys will work more on the production side and coordinate the network's programs and the local side. They will continue to do their normal jobs, except they won't talk. Newton said. The music network has studios in Chicago and Dallas to broadcast live programs such as country, rock and oldies music. KLZR has chosen the Rockin' Hits programming, which comes from a studio in Dallas, he said. "We're still going to be a local radio station." Newton said. "We're not giving up control of our music. We are seeking the research and knowledge of the Satellite Music Network." Steve Kincaid, Lawrence junior who has been a disc jockey for KLZR for three years, said the station's sound might improve because of the change, but said listeners wouldn't be able to request music. He said the change wouldn't affect him much because he was involved with production as well as being a disc jockey. However, he said, most of the disc jockeys are unhappy about the change. "They're not really going to be disc jockeys anymore. They'll just be operators." Newton said that even when requests came in now, the disc jockeys had to follow a format, and couldn't always play the requests. Although the network plays some artists that KLZR doesn't play, he said, the music will not change much. The change in announcers will not be noticeable either, he said. The Satellite Music Network hires disc jockeys with experience and good voices on the air, he said. They will have 10 people in Dallas to entertain listeners. A consulting firm for the network tests music by discovering what listeners across the country want to hear, Newton said. "It took a lot of thinking and deciding to join the network. We hope to end up with a better product on the air. "Almost two years ago, 10 percent of the radio stations were using the network either full-time or part-time." Newton said the station already belonged to a satellite network for KU football and basketball games. The Jayhawk Network, Jefferson City, Mo., brings the games to KLZR listeners. Computerark ZENITH STUDENT & FACILITY DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE Z-100 GEMINI BOARD 841-0094 4c Copies 818 Mass. Microwave 842-4134 Systems br KU vs. MISSOURI Live Broadcast KZR 106 11 a.m. Saturday Sponsored By Bum Steer Bar B Q Laird Noller Ford KU Bookstores Mister Guy Sunflower Cablevision Zercher Photo KU vs. MISSOURI Live Broadcast KZR 106 11 a.m. Saturday Sponsored By Bum Steer Bar B Q Laird Noller Ford KU Bookstores Mister Guy Sunflower Cablevision Zercher Photo Ed Marlings ksi india club presents. Diwali Nite on Saturday, November 23 at Cordley School 6 p.m. — 9 p.m. Enjoy the taste of exotic Indian cuisine and the pleasure of en-livening Indian music and folk dances. For more information, call 841-3218 or 842-8850. Tickets Available at —the Foreign Student office —the SUA office (paid for by the Student Activity Fee) Diwali Nite on Saturday, November 23 at Cordley School 6 p.m. — 9 p.m. Enjoy the taste of exotic Indian cuisine and the pleasure of enlivening Indian music and folk dances. CHANGING FORENSIC DISCOUNT Westridge * 6th & Kasold * 841-0144 Hillcrest * 9th & Iowa * 843-2313 Southside * 29rd & Louisiana * 843-8588 the Foreign Student office the SUA office (paid for by the Student Activity Fee) only 10.99 1 pint Potatoes Tailgate Chicken Special RUSTY'S IGA 16 Piece Carry Out 1 pint Cole Slaw Come experience Green's selection of fine chilled wines We specialize in party planning THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 77 Mass. street phone: 843-2510 Case lot discounts green's fine wines 800 West 23rd 841-2277 phone: 843-115 SAVE AT IMPORTS & DOMESTICS EXXTIC CARS Rolphs AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 BALLOONS -N-MORE Let Us Decorate Your Holiday Parties! Balloons 75¢ MORE 749-0148 603 Vermont No Labor Charge, We Deliver! All You Can Eat House of Hupei Sunday Buffet $5.25 2907 W. 6th PRE-CHRISTMAS COMBO SPECIAL! PENET Peavey Patriot Guitar w/Tremolo And Backstage Plus Amp— Guitar and Amp Reg. $464.00 SPECIAL PACKAGE PRICE ONLY $399.00! While Supply Lasts Open Open Evenings DULLIAM'S MUSIC HOUSE 2601 Iowa 843-3007 PURPLE PASSIONATE POSTER EVERCLEAR ALCOHOL EVERCELL LIMITED EDITION Add passion to your punch with Everclear 190 proof grain alcohol. Everdon PUBLIC PROCUREMENT HOLDEN FUERCIAR POSTER REFER Everclear Poster Offer 500 3rd Avenue West Seattle, WA 98119 For your full color 15" x 22" Everclear poster, send $3.00 in check, money order or use your Mastercard or Visa to: City State Zip 2801 Signature ___ Measures [ ] View [ ] Account 4 7 Order shipped within 48 hours. Offer valid on UR only. Gift offer where prohibited by law. No product purchase necessary. Everclear bottled, everclear bottles of World Wide Distilled Products Company, St. Louis, MO 60319. Everclear, the ultimate mixer, use in moderation, not intended for consumption unless mixed with non-alcoholic beverages. K --- The most exciting few hours you'll spend all week. Run. Climb. Rappel. Navigate. Lead And develop the confidence and skills you won't get from a textbook. Enroll in Army ROTC as one of your electives. Get the facts today. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. CALL OF MARKET PROFESSOR OF MILITARY SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE KD 60449 ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 Campus/Area 47 Food poisoning scare leads to seasonal virus By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff A food poisoning scare at Hashinger Hall was quelled, but four residents were hospitalized for a suspected seasonal virus, the chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Hospital said yesterday. The students were kept overnight at the hospital Wednesday night because of vomiting and diarrhea, said Rensselaer McClure, chief of staff. "Any concerns we had early in the day should have dissipated by now," he said last night. "If it would have been food poisoning, we would have had dozens — if not hundreds — of other cases." Lynn Heller, nurse health educator at Watkins, said sanitarians from Watkins and the State Health Department took food samples from the hall for analysis. She said the sick students had not eaten the same meal. Lenoir Ekdahl, director of food services at student housing, said the roast beef and baked pork chops served Wednesday night at Hashinger had been handled properly. "Everything had been cooked freshly and had been kept in the refrigerator." she said. "But it is not a major problem when we talking about six of 20,000 to 25,000 students," he said. Outbreaks of viruses, McClure said, come in waves and that six students were kept overnight Tuesday night. Heller said viruses are prevalent near the end of the semester because of increased stress on students. Common-sense health care such as eating well-balanced meals, dressing warmly and sleeping adequately would keep up the resistance against viruses and colds. Last year, food from Hashinger suspected of being poisonous was analyzed, but was found to be safe, he said. The last case of food poisoning at the University was more than 15 years ago, McClure said, when a fraternity left a turkey unrefrigerated in August. A report detailing how some cities regulate gun purchases was distributed to Lawrence City Commissioners yesterday by Mike Wilden, assistant city manager. City may study gun report By a Kansan reporter the commission had the power to adopt a three-day waiting period between the time of application to purchase a handgun and the actual time of purchase. The report, requested by Commissioner David Longhurst, contains copies of ordinances from Overland Park, Junction City, Kansas City, Kan., and Seattle. Commissioners can pursue the gun issue by scheduling a study session, having a public hearing or through numerous other ways, Wilden said. At the Oct. 22 commission meeting, Longhurst asked city staff whether Longhurst brought up the question about a waiting period ordinance after the Oct. 17 suicide of a KU student who shot herself with a handgun two hours after she had purchased it. State and federal banking officials closed two western Kansas banks yesterday, including the Decatur County National Bank of Oberlin, which the U.S. Controllor of the Currency said was closed for reasons stemming from alleged fraudulent activities of a former bank official. In addition, Kansas Banking Commissioner Eugene T. Barrett Jr. declared insolvent the Farmers and Merchants State Bank of Rush County of LaCrosse in an unrelated case. The Associated Press Frank Vance, a spokesman for Acting Comptroller of the Currency H. Joe Selby, said that along with the alleged problems with former bank Oberlin, LaCrosse banks close doors A statement by Barrett said only that the LaCrosse bank's condition deteriorated because of "the changing economic conditions." president Farrell D. McAtee, the depressed agricultural and energy sectors contributed to the Oberlin bank's failure. The two bank closings, the 12th and 13th in Kansas during 1985, mean Kansas regained its status as the state with the most bank failures in the nation this year. Oklahoma is second, with 12 bank failures this year, and Iowa and Texas are third with 11 failures each. Federal officials said the two Kansas banks became the 103rd and 104th banks to be closed in the nation this year. District Court in Wichita said McAtee was charged in federal indictments handed down in January with three counts of embezzlement, two counts of making false statements on loan applications, two counts of making false entries in bank records and bank theft. A spokeswoman in the clerk's office of the U.S. McAtee, 33, was charged with three counts of embezzling a total of $430,850 from the bank in 1981, 1982 and 1983, while he was bank president. He resigned late in 1983. He also was charged with trying to deceive bank examiners by making a false entry to cover up a fictitious $400,000 loan that he is accused of authorizing. PANIC BUTTON LAST CHANCE TO HAVE YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT TAKEN Back by popular demand! Senior pictures Thursday, Nov.14 through Tuesday, Nov.26 Call the Jayhawker Yearbook office immediately for an appointment! 864-3728 Becerros MEXICAN Sunday Special Becerros MEXICAN Bowl of Chili, Taco, Frijoles, Nachos and a Soft Drink Beteñros MEXICAN $3.25 As always, our chips and salsa are Free! 1.00 Margaritas all day 2515 W. 6th 841-1323 SOLOMON THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC AND DANCE PRESENTS G.F. HANDEL'S SOIOMON PERFORMED BY THE COMBINED CHOIRS, CHORUS AND UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA JAMES RALSTON, CONDUCTOR 3:30 P.M. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1985 HOCH AUDITORUM FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Christmas Bonus. 12,345,6 78.00 PV PMT FV GMS 7 8 9 + A% E% EX + - 5 6 X PROM GEAR CLX P/V SST R+ X57 ON STO REC 0 . E+ HEWLETT PACKARD A $15 REBATE on the HP-12C Business Calculator. HEWLETT PACKARD But if nobody gets the hint, buy the HP-12C for yourself from a dealer who has no equa hp It's the gift that has no equal for business professionals – like you – in real estate, finance, banking and investments. That's because it has more built-in financial calculating power than any other handheld. In March 2013, HP-12C5s purchased between November 6 and December 31, 1985. So now's the time to ask for an reg. $120.00 SALE $95.00 KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union reg. $120.00 Instituto del Colegio Prof. Christo per Escuela del Colegio KU HEARTSOUNDS- Deborah and Jonathon Hutchison are singers and songwriters of new Christian music, making their third visit to Canterbury. This national touring ministry has also appeared on the campuses of Auburn, Duke, Baylor, SMU, Yale, UCLA, Colgate, Kansas State, U. of Chicago, USC, U. of Texas, UC Berkeley, TEXAS & AEM, among others. Tuesday December 3 Kansas Union Ballroom University of Kansas "Lovely, exciting, strong and moving", the music of HEARTSOUNDS is a unique blend of styles from folk to gospel, rock to jazz, accompanied on guitar, flute, and piano. Recordings of the Hutchison's music will be available from their current cross-country tour. HONORARY MEMBER Fridays at Canterbury REDLINE & KJHK FM91 present Circle JERKS with special guest micronotz Fri., Nov. 22 Canterbury House 1116 Louisiana Gather at 4 p.m., Music until 6 p. Tickets. $6.00 in advance at all CAD locations, $7.00 at the door and 15% off Laundry EDDINGHAM PLACE & satellite I.V. & satellite T.V. 24th & Eddingham Drive (Behind Southern Hills Mall) New 2 bedroom apartments starting at $385 per month. - FREE SHOWTIME Immediate or summer - Laundry room - LAUNDRY ROOM FIBERGLASS - Semester leases for the winter nights Enjoy the POOL and CLUBHOUSE this summer - Energy efficient OPEN DAILY 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m Saturdays 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. *841-5444* For further information - On-site Manager, 841-5444 841-5444 For further information KVM Kaw Valley Management, Inc. 901 Kentucky, No. 205 841-6080 --- --- The Arts and Crafts SALE December 4,5,6 1985 Persons interested in selling wakes deadline Nov 2$ Contact SUA Office uniongallery Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 9 Water debate goes to court United Press International PUEBLO, Colo. — The long argument between Colorado and Kansas over storage of water from the Arkansas River will apparently have to be resolved by the U.S. Supreme Court, a Colorado attorney said yesterday. David Robbins, the attorney, told the board of directors of the Southeastern Colorado Water Conservancy District that negotiations with Kansas officials earlier in the week had failed to resolve any issues. Robbins said Kansas officials had become intransigent and unwilling to compromise. "...we are faced with the clear likelihood that no matter how we cooperate, they still intend to sue us unless we agree fully to their demands." he said. Robbins, a Denver attorney specializing in law water, was appointed special attorney general in the case last year. Kansas says the winter water storage program in the Pueblo Reservoir depletes the flow into the John Martin reservoir in southeastern Colorado, and that the operation of the Trinidad Reservoir is in violation of the terms of the Arkansas River Compact. Robbins said it appeared Kansas would carry through with its threat to file suit against Colorado on Dec. 18. He said the negotiating session Tuesday was called to consider matters for which Kansas said it wanted further study. "We discussed that scope of work at some length," said Robbins. "In addition, we proposed a second scope relating to Colorado's allegations that water used in Kansas has changed substantially, to the detriment of Colorado's interest under the compact." Clip a COUPON, Save your MONEY!! Chicken—Royal Peking Style! Beef with vegetables- A delicious entree now on special at Royal Peking. Dinner includes appetizer, soup, fried rice, dessert and hot tea. ___ All for only $4.25 This month's lunch special Sweet and Sour Pork Luncheon Specials served Tuesday through Saturday 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m.---at the Burge Union's PARTY-ROOM Only $2.25 Royal Peking Restaurant 店飯都京 Tues.-Sat. 711 W. 23rd St. Malls Shopping Center Tues. Sat. Lunch 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Dinner 4:30 p.m.-10 p.m. Sun. 12 p.m.-9:30 p.m. 841-4599 closed Mondays HOW DO YOU GET HOT,CHEESY, CUSTOM-MADE PIZZA TO YOUR DOOR IN 30 MINUTES OR LESS? DOMINGO PIZZA Call Domino's Pizza. One call from you sets Domino's Pizza in motion. From that moment on, we do everything possible to make sure that your hot custom-made pizza is delivered to your door in less than 30 minutes. --at the Burge Union's PARTY-ROOM Weekend Special DOMINO'S PIZZA Get a 16" custom-made Domino's Pizza with one topping and four bottles of Coke for only $8.99 Limited delivery area. One offer per order. Expires: February 15, 1986 $599 Special Name --at the Burge Union's PARTY-ROOM Address 16005/DPE-001 DOMINOS PIZZA Get a 12" custommade Domino's Pizza with one topping and two bottles of Coke for only $5.99! Limited Delivery area. One offer per order. Expires: February 15, 1986 Name Address 16005/DPE-001 Lawrence 841-7900 1445 West 23rd Street 841-8002 832 Iowa Street On the Record 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Mon-Thurs. 11 a.m.-4 a.m. Fri & Sat. 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Sun. One call does it all! DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERS FREE. 电话 Items valued at $75 were stolen Saturday morning from an unlocked room in Ellsworth Hall, KU police said. Keys, a checkbook and $170 in cash were stolen from a student's room in McCollium Hall between 9:30 and 11:30 a.m. Tuesday. KU police said yesterday. Enjoy Coke Good at listed locations. Our drivers carry less than $10.00. Limited delivery area. Brazilian STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1034 Mass. Downtown ALL HAIRCUTS $6 Quality Haircuts at Reasonable Prices No appl. necessary. Closed on Monu Sat. Nov. 23 Enjoy Coke PARTY Dance! Admission: $1.50 8 p.m. 1:30 a.m. CHECKERS PIZZA --with the purchase of a med or FREE SOFT DRINKS 2 free soft drinks with the purchase of small pizza or 4 soft drinks large pizza One coupon per order. Includes Expires in 2 wks. Expires in 2 wks. CHECKERS SPECIAL 16" PIZZA —2 TOPPINGS One coupon per order 4 SOFT DRINKS $7.99 01 00 01 50 $1.00 $1.50 OFF OFF ANY SMALL ANY MEDIUM PIZZA PIZZA $2.00 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA One coupon per order Expires in 2 wks. CHECKERS Coupon Dine In • Carry Out Home Delivery 841-8010 2214 Yale Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Something For Everyone From CBS Prices For Everyone From Kief's Choose LP or Cassette CLARENCE CLEMONS HERO Including: You're A Friend Of Mine (Duet With Jake Browne) The Sun Air't Gonna Shine Anymore I Wanna Be Your Hero/Temptation *Appears courtesy of Electra/Ayulum Records. Kief's Sale $5.99 WYNTON MARSALIS BLACK CODES (FROM THE UNDERGROUND) including Delteayo's Dilemma Of Aural Oasis Chambers Of Tain Black Codes Kief's Sale $5.99 BARBRA STREISAND THE BROADWAY ALBUM Including: Somewhere (From "West Side Story") Send In The Clowns (From Man & Little Night Music) Can't Help Lovin' That Man (From 'Showboat') If I Loved You (From 'Carousel') Kief's Sale $6.49 BIG AUDIO DYNAMITE THIS IS BIG AUDIO DYNAMITE Including: The Bottom Line/Medicine Show BAD/E = MC' Kief's Sale $5.99 THE BEST OF ELVIS COSTELLO AND THE ATTRACTIONS including Alison/Radio, Radio Accidents Will Happen Everyday I Write The Book The Only Flames In town Kief's Sale $5.99 KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE AUDIO-VIDEO shop 150th & IOWA LAWRENCE, KS 912-842-381 10 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 Rock Chalk groups announced Monday By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff A 36-year-old KU tradition will continue Monday night with the announcement of the groups selected to perform in the Rock Chalk Revue this year. The selected groups will be announced at the Eldridge House, 701 Massachusetts St. The five sorority/fraternity groups were selected Wednesday from the 12 groups that submitted scripts for this year's theme, "Games People Play." Scott Swenson, Topeka senior and producer of the show said yesterday that the eight judges were people in the Lawrence community who had the theater or previous Rock Chalk experience. Swenson said the selection was made after the groups turned in notebooks Nov. 6 with plot summaries, scripts, sets and costume designs and written and taped versions of music to be used. Interviews with the groups' directors were held Wednesday. Fraternities and sororites were the only living groups that submitted scripts this year, but Swenson said he would like to see that changed. "We want to encourage as many different groups to submit scripts as possible," Swenson said. "Unfortunately, it's a case of only those groups involved in it in the past coming back." Although entering original music was not required, Swenson said he and the judges were impressed with the 22 original songs that were submitted. The theme for the show, sponsored by the Board of Class Officers, was one of several Swenson submitted to the Rock Chalk Advisory Committee. "The theme, 'Games People Play,' gives the opportunity for several different developments and conjures up different ideas," he said. "It's a fun theme, and we want this to be a very entertaining show." This year the show will sport a new look for the in between acts, said Georgia Harmli, Lenexa junior and co-director of the IBAs. "This year we're looking for more of a variety for the IBAs with singing, dancing and up to three individual acts — such as comedians and magicians," Hamil said. "The whole idea of the IBAs is to entertain and keep the audience's attention during set changes. "It was everyone's idea to make the IBAs more diverse this year. KU has such a variety of talent, and we should use it all." Todd Schulman, Topeka junior and co-business manager of the show, said Rock Chalk had grossed $45,540 in advertising, ticket, concession and other sales last year. After expenses were paid, about half of the remaining $14,000 went to the participating groups to help defray the expenses of producing the skits. About $1,000 went back to Rock Chalk to help pay for this year's show. The rest was donated to the United Fund. TOPEKA — Gov. John Carlin will not be able to make a return trip to China, which would be his fourth since 1979, or visit Japan again in further efforts to establish trade links with these countries. Those trips would be canceled under preliminary cuts in the budget for the Department of Economic Development. The Associated Press Charles Schwartz, secretary of economic development, yesterday asked the governor's budget director to restore $6,000 for foreign trips so that Carlin could continue to nurture the sister-state relationship established with the Henan Province of China. He also complained that removal of funds needed to pay for the celebration of Kansas' 125 years of statehood in January had been cut, along with money needed to complete printing of the new Kansas promotional logo. Budget cuts stop Carlin's China visit "It would almost be better to lose positions than to lose travel money," Schwartz told Alden Shields, state COUPON Get a 60-minute KIS. 2nd Roll FREE 1 2104-C West 25th Holiday Plaza 843-5471 kls PHOTO COUPONI 湖北 Eat To Your Heart's Delight! Every Sunday House of Hupei serves a delightful buffet of delicious Chinese food. The All You Can Eat Buffet offers 14 choices of traditional favorites—appetizers, soup, fried rice, chicken, pork, beef, shrimp, vegetables, and dessert. Come See For Yourself! Served Sundays Noon-3 p.m. 2907 W. 6th 843-8070 next to Econolodge --budget chief, during an appeal of his agency's preliminary allotment for the next 18 months. PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY $1 OFF any 2 pizzas or $2 OFF any 3 pizzas Expires 12-31-85 HOURS Mon.-Thurs. - 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri.&Sat. - 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Sunday - 11 a.m.-1 a.m. NAME ADDRESS DATE Carlin established the sister-state relationship with the Henan Province 842-1212 1601 W. 23rd In the Southern Hills Shopping Center A Neodhesa company signed a deal to sell feed mills to China, and a Lawrence business agreed to provide manufacturing equipment and expertise to train Chinese workers in the operation of the machines. $^{eq}$ EASY AS 1-2-3 POZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY Shields has been scrambling to find every penny that can be saved by eliminating all non-essential services from the budgets proposed by state agencies for the 1987 fiscal year, which begins July 1, 1986. One by one, state agencies have gone before him asking that critical dollars be "The major area of our funding cuts is in travel and tourism. Those are both very important areas for us." Schwartz said items in his budget that Shields was hoping to cut would result in the waste of already-invested money. He said that brochures already printed would not be mailed and the new state logo, unveiled by the governor this summer, could not be printed. And he stressed the trade missions as being critical to the success of any economic development efforts. after a 1979 trade mission to the province. Since then, the Chinese have signed trade agreements and set up an international exhibit booth at the Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson. The specal relationship also has opened doors of opportunity for a number of Kansas businesses. restored. Several have regained their requested funds. PIZZA Shoppe DELIVERY SPECIAL! PIZZA BATEN WITH YE FRIENDS 842-0600 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center WE DELIVER! Two Topping King Size Pizza and 32 Oz. Pepsi— $ 7.95 elux tex Additional Toppings: Only 90 Each. CARRY-OUT LIMITED DELIVERY Bring A Friend! MEAL FOR 2 KU Single Tapping Prince Size Pizza, 2 Salads and 2 Pepsi DINE-IN ONLY. $ 595 plus tax UDK Exp.11-30-85 UDK Exp.11-30-85 MASS. STREET DELI in 941 MASSACHUSETTS TOTAL BREADS "4 p.m. to close daily" WE WANT YOU TO TRY OUR ALL NEW DELI BURGERS Traditional Burger Swiss & Bacon Burger $2.35 $1.99 with lettuce and tomato swiss cheese and ranch style bacon Big Blue Burger $2.35 blue cheese and sauteed mushrooms WHAT A DEAL Traditional Burger Basket and 12oz. soft drink $1.49 50¢ COUPON 50¢ OFF OFF 50¢ OFF 4p.m. to close daily FIFTY CENTS OFF ALL NEW DELI BURGERS 4 p.m. to close daily 50¢ OFF OFFER EXPIRES NOV 30, 1985 50¢ OFF All Deli Burgers are a full one-third pound of extra lean fresh ground beef Select a fresh baked deli bun onion, kaiser or whole wheat Served with potato chips, kosher dill spear and any small soft drink ALPHA OMICRON PI "New Years in November" Semi-formal November 22, 1985 --- Rock Chalk Revue Singers! Dancers! Magicians! Comedians! Animal Acts! Get YOUR act together over Thanksgiving break! Bring it to the BIG-8 Rm in the Kansas Union! OPEN AUDITION: Monday, Dec. 2, 8-11 p.m. (and 7-8 p.m., Dec. 3) "Call-backs": Tuesday, Dec. 3, 8-11 p.m. ★Questions? call Pam Jones: 749-1103 / Georgia Hamill: 843-3120 Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 Campus/Area University Daily Kansan 11 New technique helps plastic surgeons By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff KANSAS CITY, Kan. — A Kansas child's shoe is made from a toe. The toe-made nose is a far sight better than what he had before, which was nothing, John Hiebert, plastic surgeon and professor of surgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said yesterday. The child's nose actually was fashioned out of a flap of bone and tissue taken from his big toe, Hiebert said. This ability to transfer composite tissue — tissue that contains bone, skin, muscle and blood vessels — is a relatively new technique that is helping surgeons correct nature's hoofs. "Sometimes we'll see individuals who do not have a nose, who do not have a midface," he said. "The use of microsurgery and free flap reconstruction, transfer of tissues from one part of the body to another, has made some of this a little easier. "There are some exciting new things as we've begun to understand mechanisms of bone growth and blood supply. We have techniques now of moving bone that will grow and keeping its blood supply intact by using the microscope to attach the vessels supplying the bone that was brought from another place into the face. It's the same in soft tissue reconstruction." As the anatomy becomes better understood, more possibilities for tissue substitution are opened. dearly every year there may be a half dozen new flaps that are described." Hiebert said. If he was building a cheek instead of a nose, Hiebert said, he probably wouldn't use tissue from the foot. He said composite tissue, called "free The tissue used depends on the part of the face that is being constructed. flaps," could be taken from all over the body. "If I wanted tissue and bone," he said, "I would probably take it from the hip area. I might take it from the foot. "If I wanted soft tissue itself, I might take it from the arm or from the chest or back. If I wanted muscle alone, I might take it from the lower extremities." Transferring composite tissue allows surgeons to complete in one operation what a few years ago might have taken a year or more. "They've had means for reconstructing noses for many years using soft tissues from elsewhere," Hiebert said. "But this is new, quicker. You get there faster." The technique, which Hiebert said was developed 10-15 years ago, is in "Ten years ago, 15 years ago, it was a glorious stage of 'Look what I can do.' he said. its refinement stage now. The advances have not eliminated the risks, however. Problems can arise from bleeding, infection, inadequate blood supply and bones that move and heal in the wrong position. He said refinement meant trying to find ways of making a better free flap. It also means finding ways to transfer the flap in less time and assuring that it will survive. "Other complications can be related to brain injuries, injuries to the eyes or the optic nerves," he said. "Sometimes the complications can be as severe as death. Give Thanks Give Flowers Owens FLOWER SHOP INC. 9th & INDIANA STREETS LAWRENCE, KANSAS 68044 Give Thanks "I think that with increased experience over the last ten years, that in a well-trained individual with a good team, carrying out this surgery is much less risky than it used to be." 75 YEARS For the best in Authentic Chinese Food House of Hupei 2907 W. 6th 843-8070 On Campus "Jesus Christ Superstar" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today at the Escenical Christian Ministries building, 1204 Oread Ave. The KU Biology Club will meet at 4.p.m. today in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. NAACP threatens boycott The KU Honor Students Association will sponsor a trip to the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas Ci The KU office of minority affairs will present the Modern Times Theater Company from New York in "Freedom Days." a play about the civil rights movement, at 8 p.m. Saturday at Central Junior High School, 1400 Massachusetts St. There is no admission charge. ty, Mo. A bus will leave Nunemaker Center at 2 p.m. Sunday. United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — If it does not answer charges of discrimination in hiring and promoting, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People may call for a boycott of Dillard's Department Stores Inc. an NAACP official said Wednesday. The NAACP released figures indicating that black customers were responsible for 23 percent of the chain store's $800 million in annual sales. However, the NAACP figures cited that only 6 percent of Dillard's employees nationwide were black, and only 3 percent of workers in the Missouri and Kansas stores were black. JUAREZ TEQUILA The Magic of Mexico. Sigma Sigma Delta Tau Winter Cocktail '85 Saturday, Nov. 23 BORDER BANDIDO $349 TEXAS AIR FORCE ALL YOU CAN EAT SPECIAL This Saturday 5-9 p.m. All you can eat from our wide selection: - enchiladas - refried beans - chili conqueso - chili conqueso - taco salad - Spanish rice - tacos - burritos - burritos - chili - tostada - salad bar 1528 W.23rd 842-8861 Across from Post Office DOUBLE FEATURE Rent VCR 2 & 2 Novels Overnight 114.49 SAITY'S TV T (1447 W. 23rdfloor-3751) M: 9:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun. 1:5 p.m. Almost 1,000 selection includes XXX PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAI Free Consultation THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO 745 New Hampshire 881-5796 Use Kansan Classified. Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 comprehensive health associates * free pregnancy tests * outpatient abortion services * alternative counseling * gynecology * contraception Course # 913-245-1400 KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 PICAFLIC HOME VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd, Sp. 105 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 842-8177 BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320 vello sub delivers 841-3288 yello sub delivers 841-3268 Christmas is Coming! One-of-a-kind authentic jewelry and gifts The original Kenya Book bag $16 jewelry priced from $1 African Adorned 5 East 7th the BIOLOGY CLUB presents: Dr. O. Taylor, who will speak on— "Sex at 14 mph— Honeybee mating biology" "Sex at 14 mph—Honeybee mating biology" 4 p.m., Friday, Nov. 22 in the Sunflower Rm, Kansas Union The Biology Club is an informal group of undergraduates graduate students and professors who meet every Friday in the Sunflower Rm of the Kansas Union for beer and biology conversation. (paid for by Student Activity fee) SUA FILMS "An Amusing, Sophisticated French Comedy Romp, That’s Naughty But Nice!" GENE SHALIT TODAY SHOW NBC-T.V. RESTRICTED UNDER 17 REQUIRES ACCOMPANYING PARENT OR ABULT GUARDIAN the gift Hermit Ventures THE MANUEL GOODWIN COMPANY SUNDAY Nov.24 2 p.m. $1.50 Woodruff Aud. PYRAMID PIZZA KU=MU PRE-PARTY PYRAMID PIZZA FEATURING THE DOGS IN CONCERT TONIGHT Nov.22 8:00 p.m. AT THE NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY 200 Iowa (across from the Holidome) $7.00 For ticket info call Scott (913) 749-0364 PYRAMID PIZZA MUST BE 19 YEARS OF AGE PYRAMID PIZZA 1 12 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 Law students hone skills in moot court By Jill White Of the Kansan staff By Jill White Two teams of KU law students will compete at 1:30 p.m. today in preliminary rounds of the regional moot court competition sponsored by the Kansas City Metropolitan Bar Association. One team member, David Adkins, Topeka law student, said the most important part of the competition was convincing the panel of judges to view the student council as actual attorneys. "You present a balanced argument that includes emotion as well as the substance of the case," Adkins said recently. "It's very much like a regular appellate argument in that it's a dialogue. You have to be very conversational." The members of the council all are third-year law students. Adkins, Sarah Duckers, Salina, and Emily Geilker, Shawnee, form one team. The other team consists of Richard Morefield, Overland Park, Judith Batson-Sadler, Gulport, Miss, and Scott Bloch, Lawrence. Quarterfinals and semifinals are scheduled for tomorrow, and finals will be Sunday. The competition is being held at the Federal District Courthouse, Kansas City, Mo. The top two teams will advance to the national competition in February, which is held in New York City. In 1984, a team of KU law students placed first in the nationals. A U.S. Supreme Court associate justice usually presides at the nationalists; the other eight judges usually are federal and New York state judges. Bill Westerbeke, professor of law and faculty adviser to the team, said the rules of the competition prohibited faculty assistance. "The whole purpose is for students to demonstrate skills they learned in law school," Westerbeke said. "Then if they win, it really says something good about those students." Eight law schools from Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri each may send two teams to the regional competitions. The New York Bar Association submits a legal issue to the schools and teams write briefs for early scoring. The brief counts for 40 percent of the team's score. The oral argument counts for 60 percent of the score. This year's case involves a First Amendment issue about cable television. The judges analyze student oralists on their style. 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Bloch wrote the brief for Morefield and Batson-Sadler. 13" round glass Pilgrim platters with holiday designs for your favorite goodie baking . $14. Free Gift Wrap Layaway Looking Good! If you haven’t been by Naismith Hall lately, you’re in for a big surprise! We’re looking good and looking forward to seeing you next spring! JUST LOOK WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER: * Semi-private rooms w/ connecting baths * Great location (bus service from your front door to your classes) * Delicious all-you-can-eat meals * A fully equipped recreation area w/ swimming pool, fitness center, and game area. Limited Spaces Available for Spring Semester—waiting list forming now! For more information call or come by NAISMITH HALL 1800 Naismith Dr. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 (913) 843-8559 723 Mass. 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And when you become a member, every $20.00 purchase entitles you to a “punch” on your membership card. When it’s KO’d (punched out) you’ll get a big $25.00 off on anything in the store! So come on! Join! Buy something! And then get something free for a change! P. S. 14. 90 14.90 14.99 14. 99 WE SELL ONLY NEAT STUFF CLOTHES FOR *MISSES *JUNIORS *MEN *KIDS PLUS *DOMESTICS *ATHETIC SHOES *ACCESSORIES JIMORS SHAKER SWATTERS in the best pastels, the best coventry woven. Choose jeans from basic vreek pants or luxurious pants. You'd expect to pay $2.00 per pair. 46x 7.99 7-14 10.99 **ESTATES** GIRLS JOHN HENRY jumpsuits with lots of puckers, ties and snaps. With great style and fan THEY'RE FREE NOW, BUT NOT FOR LONG! --- 543 WESTPORT ROAD Kansas City, Mo 213 N. HOLDEN Warrensburg Mo 20 WEST 6th S Lawrence, Ks NOW OPEN! HOURS 10-6 MONDAY-SATURDAY +12-5 SUNDAY BEFORE THE GAME...AFTER THE GAME MEET THE EDITOR AT THE OREAD BOOK SHOP NATURAL KANSAS Edited by Joseph T. Collins Natural Kansas $25.00 Published by The University Press of Kansas Joseph T. Collins, editor of this just-published tribute to the state's natural environment, will be on hand at the Oread Book Shop before and after the Missouri Game this Saturday to sign his book and chat with you. Located in the Kansas Union building, Level 3 Open this Saturday 9-4:30 weekdays 8:30-5. 864-4431 OREAD BOOK SHOP MasterCard VISA Sports Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 13 University Daily Kansan 'Hawks to face Pepperdine By Chris Lazzarino Sports editor The preseason buildup is over for the Kansas basketball team. The midnight scrimmage, the rout of the best team from the entire country of Czechoslovakia, preseason predictions that ranged from No. 2 in the country to No. 3 in the Big Eight Conference — it's all in the past. In the present — at 10 p.m. CST tonight — is the first round of the Big Apple NIT at McNichols Arena in Denver. The Jayhawks play Pepperdine, which is preceded by Washington against Texas-El Paso at 8 p.m. The Big Apple tournament does not count on the season limit of 28 games but will be counted on the teams' season records. The KU-Pepperdine game will be televised beginning at 10:30 p.m. CST on WIBW-TV, channel 13, in Topeka, which means the game will be joined in progress. Starting for KU most likely will be the same five regular starters from last season: Cedric Hunter, 6-foot-0 junior point guard, has had a good preseason. After the Czechoslovakia game, head coach Larry Brown said Hunter was the best player on the team at that time. Hunter started 26 games last season, averaging 6.7 points per game with 147 assists. Calvin Thompson, 6-6 senior guard, became the 20th player in Kansas history to go over 1,000 career points last season with a total of 1,024. Thompson made 51.3 percent of his shots from the field, averaged 13.7 points per game and had 96 assists. Ron Kellogg, 6-5 senior forward, who was named first team All-Big Eight, led Kansas in scoring, field goal percentage and free throw percentage. He averaged 17.6 points per game, shot 57.6 percent from the field and made 24.3 percent of his free throws. Danny Manning, 6-11 sophomore forward, named last year's Big Eight Newcomer of the Year, averaged 14.6 points and 7.2 rebounds per game. He had 108 assists and 34 blocked shots. Greg Drrelling, 7-1 senior center, was named the Most Valuable Per- former in a vote by his teammates, and was second team All-Big Eight. He averaged 13.1 points and 6.9 rebounds per game and made 57.7 percent of his shots from the floor. As Kansas does, Pepperdine returns all five starters. The Waves won the West Coast Athletic Conference last season with an 11:1 conference record, and are a favorite to do the same this season. Dwayne Polee, 6-5 senior guard, was voted the WCAC Most Valuable Player last season, averaging 15.7 points and 4.8 assists per game. The other guard will be 5-11 senior Jon Korfas, who averaged 12.2 points and 5.5 assists per game. The frontcount will consist of WCAC Freshman of the Year Levy Middlebrooks, a 6-7 center who averaged 10.3 points and 6.4 rebounds per game; 6-8 junior forward Eric White, who led the team in scoring and rebounding with 15.9 points and 9.2 rebounds per game; and 6-7 senior forward Anthony Frederick, who averaged 11.3 points and 7.2 rebounds per game and is considered an outstanding defender. Washington is considered the team to beat in the Pacific-10 Conference after tying USC for first in the conference last season. Texas-El Paso also is a favorite to repeat as champions of the Western Athletic Conference. Also returning for the Waves is 6-5 senior guard Grant Gondrezick, who was Pepperdine's leading scorer in the 1983-84 season, but was forced to sit out last season with a knee injury. The winners of tonight's games will play at 7 p.m. CST Sunday to decide the winner of the Western Regional. The semifinals of the Big Apple NIT are Nov. 29 and the finals are Dec. 1. Both games will be played in New York City. In the Southern Regional, Alabama-Birmingham defeated Texas A&M 71-68 last night in Houston. Duke played Lamar in the second game. The Mideast Regional consists of Tulsa, Dayton, Louisville and Miami (Ohio). In the Eastern Regional are St. John's, Navy, Auburn and West Virginia. Finale rates high with teams By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff Tomorrow's football game between Kansas and Missouri has all the makings of a great college football game. An intense interstate rivalry played on a November afternoon in front of a television audience. There is only one thing missing — respectable records and a bowl bid at stake for the winner. Kansas, 5-6, has run itself out of the postseason picture with four straight losses, and Missouri was never in the bowl picture. The Tigers are 1-9 with their win against Iowa State. Kansas will be looking to break a four game losing streak and a 15 quarter without a touchdown streak METRO TIGERS The game will start at 11:40 a.m. in Memorial Stadium and will be televised locally on KMBC-TV Channel 9 and KSNT Channel 27 as the Big Eight.Rayoom game of the week. Missouri Game 12 Nov 23 Lawrence The Jayhawks will unveil a new look in an effort to change its ways. Kansas will be wearing silver pants instead of the traditional white ones. Despite the unimportance of the game in determining the conference championship and bowl bids, coaches from both teams said the game was an important one. "I am a graduate of Missouri, so I know what a big game this is," Missouri head coach Woody Widenhofer said yesterday. "This also would be a big win for our seniors." Kansas head coach Mike Gotfried said the game was important for the Jayhawks because it would give them a 500 record. A win would guarantee that every team Gottfried has coached at Kansas improved. During Gottfried's first year, Kansas went 4-6-1 and last season the Javahws finished 5-6. Widenhofer, who is in his first season as head coach of the Tigers, said Missouri had lost six games this season by eight points or fewer. "We didn't play real good defense early in the year, but against Nebraska and Oklahoma State the Tigers improved on defense," Widenhofer said. During the resurgence of the Missouri defense, Widenhofer has been starting four freshmen. He said he was still looking for the best athletes to put on the field. The four freshmen and the rest of the defense will have to contain the passing attack of Kansas if Missouri is to win. Widenhofer said. Big 8 volleyball tourney begins By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff The KU volleyball team is a perfect example. Athletes are never satisfied. They win one game, and already they're looking forward to the next. The Jayhawks have rebounded from a 5-30 season last year to go 1774 this year. They ended a three-year streak of Big Eight conference losses by posting a 2-8 conference record. But they're still not satisfied. "Right now, we're happy," hitter Tammy Hill said recently. "But we took so many teams to five games and lost. If we had won those games, we definitely would be in third place." Third place in the conference was the Jayhawks' goal at the beginning of the season. They finished fifth, but a couple of wins at the conference championships this weekend would make their year. Kansas will play No. 4 seed Missouri at 6 p.m. tonight at Penn Valley Community College in Kansas City, Mo. The winner of that match will play defending Big Eight champion and No. 1 seed Nebraska at 6 p.m. tomorrow. "They come out really strong." head coach Frankie Alibiz said of the Tigers, "but if they get into trouble, they start to fold." She said Missouri's blocking and hitting were the worst in the conference except for the Jayhawks, and the key to Kansas' play would be confidence. "It's past the physical preparation and down to the mental," she said. "Right now it's just a matter of who wants to win the most." Colorado and Oklahoma State do not have volleyball teams. In other tournament play, No. 6 Iowa State will face No. 3 Kansas State tonight, and the winner will play No. 2 Oklahoma tomorrow. Kansas split matches with Missouri this season. The Jayhawk's victory over the Tigers came in a five-game match in Allen Field House. "We beat them once, and I'm sure we can beat them again," KU team member Shannon Ridgeway said. Not many conference teams have been intense against the Jayhawks this year because they are too used to Kansas being the doormat of the Big Eight. Albizt said that when the Jayhawks were pressing Oklahoma in one of the teams' matches, the Oklahoma coach said to his players during the timeouts, " 'KU is going to beat us! KU!' But that is changing. As Kansas State coach Scott Nelson said of the Jayhawks last week, "They are going to be a real pain next year." Football Predictions "It didn't take the coaches long to recognize us," Albizt said. "Now our next battle is to get the teams to recognize us."
CarothersConboyLazzarinoGrave
Missouri at KansasMissouri 23-7Kansas 20-17Kansas 10-7Kansas 28-10
Nebraska at OklahomaNebraska 35-31Oklahoma 21-17Oklahoma 28-24Nebraska 35-28
Oklahoma State at Iowa StateOklahoma State 34-14Oklahoma State 32-10Oklahoma State 35-10Oklahoma State 41-7
Kansas State at ColoradoColorado 27-6Colorado 28-6Colorado 45-10Colorado 36-14
Ohio State at MichiganMichigan 28-21Michigan 24-14Michigan 31-24Ohio State 24-21
Penn State at PittsburghPenn State 25-16Penn State 31-14Penn State 28-21Penn State 34-28
UCLA at USCUCLA 24-17UCLA 28-21UCLA 17-10USC 21-18
Harvard at YaleHarvard 221-0Harvard 21-14Harvard 42-10Yale 24-14
Louisiana St. at Notre DameLouisiana St. 21-19Notre Dame 17-14Notre Dame 21-17Notre Dame 28-17
SMU at ArkansasArkansas 29-26Arkansas 28-27Arkansas 28-20Arkansas 36-21
Season Totals59-38-3---.60866-31-3---.68070-27-3---.72260-37-3---.619
The predictors are James Carothers, associate professor of English; Bill Conby, professor of communication studies; Chris Lazzerino, Kansan sports editor; and Bryan Graves, Kansan photo editor. Paul Goodman/KANSAN Lady Hawks Washington's team may need a lot of watching this season, with only one senior and two juniors. And according to Washington, the team will need a lot of hard work. Evette Ott is pressured by Sherri Stoecker during women's basketball practice at Allen Field House. The Jayhawks were preparing yesterday for the season opener tomorrow when they host Drake at 3:30 p.m. Jayhawks put to test in opener During practice, head women's basketball coach Marian Washington's eyes never leave the court. Even when she is talking to someone on the sidelines, she watches her players. By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff Fans will see whether the work has paid off so far when the team opens its season at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow against Drake in Allen Field House. The Jayhawks, 19-10 overall last year and 9-5 in the Big Eight conference, will take on the 24-6 Bulldogs. "We never think we cannot beat someone," she said yesterday. "We may bat ourselves because we're still young. But it's not going to just come for us. We're going to have to work for it." Washington said KU's game plan would be to run the ball and work together. "What we have is a lot of fitness," she said "If we just play our game and play for 40 minutes, we hope to fire them. We're not supersters. Our key is to work together." Kansas' probable starters are forwards Jackie Martin and Toni Webb, guards 'Evette Ott and Sherri Stoecker and center Vickie Adkins. The 6-foot-1 Adkins was called the best player in the conference by Street and Smith basketball magazine. She averaged 20.4 points and nine rebounds each game last season. Her counterpart, Drake center Wanda Ford, 6-0, averaged 24 points and 17.8 rebounds and was a finalist for the Wade Trophy last year. She finished the season second in the country in rebounding. Former Chief charged with theft United Press International HOUSTON — Police are investigating the possibility that former Kansas City Chief Warren McVea biked several restaurants out of food by claiming he was using it to help needy children, a prosecutor said yesterday. "It's really, really sad." Assistant District Attorney Vic Wisner said yesterday. "For a professional football player to fall this far, this fast, that he would have to resort to something like this. He has just fallen on real hard times." MeVea, 39, was charged with theft in connection with such a scam Wednesday and was released after posting $800 bond. Police are looking into reports that MeVea may have used the same tactics to defraud other fast-food restaurants. McVea allegedly posed as a Houston Oilers player soliciting food donations for underprivileged children. "He said he needed chicken for indigent children in connection with the work he does for the Oilers," Wisner said. "He promised there would be good publicity for Kentucky Fried "Of course, he always conveniently forgot to bring the tickets with him." Chicken, and that he would provide free Oilers tickets for the people who helped. Officials of a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant victimized by a similar scheme several months ago notified police after McVea, claiming to be Oilers wide receiver Tim Smith, sought a donation of $50-$100 worth of food. McVean was arrested when he arrived at the restaurant to pick up the chicken. McEnroe's heart calling the shots MELBOURNE, Australia — John McEnroe, known to give offials a difficult time on the court, now has organizers guessing whether he'll even show up for the $2.2 million Australian Open, which begins Monday at Kooyong Stadium. The 26-year-old New York southpaw, ranked second in the world, appears to be giving Lawn Tennis Association of Australia officials the runaround. One line of thought says that it's McEnroe's heart calling the shots. The heartstrings appear to be pulling in favor of his girlfriend, film star Tatum O'Neal. "We shall know within the next 24 hours," tournament spokesman Tony Peek said of McEnroe's arrival. "So far we haven't heard about a definite arrival." Officials are concerned and pessimistic about McEnroe's participation, following recent reports he was not enthusiastic about playing the Grand Slam event. If McEnroe does play, Peek said officials might not schedule the second seed in his opening match until next Friday, five days after the tournament begins. This would almost certainly result in a confrontation between the temperamental American and officials, since McEnroe prefers to work himself into a tournament with match play rather than practice. Even without McEnroe, the men's draw is still a high quality one with Lendl, the U.S. open champion from Czechoslovakia, seeded No. 1, defending champion Mats Wilander of Sweden, the third seed, and West German Wimbledon champion Boris Becker, seeded fourth. Wilander, who has been in Australia practicing for two weeks, will be attempting to become only the third player in the tournament's history to win three straight titles. Bomb Squad set to retire veterans By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas Bomb Squad, which has fizzled during the last month, will have one final opportunity to explode when the Jayhawks meet Missouri at 11:40 a.m. tomorrow in Memorial Stadium. At the end of the game, the squad will retire five of its players. Quarterback Mike Norseth, receivers Richard Estell, Sandy McGee, Skip Peete and tight end Sylvester Byrd will be making their final appearance tomorrow . They are five of the 10 offensive seniors who will be playing their last game for Kansas. Runningbacks Lynn Williams, Harvey Fields and Arnold Fields and linemen Paul Swenson and John Loncar will also be playing their final game in Memorial Stadium. "As a group we realize that this will be our last game, so we want to go out on a winning note," Byrd said yesterday. "We have invested a lot of time and effort into this week." Byrd, who redshirted himself last season, has caught 17 passes for 176 yards and three touchdowns this season. He said a victory tomorrow was important because it would give next year's team something to build upon. Estell, who holds the Kansas record for career receptions and receptions in a season, said a win over the Tigers would help salvage the season for the seniors. "We set a lot of goals this year, and one of them was to go to a bowl game," Estell said. "Since that can no longer happen, Saturday is our bowl game." "I think Kansas now has the reputation of a passing team, and I will always remember that I was a part of the team that started throwing the ball at Kansas," he said. One accomplishment that Estell takes pride in is the transformation of Kansas into an effective passing team in comparison with teams of the last three years. He said that criticism often brought Kansas closer together as a team. Norseth, who has been responsible for the passing game during the last two years, said the one thing he would miss when his career was over was the closeness of the team. Norseth became the leader in total offense this season with 3,241 yards. He surpassed the record of former quarterback Frank Seurer, who had 2,789 yards of total offense in 1983. Despite Norseth's success, Kansas has not posted a winning season. 'Our record is not that good, but we lost four games that we had a chance to win." Norseth said. "Last year in our six losses, we didn't have a chance to win any of them. That's the difference between last year and this year. We're getting confidence, and that should carry over to next year." McGee, who has caught 31 passes this season, said the two things that he would remember were the unexpected win over Southern California in 1983 and his arrival in Lawrence from Los Angeles' Olden West Junior College. "When I first came here I was out of shape and Coach Gottfried and the coaching staff have never let me forget about it." McGee said. Williams said the thing that he'd remember most were his two 100-yard games against Kansas State. And despite his on and off the field problems, Williams said he was satisfied with the season. Williams, who was declared academically ineligible and then reinstated by a court order, has rushed for 341 yards and scored three touchdowns this season. "One of my goals this year was to rush for 1,000 yards, but with missing the first three games of the season, I was not in shape when I returned in the Florida State game," Williams said. 241 1 14 University Daily Kansan Classified Ads The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 The University Daily CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 0-15 2.60 16-20 2.90 21-25 3.20 For every 5 words add: 30¢ AD DEADLINES Monday ... Thursday 4 p.m Tuesday ... Friday 4 p.m Wednesday ... Monday 4 p.m Thursday ... Tuesday 4 p.m Wednesday ... Wednesday 4 p.m - 3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 3.75 5.25 8.25 6.75 9.05 4.75 6.75 10.35 50¢ 75¢ 1.05 Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No reverence allowed in Classified Displays. Notebooks are allowed in classified display ads. POLICIES FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words. - Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words. - Deadline is 4 o.m. - 2 working days prior to - Classified display advertisements - Classified display advertisements towards me - Checks must accompany all classified ads matter to The University Dally Kansan - classified display advertisements - Classified display ads do not count towards n of FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed on the karnan business office at 804-4358. - Term Credit may not be obtained. * Tearstakes are not provided for classified or unclassified credit. - Blue wiring • Blind box ads—please add a $4 service charge - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only - Checks insure accompany all classified ads marked to The University Daly Kaiser ENTERTAINMENT this earned rate discount Samples of all mail order items must be submitted - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance >worth credit, has been established. Dance to live fiddle music! Jayhawk Oltime Bardance Company. Make your next part unite - Competitiveness is assessed for more than one item in the questionnaire. No refunds on enrolment of pre-paid classifier list. * Confidentiality is maintained. HEART OF GOLD BAND ROCKIN' OUT AT J.WATSON'S 21 9TH IOWA MILLCREST CENTER FRIDAY NOVEMBER 22TH SATURDAY NOV. 23TH News and Business Staff Positions The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, StauFFER-Flint Hall by p. 5.m., Monday, December 2, 1985. 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. Pre Thanksgiving Party "85" Dance show band The hottest band in the midwest Sat. Nov. 23 at the MASTER'S INN 6th & Iowa featuring TORCH Ken Ballroom 9 p.m.-3 a.m. Cover Charge The Master Blaster spinning your favorite sounds Sponsored by: Sponsored by: Class Act hair stylists Tom Jones Productions Donny Cameron Jerry Dowdell AWS Promotions Rock Disco Funk ANNOUNCEMENTS Rent-VCE with 2 movies, overnight $14.99 SUITEY's TV 1447 W 147, third 684-891). Mon, Sat, Sundays $5.00 per person. Aspen 891 SUA Travel is going to beautiful Aspen Calendar Jan 41 and you can have a trip. Please bring your laptop, iPhone, iPad, everything, even lift tickets. Sign-up deadline is the last Friday of the month in the office in Uber or call 644-3674 for details. BE READY FOR FINALS! Attend the Preparing for Exams Study Skills Workshop. Topics covered: time management, memory, reviewing, test-taking strategies, anxiety, and more. Free Wednesday. December 4, 7 p.m. 300 Strong Hall FREES. Presented by the Student Assistance Do you have talent? Prove it! Audition for In-Bet women acts on Rock Chalk Revue. Dec. 2, 6. Do you have talent? Prove it! Auction for In Between Acts for Reach Chalk Revue. Dec. 2 & 3. 18" Hex* Color T, V S S III 8 months. Smitty's S TV 147 W F, 345 - 0475. Mon., Sat., May 9 - 9:00 Sun. **VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL** EMILIA TEMPEZ, November 14, 2015 - Preparing for a Language Study Skills, 3-Time Management. FIRE!E! to attend at the Student Center. Weekend Special 3 an hour lane renta Don't pay by the person, pay by the hour— unlimited bowlers! THE KANSAS UNION JAYBOWL Level 1 Call 864.3545 FOR RENT Naismith Hall Contracts Available for Spring Semester $100 Pre-Paid 842-4637 Br. to sublease at Red Cake, 1030 Alhambra. Two- br. 450 plus utilities. Cable T. pay.LEASE Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 West 8th. One bedroom furnished, 3rd floor. $225 plus utilities. Lease through 842-830-1423, price could be negotiable. 842-830-1423, 843-830-1433 Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at BEKERLEY FLATS. Vacations available now and at semester. Plan ahead, lease now for next year. 843-2116. Available Jan. 1- 3 or 4 bedroom apartment 1 block from unclein newly remodeled 757 month plus building Jayhawker Towers ON CAMPUS 2-Br. Apts. for KU students. - Individual Contract Option - For 2,3 or 4 persons - 10-Month Leases - All Utilities Paid Limited spaces will be available at Naismith Hall next semester. Waiting lists are formed now so don't delay! For more information call or come to Naismith Hall, *Naismith Hall*, 108 Naismith Drive, 843-8596. jemand for Nainasit Hall has never been allowed in this spring. Limited spaces available for next semester. Drop by for a tour today and see air 'new look' for yourself. Nainasit Hall, 1000 - Limited Access Doors Available MUST SURLEASE. Gatehouse Apartments, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, good location. Available end of semester, lease through May. Ask for Sarah 749-3811 Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to university. Utilities paid. Call 842-1483. - Free Cable TV * Laundry Facility 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 - Air Conditioned - Furnished or Unfurnished HEATBREWWOOD VALLEY: One & two bedrooms available beginning at $80/month. All apartments have CA, gas heat, DP, PF refrigerator Energy efficient and on bus route. Cal 643-7547 Nice southeast location. New 1 bedroom duplex. Spacious living room with sitting glass door to eat. Eat - in kitchen w/dw, disposal, range, refrigerator, laundry room, w wall to wall carpet. Kitchen table large immediate; tissue to July 1, 186. Locker large; $45 per month. 1030 E- 252d恳 Tht. 842-3528 Nice Rooms $150.00 Util. Paid $43-476 after 8 p.m. Must substel b lr Apt. Extremely close to campus. Snaplous living and kitchen area. Comfortable sitting room with closet. NAISMITH HALL. Spring semester opening for mature security staff to be paid, immediate charge. 312-879-5240. Non-aning students reevaluate for spring semester. Duplies behind Meadowbrook $180/mo. $15 off all purchases. Enjoy the fireplace this winter and the pool this summer. New arrival of a Lawrence's nicest 2 bedroom apt. Communities. Excellent location for your home. CWTLME,打电话 814-7946 or 844-6060 for more info. excellent location one bedroom studio basement partner equipped kitchen tow furnish at 1901 room number 2208 Furnished rooms from $100 with some utilities paid. Two bkts from Kansas Union. No pets allowed. owelling 1, 2, & bedroom apt's, townhouses, and duplexes for spring & summer semester octo- nary. *CAMPUS FACILITIES* (90) Kentucky; 841-600- ROOMS FOR M/F MUSTENANCE AVAILABLE Now furnished, Share Kitchen, bath. Walk to campus. 11th & Kentucky $110, $115 & $120 per day. Large one bedroom, gas heat, gas/water paid, $255, or $149-251 Room in home for young University woman, nice location now, spring semester and on. Need transportation call 845-0368 before 9 a.m. or evenings. Rooms. No lease, furnished, all utilities paid, color cable TV, phone, maid service, laundry facilities, kitchen privileges, on KU bus route. EconLodge. 843-6611 Rooms for rent on the hill 1/10 mile from Union. 895 and 812. Call 841-6495. SUBLEASE 2 bedroom Apl. On Bus Route and Golf Course Square. Apll. 460 Flat Unitages. 842-890 Square Appl. 460 Flat Unitages. 842-890 SUNFLOWER LOWER HOUSE. Spring openings, reserve now. 10 students, private rooms, close to campus armoire 3, bo. bq. kitchensr mrm. plenty storage, $350 rm plush. uths and Indiana. OR: Female roommate non-smoker. 1/3 costs, 841-3601. 749-0805. or 749-1491. Spacious two bedroom furnished housewife for rent close to campus. Includes garage, 1/4 bath, balcony and new carpeting. Very comfortable home as Decl. Cv. 749-7404, 811-1200 (days) Gena Sublease through May, Village Apts. Apts 2. bedroom. Large kitchen and living room. Nice and quiet. On Bus route $253/month. 749-2376 or phone: 842-3040. Sublease 1 bedroom furnished apartment, Tangdee Anglo Ace, close to campus. Call office. 934-752-8081. **Sublease:** Nice big room with bath in 6 bedroom. House: Nice neighborhood, 4 blocks from campus. Sublease. Available immediately-Studio on bus line. Next to Sanctuary. Phone 842-3725. Trailer for sublease. 1. BR, close to KU. $175/month, low utilities. Call evening, eights. 84-8736. Want to live in Nismath? Need female roommate for Spring 749-4085. Subl 2 bedroom apartment until May. Option to payment of 1/2 security deposit, paid, near KU 803-0929 GIFT offers a completely furnished two bedroom apartment available immediately! We also have sobleware on 1, 2 and 3 bedroom bedrooms. The suite is near KU. CAB 1412.121.812 or 759.494, or 1412.121.812 or 759.494. NewApartment—Room, for 4; Spacious, bedrooms, Microwave; Fireplace; Garage; 1/12 Bath; Ideal Location, Campus and residential; Availability January 1. Call 749-3825. FOR SALE CARPET 1/3 of the price of new, 35,000 square yards to choose from. Big Bob's Carpet-Shop Carpet CARPET 35,000 square yards in a rainbow of color and taste. Big Bldg 8 Used Carpets. 738 New Comic Books, Playbills, Penthouses, etc. mary's New Hampshire, Tues. fri. Sat. & Sun 10-5 S.1 New Hampshire Electronic typewriter, 1 year old. $130-Knieless GS 190CM-HA, Gze binding, 80-Wki racket, gutter mount, locks. $25-call $61-6407 by 6 p.m. Keep truing. FOR SALE. Mountain bike. $30. Sold new for $50. Call Brian. 842-292-955 FOR SALE. Student season basketball ticket. Pent offer #90-300. For Sale. A 14 X 70 Mobile Home. Why throw your money away on rent when you can have equity when you graduate? 2 bdram., i bath home is perfect for coomats or young family For Sale: Folding Drafting table, white metal frame, good condition. $75-841-8666 evenings. For Sale: Student Basket Ticket. Best Offer 841-822. Ardua Call us offer (call me) for details. Call us offer (call me) for details. Call us offer (call me) for details. Call us offer (call me) for details. **Notice:** Property from $1U repair. Also delinquent tax. **Property:** 1-800-697-0878. KU SEASON BASKETBALL TICKET for sale. Call 842-8803. Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sure to use them in 1. As study guide. 2. For class discussion. 3. For analysis of Western Civilization, available now at Town Creek; The Jahawk bookstore, and online. FOUND-Nov. 19 Behind Roll-Hall Vowell FOUND-Nov. 20 Behind Roll-Hall 948-8049 days or 811-8478 weeks until 9 p.m. Tire of looking everywhere for QUALITY TIRES & WHEELS at reasonable prices. Well, you don't have to look in the back of your brand is at our everyday low prices (comparable with MAIL-ORDER). Come in and check us out 10.0 Wt. 23rd (Beeside Pizza Hut) 794-547. We also offer basketballickets. Best offer! Call 841-474-714. YAMAHA Stero Receiver, 10 watts, Digital Qartier Stereo Tuner and Special Expander. DVD/CD Audio. Found Twent. Nov 19th, calculator in Whewell Cause Brid and identify location and type of calculator. SKIMS for sale. Head Master 2005 's, w/ salanan 7207 SKIMS for sale. Head Master 2005 's, w/ salanan 7207. best in best. Call 841-340-9656. 1097 Pontine Bonneville, excellent condition, two days Must sell as soon as possible. Bent offer. NIKON AL Lenaces, 105 mm, F1.8-$200 35mm F4-275, HBts at 804-9544 FOUND 6-mp. old shaperboard puppy at lake on Christ mount. mdp AUTO SALES F/80% * 1/x* 7 inch / convertible. Runs well. Looks sharp. Clarp 81-6830. after 6 p.m. Ask $1590. 1979 Mercury Capri, $2,000 miles, one owner, A/C starting $3,000. Clarp 81-6830. after 4 p.m. Babyssity* needed in my home for all home basketball games. Top pay for response, non-contact coaching. 1975 Fiat 131. Refault. Rebuilt engine. runs good. 875 or best offer. For info. call John 841-3027. 74 Piston. Priced to sell, in good running condition. Call 748-3989. HELP WANTED Delivery Drives. Need 10 persons for campus area deliverys. Earn 25 and up per a.m. a.m. p.m. Apply 9-6 at 2222 W at the Master Inn 1123-A. Ask for Jk. 1983 Dodge Collision. 4 apex overdrive, A/C. 2001 Chrysler Accord. 4 excellent condition, Great Gas Mileage 16,500 miles. Lost Keys near Carnell O'Leary, Reward. 864-4385 or 864-0929 74 Ford 14d LRE, RELEASE, Corn well. New bat- tle, trees, planting. Call 861-2458, 12:00 noon. Door to door subscription sales/survey, November 26 & 27, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Paid training given from 4:30-5:30 p.m. Nov. 26. Pays $4 hour plus $100 per person. November 27-28, 8:30-10:00. Manage temporary Services. EOE. Lift: Folded, burgundy, flowered umbrella at stadium. Colorate game. Sentimental value. Do you enjoy cleaning? You may qualify to be a part of our hard-working team. Call BUCK-INGHAM PALACE Housecleaning between 8 a.m. noon. 842 6264 78 Buck Regal Limited 74.990 lit. AC, PC BH, 3250 North Park, Club. Interior, $2500 Buck Regal 74.970 Loft-brown male dog, white on nose and chest. Weard blue clothing. Call 842-0727. Enjoy a safe adventure in Boston; Families seek an early commitment, immediate and delayed placement mother and her nannie manage this employment write. Live *in* Care, 388 Hewlett Street, 78 Horizon, 44,000 miles 4 cyl. Auto-4, 60-240 hp 35 Hornos, 36,000 miles 4 cyl. Auto-4, 60-240 hp and dependable car in good condition, 842-7141 Large Lawrence law firm taking applications for word processors to work 24 hours during evening. Must be non-smoker. Please send resume, resume, resume and performed & requested hours to PO Box 86,玲玲馆. LOST/FOUND Macro Programming. We're looking for someone to do some 1/73 Macro programming for custom built I/O devices. As usual the hardware engineer describes it as an easy job for a good programmer. Price negotiable after you look at the job. Contact Susan NUTOM, KKM; 588-5937 Found A white & gold spoted cat. Found near 8th & 8th Ers. Rd. Call 841-6907. Needed. Babies to come to my home from 3:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. M-F. Two children age 2 and 3. Must have references and own transportation. Call between 9 and 3. M48-5527. Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 OVERSENE JOBS Summer, yr.round Europe. S.A., Ameror. Aai, Asia All, Fields 9000-2600 mo sightseeing. Free info, Write LIC, PO Box 52-KSI. Coral Del Mar, CA 90285. Found: RU all players basketball ticket in front of Yello Sub. Please call 841-733. Part-time cocktail waitress needed Fri, and Sat, nights. Apply in preparation for Saturday's event at Donates. RESEARCH ASSISTANT Full time research assistant position in analytical chemistry. Requires strong background in general chemistry and experience in the development of analytical assays for trace analysis of bioactive substances and the preparation of technical reports. A bachelor's degree in physical or biological sciences is helpful but not required. Salary dependent on qualifications. Please contact Dr. Obbore Wong, Oread Laboratories, Inc., 2065 Constant Avenue, Lawrence, S 60046. Application deadline is 12/2/8. Oread Laboratories is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer. STUDENT PROGRAMMER. Half-time student hourly position in College of LAHS Office. Duties include Coding, testing and documenting of computer software. Experience with microcomputer hardware and software. Consultation with microcomputer users concerning questions. Required: Fluency in BASIC and MS-DOS. Understanding of structured programming. Ability to communicate effectively. Preferred: Experience in UNIX, C, GBASE II or H. Microsoft BASIC Graphics and a mouse. Preferred: Experience in UNIX, C, GBASE II or H. Microsoft BASIC Graphics and a mouse. Preferred: Apply in Room 219 Strong up to 11/28/85. Teacher's Aide position in Toddler Room. Starting 0th. Hours are required. Teacher's position Toddler Home Start- ing Dec. 9th 8am-10am week of $3.50 a hour. Apply at Children Learning Center, 311 Murray by Dec.1. Wanted-Church Musician, Gospel/Contem- mural/Sacred, Student/adult, Interested, call 843-6636 or 841-707 M-F. Salary commensurate with ability. Word Processing Typists. Academic Computing Services has two half-time student hourly positions available. Deadline 5:30 p.m. December 3, 1985. Salary $3.35/hr. Editing and entering text using a word processor; data entry. Training provided. Required Qualifications. Current enrollment at KU; accurate typing skills. Fill up app. Logistics area of Computer University, University of Kansas. Female Ade A.M. 7:36 12:00; P.M. 10:12; weekends also 749-0288 Hiring Today Have 15 positions available for students and Housewives for telephone office work. Earn extra Christmas money. Good pay. No vacation. Width 8th at the Master In Suite 112A. Ask for K. PERSONAL DAHVYRN FROM WEST WHO CALLED AT 3:30 A.M. CALL ME BACK RICK BATTENFELD HALL cordially invites All Alumni and Friends to an Open House Schnoikodiodes-You are my Kartoffelkneelm, Ich liebe Dich. Huckleberry 3 three attractive females seek three fun-loving, attractive males for a one night stand of dining and dancing on Dec. 7. Call 843-6255. Ask for Iot Blondes Saturday, November 23 10 a.m.—7 p.m. on Congratulations Deon Jennifer Francis "Mom" Platt Welcome to the bonds of Alpha Chi! AX love, your sisters To that Cute Blonde, Brunette or Red Head with Talent - Meet me at the Rock Chalk BAI Auditions. Dec 2 and 3 - Bring your Act. Wanted: Doopex Dead. Must be young and attractive. Available. Must be able to start dishwasher and care for goat. Contact Hobber at "the dooper." $100-$389 Weekly/Up Mailing Circulars! "Quarterly. Sincerely interrelated ruth self-addressed envelope: Success, PO Box 470CEG, Woodstock, IL 60098 BUS. PERSONAL Aerobics W/Style - Guey-Gala, good workouts 4x weekly; Monday, Wednesday, Thursday evenings & Saturday mornings. Enrol 2 friends a week session. Tit 841-6327, Aid 824-0807. Students include: 4x weekly students. Four full time barbers; regular hair students. Calls 8-5. Bats: 8-7. Batec: 8-14. Closed Mondays. Check Us Out Check Us Out jewelry posters THE MUSEUM SHOP rocks books happy 2nd生日 Witters. Have had a wonderful 3 months with you, looking forward to many more with you. Thank God for Country Club Week!. With you, The Writers Woman. All remaining T-shirts $4-$4.75 reduced prices on some merchandise Museum of Natural History for that special someone Museum of Natural History (next to KS Union) 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 1-5 Sun 夜 startling at 5 p.m. Call: 841-3260. Rent '19" Color V T 328.98 a month Curtis Mathes, 1447 W, 824, 325-731. Mon - Sat; 9:30 - 10:45 Nov. 5 Immediate passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa. I.D., and of course, fax. Send to: Department of Health, USA. FLOAT CONNECTION · 14th E. 8th St. 749-0771. Mastercard and Visa. We get your computer's heads on straight. Computer Weget AlphaOmega Computer Services. AlphaOmega Computer Services. Keep Warm with wool top coats, hats, and gloves from The Ets. Shop 72 Mass. 64831 OPN1 www.theetshop.com New from California: Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure: 316-584-7542, PG Roos 362, Wikillea. On Monday's Ransom KU Kaperservices needed Rent' 13% C. T. V $28.98 a month. Smity's T. V. 1477 824 r-9572 8471 Sun; 9:30-10:30. Sun; 1 1:30-3:30. Sun; 3:30-4:30. Sun; 6:30-7:30. MENU HOT LINE 364-4567 The Union's recording + of the dav's entrees & soups. Broke? Not enough money for college? You could be missing out on thousands of dollars in financial aid. And find out how to get your fair share. For your copy of "A Compensate Guide to Financial Aid" address, and only $19 to Bel-Ray International, 3023 Metcalf Suite Overland PK 6921 Let Your Body Breathe! JOMPHREBSENIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater area: Call for appointment 13-345-1800. NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING NATURAL WAY Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed shirt; 749-1611 Camera Repair now at One Hour Photo. Southern Hills Mile. THE FAR SIDE 841-0100 WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from 75, or sailing at South Padre Island for 100 or more hours. Sunscape Tours for more information call (1-800-321-9911 or contact a Sunscape Representative TODAY! When your winter break is over, come back to Steamboat Springs to Warm up snorkeling long enough. CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK **MATH TUTOR** - Bob Meets holds an M, in math from K. U. where 102, 102, 116, and 133 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professional students at KU with a 40 minute session. Call 849-9321. **SINGLES**. Results Effective. Join hundreds of preteened quality adults looking for sincere companionship, 1/2 price for women under 30 and 5/2 price for men under 40. 849-7944. No obligation. New Connections Video in Lawrence is an offspring of New Beginnings Video in Kansas City. Holdings are coming so soon. Call 849-7944. The first 10 women under 25 (with KUD) get a FREE membership. Modeling and theater portfolios—showing new beginners to professionals, call for information * Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, 14-skirt glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc., for an up-coming event? J M Favors offers the best quality and price on canvas to deliver your delivery. You design it on our latest artists, 2201 W. 25th (Behind Gabson-611-4349). By GARY LARSON BLOOM COUNTY 1965 Universal Press Syndicate "C'mon, c'mon! You've done this a hundred times, Uzula; the vines always snap you back just before you hit. ... Remember, that's National Geographic down there." YA KNOW, I CAN'T SEEM TO SHARE THE FEELING THAT CHARLES AND DI ARE JUST TOO TOO SOMETHING. by Berke Breathed THEY'RE JUST TOO... TOO SOMETHING. JUST TOO...TOO. THE WAY THEY WALK, TALK...DRESS...SIT. LAUGH PERICATELY... ITS VAGUE...ABSTRACT... I CAN'T PUT MY FINGER ON IT. 1 ...WHITE. THAT'S IT. Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 University Daily Kansan 15 *Thousands of R & B R album* - or less. Also collectors items, Sat & Sun only. 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. Quantitables B11 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all styles music. Finest Quality Skateboards & Accessories UPTOWN BICYCLES 1337 Mass. 749-0636 **Sewing and Alterations-all kids, including** **rewafters, professional fashion designer** **dressers, models, etc.** 943-520-7818 CHRISTMAS GIFT LIST Men's Hats & Caps Leather Flight Jackets Formal Wear Paradise-Found Hawaiian Shirts, Shorts, Long Pants wring-tip Shirts Silk Cumbernd Setts Studs & Cuff Links Studs & Cuff Links Ladies Hats □ Ladies Gloves Leather, Lace, Fashion □ New & Antique Jewelry □ Fun Fashion Hosiery □ Femilet From Denmark □ 100% Cotton Camisoles, Sleep & Exercise Wear The Etc. Shop TM Vintage Formal Wear & Classic Clothing 732 Mass. 843-0611 Mon-Sat 11:50-30 Thurs. until Sun 12:5 Classified Ads The Etc. Shop Vintage Formal Weed & Classic Clothing 732 Mass. 843-0611 Animal Acta! Comedians! Anything that can be performed in front of over 7,000 people in Auditions. Auditions Dec 2 & 3. MISCELLANEOUS LAWRENCE LIONS CLUB announces the exciting 1985-86 MERCHANTS GOLDEN CHECKS $700 value for only $24.95 A Real Budget Stretcher Gifts* Services Restaurant Meals Entertainment You may be called to receive 100 FREE CERTIFICATES call for more info. 842-2046 No purchases are required when you spend Lions Club Golden Checks LIONS L INFINITIVO RIÓN5 L INFORMACIÓN MUNICIPAL available immediately; Secure, accessible, overnight garage close to campus $40/mo. Ships within 2 business days. SERVICES OFFERED Haircuts 77, perm $30 at Chanel. Contact Chris Mon sat at 12:30PM. Walt-in-law. in-room TADIUM BARBER SHOP 1032 Massachusetts, township, all haircuts. $6. No appointment BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling 843-8421 Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841.5716 THEME & THIES OUTLINED enhanced with library RE-SEARCH organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising, Victor Clark 462,8240 TYPING 1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Affordable and affordable tutoring, judy. 829-7454. 1- 1- 1. TRI WORD PROCESSING. Experience tensible, Reliable. Rush job, accept payment. 1. 3-Dependable, accurate, professional WORLD books, etc. Data.World.B41 847-070 import data.world.b41 84-Hour Typing, All day, all night, Resumes, Resumes and fast service. Best quality and fastest service. 841-506-7966 professional typing. Term papers, Thesis. Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Using IBM Sectric Computer Systems. AAA TYPEING/842-1942. Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs, Law review articles typed by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in b 6 p.m. out by 10 p.m. same day. A.L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term terms. P897-4697 5:30. A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850. Absolutely LETTER PERFECT Word processing, typing and bookkeeping for high school students. 444 Illinois, 943-618. Accurate, affordable typing through holiday by formatting a Medical School secretary. Call 412-750-7800. All Kinds of Typing: GOOD IMPRESSIONS Fast, recommend spelling/punctuation errors creni- 441-1829 AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing/Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics, Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates. 749-1118 Attention Meadowbrook student, excellent experience. APA format experience Call Pat. 845-6708 CLEAN Fast and Dependable Typing Service. Call 841-6846 any time. 1:Plus Typing: law papers, resumes, disertations 2:Typing: law papers, resumes, memory 3:474-874 or 475-874, p. e.m. t.p. DEFENDABLE, professional, experienced. JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service. TRANSCRIPT also; standard cassette tape. 843-877. DISSERTATIONS/ THESES/ LAW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphics, ONE-DAY服务 available on shorter student papers (up to 30 pages); Call Katy, Mommys "妈妈"; 843843 Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone 942-8310 after 3:30. Bars. English B.A. Tying or Tutoring. Spelling and grammar corrected. Overnight service. Call PROFESSIONAL typist with 15 years experience. Fast, accurate, and reliable. Call Cagget after 5 minutes. QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected TRIG Wordprocessing . CONSCIENTIOUS WORD PROCESSING. Will accept rush phone. Call 841-9711 TYPING PLUS assistance with competition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses; dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resume HAVE M.S., Degree 81-8254. EXPERIENCE TYPETT Term papers, theses. EXPERIENCE WRIGHT Correct spelling Phone 853-904. Mrs. Wright TOP-NOTCH professional word processing, memoirs records, theses, letter quality print- ing. THE WORDCOCTORS--Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 943-3147 WANTED Female Roomate Wanted immediately to share two bedroom apt. Very nice furnished, have all bedrooms conditioned, conditioning close to campus and downtown is on bus route. 840.00 and half utilities 842.976 - if you need. Female, Roommate to share large two bedroom apartment spring semester. Close campus. Call Female roommate wanted for spring semester. Solar powered split-level townhouse, spinal stair, elevator. Female to share two bedroom apartment for spring semester. Close to campus: 745-6472 THE CLIQUE Female with 7 year old son needs roommate immediately to be duplex. $150 plus 1/4 utilities Fri. & Sat. Nights Party with THE CLIQUE 25¢ Draws Tues & Thurs. Mondays featuring The Electric Circus Non-Smoking female roommate for 2 bdmr. apt Call 843-9699 Cogburns Non-smoking female roommate to share three bedroom duplex new Mawbrook $190/mo non-smoking female roommate to share three bedroom duplex new Mawbrook $190/mo Non-Smoking, Male Romanite for two-bedroom agartment. Move-In January. $150/月, 1/2 utilities. Close to campus. 842-1436. After six. Ask for John. O. T. student cooperatively needs female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment in BC for spring semester. Roommate needed for spring semester. Nice 4 bedroom. Townhouse $135.00 per month. Call (866) 725-1234. Roommate needed to share fantastic house $235 + 1/3 utility. Close to campus, near busine street. Free parking. Responsible and fun-loving female to share 2-Demn for $100 a month. Beautiful view and location! Bas-ons: Keep dry. Bas-ons: Keep dry. Bus. router on bus. route. Call 844-3007. Your own rooms on bus. route. Call 844-3007. SHAKE HOUSE, 5 bhm 2 bath, deck, flakeage, washer/dryer, dishwasher, dispense. Near Westridge and Junkyra Jym. Call 740-6856 (wk), 841-1094 (bill). Bills. Wanted: 1 or 2 female roommates. New or second semester. Beautiful 3 bedding Bedroom Apt. PF, Cape (HBO), SW, on busine. 837-4167-8508. Keep trying. 837-9237-8517 or 837-4167-8508. Keep trying. Two people need 1-way ride to Milwaukee/North Share Drive. Share Drive: Share Drive Call 843-5491 or 843-6053 Space available for female at Nassim Hall start- ing spring semester. Call 749-2849. Wanted-Bonafide Student talent for Rock Chalk REVA IBA's. Auditions Dc. 2 & 3. Wanted: Senior, responsible male roommate to share apartment for spring semester. Two blocks from Kansas Union. 80 of rent per l/ of utilities. Call 749-2580 before 11 a.m. or after 10 p.m. Wanted - non-smoking female to share a large room 185pm plus 1/2 utilition. Call 842-3145. WIN a LARGE Minsky's PIZZA! Have Your Name in Lights Announced on 106 KLZR! PICK THE WINNERS BIG 8 GAMES of these Kansas State _vs. Colorado Oklahoma Nebraska ___ Oklahoma State ___ vs. Iowa State Tiebreaker: Pick the Score of Phone DEADLINE: Nov. 23 by 1 p.m. A WINNER EVERY WEEK! Your Entry Entitles You to $2 OFF a LARGE Pizza or $1 OFF a MEDIUM Pizza * Good at the time of registration * Good on delivery—842-0154 - We have FREE DAY DELIVERY! - We have FREE DAY DELIVERY • Reserve our "PARTY ROOM" for your party! 842-0154 Minsky's PIZZA 2228 Iowa $1495 COMPLETE High-Res Monitor, 256K, 2 Drives, Graphics Capability, Enhanced Keyboard, Clock/Calendar, MS-DOS, 1 YR Warranty AND Batteries INCLUDED WINNER LEADING EDGE MODEL "D" THE bargain-priced PC-compatibles tested, Leading Edge Model D is the clear winner. That's not surprising—it's the newest machine tested and was designed around lessons that were learned from some of the others. It combines all the features that you could possibly want as standard equipment with a price that you'd expect to pay for a stripped IBM machine." "PC EDITOR'S CHOICE—Among the PC Magazine—Oct.,1985 "Leading Edge is a registered trademark" COMPUTER OUTLET Your computer connection at 843-PLUG • 804 N.H. SUA FILMS THEY'RE HERE TO SAVE THE WORLD BILL MURRAY DAN AYKROYD MICHELNEY WEAVY GHOSTBUSTERS THE SUPERNATURAL COMEDY "GHOSTBUSTERS is pure gold all the way." — Shella Benson, LOS ANGELES TIMES Fri. & Sat., Nov. 22 & 23 $1.50 Woodruff Aud. 3:30 p.m., 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m. STRANGE BEHAVIOR' IS IN A CLASS BY ITSELF. FIONA LEWIS GIVES A TERRIFICALLY MANIACAL PERFORMANCE AS THE ICY MURDEROUS LADY SCIENTIST. -Rex Reed, N.Y. DAILY NEWS A MAGNIFICENT NEW HORROR CLASSIC. IT IS SUPERBLY CHILLING AND ENTERTAINING. it's dead of night and everybody's asleep...ALMOST EVERYBODY! STRANGE BEHAVIOR "STRANGE BEHAVIOR" MICHAEL MURPHY LOUISE FLETCHER DAN SHOR FIDIA LEWIS ARTHUR DIGNAM Associate Producer WILLIAM CONDON Executive Producer JOHN ONLY DAVID HEMMINGS WILLIAM FAYMAN Produced by ANTHONY GINNAN and JOHN BARRETT Original music by TANDERINE DREAM A Hemileah and Riley Richhew Preservation of a South Street Film Production of a Michael Laughlin Film Screenplay by WILLIAM CONDON and MICHAEL LAUGHLIN RLD NORTHAL film Directed by MICHAEL LAUGHLIN R RESTRICTED And Two BY DAVID LYNCH THE GRANDMOTHER 34 minutes. 1970. Color. ALPHABET 4 minutes.1970.Color. MIDNIGHT MOVIE Fri. & Sat., Nov. 22 & 23 $2 Woodruff Aud. 16 University Daily Kansan From Page One Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 Coach Continued from p. 1 and grabbing players after they make mistakes. "He's almost like a Jekyll and Hyde," said Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director and a close friend of Gottfried's. "On the sidelines, it's war, and he's trying to win. Off the sidelines, he's one of the quietest, most sensitive guys you'd ever meet. "But I've never been around the guy — whether it's playing pinball at Mazizio's during lunch or whatever — when he was not a winner." Gottfried is just as competitive when it comes to academics. In the past two seasons, 18 players have been declared academically ineligible. Gottfried sees that as 18 losses. "When I lose people, that's almost like a defeat," Gotfried said. "I don't want us to fail at anything, whether it's academics or whatever. I guess when I lose a Doug certain, I really take that personally because he was one of the kids I brought from Cincinnati." and set rules. Gottfried also has supported tailback Lynn Williams and defensive lineman Dane Griffin, who were declared ineligible and are challenging the University's action in Johnson County District Court. Certain was ruled ineligible before the beginning of this season. Since he was a fifthyear senior, Certain had no more eligibility and left school. "I felt like that was a conscious decision on my part because I really felt like they had a good point." Gottfried said. "I haven't had one regret. I felt, especially in Lynn Williams' case, that they deserved to play. He has a wife and a child, and it is his last year." His fierce battle for his players has ruffled feathers in the academic community. teachers in the team be that his intensity and competitiveness may be misinterpreted," said Del Brinkman, KU's faculty representative to the National Collegiate Athletic Association and dean of journalism. "I've seen that often with people involved in sports. It's win or lose, up or down. That's the way it is for coaches because that is how society judges their success. Coaches tend to look at things as win-orlose situations, and in reality, what it's what it is for Mike Gottfried." Hunter worked as a middleman between Gottfried and the University faculty during the conflict last August. He said he saw the same intensity from Gottfried that he observed on Saturday afternoons. on Saturday. "Mike feels a deep sense of responsibility for his kids," Hunter said. "I think sometimes he's misunderstood by the public and the academic community because he battles so hard for his kids." In each of the past two years, Gottfried has lost key players because of academic problems. The ineligibilities twice have forced Gottfried to change plans right before the opening game of the season. "The academic thing has been one area that has kind of been a detriment," he said. "But I think people are working to improve that. There's a lot of things that happen when you're down, and people want to start jumping on people. I don't blame anybody for that." Still, the losses were bitter for Gottried. He says he wishes the problems never would have surfaced. But he has kept those feelings under wraps, despite the frustration. Mickey, Gottfried's wife, has watched the frustration build for the past two years. "This year, with all the things that have happened, has been really hard for Mike," she said. "This has been probably the touhest of all his years in coaching." Gottfried is no stranger to adversity. Despite the ineligibilities and five consecutive losses, Gottfried doesn't consider the 1985 season a tough time in his life. When Gottfried was 11, his father died of a heart attack at home. He held his father in his arms as he took his last breath. Two years ago, after KU upset USC and Gottfried was named Coach of the Week by UPI, he made a special trip to Alabama to visit a sick boy. Gottfried gave the boy an autographed football, then came home and asked other athletic officials to call the boy The boy died a week later. Hunter said of Gotfried, "I saw him cry in Hawaii this year after we won because we thought Skip Petee had a knee injury that might never allow him to play football again. It was because one of his players was hurt, and he cares about them deeply." So when Gottfried is asked about adversity, he just shrugs his shoulders. "This is not really a tough time. People are asking me about adversity, but this isn't This paradox of feelings bothers Gottfried at times. He desperately wants to win, but he also is aware of life outside football. adversity. When we were preparing for the Colorado game, I heard about the girl who fell out of a window and died. That's tough." "Sometimes I lose perspective," he said. "Win and loss record is important, but your everyday interaction with players and relationships with all other people is just as important, maybe more important. Not everybody can be an 11-0 team. Maybe you are a 5-7 team or a 5-6 team or a 6-8 team or a 7-team. "What it means when you lose is that the time is not right for you to win yet. We haven't done enough to win yet. We're going to do it and keep going until we get it right." Gottfried has seen the season slip away, from the ecstasy of a 4-1 start to the depths of a five-game tailspin in which the offense has disappeared along with chances for a bowl game. Tomorrow brings the end of the season, and with it the chance of finishing below 500. "If we get the sixth win, that's improvement," Gottfried said. "The kids have been through a lot. Everybody has." That includes Gottfried. Because the bottom line for him is winning — not at any cost — but winning. And he hasn't won at Kansas. But if his past is any indication, his competitive drive will keep him here until the Jayhawks are winners. "I felt like that's whatyou're supposed to do — you're supposed to win." Americans halt spending spree United Press International WASHINGTON — Americans reined in their purchases of big-ticket items during October as they nearly doubled their savings following a two-month car-buying spree, the Commerce Department reported yesterday; The department also said personal income before taxes rose 0.4 percent, or $13.1 billion, during October to $3.22 trillion on a seasonally adjusted annual basis — the fifth straight monthly increase. After-tax income also increased 0.4 percent, or $9.7 billion, following increases in September and August. But spending on goods and services tumbled 0.9 percent, or $23.3 billion, matching the same drop in February 1984 and bringing spending for the month to $2.54 trillion on an annual basis. Despite the drop in spending, attributed to fewer new car sales, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said, "We feel confident that the solid gains of the recent past should continue unabated." The drop "was inevitable," said Sandra Shaber, an economist with Chase Econometrics in Bala Cynwyd, Pa. "It was that huge swing in car sales that accounted for the drop but I don't think we're seeing a collapse in spending overall." consumers went on a car-buying spree in September and August, spurred by sales and attractive financing deals on 1985 models as dealers cleared their inventories before 1986 models came on the market. LAWRENCE BATTERY Co. 903 N. 2nd 7 to 6 M-F 842-2922 8 to 4 Sat. AUTOMOTIVE SALE Be Ready for Winter Don't Get Caught with your Battery Down Batteries 3 YR. 400 AMP... $29.95 4 YR. 455 AMP... $34.95 5 YR. 525 AMP... $39.95 5 YR. SUPER 650 AMP... $49.95 W/EX to Fit Most Cars and l.Trucks Ten Minute Free Installations—Free System Check Sale ends Sat. 11/23/85 Drinking Myth of the Week "YA GOTTA HAND IT TO JOE. HE CAN REALLY HOLD HIS LIQUOR." Don't envy Joe. Often the guy who can hold so much is developing a "tolerance" for alcohol. And tolerance can be a polite word for need. The Student Assistance Center STOPBREAKING SAC 465-091-0845 KU Basketball KU vs. PEPPERDINE N.I.T. Live Broadcast HZR106 9:45 p.m. Friday if won, also listen 7:45 p.m. Sunday Sponsored By Mrs. Winners Jayhawk Bookstore Owens Flowers Gammons Ellen Ford Moto-Photo Douglas County Bank Douglas County Bank Steak Dinner for Two at Whistlers Walk restaurant Includes: 2 8 oz. 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ZERCHER PHOTO DOWNTOWN 1107 Mass 843-4435 HILLCREST 919 Iowa 841-8668 TOASTIES! GLOVES AND MITT'S IN WOOLS, LEATHERS, GORETEX AND THINSULATE TO KEEP THOSE DIGITS FLEXIBLE... SUNFLOWER 804MASS. 1 Scary win Jayhawks beat Huskies 69-64 but victory isn't easy. See page 9. SINCE 1889 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A MONDAY, NOV. 25, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 66 (USPS 650-640) Drizzle Details page 3. 50 feared dead in raid on hijacked jet From Kansan wires VALLETTA, Malta — Egyptian commandos stormed a hijacked AirGirl jeliner in a burst of gunfire yesterday and battled grenade throwing Arab terrorists in a 10 minute firefight that left up to 50 people dead. Maltese officials said. The plane erupted in flames after the grenades were detonated, filling the cabin with smoke that billowed from the aircraft in one of the bloodiest conclusions to a bijacking in history. For the second time in a month the Boeing 737 served as a stage for terrorists. The jetliner was the same one forced down by U.S. fighters after the hijacking of the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro. At the time the plane was spiriting the Palestinian pirates responsible for the ship hijacking to freedom. The dead left in the wake of yesterday's raid included at least one of the three Americans aboard, a 20-year old woman who the pilot said was "executed" Saturday by "first-class killers." Her name was not immediately released. Officials also said all eight children aboard the plane were killed. Malta's state-run television said about 80 people were on the jetliner when the commandes attacked. It said 28 wounded people were taken to hospitals. At 8:15 p.m. the commanders crept up to the airliner after the lights were extinguished on the LUga airport on the southern end of Malta, said government information director Paul Mifsud. They blew in the cargo door and stormed into the plane firing automatic weapons, he said. Realizing an assault was under way, the Arabs pulled the pins on grenades and hurted them at their captives. Mifsud said. "The hijackers threw three hand grenades at the passengers and the grenades started a fire that filled the plane with flames and smoke. They (the commandos) fired with automatic weapons as they went in." he said. One of the hijackers tried to kill the pilot, Captain Hani Galal, during the assault and fired a shot that grazed his head. Galick picked up an ax and struck the hijacker with it. "I don't know why he decided to kill me," the pilot told sait at a news conference, his head wrapped in a white bandage. "Perhaps for the fun of it." The commandos and terrorists battled for 10 minutes before the gunfire stopped, Mistud said. Mifsud told a news conference that "about 50" people were killed in the assault. All of the hijackers, thought to number four or five, were thought to have died, he said. Mifsud and the State Department said no Americans were thought to have been aboard the plane during the commando assault. It was not immediately clear how many passengers had died at the hands of the hijackers before the raid. Reports ranged from one dead to as many as eight. The pilot said that the 20-year-old American woman was "executed" by the hijackers Saturday night and that the hijackers shot five other people during two gun battles with Egyptian sky marshals aboard the plane — one shortly after the hijacking began and another while the surrounded plane was on Malta. "I can't describe to you how I felt seeing my passengers being killed in cold blood," Galal, the pilot, said. "If I had to describe the hijackers, I would say first-class killers. They were desperate. They would not hesitate to blow up the whole plane. I did not think I would survive. I hated every minute of it." Mifsud said Prime Minister Carmelo Mifus Bonnii authorized the assault because "the situation was getting out of hand." JA AS J --- Bryan Graves/KANSAN Cold seat Sharon Mayo, Topkea, tries to stay warm in the Memorial Stadium stands during the KU Missouri football game. She said she went to Saturday's game, the last of the season for both teams, because she originally was from Missouri. The Jayhawks beat Missouri 34-20 to even their season record at 6-6. By Jill White Of the Kansan staff A planning oversight that scheduled basketball games on the same nights as performances in the Chamber Music Series and Concert Series has caused problems, the director of the series said last week. Jackie Davis, the director, said she was able to reschedule the Feb. 11 performance of the Canadian Brass for March 31, but the Waverly Consort's "A Christmas Story" would have to compete for audience members and parking space with the KU-Southern Illinois University game Dec. 3. "To say it's caused major problems is putting it mildly," Davis said. "I tried to change the Waverley Consort, but it was impossible. Unfortunately we have many patrons who have tickets to both events and will have to choose between the two events." Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, blamed the conflict on the rescheduling of Big Eight Conference games late in the summer and on his being new to the job. He was appointed as an assistant athletic director in July. "This year, due to conference readjustments, practically every team in the Big Eight was rescheduling games as late as this summer." Hunter said. "Everyone was trying to readjust for everyone else in the conference, and I was not aware of the conflict at the time." Hunter said he discovered the conflict when Davis called in mid-August and asked whether the department knew there was a schedule problem. Davis said the Concert Series and Chamber Music Series performances already had been made final. Hunter said the Big Eight schedule was being adjusted as late as August. The final schedule set the Southern Illinois game for Dec. 3 with the Waverley Consort and the University of Missouri game on Feb. 11, the date of the Concert Series performance by the Canadian Brass. After Davis informed him of the conflict, she and Hunter attempted to remedy the problem by designating certain parking areas soley for persons attending Waverly's Chamber Music Series performance, Hunter said. Parking spaces for persons attending the Waverly Consort have been reserved in Lot 3, behind and west of Strong Hall; Lot 18, along the service drive behind Hoch Auditorium and Wesco Hall, and in Lot 33, south of Lindley Hall. Open parking will be available in Lots 91 and 94, south and east of Memorial Stadium. Free shuttle bus service will be available from the stadium lots See CONFLICT. p. 5. col. 1 Unity helps Majority may end discord in Senate By Theresa Scott Of the Kansan staff When the votes were counted Thursday night in the Student Senate elections, the Common Sense Coalition had won at least 44 of 58 Senate seats, giving it at least a 75 percent majority in student government. Because of this large majority, many victorious Common Sense candidates say dissent in the Senate will be reduced and efficiency of the government will be increased. David Epstein, new student body president, said that he had not anticipated winning so many senatorial seats but that he was happy about it. "It will drastically cut down on the infighting," Epstein said yesterday. "The 44 that ran together know about each other and know where everyone stands. We'll know where everyone is coming from when we walk in the Senate door." Amy Brown, new student body vice president, agreed with Epstein. "These are 44 people that already know each other and know they can work together," Brown said. "That'll be a huge advantage in the Senate." Brown said Common Sense Coalition had held meetings on the past six or seven Sundays, even if there had been no important coalition business to discuss. "It's important just to get the people together," she said. "There's a good team spirit already built." Amy Varney, re-elected Nunemaker senator who ran on the Common Sense Coalition, said she thought the weekly meetings had helped the coalition members know each other better. But she said disputes would never be avoided. "Whenever you have a senate, you have people with different viewpoints See ELECTIONS. p. 5, col. 1 By a Kansan reporter Committee receives election complaints Two appeals have been filed with the Student Senate Elections Committee about this year's coalition campaigns, and two or three appeals have been filed about last week's elections, the committee's chairman said yesterday. But David Day, the chairman, said no action would be taken on the appeals until after Thanksgiving break. Decisions on seven unfilled Senate seats also will not be made until after Thanksgiving, Day said. The seats — one law, one business, one journalism, two graduate and two special student — were left unfilled, pending confirmation of tie-breakers and the status of write-in candidates. The new officers of student government will meet in a joint session with the former officers Dec. 4 in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union. Day would not say who had filed the complaints, what the complaints were or exactly how many had been filed. Milton Scott, Chrysalis presidential candidate, said neither he nor Ruth Lichtwartd, Chrysalis vice presidential candidate, had filed appeals concerning the election or the campaign. He also said the Chrysalis coalition as a whole had not filed any appeals. Scott and Lichtwardt lost the presidential and vice presidential election Thursday to David Epstein and Amy Brown of the Common Sense Coalition. One appeal about the campaign was filed by Charles Munson, a victorious Chrysalis candidate for fine arts senator. Munson said he filed an appeal job as nanny brings joy, sorrow By Kady McMaster Of the Kansan staff See APPEALS p. 5 col. 3 Mary Poppins would be proud. Although women don't carry black umbrellas or fly over rooftops, their job is essentially the same. They are KU students looking for a change in their lives. They are naniples in every sense of the word. Entertaining the children, walks in Central Park and light housework are all part of the job that some KU women choose for a summer or even a year. Most travel to East Coast states to live with families and take care of the children for a weekly salary, room and board. "It was the most valuable experience I have had in my whole life." Katie Barmettler, Omaha, Bnj. junior, who was a nanny last year for an 8-year-old hyperactive and neurologically impaired boy, said, "I don't regret missing school during that year at all." Barmettel said she was responsible for waking, dressing and feeding her charge, and for driving him to and from school. "Depending on what day it was, we'd play in Central Park, take bike rides or go to the library," she said. "Some days I would take him to his recreational program or go to the an agency, or like on pet books. Barmettier who is an education major and babyss often, said yesterday that she interviewed briefly over the phone with her employers after reading about the job on a bulletin board in Strong Hall. She said the family advertised in the Midwest because they thought Midwesterners were easygoing and had better morals than people from other parts of the country. Bronx Zoo, on a ferry ride or on a picnic. Their summer house in Long Island was two blocks from the beach, and we went there all the time." Some of the families hire through an agency, or take out personal ads. "They were just like my own family," she said. "I got to do so much with them. I was able to travel with them and take classes in New York. It was difficult for me to get back into school here." Barmettet said she got very close to the family she worked for. Barmettet said she was able to see things she normally wouldn't have. "I saw a lot of famous people," Barmettler said. "Mick Jagger lived across the street from us. I saw John Travolta when he was filming a movie two blocks down the street, and I kissed Dustin Hoffman when he was getting in his limo." "I cried on the plane the entire three hours home," she said. Becky Robinson, Lawrence sophomore who was a nanny in Walden, N.Y., for eight weeks last summer, said she wasn't as happy with her job. She said she also cried the entire plane ride home, but because she was so happy to be returning. "I answered an ad in the Kansan because I thought it would be fun to work with kids and get away from Lawrence," Robinson said. "The family just wasnt what they seemed to be in the phone interview. Barnettler said the time she worked in New York was the best year of her life. "The mother had a rough life, and she was difficult to work for. I didn't quit, though, because I felt I had contracted to do this and I was going to see it if it killed me." Robinson said that she enjoyed taking care of the 11-year-old boy and the 5-year-old girl and that she learned a lot about people. "It was a valuable experience," she said. "I'm not sorry I did it, and I would do it again for someone I knew or who came highly recommended." Many families hire nannies. See NANNIES, p. 5, col. 2 M'Lias Bullock/Special to the KANSAN 359 354 260 Turkey trotters Runners awaited the shot of the starting gun to begin the Turkey Trot at 8 a.m. Saturday in the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The 3.5-mile run around West Campus was sponsored by KU Recreation Services and the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department. 2 Nation/World University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 25, 1985 News Briefs Big airports warned about Shiite 'gang' LONDON — Large airports around the world have been alerted to watch for a "fanatical gang" of hundreds of Shiite Muslim hijackers carrying false passports and armed with suitcase bombs, the London Mail reported yesterday. Police and the British airport authorities declined to comment on whether the alert was connected to the hijacking Saturday of an EgyptAir Boeing 737 with 96 people aboard. Regan offers apologv WASHINGTON — White House chief of staff Donald Regan, apologized yesterday for a remark about women not understanding the issues at last week's summit meeting in Geneva. Regan, questioned on CBS's "Face the Nation" about a comment published in The Washington Post last week explained that he had not said what he really meant. Shacks may increase HANOVER, N.H. - Dartmouth college students protesting the school's South African-linked investments pressed their divestment demand yesterday and considered an expansion of their anti-apartheid shantytown. The Dartmouth Community for Divestment, which has built four shanties on the college green, called on the school's administration to explain why it will not completely divest from companies linked to South Africa AIDS spread limited BRUSSELS, Belgium Boarding-school children with AIDS did not transmit the disease to any healthy classmates during up to three years of living, eating and studying together, new research shows. The research, done in western France at a school for children with medical problems, shows that even close contact between children will not allow acquired immune deficiency syndrome to spread. From Kansan wires. Israel pledges investigation From Kansan wires JERUSALEM — The Israel government yesterday pledged a thorough investigation and possible dismissals over a spy scandal that threatened to damage its relations with the United States, its closest ally. The Foreign Ministry statement was the first time Israel has conceded that it might be linked in some way to the Jonathan J. Pollard case, although high-ranking officials said the government had not been involved. Previously, government officials have denied any knowledge or involvement with Pollard, a civilian U.S. Navy analyst arrested Friday and accused of selling classified military documents to Israel and Pakistan in the past two years. Pollard, 31, was arraigned Saturday on espionage charges. His wife, Anne L. Henderson-Pollard, 25, was ordered held without bail on charges of possessing unauthorized classified documents. Officials said it was not known whether Pollard had a connection with Israel. The FBI last Thursday arrested a U.S. naval counterterrorism specialist identified as Pollard on charges of spying on the United States for Israel and Pakistan. Israeli television reported yesterday that neither Prime Minister Shimon Peres nor the head of Mossad, the Israeli spy agency, had been aware of or had been asked to authorize Pollard's activity. The report said Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir and Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin had also been kept in the dark. The government-run network said it seemed Pollard had been spying on the United States for many years since a visit to Israel 11 years ago. The Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying a thorough examination was under way to determine whether there had been any deviation from Israel's policy to refrain from spying on the United States. Cabinet spokesman Michael Nir said the incident was not discussed at the weekly Cabinet meeting, which was attended by army Chief of Staff Moshe Levy. The spokesman said the full Cabinet had not been briefed by intelligence officials on the affair. Israeli radio quoted intelligence sources as saying there was no reason for Israel to spy on the U.S. Army, because both nations shared intelligence information. Ma'ariv newspaper said Pollard's father was an internationally famous cancer researcher at Notre Dame University and had maintained close ties with Israel's Weizman Institute of Science. The Jerusalem Post quoted officials as the saying the affair didn't make sense because the 1981 Strategic Cooperation Agreement between Israel and the United States provided for sharing of intelligence. Frankfurt explosion injures 36 From Kansan wires FRANKFURT, West Germany — A powerful car bomb exploded outside a busy U.S. military shopping center yesterday and injured 36 people, most of whom were Americans, authorities said. The blast damaged 42 cars parked in the area, shattered windows within a radius of 100 yards, gouged a six-foot hole in the ground and battered a one-story office wind of a nearby building. The bomb injured 34 Americans, including several children, and two Germans. Most were cut by glass splinters and all but seven Americans were released after treatment. The injured included 19 U.S. military personnel, 11 American civilians, a West German civilian and a Filipino. Most were taken to the American military hospital, but some were treated in a German hospital. hospital, our some friends. No organization took responsibility for the attack, but a German police spokesman said he assumed it was carried out by terrorists who launched a similar attack in August against the U.S. Air Force headquarters for Europe outside Frankfurt. The spokesman said yesterday's bomb went off at 3:20 p.m. in a BMW with West German plates that had been parked outside a one-story office building at the U.S. Army post exchange shopping center at the corner of two main streets in downtown Frankfurt. Frankfurt police spokesman Kurt Kraus said the bomb was packed in a blue BMW sedan that was bought by a "Moroccan-looking man" Saturday at a used car dealership near Frankfurt. Kraus said the BMW was bought at the same dealer ship that sold the car used in the August bombing. Vatican council to assess reforms The Associated Press VATICAN CITY — Pope John Paul II opened yesterday an extraordinary synod of bishops convened to assess the Second Vatican Council's far-reaching reforms and the divisions they spawned. "We begin the synod with the same openness which filled the council fathers two years ago," he said during his homily, delivered in Italian to about 10,000 people packed into St. Peter's Basilica. The service followed a procession of more than 300 cardinals, bishops and priests, all clad in white and golden robes and white miters, through St. Peter's Square. At the pope's request, the procession was fashioned to resemble the 1962 opening ceremonies of the Second Vatican Council, commonly known as Vatican II, that were presided over by Pope John XXIII. The council ended in 1965. Although the synod is an advisory body that can only make recommendations to the pope, the current meeting is considered crucial because it represents the first official Vatican forum for the bishops to air their views on the effects of the Vatican II reforms on local churches and to make suggestions. Soviets may change Afghanistan policy United Press International WASHINGTON — U.S. and Soviet officials yesterday suggested that a political solution to the conflict in Afghanistan is possible and that there are indications the Kremlin may be ready to set a timable for a pullout. President Reagan brought up the subject of the Soviet role in the Afghan civil war at his summit meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in Geneva last week. The United Nations-sponsored negotiations between the Soviet-backed Afghan government and Pakistan will resume in early December in Geneva and the two sides are reported close to an agreement. The key element remains the withdrawal of the more Secretary of State George Shultz, appearing on NBC's "Meet the Press," hinted that the Soviets appeared ready to discuss a timetable for troop withdrawal from Afghanistan. than 100,000 Soviet troops in Afghanistan. The United States is providing aid to the rebels, who have used Pakistan as a sanctuary in their guerrilla war. Stanislav Menshikov, adviser to the Central Committee of the Soviet Union, said yesterday on ABC's "This Week with David Brinkley" that political action must be used to resolve the situation in Afghanistan. "We do not fear Afghanistan," Menshikov said. "We are not fighting Afghanistan, what we are fighting is against people — people who come from Pakistan and from some other countries and help some people in Afghanistan and don't like their regime. "This is a civil war in which the government is supported by us and the anti-government forces are supported by your side. If we back out at this moment leaving these people to themselves . . . there may be more bloodshed than there is now." Reagan ponders endorsing tax bill of House committee The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan, who has called tax reform the spark that will ignite a "second American Revolution," must decide whether to keep the movement alive by endorsing a House Ways and Means Committee tax bill that falls short of his demands. Members of the committee from both parties say the voluminous bill has little chance of passing the House if Reagan criticizes it publicly. Several said they expected the president to hail the measure as a good first step toward overhauling the income tax and to count on the Republican-controlled Senate to change it. But White House Chief of Staff Donald T. Ragan suggested yesterday that the administration might not endorse the panel's bill because "it changes the president's proposition quite a bit." Regan, however, said the ad ministration would know more about its position after careful study this week. Rep. Ray McGrath, R-N.Y., predicted, however, that the president would eventually support the bill even though administration leaders "won't say they love it." Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-III., the committee chairman and chief congressional backer of a tax overhaul, pleaded with Reagan not to make a snap judgment that could kill the bill which Rostenkowski called "a victory of cooperation over confrontation." While members of Congress take a week's recess for the Thanksgiving holiday, Ways and Means aides will write the committee's proposal into legal language. The plan is most likely to be debated in the House the week of Dec. 8. The Senate will not consider it this year. PYRAMID PIZZA Brings Back By Popular Demand MONDAY GLADNESS *TONIGHT ONLY* Get a 16" Large 1 Topping Pizza PLUS Extra Cheese PLUS 2 Free Pepsis ALL FOR ONLY $8.95 MONDAY Get a 16" Large 1 Topping Pizza plus Extra Cheese plus 2 Free Pepsis PYRAMID PIZZA We Pile It On! Expires 11-25-85 GLADNESS ALL FOR $8.95 14th & Ohio Under The Wheel 842-3232 FAST FREE DELIVERY PYRAMID PIZZA Brings Back By Popular Demand MONDAY GLADNESS *TONIGHT ONLY* Get a 16" Large 1 Topping Pizza PLUS Extra Cheese PLUS 2 Free Pepsis ALL FOR ONLY $8.95 MONDAY Get a 16" Large 1 Topping Pizza plus Extra Cheese plus 2 Free Pepsis GLADNESS ALL FOR $8.95 14th & Ohio Under The Wheel 842-3232 FAST FREE DELIVERY REDLINE & KJHK FM91 present Circle Jerks with special guest micronotz Tuesday December 3 Kansas Union Ballroom University of Kansas Tickets: $6.00 in advance at all locations, $7.00 at the door. REDLINE & KJHK FM91 present Circle JERKS with special guest micronotz tickets at EXILE in Lawrence Tuesday December 3 Kansas Union Ballroom University of Kansas Tickets: $6.00 in advance at all locations, $7.00 at the door. Campus/Area University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 25, 1985 3 News Briefs Two hurt in accident when car rolls over A 20-year-old student and a 21-year-old Overland Park woman were treated and released at Lawrence Memorial Hospital after an accident Saturday on Emery Road near Sigma Nu Place, a hospital spokesman said yesterday. Lawrence police said Steven K. Pearson, Kansas City, Mo., junior, was driving north on Emery at about 45-50 mph when he lost control of his car at the curve about 200 feet north of Sigma Nu Place. The rear of his car struck the curb on the east side of Emery. Witnesses told police the car rolled onto its top and back onto its tires before coming to a stop. Jason Green, Lawrence freshman and a passenger in Pearson's car, told police that he and the other three passengers got out of the car and that Pearson drove away. George Alyea, Blue Springs, Mo., freshman, and Christine Walker, 21, Overland Park, both passengers, were taken by Douglas County Ambulance Service to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where they were treated and released. Pearson was cited for driving while intoxicated, reckless driving, leaving the scene of an injury accident and not reporting an accident, police said. Pearson's attorney contacted police about 11 a.m. yesterday, police said. Composers honored Three members of KU's music composition and theory faculty have received the 1985-86 American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers awards. The professors being recognized for their contributions to contemporary composition are: James C. Barnes, associate professor of music theory; Charles Hoag, professor of music theory; and John Pozdro, professor of music theory. Concert to be held The 61st annual Vespers concert will open the holiday season at KU with traditional Christmas songs performed by five musical groups at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Dec. 8 in Hoch Auditorium. Performing during Vespers are student members of the Chamber Choir, Concert Choir, University Singers, University Chorus and the University Symphony Orchestra. Before each Vespers performance, Albert Gerken, University carillonneur, will play carols on the Memorial Carillon, and a student brass ensemble will play carols from the balcony of Hoch Auditorium. Holiday closes union The Kansas Union will be open during regular hours until 5 p.m. Wednesday and then will be closed from Nov. 28 through Dec. 1. The Burge Union will be closed from Nov. 27 through Dec. 1. Weather Today will be cloudy with a chance of drizzle. The high will be around 40. Winds will be out of the southeast at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain. The low will be in the mid- to upper 30s. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of rain and a high in the 40s. From staff and wire reports. Administrators warn of large budget cuts KU administrators sounded the fiscal alarm to about 200 alumni Saturday as a result of possible drastic budget cuts facing the University next year. By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff "The future of Kansas is at stake," Chancellor Gene A. Budig said at the annual alumni development committee meeting at the Kansas Union. Budig and other KU administrators spoke at the meeting about economic problems facing the University. Earlier this month, Alden Shields, state budget director, told members of the Board of Regents that Kansas would take in $132.6 million less than projected in state revenue over the next two fiscal years. He said that translated into a cut of at least $17 million from KU's lowest budget request. Budig told the committee that despite Kansas' bleak economic outlook, the University had continued to excel as an academic leader Proof of KU's strength, Budig said, is the high rating the University recently received from the New York Times as one of the country's finest academic institutions. had continued to exert as his叔侄杰尔洛 "KU has never been stronger than today." Budig said the University needed additional support from the state if it was to maintain its academic strength. He said the future of the state was tied directly to the future of the University. "We are the key to the state's economic future," he said. "The time is right to invest. History tells us that the time for a state to invest in higher education is when it faces economic problems." Budig said investment in the University made good economic sense for Kansas. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said that while the University was a leading academic institution, it could be better. "We are the state's principal asset," Budig said. "Few will dispute this fact." "This is a fine university," he said. "It has an immense capability, however, to be a better one." Cobb outlined the Board of Regents' budget proposal for the University. He said that the Lawrence campus had several priorities for its fiscal year 1987 budget that could not be ignored if the University was to remain competitive. The university is 60 percent behind its peer institutions in the area of its other operating expenses, such as money needed to purchase equipment, books and supplies, Cobb said. An increase in that area is necessary, he said, if the University is to be competitive. Salaries for unclassified and classified personnel as well as student workers are also below par at the University, Cobb said. He said the University needed to make salaries competitive if it wanted to obtain and keep qualified people. D. Kay Clawson, executive vice chancellor of the University of Kansas Medical Center, presented the Med Center's economic situation. He said that while the Med Center was in good shape, added investment was needed if it was to remain competitive. Wint Winter, co-chairman of the alumni committee, said the budget issue needed to be taken up with state legislators. He said that unless the state had some kind of tax incentive it would become harder and harder to find money for anything. Trainers, managers play game matter to an AI. In the winter said it would take greater effort in the future to maintain KU's tradition as an academic leader. By Mike Snider Of the Kansan staff KENNEDY These football players didn't come to Memorial Stadium on a frigid Sunday to play for the national championship, a bowl bid or even a playoff berth. Bryan Graves/KANSAN It was for the love of football. Ronnie Caldwell; KU sophomore wide receiver, gave the touchdown signal yesterday for the football Managers in the ninth annual Deaner Cup game against the sports Trainers. The Managers won the game 31-20. The game was played at Memorial Stadium. It was for the players in the game were the men who were managers of the football team this season and the men who were trainers for the KU sports programs. they give their time to the game of football by working on the sidelines, in the training room or anywhere else needed to help the football program operate smoothly. Yesterday, they wore the navy blue and white jerseys of the Kansas Javhaws. The Ninth Annual Dealer Cup Game pitted the Managers against the Trainers in a game of eight-man flag football. KU football players Ronnie Caldwell, Dan Crossman, Travis Hardy and Paul Swenson acted as players and markers Mark Lesher, Mike Lesher and Rod Newson operated the chains for the two teams. The players said they were glad to give their time so the managers and trainers could have their turn on the turf. 'They do a lot for us all week,' Mike Lesher said. Mark Lesher said, "Well, we like football and this is pretty fun." It wasn't all fun and games on the field. As is usual with true-blooded sportsmen, these players played to win. On this day, the Managers were the better team, winning 31-20. The last play of the game told the story of how the Managers dominated the game. Manager quarterback John Bong, Lawrence senior, after taking the snap at the 40-yard line, rolled left to evade an onrushing lineman and passed to tight end Paul Pettit, Topeka junior, who was wide open at the Trainer 40-yard line. Pettit tucked the ball away and ran toward the left sideline. At about the 15 yardline, he flipped the ball to Rich Eckert, Effingham freshman, who was trailing Pettit. Eckert sprinted on into the end zone to give the Managers a 31-20 lead. Mike Hill, Manager coach and head equipment manager, said the game originated nine years ago. The game is played each season on the day after the KU-Missouri game. The winning team gets to possess a plaque, nicknamed the Deaner Cup after the late KU trainer Dean Nesmith. The plaque will remain in the managers' office for another year. KU researcher wins Javits award Bv a Kansan reporter Ralph Adams, KU distinguished professor of chemistry, will receive one of 22 national awards given so far this year for neuroscience research. Adams will receive more than $400,000 over a seven year period from the National Institutes of Health to support his research. for this year for neuroscience. The award is one of the Javits Neuroscience Investigators Awards, which are named in honor of former Sen. Jacob K. Javitis of New York. Adams' research is based in electrochemistry. He and his students take measurements of minute quantities of biogenic amine neurotransmitters — important brain chemicals which may aid scientists in understanding brain functions and neurological and mental disorders Adams' project, which concerns the precise chemical mapping of the brain, has received NIH support for 15 years. Twenty-two research awards have been given since Oct. 1. Only two other awards have been given to Midwestern researchers — a University of Michigan researcher and an Ohio State University professor. Recipients are selected from among scientists who submit regular grant applications to the NIH for competitive review. Adams, a Princeton University graduate, joined the chemistry department in 1955. He is the first KU faculty member to be chosen for the awards. Adams has received many awards for his scientific achievements. The week before he was notified of the Javits award, he received the Kolthoff Award from the American Pharmaceutical Association in a presentation in Minneapolis. The awards were established by Congress three years ago in honor of Javits, who suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease. Synthetic drugs growing popular for drug abusers By Bengt Ljung Of the Kansan staff Designer drugs may soon start poisoning drug users in Lawrence as the drugs replace previously abused drugs, a pharmacy professor said Friday. Lester Mitscher, chairman of medicinal chemistry, said designer drugs, such as Ecstasy, will soon reach Lawrence. "It will be a problem in Lawrence before we can snap our fingers," he said Mitscher said designer drugs were newly created substances that could be abused in place of historically forbidden drugs. Designer drugs are generally synthetic, while cocaine and heroin are mostly natural products. Ecstasy is a recently outlawed designer drug. A member of the Lawrence police Drug Enforcement Unit, who asked not to be identified, said the unit had no indications of designer drugs reaching Lawrence, but that it was aware of the new national trend. "Society is skating toward another disaster it doesn't need." Mitscher said. "I hate to sound like a right-wing nut, but our society has been much too permissive toward drugs." The new drugs usually go untested from the laboratory directly to the user in the street, Mitscher said. The abusers use themselves as guinea pigs. "The toxicological effects aren't known," he said. "Normally it takes years to determine if a drug is harmful. "The abusers don't realize or are indifferent to the risks they are taking." The drug 3-methyl fentanyl, which has effects similar to heroin, has been responsible for about 100 overdose deaths in California since 1984, Mitscher said. Meperidine drugs have caused several cases of Parkinson's disease among abusers by destroying certain brain cells. "Young people turn into zombies because of impurities in the compounds." Mitscher said. Compounds that have been prepared at acidities or temperatures that are too high act as poison on the nervous system. "Lives are being wasted for personal profit." Mitscher said. And the profits are great. Frank Spaienza, a chemist with the Drug Enforcement Agency in Washington, D.C., said an investment of $2,000 toward the production of heroin would yield one kilogram of heroin, worth about $1 million on the street. A $2,000 investment in chemicals can be turned into one kilogram of 3-menthyl fentanyl, worth about $1 billion. Mitscher said, "The designer drugs are so potent that half a pound equals about 200 million doses. And you don't need a great deal of material. A high school chemistry lab would do." Designer drugs give security to underground chemists. Producing heroin is a severe crime that carries a stiff prison sentence, Mitscher said. The career of the chemist is ruined. Producing drugs with new chemical structures that have not yet been made illegal is preferable. "It's immoral, but not illegal," Mitscher said. "The chemist can say he sold the drugs as vitamins or to dust on the roses to prevent cockroaches. He can act very surprised that people ate his compound." To avoid the laws, the chemical structure of the drugs is slightly altered while they retain their effects. Three-methyl fentanyl is the fourth member of the fentanyl family of drugs which started to appear six years ago. Designating a drug to be a controlled substance used to take several years, Mitscher said. The Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 allows the attorney general to use emergency procedures. Now a compound can be made illegal for one year within 30 days after it has been determined that it is hazardous to public safety. The drug 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), called Ecstasy or simply "X" on the street, was made illegal last July. It is related to 3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA) and methamphetamine. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, MDA has caused brain damage in animals and Ecstasy users experience problems similar to cocaine and amphetamine users, which include confusion, depressions and paranoia. Mitscher said he thought a mastermind chemist was behind the sophisticated drug alterations. That person can now leave the production and distribution to others. The risk and penalties are lower to invent formulas for new drugs. "Trends like these usually start in California," Mitscher said. "They move to the East Coast, and then they fill out the middle." 1720 W. 23 9th & Indiana 11-11 SUN-TH 11-12 F, S 50¢ TACOS All day/Everyday Our 3/$1.00 taco special on Sundays and Mondays is great—but our new special of 50¢ TACOS all day/every-day is unbelievable! TACO GRANDE 1720 W. 23 11-11 SUN-TH 9th & Indiana 11-12 F, S Cornucopia RESTAURANT Salad Bar and Dinner Special! $3.75 Salad Bar or ONE COUPON PER PERSON $2.00 off any Dinner! Dinner includes soup, unlimited trips to our salad bar, fresh fruit and vegetables, and home-made bread, all at the a la carte price. • Try Our Great Desserts • Homemade Bread • Breakfast Served Anytime HOURS Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-10 p.m. 1801 Mass. 842-9637 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Monday, Nov. 25, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Toxic time bombs The University has set up a campuswide "bomb squad." Its mission is to establish a policy to deal with potential time bombs — in the form of hazardous wastes — ticking away in various laboratories across campus. Most large universities have a special office to coordinate the storage and disposal of hazardous wastes and to deal with possible health and safety problems such waste poses. The University of Kansas Medical Center has had such an office since 1977 and an industrial hygienist since 1978. Because the University has no standard policy for complying with federal and state laws about storage of hazardous materials, this stuff lurks on scattered lab shelves. It is often the legacy of some departed faculty member. Now KU is cleaning up its act on the Lawrence campus. The Task Force on Hazardous Materials created this semester will recommend a comprehensive plan for handling hazardous substances. Last month, a central storage site was set up on West Campus to keep the hazardous materials used and created in University laboratories. This site will gather the hazardous substances from their scattered pockets around campus. In an age when everything from eggs to VDT screens are considered health risks, it's easy to ignore warnings about potential hazards. The daily handling of hazardous materials also tends to blind users of their dangers. The task force also is pushing for an office of safety and hazardous materials. Such an office moves KU beyond mere compliance with the law to anticipation of potential safety problems. But the growing number of industrial diseases warn that we can't afford to treat hazardous wastes casually, even in the relatively non-industrial setting of the University. The coiness reached its peak in the case of Rita Lavelle of the Environmental Protection Agency and her friendly lunches with industrial polluters. In the 1970s and early '80s, state and federal regulatory agencies gained notoriety for their too-close ties to the industries they were supposed to regulate. Regulating Wolf Creek But to its credit, the Kansas Corporation Commission broke this pattern with recent rulings against rate increases requested by the utilities that own the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant. The KCC not only held the utilities to a third of their requested rate increase, but when the utilities came back asking for a new hearing the KCC turned them down. The close ties between the regulators and the regulated also showed up in the rate-setting process. The industry would approach the agency asking for twice its desired increase. The regulatory board would grant exactly half of the rate request. The utilities — Kansas Gas & Electric Co., Kansas City Power & Light Co. and a consortium of rural electric cooperatives — had argued that they were caught out in the cold when the regulatory climate changed after the near-disaster at Three Mile Island. They wanted consumers to pick up the extra costs for complying with the new regulations. For KG&E customers, this would have meant a 101-percent increase in their electric bills. The KCC saw it otherwise. Through a complicated regulatory formula, the commission's legal staff valued the power plant the same as if it were coal-fired rather than nuclear-powered. It was this part of the ruling the utilities appealed this part the commission held firm. The appeal process, of course, hasn't ended; the utilities are expected to take their case next to the state's courts. But regardless of what the courts decide, the commission deserves praise - for its original tough stand on the rate increase and for standing up to the pressure for a repeat hearing. But then, the commission was just doing its job. McCollum's art collector What a humble thing a trash bin is. Except at McCollum Hall. A squat, metal box, its two main occupations in life are to collect the refuse of mankind and to rust. The trash bin is somewhat of an necessary evil, an ugly object to be ignored. Except at McCaucas Hall. There, a trash bin has become part of the avant-garde. Color splotches, splashes, slashes and drips across a metal surface that once was a dull, uniform rust. Patches of green, blue, tan and orange cover the metal. Mike Stevens, a sophomore in the school of fine arts; is the author of the work on the metal canvas. He said he wants to do his work in public. The office of student housing and the city of Lawrence gave Stevens permission to paint the bins, apparently the first such request. A housing official said he was receptive to the idea because trash bins are not attractive. So McCollum boasts a trash bin that is colorful, interesting and a little less humble. Reactions to the design as well as interpretations of it may vary, but one thing is certain. The work on McCollum's trash bin and the idea behind it required imagination. That is something that should be encouraged. Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager John Hanba Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sale Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. GUEST SHORTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The The Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 11 Stauffer-Fillt Hall, Lawn, Kan., 66045, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and final periods, and Wednesdays during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. In Douglas County, mail subscriptions cost $15 for six months and $2 a week. Mail requests to the Lawrence Public Library. Student subscriptions cost $2 and are paid through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER; Send address changes to the University Daily Kaman, 118 Stuart Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 68045 ...and I might even run for governor... ...any questions? Yes? SALINA LADIES' TEA SOCIETY STEPHAN'S LAST DAYS ...and I might even run for governor... any questions? Yes? SALINA LADIES' TEA SOCIETY What did you do to that poor woman? WELCOME SCOUTS Oh yeah? Why did you settle out of court then?! IDDLYWINKERS ROAST BOB S Anyone as friendly as Bob should be governor! It's not fair! ONE LITTLE Sexual harrassment suit and I'm labeled for political life! what did you do to that poor woman? SALINA LADIES' TEA SOCIETY IDDLYWINKERS ROAST BOB S Anyone as friendly as Bob should be governor! clap clap no no no clap clap clap UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WELCOME SCOUTS Oh yeah? why did you settle out of court then?! Yeah! It's not fair! STEPHAN [Drawing of a courtroom scene with several people] Private contractors eye president's job Private contractors have been picking up America's garbage and repairing the street lamps for many years. When Ronald Reagan took office as one of the most conservative presidents in recent history, "privization" had already begun to gallop across the national landscape. Now, the president had better watch out. The forces of privatization have become so zealous that they are taking aim at his job. Privitate the presidency? Put the job out to the biggest bidder? Nonsense, surely. Not really, say a pair of privatization zealots. They would put the whole executive branch out to bid, and those 535 jobs in Congress would not be far behind. There are now privately operated prisons and immigration detention centers, municipal air traffic control Before we consider the merits of selling off the functions of the entire federal government to private contractors, it would be helpful to see how the privatization movement has mushroomed throughout government in recent years. What had been limited to garbage collection, streetlight repairs and a handful of other municipal functions in private hands has become a new American economic sector. Oakland Tribune towers, hospitals, golf courses, public parks, sewer treatment plants and a law firm that handles the prosecution functions in a Southern California town. The great tax revolt of the 1970s forced municipalities to find cheaper ways of delivering city services. A recent federal study, vigorously contested by public employee unions, found that privatization, on the average, saves a city about 20 percent of the cost of doing the same job itself. Contractors, says Fortune magazine, get more out of employees because the government gives more vacations, holidays and sick leaves and tolerates more absenteeism. The contractors also play more to the supply-and-demand rhythms of the marketplace by paying less than governments for some jobs and more for others. Add the economic savings to the conservative climate Reagan has fostered, and you get a wave of new ideas for functions that can be taken private, much to the chagrin of the service employee unions. Labor organizations have been pumping out reports filled with examples of disasters that came in the wake of privatization. The stories include service lapses, neglect of the poor and unfortunate, corruption and abuse of citizens. Nonetheless, privatization proceeds apace. The U.S. Army is talking with large engineering firms about creating and maintaining an important infantry base. The successful bidder would find the financing and then design, build and operate the base. All the Army plans to provide are the soldiers. That's where Alan Pifer and Forrest Chisman come in. They don't see any reason a private company should not be running the Army. The Air Force, Navy and Marines, too, for that matter. And they don't plan to stop there. As far as they are concerned, Pifer and Chisman wrote recently in the Wall Street Journal, there is just about nothing the federal government does that private enterprise couldn't do better. Why not turn over the Social Security Administration to a good data management and payroll company, say Pifer and Chisman, who run the Project on the Federal Social Role. Before you know it, they have taken the unlikely leap to having federal contractors poised to fire the nation's missiles and conduct our foreign policy. If privatization dreamers can go that far in their imaginations, what could be left? Why not the presidency? They argue that the presidency is actually two jobs, one ceremonial and the other managerial. Ever so kindly, they would leave the ceremonial function in the hands of the elected president, but they would look to the ranks of American business for a top-flight executive with a proven record for handling big bucks. He or she would become the national version of a city manager. Would Congress escape the privatization revolution? Not a chance, say Pifer and Chisman. They would put the job in the hands of Roper or Gallup to conduct a national daily poll. Under such circumstances, who needs a congressman, they ask. Democracy would be direct. Verbatim nocracy would be direct. Could this all be a joke, a put-on? Remember the one about a Hollywood actor one day becoming president? You never know. Classified research New policy would change little A proposal from the Center for Research, Inc., to change KU's classified research policy has caused heated debate in the University Council. The proposed change would loosen the University's restrictions on classified research. Frances Horowitz, president and acting director for CRINC, recently talked with Kathy Flanders, staff columnist, about CRINC and the policy change. WILLIAM L. BROWN Frances Horowitz What exactly is CRINC and what are its functions? HOROWITZ: CRINC operates like research foundations on many campuses — it is in essence a research foundation. It is to facilitate the conduct of research for the people it serves. In this case, it serves the engineering and engineering-related faculty. How does it serve the engineering faculty? HOROWITZ: It processes proposals and provides services for their grants. It does all the business accounting for grants, helps in the purchase of equipment and employs people who work on research grants. HOROWITZ: Engineering and engineering-related research is done. At the present time there is no classified research going on. The same policies that cover the research done at the University are now the same policies used for CRINC. It's not a separate research facility — it's an accounting facility. The policy changes are before the University Council now. What kind of research is done through CRINC? So does CRINC do any research? HOROWITZ: The faculty does the research in their own facilities. CRINC has no research facilities. What kinds of changes are being considered? HOROWITZ2: The proposal before the University Council is concerned with the acceptance of grants and contracts that would allow a propriety period, which is the period material cannot be released, presently one year, to be extended to three years. The second part of the proposal would permit the acceptance of grants and contracts in which an insubstantial portion of grants and contracts might be classified. What types of material would be classified? HOROWITZ: It would be determined by each grant or contract. They could be government or industrial contracts. What changes do you see for CRINC if the proposal is passed? HOROWITZ: I don't know. We are in the process of looking at that now. Do you think it is the role of the University to get involved with classified research? HOROWITZ: There is a philosophy that a University should be a totally open society where all ideas and material should be open for public inspection. We now permit classification of what we call primary source material. If someone does a biography and the family says you can look at a family letter but not publish it so as not to reveal certain aspects of the letter, we permit that. So it's not true that we don't classify all material. Humanists can use classified material in their research as much as they wish and have agreed not to publish material. Will there be a checks and balance system to deal with classified research and material? HOROWITZ: There is a checks and balance system in the proposal. There are several checks. The first is that nothing that is proprietary or classified could serve as a basis for student work. A student couldn't do a thesis or dissertation with the material. The third check is that anything not publicly available could not be used by a faculty member for promotion or tenure consideration or for a merit salary evaluation. Therefore, it would not be to the advantage of the faculty to engage in very much of such activities. The second is that we wouldn't accept a contract that had an substantial portion that was classified or had two to three years of propriety. And we couldn't accept it unless the faculty committee reviewed it and said it was in the best interest of the University. Mailbox Harmful stereotype I am writing after listening to a program on KJHK that surprised and angered me. At about 3 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 21, the station played a supposedly humorous sketch about "Aunt Suzy" and her lisping, campy male guest from San Francisco. The two prepared "swish steak." The sketch was no more than a long faggot joke. It relied on and perpetuated the stereotype that gay men are effeminate and inconsequential people. That stereotype is factually inaccurate and hurtful to a great number of men. The homophobia in the Aunt Suzy program is just as unfair as the blatant racism in programs such as the old "Amos 'n' Andy." I also would like to add that immediately after the program, I called the d.j., and expressed my concern with the program. The d.j. did not apologize to me on the phone or, more importantly, to his other listeners over the air. Business continued as usual without concern for the ramifications of what he had broadcast. My impression of KJHK to this point has been that it was fairly accepting of diversity. This program, however, exposed a different sympathy, one which should be considered a major foul. Jeff Thomas Lawrence law student Proper etymology About Dan Howell's thoughts on the bill "more which we toll"; the hill "upon which we toin : If "Oread" comes from the Greek word for mountain, and if oreads were nymphs of the mountains in Greek mythology, then it's perfectly clear that the word "Mount" in Mount Oread isn't a proper noun but a copulative verb. "Some days, that says a lot Some days, that says a lot about studies in a university." Toil on, Dan. Paul Stephen Lim lecturer in English Monday, Nov. 25, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Elections Continued from p.1 and opinions," said Varney, who will represent freshmen and sophomores in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. "I just don't think it'll be as vicious as it was last year." Epstein said that Common Sense senators would support the four main issues he and Brown ran on, but said other issues would spark debate among coalition members. The issues he and Brown ran on were establishing a new University lecture series, creating a night bus service, putting together a guide to professors and improving campus parking. "It's a difference of getting nothing done and of getting four major programs through," Epstein said. "Other issues will always be debated, but when we chose the senators for our coalition, we looked Conflict for quality people and people who thought the same general way and held the same philosophy as Amy and me." Brown and Epstein said that some disagreement among senators was inevitable, but that they thought the Common Sense senators would be able to disagree without personal attacks or insults. "There will be some give and take, but there won't be the personal animosity like there was last year," Epstein said. "There were severe antagonisms between the coalitions last year, and there were bad feelings in the air." Dennis Enslinger, re-elected business senator who ran with the Chrysalis coalition, said most infighting occurred when Senate rules and regulations were debated. Continued from p.1 before and after the concert. Shuttle service begins at 7:15 p.m. The concert begins at 8 p.m. Davis said that when she learned of the schedule conflict she alerted people in the Athletic Department to the problem. But they weren't able to change game dates. "The amount of infighting depends on how much senators follow party lines," Enslinger said. Nannies Continued from p. 1 "We knew we would not benefit from this conflict," Davis said. "We looked for alternative dates for the Canadian Brass. The day we got, the day after Easter, is not ideal because it's a free day here. But the option of having a concert on top of the Missouri-KU game was impossible." William Easley, former student body president, said Common Sense's majority in the Senate would definitely cut down on fighting. because both parents work. But Robinson said the family she worked for was different. "As far as I could tell, they didn't want to take care of their kids," she said. "I was a substitute mother, and I had to entertain the kids." "They don't have two vastly different groups opposing each other, so that will obviously cut down on the infighting." Easley said. "But Common Sense didn't have to fight as hard, debate as hard or defend themselves much. I don't think the coalition ties are that strong. New York isn't the only place nannies work. Jacci Bury, Overland Park sophomore, said she was a nanny last summer for three girls, ages 3, 6 and 9, who lived in her neighborhood. "Coalitions are knitted together when they have to fight for what they believe in. Some of the senators didn't even have to campaign because there was no one running against them." "I learned a lot," Bury said. "Motherhood is not as easy as I thought it would be." Appeals Continued from p. 1 about Common Sense campaign slogans that had been written in chalk outside Fraser Hall. "It was a violation of the rules," he said. "The election rules state that any banners or slogans outside buildings are illegal. I think they meant paper or filers taped to the buildings, but I think this was a violation of the election rules." Epstein said the Common Sense Coalition had filed a campaign appeal because some campaign posters for Chrysalis architecture senatorial candidates had been posted on Kansan distribution boxes. By a Kansan reporter Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory will file no charges in connection with a fatal traffic accident that occurred Oct. 3 in the 700 block of North Second Street involving a local woman and a city garbage truck. No charges filed in fatal crash after her car collided head-on with a garbage truck driven by William A. Ashborn, 1308 E. 16th St. Donna Wortman, 30, 1519 Cadet Ave., was dead on arrival at Lawrence Memorial Hospital shortly Flory said Friday that he had decided against filing criminal charges. In a prepared statement, Flory in, "To file and successfully prosecute a charge of vehicular homicide it is necessary to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the driver operated a vehicle in a manner which 'constitutes a material deviation from the standard of care which a reasonable person would observe under the same circumstances.' "In my opinion there is insufficient evidence to prove that critical element in this case." Flory said he had explained his decision to Wortman's husband, Greg Wortman, in a telephone conversation Thursday night. Man arrested for killing mother United Press International ty Hospital, officials said. returned to remove some of her possessions. Estes did not live at the trailer, he said. SYRACUSE — A 45-year-old man suspected of fatally shooting his mother and wounding his sister at the start of a four-hour standoff with police was being held yesterday in the Hamilton County Jail. The suspect was arrested after western Kansas law enforcement officers tore down the back door of his mobile home and stormed inside early Saturday afternoon. Tear gas that was fired into the trailer 45 minutes earlier had failed to force out the man. Fifteen lawmen, including Hamilton County Sheriff Thomas Lambeth, who was shot at by the suspect, surrounded the trailer after the wounded sister flagged down a passing motorist, Jack Helfrick of Syracuse, immediately after the shootings. County Attorney John Stanley said Mrs. Bone was killed about 9:30 a.m. and her daughter was shot in the hand. He said both were shot with a small-caliber weapon that was recovered at the trailer. Lambeth said the dead woman was Florence Bone, 73. He identified the daughter as Betty Estes, 49. She was in stable condition at Hamilton Coun- While the sheriff was checking Bone's body outside the trailer, the suspect emerged through the trailer's door. Lambeth then slammed it shut. He said a shot was fired at him through the door. Lambeth said Bone, who had been living at the trailer with her son, had On Campus The Strat-o-matic Baseball Club will meet at 7 p.m. today in Parlor C of the Kansas Union. Tau Sigma Student Dance Club will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Room 242 of Robinson Center. Strategy Games Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Trail Room of the Union. The KU Women's Soccer Club will practice at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The KU Committee on South Africa will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1294 Oread Ave. A car valued at $2,500 was stolen between 4:30 and 10:30 p.m. Saturday from the 3000 block of West Seventh Street, Lawrence police said yesterday. 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Dine In • Carry Out Home Delivery 841-8010 2214 Yale Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. MASS. STREET DELI inc 941 MASSACHUSETTS IT'S NO BULL! The Deli has the best burgers in town... Swiss & Bacon Burger $2.35 Swiss cheese and ranch style bacon 100 Traditional Burger $1.99 with lettuce and tomato WALKING THE WORLD DON'T LEAVE SCHOOL WITHOUT IT. They often sit unwanted in the Bookstore shelves until end-of-the-semester panic sets in. Although it's unfortunate, most fall semester textbooks are returned to the distributors when spring semester books begin arriving. The switch all takes place while you eat Thanksgiving dinner. Don't be a victim of "book-buying procrastination." Buy the books you'll need for finals before you leave for break. KUBookstores Kansas Union Level 1 6 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Monday, Nov. 25, 1985 Survey indicates diverse taste By John Williams Of the Kansan staff During the late 1970s and early 1980s, the University of Kansas was called the "place" for reggae and progressive musical groups to play. That label has worn off for 1985, however, according to a music survey indicating diverse musical tastes of KU students. The survey was distributed on campus by Rock for KU, a group of students who want to bring a big-name concert to KU. Reggie Estell, president of Rock for KU, said he was not that surprised with the results. "The people of Rock for KU are all over in musical tastes," he said. "So we expected a wide variety." Contemporary music was chosen most popular by KU students with progressive running a close second, he said. The surveys were received and counted last week by memebers of Rock for KU. Estell said that more than 1,000 of the 1,600 surveys were returned by students, and that one was postmarked Dallas. Estell said the next step would be to make arrangements with a promoter to get concerts. He would not disclose specific names of promoters, but a tentative concert in Memorial Stadium has been set for late April. "This will be a top artist, or we won't have it at all," he said. "That's a promise." Easy listening/soft rock, '60s music and the cool sound of jazz/soul were third to fifth, with hard rock being the least favorite choice. "We were expecting more hard rock," he said. "I guess it's going out with the times." Besides asking students their musical preference, the survey asked for their favorite groups, favorite male and female vocalists, and the price they would pay for tickets to see their favorite groups. Top musical groups were U2, Talking Heads, the Rolling Stones, Chicago and REM. Two other big-name groups, Huey Lewis and the News and the country sound of Alabama, were sixth and seventh. "We received a lot of them back, so there was a lot of interest," he said. "I think people relate a lot. I guess they want to have a concert." The top male vocalists chosen were Phil Collins, Bruce Springsteen, Lionel Richie, Billy Joel and Elton John. The most popular female vocalists were Tina Turner, Madonna, Diana Ross, Pat Benatar and Stevie Nicks. Cost is a primary consideration in bringing a concert to KU, Estell said, but it appears students would be happy to pay $15 to see their favorite musical group. $10 and $20 were second and third choices on the survey. SAVE AT IMPORTS + DOMESTIC + EXOTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mass. phone: 841-1151 THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mass. phone: 843-1151 SAVE AT IMPORTS • DOMESTICS • EXOTIC CARS Ralphs AUTO REPAIR 707 N. 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ANN JONES DOUBLE FEATURE Rent VCR & 2 Movies Overnight $14.99 SMITTY'S TV 1/1447 W. 23rd/842-9751 M-5:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun. 1-5 p.m. Almost 1,000 selections including XXX SUPER SINGLE SALE Includes 15 yr. mattress, 4-yr. heater, standup liner, fill kit and conditioner. (Super Single) $188.00 COMPLETE While Supply Lasts 90 Days Same As Cash Waterbed Works 710 W. 6th Lawrence, Ks. Open Sundays Locally owned and operated Works Lawrence, Ks OPEN EARLY. OPEN LATE. PLACE ORDERS Great copies and complete services, day or night. Only at Kinko's. kinko's Great copies. Great people. 29rd & IOWA 740-5392 904 VEBRICHT 843-8019 12hr & INDANA 841-6177 Waterbed BORDER BANDIDO MONDAY MANIA! Make your own at our taco and salad bar MARSHAL 1528 W.23rd 842-8861 ALL YOU CAN EAT TACOS $2.99 Across from post office Kansan. Save it. You may need it! Math Final Panic Relief Math Tutorials With Math Tutor Bob Mears, M.A. $8.00 for a 40 minute session. Call Bob at 843-9032 in P.M. Hello Jayhawks, I've taught and tutored over 15 years. I like independence.I like students. But most of all I like producing clarity, simplicity,and accuracy. I hope you will too. Cordially, Bob WE MAKE SENDING CHRISTMAS PACKAGES INDIVIDUAL CONTRACT L On the KU Campus 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Choose your space in an INDIVIDUAL CONTRACT Lease Daily Pickup by UPS - Convenient Location Great view of campus, or of the Jayhawker Towers POOL! Closets: 11 feet wide, dresser built in. Walls: Solid, rich brick. Two Sinks: No waiting for your roommate! BATH BED RM 140 square feet Big Picture Windows Location: On campus, on bus route. Thermostat: All Utilities Paid! LIVING/DINING RM 240 square feet Paid Cable TV Hookup Private Entrance: Double locks on doors. Carpet: Wall to wall, several colors. THE WOODLAND TREE GROUP - Free Parking - Open 7 Days during Christmas Season EASY! Open 7 Days during Christmas Season PS EXPRESS - Low UPS Rates 2 Locations PACK & SHIP EXPRESS, INC. You're Right on Campus in the Jayhawker Towers Apts. - Insured Overnight Delivery Available 2449 Iowa St. 609 Vermont St. 842-3413 湖南 湖 南 Hunan Japanese Chef,Mr. Takashi Hasumi,has just arrived from Tokyo to present a new and very popular Japanese menu to our neighbors in Lawrence. *Now Featuring Authentic Japanese F Sushi, Tempura Sukiyaki *served 5 p.m. to close, every night. To make a reservation or for carryout please call 1516 W.23rd 843-8222 Chinese food served during regular hours 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Fri. Noon-10:30 p.m. Sat. Noon,9 p.m. Sun. Hunan will be closed on Thanksgiving, Nov. 28. Monday, Nov. 25, 1985 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Week Ahead at KU Today Nov. 25 Exxon collagen, "Partnership Between the Government, Community and Business (Japan) v. United States," U., L. Ahmed, University of Kyoto, 3:30 p.m., International Kansas, Union College. Tomorrow Nov. 26 *Informative Action workbook, "Search. Screen. Screen. Turner. Turner. 10 a.m. Call. 3686 for appointment.* Wednesday Nov. 27 Thanksgiving break begins. No classes. University offices open. Union open, Burgery Union closed. Retiree Club coffee. Adam Lounge. Adams Library closed. State Fair closed. Watson Library closed for holiday. Library closes at 5 p.m. Closed also Thursday and Friday. Students return and resumes normal hours at a 9 a.m. Saturday. Thursday Nov. 28 Thanksgiving, Kansas and Burge Unions closed through March. KANU-FM 82. The American Past with Calder. Pickett, 7 p.m. Friday Nov. 29 Thanksgiving break at the South American societies, "The Last of the Caucasus," 4 p.m. Museum of American History, 210 E. Sixth Street. Women's basketball, Lady Jayhawk Dial Classic, 6 m. Allen Field House. Second game at 8 p.m. Games also at 6 a.m and 8 p.m. Saturday, September 24. Game at Mybiby on Miyabi, with James Seaver, 7 p.m. Saturday Nov. 30 Thanksgiving拜年. KANU-FM 92. The Vintage Jazz Show with Michael Mather. 9:30 a.m. The Jazz Scene with Dick Wright. 10 a.m. A Sunday Last day of Thanksgiving break. Lad day of Thanksgiving break. KAU-MF '94. The KU Concert. 1:30 p.m. The Metropolitan Opera, Spain, 印艺, played by Grenciell Consort of KU Colegium Musicon in voices, recitals, crumhorses and cornetto, 2 p.M., Spencer Museum of Art. ACE the next Week Ahead will appear Dec. 2 and cover through Dec. 8. The deadline for submitting entries for next week's calendar has passed. Entries for the Dec. 15 Week Ahead must be submitted in writing to the office of University relations by 5 p.m. Wednesday. Holidays and semester breaks may alter the schedule. An asterisk indicates an admission charge for an event. Coming Soon... By Popular Demand What was great now is even greater! NEW FULL OUNCE SHOTS We are serving the BEEFIEST DRINKS in town. 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HUTTON 842-5208 Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. 8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Monday, Nov. 25, 1985 Protesters wait for ruling about validity of appeals By Jennifer Benjamin Of the Kansan staff Associate District Judge Jean Shepherd this week will decide the validity of the appeals of seven anti-apartheid protesters who were convicted of criminal trespassing. The seven protesters were convicted in July in Lawrence Municipal Court and appealed to Douglas County District Court in September. At a hearing Nov. 12 in district court Jack Klinkett, Lawrence attorney representing the protesters, and Mike Glover, city prosecutor, presented their arguments. Glover requested the hearing to determine whether the protesters had filed their appeals correctly within the 10-day filing period. Before this hearing, Klinknett requested a hearing in municipal court to determine whether the appeals would advance to district court. The outcome of that hearing was that the appeals would be sent to district court. The seven protesters are Aimee Alderman, Olathe junior; Judy Brow, KU library clerk; Clark Coan, a 1979 KU graduate from Lawrence; Michael Foubert. Lawrence graduate student; Laird Okie, 1983 KU graduate from Lawrence; Gabriele Otto, West Germany senior; and Kathryn Steger, Leavenworth graduate student. They were arrested May 3 and 9 at Youngberg Hall, home of the Kansas University Endowment Association, while protesting the Endowment Association's investments in U.S. companies doing business in South Africa. The protesters paid a $50 bond and filed a notice of appeal but failed to sign a recognizance form when they appealed. The form is a promise to the court that they will appear and acknowledges that they are indebted to the court. The protesters' bonds have been used to pay their fines. Six of the seven are appealing one conviction resulting in a $30 fine each, and one protester is appealing two convictions with fines totaling $75. On Jan. 13, the five protesters arrested Nov. 4 in Chancellor Gene A. Budig's suite in Strong Hall will go to trial. Members of the KU Committee on South Africa are expected to formally ask the administration today to drop the charges against the five. By Jili White Of the Kansan staff Law student team wins in moot court regionals A team of KU law students won the regional moot court competitions yesterday and will advance to the national competition in February, which is held in New York, officials said yesterday. The second-place team, from Washburn University, will also advance to the national competition. The winning team consisted of third-year law students David Adkins, Topeka; Sarah Duckers, Salina; and Emily Geilker, Shawnee. Last year, the three members were finalists in the second-year law student competition held at KU. dent competet. The other KU team advanced as far as the quarterfinals, where it lost to the University of Missouri. It consisted of Richard Morefield, Overland Park, Judith Batson-Sadler, Gulfport, Miss., and Scott Bloch, Lawrence. Eight law schools from Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri sent two teams each to the regional competition, which was sponsored by the Kansas City Metropolitan Bar Association and held at the Federal District Court House, Kansas City, Mo. Based on the scores of three preliminary rounds held Friday afternoon, eight teams were chosen for the quarterfinals, the winners of which advanced to the semifinals. "Once we got into the finals a lot of the pressure was off," Adkins said. "We had a really good round overall. Everything went well." Moot court competitions simulate the appellate court process where one council, usually the petitioner, presents its side of the issue and the other council, the respondant, presents its side. The petitioner is allowed a three minute rebuttal. The New York Bar Association submits a legal issue to the schools and teams write briefs for early scoring. The brief counts for 40 percent of the team's score. The oral argument counts for 60 percent of the score. This year's case involved a First Amendment issue about cable television. A panel of judges analyze student oralists on their style. Points may be gained for how students answer judges' questions or whether they avoid the questions asked. Geliker wrote her team's brief which placed second in the competition with 87 points. The team from the University of Missouri placed first in brief writing with 88.33 points. Adkins and Duckers gave oral presentation as the petitioners in the final round and earned medallions, plaques and a trip to New York for the national moot court competition. We can help you with all your gift needs Bridal Registry Free Gift Wrap 723 Mass. St. Collections Gift Store Phoebe Collections Gift Store DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER Serving Lawrence & KU Since 1973 Complete service and parts sales for most foreign cars COMPLETE FULL LINE OF IMPORT CAR PARTS - VW * VOLVO * SUBARU * MG * DATSUN * MAZDA * TOYOTA * HONDA BOSCH Automotive Parts WINTERIZE! WINTERIZE! 841-4833 1008 E 12th SYNCHILLA and SHELLSYNCHILLA by TACAGENIA THINSULATE PARKAS AND JACKETS IN SIERRA WEST SUNFLOWER 804 MASS. O Call the Kansan. 841-DIET 935 Iowa "He knows when you've been eating, So be thin, for goodness sake!" If you indulge and get that holiday bulge, don't forget Diet Center. HP MINIJETT DAC6400 A1CX The Facts. The powerful Hewlett-Packard Series 40 advanced calculators are expandable. Versatile. 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CINEMA King Solomon's Mines CANNUN Daily 7.18 9:20 Fr $5.00 Sat & Sun $3.00 $1.00 **'Borgins Show-148' & Bun.** show times will also be in effect Thurs., 20—Thursday, 23—The Wedding Day. 湖北 T D fro de 湖北 Tis the Season to Celebrate! During the Holiday Season come inside from the cold; spice up your senses with a delicious, traditional Chinese dinner from House of Hupei. Closed Nov. 28 for Thanksgiving. House of HuPEI Open daily: Lunch 11:30-2:30 p.m. Dinner 4:30-9:30 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 'til 10:30 p.m. 2907 W. 6th nest to Econcolodge 843-8070 a Monday. Nov. 25, 1985 Sports University Daily Kansan 9 Dream season fades with onset of winter It was the early days of August. Heat and humidity clenched lawrence unmercifully. All activity outside of air conditioning was accompanied by scorching sun and pauring sweat. These were the conditions that met the Kansas Jayhawks when they reported for pre-season football practice. But the heat didn't really matter. It was just an obstacle to be overcome. This was a team of destiny. Heat wasn't going to stop them. The Cornhuskers or the Sooners, maybe. But that was it. Little orange dots were stuck to the crystal of every man's watch. The dots didn't necessarily represent the Orange Bowl — they were meant to constantly remind the wearer of the total dedication needed for the Jayhawks to be invited to a bowl game, any bowl game. "The oppressive heat was gradually replaced by the gentle, temperate days of fall. The Jayhawks were slaughtering victims every Saturday, even coming close to knocking off nationally ranked Florida State." The offense, led by seniors Mike Norseth and Richard Estell, could do no wrong. Norseth was even considered a candidate for the Heisman Trophy. Then came Oct. 12, Kansas was 4-1, riding higher than ever. The Iowa State Cyclones were coming off a loss to lowly Drake. The torrential rains of the night before lingered into a gray Saturday in Ames, Iowa. This was it. The Jayhawks were a team to be reckoned with, and bowl scouts were asking for seats in the press box. By games' end, the Jayhawks had lost their first Big Eight Conference game. As head coach Mike Gottfried said, it's tough to be 0-1 in the Big Eight without having played Nebraska, Oklahoma or Oklahoma State. The loss hit Kansas hard. In the next five games, Kansas played itself right out of the bowl picture with one win against four losses. (Winter blew into Memorial Stadium Saturday as mercilessly as summer sat on the practice field in August. But again, that wouldn't stop --- Chris Lazzarino Sports editor the Jayhays. Kansas, just like the weather, had come full circle. Early season wins were replaced by midseason losses. It was now time to replace the memories of those losses with a win and a .500 season. The underclassmen made sure that they wouldn't have to endure winter, spring and summer with a last-game loss hanging over their heads. The seniors made sure their last game in a Kansas uniform would be one to remember fondly. In years to come, tailback Lynn Williams can tell his son about how he overcame academic ineligibility and a badly injured body to score two touchdowns in his last game in a Kansas uniform. Linebacker Willie Pless can talk of how he proved the doosers wrong — he wasn't too small to play college football. He is leaving Kansas as the Big Eight's all-time tackle leader with 632. No Cornhusker or Sooner has ever done better. Estell can talk of a truly magical catch in the third quarter of his last game. After reaching over a defender and bobbling the ball a few times, he gained control and completed a 64-yard touchdown pass from Norseth. Norseth can talk of passing for 480 yards against Vanderbilt, and being considered, at least for that time, one of the best players in all of college football. He can also talk of how he and the rest of the offense combined to destroy Kansas and Big Eight offensive records. All of the seniors will have fond memories of glory days in a Kansas uniform, Saturday being one of them. But the Jayhawks fell short. A season of wonderful highs and tormenting lows ended without an invitation to a bowl game. Now Memorial Stadium sits empty, shrouded in fog, dizzle and freezing cold — silently awaiting another season. Team loses in tournev Kansas ends the season with a record of 17-15. The Kansas volleyball team's season ended Friday night when the Jayhawks lost to the Missouri Tigers 19-15, 7-15, 14-16 in the Big Eight conference tournament. "What I kept telling the girls in the huddle was that we were too worried about winning." KU hitter Judy Desch said yesterday. "You have to play every point. It wasn't like they were on a roll. We were just flat." Kansas head coach Frankie Albizt said Missouri played more steadily than Kansas. The Jayhawks had split two matches with Missouri during the regular season, but players said they were too nervous to play well Friday. GARNER 16 M 84 "They played steady ball, and our players were just a bit off," she said. Chad DeShazo/KANSAN Mitt Garner, Kansas cornerback, intercepts a pass from Missouri quarterback to bring him down. Garner had two interceptions in Saturday's game against Marion Adler on the KU 40-yard line as Tim Clark, Missouri wide receiver, tries Missouri, the last game of the season for both teams. 'Hawks finish season on winning note By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff The Kansas Jayhawks took care of some unfinished business Saturday with a 34-20 win over Missouri in Memorial Stadium. The Jayhawks broke a four-game losing streak and ended the season with a 6-6 record, the best in head coach Mike Gottfried's three year tenure. Kansas finished sixth in the Big Eight with a 2-5 record. Missouri, 1-10 overall, tied Kansas State for seventh place in the conference with a 1-6 mark. KU never fell behind, and 14 seniors concluded their careers on a winning note. But Gottfried and the Kansas staff will not take long to ponder what happened or what might have happened in this season filled with controversy Quarterback Mike Norseth scored on a one-yard quarterback sneak with 3 minutes, 15 seconds left in the first quarter to end a streak of 15 quarters without a touchdown. on the field and off. "It's sad knowing this was the last game for the seniors," Gottfried said after the game. "But we have got to look ahead to next year, and there are a lot of players in that locker room who will be ready to take over." In addition, Gottfried will continue recruiting efforts for next season. Part of those efforts included courting about 60 recruits over the weekend. Suddenly the talk of a winning season and a possible bowl bid that had followed the Jayhawks since August was gone, and Kansas needed Saturday's win against Missouri to salvage a 500 season. The season opened on an optimistic note for the Jayhawks. Kansas won four of its first five games, with the lone loss being a four point setback to highly ranked Florida State in Tallahassee. Fla. "We go directly into recruiting, and then we'll evaluate the season and the program." Gottfried said. "It feels really good, and we picked a good time to have a good game," linebacker Willie Pless said about the win. "It should carry over into next season." In its sixth game, Kansas was upset by Iowa State. The team went on to lose four of its next five games. The lone victory was a 38-7 win Oct. 19 over intrastate rival Kansas State, a team that finished 1-10 this season. For the first quarter and a half it looked as if the Jayhawks would have an easy time with Missouri. Kansas jumped out to a 14-0 lead on the strength of one-yard touchdown runs by Norseth and tailback Lynn Williams. Missouri rallied with two second-quarter touchdowns, but place-kicker Jeff Johnson gave Kansas the lead for good with a 22-yard field goal with 03 left in the first half. After Johnson added a 51-yard field goal, the Jayhawks took control in the third quarter on a 64-yard touchdown pass from Norseth to wide receiver Richard Estell. Estell and Missouri cornerback Tony Facinelli were running side by side down the left sideline when Norseth's pass bounced off of Facinelli's helmet and shoulder pads into Estell's arms at the 10-yard line. He eluded the Missouri defender with a stiff arm at the five-yard line and gave Kansas a 27-14 lead. "The Missouri defensive back played great defense, but he overran the ball a little bit," Estell said. "It hit him in back of the head, and then we started juggling the ball around. Luckily, I came away with it for a touchdown." Facinelli said he had Estell covered well, but the ball bounced in his arms. He added that if they would have run that play 100 times he probably would have made a catch like that only three times. Both Gottfried and Missouri head coach Woody Widenhofer said the catch was the turning point in the game. "That was probably the biggest play of the game." Gottfried said. KU women beat Drake in opener Bv Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff when the KU women's basketball team started conditioning at the beginning of the year, forward Jackie Martin was already thinking about Wanda Ford, who plays center for Drake University. "When we got up at five in the morning to run, I wondered where she was — was she still in bed?" Martin said Saturday. "Today it looked to me like she was still in bed." Saturday Kansas shut down Ford and beat Drake 80-64 in the season opener in Allen Field House. The Jayhawks held Ford, Drake's leading scorer and rebounder and a finalist last year for the Wade Trophy, to only six points and nine rebounds. Her average last year was 24 points and 17.7 rebounds. Drake head coach Carolele Baumgarten said, "If KU can play as aggressively as they did tonight, they will really contend for the Big Eight title." "When you lose a game like that, it's hard to take," said KU guard Lisa Dougherty, who came off the bench Saturday to score 10 points. "We knew we couldn't let up on them." The victory was sweet revenge for the Jayhawks. Last year on Drake's court in Des Moines, Iowa, Kansas lost by one point on a basket by Drake with one second left. Kansas' 6-foot-5 center, Kelly Jennings, was held to only two points in the first half, but in the second she scored 13. Forward Vickie Adams added 15 points in the second half to end the game with 26 points and 15 rebounds. Drake, 24-6 overall and 16-2 in the Gateway Conference last season, went out to an early lead, but Kansas came back to take a 36-29 halftime lead. "Vickie was just super," said KU head coach Marian Washington, who called Drake a top 25 team. "She had some awesome shots." Jasperis 1 Drakes' Caroline Orr gets the offensive rebound as Jayhawk forward Regan Miller goes after the ball in Saturday's women's basketball game against Drake. The Jayhawks beat Drake 80-64 in their season opener. Kellogg scores 22 in KU victory From Kansan wires DENVER — Forward Ron Kellogg scored 22 points, 14 of them in the second half, as fifth-ranked Kansas rallied to beat Washington 68-64 last night in the Denver regional final of the Big Apple National Invitation Tournament. Kansas will play Louisville in the semi-finals of the Big Annie NT at 8 p.m. CST Friday in New York City. The Jayhawks, trailing by as many as eight points in the first half, tossed in 12 straight points — the last six points of the first half and the first six points of the second half — to move to a 40-35 advantage. Six straight Washington points gave the lead back to the Huskies, and the lead seesawed for the next seven minutes. Kellogg sank back-to-back jumpers to put the Jayhawks up 48-47. After a Shag Williams basket for Washington, Chris Piper rebounded in a basket and Kellogg scored on a fast break, giving KU a 52-49 lead with 8:47 left. The Jayhawks didn't trail again, although Washington cut the lead to one point on two occasions. Guard Calvin Thompson's three-point play with 4:31 left triggered a 9-2 Kansas flurry that produced a 67-58 Center Greg Dreiling added 14 points and Thompson 13 for the winners. Washington, shooting 44 percent from the floor compared to Kansas' 38 percent in the first half, led in the early stages. advantage, and Washington got no closer than three points after that. The Huskies were paced by center Chris Welp with 21 points and forward Paul Fortier with 16. Back-to-back baskets by Fortier put the Huskies up 8-4. Midway through the half, point guard Greg Feld fed for a pair of baskets inside, and Hill followed with a 16-foot jumper to give Washington a 23-16 lead. Pepperdine forward Eric White was good for 13 points, center Levy Middlebrooks chipped in 11 and guard Jon Korfas made 10 points. Thompson led Kansas with 14 points. He was 6-13 from the field and 2-4 of from the free throw line. Manning and guard Cedric Hunter both had 12 points for the Jayhawks. Dreiling had nine points. Kellogg and forward Archie Marshall both had eight points. Kansas advanced to yesterday's game by defeating Pepperdine 67-61. Friday night. Chiefs snap 7-game losing streak KANSAS CITY. Mo. — Backup Todd Blackledge passed for 246 yards and a touchdown yesterday to help the beleaguered Kansas City Chiefs snap a club-record seven-game losing streak with 20-7 victory over the Indianapolis Colts. United Press International NFL scores, standings p. 12. The Chiefs, battered with injuries, bruised by the drug bust Wednesday of their star defensive end Mike Bell and conceding the season to youth, won for the first time since Sept. 29 to improve to 4-8. Indianapolis dropped to 3-9 with its sixth loss in the last seven games. Blackieck, who was given the starting quarterback job for the remainder of the season by Coach John Mackovic to see how he can perform in a pressureless atmosphere, completed 16-of-31 passes with a touchdown strike of 22 yards to Stonehua Paige. In his last start, Blackledge threw a club-record six interceptions and also fumbled once in a 16-0 loss to the Los Angeles Rams Oct. 20. Blackledge took the Chiefs 77 yards on their opening possession against the Colts to put Kansas City in front for good with his touchdown pass to Paige, Mike Pruitt chipped in a 2-yard touchdown run and Nick Lowery added field goals of 29 and 42 yards. Scott Radiche intercepted a pass and Bill Maas, Calvin Daniels and Bobby Hamm all had sacks for the Chiefs, which lost their shutout on a 14-yard run by George Wonsley with 2:22 left in the game. The Colts also started their backup quarterback, Matt Kofler, but he was 2-of-11 passing for 12 yards and could generate only four first downs before being yanked in favor of Mike Pagel midway through the third quarter. Kansas City put together another lengthy drive at the close of the half, moving 80 vards in 13 plays for the Blackiege completed (our third-down passes in the game-opening drive, including a 22-yard to rookie running back Ethan Horton, and had two other passes to Anthony Harcock for 66 yards nullified by penalties before Paige's team-leading fifth TD catch of the season. 2-yard touchdown run by Pruitt and a 14-0 lead with 75 seconds remaining. Blackledge completed passes of 21 yards to Carlos Carson and 14 to Walt Arnold in the drive and also scrambled out of the pocket for 9 yards to move the ball to the Indianapolis 5. The Chiefs got the ball back with 35 seconds left in the half at their own 29 and Blackledge promptly moved them to the Indianapolis 4 with two passcs to Hancock. The second covered 48 yards to the 4 and, after a sack, Lowery kicked his 29-yard goal goal to give Kansas City a 17-0 halftime lead. The Colts were forced to punt on their opening possession of the second half and Garcia Lane returned it 57 yards to the Colt 31. Four plays later, Lowery kicked a 42-yard field goal for a 20-0 Kansas City lead. The Colts finally snapped the shutout with an 80-yard drive in the game's closing minutes. Pagel hit Pat Beach with a 30-yard pass and Owen Gill with a 20-yard pass in the four-play drive to set up the Wonsley touchdown run. 10 36 University Daily Kansan Classified Ads The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Words t-Day 0-15 2.60 16-20 2.90 21-25 3.20 Total 8 words add. int AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Wednesday Wednesday 4 p.m. 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 5.25 8.25 6.00 9.00 6.75 10.35 75¢ 1.05 Classified Display ... $4.40 manual book Classified display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No reverses allowed in classified display advertisements except for logos. Monday, Nov. 25, 1985 POLICIES - Words in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words in BOLD FACE count as 1 word * Deadline is B4 p.m. —2 working days prior to - Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS I found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the Kansan business office at 864-4358. hily earned sale discount Samples of all mail order items must be submitted to the sales department for retiring. - Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University Daily Kansas until credit has been established. * Treatments are not provided for classified or ANNOUNCEMENTS I READY FOR FINALS! Attend the Preparing for Exams Study Skills Workshop. Topics covered: time management, memory, reviewing, test-taking strategies, anxiety, and more Free Resources Available at Hall FREEL! Presented by the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 844-604-4. - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only. Congratulations Phi Kappa Theta Pi Beta Phi Fall Basketball Champ - Classified display ads do not count towards more earned rate discount Delta Upsilon and all-tourney team John Lienemann (AKL) Paul Sedler (AKL) Brad Coble (DU) Wes Hendricks (DU) George McKenney (Beta to the University daily Kansan * All advertisements will be required to pay in advance All proceeds go to the Lawrence Warm Hearts Fund - All Utilities Paid Do you have talent? prove! *Auction* I for In Between Acts for Rock Chalk Reve. Dec. 2 & 3. GRAPEVINE doesn't grow around the campanile. Cereus doesn't need a phallic symbol. Jayhawker Towers ON CAMPUS 2-Br. Apts. for KU students. - advertising* * Blind box ads — please add $A service charge* Is there a free anti-spam email list? 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 - Individual Contract Option - A requirement of assumption from one or more countries * No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified fees on cancellations - Furnished or Unfurnished - For 2,3 or 4 persons - Laundry Facilities - Limited Access Doors Available - Air Conditioned - Free Cable TV Swimming Pool On Pipe Line Excellent location one bedroom studio basement apartment equipment kitchen low to ceiling at 1903 526 W. 46th St., Bronx, NY 10460 - Furnished or Unfurnished New looring for spring Hent-1' 9" Color T $9.28 am. $8.08 Smarty's TUY W. Wrd. 343 B47.531. Sat. Mon. 8-3v 9:00 Sun. Tue. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Satur. Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-4185. Reent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight *814.98* $147.97 (447 W. 21st 842-3431). Mon. Sat. 9, Sun. 9, Jan. 5. Enjoy the fireplace this winter and the pool this summer. Now available on Lawrence's nicest 2 bedroom unit. Communities. Excellent location in CHOWTIME. Call 814-544-8190 or 814-690 for more info. FOR RENT AWARD-WINNING 2. BR, Energy Efficient TOWNHOUSE. All appl. Air. Cond. W/D hookup, 5 minute walk to campus. Sublease - Call 749-3289 or 841-0799 News and Business Staff Positions The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1986 Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200, Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200, StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Monday, December 2, 1985. The University Daily Kansan is an Annual 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. Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 West 9th. One bedroom furnished, 3rd floor $225 plus utilities. Lease through price could be negotiable. 841-320-6330. 841-320-6330. Apt to abuja at Red Oaks at 3001 Alabam. Two buses depart at Red Oaks. Cable TV paid, two leaves through Miami. Bikes 81-405. A you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at BERKELEY FLATS. Vacancies available now and at semester. Plan ahead, lease now for next year. 843-2116. Attractive 2 BR apartment in remodeled house, sublease for January 1. Lunials, bay window, ceiling fan, new carpeting, private parking, close to gymnasium and dormitories. 249-3543 Available Jan 1-3 or 4 bedroom apartment 1 block from union newly remodeled 75 month pu- plex Demand for Naimish Hall has never been higher--insure yourself a space next fall by moving to Naimish Hall, or at least the next semester. Drop by for a tour today and see our "new look" for yourself. Naimish Hall, 1600 West 25th Street, New York, NY 10019. Naismith Hall Contracts Available for Spring Semester $100 Pre-Paid 842-4637 Furnished rooms from $100 with some utilities Two bikes from Kansas Union. No pets. Email: krsunion@kansasunion.com Large one bedroom, gas heat, gas/water paid, $250, or MF-3601. Limited spaces will be available at Naismith Hall next semester. Waiting lists are forming now so don't delay! For more information call or come by for a tour. Naismith Hall, 1800 Naismith Street MUST SUBLEASE. Gatehouse Apartments, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, good location. Available end of semester, lease through May. Ask for Sarah 749-3841 HEATHERWOOD VALLEY: One & two bedrooms available beginning at $300/month. All apartments have CA, gas heat, DW, FF repricient and on bus route. Call 841-7454 for details. Berkley FLATS 843-2116 11th & Mississippi NOW LEASING - Over 40 New Units - Great location Walk Anywhere - Furnished Units Available SUBLEASE: 2 bd, lt kichluvng rm, plenly roommate, 3500 uplth. units in Indiana. OR: Female roommate non-smoker, 1/3 costs, 841-3601, 749-0805, or 749-149). - Laundry facilities SHORT LEASES AVAILABLE 1123 Indiana Furnished by Thompson Crawley Nice southeast location. New 2 bedroom duplex. Spacious room living with lid glass door to pot. Eat - in kitchen w/dw, dispail, range. refrigerator, laundry room, wall to waist carpet, easy access to laundry room and closet. 31, 1986. 1 month deposit, $245 per month. 1301 E. 25th Terc. 842-2509. - On KU Bus Route Non-smoking roommate for spring daupe. Duke beach meadow $190/mo. Bachelor's degree required. NAISMITH HALL - Spring semester opening for MIHNIMED HALL. Call 768 0731. Immediate phone: Call 768 0731. New offering 1. 8' x 2.8' bedroom apts, continental. New offering 1. 8' x 2.8' bedroom apts, continental. Capacity. If your looking for a new call, call us Kaw Valley Management. 904-6750. Kentucky. 841-6600. Pretty, cedar trimmed 3 BR apartment. All appliances. A/C, W/D hookup, garage one block from bus. Sublease, option to take next lease. Must substel b lr Apt. Extremely close to campus Spacious living and kitchen area. Comfortable SUNFLOWER HOUSE. Spring openings, reserve now. 30 students, private rooms, close to campus. Spacious two bedroom furnished househouse for rent close to campus. Includes garage, 1/2 bath, balcony and new carpeting. Very quiet location and ascend Dec. Call 789-7400, 841-1200 (days) Gena Room in home for young University woman, nice location now, spring semester and on. Need contact phone 845-0888 before 9 a.m. or e-mail. ROOMS FOR M/F STUDENTS AVAILABLE NOW. Furnished, Share Kitchen, Walk to campus. 140th & Kentucky, $110, $115, $125 plus 1/8 per person. 641/2109/851318 Romeo. No lease, furnished, all utilities paid, cable color TV, phone, maid service, laundry facilities, kitchen privileges, on KU bus route. Recon-Lodge, 843-6611 Room for rent, condo living ask for Kevin or Maurice at 841-6471 Rooms for rent on the hill 1/1 mile from Union 895 and 823. Call 641-9459. Sublease 3 bedroom furnished apartment, Tangweilday 1, chome to campus Call office, 810-452-6759 SUBLEASE 3 bedroom ApT. On Bis Road and Chase to Clarem, Fit a 6m² space, Village area with kitchen, laundry, garden. Sublease through May, Village Square Apt. 5, bedroom. Large kitchen and living room. Nice and quiet. On Bus route $235/month. 749-2378 or office. 842-3040. Sublease. Available immediately on bus line. Next to Sanctuary. Phone 842-2725. Submit 2 bedroom apartment until May. Option to renew lease, rate 1/2 security deposit paid, bid 809-8529 881-8529 Sublease. Nice big room with bath in 6 bedrooms. Nice neighborhood. 2 blocks from campuses. Trailer for sublease, 1 BR, close to KU, 17/15/month, low utilities. Call nights, 842-8736. Wanted Male-mother to sublease 1 bbr of 2. bfr. apt. 150 ft. ptl. until 843-333ion 2 Eavings. Want to live in Nazimsh ? Need female roommate for Spring 749-4885. NEWApartment-Room for 4: Spacious 2 bedrooms, Microwave; Fireplace; Garage; 11/2 Baths; Ideal Location, Campus and residential; Available午夜1. Call now 249-2825. FOR SALE MASTERCRAFT offers a completely furnished two bedroom apartment available immediately! We also have sutleware on 1, 2 and 3 bedroom rooms. Please call us for help. KU, Call 1812. 1412, 0759, or 794-895. 78 Chevette 2-door hatch back, good for getting around town. Interior well worn. Rum well. Misa good. Baseball cards and sports nontailog. Buy, Sell and Trade. Baseball cards. Open 10-8 M-S. For Sale: 14 X 70 Mobile Home, why throw your money away on rent when you can have equity when you graduate? 2 bdrmks, i bath home is perfect for roommates or young family For Sale Folding Drafting table, white metal frame, good condition, $75 811 - 956 evenings. For sale Brand new sony D-S Diskman $190 or offer. Call 843 9035. GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U$ reap). Also government homes from 1-857-609-687. GILGIRL-6724 for information on these homes. For sale. SONS CANTILEVER deck TC-F70X70 top on one. Brand new only $200, value of $600 at B&H. KU SEASON BASKETBALL TICKET for sale: Call 821-8891 Call 842-8893 QUALITY used carpet, twice cleaned and profe- sanitized sanitized. Big Bob's 84-BOJS. SILVER REPEAT TYPEWRITER. Two extra daisy letters. SKIS for sale. Head Master 2005's, w/Saishan 720 headphones, book cases, 13 books, M's best buy. Call 841-918-8690. Tired of looking everywhere for QUALITY TIRES & WHEELS at reasonable prices? Well, you don't have to anymore! At IMPORT PLUS, all major tires are available. Call 718-596-2200 or particularly with MAIL-ORDER). In and check us out! 1610 W.23rd (Beside Pizza Hut) 749-547-3 Two student night basketball tickets. Best offer! un out 610 h. W. 23rd (Bendie Pizza Hut) 749-5478 n out 610 h. W. 23rd (Nestlé basketball Basketball) Best offer n out 610 h. W. 23rd (Kohl's) Best offer Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sense to use them: 1) As study guide, 2) For class material. 3) As a workbook, 4) Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Town Crier. The Joahawk Bookstore, and www.westerncivilization.com. NIKON AL Lenses. 105 mm F1.8/$200 35mm F2.78 F872. Battery at 844-9348 TRUMPETS TWO BRASS BUNDY'S TRUMPETS MIKAEL BUNDY'S NEGOTIABLE TWO BRASS D. 84536 Omg good condition AUTO SALES 1975 Chevrolet Impala Wagon, runs well, $500 or best offer, call 749-3122 after 5 p.m. 1979 Mercury Capri, 52,000 miles, one owner, A/C start up. Cell #L8413, after 2 months. 71 Ford Ld. JREABLE, Runs well. New batte- tle, dies, lakes up. Call 609-824-2884. 19 rows - - rente Priced to sell in, good running condition. Call 740 - 2909. Good SUMMER JOBS near Estes Park, Colorado, a as camp counselor, cook, nurse, typist, photographer, barn wrenner, trans driver, or assistant unit director. Applicants must be at least 18, interviews on campus January 11. SCHOOL IDENTIFIED. DO NOT MISS. 8025, Denver. Colorado 8026, 9037-7731-616. FWD, Hatchback, AMFM, Clean body, Economic and dependable car in good condition. 842-3714. Is it True You Can Buy Jeeps for $44 through the MOTO-Motive website? (today's call) 1-212-742-1143, Els. 3294. Enjoy a safe adventure in Boston Families seek live-in care help. Year commitment. Immediate and delayed placements available. A team of dedicated professionals agency Write Live 'n Care, 358 Houghton Street Delivery Drivers. Need 10 persons for campus area deliveries. Earn 25 and up per a.m. d.m. p.m. Apply 9-4 at 2272 W. 6th at the Master Inn Suite 112 A, Ask for Joy. Door to door subscription sales/survey. November 26, 2015 5:30-8:30 m.p. Paid training given from 4:50-3:00 p.m. Nov. 26. Pays $4 hour plus commission and mileage call 877-290-3800. Manage Do you enjoy cleaning? "You may qualify to be a part of our hard-working team. Call BUCKINGHAM PALACE Housecleaning between 8 a.m.-p.m. 826-8264 Babyfairy needed in my home for all home basketball games. Top pay for responsible, non-custodial parents. Independence Inc. is seeking individuals to work as reg. or part-time attendants to persons with a disability. To apply call or come to Independence Inc. 841. 0332, 1910 Haulell O.E. RESEARCH ASSISTANT. Full time research assistant position in analytical chemistry. Requires strong background in general chemistry and good laboratory skills. Duties include the development of analytical assays for trait testing, use of advanced technology of technical reports. A bachelor's degree in physical or biological sciences is helpful but not required. Salary dependent on qualifications. Apply directly to: Dr. Osborne Wong, Great Laboratories, Inc., 2603 Constant Avenue, Lawrence KS 60068. Application deadline is 12/27/88. Ourea's affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer large Lawrence law firm taking applications for word processors to work 2-4 hours during evening hours, non-smoker. Please send resume to typemaster, non-smoker, or receive hours to PO Box 606, Lawrence KS 60049. Macro Programming. We're looking for someone to do some 11/7 Macro programming for custom programs. We'll write the code and describe it as an easy job for a good programmer. Price negotiates after you look at the job description. Part-time positions open for morning and noontime care givers on a regular and a two-month basis. Participants are required to be available to train 4 days in Dec. Applicant *Yodder Day Center, Bristol St. AA 104 (Midwoodboro) Hiring Today Have 15 positions available for students and Housewives for telephone office work. Earn extra Christmas money. Good pay. Send resume to Office of the Master In Suite 113A. A.k.a. For Joy. hardware & software space, and application knowledge. Understanding of structured programming. Understanding of structured programming. Ability to use computer hardware and software. Interfered: Experience in UNIX, C, dBASE II or III, Microsoft BASIC Graphics and a microcomputer word processor Salary: 120-180 Strong up to 11/29/85 Teacher's Aide position in Toddler Room. Start- December. 9th Hours are : 1-5:30 p.m, weekdays; $3.35 a hour. Apply at Children Learning Center, 311 Mane De by Dec.1 [OVERSEAS] JOB'S, Summer, yr.round, Europe, S. Amer., Australia, All. fields 8000-2000 mo. Sightseeing Free info. Write LJC, P Box 52-KH, Corona Del Mar, CA 92035. Part-time cocktail waitress needed Thurs., Fri. and Saturdays. In apply on Wed. Sep-7 10am to 5pm each day. Needed. Babysitter to come to my home from 3:30 p.m. to a 1.m. M-F. Two children ages 2 and 3 Must have references and own transportation Call between 9 and 3:42-5277 Word Processing Typesi. Academic Computing Services has two half-time student hourly post-graduate positions (189, $85 per hour). Entering and editing text using a word processor; data entry. Training program at KU; training on computer management at KU; acceptance (typing skills). Fill out application at reception area of Computer Center. MISCELLANEOUS *emale Aide Aile M: 7-30:12:00; P.M. 10-12; weekends alide 749.088 **animal Acts!** Condemand! that can be performed in front of over 7,000 people is the answer to this dilemma. available immediately; Secure, accessible, reatherly garage close to campus $40/mo. 50 valu for only $24.95 A Real Budget Stretcher Gifts*Services Restaurant Meals Entertainment You may be called to receive 100 FREE CERTIFICATES call for more info. 842-2046 No purchases are required when you No purchases are required when you spend Lions Club Golden Checks (1105) L MILITARY SERVICE PERSONAL DAIRYMAN FROM WEST WHO CALLED AT 3:00 AM CALL ME RACE RICK quagga (kwag uh) n. a quagga (kwag un) n. a striped, wild ass of South Africa, now extinct, resembling the donkey and the zebra. Brought to you by the South African Caligula Exciting new band! "I love Magnae and the Attractions" - appearing mighty at Opposite Poles. "I love Magnae and the Attractions" - appearing mighty at Opposite Poles. 1-400-FINCHES. Special party favors not included. She's not a little illusion and she won't steal your heart. M-W Parent Age 32 with 9 yr. old son new to N.E. Kansas seeking warm, attractive, warm considerate, loving woman 28-34. To share spare time on winter days & enters *Children's education* apps, intelligent conversation, and quiet times. Wellly to Single Parent Box 1544, Lawrence, KS. YOURE ARE NOT ALONE, Lesbian gay peer counselors. For referral call 811 2434 or 894-3681. Sponsored by Headquarters & GLSOK. Funded by Student Senate. --- МАHTA HAPPY 20th BIRTHDAY BUS.PERSONAL $10-$800 Weekly Up/Mail Circulars: No calls! S蜜情ly interested Direct self-addressed envelope: Success, PO Box 470CEG, Woodstock, IL 60098. Amya Barbershop 942 1/2 Mass. welcomes all parties. For enquiries call 806-543-8001; hair cuts, Hospice 806-543-8001; Closed 806-543- 8001. A Finest Quality Skateboards & Accessories UPTOWN BICYCLES 1337 Mass. 749-0636 A > > 3 distinctive females seek three fun-living, attractive males for a one-night stand of dining and dancing on Dec. 7. Call 845-8256. Ask for Hot Blondes. Broke? Not enough money for college? You could be missing out on thousands of dollars in financial and find out how to get your fair share. For your copy of "A Comprehensive Guide to Financial Accounting," address, and only 85 to 90 Bay Information 10230 Mercy Suite 368, Overland Park KS 62311 FLOAT CONNECTION - 14th E. 8th St. 749-0771 Mastercard and Visa. A她 named Tedi. Together through the hard times, appreciating all the good times. My love for you is bigger than the sky. Ppy 1 yr. Love, your knight in shining armor Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, 1.10, and 4.0 of course; time to submit resume must be specified. Rent'19 Polym T V 288 a month Curtis Mathen, 147 W 23rd B 843 8575 Men, Sat 9-30 COMPETENCESENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE: early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care; confidential assured Greater Area call for appointment 913-356-1400 Modeling and theater partition -- shooting not beginner, professionals, call for information To that Cate Blanche, Brunette or Red Head with Talent. Meet me at the Rock Church Haifa with Talent. We get your computer's head on straight. Computer Service Alpha-Mega Computer Services 718-562-9000 Keep Warm with wool top coat. hats, and gloves Shop. Shop 725 Mass. B4016 0491 EVERY DAY Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event? J M Favors offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specialties plus fashion apparel from their own or our talented artists. 220 W 251 (Behind Gibson's) 814-439. MENU HOT LINE 364-4567 The Union's recording of the day's entrees & soups New from California. Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure. 316-284-3742. FO Box 3632. Wichita, in Monday's MKU KRI Representation needs feedback. 18 'Color' T.C. V. T.$2.60 a month. Smith's T.Y. 147 W. 23rd, 842-5731. Mon-Sat: 9:30-10:00, Sun: 5 1 FOIVIEN UBSTUDENT TOUR "De-Jan 27 12 $1.475 UC." Tour includes: Airfare out of K.C. Hotel Accommodations, fully escorted tour, meals and much more. Magnifique (1613 340-283). Sewing and Alterations-kind kinds, including sweaters. By professional fashion designer Krystyna. 843-5777 or 841-5833. Keep trying! Thousands of R D albums = $2 or less. Also collect items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Quantrillts 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed shirttart. 749-1611. We rent downwilh skies 4 days $3, 8 days $4.00 Head skis, new boots and poles. $10 deposit required. Sunshield Surplus, 844 Mass. 945-500. Reserved at one hour Photo. Southern Air Mits. MI-7295 MATH TUTOR - Bob Movera holds an A.M. in M.A. from K.U. where 092, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professionals at SUNY College of Law. Statements 88 and 40 minute session Call-83-9032. CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for Chauffeur Driven LIMOUSINES For Any Occasion. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK SINGLES... Results Effective. Join hundreds of prescreened quality adults looking for sincere connections 1/2 price for women under 40 and those aged 35-49. For info call 842-7894. No obligation. New Connections Video in Lawrence is an offspring of New Beginnings video in Kansas City. Holdings are coming to give you the opportunity for free membership. The first 10 women under 25 (WKUD) get a FREE membership. SERVICES OFFERED STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts, downstairs all haircuts. $63 No appointment KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS HARPER Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in ... 941-716 Write ad here 1101 Mass. Suite 201 749-0117 BLOOM COUNTY THEME & THEIS OUTLINED- enhanced with library RE. SEARCH, organized through WORD PROCESSING, editing, revising Victor Clark 842-8240 BIRTHRIGHT--Free Pregnancy Testing. Con- ditional Counseling. 843-8421. LOST/FOUND Lest. brown male dog, white on nose and cheek Wearing blue collar, call 824 977-3 Classified Heading:— Lost Brown Billfold With ID's, Award, Please Call 842-2987. THE FAR SIDE FOUND 6 mo. old shag puppy sits on Lake Wancoma. Compass Humane Society or Chris Jenkins. By GARY LARSON © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate 11-25 Jenson © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate The fords of Norway LANE... I WANT YOU TO MARRY ME. Hollie Lee "YOU" 11/17 by Berke Breathed I DON'T WANT TO START A FAMILY! LANE...BABY. SUGAR POO-BRO. HOW LONG HIME WE BEEN PATIO NOW! TWENTY MINUTES. AND MY BIOLOGICAL CLOCK IS TICKING! Mondav. Nov. 25. 1985 11 Classified Ads FOUND-Nev. 19 Rehond High-Young female cat Lat. Cats Sara 894-404 days male cat Lat. Cats Sara 754-604 days Found A-18 gold & spoted cat. Found near 9th & Emery Rd. Call 841-6977. Found Tues, Nov. 19th, calculator in Werech, Callen Irae and identify location and type of calculation Last: Folded, burgundy, flowered umbrella at left. Colorado billboard. Sentimental value. Beware of small burgundy shells. University Daily Kansan ENTERTAINMENT Tan Barracuda raincoat, birthday gift from wife Nancy. Birthday, Nov. 15, 2013. Reward 86-343-252 (7), 86-823-8549 www.tanbarracudas.com Dance to live fiddle music! Jayhawk Oldtime bardiance Company. Make your next part unimpaired 3,100 pages. No job too small or too large. Affordable and affordable typing, Judy, 842-7945. TYPING 1. TRIO WORD PROCESSING. Experience in concurrentness. Reliable. Rush jobs accept all job types. 3. Dependable, accurate, professional, WORD books, 2 eds., Data Word B41 8710 books, 2 eds., Data Word B41 8710 *80-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes, *computer. Best campus. *Best quality and fastest service.* 810-590-3222 A: professional typing. Term papers, Thesis. Dissemination, Necumes, etc. using IBM Silecric Database. AAA TYPEG/842-1942. Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs. Law review articles typed by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in by 6 p.m. out by 10 p.m. same day. A. L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, themes, term papers. Phone 942-8657 after 5:30. A-Z Wordpressing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850 Absolutely LETTER PERFECT Word processing, typing and bookkeeping. IBM OS/6-9, M-P. Same day service available. 844 Illinois, 843-6618. Accurate, afterward typing through by former Harvard Medical School secretary. Call Nancy 841-1219. All Kinds of Typing: GOOD IMPRESSIONS Past, reasonable punctuation/errors errors AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing/ Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics, Wordart Document upgrading. Free estimates 7/19-1118 Attention Meadowbrook excellent kyptem nearby. APA format experience Call Pat. P.O. Box 1206, Boca Raton, FL 33427 5-Plus Typing law paper, resumes, dissertation notes, lecture notes, with memory. 4749 or 4754, a m. n. p. (1-8) in: Bibliography, Journal articles, and more. DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced. UEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service. TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape. 843-8877 DISSERTATIONS / THESEES / LAW PAPERS/ Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter student papers up to 30 pages per page. Mommy's paper: 843-378 PAGE 11. CLEAR Fast and Dependable Typing Service. Call 814.846 any time. PROFESSIONAL typet with 15 years experience. Fast, accurate, and reliable Cal Peggy after 5 years of training. QUALITY TYPING, Letters, theses, dissertations, applications, spelling Corrected Cell Phone ID: B749-214 EXPERIENCED TYPET. Term papers, those. IR Correcting Selection will correct spelling errors. TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254 *masteries.* Theses, Tune Papers. Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone 842-2210 after 5:30. Barb. *NOTCH* professional word processing, theses, measures, leses, letter quality prim- nature; etc. 853-6008 THE WORDCOCTORS—Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147 WANTED CARPOLT.OF. Ottawa to Lawrence. Monday thru July 4th. Monday to Friday schedule. Call Debbie 844-391-3541 (Staffley Hall) Female Roommate to share two bedrooms apartment spring semester. Close to campus. Call Female to share two bedroom apartment for spring semester. Close to campus: 749-5472. Non-Smoking, Male Roommate for two-bedroom apartment. Move-In January $150/month, 1/2 utilities. Close to campus 842-1436. After six. Ask for John. Non-swimming female friendmate to share three ridges in a Wendover midback. $180/mo. Filled includes 942/792. O. T student desperately needs a non-monitored KC for apartment. Prefer no-smoker. 842-0881. Responsible and fun-loving female to share experiences with young women. Beautiful view and agency. Built on positive relationships. Roommate needed to share fantastic house $135 + 1/2 usher. Close to campus, near busin- ing area. Roommate needed for spring semester. Nice 4 bed Townhouse Tuition $125.00 per month. Call 618-373-1692 SHARE HOUSE, 3 berm 2 bath, deck, fireplace, dryer/water, dishwasher, disposal. Near Westridge and Junkyards Jym. Call 749-4856 (wk), 1841-9044 (bill). BILL. Space available for female at Naimish Hall starting spring semester. Call 749-2904. Wanted: 1 or 2 female roommates. Now or second semester. Beautiful 2 bedding Eddington Apt. FP, Cabble (SHO), DW, on business. $137 / 416/month / 2 / utilities! B4832-9427 or 8439-4103. Keep them Wanted-Bonaired Student talent for Rock Chalk REVA IBA's Auditions. Dec 2 & 3. Wanted: Non-smoking female roomate for Spring to share 2 bdgr. apt. Graduate student preferred. $135/mo, and utilities, semi-furnished, on bus route. 845.9845 Wanted: Sensitive, responsible male roommate to work from Kansai Union. $500 for rent plus 2 of utilities from Kansai Union. $800 for rent plus 2 of utilities. Wanted - non-smoking female to share a larger 3-bedroom apartment. Can move in any time. Req's a Bachelor's degree and 2 years of experience. TALK TO THE COACH Hawk Talk with Larry Brown Mondays at 6:07 p.m. Call 1-800-332-0090 KZR 106 FRED PANNAKOVA Help us celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday season with our... KU ANNUAL IN SALE!! CLOTHING TRADE-IN SALE!! The sale continues through Sunday Dec.1st. How many times have you wished that you could trade-in worn out or out-of-style clothing on something new? Well, this week you can...come in and TRADE-IN your old clothing and outerwear for new, and get big discounts on fresh, exciting items from our regular stock. Some selected items are withheld from this sale. Trade-in value $50.00 SUITS Trade-in $40.00 value Trade-in value $30.00 SPORT COATS ALL WEATHER & TRENCH COATS LINED JACKETS Trade-in value $40.00 Come on in...this event is great fun and you help others by putting your used clothing back into circulation...Alterations extra at cost. DRESS TROUSERS DRESS TROUSERS Trade-in value $10.00 A BARACUTA jacket FREE with purchase of BARACUTA coat "Trade-in value" means you will receive a direct reduction of that amount on your purchase of the new item listed. One for one trade. Clothing traded will be donated to the Salvation Army and the Plymouth Thrift Shop. LIGHT JACKETS Trade-in value $20.00 the men's shop • 639 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 6044 • 643-5755 WHITENIGHT'S Give Her the Bear Necessities Pandas 6th & Kasold 749-2860 Westridge Floral from EDDINGHAM PLACE 24th & Eddingham Drive (Behind Southern Hills Mall) New 2 bedroom apartments starting at $385 per month. - FREE SHOWTIME - & satellite T.V. - Semester leases - Immediate or summer - FIREPLACE - Enjoy the POOL and CLUBHOUSE and CLUBHOUSE this summer for the winter nights - On-site Manager, 841-5444. - Energy efficient this summer OPEN DAILY 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Saturdays 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. * 841-5444 * For further information KVM Kaw Valley Management, Inc. 901 Kentucky, No. 205 841-6080 KVM --- KANSAS' FREEWAY SINGLES CLUB OFFERS A SMOOTH WAY TO GET YOUR LOVE LIFE IN GEAR Surely it's happened to you, and you've seen it happen to others. Surely it's happened to you; and you've seen innaphors on others. You're driving down the street at rush hour and in the lane next to you sits that someone's car. The rest of the way down the stent, you make darn sure that person doesn't leave your eyesight and you even try to navigate your way into a position where you can pull alongside that car at the next light. You exchange a few innocent glances and then 'ZOOM' - the person turns left never to be seen again. That's what happened to a California women who saw her "Prince Charming" disappear forever in a yellow Cadillac several years ago. That woman, Ruth Guillou, devised a solution she called the Freeway Singles Club, an organization whose singles numbered stickers on the backs of their care signifying them as single and available. The process is simple enough. To join members pay annual dues. That entitles them to a numbered decal that is attached to the rear window of the car. When a member is spotted by an interested member, the spotter jots down the number and mails a letter with that number on the outside of the envelope to the Freeway Singles Club. The Club takes the number and matches it with the address of the person owning that number and mails the letter sent by the spotter. The Freeway Singles Club is now expanding throughout the United States. Each state is being licensed many being purchased by former representatives of the 420 Huntington Beach Club tion, members will be able other members through- Each state's decals will proceeded by a state abbre- designation for the Free- cas is KS. Now a national organiza- to communicate with out the United States have the member numbe viation on the decal. Thi way Singles Club of Kan MATTHIAS PANCHATRI To get things rolling in the Lawrence area we are offering regular $35 memberships for only $5 to the first 50 applicants. FSC KS250 ANTIQUE SUNGLASS CLUB For more information Freeway Singles Club P.O. Box 3652 Wichita, KS 67201 (316) 264-3742 For more information contact: Kansas University Representatives needed. KWALITY COMICS SCIENCE FICTION COMIC BOOKS • GAMES 1111 Massachusetts 843-7239 comprehensive health associates • free pregnancy tests • outpatient abortion services • alternative counseling • gynecology • contraception Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400 PIZZA Shoppe and Pub Westridge Shopping Center 6th & Kasold WE DELIVER! 842-0600 MONDAY NIGHT football MONDAYS ONLY! King Size Pizza 2 toppings end 32 oz. Pepsi— $795 plus tax Mention Monday Night Football Special when ordering and receive extra mazzarella FREE! TUESDAY DIME DRAWS 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Wed. Special: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs. 843-0540 --- The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series * Follow the Star to... The Christmas Story presented by The Waverly Consort ★ An Evening For Your Entire Family. Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved. 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, December 3, 1985 Hoch Auditorium Public: $11 & $9, KU and K-12 Students: $5.50 & $4.50; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $10 & $8 For reservations, call 913/864-3982; VISA/MasterCard Accepted HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS! --- Because of a change in the basketball schedule, there will be a men's basketball game in Allen Field House on the same evening as the Waverly Consort in *The Christmas Story*. Special parking arrangements have been made for concert-goers in KU Lot 3, west and in back of Strong Hall; Lot 18, along the service drive behind Hoch Auditorium and Wesco Hall, and in Lot 33, south of Lindley Hall. Open parking will be available in Lots 91 and 94, south and east of Memorial Stadium. FREE shuttle bus service will be available from the stadium lots before and after the concert. Shuttle service begins at 7:15 p.m. Concept: Shorts are free original at 119 pm. --- Rock Chalk Revue In Between Acts Auditions Singers! ★Magicians! ★Comedians! ★Animal Acts! Get YOUR act together over Thanksgiving break! Bring it to the BIG-8 Rm in the Kansas Union! OPEN AUDITION: Monday, Dec. 2, 8-11 p.m. (and 7-8 p.m., Dec. "Call-backs": Tuesday, Dec. 3, 8-11 p.m. ★ Questions? call Pam Jones: 749-1103 / Georgia Hamill: 843-8425 --- 12 University Daily Kansan Sports Monday, Nov. 25, 1985 Sports Almanac NFL American Conference East N. Y. Joon W L T 3 W T Pet. PF PA New England 8 3 7 667 240 300 Miami 8 4 7 667 280 214 Indianapolis 8 3 9 650 214 285 Oakland 8 3 10 650 214 285 Cleveland 6 6 0 500 201 172 Pittsburgh 6 6 0 500 201 172 Houston 5 7 0 417 206 270 Cincinnati 5 7 0 417 299 325 National Conference L.A. Raiders 8 4 4 0 .667 274 361 Denver 8 4 4 0 .667 274 362 Seattle 8 4 4 0 .667 274 362 San Diego 5 7 4 0 .417 319 322 Kansas City 5 7 4 0 .333 322 378 Dallas 8 4 4 0 667 254 214 N. Y. Giants 8 4 4 0 667 252 198 Washington 7 5 4 0 667 250 125 Philadelphia N. J. 7 5 4 500 290 125 Baltimore N. J. 8 4 3 0 633 203 290 x. Chicago 12 6 0 0 1,000 359 127 Detroit 12 6 0 0 1,000 359 128 Dallas 12 6 0 0 1,000 359 128 Minnesota 5 7 0 417 244 278 Tampa Bay 5 7 0 417 244 278 L.A. Rams 9 3 0 750 258 198 San Francisco 6 5 0 545 275 187 New Orleans 4 8 0 333 220 232 Atlanta 2 10 0 167 218 357 Yesterday's results Kansas City 20, Indianaapolis 7 Chicago 36, Atlanta 0 Cleveland 24, Cincinnati 6 Portland 16, Detroit 16, OT Houston 37, San Diego 35 Washington 30, Pittsburgh 23 Miami 22, Birmingham 14 New England 13, Ohio New Orleans 30, Minnesota 23 New York Giants 34, St Louis 3 Philadelphia 29, Denver 15 Los Angeles Rams 34, Green Bay 17 Los Angeles Raiders 31, Denver 28 Tonight's game Seattle at San Francisco, 8 p.m. Bowl games Likely college football bowl participants; Dec. 14 California, Presno, Calif., — Presno State or Bowling Green Cherry Bowl (Pontac, Mich.) Maryland vs. Syracuse. Independent Bowl (Shreveport, La.) - Minnesota vs. Clemson. Dec 22 Holiday Bowl 'San Diego' - Arkansas vs. Arizona State fields the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187 LONDON BRIDGE MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Come watch the game with Harry! FREE DRINK with any sandwich purchase when you ask for the Monday Night Football Special! HARRY BEAR'S THE DEVIL'S BOOTLEGS 106 N. Park 749-5246 HARRY BEAR'S CHICAGO, IL 60214 THE BEST BEER TO EVER MADE for ill 749-5246 Dec 27 Library Belt (Miami, Teen) - Louisiana State vs. Baylor Dec. 28 Citrus Bowl (Orlando, Fl.) – Brigham Young vs Ohio State. Sun Bowl (El Paso, Texas) – Georgia vs Arizona. Aloha Bowl (Hondulua) – Alabama vs West Virginia. Dec 30 Freedom Bowl (Anahaelim, Calif.) — Washington vs Colorado. College Bowl, Jacksonville, Fla. ) — Florida State vs Oklahoma State. Dec 30 Dec. 31 Bluestone Bowel (Houston) – Air Force vs. Texas-Texas AM队 All American Bowl (Birmingham, Ala.) Gregory Beach (Atlanta) – Playoff Beach Bowel (Atlanta) – Illinois. Dallas | Jan 1 Cotton Bowl (Dallas) - Auburn vs. Texas- Texas A&M winner Fiesta Bowl (Tempe, Ariz.) - Michigan vs. New York Orange Bowl (Miami) - State State vs. Oklahoma Rone Bowl (Pasadena, Calif.) - UCLA vs. Sugar Bowl (New Orleans) - Miami (Fla.) vs. Specials This Week's Specials Monday Monday Cheeseburger French Fries 16 oz. Drink $1.95 Tuesday Taco Salad $2.05 16 oz. Drink Wednesday Lasagna $1.90 Garlic Roll 16 oz. Drink Thursday Burrito with Chili Small Salad $1.95 16 oz. Drink Friday Fish Onion Rings 16 oz. Drink $2.10 9-3:30 THE KANSAS UNION Level 2 HAWK'S NEST Hurray! BALLOONS Hurray! -N-MORE Send Balloons Today! We Deliver Innovative Gifts, Balloon Bouquets, BLOONS I-MORE 603 Vermont The Arts and Crafts SALE December 4,5,6 1985 Persons interested in selling wares deadline Nov 2$ Contact SUA Office uniongallery ARENSBERG'S SHOES MOVING SALE ARENSBERG'S SHOES MOVING CLOSE OUT 6,500 pairs of close out All close out shoes have been placed on racks by size for easy access. Don't miss this sale on the largest inventory in the area, it won't last much longer! in addition to great savings on entire stock! Men's Shoes $15.90-74.90 All your favorite brands! Florsheim Sebago Dexter Clarks Sperry Walkovers Hush Puppies up to 70% off 7 Children's Shoes $12.90-24.90 Quality Brands Stride Rite Little Capezio La Crosse Boots Zips 819 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 843.3470 We're closed today to prepare for this tremendous sale—STARTS TOMMOROW AT 7 A.M. ARENSBERG'S SHOES Quality Footwear for the whole family since 1958. We're on the move Women's Shoes $9.90-49.90 Wide Selection! Bandolino Dexter Capezio Van Eli Connie De Liso Nina Gloria Vanderbilt 9-West Sperry Bass SAS Women's Boots $49.90-74.90 This season's hottest styles! Dexter Zodiac Erve Honored 'Hawks Estell, Pless are named to first team of Big 8 squad See page 7. SINCE 1889 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A lion with an umbrella. TUESDAY, NOV. 26, 1985, VOL. 96, NO. 67 (USPS 650-640) Drizzly Details page 3 PUBLICATIONS Steve Mingle/KANSAN A warmly dressed student, partially obscured by a cloud of steam from the Blake Hall heating unit, walks between classes. Winterlike weather creates havoc Travel is made difficult by hazardous conditions By Gary Duda Of the Kansan staff Winterlike weather created havoc yesterday for motorists and pedestrians as they tried to cope with icy roads and sidewalks. Numerous traffic accidents — at least three of which resulted in deaths were reported throughout the state yesterday and Sunday night. Officer Mark Warren, the technical services officer for the Lawrence Police Department, said last night that about 50 accidents, most related to the weather, had occurred yesterday. One injury accident was reported. Warren said that all accident reports had not been processed. Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said icy roads resulted in nine minor traffic accidents on campus. No injuries were reported. Slippery sidewalks, Longaker said, did result in one injury. She said a person was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital after falling on an icy sidewalk in front of Haworth Hall. Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said KU crews began applying salt and sand to campus roads late Sunday night. He said crews finally quit working yesterday morning when the situation was under control. The priority when hazardous weather occurs, Anderson said, is to clear the main roads leading to 1234567890 Pat Connor/Special to the KANSAN See WEATHER, p 5, col. 4 Freezing drizzle Sunday night left a hazardous glaze of ice on Lawrence streets yesterday morning. Four cars tried — but failed — to make it up a hill on 11th Street leading to Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall. Lawrence police reported about 50 accidents yesterday, most of them related to icy road conditions. State to view Budig appeal of budget cut By David Silverman Of the Kansan staff In an attempt to head off imminent KU budget cuts, Chancellor Gene A. Budig submitted an appeal last week to Gov. John Carlin that calls for increased financial support from the state, the University director of business and financial affairs said yesterday. Keith Nitcher, the director, said the appeal was a chance for the University to justify its budget proposal and respond to the state's proposed budget cuts. In a Nov. 18 letter to Carlin, Budig said that state support for the University of Kansas was essential to the state's economic future. Nitcher said, "It's an opportunity for the chancellor to say in his own words what effect the budget cuts will have on the University and the state." Budig said in the letter, "The University is not unaware of the financial problems that the state faces but would point out that the recommendations made by the Division of the Budget would be devastating to the quality of research and instruction at the University at a time when the future of the state depends on a strong system of education. "The budget for the University of Kansas was designed around a program that would contribute to the economic development for our state and to its improved economy." Budig's appeal was a reply to an announcement made earlier this month by Alden Shields, the state budget director, indicating that he would chop more than $45 million from the Kansas Board of Regents' original budget request for the seven Regents schools. The results of the cuts would be a virtual freeze on salaries and operating expenses during fiscal year 1986. The state's recommendation was based on a report earlier this month that predicted state revenues would be $132.6 million lower through fiscal year 1987 than was predicted previously. David Dallam, an assistant to Shields, said yesterday that Budig's appeal would be considered by his office and the governor before a decision was made on the Regents' 1986 budget. "We take the written appeals and when we work with the governor they are used as a guideline." Dallam said. "The final budget depends on what the governor thinks is right." KU's budget proposal for fiscal 1987, submitted in September, calls for a 7 percent increase over this year's budget. Included in the budget is a 7 percent pay increase for unclassified and student employees as well as a 7 percent increase in operating expenses. In his appeal to Carlin, Budig outlined KU's priorities for the next fiscal year. Foremost was the reinstatement of almost $1 million in operating expenses. "The restoration of the request for an increase in other operating expenditures is so essential to the programs of the University as to warrant top priority," Budig said in the letter. Shields has requested only a 3 percent increase in operating expenditures for fiscal 1986 compared with KU's 7 percent request. The operating funds are to acquire equipment, supplies and books for the University. Next on Budig's list were the salary increases that had been requested for unclassified employees, which includes faculty and student employees. To reach the 7 percent increase requested by KU, Carlin would have to restore more than $4.5 million for unclassified employee salaries and about $9,500 for student salaries. A year of no increases would have a devastating effect on morale," Budig said. "Unfortunately it would be the best professors and researchers — the ones who are most in demand — who would leave, and it would be years before the University would recover such losses." See APPEALS, p. 5, col. 1 2 students from KU competing Rhodes awards to be presented Since 1994, 21 KU students have been chosen as Rhodes Scholars. Rhodes Scholarships are awarded each year to 32 students and offer winners as much as $2,000 a year to study at Oxford University, England, for as many as three years. By a Kansan reporter Fidler and Sanders will be interviewed in mid-December by the Kansas Rhodes Selection Committee. If they are selected by the committee, they will be interviewed by a district committee later in December. Concerned students oppose liquor policies David Fidler, Salma junior, and Sylvia Sanders, Lawrence senior, were chosen on the basis of their devotion to duty, academic excellence, moral courage, physical vigor and ability to handle ideas and values. Randa Dubrick, assistant director of the College Honors Program, said yesterday. Fidler, who is working toward majors in political science and English, is a previous winner of the Harry S. Truman Scholarship and of a KU Summerfield Scholarship. He spent last year studying at the University of Exeter, England, and this year was recognized as a KU Hilltopper. Two undergraduate students have been nominated by the University of Kansas for 1986 Rhodes Scholarships. Sanders, who is working toward a major in biochemistry, is a University Scholar and last summer was awarded an undergraduate research grant to study a biochemical enzyme. She also plays violin in the KU Symphony and recently was recognized as a KU Hilltopper. By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff The new policy that prohibits residence hall students from keeping beer, wine and hard liquor in their rooms doesn't make sense, according to 90 percent of hall residents who responded to a recent survey. Thirty percent of the respondents are under And 50 percent of the nearly 200 students polled said they regularly broke the policy by stashing alcoholic beverages in their rooms and drinking behind closed doors. The survey, in which students answered seven questions about alcohol anonymously, appeared in the November issue of the Hall Street Journal, the newsletter for the Association of University Residence Halls. About 5.000 issues of the Hall Street Journal circulate monthly through the eight residence halls 19, and 40 percent are 19 and 20. The rest are 21 or older. Ninety percent of the respondents said hall residents who were of legal age should be able to keep and drink alcohol in their rooms. Participants answered questions about the new Kansas drinking laws, their drinking habits and the housing office policy that prohibits alcoholic beverages in University housing. The policy took effect Aug. 1. Wanda Wood, editor of the Hall Street Journal, said she included the survey in the November issue because "I wanted to do something people would respond to and I thought the alcohol problem would be a good issue." Before the new policy, students who were old enough could keep and drink 3.2 percent beer in their rooms. Repealing the policy would reduce drunken driving among residents of University housing, said one student in his response. The residents wouldn't drive to taverns and private clubs as much, he said. Another resident said the new policy drove residents off campus to party. They often return drunk, he said. "Ims traught scares me to death," he said. Wood said, "a Lot of people sit in their rooms and drink. It's a lot better than drinking and driving." Only 20 percent of the respondents said they supported a minimum national drinking age of 21. Seventy-nine percent said they opposed 21 as the legal drinking age nationwide, and 1 percent said they were undecided. One respondent said youth had proven that they were incapable of responsible drinking. "As is often the case, a few have spoiled things for the many," the respondent said. Fifty percent of those answering the survey said it was a good idea not to have alcohol at hall events. But respondents on both sides of that question said residents should be allowed to drink in their rooms. Libby Sherwood, Topeka junior and McColum resident, said residence halls now had more money to spend on other things for their parties besides alcohol. Sherwood was a member of Lewis Hall's social committee last year. "We spent about $800 on beer alone," she said. AURH has tried to prevent students from driving drunk by promoting an "I'm Driving Club." Wood said. But she said the office of student housing rejected the idea. Under the plan for the club, a resident would pay $1 to join. He would receive a card that would provide him with free soft drinks at participating taverns. At the end of the night, the resident could drive his friends home soberly and safely. Hijack and rescue claim 60 United Press International Greece and Egypt sent military planes to Malta to pick up the survivors and the bodies of those killed in the 30-hour hijacking that ended Sunday night when 25 Egyptian commandos blasted their way onto the plane, triggering a grenade and gun battle that set the aircraft on fire. VALLETTA, Malta — Sixty people died in the bloody hijacking and rescue in history but one air pirate survived and was under armed guard, the government said yesterday. Egypt defended its decision to send commandos to storm the hijacked EgyptAir plane. The commandos were firing indiscriminately when they stormed the plane, one survivor of the raid said, because they could not immediately tell the terrorists from the others aboard the plane. The Middle East News Agency said that President Reagan sent a message of support for the raid to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, saying the "courage and decisive action offer a model of the determination to rid the world of terrorism. Maltese Prime Minister Carmelo Mifsud Bonnici told Parliament that his government accepted Egypt's offer to storm the plane "because we had neither the means nor the knowhow to handle this situation ourselves" and that the hijackers threatened to kill other passengers. The Maltese government said 60 people died in the hijacking and rescue. Fifty-eight bodies were found on board the charred Boeing 737, which was seized Saturday night en route to Cairo from Athens, Greece, with 97 people on board. Ambulance crews placed the bodies — including that of a Canadian infant too young to be on the passenger list — in heavy plastic bags and took them to a morgue. One passenger died on the way to the hospital after the raid and an American, Scarlett Rosenkamp, 38, of Oceanside, Calif., was shot in the head by hijackers before the commandos stormed the plane. Two other Americans were injured before the commando assault. The government initially said all the hijackers were killed. But spokesman Paul Mifsud said later that among the 30 people injured in the hijacking and rescue was an Arab identified by the pilot as one of the five air pirates. Mifusd said the unconscious Arab was being held under armed guard at a hospital. The state-controlled Egyptian newspaper Al Ahram said Egyptian authorities asked the Malta government to keep him in custody for interrogation by Egyptian authorities. Egypt identified the hijackers as members of a Palestinian faction opposed to the leadership of PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat, and in an apparent reference to Libya said they were working with one or two Arab countries "interested in creating problems in Egypt." Al Ahram also said today that Libyan intelligence was behind the hijacking and that its main "operations room" was in Athens. The Associated Press ISU team members die in plane crash DES MOINES, Iowa — A twinengine plane carrying members of the Iowa State University cross-country team crashed and burst into flames in a residential neighborhood last night, killing seven people aboard. The crash also knocked out power to about 1,600 homes, authorities said. "It's a tragedy, but it could have been three or four times as bad," Mullins said. 1ne Aero Commander, one of three planes carrying members of the men's and women's teams and coaching staff from Milwaukee to Ames, crashed in a freezing drizzle shortly before 6 p.m., and missed a house by 50 feet, said Sgt. Bull Mullins of the Des Moines police. Seven bodies were found. Mullins said, as firefighters searched the charred wreckage. Dave Tidler, assistant manager of the Ames airport, confirmed that the plane was one carrying part of the Iowa State team but added that he did not know how many people were aboard. "The plane was built to carry seven, and we think that is all that are there," he said. --- Bad weather forced the three planes to be diverted from Ames to Des Moines, and the other two planes landed safely. Mullins said. Twenty-one members of the men's and women's teams and coaching staff were aboard the three planes. The cross-country team finished second behind Wisconsin in the National Collegiate Athletic Association championship meet at Marquette University. 2 University Daily Kansan Nation/World Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1985 News Briefs Goetz defense wants charges dismissed NEW YORK - Attempted murder charges against subway gunman Bernhard Hugo Goetz should be dismissed because prosecutors withheld evidence from a second grand jury and improperly instructed the panel, defense lawyers argued yesterday. Assistant District Attorney Gregory Waples denied any impropriety in the handling of the celebrated case. Suspect to go to trial LOS ANGELES — A judge yesterday ordered Cathy Evelyn Smith to stand trial for second degree murder in the death of comedian John Belushi, who was found dead from an overdose of cocaine and heroin in a Hollywood hotel in 1982. Municipal Court Judge James Nelson allowed Smith, a former rock backup singer, to remain free on bail pending a Superior Court arraignment Dec. 10 on the murder count and 13 counts of administering drugs. NEW YORK — A gleaming new torch was hoisted up the side of the Statue of Liberty and placed in her hand yesterday, $1/2 years after the removal of the battered old light that had been a beacon to thousands of immigrants. Ladv gets new torch The new torch is part of a $260 million restoration project of the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, Inc. Shuttle launch OK'd CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The shuttle Atlantis was cleared yesterday for a dazzling launch tonight on a weeklong flight to carry three satellites into orbit and featuring spacewalks to practice space station construction. Engineers worked through the day priming the giant space freighter for its second flight and if all goes well, Atlantis and its seven-member international crew will streak aloft at 7:29 p.m. EST today. From Kansan wires. Former agent admits data sale BALTIMORE — A former National Security Agency communications specialist admitted to FBI agents that he has sold extremely sensitive classified information about U.S. intelligence activities to the Soviet Union, according to a federal court document filed yesterday. The Associated Press Ronald William Pelton, 44, who worked for the NSA from 1965 to 1979, told the FBI in an interview Sunday that he met with KBG officer Anatoly Slavnov on several occasions from January 1980 through January 1983, said an FBI affidavit signed by agent David Faulkner. Pelton was arrested in Annapolis, Md., yesterday and accused of violating federal law concerning the gathering of defense information for a foreign government. Fred Warren Bennett, Pelton's court-appointed attorney, said his client's FBI statement should not be characterized as a confession. Pelton admitted receiving cash payments from the Soviet agent on several occasions, including a $15,000 payoff as a result of a trip to Vienna. The FBI said Pelton went to the Soviet Embassy in Washington in January 1980 to offer to spy for the Soviets in return for cash. On that occasion, the FBI said, he provided information about a United States intelligence collection project targeted at the Soviet Union. Austria, in January 1983, according to the affidavit. Pelton had serious financial troubles at about the time he allegedly decided to begin his espionage activities, having filed for bankruptcy in April 1979, the affidavit said. The former NSA employee said his spy trips continued through this year, and that he made a trip to Vienna as recently as last April to meet with a Soviet contact, according to the affidavit. According to the court documents, Pelton failed to meet that contact in Vienna and was asked to make another trip in October. The affidavit does not give any evidence he made the October trip. Pelton, an Annapolis yacht salesman who listed a home address in Washington, D.C., appeared briefly before U.S. Magistrate Daniel E. Klein Jr. in Baltimore. Klein ordered him held until a detention hearing tomorrow, when bail would be set. Pelton did not enter a plea to the charge of conspiracy under a federal statute prohibiting the gathering of U.S. defense information for a foreign government. The court documents indicate that Pelton did not start delivering secrets to the Soviets until after he left the NSA, and that the Soviets received only dated information learned during Pelton's government service. The FBI said that Pelton spent three to four days in Vienna during each of two trips and was housed at the apartment of the Soviet ambassador to Austria, within the Soviet embassy compound. Law delays sale of arms United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan signed a compromise Senate resolution yesterday that bars a nearly $2 billion sale of advanced weapons to Jordan until at least March 1 unless Jordan negotiates for peace directly with Israel. In a statement, Reagan said, "This legislation expresses Congress' belief that the peace process should be our primary concern." "Peace remains my main concern as it is that of (Jordanian) King Hussein, (Israeli) Prime Minister Shimon Peres and other responsible leaders in the Middle East," Reagan said in signing the resolution into law. Reagan originally asked Congress to approve outright the sale to Jordan of the costly package of fighter aircraft, air defense missiles, armored vehicles and other equipment. But in the face of overwhelming congressional opposition, the president retreated and agreed to the Senate compromise resolution banning any sale until March 1 without direct negotiations between the two countries. "King Hussein has taken dramatic steps towards peace, steps which have exposed him and the people of Jordan to strong pressure and bloody violence from those adamantly opposed to any peace settlement." Envoy hopes for solutions United Press International NEW YORK — Anglican church envoy Terry Waite arrived yesterday in New York to meet with U.S. officials on his efforts to free four American hostages in Beirut, saying negotiations were at a "hopeful stage" but could still fall through. Waite, the secretary to Archbishop of Canterbury Robert Runcie, told a news conference shortly after his arrival from Athens that he believed the captors of the American hostages wanted a solution and that he was making his appeal based on religious and humanitarian grounds. "I think they would like a resolution to this problem, and I regard it as a hopeful sign they will talk to me," he said. "It's rather a hopeful stage at the moment. Hopeful, but by no means there." Waite told reporters in Athens, where he stopped off on his way from Lebanon, that he had met the Moslem fundamentalist kidnappers of the four Americans at least three times while in Beirut, where he was trapped four days by fierce Moslem militia battles that killed dozens of people. "This situation is the most difficult and dangerous that I have ever encountered," he said in New York. "Whilst I remain quietly optimistic, by no means are we through the problem. There are very grave dangers ahead." Waite said he expected to return to Lebanon after meeting U.S. officials in New York. Filipinos urge Aquino to run United Press International MANILA, Philippines — A group urging the widow of slain opposition leader Benigno Aquino to run against President Ferdinand Marcos in upcoming elections announced yesterday that it has collected 1 million signatures endorsing her candidacy. "I don't know of anywhere in the world where this kind of thing has happened," Lupita Kashiwahara, Benigno Aquino's sister, said during a celebration at the headquarters of the Draft Cory Aquino for President Movement. Marcos recently called for "snap," or early, presidential elections amid sharp domestic and U.S. criticism over his handling of a growing communist insurgency and a severe economic crisis. The elections, originally scheduled for when Marcos' term runs out in 1987, are now set for Feb. 7. Philippine law demands that in early elections, the president must resign before the vote. Marcos has submitted a resignation letter, but it will be effective only after a winner is declared. popular figure in the Philippines despite a lack of political experience, said she would consider running against Marcos if 1 million signatures had been collected urging her to enter the race. Aquino's widow, Corazon, a Former newspaper publisher Joaquin Roces, 7,12, said his group had collected 1,005,882 signatures as of 6.35 p.m. yesterday in support of her candidacy. "One million is just the beginning." he said. Roces said he called Aquino when they reached 1 million and she thanked him. 2 suspects sought in explosion The Associated Press FRANKFURT, West Germany — Two men thought to be carrying Moroccan passports became prime suspects yesterday in the hunt for those who bombed a U.S. military shopping center, West German authorities reported. Sunday's car bombing wounded 35 people, almost all of them U.S. civilians and servicemen. Three remained hospitalized, one a serviceman who had been listed in serious condition but was upgraded to good condition. Officials have refused to release the names of the injured. Authorities first had said the attack looked like the work of West German leftist terrorists. Later they said foreigners might have been responsible, and federal police issued a statement saying the silver-blue metallic BMW 525 sedan in which the explosives were packed had been bought Saturday by two men "aparently carrying Moroccan passports." Authorities issued descriptions and composite pictures of the pair and asked possible witnesses to report any sightings of the men, described as being in their 30s. "They may be Arabs," the statement said, adding that both were definitely foreigners and that only one spoke any German. One man's name appeared on his passport as "Anz Muhein." Police said the two told the automobile dealership they were taking the BMW to Rabat, the Moroccan capital, where they resided. The same second-hand car dealership, outside Frankfurt, also sold the car that was used in a bombing at the U.S. Air Force Rhein-Main Air Base on Aug. 8, which killed two Americans and injured 20 people. The left-wing Red Army Faction terrorist group claimed responsibility for that attack, but there was no immediate assertion of responsibility for Sunday's blast. Police said one of the men was between 30 and 35, with short black hair and black moustache. The other was between 35 and 40 years old Looking Good! Looking Good! If you haven’t been by Naismith Hall lately, you’re in for a big surprise! We’re looking good and looking forward to seeing you next spring! JUST LOOK WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER: * Semi-private rooms w/ connecting baths * Great location (bus service from your front door to your classes) * Delicious all-you-can-eat meals * A fully equipped recreation area w/ swimming pool, fitness center, and game area. Spaces Available for waiting now! For more information call or come by NAISMITH HALL 1800 Naismith Dr. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 (913) 843-8559 If you haven’t been by Naismith Hall lately, you’re in for a big surprise! We’re looking good and looking forward to seeing you next spring! JUST LOOK WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER: * Semi-private rooms w/ connecting baths * Great location (bus service from your front door to your classes) * Delicious all-you-can-eat meals * A fully equipped recreation area w/ swimming pool, fitness center, and game area. Limited Spaces Available for Spring Semester—waiting list forming now! For more information call or come by NAISMITH HALL 1800 Naismith Dr. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 (913) 843-8559 with special guest micronotz Tuesday December 3 Kansas Union Ballroom University of Kansas Tickets at EXILE in Lawrence Tickets: $6.00 in advance at all locations, $7.00 at the door. REDLINE & KJHK FM91 present Circle Jerks with special guest micronotz tickets at EXILE in Lawrence Tuesday December 3 Kansas Union Ballroom University of Kansas CAD Campus/Area Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1985 University Daily Kansan 3 News Briefs Man kills himself with .357 Magnum A 30-year-old Lawrence man committed suicide with a .357-caliber Magnum handgun yesterday afternoon in his motel room after threatening a woman who had delivered his lunch, the Douglas County deputy coroner said yesterday. "He threatened the motel employee, then just turned the gun and shot himself behind the right ear," said Carol Moddrell, the deputy coroner. Moddrell said the man died in his motel room at the All Seasons Motel. 2309 Iowa St. Officer David Reavis of the Lawrence Police Department said the man had been staying at the motel for a few days. He said no receipts for a gun purchase were found on the man or in the room, and police did not know where or when he purchased the gun. He said the investigation of the suicide would continue until a possible motive was established. Reavis said the man's name would not be released until the man's wife was found and notified of the death. "There are no indications of foul play." Reavis said. Nominations for the Distinguished Teaching Awards currently are being accepted by Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs. Nominations taken Any KU faculty member can be nominated by any student, student organization, alumnus, faculty member, department, school or group of individuals. Nominations should be submitted in the form of a letter stating why the person nominated is deserving of the award. Deadline for nominations is Dec. 13. They should be submitted to Tacha's office, 127 Strong Hall. Previous recipients are not eligible to receive the award. The awards are presented in May at Commencement. Awards also will be presented to faculty members from the College of Health Sciences, Kansas City, Kan., and Wichita campuses. Weather Today will be cloudy with a 40 percent chance of rain. Highs will be in the lower 40s, turning colder this afternoon with rain possibly changing to freezing rain or snow. Tonight will be cloudy with a 30 percent chance of snow and lows in the lower to mid 20s. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy, with highs around 40. The Thanksgiving outlook calls for cloudy skies, with highs in the 40s. Corrections Because of a reporter's error, a story in yesterday's Kansas incorrectly reported the University's budget request to the state for fiscal year 1987 would be cut by $17 million because of low state revenue. The budget request is by the Kansas Board of Regents. Because of reporter's error, a story and a photo cutline in yesterday's Kansan incorrectly reported the score of the Deener Cup football game between football team managers and trainers. The managers prevailed 31-12. From staff and wire reports House of Hupei is Open Daily For Lunch & Dinner 2907 W. 6th Sunday Evening Worship 5:30 pm followed by Supper ($1) + + + + + Mark Mohier/KANSAN E C M Student Christian Center 1204 Oread, (1 blk. north of K.Union) Ecumenical Christian Ministries: The United Methodist Church The Presbyterian Church (USA) The United Church of Christ The Church of the Brethren AKA Mike Patterson, Topeka freshman, tries to tag Andy Eilert, Topeka freshman, as Eilert makes a reception. The two played football yesterday in a parking lot at Jayhawker Towers Apartments. 1603 W. 15th St. A lot of fun Medieval effects used Consort puts twist on story By Jill White Of the Kansan staff The Waverly Consort's Chamber Music Series performance in song and dance drama will not be the typical Christmas story rendition. Instead, it will be medieval. Playing reproductions of medieval instruments and using authentic costuming, the Waverley Consort will perform musical selections from the 10th to the 15th centuries in "The Christmas Story" at 8 p.m. Dec. 3 in Hoch Auditorium. Tickets for the performance cost $4.50 and $5.50 for KU students and kindergarten through 12th-grade students. Public tickets are $11 and $9 and senior citizens' and other students' tickets are $8 and $10. "We have very carefully worked out some of what we consider the best music detailing the Christmas story," Michael Jaffee, director of the consort, said recently. "The lighting, costuming, music and performers make this performance very special." In less than 90 minutes, eight singers and five instrumentalists will enact the message of the archangel Gabriel, the journey of the Magi, the scene at the manger in Bethlehem and the intrigue of Herod and his court. Jaffee said the special lighting would enhance the mood changes. The costumes, which are based upon historic models from the 10th to the 15th century, will suggest a displacement in time, he said. Unless audience members have studied medieval music, they may not recognize some instruments the consort uses such as the vielle, citole. Michael Jaffee director 'We have very carefully worked out some of what we consider the best detailing of the Christmas story.' decided to develop a concert-size repertoire for "The Christmas Story." nuns fidlede, slide trumpet, shawm and rauschpiefte. The consort also plays recorders, trumpets, handbells and various percussion instruments. Long before the Waverly Consort made its New York debut of "The Christmas Story" in 1980, it was known for reviving early music styles. Since its beginning in 1944, Jaffee has directed the consortium in performances at the Casals Festival, Madeira Bach Festival and the Caramoor Festival. "We already had done two stage productions and we had a concert coming up with some of the same music in it," he said. "It seemed a natural step to add the other music and develop this concert." Since the first performance in 1980, Jaffee said, the consort has given about 100 performances of "The Christmas Story." Because of a late change in the KU men's basketball schedule, the basketball team will be playing in Allen Field House on the night of the Chamber Music Series' performance. The Waverly Consort will have to compete for audience members and parking space with the KU-Southern Illinois University game. Jackie Davis, director of the Concert and the Chamber Music series, said special parking arrangements had been made for concert-goers. Jaffee said that in 1960 the consort Parking spaces for people attending the Waverly Consort have been reserved in KU Lot 3, west of and behind Strong Hall; Lot 18, along the service drive behind Hoch and Wescoe Hall; and Lot 33, south of Lindley Hall. Open parking will be available in Lots 91 and 94, south and east of Memorial Stadium. Colleagues rank KU law research highly in nation By Jill White Of the Kansan staff KU law professors rank highly among colleagues from across the country for their prolific research and publication, according to a recently released national study. A survey by the Association of American Law Schools indicated that the University of Kansas placed fourth among 138 law schools for the number of published research articles written by its senior faculty members from 1980 to 1983. "It's terrific," Mike Davis, dean of law, said yesterday. "I think everyone at the law school was very pleased. You work very hard for a long time without much recognition. "Although we receive local and regional visibility, this is the first time we've received this kind of national visibility." The study separated law schools in terms of large, medium or small faculty size. KU's School of Law placed first in the country for publications from medium-sized faculties. The University of Chicago placed first overall, followed by Stanford University and Harvard University. The University of Kansas placed fourth and was followed by the University of California-Berkeley, Yale University and Columbia University. The results were published in the September issue of the Journal of Legal Education. The goal of the study was to determine the productivity of senior law school faculty members who had been professors for at least four years. In some cases, the study indicated, high faculty productivity can result from peer pressure to "publish or perish" and from anticipated monetary rewards, such as merit salary increases and publication royalties. Davis said that law school administrators considered the amount of faculty members' publications when considering them for salary increases, but that KU law professors also were motivated in other ways. For example, he said, many law professors consider it their responsibility to do scholarly research. The University encourages faculty members to do research in addition to service and teaching. These professors do not need extra prodding from administrators to do research, he said. The national study considered the percentage of senior faculty members who published research articles, which Davis said helped to make the study "methodologically very sound." Davis said that KU probably would continue to be strong in publication productivity because several younger faculty members, who were "highly prolific," were not counted in this study. Rock Chalk show slates five groups By Bob Tinsley Of the Kansan staff Amid delighted shrieks, lots of hugs and a few tears, the five groups that will perform in this year's Rock Chalk Revue were announced last night. The announcement was made at a champagne reception at the Eldridge House, 701 Massachusetts St. It was the culmination of a semester's hard work for 24 KU fraternities and sororites. The 24 living groups paired off last spring to create scripts, scores and other essentials for 12 acts. They turned them in Nov. 6 for judging. Five acts were chosen last night for the revue, an annual variety show. Scott Swenson, Topeka senior, is the executive producer of the revue. The judges were local people who have had the theater experience, Swenson said. Some have appeared in past revues. "All of them have at least seen Rock Chalk before and know what it is," he said. "The ones who have been in it before were an added bonus." The theme of this year's show is "Games People Play." It was not necessary for a group's act to focus on the theme. The chosen acts were "Bungle in the jungle," Kappa Sigma and Gamma Phi Beta; "Picking Up the Pieces," Delta Upsilon and Kappa Alpha Theta; "Neuron My Mind," Delta Chi and Alpha Delta Pi; "Pair O'Dice," Phi Delta Theta and Kappa Kappa Gamma; and "Chariots Afire," Phi Kappa Psi and Alpha Chi Omega. "In the judging, they got so many points for identifying with the theme, but there's a real variety of acts," said John Allison, Prairie Village senior and executive director of the revue. The 36th annual Rock Chalk Revue will be presented Feb. 27-28 and March 1. Tickets cost $4 for the first night, $5 for the second night and $7 for the last night. They will be available at the Rock Chalk Advisory Board office, Student Union Activities office, various local businesses and from the groups themselves. Swenson said. Last year's revue grossed $45,540. After expenses, such as the salaries for the revue's officers, the remainder each year is given to the United Way. The revue hopes to give about $10,000 to the United Way this year, said John Fevlury, Tonganoxic junior and junior class president. Officers' salaries total about $200, Fevlury said. Next year, organizers hope to attract groups from outside the greek system. They will offer a scholarship fund for groups who would like to perform but need financing, Allison said. Swenson said that HashingHall submitted a script last year and that efforts were made to get residents of the hall to submit another script this year. "I think all it's going to take is for one to get in and the rest will see that it's possible." Allison said. When Lisa Frerker, Leawood junior, found out that the show she worked on was chosen to be performed in the revue, she said, "I'm so excited. It all paid off!" Frerker helped create "Bungle in the Jungle," Kappa Sigma and Gamma Phi Beta's act. The story is about a group of natives in a jungle whose chief takes away all their fun. The natives must get it back. "Chariots Afire," the Phi Kappa Psi and Alpha Chi Omega act, is about an Olympics for automobiles TUESDAY DIME DRAWS 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover Wed. Special: 75¢ Bar Drinks 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $2 cover the the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-09 I ALL YOU CAN EAT BBQ RIBS at Whistlers Walk restaurant Tuesday Nights from 5-9 includes: salad choice of potato rolls only $5.95 3120 W. 6th between Lawrence & Kasold 842-1200 . 4 University Daily Kansan Opinion Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1985 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Winter will come early to Kansas. A bitter coid budget A cold wind blows across the state's bleak financial landscape, and agencies struggle to keep warm in the biting air. To keep people warm next fiscal year, the agencies need money — money that state officials have projected the state won't have. Earlier this month, Alden Shields, state budget director, told the Board of Regents that Kansas would receive $132.6 million less than expected in revenues over the next two fiscal years. At the University of Kansas, the cruel wind has passed through loose shutters, giving employees a feeling of what winter will be like. The cottage is cold, and the University will not have enough state-supplied firewood. The state needs to cut $17 million from the Regents' lowest budget request of almost $182.6 million, Shields said. That request is the "bare bones" request, the minimum KU officials say the University needs. KU workers probably will get no salary increases. Here and in many other places across the state, hands and feet will be numbed. Movement will be slow. Agencies will try to bundle up. And finally, Republican leaders in the Kansas Legislature may be moved to do something. There is talk of increasing the sales tax, an attempt to get and give out more firewood. Republican leaders scoffed when Gov. John Carlin suggested that the Legislature pass a half-cent sales tax increase last session. It was early fall, and they are loath to buy wood when there seems no need for it. Legislators have heard that the cold front will pass through the state, and perhaps they have been out walking in the wind. Perhaps, too, they will see the logic of a lottery and sin taxes. Now, perhaps they will learn. Now that it is winter, legislators should buy the firewood that state agencies need to stay warm. If they do not, the winter will continue to be a long and cruel one. Because of a scheduling snafu, fans of the Chamber Music Series and Concert Series have been left holding the short end of the ticket stub. A planning oversight caused two basketball games to be scheduled on the same nights as Tuesday's performance of the Waverly Consort's "A Christmas Story" and the Feb. 11 performance of the Canadian Brass. Scheduling snafu Unfortunately, Athletic Department officials didn't realize that the dates of two rescheduled games conflicted with musical performances slated more than six months before. Because of this communication gap, concert organizers and fans have been inconvenienced. New tickets had to be printed. Season-ticket holders had to be notified of schedule changes. Jackie Davis, director of the series, had to scramble to salvage the music series schedule. The Waverly Consort date couldn't be switched. People with tickets to both the concert and the KU-Southern Illinois University game now must choose between the two events. The Canadian Brass was moved to March 31, the day after Easter. But because there are no classes on that day, fewer patrons may attend the performance. To prevent similar snafus in the future, several administrators have formed a committee to coordinate the scheduling of University events. With a little foresight and communication, the campus calendar should be able to accommodate basketball and brass. Grandparent liability This law, which makes grandparents liable until their children reach 18, slaps weakly at the teen pregnancy problem. Wisconsin has devised a new twist in dealing with the problem of teen-age pregnancy: Make the grandparents pay for bringing up baby. Under a law passed this month, welfare agencies may take parents of minor children who have babies to court and force them to financially support their grandchildren. A high percentage of teens who have illegitimate babies are from poor families. Making the parents of these minors financially responsible is practically impossible. The causes of the high teenage pregnancy rate aren't easy to figure. Neither are the solutions. Wisconsin legislators say the law will encourage discussion between parents and teens. But instead of using financial threats to encourage dialogue, lawmakers should have spent their time addressing the social problems at the root of teen pregnancy. Poverty and poor education come to mind immediately. Fortunately, the Wisconsin law includes other provisions. They include allocating $1 million for pregnancy counseling, requiring a girl's consent before a hospital or clinic can notify her parents of an abortion and repealing restrictions on the sale and advertising of contraceptives. Wisconsin is on the right track with these ideas. But state legislators derail the program by trying to make grandparents financially responsible. The complex social problem of teen-age pregnancy won't be eradicated with a legal ploy that drags parents into court and forces them to pay for their childrens' mistakes. Rob Karwath Editor Duncan Calhoun Business manager John Hanna Michael Totty Managing editor Editorial editor Lauretta McMillen Campus editor Susanne Shaw General manager, news adviser General manager, news adviser Business manager Brett McCabe Sue Johnson Retail sales Campus sales Megan Burke National/Co-op sales John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser **LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be typed, double-spaced and less than 300 words. Include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.** **GUEST SHOTS should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The** The Kanans reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanans newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650 640) is published at the University of Kansas, 18 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 60445, daily during the regular school year, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., 60444. In Douglas County, they pay $279, in New Hampshire, they pay $18 for six months and $35 a year. Student subscriptions cost $3 and are paid through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA, 66045. The real history of Thanksgiving Patriots vs. Redskins players, people consumed huge amounts of food. One meal seemed to work the best: turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, corn, pumpkin pie and a nectar called Budweiser. The year is 4004. Here is a retrospective of Thanksgiving that traces the holiday's origin and development. Thanksgiving began sometime near the beginning of the Age of Strength, probably around the year 1945. The holiday commemorates a historic clash between two groups of people, one living in the northeast United States and the other invading the area. The battle between these groups, who were known at the time as the Washington Redskins and the New England Patriots, was significant because it resulted in peaceful cohabitation for all people. The anniversary of this meeting, Thanksgiving, actually became an elaborate religious service, celebrated on the Thursday after the 10th Sunday of the season of worship. This day of worship served anyone who had an electronic worship box. Religious leaders of the era instructed the people to enshrine the boxes in their living rooms and to keep them running all the time. The holiday began with demonstrations known as parades. In these After the ceremonial feast, people returned to the living room, sipped nectar and watched more Football until everyone fell asleep. As people awoke they would begin to eat leftover food. 1 Rick Zaporowski Staff columnist events, two deities seemed to be honored more than any others, namely, Bullwinkle and Underdog. This pattern of binging and napping often lasted several days, until all the relatives had left and all the turkey had been converted into sandwiches and consumed. The purpose of the parades was to show the stamina of the human body. To do this, people stood in the cold for several hours, while the viewers at home drank eggnog spiked with alcohol. The parades led up to the holiday's most important religious service that lasted well into the evening. This service was known as Football. The Thanksgiving Football services were special, so worshipers stayed home from work to watch them. Families would travel thousands of miles to share this blessed event with their loved ones. There were a handful of heretics who immediately tried to resist the Football ceremonies. This group unplugged their worship boxes and spent the day conversing with relatives and reflecting on their good fortunes. Historians used to say that these heretics were responsible for the holiday's naming. Of course, we now know that Thanksgiving was named for people's gratitude for the power that kept their worship boxes running. Little is known about Football, probably because few survived its violent actions. We do know that the participants gathered in an arena that resembled the area in which the Redskins and the Patriots first met. Football participants, known as players, smashed and kicked one another as the original players had done. They carried and threw a sacred pigskin among themselves, demonstrating its adaptability to adverse circumstances in life. The players wore costumes that made them look larger than life. The biggest people were selected to participate, and their costumes made them appear almost godlike. The worshipers at home tried to imitate the Football players. To try to grow as large and as fat as the The amount of rewards worshippers gained on Thanksgiving depended mostly on the outcome of the Football services. But even if the Thanksgiving Football services did not fulfill the worshippers' religious hunger, they did not get discouraged. Mailbox They had the second half of the season of worship to look forward to, and there seemed to be an endless supply of nectar. An educated response In his Nov. 22 guest column on the School of Education and the five-year program, Michael Mills makes some solid and accurate statements. However, he also makes some bold and inaccurate assumptions. First of all, he speaks as if every education major felt as he does, which is not the case. Granted, most of the students have qualms with the setup of the program. Yet to say that the program is "... a mess. Kaput. Silly." is an exaggeration of the situation. The program is new and has a great deal of revision ahead, but it is designed to deal with a very real problem in our society today. Mills fails to address this problem in his column. The fact of the matter is that universities are turning out teachers who cannot teach. KU originally designed this new program to develop more educated teachers to try to alleviate this problem. The changes that need to be made will occur only when students instigate them, and that is happening now within the School of Education. However, to go back to four years, to cut professional experience in half and to cut the number of professional classes will succeed in doing nothing but putting the KU education department back with many other institutions that seem to be producing substandard educators. We suggest that anyone in that much of a hurry to get out should transfer to an institution with a four-year program. We will stay here and work through and try to change the rough spots in this program. In our opinion, as far as being an educator goes, better overprepared than underprepared. Merdith Mpam, Topeka junior Teresa Tulipana, Pampton Lake, Riverside Mary Agnew, Lawrence graduate student *@!!! STAR WARS... ZAP! ZAP! POW! ZAP! CRASH! Ouch! Halley's Comet Palestinian propaganda in display booth As I was walking to the library to do some homework Sunday afternoon, I was shocked to notice a libelous and graphic display of distasteful propaganda put in the display booth in front of StaufferFlint Hall. Posters were up depicting supposed Israeli soldiers chasing supposedly innocent Palestinians. Bodies were depicted strewn about the landscape in a fashion that would indicate that they had been slaughtered in a military invasion. Senseless rhetoric was posted, inferring that Israel is a doomed society that can't meet its debts. Courtain to the display, none of what is depicted is true. Israel does not kill innocent Palestinians, only those like the ones that killed American tourist Leon Klinghofer. How do we know that the dead people depicted were not killed by other Palestinians? As far as ISrael not paying its debts, it has been so good at paying back its debts that it has been granted free trade with the United States — the first country to be able to claim this status. Some historical background seems appropriate. It was not until after 1948 – the birth of Israel as a nation – that the Palestinian Arabs wanted this part of Palestine. Yes, I said *part*. Most people don't know it, but Jordan is 80 percent of Palestine and its people are 75 percent Palestinian. The reason the Palestinians wanted contol of this part of Palestine after 1948 is that before then they thought the land was not able to be farmed. After the Israelis proved the land could be farmed, and after the desert that had been there for centuries all of a sudden became an oasis, they claimed it. One of the reasons for the recent influx of Jews from other countries is the mistreatment of Jews in As far as the Jewish population is concerned, there has never been a period during history when there has not been a Jewish population in the land that is now Israel. The European Jews who came beginning in the mid-1800s were descendants of the Jews who were forced out by Arabs and Crusaders. Arab countries, a treatment far worse than anything dealt to the Palestinians in Israel. In 1948, for example, more than 450,000 Jews lived in Syria; there are now less than 4,000. Even before the 1967 war, Jews in Syria were terrorized by night arrest, imprisonment, interrogations and torture. After the war their situation worsened. In Iraq, the Jewish population of 1948 was more than 125,000; now it is less than 300. There may be-isolated cases of discrimination in the state of Israel, but it hardly can compare to the calculable sufferings the Jews have had to endure throughout history at the hands of Arab madmen. while pictures of pathetic looking supposedly Palestinian children may stir the emotions of the uninformed, the bottom line is a phrase that was on one of the signs: "They (Palestinians) will always be ready to fight." When are you going to be ready to talk, guys? Michael A. Geller St. Louis senior The Kansan's selective speech coverage If a speaker visits the University of Kansas, but the Kansan didn't cover the speech, did it happen? The immediate answer would be yes, but after careful thought, maybe not. If no written record is kept of the speech, then as far as history is concerned it never happened. It only happened in the minds of those who were there. But anyone, in later years, who goes through the Kansan archives, will read about the many events that took place on campus — but not about that speaker. Was the speaker of any importance? You be the judge of that. Charles Wiley, a journalist for more than 25 years, spoke at the Kansas Union Thursday night and to a journalism class Thursday morning. His articles and photographs have been in magazines such as Newsweek and U.S. News and World Report and in newspapers such as the New York Times and Washington Post. He has also reported for national radio networks and foreign newspapers. Wiley covered the Cuban revolution, the Vietnam War, and is working on an in-depth investigation of the AIDS epidemic. He has been arrested and detained by the KGB and the Cuban secret police several times. He has covered 10 wars. Incredibly, the Kansan didn't Victor Goodpasture Staff columnist cover either speech he gave. Why? On Thursday, the Kansan was busy covering Student Senate elections, the paper's editors said. Its staff of 15 campus reporters can cover only so many stories on a given day, and editors had decided that the speech wasn't as newsworthy as other events taking place that day. That answer may have to do with what Wiley came to talk about -- selective journalism. Selective journalism is exactly what the Kansan did even before he gave his speeches. Besides being a journalist, Wiley is a critic of the media. The Kansan editors selectively chose not to cover him, even though they knew he was here. That action was a grave disservice to KU students and a violation of their trust in the paper. However, the Kansan is not alone when it comes to selective journalism. Wiley said journalists selectively advocate certain points in a story, which gives readers a distorted view of reality. "They set the agenda," he 'However, the Kansan is not alone when it comes to selective journalism.' said. "They become the final authority." But that's not what the American people were told. Wiley said the press was very anti-war, so naturally they did not report the full story. In other words, the press lied to the American people. He said that when the press covered the 1968 Tet Offensive, it turned a total victory by U.S. and South Vietnamese forces into a total defeat. Wiley said that during the media's coverage of the 40th anniversary of the end of World War II, figures of the number of dead from the first atomic bomb ranged from 100,000 to 300,000. The actual figure was 70,000, according to the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission. But the most incredible occurrence of gross negligence by the media was its failure to report on a massive Vietnam veterans' parade on March 31, 1973, the official day all American prisoners of war were supposed to have been released by North Vietnam. More than 150,000 people, many of them veterans, marched down Broadway and through Square in New York City. At least that many watched the four-hour parade. The New York Times gave it frontpage coverage in its Sunday edition: "Bands thundered, haggis skirled, forests of American flags waved wildly, and large sidewalk crowds roared their approval yesterday as tens of thousands of marchers paraded up Broadway in an outpouring tribute to the men who served the nation in Southeast Asia during the war in Vietnam." NBC and CBS didn't cover the parade at all.它 gave it less than one minute on all its Saturday evening news program — and it had been a slow news day. The New York papers covered the parade, but the rest of the nation never knew it happened. Then 12 years later, the media has the gall to ask why there never was a parade for the Vietnam veterans. Because as far as history is concerned, that parade never happened — except to those who read the New York papers. This is the kind of selective journalism that Wiley was talking about. It goes on everyday, all over the world, in Central America, South Africa, and even in Lawrence. Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1985 From Page One University Daily Kansan 5 Appeals Continued from p. 1 If inflation ran at a rate of 4 percent or more, the salary freeze would translate into an actual decrease in salaries for KU employees. "We're going through tough times," Nitcher said. "But, the University's budget requests are minimal. The salary increases, the operating budget and two or three programs are designed to increase the performance of the University for the benefit of the state." In addition to the operating fund and salary increases, Budig called for: The restatement of a 1 percent increase in the state's contribution to the Regents' retirement system. If the entire 7 percent increase in salaries is not granted, Budig urged that the retirement and salary in- 'The restoration of the request for an increase in other operating expenditures is so essential to the programs of the University as to warrant top priority.' - Chancellor Gene A. Budig creates be committed in some muffin increases for classified employees. Reinstatement of more than $2.27 million in funds from the state's general fund that Shields stripped from the Regents' budget proposal $200,000 for enhancement of graduate teaching assistant stipends. The governor met with staff members and department heads yesterday in Topeka for a two-day "budget retreat" to try to to forge a budget package for fiscal 1986, a spokesman in Carlin's press office said. sure. The governor will look at the University's proposal sometime this week, the spokesman said. campus. He said it was important that emergency vehicles could climb the hills. ■ More than $280,000 for distinguished professorships. Duane Philkins, supervisor for the Douglas County Ambulance Service, said the ice didn't pose any abnormal problems. Weather "We had about five calls," he said. "But it was real typical as far as being the first inclement day." In Sedgwick County, the sheriff's department responded to about 30 traffic accidents during a three-hour period yesterday and 50 accidents in an eight-hour period Sunday, the department's emergency supervisor said. terstate 235 as she tried to change lanes. Two other Wichitans were killed Sunday night when the car they were in spun out of control on an icy bridge on Kansas Highway 42 near Viola and was hit broadside by an broadside by an oncoming pickup truck. Topeka police reported 17 accidents, including a five-car pileup, Sunday night. In the Kansas City metropolitan area, many accidents occurred, including a 20-car pileup, police said. Many schools in the Kansas City area were closed yesterday. Continued from p.1 A Wichita woman was killed yesterday when her car spun out of control on a patch of ice on In- The National Weather Service in Topeka predicted slippery conditions again for tonight. A weather service meteorologist said yesterday that temperatures would drop rapidly today after reaching a high in the upper 30s. The forecast for tonight, the meteorologist said, is for a chance of rain mixed with snow. The Kansas Highway Patrol suggests that students check road conditions before traveling. The highway patrol's 24-hour road condition number is 913-296-3102. 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IBM, Columbia and Corona are the registered trademarks of their respective companies. Leading Edge is the registered trademark of Leading Edge Hardware Products. 6 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1985 News Briefs Ellsworth man gets heart at Med Center A 24-year-old Ellsworth man received a new heart Sunday at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. The patient, Joseph Rodriguez, was in critical condition yesterday but was awake and responsive, a Med Center spokesman said. Rodriguez, a miner for Independent Salt Co., Ellsworth, was admitted on Nov. 8 to the Med Center with cardiomyopathy, a condition in which the heart muscle is diseased and unable to pump properly. He is the 11th patient to receive a heart transplant at the Med Center. The spokesman said 10 transplant patients still were alive and two had undergone the transplant more than a year ago. Staff positions open The Kansan is accepting applications for news and business staff positions for the spring semester. Applications are due by 5 p.m. Monday in the journal dean's office, 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. They are available in the Kansas business office, 119 StauFFER-Flint; 200 StauFFER-Flint; and the Student Senate Office. B-105 Kansas Union. The spring semester editor and business manager, who will be selected Dec. 2, fill staff positions for next semester. Law prof to lecture A lecture on the current changes in American law and how they affect business decisions will be given at 3:30 p.m. Monday in the International Room of the Kansas Union. "The lecture, to be given by Charles M. Hewitt, professor of business law at Indiana University's Graduate School of Business, is titled "A Law-Related Framework for Executive Decision Making." Hewitt is past president of the American Business Law Association, former dean of the University Division at Indiana University and former editor in chief of the American Business Law Review. Musicians to play The Gruenroll Consort of the KU Collegium Musicum will play Renaissance music of France, Spain and Italy at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Spencer Museum of Art. Musicians will play violis, recorders, lutes, crumhorns and cornetto. Admission to the concert is free. Politicians consider possible House seat The Associated Press TOPEKA — Just as Attorney General Robert Stephan's withdrawal from the race for the Republican gubernatorial nomination has spawned more potential candidates for the nomination, U.S. Rep. Bob Whittaker's interest in becoming governor of Kansas has caused several people to consider trying to succeed him in Congress. The Republicans who may vie for the congressional seat are former state Sen. Wint Winter Sr. and state GOP Chairman Vern Chesbro, both of Ottawa, state Rep. Rex Crowell of Longton and former state Sen. Ed Roitz of Pittsburg. Four Republicans and four Democrats already have confirmed that they either would take a serious look at the 5th District seat or that they had supporters who were encouraging them to consider it — if Whittaker decides to give it up and bid for the GOP nomination for governor in 1986. Democrats considering the seat are state Sens. Michael Johnston of Parsons and Jerry Karr of Emporia, former state Rep. Fred Weaver of Baxter Springs and Charles Benjamin of Newton, a political science professor at Bethel College. Whitaker has said he expects to decide about running for governor by early December, but has said his decision probably won't be public until early next year. However, his own statements and messages to potential supporters indicate he is serious about seeking the governorship. Whittaker has represented southeastern Kansas in the U.S. House since winning the seat in 1978. Chesbro, executive director and chairman of the state GOP, has strong party contacts in southeast Kansas. DOUBLE FEATURE Rent VCR & 2 Movies Overnight 14.49 SMITTY'S TV (11447 W.23rd/842-7531) M: 9:30 a.m.-9 p.m. S: 1.5 p.m. Almost 1,000 selections including XXX Koitz served one term in the state Senate, 1881-85, but chose not to seek re-election last year. On the Democratic side, Weaver said yesterday that he was being encouraged to seek his party's nomination, but that he was cool to the idea at present. Crowell, a veteran of 12 years in the Kansas House, serves as chairman of the House Transportation Committee. Weaver is now chairman of the state Board of Tax Appeals. Johnston, minority leader of the state Senate, said he would take a good look at seeking the Democratic congressional nomination. TOPEKA — Department of Corrections officials outlined plans before a state building panel yesterday for construction of a $11 million medium-security prison in Ellsworth and the purchase of an unused meat packing plant near Oskaloosa for Kansas' prison factory system. However, the Joint Committee on State Building Construction took no action on the department's request to release about $295,600 that has been set aside for final planning of the Ellsworth facility, because only two of the panel's six members attended the meeting. Rep. Phil Kline, R-Overland Park, chairman of the committee, said the panel might take action today on several proposals that corrections department officials presented yesterday, including the release of about $125,700 for final planning of a proposed $10.8 million renovation of the Kansas Correctional Institution in Lansing. Steven J. Davies, deputy secretary of corrections for institutional services, said the department also needed legislative permission to spend about $311,600 to purchase the former Sherman Meat Packing Plant west of Oskaloosa, which could process all the meat Kansas prisons and other state agencies use each year. The Associated Press Most of the presentation centered on architectural drawings of the proposed 190-bed prison in Ellsworth. Earl Stahl, of the architectural firm Hennington. Durham and Richardson, Inc. based in Dallas, said the prison would be designed for expansion. Stahl said about $1.3 million of the prison's initial cost would involve construction of areas designed for a capacity of 190 prisoners. The prison's capacity could be doubled later for an estimated cost of $6.7 million in 1986 dollars, he said. 1500 dollars, he said. The preliminary plans call for the prison to be bounded by two layers of security fences under observation from two guard towers. The 150-bed medium-security housing and service area would be on one side of the complex while the proposed 40-bed minimum-security honor camp section would be located at the other end, Stahl said. Plans for prisons proposed About 80 people would be employed at the prison initially and 26 more would be added whenever the facility was expanded to a capacity of 380, he said. In other matters, a consulting architect from Topeka told the committee that he agreed with the Dallas firm's conclusion that it would cost the state less to demolish and rebuild three buildings at KCIL, the old state women's prison, than it would to renovate the structures. On Campus A Lawrence architectural firm earlier had estimated that the three buildings, used primarily for housing and food services, could be renovated for about $813,000 less that the cost of constructing new buildings. However, James F. Reeves, an architect with Horst, Terrill and Karst Architects of Topeka, said the Lawrence firm had not included slightly more than $1 million in renovation costs, making renovation about $200,000 more expensive than building new structures. The KU Women's Soccer Club will practice at 4:30 p.m. today and Thursday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. Strategy Games Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union. Davies told the panel that the Oskaloosa meat packing plant could be operational within nine months of its purchase and could be financed by using about $151,100 in equipment replacement money set aside for the prison factory system, called Kansas Correctional Industries. The KU Men's Soccer Club will practice at 4 p.m. today and Thursday at the soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The KU Committee on South Africa will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Orave Ahead. The Tau Sigma Student Dance Club will meet at 7 p.m. today in Room 242 of Robinson Center. Man flashes sorority Police searched the area but did not find the man. A man who covered his face with a newspaper exposed himself to two sorority women Sunday evening. Lawrence police said yesterday. About 11:45 p.m. Sunday, police said, the man walked onto the patio of Alpha Phi sorority, 1602 High Drive, dropped his pants and exposed himself to the two students. PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL Free Consultation THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO 745 New Hampshire 841-5796 PENNY ANNIES Sweet Shoppe 710 Medcalibur Road PENNYANNIES has has Tantalizing Treats. We make our own Cream&Butter Fudge. 12 Flavors! 12 Flab 20-Flavors of Ice Cream. 20-Flavors of Ice Cream. Quarter pound dip on a HAND ROLLED WAFFLE CONE only 69¢ a dip. Largest selection of Imported and Domestic Candy in Lawrence. 10:30-5 30 daily, Thurs. until 8 p.m. 730 Mass. 843-5544 CHRISTMAS & THANKSGIVING FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST NO EXTRA CHARGE! AIRLINE COUNTER PRICES ST DON'T DELAY DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED Make your reservations at todays prices. On campus or downtown. CALL NOW! Hand gesture Electronic Typewriters Sales—Service—Rentals Maupintour travel service 818 Midwest 842.4134 Mass. System Inc. K. U. Union/900 Mass. 749-0700 STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Mass. Downtown ALL HAIRCUTS $6 Quality Haircuts at Reasonable Prices No app. necessary - Closed on Mona BILLY EBELING at the ROCK CHALK BAR Tues. Nov.26 Fri. Nov.29 Sat. Nov.30 Check for our Concert Calendar for December 12th & Indiana but in nobody gets the hint, buy the HP-12C for yourself – from a dealer who has no equal. hp HEWLETT PACKARD And Hewlett-Packard is giving a $15 Christmas bonus on HP-12C purchased between November 6 and December 31, 1985. So now's the time to ask for an hp It's the gift that has no equal for business professionals - like you - in real estate, finance, banking and investments. That's because it has more built-in A $15 REBATE on the HP-12C Business Calculator. Christmas Bonus. 12,345,678.00 HP PV PM1 FV CHD 7 8 9 + PC PX CV EK EE 4 5 6 X PROM EM RX YX CLX PREMIT 1 2 3 - DR f 9 SIO RCL HEWLETT PACKARD KU reg. $120.00 SALE $95.00 KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union Give Her the Bear Necessities from Westridge Floral 6th & Kasold 749-2860 The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series ✩ ★ Follow the Star to. The Christmas Story presented by The Waverly Consort 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, December 3, 1985 Hoch Auditorium Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved Public: $11 & $9; KU and K-12 Students: $5.50 & $4.50 Senior Citizens and Other Students: $10 & $8 0131 6744 1982; VIA MasterCard Access An Evening For Your Entire Family. For reservations, call 913/864-3982; VISA/MasterCard Accepted Call 913-864-5982, 913-864-5983 Faxed to 913-864-5982 National Audit Office, Audit of the United States Government HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS! Because of a change in the basketball schedule, there will be a men's basketball game in Allen Field House on the same evening as the Waverly Consort in *The Christmas Story*. Special parking arrangements have been made for concert-goers in KU Lot 3, west and in back of Strong Hall; Lot 18, along the service drive behind Hoch Auditorium and Wesco Hall, and in Lot 33, south of Lindley Hall. Open parking will be available in Lots 91 and 94, south and east of Memorial Stadium. Every week while available from the stadium lots before and after the concert, Shuttle service begins at 7:15 p.m. --- Rock Chalk Revue In Between Acts Auditions Singers! Dancers! Magicians! Comedians! Animal Acts! Get YOUR act together over Thanksgiving break! OPEN AUDITION: Monday, Dec. 2, 8-11 p.m. (and 7-8 p.m., Dec. 3) "Call-backs": Tuesday, Dec. 3, 8-11 p.m. "Call-backs": Tuesday, Dec. 3, 8-11 p.m. Questions? call Ben Jones: 749-1103 / Georgia Hamill: 843-3120 ★ Questions? call Pam Jones: 749-1103 / Georgia Hamill: 843-3120 Sports Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1985 University Daily Kansan 7 News Briefs Jayhawks hosting Dial Classic tourney Kansas will be the host of the annual Lady Jayhawk Dial Classic, the country's largest women's basketball tournament series, Friday and Saturday in Allen Field House. Friday, Missouri-Kansas City and Alcorn State meet at 6 p.m., and Kansas plays Indiana State at 8 p.m. The consolation game is at 6 p.m. and the championship game is at 8 p.m. Saturday. Admission for one session is $3 for adults and $2 for students. For all games, admission is $5 for adults and $3 for students. Last year Kansas finished second to Louisiana Tech in the tournament. Kansas graduate student Mike Eglinski won the Kansas orientee championships on Sunday at Lake Perry. This season the Jayhawks are 1-0 after beating Drake Saturday. Eglinski wins meet Eglinski said the meet, which was run by Orienteer Kansas, attracted about 35 competitors. Eglinski won in 41 minutes, 23 seconds. Bum Phillips resigns NEW ORLEANS — New Orleans Saints coach Bum Phillips, one of the most colorful and popular figures in the NFL, resigned yesterday. He took four others in the team's hierarchy with him and left his son Wade to act as head coach for the last four games of what has been a dismal season. Club president Eddie Jones also resigned along with offensive coordinator King Hill, personnel director Pat Peppler and public information director Greg Suit. The surprise resignations came just 24 hours after the Saints, 4-8, beat the Minnesota Vikings 30-23, with Earl Campbell rushing for a team record 160 yards. After Sunday's triumph Phillips had happily predicted more victories. Guillen top rookie "My job here was to win football games, and my job here was to provide a winning season. I didn't do that," Phillips said in an emotional farewell. NEW YORK — Ozzie Guillen, a slick-fielding shortstop acquired by the Chicago White Sox in an off-season trade, yesterday was named the American League's Rookie of the Year by the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Guillen, a 21-year-old native of Venezuela received 16 of 28 first-place votes to easily defeat two Milwaukee Brewers. Left-handed pitcher Ted Higuera received nine first-place votes and 67 points to finish second. Brewers shortstop Earnet Riles was third with 29 points. Two writers from each AL city took part in the voting. The White Sox gave up 1983 Cy Young Award winner LaMarr Hoyt to acquire Guillen from the San Diego Padres. Guillen's 12 errors were the fewest among any AL regular shortstop. He batted .273 with 71 runs scored. Guillen was hitting .210 on June 10 but hit at about .302 the rest of the way. From staff and wire reports. 'Hawks honored in Big 8 By Frank Hansel Of the Kansan sports staff For the third consecutive year Kansas linebacker Willie Pless has been named first team All-Big Eight. Pless and KU wide receiver Richard Estell were named to the first team by United Press International yesterday. In addition, Kansas quarterback Mike Norseth and offensive tackle Jim Davis were named to the second team. Offensive guard Bob Pieper and linebacker John Randolph received honorable mention. The vote was conducted by a panel of the eight conference coaches and sports writers. Pless finished as the all-time Big Eight Conference leader in tackles with 632. He recorded 190 tackles this season and finished with a streak of 27 games with at least 10 tackles each. Against Missouri, Pless had 14 tackles. "I'm really thrilled and it's a great honor," Pless said yesterday. "But a lot of the credit has to go to the coaching staff and the defensive line, because I couldn't make that many tackles if they didn't control the line of scrimmage." Estell concluded his four years at Kansas as the school leader in passes caught in a season, 70; most receptions in a career, 117; and most yards in a career, 1,996. This season Estell became the second Kansas receiver to gain more than 1,000 yards. He gained 1,109 yards, which was good enough for second place behind Bobby Johnson's 1,154 yards in 1983. "It's a tremendous thrill." Estell said. "It was something I set forth to do in the beginning of the season, and now it has come true." Saturday, Estell caught eight passes for 169 yards and one touchdown. The score came on a 64-yard pass from Norseth. Estell out-juggled Missouri defender Tony Faciniel to make the reception. Norseth ended his two-year career at Kansas as the season leader in total offense with 3,483 yards. He passed Frank Seurer's mark of 2,789 yards set in 1983. This season Norseth completed 227 of 408 passes for 2,995 yards, 15 touchdowns and 11 interceptions. Davis, a sophomore, has started in both his seasons at Kansas. Last year he was named to the second team All- Pieper, a junior, had started at every game at right tackle last season, after playing in a reserve role during his freshman season. This year he was moved to starting at right guard but also saw action at right tackle behind Bryan Howard. America freshman team by The Football News. Randolph, a junior, completed his first year with the Jayhawks after transferring from Coffeyville Community College. Last year, Randolph was named to the Grid Wire firstteam junior college All-America team. He finished the season with 104 tackles, two quarterback sacks and one fumble recovery. Big Eight champion Oklahoma dominated the first team with seven players, inincluding freshman quarterback Jamelle Holieway, nose guard Tony Casillas and linebacker Brian Bosworth. Runner-up Nebraska placed five players on the first team, including running back Doug DuBose and defensive tackle Jim Skow. Athletic director at MU to resign United Press International COLUMBIA, Mo. — Dave Hart. Missouri athletic director, said yesterday that he would resign the position to take the post of commissioner of the Southern Athletic Conference. Conference officials confirmed later yesterday that they had reached an oral agreement with Hart, who said he would take the post as of June 1. "I'm very happy with the situation. It's just a case that it's such a "The chancellor told me today that she did not want me to leave — it's not a forced one," Hart said. "If we were 10-1 and everything was peachy, well, it's just a job for Dave Hart." Hart's action comes two days after the Missouri football team ended its season with a 1-10 mark, equalizing its worst record since 1971. Hart denied that his leaving Missouri had anything to do with the dismal football season. good opportunity. It's really a good job. I love Missouri and I love Columbia. I don't want to leave for another athletic director's job. "It's just that this is a commissioner's job with the Southern Conference and I like to think of conference work. It's a new challenge... and I like the challenge. I think I need some new ones right now." Both Missouri and Southern Conference officials said an informal announcement of Hart's decision would be made before Thanksgiving, possibly today. Hart said he would probably continue his duties at Missouri until about April. Hart said he had not been asked to suggest his possible replacement. KU remains No. 5 "I'm not into that," he said. "I don't have anybody in particular. I don't know if I'll be involved or not." Hart came to Missouri in 1978 The Associated Press North Carolina, which handed UCLA its worst defeat ever, passed idle Georgia Tech yesterday to take the No. 1 spot in The Associated Press' college basketball poll. The Tar Heels, who blasted UCLA 107.70 Sunday night in the season opener for both teams, received 22 first-place wins — two fewer than Georgia Tech — and 1,158 points in the nationwide balloting of 61 writers and broadcasters. After Georgia Tech, 10 points behind North Carolina, the third through ninth spots in the poll remained the same as the preseason Top Twenty. Michigan, which won two games during the opening week of the college basketball season, had nine first-place votes and 1,030 points, followed by Syracuse, 947; Karsas, two first-place votes and 933; Duke, one first-place and 917; Illinois, one first-place and 809; Georgetown, one first-place and 791; and Louisville, 786 points. Antenbury, which led the Second Ten in the preseason poll, improved one spot with 526 points, while Notre Dame, 12th last week, led the Second The four teams scheduled to meet in the Big Apple NIT semifinals Friday night in New York are all ranked. Duke will face St. John's, and Kansas is to meet Louisville. Ten this week with the remaining first-place vote. AP Top 20 First-place votes in parentheses, total points based on 20-18 etc. record through Nov. 24 and Dec. 31. | | Record | Pts | Pts | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1. North Carolina (22) | 1-0 | 1138 | 1 | | 2. Georgia Tech (34) | 1-0 | 1488 | 1 | | 3. Michigan (9) | 2-0 | 1070 | 3 | | 4. Syracuse | 1-0 | 947 | 3 | | 5. Kansas (2) | 2-0 | 933 | 5 | | 6. Duke (4) | 2-0 | 953 | 5 | | 7. Illinois (1) | 1-0 | 809 | 7 | | 8. Georgetown (1) | 1-0 | 791 | 8 | | 9. Louisville | 1-0 | 786 | 9 | | 10. Kentucky | 1-0 | 528 | 11 | | 11. Notre Dame | 1-0 | 474 | 11 | | 12. Louisiana State | 1-0 | 471 | 14 | | 13. Oklahoma | 1-0 | 412 | 13 | | 14. Memphis State | 1-0 | 378 | 15 | | 15. N. Carolina State | 1-0 | 365 | 17 | | 16. New York Juggles | 1-0 | 283 | 17 | | 17. Maryland | 1-0 | 214 | 19 | | 18. St. John's | 2-0 | 192 | — | | 19. Auburn | 0-1 | 164 | 10 | | 20. Clemson | 0-1 | 164 | 10 | 19. Auburn 0-1 164 10 20. Ala -Birmingham 0-1 164 10 Suzy Mast/KANSAN Others receiving votes: Iowa 96, Indiana 82, Missouri 70, Illinois 71, Virginia 65, church shrub, Villanova 42, Georgia 61, Tennessee 32, Virginia 24, Navy 19, Virginia Tech 19, Alabama 23, Florida 21, Georgia 20, Bradley 19, Bradley 14, UC ArizonA 17, Stone 17, Jeppinger 4, Ariona 3, Boston College 3, Tuition 2, Fresno State 1, Lamar 1, Northwestern 1, Old Maine 1 Mill Newton, a forward on the men's basketball team, prepared to pass the ball during practice yesterday afternoon in Allen Field House. Doug Vance, sports information director, said yesterday that head coach Larry Brown hoped to be able to redshirt Newton for the season. The Associated Press Penn State remained No. 1 yesterday in the Associated Press college football poll while Oklahoma moved close to a possible national championship showdown in the Orange Bowl. Penn State completed an 11-0 regular season by defeating Pitt 31-0 and received 49 of 60 first-place votes and 1,186 of a possible 1,200 points from a nationwide panel of sports writers and sportscasters. The Nittany Lions, who will meet Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl, have been No. 1 for three weeks in a row. The Orange Bowl had hoped for a 1-2 shootout between Penn State and Nebraska, but the Cornhuskers lost to Oklahoma 27-7. That vaulted Oklahoma from fifth place to third behind Iowa. The Hawkeyes, who moved up from third place to second and are headed for the Rose Bowl after trum- cing Minnesota 31-9, received three first-place votes and 1,082 points. Oklahoma had six first-place ballots and 1,074 points. AP Top 20 | | Record | Pts | Pius | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1. Penn State (49) | 11-0-0 | 1,186 | 1 | | 2. Iowa | 10-0-0 | 1,161 | 1 | | 3. Oklahoma (6) | 8-1-0 | 1,074 | 5 | | 4. Miami, Fla. (1) | 9-1-0 | 1,058 | 4 | | 5. Michigan (1) | 9-1-0 | 971 | 6 | | 6. Florida | 8-1-0 | 974 | 6 | | 7. Albany | 8-1-0 | 961 | 10 | | 8. Nebraska | 9-2-0 | 761 | 11 | | 9. Brigham Young | 10-2-0 | 722 | 2 | | 10. Tennessee | 7-1-2 | 651 | 11 | | 11. Air Force | 7-1-2 | 583 | 18 | | 12. Florida State | 8-2-0 | 581 | 14 | | 13. LSU | 7-1-1 | 425 | 17 | | 14. Arkansas | 9-2-0 | 370 | 18 | | 15. Tampa Bay | 8-2-0 | 361 | 17 | | 16. UCLA | 8-2-1 | 296 | 8 | | 17. Oklahoma State | 8-2-1 | 296 | 7 | | 18. Texas | 8-2-0 | 238 // | | 19. Ohio State | 8-2-0 | 238 // | | 20. Georgia | 9-1-0 | 168 | 20 | First-place votes in parentheses, season record, total points based on 20-19-18 etc. and last week's Making a pass Others receiving votes: Alabama 68, Bowling Green 53, Baylor 34, Maryland 16, Army 7, Arizona 6, Syracuse 4, Fresno State 3, Arizona State 2, Michigan State 1. PARKS 0 Bryan Graves/KANSAN Kansas tennis player, Pam Porter, right, plays tennis with her host family at the Alvamar Tennis & Swim Club, 4120 Clinton Parkway, Darcy Buehler, 1201 Oxford Terrace, left, and daughter Kallie practiced some volleys with Porter yesterday afternoon. Tennis players feel at home By Heather Fritz Of the Kansan sports staff Pam Porter has two homes. For that matter, so do the other members of the men's and women's tennis teams. It's all part of a host family program, designed to give athletes the same kind of support foreign students receive from their host families. The program for the tennis players took root last year when team member Tracy Treps was homesick after coming to Kansas from her home in Edmonds, Okla. She became friends with a Lawrence family, which she eventually adopted. "If we are ever in trouble or need to get away, we can go there," Treps said. "It really benefits me because I'm away from home." As it turned out, she started a trend. A year later, the whole team has host families. The players were paired with families by Jeff Henderson, the pro at Alvamar Tennis & Swim Club, where the team sometimes practices. The host families are members of the club, and most have children who play tennis. Families and athletes involved say the program is a positive experience "I think it's great." Porter said. "You get up to school and it's nice to go back into a home and do something different." Head coach Scott Perelman also values the program. "It's good when you have kids who are away from home for the first time," Perelman said. "It's so important when freshmen or transfer students arrive that they feel comfortable. It hopefully develops into a special thing." The parents say one of the biggest benefits of the program is that it gives their children someone to admire. "It provides a good role model for the kids to see what they can really do with tennis and where they can go with it," said Connie Friesen. Friessen and her husband, Dale, are host parents to KU men's players The Friesen's have two sons who play competitive tennis. The parents also get something from the program. For Darcy Buehler, Pam Porter provides companionship. "They really do like tennis," Connie said. "They've cut out a lot of other sports because of it. And they just idolize them." Buehler said Porter was also someone that her daughter, an only child, could talk to. Porter plays tennis with Kallie, and they sometimes go to movies and out for dinner. “It's nice to have someone around.” Buehler said. “We're just kind of hoping Pam doesn't graduate.” 49ers earn important victory SAN FRANCISCO — Joe Montana, intercepted twice in a nightmarish start, completed his first two passes of the second period on a 66-yard San Francisco touchdown drive and the 49ers posted an important 18-6 victory over the Seattle Seahawks in last night's National Football League game. The Associated Press On a third-down play, Montana threw to fullback Roger Craig for a 33-yard gain, and Fred Solomon caught a 27-yard pass on the next play for the game's first points. The 48ers added five points in the quarter on a safety and Ray Wersching's 32-ward field goal. Dwight Clark, the wide receiver who broke into the NFL along with Montana in 1979, established a team record for career receptions when he caught a 22-yard TD pass from Montana in the final period. It was Clark's 400th catch. Montana finished the game with 16 completions in 32 attempts for 232 vards. With the victory, the defending Super Bowl champions made their record 7-5. The 49ers are two games behind the Los Angeles Rams in the National Football Conference West. The Seahawks, 6-6, fell two games behind in the AFC West race. Seattle averted a shutout, which would have been the team's first since 1982, when linebacker Sam Merriman blocked a punt by the 49ers' Max Runager and fell on the ball in the end zone for a touchdown with 1:55 remaining. The extra point attempt by Norm Johnson was blocked. Seahawks refused three points in the first period, The Seahawks refused three points in the first period accepting a penalty and a first down instead. Bowlers give up Thanksgiving By a Kansan reporter Kansas bowlers will pass up the turkey this weekend to compete in the National Collegiate Match-Play Tournament Friday and Saturday in St. Louis. Coach Mike Fine said it was the most prestigious tournament outside of the national championships. West Texas State is the men's defending champion, and Wichita State won the women's title last year. The Kansas men finished 18th and the women 21st last year. "It's a sacrifice for our bowlers because they're giving up Thanksgiving," Fine said yesterday, "but it's a biggie. If a team is going to be in the national championship, they'll be in St. Louis." "It's a national tournament, so this will be a significant test for us," Fine said. "If ever there was a time for both squads to come through, this is it." The teams will each bowl 12 The competition includes 48 men's teams and 32 women's teams, including Wichita State, San Jose State, Miami (Fla.) and Buffalo State. games, and the top ten teams will go on to bowl three more. Scoring will be done on a point system. Four teams will compete in a round, and teams will receive one point per pin, plus a bonus for their place in the round. National rankings have not come out yet, but Fine said that with a good showing in St. Louis, both teams could be in the top 20. "Right now I don't think either the men or the women possess the consistency to be in the top 10," he said. "But they deserve to be in the top 20." 8 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1985 'Yabba-dabba-do Campaign advocates seat belts, child safety restraints United Press International WASHINGTON — The government, in a partnership with Fred Flintstone, kicked off a campaign yesterday with a "yabba-dabba-doo" to promote automobile seat belts and child safety restraints — devices that could save more than just make-believe lives. Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole helped begin the drive before a group of school children and others assembled on the Washington Mall. She sat, carefully buckled up, in a battery-powered replica of Fred and Wilma Flintstone's Stone Age vehicle, the Flintmobile. Dole sat smiling and waving next to an actor dressed up in a Fred Flintstone costume who also was buckled up. The "Fred Flintstone's All American Buckle Up" campaign marks an unusual partnership between the creators of the popular television cartoon characters and the Transportation Department. The American Automobile Association also pledged its services to educate the public. The Stone Age vehicle will be featured in parades and other events nationwide next year to remind adults and children to buckle up for safety. "Statistics indicate that as many as half of all motor vehicle fatalities and serious injuries could be prevented by safety belt use." Dole said. According to federal statistics, traffic accidents are the leading cause of death for people ages 1 to 44. In fact, the government says more people up to the age of 50 die from auto accidents than heart disease, cancer or stroke. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, a unit of the Transportation Department, estimates more than 8,000 lives could be saved annually with wider use of lap and shoulder belts. Last year, 44,241 Americans were killed in motor vehicle accidents. Every state and the District of Columbia have laws requiring that infants and toddlers be placed in child safety seats or buckled up. The government says child safety seat usage saves 160 lives each year but that with full and proper use thousands more injuries would be avoided. Sixteen states already have adopted laws making the use of safety belts mandatory for front-seat passengers and drivers. Iowa report disputes ruling on teachers United Press International DES MOINES, Iowa — A governor's task force, citing a need for diversity in education, recommended yesterday that the state eliminate mandatory certification of teachers in fundamentalist Christian and home schools. The recommendation is at odds with a recent Iowa Supreme Court ruling and a U.S. District Court ruling in Des Moines, which upheld the constitutionality of mandatory state certification of teachers at Christian and home schools. But one member of the task force, Robert Van Vooren, past president of the Iowa State Bar Association, said it had considered the court cases in recommending that the Legislature implement the new policy for a test period of five years. "No more than five states require certification of teachers in Christian and home schools. . . We also found in other states home-schooling students and Christian students do quite well. We would be less than canid if we said that was not a factor in our decision." Van Vooren said. In place of state certification, the panel recommended that "other adequate safeguards" be incorporated to ensure quality education, including annual reporting requirements and annual testing of children in Christian and home schools. the unanimous recommendation was hailed by Christian school leaders as a reaffirmation of parents' rights to determine the proper education for their own children. But it met strong opposition from the state's largest teachers' group, the Iowa State Education Association, which said the recommendation would jeopardize the state's ability to guarantee equal educational opportunities for all Iowa students. The three-member Task Force on Compulsory Education was made up of Van Vooren; Robert Benton, director of the Iowa Department of Public Instruction; and Earl Hill, a Kanawha attorney who has represented Christian schools. Van Vooren said there was a likelihood that students who failed the annual exams would not be allowed to continue in the private programs. In its recommendation issued to Gov. Terry Branstad, the task force said, "Freedom of choice goes to the heart of America's democracy. "It it is apparent that there is great diversity in the educational approaches taken both among and within the public and on-public educational sectors. This is healthy and should be encouraged. Unanimity is not necessary. It is not even desirable." The Rev. David Jaspers of the Fellowship Baptist Church in Marshaltown said his church had been working for 13 years to pass such legislation. 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The University Daily Kansan is recognized as one of the country's leading college newspapers. Recently in Dallas, Texas, the Kansan received the national Pacemaker Newspaper Award for the fourth time since 1971. The award is based on excellent service to the University of Kansas campus community and the City of Lawrence. Why not let the Kansan work for you? It is the ideal way to reach the students, faculty, staff, the entire KU community, and you'll get the most out of your advertising dollar. For more information, contact your Kansan sales representative or call the Kansan Business Office, 864-4358. The Kansan works! SAVE AT IMPORTS • DOMESTICS • EXOTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205 JAN. 25 GMAT THERE'S STILL TIME TO PREPARE CLASSES STARTING Last week of November Stanley H KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER in New York, New York at 341-640-3300 TECH INFORMATION SPECIAL EVENT with CALL DAYS, EVENINGS & WEEKENDES 341-1220 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Both ads feature children, but the children come to different conclusions about what Star Wars means. In the High Frontier ad, the child associates Star Wars with peace, while the child in the ad by the Committee for a Strong Peaceful America determines that THE KANSAN WORKS. 2007 UNIVERSITY BAD UYANAN THIRD SECOND YEAR FAMILY CENTER KANSAN Parrakhan robots critics, draws ovalion demonstrators protest peacefully KU forum urges swift divestment Three freshmen arrested at freedom house Ha-ha "It's true that we are using it to refer to a specific proposal — the SDI proposal," she said. "We are using it to describe what is now a reality. Lucasfilm creates a fantasy world." The two groups, High Frontier and the Committee for a Strong Peaceful America, have been running television advertisements with opposing viewpoints on the SDI proposal since October. "Star Wars," your honor, is a fantasy. It's something that doesn't exist." Hefer said. Ads that associate "Star Wars" with a missile program, he said, "will cause children and parents to tend to shy away from 'Star Wars.'" "There should be no use of 'Star Wars' as directed to children," he said. "They will identify the two together and become frightened." During an hour and a half hearing, the judge said, "I'm assuming 'Star Wars' is a strong (trade) mark. I'm also assuming that little children who see TV might get mixed up about it." Hefter said Lucas' company, Lucasfilm, "does not seek to silence either party" but merely wants to protect its trademark and "prevent it from association with a noxious subject, particularly nuclear holocaust." Laurence Hefter, representing the creator of the adventure film that has reaped $1.3 billion, asked U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell to grant a preliminary injunction stopping two groups from using the phrase War Wars in advertisements about the controversial defense proposal. Lawyers protest SDI's nickname WASHINGTON — Using the term Star Wars to describe President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative has turned a movie of fantasy into one of fear, lawyers for film-maker George Lucas told a federal judge yesterday. Marianne Hall, representing High Frontier, said her client agrees with Lucas that Star Wars is not the right term to describe Reagan's initiative. High Frontier's ads, she said, are trying to stop the use of the phrase in that context. United Press International SDI will lead to war in space. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 307 Mass. phone 841-111 Computerark ZENITH STUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE Z-100 GEMINI BOARD 841-0094 Hurray! Hurray! BALLOONS -N-MORE Send Balloons Today! We Deliver Innovative Gifts, Balloon Bouquets, & Singing Telegrams 749-0148 603 Vermont BLOONS -N-MORE ts, 603 Vermont ALEXIS D'ALPHOND EVEN BEFORE COMMENCEMENT YOU COULD BEGIN USING THE AMERICAN EXPRESS CARD. As soon as you get a job,you could get the American Express Card. If you're a senator, 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 right now? Well, simply stated, we believe in your future. And as you go up the ladder, we can help—in a lot of ways. JEAN BRUNTON DE GRECOMB 3712 950704 MAIL PHONE The Card can help you begin to establish your credit history. And, for business, the Card is invaluable for travel and restaurants. As well as shopping for yourself. Of course, the American Express Card is recognized around the world. So you are too. So call I-800-THE-CARD and Call 800 THE CARD 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. $^{SM}$ © 1987 American Express Bank Retail Services Company, Inc. Tuesday. Nov. 26, 1985 The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 q CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 8.25 10-20 2.90 4.25 6.00 9.30 21-25 3.20 4.75 6.75 10.35 For every 5 words add: 30¢ 50¢ 75¢ 1.05 AD DEADLINES Munday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Friday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. Classified Display $4.40 per column inch Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Mitrium depth is one inch. No revenues allowed in classified displays. No overheads in classified display ads. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the Kansas business office at 864-4358. POLICIES Classified Ads - Above rates based on contacive day insertions only. - Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. - Words in boi lori a Mælchion d'es wifi * Deadline is 4 p. m. - 2 working days prior to - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words * Deadline is 4 p.m. - 2 working days prior to - advertising* * Blind box ads—please add a $4 service charge.* - Classified display ads do not count towards monthly annual rate discount until credit has been established * Tearsheets are not provided for classified or Samples of all mail order items must be submitted by the date of advertisement. - Blind office adjs - place ads and receive change* * Checks must accompany all classified adjs marked ANNOUNCEMENTS BE READY FOR FINALS! The Preparing for Exams Study Skills Workshop, Topics covered: time management, memory, reviewing, test-taking strategies, anxiety, and more. Free Wednesday, December 4, 7 p.m., 300 Strong Assistance Center, 121 Broadway Hall, 844-404-6. to The University Daily Kananu · All advertisers will be required to pay in advance Do you have talent? Prove it! *Audition for In-Bet- nets Acts for Rock Chalk Revue*. De. 2 & 3. - correct insertion of any advertisement - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified Heard through the GRAPEVINE. Pach, wanna function?" Respond he. Cereus will be waiting. Rent '19' Color TV C V 828.8 m month. Smitty's TV C 84.7 wrld. B242.851. Mon.-Sat. 8:00-9:00 Sun. SKI STEAMBAOT. Condo-nor Mt. Wiener. Fully equipped, sleep 6. Available week of December 15-22, and January 19-26, $50 per week. 1-232-9361 (Topeka). Rent-VCMP with 2 movies, overnight **9.96** Smilv's TV Club **147 W 147** bd 842/3513 Mon - Sat, Saturday ROCK CHALK BAR Open During Thanksgiving Break Live music Fri. & Sat. night 12th & Indiana ENTERTAINMENT Dance to live fiddle tune! Jaayhawer Oldtime Bardmusic Company. Make your next participation in our program. 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 FOR RENT AWARD--WINNING- 2. BR. Energy Efficient TOWNHOUSE. All appl. Air. Cond. W/ dookup, 5 minute walk to campus. Sublease -- Call 749-3289 or 841-0079 Apartment to sublease at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 West 9th. One bedroom furnished, 3rd floor $225 plus utilities Lease through $250. Price could be price beigatable 842-383-1433. 842-383-1433. Apt to sublease at Red Rows, 4006 Alamora, Two bars plus inside. Cable TV paid. Lease with 15 months. Astreative 2 BR apartment in remodeled house, sublease for January 1, Lowry units, bay window, ceiling fan, new carpeting, private parking, close to campus and downtown, 749-3543. Available Jan. 1-3 or 4 bedroom apartment, 1 bedroom newly remodeled 375 plus month blues 144-85-67 enjoy the fireplace this winter and the pool this summer. Now available all of Lawrence's nicest 2 bedroom apartments. Communities. Excellent location on WESTPORT BETLINE,叫414-834 or 84-680 for more info. Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at BERKELEY FLATS. Vacancies available now and at semester Plan ahead, lease now for next year. 843-2116. Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid 842-418-105. Demand for Naimish Hall has never been higher. You will be invited to this spring. Limited spaces available for next semester. Drop by for a tour today and see our new look 'for yourself.' Naimish Hall 1000 MUST SUBLEASE. Gatehouse Apartments, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, good location. Available end of semester, lease through May; ask for Sarah 749-3841 HEATHERWOOD VALLEY $200 OFF December rent. One & two bedrooms available on the same level of apartments have GG, KG, DW, DW, FF reffing on all on-hase route. BK 483-4754 for details. Must subset 2 N tpr A. Extremely close to campus Spaacious living and kitchen area. Comfortable Furnished, with central heating. NAISMITH HALL: Spring semester opening for male. Security. Call 749-700. Immediate call: 749-700. Call 749-700. Get Something Going! If you can't buy it...bargain. Don't do without the things you really want simply of today, because of their high prices. Bargain in classified. Many of the same items available in stores are listed at lower prices in classified. Sometimes you can even find them for free. Many many items in classified are sold by private parties. Don't do without -do it with classified. Kansas Classifieds 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 Furnished rooms from $100 with some utilities paid. Two btw from Kansas Union . No pets allowed. Expert location one bedroom studio basement partition equipped kitchens for appliances at 1801 254th Street arge one bedroom, gas heat, gas/water paid, SS1, or B4-1291. Nice southwest location. New 2 bedroom duplex. Spacious living room with sliding glass door to patio. Eat - in kitchen w/dw, disposal range, refrigerator, laundry room, wall to wall carpet, central air. Available immediate, lease to July 31, 1986. 1 month deposit, $45 per month 1900 E. limited spaces will be available at Naismith Hall next semester. Waiting lists are forming now so don't delay! For more information or come by, visit www.naismith.com. Naismith Hall, 1806 Naismith Street, 843-8596 vo-non-smoking roommate for spring and fall semesters at Meadowbrook $10/mo/ 2 utilities. 482-7925 Now offering 1, 2, & 3 bedroom apt's, townhouses, and duplexes for spring & summer semester occupancy. If your looking for a new nest, call us now! We have a wide variety of rooms. Pretty, creamed trimmed 3 BR apartment. All appliances. A/C, W/D bookup, garage, one block from bus. Sublease, option to take next lease. ROOMS FOR MVC STUDENTS, AVAILABLE NOW. Pursuit, Share Kitchen, bath. Walk to campu. 149 & Kentucky, $110, $115, $215 plus 1/9 gas, 841, 210/841, 5318. Room for rent, condo living ask for Kevin or Maurice at 811-6471 Room in home for young University woman, nice location now, spring semester and on. Need transportation call 843-0388 before 9 a.m. or evenings. Rooms. No lease, furnished, all utilities paid, cable color TV, phone, maid service, laundry facilities, kitchen privileges, on KU bus route. EconLodge, 843-6511 Rooms for rent on the hill 1/10 mile from Union. 895 and $12. Call 841-6495. SUBLEASE. 2 bedroom Apl. On Bus Route and Village Square. Apg. 450 Pm Utilities. Village Square Apg. 450 Pm Utilities. SUBLEASE. 2 bd, lbd kikihvchm rp, mllen storage, $350/mi uths. 10th indian OR: Female roommate non-smoker, 1/3 costs, 81-3601, 749-005, or 749-181. SUBLEASE One-bedroom AP on BUS ROUTE. 233 Ridge Ct., Apt. 825, Apk $250, um. Included. Available Jan. 1, 1866, to August. Call Hitses. 844-308 7653, 842-781 7814. eveningals. SUNFLOWER HOUSE. Spring openings, reserve 30-student private rooms, close to campus and library. Spacious two bedroom furnished townhouse for rent close to campus. Includes garage, 1/3 bath, balcony and new carpeting. Very economical and available as early as Dec. 1. Call Sublease 3 bedroom furnished apartment, Tangweed Anglo, aches to campus. Call office. 914-265-2800 or visit www.tangweedanglo.com. Sublease through May. Village Square Apts. 2 bedroom, Large kitchen and living room. Nice and quiet. On Bus route, $225/month. 749-2376 or office. 842-3940. Sublease, Available Dec int 2 Bedroom Apt. Fireplace, 10 tables and 2 free cabinets, cable tv, 1 flat screen TV Trailer for sublease. 1 BR, close to KU. $175/month, low utilities. Call nights, 842-7367. Wanted Male-mounte to sublease 1 bdr. of 2. bdr. apt. 150 and pt. untl. 843-3315 Evenings Submit 2 bedroom apartment until May. Option to renew. Discount rate 1/2 security deposit paid, payable by May 27. MASTERCRAFT offers a completely furnished two bedroom apartment available immediately! We also have subsules on 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments for January! All neal KU, Call us at (918) 550-6747. Comic Books. Playboys, Penalties, etc. Max 10 Comics. Comic Books. Sat. & Sun. Max 10 5-8pm For Sale: 14 X 70 Mobile Home, why throw your money away or rent, when you can have equity when you graduate? 2 dbaims. I bath home to you. 6 roommates or young family: 181-356-2922. Sublease one-bedroom apt. behind Peminja $52mm price with Available Bed. 15 Cal Kaustner, 30 Bed. Apt. A+ on 8th Floor. FOR SALE NewApartment-Room for 4: Spacious 2 bedrooms, Microwave; Fireplace Garage; 11/2 baths; Ideal Location, Campus and residential; Available January 1, Call now 749-2835. 79 Chevette 2-door hatch back, good for getting around town. Interior well work. Well. Miss. Well. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class presentation. 3) For analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Town Creek. The Jayhawk Bookstore, and online. Baseball cards and sports nostalgia. Buy, Sell and Trade. J.D.'s BASEBALL card. Open 10-M-S. M QUALITY used carpet, twice cleaned and professionally sanded. Big Bubby, 841-BOBS. GVERNMENT HOMES FROM (1 $U/ repair). Also delinquent tax property. Call 1-877-607-6889 For Sale: Folding Drafting table, white metal frame, good condition. $75.81 - 266 evenings. for sale. MONICA cassette deck TC-FX2x0 on the line. Brand new only $20, value of $30 THUMPSTER TWO BRASS BUNNY'S D NEGOTIABLE NEGOTIABLE D 845-3686 Same good coin AUTO SALES SILVER REED TYPEWRITER. Two extra dairy shapes. Compatible with C540 1289 two student season basketball tickets, Best offer! call 811-4741 129 Mercury Capri, 2,000 miles, A/C/ Starting 8:59, Call 8411 2447 after 7 p.m. 99% Chevrolet Impala Wagon, runs well, $500 or less. 728.312.323 with 5.0 m Lost Billboard With ID's, Award, Please Call 842-9097 LOST/FOUND Found A white & gold spoted cat. Found near 9th & Emery Rd. Call 841-6907. Found Trials. Twn. 11th calendar in Western Washington and identify location and type of calculation: 86214 Lose-belly male dog, white on nose and chest, Wearing blue collar: Call 842-0777. HELP WANTED Do you enjoy cleaning? You may qualify to be a part of our hard-working team. Call BUCKINGHAM PALACE Housecleaning between 8 a.m.-9 p.m. noon. @4284.6284 BabySitter needed in my home for all home basketball games. Top pay for support, non-traditional accommodations. GOD SUMMER JOBS near East Park, Colorado, as a camp counselor, cook, nurse, typist, photographer, barn wrench, trans driver, or assistant unit director. Applicants must be at or near U.S. Air Force Academy in Cheyenne. CHELEY COLORADO CAMPS, Dept. C, Box 8525, Denver, Colorado 80206, 9337-737-616. Large Lawrence law firm taking applications for word processors to work 2-4 hours during evening. Must be non-smoker. Please send resume, reference, typing speed & performance to PO Independence Inc. is seeking individuals to work as a co-op or part-time attendants to persons with a disability. To apply call or come by Independence Inc. at 417-6201 henkel E.O.E. Macro Programming! We're looking for someone to do some 1/73 Macro programming for custom graphics. We will be describing what you describe it as an easy job for a good programmer. Price varies by location. KUNIC, KUMC, 898-507-7 Needed, Babysitter to come to my home from 3:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. M-F. Two children age 2 and 3. Must have references and own transportation. Call between 9 and 3. 842-5527 OVERSEAS JOBS Summer, yr round, Europe, S.A. Amerer, Ausa, Alla faces, $900-2000 mo. mightseeing, Free info, Write LJC, PO Box 52-KS1 Corom Del Mar, CA 92825 Part-time cocktail waitresses needed Fridays, Fri, and Sat. Apply inquiries to Mary K. St. 7-10 Mon-Fri. at McDonald's McDonalds. Part-time position uses for morning and noon-time care givers on a regular and a two-month substitute basis beginning the Amar. Ann. Applicant Toddle Day Center, Bristol Teach. AA 104 (Mawrothown) University Daily Kansan RESEARCH ASSISTANT Full time research assistant position in analytical chemistry. Requires strong background in general chemistry and good laboratory skills. Duties include the analysis of bioactive substances and the preparation of technical reports. A bachelor's degree in physical or biological sciences is helpful but not required. Research experience is needed to interact together with curriculum vitae to: Dr. Obore Wong, Oread Laboratories, Inc., 2965 Constant Avenue, Lawrence, KS 6006. Application deadline is 12/2/8. Orde Applied Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employment Student Assistance needs to work as security monitors at the Spencer Museum of Art. Work study preferred, contact Keith Barnharrn 864-4710. Teacher's Aide position in Room Toddler. Starting Dec. 9th Hours are 1:50 p.m. weekday. Teachers need to have Learning Content 31 Maines by Dec. 1 Female Aide. A.M. 7:30-12:00; P.M. 10-12, weekends also. 749-0288. Word Processing Typatas. Academic Computing Word Services has two half-hour student hourly postings for a variety of tasks in 1983, $15.35/hour. Entering and editing text using a word processor; data entry. Training programs at KU; application at KU; accurate typing skills. Fill out applications rt reception area of Computer Center. MISCELLANEOUS Animal Act! Condemn! that people can be performed in front of over 7,000 people in the world. Happy Early Birthday MISTY and STACILE! Have a Great Thanksgiving Break — Jackie! Is there a more perfect gift than a fine portrait? SWELLS Studio, 740-1631. A to她 named Teri; Together through the hard times, appreciating all the good times. My love for you is bigger than the sky. Hpy 1 yr. Love, your knight in shimmering armor. PERSONAL Hey Henry! Happy 21st! Love, Peggy To that Cale Blonde, Brunette or Red Head with Meet me at the Rock Glau HA and Lakeview. COMPRESIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care, confidential assured. Greater area'c call for appointment 913-546-1400. BUS.PERSONAL Modeling and theater portfolio--shooting now- Beginner in professionals, call for information. Amyx Barberchief, 942 1/2 Mass welcomes all season guests. Saturdays: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m. Hours: 8-10, Saul - 8-10. Good Mondays. Saturday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m. ( ) Broke? Not enough money for college? You could be missing out on thousands of dollars in financial aid. Find out how to get your fair share. For your copy of "A Comprehensive Guide to Financial Aid" (McGraw-Hill International 10552 Metcalf Suite 396, Overland Pk 16621) MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Union's recording Need custom imprinted aweshairts, *t-shirts*, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event! J & M Favors offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specialties plus speedy and reliable delivery. You design it or it be designed. 2201 W. Brown (Behind Gobber) 811-4949) 811-4949 of the day's entrees & soups New from California: Freeway Singles Club, a new and unique way for KU singles to meet. Free brochure: 316-284-7342, PG Box 3825, Wichita. Weekdays: Monday & Kansan KU Impresss takes needed. FLOAT CONNECTION . 14th E. 8th St. 749-071) Mastercard and Via. manual passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization panels, diploma, certificate of course, fairs, Sensible Studio. 99-163-1480. Rent.* 19.0% C.T. V. $28.90 a month. Smitty's TV 147 W.RT. 845-671-5751, Mon.-Sat. 9:30-10:00, Sun.-1 SOVIET UNISTUDENT TOUR* Dec. 27 Jan. 12 $1, 471 $4,04. Tour includes: Airfare out of K.C. Hotel Accommodations, fully escorted tour; meals and much more. Maipuzcat (316) 343-2800 18" Rent' 10°C T. W. $23.90 a month, Curtis Mathews, 14th W. W. 23rd W. 371-891; Memr. 9-30 Maryann, 25th W. W. 371-891 We get your computer's head on straight. Com- miprint AltaOptome Computer Services. CUSTOM DESIGNS FOR QUALITY SPORTSWEAR Party Favors Sweatshirts Y-Shirts Glassware JOB TIME ... 1023 Mass 749-7471 K2 sportswear Keep Warm with wet top coat, lits, and glove the ETC. Shop 212 Mascus 845-861-0911 EUC Store 123 West 71st Street 845-861-0911 Sewing and Alterations-all kinds, including sweaters. By professional fashion designer Krystyna. 843-5977 or 841-5363. Keep trying! Thousands of B & A R Albums= $2 or less. Also collector items. Sat & Sim only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Innsbury, Manchester. Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles. Warm awnet shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom orioned shirtl. 780-1611. 1023 Mass. 749-7471 We rent downhill skis 4 days $30, 8 days $50 New head skis, new boots and shoes $10.00 deposit required. Sunflower Surplun, 904 Mains. 843-5000. Camera repair on one at Hour Time Southern. CORPORATE COACH Call 841-LIMO for AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION. 24 HOURS a DAY 7 DAYS a WEEK MATH TUTOR - Bob Mears holds an A, in math in K u. where U02, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring pre-graduate students at U04, 80, 90, 91, 95, 98, and 40 minute session - Call 843-9032. GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd Weekly Beer Special Nov. 27-Dec 3 SINGLELY.. Results Effective. Join hundreds of preoccupied quality adults looking for sincere companionship, 1/2 price for women under 40 (have you got a man for you). For info call 856-397-8312 or visit www.ncwklawrence.com Lawrence is an offspring of New Beginnings Video in Kansas City. Holidays are coming to give yourself the best gift ever. Not an Export Services card. Visit www.ncwklawrence.com (with RUB) get a FREE membership. Wiedemann 12 pk 3.52 Michelob 6pk 2.87 Michelob Light 6pk 2.87 Black Label 12 pk 3.52 Lowenbrau 6pk 2.97 SERVICES OFFERED Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716. STADIUM BARBER SHOP. 1033 Massachusetts, downstairs. All haircuts. No appointment. 1-1-1. TROID WORK PROCESSING. Experienced in acquiring, Reliable, Rush jobs acceptance. BETHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-4821. **THEME & THEISIS OUTLINED - enhanced with** **library RE-SEARCH organized through WORD** **PROCESSING, editing, revising. Victor** **Clark: 842-8240** Absolutely LETTER PERFECT Word processing package. 448 SCRATCHING BASKETS by service department 843-6518 843-6518. Accurate, affordable transfer through holiday by Medical School secretary. Call NACRY 843-6518 on rande of Typing; GOOD IMPRESSIONS Faint, suspicious/spunctuation errors corrected TYPING 1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Attachable and affordable tuition. Jolly. 829-7945. 1-2-3 Dependable, accurate, professional, WOHD 1-2-3 Dependable, accurate, professional, papers, papers, etc., data WOHD 841 6770 841 6770 AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing/Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics, Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates 749-1118 Attention. Meadowbrook Residents - excellent tactly nearby. AFA format experience. Call Pa. Phone. 1-Pin Typing, law papers, resumes, dissertations 2-Pin Typing, law papers, resumes with memoirs 3-843 or 7457 or 8379, 6 p. in min. 1 14-24-hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes, dissertations paper, close to campus. Best prices available in Chicago. Dissertations, Thesee, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs. experience. Phone 842-2310; 5:30; Bark. www.library.dassel.edu A3 professional typing. Term papers, Theses. Dissertation Resumes, etc. using IBM Selectric Software. DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced. JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape. 843-8077 A-L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term names. Bases 843-1657 after 5:30. PROPESSIONAL typet with 15 years experience. Fast, accurate, and reliable. Call Peggy after 5 minutes. AAA TYPING/943-1942. Class papers, correspondence, legal briefs. Law review articles typed by KC legal secretary. Generally, if in by 6 out, by 10 p.m. same day. A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality renewals, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1800. DISTRISKATIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/ Typeing, Editing and GAMEING. One-DAY Service available on shorter student papers (up to 30 papers) or Mommy's Monthly: 845-3787 before 9 p.m. Please QUALITY TYPING Letters, themes, dissertations, remines, applications. Spelling corrected TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, edgar, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254. EXPERIENCED TYPET. Tern paper, theses. For correct spelling will correct spelling. Phone 843-6295, Mrs. Wright. TOP-NOTCH professional word processing, manuscript, resumes, theses, letter qualifying print- ers. THE WORKDOCTORS - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 943-3147 WANTED CARPOLT 04 Ottawa to Lawrence Monday thru Friday. Schedule on week schedule Call Debbie 804-391 (Bailley Hall) Female Roommate to share large two bedroom apartment spring semester. Close to Campus Call c innate to two bedroom apartment for spring semester. Close to campus 749-5472. Non-Smoking. Male Roommate for two-bedroom apartment. Move-In January. $150/month. 1/2 utilities. Close to campus. 842-1436. After six. Ask for John. Non-smoking female roommate to share three bedroom duplex units. Mendowbrook $10/mo. Room rate: 847-797-6333 O. T. student desperately needs female roommates to share 3 bedroom apartment in KG for spring semester. Broommate needed for spring semester. Nice 4 broomhouse Townhouse $125.00 per month. Call 866-793-6500. SHARE HOUSE, b 2orm 2 bath, deck, fireplace, dwarf/diver, dishwasher, diaper. Near Westridge and Junkyards Jym. Call 749-6856 (wk), 1941-(904).bm. Responsible and fun-loving female to share space with students in full view and, spacious. On bus route 841-8012. Space available for female at Naslima Hall starting spring semester. Call 749-2904. moies needed to share fantastic house, $135 and $29 each. Go to campan, near burlington, 463-382-389. KeepIFY! Wanted-Bonafide Student talent for Rock Chalk RevUE IBA's Auditions. Dec 2 & 3. Wanted: 1 or 2 female roommates. Now or second semester. Beautiful 2 bedding Eddington Apt. FP, Cab (SIO), DW, on business. $137.418/$107. p/1 ushelf? B43219 or 84327 or 84136. Keep Wanted: Non-smoking female roomate for Spring to share 2 bcp. acgt student preferred, $135/mo, and utilities, semi-furnished, on bus route. 843-3845 Wanted: Serious, responsible male roommate to share apartment for spring学期. Two blocks from Kansas Union, $90 of rent plus 1/3 of utilities. Call 749-8938 from a.m. 11 a.m. or 10 p.m. SIFIEDS Classified Heading: Write ad here: Net a Winner... THE CLASSIFIEDS Address: ___ Dates to run: ___ to ___ Phone BLOOM COUNTY | | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | *1-15 words* | $2.80 | $3.75 | $5.25 | $8.25 | | For every 15 words added | $30* | $50* | $75* | $1.05 | Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Classified Display 1 col. x 1 inch = $4 40 THE FAR SIDE Bv GARY LARSON © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate RE. MEYER VETERINARY MEDICINE CANNE. I'M PERFECT MARRIAGE MATERIAL. EAT MOST ANYTHINGS COOK. I WOOT RING. MY BEER BUILDS OVER THE DAYS YOU WAX THE "The big fellah's gonna be A-OK, Mrs. Dickerson. Now, a square knot would've been bad news, but this just appears to be a 'granny.'" SO PLEASE, WANT IS IT ATTOCK ME WHAT ANY PERSONALIZE WOMEN IN THIS POST-FEMINIST AMERICA WOULDN'T CRYNE? WELL? FLOOR... 中街107号 by Berke Breathed AND MOST IMPORTANTLY, I WILL BE SENSITIVE TO YOUR NEED FOR PERSONAL GROWTH. GIVEN YOU FERMISSION TO RING FOR A AFTER YOU RING UP YOUR NEMO TO KIDS. TED I will provide a text based on the image provided. It appears to be an illustration of two characters facing each other with their mouths open, possibly in a conversation or moment of intense emotion. The style is cartoonish and minimalistic. If you need specific details about the characters or the scene, please let me know. WELL? THIS IS A TRICK QUESTION, NON'T IT? 10 University Daily Kansan Campus/Area Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1985 Med Center heeds criticism Animal care unit improved By Stefani Day Of the Kansan staff KANSAS CITY, Kan. — The animal care unit at the University of Kansas Medical Center is on the road to righting several wrongs found in January by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, a Med Center official said last week. An improved ventilation system, newly painted animal rooms and new cages are among the corrections made, said John Mulder, director of animal resources. In January, the USDA criticized the animal care unit for not conforming to USDA standards. Some of the problems cited in the report included rusty cages, peeling paint and poor air circulation. "In six months time we've made considerable effort and progress," said Mulder, who in April transferred from the animal care unit on the Lawrence campus to the Med Center. "We still have a long way to go, but we're now on the road." He said other improvements in cluded opening several special procedure rooms, such as a preparation room next to the surgery room, a room to treat sick animals and a diagnostic laboratory. diagnostic laboratory. "It it's not the best," Mulder said of the diagnostic lab. "but it's better than what we had — nothing." Besides improvements in the building and equipment, Mulder said, changes were made in animal care personnel. An Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee was appointed by D. Kay Clawson, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, to bring problems to the attention of the administration. Also, animal care staff have attended training courses in animal care and former animal care director C.C. Templeman was transferred to the research office. A plan to renovate the animal care unit had been approved before the inspection, but that plan has been scrapped. Clawson said. tight now we're not going to spend any more money on a building that can't be put into compliance with "accreditation standards," Clawson said. Roger Lambson, vice chancellor for health policy and program development at the Med Center, said, "After the whole thing was studied and we evaluated the cost of renovating or constructing a new facility, a decision was made not to renovate." Clawson said that about $300,000 had been allocated for planning and architect fees for the new building but that no money had been approved for the building itself, which would cost about $5.2 million. "I think the critical factor now is funding for the new building." Mulder said. "If we don't get that, we're going to be in serious trouble again with the regulating agencies." Anuray said the animal care unit had been inspected nearly every month since the report was issued in January. Inspectors have had no significant complaints, he said. "The most recent investigation has uncovered no major deficiency." Lambson said. Professor gets research grant By a Kansan reporter A researcher at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. has received a $115,500 cancer research grant from the American Cancer Society. The grant will support a program to develop drugs to fight cancer, the researcher, C.C Cheng, said yesterday. "I consider myself lucky because nowadays it's hard to get grants," said Cheng, professor of pharmacology and director of the drug development laboratory at the Med Center. "Our people are a hard working group, and I believe they probably know this. They know the money will be well spent," he said. The grant runs from Jan. 1, 1986, to Dec. 31, 1986. Another $115,500 has been promised for the following year. Stefan Vivona, vice president for research of the American Cancer Society, wrote in the letter to Cheng announcing the grant, "Because your application received an exceptionally high priority, the society is assuring you support for one additional year." Cheng, who has been working on cancer research since 1955, helped develop the anticancer drug DHAQ, which is now being clinically tested. DHAQ is thought to be especially effective at stopping breast cancer and also may work against leukemia. and also they work against the best, "DHAQ is probably one of the best, if not the best, in the world," Cheng said. "We want to develop something else now. We'll try to develop something else we hope is better." We Deliver! 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