Satirical request
SINCE 1839
Fan club wants funds for parody magazine. See page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, FEB. 3, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 88 (USPS 650-640)
A man and a woman sitting in a room.
Rain Details page 3.
Faulty booster rocket cause of blast
United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Challenger's right side booster rocket, a powerhouse never expected to fail, apparently ruptured at or near a seam where two rubber-like solid fuel segments are joined, NASA's acting administrator said yesterday.
- See related stories p. 9.8
Tracking photos showed an increasingly intense flame spewing from the lower portion of the rocket during the 15 seconds before the explosion that destroyed the shuttle and killed its crew of seven Tuesday.
"We haven't yet finished the analysis and measurement on the film to identify the exact point at which the plume appeared," said William Graham on CBS's "Face the Nation."
"It itdn't necessarily happen along a seam. It did appear to happen at least near a seam."
Graham hinted that investigators thought the trouble was an engineering problem that could be remedied fairly quickly. However, an engineer close to the rocket program who asked not to be identified said the National Aeronautics and Space Administration might face a long delay before it could fly again.
NASA sources said mission planners in Houston hoped the shuttle Atlantis could be readied for flight in time to meet a June launch deadline to send the billion-dollar Galileo spacecraft to Jupiter.
The emphasis on the search for wreckage from the shuttle shifted to the sea bottom over the weekend and NASA's newest booster recovery ship, Independence, was scheduled to join the effort today with an advanced submersible called Recon IV.
Lt. Cmdr. James Simpson of the Coast Guard said the surface search was producing fewer returns."
NASA's board of investigation met at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., yesterday to
review records and data analysis that should hold clues to exactly what happened and possibly how. Marshall is the NASA center responsible for the ship's boosters, its external fuel tank and the three main engines.
"There are so many different possibilities," Graham said, when asked how the flame could have penetrated the steel rocket casing.
Graham said if Francis Scobee, shuttle commander, had some warning of impending disaster, he might have been able to jettison the boosters and the fuel tank and attempt a gliding return to the launch site.
But the astronauts did not have instrument readings of booster rocket performance and Graham said control center personnel detected nothing abnormal in the engineering data being monitored. He said other data were recorded for study later.
Graham said on ABC's "This Week with David Brinkley" that engineers did not know whether the flame from the rocket burned through the
aluminum wall of the 184-foot external fuel tank to which the booster was attached
"I don't think it would be productive for me or NASA to speculate," he said. "We're going to release the factual information as soon as we can, when we've pulled it all together and cross checked it and understand it."
Sources said investigators also were considering the possibility that the flame might have heated the tank, and its normally supercold liquid hydrogen, to the point where a pressure buildup caused it to rupture.
Independent videotape analysis of the flight sequence showed a mass of what appears to be hydrogen at the base of the tank just before it blew up in an immense ball of fire 8.9 miles above the Atlantic Ocean.
The suspect area on the 12-foot diameter booster rocket with half-inch thick steel walls is just above a steel ring which holds the three struts
See SHUTTLE, p. 5, col. 1
United Press International
SPACE CENTER, Houston — The Challenger booster rocket that apparently triggered the shuttle disaster was so solidly built that engineers considered such a failure impossible officials said yesterday.
Officials also said the booster that developed the blowtorch-like leak may never be recovered intact for study because its heavy steel skin was split open by a launch range safety officer moments after Challenger exploded.
Challenger booster rocket was thought to be infallible
They expressed confidence, however, that the rocket's failure was caused by an isolated problem rather than a design flaw and that steps to keep the same thing from happening again could be implemented quickly.
Films of Challenger's short flight show the 149-foot-long, 12-foot-diameter booster on the right side of the craft began peening a jet of fire
from its side 59.82 seconds after launch.
The plume of fire came from a point at or near a joint between two segments of the rocket's casing, which had been used on previous flights and then refurbished for that mission.
Officials said Challenger's instruments gave no sign of the impending catastrophe that might have warned either the shuttle pilots or mission controllers in the 13.6 seconds between the plume's appearance and the blast that killed all seven on board the craft.
Challenger carried three sensors to monitor pressure in each of its booster combustion chambers, providing the primary clue about booster performance, said National Aeronautics and Space Administration spokesman Joe Green at Cape Canaval.
Art, rugs in storage since 1954
See BOOSTER, p. 5, col. 1
S
By Alison Young
Special to the Kansar
Nearly $250,000 in artwork and Oriental rugs has been locked away in University storage for more than 30 years, according to KU inventory records.
The records, however, may be misleading, Ken Stoner, KU director of student housing, said last semester.
According to inventory records, nine paintings valued together at $175,000, five Oriental rugs valued together at $23,000, and a chandelier valued at $1,000, have been in a storage room in Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall since 1954.
KU men's basketball head coach Larry Brown helps Sabrina Brouillard, Special Olympian, in a dribbling exercise. KU center Greg Drilling, right, gives a boost to Marty Thurston, Special Olympian, in a game after the two practiced basketball drills.
Seven additional paintings, valued at $23,000, are stored in GSP. All were at one time part of the estate of Joseph R. Pearson and donated to the University.
J. J. Wilson, who retired in July after 33 years as KU student housing director, said recently that he had never seen any reason to take the art out of storage. But when Stoner took over as housing director this summer, he decided that the items should be put on display.
"In my opinion, based on the conversions I had, the values were correct at the time." Wilson said.
Wilson said the 1954 inventory values of the paintings donated by the Pearson estate were comparable to market prices for paintings of the same type and class.
The storage room's ceiling is lined with steam pipes from the boiler room below. The room, about the size of two residence hall rooms, is packed with old wooden furniture and hand-made mattresses. Just inside the door, the Oriental rugs are rolled up and have faded chairs stacked on top of them.
same syllables.
He said this was done through consultation with the Spencer Museum of Art and Robert Ackerson of Ackerson Fine Arts; an art dealership in Kansas City, Mo.
Ackerson said he didn't remember in detail the paintings, although he did recall the University had acquired some fine paintings.
He said they were given values in excess of $200 to be able to put them on University inventory, but that most of the pieces were not worth more than $200. Items valued at less than $200 are not recorded on the inventory.
quit some of the pa-
Ackerson said the value of the art-
Inventory values paintings range from $500 to $10,000. The teacher, Wilson said, the inventory values were not arbitrarily assigned.
in the middle of the room stand two large shipping crates, marked "PICTURES, DO NOT DROP, MR J.R. PEARSON, HARRODS LTD. EXPORTERS LONDON, OIL PAINTINGS." Black streaks of mold cover three boards at one end of a crate.
In a corner stands another wooden crate, marked "GLASS." It is collapsing with age and the weight of sheet-covered chairs. A crack in the top reveals glass light fixtures packed in yellow pages from the Kansas City Times — dated Sep. 19, 1947.
Stoner said the inventory values for the artwork and Oriental rugs were arbitrarily assigned and didn't reflect the items' actual values.
Inventory values for the individual paintings range from $500 to $10,000.
See ART, p. 5, col.4
Special Olympians practice lofty goals with KU idols
By Jim Suhr
Sports writer
brown and his Jayhawks met with about 70 Kansas Special Olympians for a clinic designed not only to
Less than 24 hours after its Big Eight win at Kansas State, the Kansas men's basketball team and head coach Larry Brown gathered in Allen Field House for a special two-hour workout...
Monday Morning
sharpen the participants' basketball skills but to realize goals that seemed as lofty as 7-foot-1 center Greg Dreiling.
Randi Williams, training director for Kansas Special Olympics, said the clinic was part of a year-round sports fitness and training program for the mentally retarded. Kansas offers training in all sports except hockey, ranging from gymnastics to ice skating and bowling.
Yesterday's clinic, Williams said, concentrated on basketball fundamentals such as layups, free-throw shooting, passing and dribbling.
Williams said the turnout for the clinic was twice as big as last year's. He said the Jayhawks' offering their Sunday afternoon was something the Olympians would not forget.
But the time together was a special moment for both the Olympians and the players they adored.
"When teams like this do this, our athletes tend to become loyal fans," Williams said. "That's what happened after last year's Jawhawk clinic."
wants his hand stinging from a high-five with Jayhawk forward Jerry Johnson, Special Olympian Wade Elm, of Nortonville, said the chance
to learn basketball skills and meet his favorite players was like a dream come true.
"I watched them on television, but it's a lot more special to meet them in person," he said. "I'm going to practice what I learned as soon as I get home."
Gary Samuels, a teammate of Elm's on the Lawrence Special Olympic team, stood on the sidelines after the clinic with bright eyes and Calvin Thompson's autograph. He said what he had learned meant a lot to him, and he hoped to use it in a game Friday at Topeka.
For Dreiling, the opportunity to help Olympians such as Elm and Samuels was enjoyable. He said the enthusiasm of the Special Olympians
would extend off the court.
"We only work with them a couple of hours, but they go home and practice what they've learned," he said. "That's satisfying."
Dreiling said several Olympians had called him at home prior to the clinic to ask him what skills they should practice.
"For us to have the opportunity to help someone less fortunate than us is rewarding. It's also a lot of fun," he said.
Jayhawk forward Danny Manning agreed with Driling's comments.
Brown, who has been active in the Special Olympics since the early 1980s, said the clinic was a way to expose his team to what he thought was a tremendous cause.
KANSAS CITY
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Basketball season parking frustrates campus study
By Monique O'Donnell Staff writer
Staff writer
When it's the season for basketball, it also the season for frustrated students who want to study on campus and can't find a place to park their cars.
Students who have night classes or want to study on Saturday's or weekday evenings in Learned Hall, Green Hall, Summerfield Hall and Murphy Hall often face parking problems when there are basketball games at the Allen Field House.
Tore Iversen, Drammen, Norway,
senior, said he often had problems
finding parking when he wanted to
work in the engineering design room
in Learned if there was a basketball
game that evening.
"I can understand that people want to see the basketball games," Iversen said. "But this is a university where students should have the right to get to their classes and the facilities when they need to."
Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking services, said the parking stalls reserved during basketball games were rented by the Williams Educational Fund for its members.
The Williams Fund is comprised of alumni, faculty and some students. The group donates money for athletic scholarships. Members who have season tickets and donate to the fund receive basketball parking permits.
There are 11 parking lots in which
Most parking lots around the field house are not accessible to students during the games. Hultine said the parking spaces were guaranteed to the patrons of the Williams Fund whether all spaces were filled or not.
all parking spaces are reserved and
one parking lot in which 750 out of
1,000 stalls are reserved for the
Williams Fund, Hultine said.
"There really is no provision for engineering students who have to go to Learned Hall during games," Hultine said.
Basketball fans who are not members of the Williams Fund can pay to park in certain reserved lots.
Richard Konzem, director of the Williams Fund, said the fund had purchased parking spaces from parking services for $1.50 a stall for each game.
Konzem said he hadn't heard any complaints from students having parking problems. Most events, he said, are scheduled on Saturdays which should not cause parking problems for students.
"We are paying $70,000 to parking services this year," Konzem said. "We don't take all of the parking spaces. We don't buy the one north of Robinson, the one behind the Computer Center or behind Summerfield."
Kathryn Nichols, Lawrence second-year law student, said she had bad problems finding parking
places near Green Hall during basketball game. But last semester, while she was taking a final, her professor announced that the students had to move their cars for people attending the basketball game.
"We've had problems with parking before but they never threatened us with towing our cars until that day when we were taking the final." Nichols said. "The University obviously has a screwed-up set of priorities."
Parking during sports events is an ongoing problem. A year ago, Iversen said, an evening class he was taking had to relocate to a building on West Campus because people were unable to park their cars around Learned Hall.
But George Crawford, chairman of the board of parking services, said he had not heard any complaints about parking during basketball games. He said he knew of no proposals or meetings which addressed the issue of parking during games.
See PARKING, p. 5, col. 4
or parked David Epstein, student body president and member of the parking board, said he had heard students complain about not getting to buildings they needed to study at while there was a basketball game going on.
- 'Getting to classes or to certain facilities on campus is a genuine con-
Parking fees may increase 50 cents for special events
By Leslie Hirschbach Staff writer
A planned 50-cent increase in the cost of parking at athletic and other special events has drawn the criticism of Athletic Department officials.
Members of the Parking Board approved the increase at their Jan. 27 meeting. The decision was among several that will revise KU's parking system.
With the 50-cent increase, the price of football parking would be raised from $2.50 to $3 a space each game, and the price of basketball parking would be raised from $1.50 to $2.
The money comes from the Williams Fund, which, in addition to parking fees, pays for athletic scholarships by collecting donations, he said.
Richard Konzem, assistant athletic director, said the KU athletic department paid a fee to University parking services for parking spaces used during athletic events.
Monte Johnson, athletic director,
objected to the planned increase.
Konzem said that in 1987, the
athletic department would pay $70,000 to the parking services. In 1988, the athletic department would pay $90,000 because of the ticket price increase.
"It amounts to $20,000 added expenses for us," he said.
Johnson said the additional fee for the lots around Allen Field House and the football stadium didn't seem large to most people, but would hurt the Athletic Department.
Parking board officials could not be reached for comment.
The motion needs Senex and University Council approval before the increase is carried out.
In other recent action to alter the parking system, the parking board approved a proposed common parking permit for students living in KU residence halls.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said that next fall, a common parking permit for residence halls officially would enable students to park in other residence halls' lots without receiving a ticket.
Stoner said he recommended merging the separate parking permits into a single permit because the parking authorities hadn't been enforcing the rule for the past two years.
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
News Briefs
Boy dies after attack by nine wild dogs
DALLAS — A 6-year-old Texas boy, who was bitten 100 times by a pack of frenzied dogs, died yesterday at a Dallas hospital.
Stephen Mark Flengo Jr. probably died of infection from the bites, said Mary Layman, a Parkland Memorial Hospital spokesman.
He had been in critical condition since the Jan. 22 incident in which nine wild dogs authorities described as crossbreed pit bullterriers attacked him near a pond.
He received 187 pints of blood and underwent surgery several times because of hemorrhaging and complications, hospital spokesman said.
Manson gets hearing
LOS ANGELES — Charles Manson, 51, this week faces his first parole hearing in three years for the 1969 Tate-LaBianca cult murders.
Manson and four of his followers were convicted of the slayings and sentenced to death in 1971. In 1972, the California Supreme Court overturned the state's deathpenalty law and commuted their sentences to life in prison.
Monday, Feb. 3 1986
Manson has been refused parole at least five times, most recently in 1982. Officials expect the same outcome Tuesday in the parole hearing at San Quentin Prison.
Rivals seek support
The two men are considered rivals for the support of the religious right in the race for the Republican presidential nomination. Neither has declared a candidacy.
WASHINGTON — Television evangelist M. G. "Pat" Robertson and Vice President George Bush this week will address the National Religious Broadcasters — an influential conservative group.
Robertson last week told a meeting of the Conservative Political Action Committee that he was not yet sure whether he would run.
From Kansan wires
55 Haitians killed in two-day protest
United Press International
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Security forces have killed at least 55 people in two days of protests against President-for-life Jean-Claude Duvalier, doctors said yesterday, contradicting government reports that only 16 had died.
Although the capital appeared calm yesterday, a government spokesman described conditions in the impoverished Caribbean nation as confused and uncertain.
Doctors at Port-au-Prince General Hospital, defying government orders to remain silent, said the bodies of at least 55 people killed by security forces had been brought to the hospital since rioting erupted in the capital Friday following rumors
Duvalier had been deposed and fled the country.
One doctor, who asked not to be named, said at least 48 people were killed in the unrest Friday and Saturday, and seven people died yesterday.
"We have orders not to talk to journalists" the doctor said. "But I'm telling you this because people should know it."
"There must be many more. This is just the number that have passed through the hospital," the doctor said.
The report by the hospital sources could not be independently confirmed, and a government spokesman refused to comment on the higher figures, saying that he knew only of the deaths already reported.
Officials at the government-run General Hospital previously had said that only 16 people had been killed by security forces — eight in the capital, four more in Leagane, about 50 miles south of Port-au-Prince, and four in St. Marc.
Open air markets in the capital were crowded yesterday morning with colorfully dressed Haitian women selling fruits, clothes and other goods, but most stores in the city's center were tightly boarded, and patrols of police, soldiers and militias kept watch on the city.
There was no report on conditions outside Port-au-Prince, where
looting and anti-government protests have erupted every day since security forces killed three people Jan. 26. The government declared a state of siege Friday.
Mayer said the request that foreign journalists stay in the capital was not an order, just a recommendation.
Information Ministry spokesman Guy Mayer said journalists and other foreigners were being asked not to travel outside of Port-au-Prince for security reasons.
There are about 200 foreign journalists in the capital, where tourism has virtually been brought to a halt in recent years by reports that the disease Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome entered the United States from Haiti.
Philippine faction denounces election
United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — An estimated 6,000 leftists marched to the presidential palace yesterday, burned effigies of Ferdinand Marcos and President Reagan and denounced Friday's presidential election as a sham.
Opposition candidate Corazon Aquino, calling Marcos a coward, led a motorcade through Batangas Province, south of Manila, and voiced her fears of fraud in the election.
Marcos supporters crisscrossed Manila in a mammoth motorcade.
The march on Marcos' Malacanang Palace was organized by Bayan — a national alliance of leftist
groups boycotting the election because its members believe neither candidate represents the Filipino people.
The placard-waving, leftist demonstrators marched through central Manila until they were stopped short of the palace by coils of barbed wire. Behind the wire, 200 police and marines brandished automatic weapons and riot shields.
Just short of the wire barricade, several masked demonstrators set fire to effigies of Marcos and Reagan. Youths with sticks smashed the severed head of the Marcos effuiy.
"The dictatorship can only be toppled, not by sham elections, but in direct confrontation by the oppressed masses with the dictatorship," said
Father Joe Dizon, a Roman Catholic priest and Bayan leader.
Bayan claims to represent 1.5 million people and has been denounced by Marcos as a communist front. It favors the dismantling of U.S. military bases in the Philippines.
Nearby, several thousand people in cars, buses, and jeeps festooned with Marcos banners took part in a noisy motorcade through the capital.
Meatpackers refuse to vote; Guard protection considered
"We're sure winners," said Aquino, widow of opposition leader and Marcos archrival Benigno Aquino, who was assassinated in 1983. "We just pray for a clean election."
The Marcos motorcade was rivaled by a similar daylong Aquino caravan in Batangas Province.
The Associated Press
AUSTIN, Minn. — Striking Hormel meatpackers rejected pleas that they vote a third time on a proposed settlement with the company, and Gov. Rudy Perpich considered yesterday whether to return National Guardmen to the plant to protect people crossing picket lines.
third time on a federal mediator's proposal.
Paul Goldberg, director of the state Bureau of Mediation Services, said, "I don't know at what point you lose a labor dispute. I would certainly not be encouraged if I were a P-9 member."
About 1,500 Hormel workers have been on strike since Aug. 17.
Members of Local P-9 of the United Food and Commercial Workers union, on strike against Geo. A. Hormel & Co. for 5½ months, rejected a plea from Peripch and decided Saturday night against voting a
P-9 President Jim Guyette said after the vote by about 900 union members, "It wasn't questioned by anyone, nor was it even close. We weighed the pros and cons. The pros, if there were any, were that the strike would be over. Personally, I didn't have any pros. Mine were all cons."
Perpich was expected to decide whether National Guard troops, stationed in Austin since Jan. 21 but moved to an armory last week, would return to the plant when it opened today, press aide Gerry Nelson said.
Union members met Saturday to discuss a report by neutral factfinder Arnold Zack.
Pro-choice groups to back rebellious Catholic clergy
WASHINGTON — Defenders of a group of Roman Catholic nuns and priests who are under fire from the Vatican for signing a 1984 abortion-related ad, said yesterday they would publish a new statement next month declaring solidarity with the nuns.
United Press International
"It was a difficult decision for the committee but we are deeply concerned by the growing repression of dissent in the church," said Frances Kissling, executive director of Catholics for a Free Choice.
Kissling is on a seven-member steering panel of the Committee of Concerned Catholics, formed by signers of the original advertisement and others after the Vatican
ordered 28 priests and nuns to retract their participation.
That statement, signed by 97 prominent Catholics, argued, "A diversity of opinion regarding abortion exists among committed Catholics" and, "A large number of Catholic theologians hold that even direct abortion, though tragic, can sometimes be a moral choice."
The ad, published in the New York Times, came less than a month before the presidential election. Geralda Ferraro, the Democratic vice president candidate, is Catholic and was attacked by conservatives for saying that while she personally was against abortion, she was, as a member of Congress, in favor.
ATHENS, Greece — The head of the American-Arab Relations Committee defied President Reagan's order banning Americans from traveling to Libya and went to the north African nation yesterday for a lecture tour.
Mohammed Medhi, president of the New York-based committee, flew to Libya from Athens yesterday and said the few Americans remaining there in defiance of Reagan's order were preparing a U.S.'s court appeal*
United Press International
"Americans here share my view that the president's order is unconstitutional and we will plan a strategy for their fight in court," he said in a telephone interview from Tripoli, the Libyan capital.
"They are preparing an appeal to both President Reagan and Libyan leader, Col. Moammar Khadafy, to find a way to settle their differences," he said. "We think there is the rule of law in the United States."
Medhi, a 58-year-old Iraqi-born American, traveled to Libya for a week of lectures and to make contacts with Americans and Libyan government officials. Medhi is a political scientist and taught at the University of California, Berkeley.
"I am the first American to go there and President Reagan's order could not restrain me because it is unconstitutional," Medhi said before leaving Athens for Libya.
Lecturer disobeys Libva ban
Reagan severed commercial links, with Libya last month, froze Libyan government assets in the United States and ordered Americans in Libya to leave by Feb. 1 or face stiff fines and tail terms.
Reagan said he ordered the punitive sanctions because of irrefutable evidence linking Libya to the Palestinian terror attacks at airports in Rome and Vienna. Dec. 27 which left 20 people dead, including five Americans.
Authorities investigating the virtually simultaneous attacks suspect they were carried out by the Palestinian terror faction Abu Nidal.
Western diplomatic sources in Libya said most of the estimated 1,500 Americans in Libya had left but that a few remained. Most Americans in Libya worked in the north African nation's crucial oil industry.
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SLICE-O-LIFE
Ski Trip
Pyramid has been collecting names all semester for our fabulous ski trip. The winner will be announced in Tuesday's paper.
THE 5 FINALISTS ARE:
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Ann Kelly
Jill John
Selina Jackson
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Monday, Feb. 3 1986
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
3
News Briefs
KU student raped; suspect in custody
A 21-year-old KU student was raped at knifepoint early Friday morning after accepting a ride home from a man at a North Lawrence private club, Lawrence police said. Police have a suspect in custody at Douglas County jail.
Police said the victim met the suspect when he offered to take her home because she fell ill. The suspect took her to 31st and Kasold streets, held a knife to her throat and then raped her, police said.
The woman was able to persuade the suspect to take her home, police said. On the way, they stopped at a convenience store in the 2500 block of Iowa Street for cigarettes. While in the store, the victim told the store clerk to call the police and the suspect then fled.
Police apprehended the suspect at 25th and Kasold streets. The victim identified the suspect at the scene, police said. The suspect is being held on $20,000 bond, according to jail records.
Car windows broken
Police said the windows were broken between 11:30 p.m. m. Thursday and 12:05 a.m. Friday.
Thieves broke windows in nine automobiles causing an estimated $2,000 damage in the residential hull overflow parking lot on West Campus, KU police said Friday.
Nothing was stolen in most of the break-ins, police said. A toolbox, tools and speakers valued together at $700 were stolen from one car. Twenty cassette tapes valued at $180 were stolen from another car.
KU police have no suspects, said Lt. Jeanne Longaker.
The thieves apparently 'vere amateurs because they didn't steal many items, she said.
Program offers aid
The fund was established by Pearson, a former U.S. senator from Kansas, to help students gain a wide education in order to cope with a changing world.
Financial assistance for graduate students who want to study abroad is available through the James B. Pearson Fellowship program.
'Stipends usually range from $1,500 to $2,000.
Information about applications, application procedure and eligibility is available through the financial aid, graduate school and study abroad offices.
Weather
Today will be cloudy with a 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms and a high temperature around 50. Winds will be from the northeast at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a low in the mid-30s. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high of 45 to 50.
Where to call
readers who have ideas for stories or photographs can call the Kansan newsroom at 864-4810.
For ideas about campus and area coverage, ask for Cindy McCurry, campus editor. For magazine ideas ask for Sharon Rosse, magazine editor. For arts and entertainment ideas or On Campus items, ask for Jill White, arts editor.
For sports, ask for Dave Giles,
sports editor. For photographs,
ask for Brice Waddill, photo
editor.
For questions or complaints, ask for Michael Totty, editor, or Lauretta McMillen, managing editor.
The Student Senate will consider allocating $293 next week to the Rocky and Bullwinkle Fan Club for the support of The KU Travesty, a satirical magazine published by the club.
Senators disagree whether to finance magazine
From staff and wire reports.
By Piper Scholfield
Staff writer
however, at least one student senator considers the magazine offensive and doesn't think it should be financed with Senate money.
Brian Pyle, Hutchinson freshman and co-presenter of the Rocky and Bollwinkle Fan Club, said the magazine was published twice last
semester at the expense of the members. If Student Senate approves financing, the money will be sufficient to publish 2,000 copies of two more issues, he said.
The club, formed specifically to publish the magazine, distributes it free.
But Gordon Woods, chairman of the Senate Cultural Affairs Committee, said he opposed financing the KU Travesty because the magazine contained material that could be offensive to some students.
Woods. "I'm not personally offended, but I could see how some people could be."
"The whole thing, as far as I'm concerned, is worthless," said
In its first two issues, the magazine, two to four pages long, mocked residence hall food, President Reagan and Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, for example.
No one should take the KU Travessy seriously, said Pyle. Beneath the title of the magazine are the words, "no cows," meaning the magazine holds no subject sacred, he said.
Some student senators defended financing the magazine in the name of freedom of the press.
Ruth Lichtwardt, holdover senator, said KU Travesty should receive Senate financing because it is a student publication, not on the basis of its content.
"We shouldn't be the censors, we should just provide the forum," she said.
David Epstein, student body president, said that before financing the magazine, Student Senate would seek legal help to determine whether it could be held liable for statements made in the magazine.
no complaints about the content of the magazine. About four people had requested to write for the magazine.
Pyle said that since the initial publication last fall, he had received
Michael Butler, associate professor of English and adviser to the Rocky and Bullwinkle Fan Club, said KU Travesty should receive the same press freedom as any other publication on campus. He described the magazine as an "all-points-covered satire magazine."
The magazine does not attempt to attack any single sector of the student population, Butler said. Any group is up for criticism.
February brings rain to parched Lawrence
By Tim Hrenchir
Staff writer
Although January proved to be one of the driest months on record in Lawrence, February brought with it rain and a dense fog that covered northeast Kansas yesterday.
The fog is expected to continue throughout today with highs in the 40s and 50s, the National Weather Service in Topeka said yesterday.
Last month, residents experienced the driest January on record, while temperatures were the warmest in more than 100 years, the KU Weather Service said.
Kisner said the fog was caused by warm, moist winds from the south
The showers that hung over the city this weekend were accompanied by a dense fog that dropped visibility to zero in Topeka last night, said Steven Kisner, meteorological technician for the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Aaron Smith, weather observer for the KU Weather Service, said Lawrence received no measurable precipitation last month and the city's total rainfall was a trace.
The dry spell was broken Saturday as .01 inch of rain fell on Lawrence. The city hadn't received any measurable precipitation since Dec. 20. 1985, when .01 inch of snow fell
combining with cold, moist air in the area.
Although Kisner said the weather service might issue a traveler's advisory because of the fog, the Kansas Highway Patrol reported no increase in traffic accidents last night.
The rain and fog ended a record-breaking dry spell. Since the National Weather Service have kept records, only two months besides this January have seen no measurable precipitation.
Crain Sanders/KANSAN
--expansion.
January temperatures also set records, Smith said. January's average temperature of 40 was the second highest on record, eclipsed only by a mark that was registered 106 years ago. A meteorological summary prepared by a KU professor in 1800 said the mean temperature that January was 41.23, he said.
The city's average high temperature during January was 52.3, more than 14 degrees above normal. Average precipitation for January is 1.11 inches.
Fog and rain didn't keep these fishermen from enjoying a day on the lake. They were fishing yesterday afternoon or Lake Perry.
The warm weather should continue, forecasters said, but the dry spell will probably come to an end.
The average high temperature in
Kisner said February's forecast called for above normal temperatures and average precipitation for northeast Kansas.
February is 43 degrees, while the month's average precipitation is 1.05 inches.
Workers at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Cressd Rc., used January's warm, dry weather to make progress on a roof they were constructing as part of a church and student center renovation and
Bill Griffin, job superintendent for the project, said workers didn't miss a day during the month.
Griffin said Friday, "We could stand a lot of days like we've had, at least until we get the roof on this thing and get it closed in. Then it can blow for awhile."
Allen Wiechert, KU's director of facilities planning, said the weather had aided construction work on a housing maintenance shop on west campus.
Variety show to dance to tax tune
"We lost a lot of time to cold and wet weather last November and December," Weichert said.
By a Kansan reporter
The Rock Chalk Reve will have to start paying sales tax on ticket sales for 1986, said John Allison, executive director of the show.
Allison said that since the money the show raised was donated to charity, the organizers had never paid sales taxes. The organizers didn't know charities weren't exempt from paying sales tax on tickets.
The annual variety show com-
prises ten campus living groups,
usually greek houses. Part of ticket
proceeds go to the Lawrence United
Way. This year's shows will be Feb.
27, 28 and March 1 at Hoch
Auditorium.
Allison said he expected the 33-year-old show to bring in a total of about $18,000. Rental of Hoch will come out of the total.
The University comproller's office told this year's organizers that the show would have to begin paying the tax.
Then, 50 percent of the proceeds is donated to the Lawrence United Fund, 40 percent goes back to the living groups that participate in the show to cover their expenses, and the other 10 percent is used for next year's show.
The show will be audited in a few months, and at that time, back taxes may be assessed, Allison said. If back taxes do have to be paid, the show will take money from this year's proceeds to pay them.
The ticket prices are $4, $5 and $7. After ticket sales close, the organizers will remove the tax percentage, about 3 percent, Allison said. The sales tax shouldn't affect the $8,000 pledge the organizers plan to give to the Lawrence United Fund, he said.
Bill McGowan, the show's business director, said he was upset that a charity had to pay sales tax, but it had to be done.
McGowan said the organizers were cutting spending as much as possible to ensure the show would meet its pledge to the United Fund.
Silence surrounds reactor center
Security was tight around the Nuclear Reactor Center yesterday morning, but officials would not comment on the reason for the security measures.
Harold Rosson, professor of chemical and petroleum and coordinator of the reactor's dismantling process, said yesterday that he would not be able to comment about the reactor for 10 days.
Rosson would not comment on the security measures, or whether the security was in connection with the removal of uranium-235 from the reactor last Tuesday.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker of the KU Police Department would not comment on the number of officers involved in the security measures at the reactor.
and set up road blocks in front of the driveway area. Police would not allow entrance into the building.
A flatbed truck carrying a large, seemingly concrete, cask was parked in the loading area of the center.
Staff writer
KU Police cordoned off an area around the center yesterday morning
Police officers would not comment on the security or the presence of the flatbed truck.
By Grant W. Butler
Security was eased after the truck left the center at about 11:30 a.m.
Regulatory Commission regulations require the restriction of any information dealing with the transportation of hazardous materials, she said.
Robin Eversole, director of University Relations, said she could not discuss the nature of the security at the reactor center. Nuclear
"You must understand that security measures of this nature are confidential," she said.
Staff writer
Security measures and the confidentiality are not because of a fear of terrorists, she said, but to protect the public from hazardous materials.
Information about the activity at the reactor center will be available to the public by the middle of the month, Eversole said.
Yesterday's security measures were similar to ones taken last Tuesday when nuclear materials were transferred from the reactor center by a crane.
Students lead Girl Scouts far beyond selling cookies
By Abbie Jones
Imagine taking charge of a bunch of Girl Scouts every Saturday morning. One wants to go to the zoo, one wants some punch and one wants her wilderness badge.
Several busy KU women take time out of their schedules to show Lawrence girls that there is more to Girl Scouts than cookies.
"The purpose is to help young girls see their world," said Kristen Henderson, Lawrence senior and assistant troop leader. "For girls, it's especially important to show them that they can do whatever they want to do. There are no limits."
Henderson, who started as a Brownie when she was in second grade, now manages a Junior Girl Scout troop of 10- to 12-year-old girls from Cordley Elementary School. She has led one Saturday morning excursion to Lindley Hall to see Halley's comet and is planning several projects for the girls to earn badges.
"I see this as a way of returning some of the things I had," said Henderson. "It's a way of teaching and learning at the same time."
To earn a wildlife badge, the girls must go to Clinton Lake, a park, or river to learn about nature. For a home-living badge, the girls must make something that records their family history or spend time with a senior citizen. Each badge has about 10 requirements and is sewn on the traditional green-felt vest, Henderson said.
"The badge is kind of the pat on the back," she said. "The important thing is doing the activities."
Girl Scuits is broken up into four groups for girls of different ages, Henderson said. Brownies is for second and third graders, Juniors for fourth through sixth graders, Cadets for seventh through ninth graders and Seniors for high school-age girls.
Mariana Remple, who leads a senior scout troop called the Mariners, said Girl Scouts was a place for women with a sense of adventure.
The Mariners sponsor water-related activities. Another troop called Mounted primarily rides horses, she said. These groups are for the older women who are members themselves.
"Girls who remain in scouting are very service-oriented." Remple said.
Lynda Kieffer, Lawrence senior who has been involved in Mariners for seven years, spent a week caneeing in the boundary waters between Minnesota and Canada. She also took weekend river trips in the Ozarks.
Remple said Lawrence was part of the Kaw Valley Girl Scout Council, which covers 13 northeast Kansas counties. There are about 10 councilis in the state. The Canada trip usually draws girls from across Kansas.
Jennifer Owen, Lawrence freshman, said KU women not affiliated with the Kaw Valley Council might have their own organization if there was interest. Owen is in the process of starting Campus Girl Scouts.
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4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Monday, Feb. 3 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Kansas Public Employees Retirement System found that it can do good and still make money.
Morality making money
KPERS voted in September to divest its holdings in U.S. companies that have investments in South Africa but have not signed the Sullivan Principles — voluntary guidelines that require companies to provide equality in the workplace.
Because KPERS happened to sell the divested stock during a bull market, it managed to turn a $1 million to $2 million profit on its $26 million in divested holdings.
Not all investment funds can expect to turn such a quick profit from divestment, of course. A KPERS official estimated that in a normal
market, earning a similar profit from divesting-might take as long as two years.
The argument has been that using divestment to make a statement against South African apartheid may be good politics, but bad economics.
But KPERS unexpected success should counter arguments by the Kansas University Endowment Association that divestment is unprofitable and imprudent.
Instead, the imprudent decision is waiting to divest until the inevitable collapse of aparthied. Those investment funds who, like KPERS, decide to sell their South African holdings now when it is profitable have made the prudent business, and political, decision.
Five months ago, Meese proposed a presidential order to eliminate all minority hiring goals and timetables required for government contractors, suggesting that affirmative action equaled discrimination.
But Meese says affirmative action amounts to illegal racial quotas and is an insult to women and minorities who should be able to rise on their merit.
Attorney General Edwin Meese III needs to rephrase his definition of discrimination.
Keep affirmative action
Labor Secretary William Brock blocked the proposal and defended the Labor Department program, which is enforced by a 1965 executive order. Brock applauded the departmental program because of its effectiveness in increasing minority hiring.
Yes, it may be so that women and minorities can rise on their own performances, but in many cases, it's getting their feet through the door that poses the problem.
Without such affirmative action programs, those women and minorities might not even have the chance to prove their merit.
But how many opportunities have women and minorities lost out to the "Old Boy" system, which is another form of discrimination?
No one can say discrimination simply ceased to exist with the close of the civil rights movement of the '60s.
Some, such as Alan Bakke,
have cried reverse discrimination
upon losing opportunities
to minorities or women.
No woman or minority wants to be hired simply because she is a woman or he is a minority. But without such affirmative action programs, they might not be hired simply because she is a woman or he is a minority.
Weinberger is right
It's hard to cast Caspar Weinberger as a dove, but in the debate over the use of retributive force against countries that back terrorism, he has assumed that role.
More power to him.
Weinberger, as secretary of defense, might be expected to be out for blood, but he has argued for the more sane approach of caution.
A hastily planned strike, he has warned, would kill the innocent along with the guilty and undermine U.S. interests in the Middle East. There also is the danger that retaliatory strikes would inflame a desire for revenge among terrorists, which could result in more deaths of innocent Americans.
Added to Weinberger's considerations is the knowledge that in violating international law with the use of such force, the United States would be as guilty as the countries that back terrorism.
tacks on Rome and Vienna, State Department sources have revealed, Shultz urged President Reagan to strike at targets in Libya.
On the other hand, Secretary of State George Shultz, the official who is supposed to stand for diplomacy, has argued for a tough U.S. stand against terrorism. After the terrorist at-
This in-house fighting among Cabinet members dwarfs the vacillation in the White House on the issue.
Last year, Reagan appointed a special task force, headed by Vice President George Bush, to examine terrorism. There was hope expressed that the task force would define what form of retribution might be appropriate, but apparently that hasn't happened.
Reagan finally took a stand on the issue when he opted for economic sanctions against Libya rather than military solutions. Let's hope he sticks with Weinberger on this one.
The report won't be made public until next month, but Bush aides are saying that it neither rules out nor supports the use of retributive force.
Peace-loving countries should not stoop to the use of retaliatory strikes. Getting an eye for an eye isn't worth the deaths of innocent people.
Madonna reviving sexual revolution
Mention the word feminism on campus today and you are most likely to produce evasion from the student population lest its proponents be aligned with those bra-burning women of the 1970s.
Curiously, this connection comes from a most unlikely source — a female rock/movie star who makes black lace and a crucifix her trademarks. From the discotheques of New York City, Madonna's career makes women's sexuality a modern-day topic.
it is a much quieter campus in 1986, now that the Reagan administration has had six long years to make conservatism a badge worth displaying.
Evidence of her influence can be found daily in almost all classroom.
But whether or not one chooses to acknowledge feminism, there is at least one visible marker that KU women have not totally forsaken the ideal of sexual equality, although they probably won't call it feminism.
Jennifer Roblez
Staff columnist
Who else could make women's underwear, including bras, a fashionable statement about what it means to be a woman today?
The answer, though, is becoming more than a choice in fashion.
Madonna is the 1980s' version of the sexual revolution.
In a May 27, 1985 interview with Time magazine, Madonna said, "To call me an anti-feminist is ludicrous. Some people have said that I'm setting women back 30 years. Well, I think in the '50s, women weren't ashamed of their bodies. I think they luxuriated in their sexuality and being strong in their femininity.
"I think that is better than hiding and saying, 'I'm strong,' just like
a man.' Women aren't like men. They do things that men can't do.'
Whether one approves or disapproves of Madonna's music or fashion, she raises a question that is the cornerstone of feminism: Why should a woman's sex keep her from achieving political, economic and social equality with men?
Perhaps not since Kate Millett's Sexual Politics appeared in 1969 has today's woman had a chance to review what more committed women have known all along — that one's sex is a category loaded with implications beyond the mere biological.
According to Millett, "What goes largely unexamined, often even unacknowledged (yet is institutionalized nonetheless) in our social order, is the birthright priority whereby males rule females."
She also writes, "However muted its present appearance may be, sexual dominion remains nevertheless
as perhaps the most pervasive ideology of our culture and provides its most fundamental concept of power."
This is the same sexual domain that Madonna has turned upside down with her brazen sexuality that seems to signify sexiness and freedom at the same time.
10 some. Madonna's way of life may not qualify as feminism, but the significance of her image on society certainly confronts many stereotypes. The biggest of these is that to be sexy, to be a woman, means living a subordinate life.
The Madonna personality is contrary to subordination, and her success is obvious proof that many find it appealing enough to imitate.
But none of this is new. The ideal of sexual liberation is as old as the Victorian age. No matter how you "dress it up," it's still the same struggle.
SOVIET BUREAU OF CENSORSHIP
HAS ABC SENT NEXT WEEKS TV SCHEDULE YET?
Suing becoming big business in U.S.
"I'll sue!"
It's heard all the time in the United States, and frequently practiced. In fact, it seems to have become America's favorite pastime.
Our universities are producing more lawyers than we'll ever need, and the overflow has to go somewhere. And lawsuits are an ever-increasing social norm.
You can be sued for just about anything these days. Some examples:
In 1970, a San Francisco woman was awarded $50,000 because she claimed a cable car accident transformed her into a nymphomaniac.
In 1978, a California man sued his date when she failed to show up. He sued for "breach of oral contract." His lawyer said his client was "not the type of man to take standing up lying down." The man lost the suit.
Two Chinese organizations are suing director Michael Cimino for $100 million because they say the movie "Year of the Dragon" unfairly portrays Chinese-Americans. They also want the movie banned — something called censorship.
42.
McDonald's Corporation is being sued by the families of the victims who were stained by crazed gunman James Huberty, last year, in a McDonald's in San Ysidro, California. In that incident 21 people were slain before Huberty was killed by police.
Victor Goodpasture
Staff columnist
MARKTAPPLE
The plaintiffs argue that McDonald's didn't provide adequate protection to its customers. And if that wasn't enough, defendants in the case are the police department, the mayor, the phone company, a television helicopter pilot, a gun manufacturer and a gun magazine. The reasoning is that somebody must be liable.
Staff columnist
In fact, the suing business has expanded so rapidly that lawyers are now suing each other.
Newsweek reported last semester that lawyers are abandoning the old ethic that lawyers don't attack one another. The magazine said, "In part, the increase may be due to the growth in the number of lawyers."
This situation has created a whole new type of lawyer — one who defends a lawyer from lawsuits filed by other lawyers.
A current bizarre lawsuit, in San Francisco, deals with a well-known personal injury lawyer, Melvin Belli. Last year, a jury returned a $5.8 million verdict against his law firm for negligence. But Belli has come back with an even more bizzarre strategy — he will sue the lawyers in his own firm who he says made the mistakes.
Lawyers have always been especially tricky people. They can come up with the most ridiculous defenses for people who have committed horrible crimes.
In fact, the suing business has expanded so rapidly that lawyers are now suing each other.
One such case is the famous "Twinkie defense," where politician Dan White murdered San Francisco mayor George Moscone and city council member Harvey Milk in 1978.
White's lawyers claimed that White was under the influence of junk food, and thus wasn't responsible for his actions. The jury bought the argument and White received a five-year sentence.
In the Dec. 9, 1985 issue of Insight magazine, new studies published by the National Education Association and conducted by major U.S. and Canadian research universities "give substantial . . . support to the assertion that sugar neither causes hyperactivity nor triggers hyperactive episodes."
Lawyers, again, have pulled the wool over the eyes of justice.
Only hours after the chemical leak in Bhopal, India — which killed 2,000
and injured 200,000 — was announced,
lawyers were flying to India to get their hand in the Union Carbide
cookie jar.
The pride of America — international ambulance chasers.
It was at this point when used car salesmen and pawnshop dealers rose above lawyers on the ethics scale.
above lawyers on the ethics scale.
Face it, lawyers never were
interested in justice. Just "my client
right or wrong."
No one denies that everyone has the right to a fair trial with a competent lawyer. But when a murderer is set free on a technicality and the lawyer has neatly lined his own pocket, the public cries for justice.
A recent column in the Washington Inquirer reported about a California burglar who fell through a school skylight and was paralyzed. He wore $260,000 from the school. The column nist noted: "The moral is to burgl, home and businesses where you might develop a good lawsuit."
Jean Giraudoux wrote in "The Madwoman of Chaillot," "You're an attorney. It's your duty to lie, conceal and distort everything, and slander everybody."
In Shakespeare's Henry VI, Par II,
the butcher says, "The first thirst we do, we kill all the lawyers."
A bit extreme, because if that wre to happen, who would defend m when I suggest Green Hall be turned into a shelter for obsessive Twinkie eaters?
News staff.
Michael Totty ... Editor
Lauretta McMillen ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry ... Campus editor
David Giles ... Sports editor
Brice Wardill ... Photo editor
Benise Show ... General manager, news adviser
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nixon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Lori Eckart ... Classified manager
Caroline Innes ... Production manager
Vallien Lee ... National manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
Business staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone 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 fewer than 700 words. The
writer will be required reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newroom, 111 Stuart-Flint Hall.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 68045.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuffer-First Flight, Lawton, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and on Wednesday during the summer. Students are welcome to register for the course. Subscriptions by mail are $13 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months and $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity tee.
Mailbox
In defense of rally
This letter is in response to the letter "Rally tactics insulting" (Kansas, Jan. 28). I, too, was "forced to walk through demonstrators who had crowded onto the walkways in front of the Kansas Union." Aside from the fact that the participants were holding signs or holding out pamphlets for those interested to take, it was no different from the small crowds in front of the Union on any day.
The writer spoke of her distaste for pictures of bloody fetuses and the involvement of young children in rallies. If a person is not offended by the fact that people are murdered on demand for the mothers' convenience, then that person should not be offended by a pictorial reminder of
their choice. (I would like to add that "convenience" is the only abortion need being served since the law was changed, since they were allowed previously in cases of rape, incest or when the mother's life was endangered.)
As to any "lack of judgment and ethics" demonstrated by parents who involve their children in rallies, the writer might be reminded that part of being a parent is instilling in that child the beliefs and values that one holds. Teaching their children to act upon their beliefs and live up to their social responsibilities should not be seen as a fault.
Lastly, I would like to mention that violent responses from persons unable to cope with issues and their emotions are present in every aspect of society, and should be view as an
Elizabeth Van Mol
Kansas City, Kah. sophomore
individual problem and not condoned by the group with which it is affiliated.
Racial I.D. not needed
Why did the Kansan identify the participants by color? Since all of the participants are in custody, such identification cannot aid in their
Under the byline of Brian Whepley, the Jan. 28 Kansan carried a rather muddled front-page story about a white gunshot victim, a black stabbing victim, a second black man whose involvement was unknown, plus one eyewitness and nine Lawrence police officers assigned to the case, all of unknown color or race.
apprehension.
Indeed, nowhere else on the front page is anyone identified by color. And an article on page seven, dealing with a multi-vicifum assault case, makes no mention of the race of the accused, n of the victims.
Perhap e Kansan wished to resurrect an old tradition in U. journalism which has faded always identify blacks whenever crime or violence is involved. I hope that this is not true. When part of full description — height, weight build, color of eyes and hair — identity of color is appropriate.
In the circumstances of the Jan. article, however, it is not. I believe that such specious racial designations deserve to be buried along wit Jim Crow.
David M. Katzma professor of histo
Monday, Feb. 3 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Shuttle
Continued from p. 1
that join the base of the 149-foot rocket to the external tank. The rocket normally is severed from the tank by explosive bolts when the rocket burns out two minutes after launch.
Challenger exploded 73 seconds after launch, and tracking pictures
released by NASA Saturday night showed what was described as an unusual plume 58.32 seconds after launch. The first clear indication of flame from the wall of the booster came 1.5 seconds later.
NASA sources said there was evidence, however, of something ab
normal occurring even earlier in the flight.
Continued from p. 1
Art
"It's one link in the chain," said Gil Moore, spokesman for the Morton-Thiolok Wasatch Division which built the booster in Brigham City, Utah. "But we don't know whether it's the beginning link of the chain.
work had increased by at least half since 1954.
"It would assume that a $10,000 painting would be worth roughly $15,000 now, and it could be higher," he said.
If the values have increased by half, the total value of paintings
alone has increased to $297,000, in-
creasing the total amount in stock
— paintings, rugs and the chandelier
— to $321,000.
Jay Gates, director of the Spencer Museum of Art, said there were many nice paintings in storage, but none were of museum quality.
Most of the items the Pearson estate donated to the University have been put on display in the Pearson residence and scholarship halls.
Last semester, the department of student housing began the process of taking paintings out of storage and putting them on display.
Booster
Early shuttle flights had many more sensors to verify booster performance, but officials said those development instruments were removed to save weight after several flights demonstrated the boosters performed as expected.
"These very heavy steel casings that constitute the structure of the
Continued from p. 1
Parking
solid rocket boosters are some of the sturdiest parts of the entire shuttle system," said acting NASA chief William Graham.
Spokesman John Lawrence at the Houston space center said the booster systems officer in mission control, Jerry L. Borer, saw nothing unusual in the chamber pressure data displayed on his console.
A vital supplement to the shuttle's three main liquid-fuel engines, the boosters were designed to generate 3.3 million pounds of thrust and provide 71 percent of the lifting power at
After 24 successful shuttle flights, he said, the boosters were considered primary structure not susceptible to failure and there was no reason to instrument them against incredible failure modes.
launch. Two minutes into the flight, they are supposed to break away and parachute back into the ocean for refurbishment and reuse.
Each booster has a steel outer skin packed with fuel that resembles hard rubber and is made of ammonium perchlorate, aluminum and iron oxide bound together.
The boosters are such a fundamental part of the shuttle, Graham said in televised interviews on NBC, ABC and CBS, that the failure of Challenger's booster Tuesday was like the wing falling off an airplane.
Continued from p. 1
cern," Epstein said. "But if parking services won't address it there's not much that can be done."
James Holt, Topeka second-year law student and member of the traffic board, said he thought the parking issue on game nights had not been addressed by parking services because most students just grumbled about the parking problem. He said there had not been a comprehensive and cohesive complaint to the right sources.
Traffic board is a court comprised of law students who will hear parking
ticket complaints.
Holt said most people didn't think ahead and were suddenly surprised to find all parking spots taken because there was a basketball game they didn't know was scheduled. The students then often complain to the KU police officers or to the people working in the parking fines office in Hoch Auditorium.
Students who have a legitimate parking complaint should get together, Holt said, and appeal to parking services. Then if parking services does not address the problem they can appeal to the parking board.
Holt said the best way of getting anything done was probably for the students to go to their schools with their complaints. The schools, Holt said, can apply for special passes for their students.
Holt said it wasn't just the basketball games which caused parking probems. Concerts and plays in Murphy Hall also cluttered parking lots on certain evenings.
SPRING BREAK SPECIAL
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SUA FEBRUARY EVENTS
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUN.
2
- Orienteering Workshop
16
• Film—The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter
MON.
- Film—The Gods Must Be Crazy
3
* Film—The Fly
* Strat-o-matic—6:30 (Parkor C)
* P.M. Deadline
Steamboat Trip
* Gallery Display
10
* Strat-o-matic—6:30 (Parlor C)
* Film—Secret Honor
TUE.
24
17
• Strat-o-matic—6.30 (Parlor C)
• Film—Them
4
* Strat-o-matic—8:30
(Parker C)
* Film—Seventeen
* Film-The Shop on Main Street
* Chess Club—7 p.m.
(Trail Room)
* College Quiz Bowl
11
- Chess Club—7 p.m.
(Trail Room)
- Film—Secret
Honor
WED.
25
18
- Chess—7 p.m.
(Trail Club)
- Film—Barrier
5
• Film—The King and I
• KU Salt Club Meeting (Parters, 7 p.m.)
• Dungeons and Dragonas (6:30, Trail Room)
• College Quiz Bowl
12
- Dungeons
- Film—They Drive By Night
- Sail Club
* Chess—7 p.m.
(Trial Room)
* Film—Seventeen
* Concert: Wall of
Voodoo
19
• Dungeons (6:30 Trail Room)
• Film—Modern Times
• Sail Club (Parlors 7 p.m.)
* Dungeons (6:30,
Trail Room)
Fairyland
& About Eve
* Sail Club
(Parlors 7 p.m.)
* Leonardo da
Vinci exhibition
THU.
26
6
• Film—Picnic at Hanging Rock
• Championa Club 6:30 (Trail Room)
13
* Champions
* Film—Kamila
* Speaker: Playboy
Advisor
20
• Champions—6:30
(Trail Room)
27
7
• Films—E.T.; Bad Timing, A Sensual Obsession
• ACU-I Reg.
Tourn —Springfield,
Mo.
FRI.
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6
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Monday. Feb. 3 1986
Louisiana Purchase to expand Lawrence shopping community
By Barbara Shear Staff writer
In 1803, the Louisiana Purchase expanded the United States. In 1986, the Louisiana Purchase will expand the Lawrence shopping community, the developer of the project said yesterday.
The $1.3 million shopping center at 23rd and Louisiana streets is expected to be completed March 15. The center will add 10 new shops and restaurants to Lawrence, said Arvid Zarley, builder and developer of Louisiana Purchase.
Zarley said he thought the center would open by June 1.
Some area merchants,however don't think the new shopping center is needed.
"We don't need another shopping center," said Mary Lou Brown, manager of So-Fro Fabrics, which is in the Malls shopping center, 711 W. 23rd St., across the street from Louisiana Purchase.
"Instead, we could make use of some of the empty buildings around town," she said.
David Billings, leasing agent, said that although no one had signed a lease for the shopping center, many people had expressed an interest in
it. He said that, he and Don Theno, another leasing agent for the center, were now negotiating with a few people and expected to receive leases from them by the end of the week.
Billings said 10 stores could fit into the 25,000 square foot shopping center. Several businesses such as hair salons, sandwich shops, liquor stores and dress shops have expressed an interest in leasing space.
"We will hopefully have one of the nicer shopping centers in the city,"
Zarley agreed, saying that although the other shopping centers in the city have been doing well, a new one would benefit the city.
"Lawrence needs something commercial to back up its residential growth." Zarley said. "A little bit of new life would not hurt Lawrence."
Ed Ash, assistant manager of Godfather's Pizza, also in the Malls shopping center, disagreed.
"We don't need another shopping center, at least at that corner," he said. "It is so congested already."
However, Brown and Ash said they thought the shopping center wouldn't hurt the other businesses in the area.
Brown said she wasn't worried about competition across the street either. Instead, she said she thought it might improve her business.
would put in another pizza place next door."
"It might help in getting people to this end of town." she said.
"There's a Valentino across the street," Ash said. "I don't think they
Gary Toobben, executive vicepresident of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said he didn't think the new shopping area would hurt the other businesses in the area.
"The consumer will determine whether or not another shopping area is needed." he said.
Zarley began working on the new shopping center project in July of 1985. He said he decided to build the shopping center because Lawrence's residential section had expanded and because he thought it would be a profitable venture.
The shopping center is divided in two buildings. The number of stores each building can hold is flexible, Zarley said.
Zarley, said that even though development of the complex was done privately, developers had worked with the city.
"We had to get approval from the city about everything," he said.
Urinalysis reveals more than drug use, also used for detection of health troubles
Attention recently has been given to urinalysis as a means to detect drug use, but the process also can reveal other useful medical information.
By Lynn Maree Ross
Urine tests can detect drugs and indications of diabetes, kidney disease and other health problems, a doctor at the University of Kansas Medical Center said last week.
Aryeh Hurwitz, the doctor and professor of clinical pharmacology, said the Med Center only used two types of tests to detect the presence of drugs in urine, but the number of tests available to check for possible health problems would fill pages in a medical journal.
Lowell Tilzer, a doctor and associate professor of pathology, said the Med Center used thin-layer chromatography and an enzyme assay test, to screen urine for drugs.
The tests, Tilzer said, can detect amphetamines, barbiturates, opiates, antidepressants and tetrahydrocannabinol, the active ingredient in marijuana, but not the amount ingested or inhaled by the user. Blood is required for quantitative tests, he said.
Jack Brown, associate professor of microbiology at KU, said thin-layer chromatography separated compounds on the basis of their physical and chemical properties, such as chemical structure and solubility.
Thin-layer chromatography, he said, is like putting a spot of ink near the end of a paper towel and placing that end in a jar with a small amount of ethanol.
The ink travels up the paper towel as the towel absorbs the ethanol, he said. The ink, moving up the towel with the ethanol, will separate, leaving a line of different colored spots in its path.
In uranalysis, instead of a paper towel, a glass plate
covered with a porous material is used.
Solutions containing reference compounds are run next to the test solutions, in this case urine, Brown said. If a spot left by the test solution lines up even with one in the reference solution, the substance in the urine can be determined.
The tests are reliable, Tilzer said, but false negative results are possible. The drug may be present, he said, but in undetectable quantities.
Because the amount of time that a drug remains detectable in the urine varies from drug to drug, the amount of time elapsed between drug use and testing can be important, Tilzer said. Although opiates only are detectable within hours after use, he said, marijuana is detectable for days or even weeks.
False positive results also are possible, which is the reason for using both thin-layer chromatography and the enzyme test — each test is a check for the other, Tilzer said.
Doctors do not run drug tests routinely, although other types of urine tests are common.
Hurwitz said that in routine physical examinations, doctors checked sugar levels and protein acidity in the urine. An abnormal sugar level can indicate that the patient has diabetes, he said, while an abnormal protein level can indicate kidney disease.
In any case, he said, the results of urine tests only give information about what diseases to check for with more specific tests. While abnormal sugar or protein acidity levels indicated what disease a patient might have, normal sugar or protein levels indicated what diseases could be ruled out.
If a doctor has reason to believe a patient has a particular problem, he said, more specialized tests can be run. However, urine tests can't detect all diseases.
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
7
KU women pledge sororities after rush last month
The following is a list of KU sororites and their 1863 biddle classes. The women pledged the houses after formal rush, Jan 8-13.
Alpha Chi Omega
Suzanne Armatals, Jana Armadio, Jana Bacura, Kurtin Stallery, Abby Blaire, Nicolle Brienneidy, Ciana Campbell, Elizabeth Drumont, Cymbidium Tianba, Emma Fick Till Flanders, Linda Fostersey, Schaer Jannah, Laura Grishman, Laura Heek, Jan Hampton, Jerry Hall, Katherine Kohanine, Jennifer Alysson, Jasperson TraiKee Kenny, Kelly Lisa Kruskind, Laura Lee, Frances Lacson, Andrea Hancock, David Lippincott, Maria Ernault, Eileen Mellor, Tracy Morris, Margaret Donar, Paula Querry, Schreiber Rahume, Anne Tussel, Sheila Scheir, Mercedes Taylor Puckett, Joseph J. Sullivan, Wiesław Wasserman, Susan Zembenz
Alpha Delta Pi
Jannee Hain, Deborah Bregstone, Teresa Buchman, Karen Caddie, Amy Cunningham, Kelly Dunster, Kimberley Ferrer, Tana Ferre Jr. Gordon, Kim Green, Michelle Hardin, Cheryl Behrotz, Krista Hixon, Kimberly Felfy, Krista Gordon, Kim Green, Michelle Hardin, Cheryl Behrotz, Krista Hixon, Kimberly Felfy, Krista Gordon, Kim Green, Michelle Hardin, Neal Lau, Jill M逊er, Mary Moylan, Susan Elizabeth Abbott, Joe Miller, Kai Kuhnain, Elizabeth Abbott Joseph, Jodi Poguski, Keri Rash, Janeine Michelle, Michelle Roberts, Deborah Buchman, Jodie Moll, Kari Hanzib, Tama Rasson, Melanie Rouen, Karen Sanger, Dina Sunga, Kristin Allison Smith, Marcia Strong, Melanie Rouen, Karen Sanger, Dee Donglis, and Stacy Woolf
Alpha Gamma Delta
Amy Barrett, Laura Beehne, Andrea Boyd, Debrah Britton, Daryla Brummer, Kirsten Burgele, Kaly A. Daly, Michael Dentrock, Christine Dodge, Robert Curran, Nicholas Peyh, Faye. Ampy. Shell, Shell Grainberg, Lauria Buira, Paula Hambelman, Shannon Harbarger, Hogan, Dan Schoenfelder, Tara Marnake, Hogan,凯伦 Kim Johnson, Tama Kame.
Kristine Kirsten, Kimberly Kilvonen, Kelly Klassenmeier, Kimberly Klassenman, Susan Kinnell, Mary Larkin, Marie Marie McAbey, Joel McAlewne, Mary Kendall, Julia Keeler, Elizabeth Phillips, Robyn Rolich Henderson, Jennifer Riley, Suzanne Suzannah, Cheryl Kreisner, Kristen McAlewne, Robin Roberts, Nicole Smith, Nicole Soder, Mara Spreelingen, Cami Sprick* Jo Strobel, Lai Staue, Bobur, Kimby Upchurch, Katheryn Walsh and Joulinene
Alpha Omicron Pi
Sarah Ailor, Kari Austen, Katie Brown, Jacqueline Brinkman, Shelly Brown, Cynthia Carlyle, Jody Carver, Barbara Cable, Joe Claymont, Kristi Davenport, Joan Duffey, David Janie Davis, Geoffrey Dearden, Gaylan Dickenshee, Marilyn Douglas, Sarah Fodhun, David Jenkins, Michael Krieger, Heather Green, Sandra Hachinger, Karen Hanson, Cynthia Harper, Janet Hennek, Ann Mackenzie, Christina McDermott, Kleihozel, Leslie Lanning, Liley Angle, Michelle Rae Maloney, Guille McKillip, Leslie Patterson, Hannah Rowe, James Watson, Stuart Lewis, Lorna Reece, Sandra Ruuma, Michelle Saul, Stoll Megan Thomas, Ann Valentine, Stephen Wintrey and Catherine Yutseler
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Caroline Aita, Sigma Barbara, Linda Bauerle, Marie Baugh, Elizabeth Brillar, Debra Dilas, Dana Bukaty, Melissa Carrue, Courtney Cleary, Elizabeth Dyhne, Melanie Ebert, Elizabeth Dyhne, Michel Friesey, Michel Funk, Katherine Glaser, Karen Glazer, Polly Goodman, Janice Griggs, Sarah Haines, Jill Kushner, Kristen McNally, Patricia Herkan, Chandler Hudson, Mary Hedu, Heidi Hugh, Regen Kirk, Lynn Kulkback, McYdraft Mary, Mary McQueny, Martha Mitchell, Kate Nielsen, Rose Prose, Nancy Reiland, Jill Riemer, Kimberley Rooney, Janet Saggau, Kristin Sawyer, Kathryn Schineeler, Kari Schook, Cheryl Schoeller, Stephane Tarr, Turn Tamaroe, Thomas McIntosh, Mary Uriel, Jane Wadeck, Pamela Withrow
reedi Bellt, Sara Bridston, Stephanie Brooks, Jill Bailey, Laurie Caldwell, Nancy Calhane, Rebecca Melville, Kachel Cummins, Chloe Jones, Joanna Courville, Kimberly Deasy, Kir基姆迪 Courville, Kimberly Deasy, Kir基姆迪 Stephanie Digman, Laura Lluis, Jules Fisher, Kimberly Deasy, Kir基姆迪 Guillele, Susan Hamilton, Christine Hedrick, Kristin Helm, Deborah Hosechke, jil Jenks, Kimberly Deasy, Kir基姆迪 Gundela
Pi Beta Phi
Noelle Applegate, Ann Bernard, Molly Berry,
Delta Gamma
Krissam Asher, Amy Ayole, Patricia Allaire, Sarah Allen, Nancy Anderson, Susan Beek, Maria Binter, Todd Hedenke, Katherine Beeker, James Bryan, Jenice Rothuchik, Lara Chase, Jennifer冷冰, Jeannie Rothuchik, Lara Chase, Jennifer冷冰, Jeannie Rothuchik, Lara Chase, Jennifer冷冰, Jeannie Rothuchik, Lara Chase, Jennifer冷冰, Jeannie Rothuchik, Lara Chase, Jennifer冷冰, Jeannie Rothuchik, Lara Chase, Jennifer冷冰, Jeannie Rothuchik, Lara Chase, Jennifer冷冰, Jeannie Rothuchik, Lara Chase, Jennifer冷冰, Jeannie Rothuchik, Lara Chase, Jennifer冷冰, Jeannie Rothuchik, Lara Chase,
Kappa Alpha Theta
Karen Beary, Robin Beery, Lori Borews, Beth Brown, Jamie Brown, Amy Chrysler, Laura E. Clark, Susan Collin, Susan Cooper, Jd Didrell, Gerald Sheldon, Elizabeth Gilbey, gerald Sheldon, Stephanie Gisel, Elizabath Gil, Christine Harris, Hearth Hathaway, Hile Heagerty, Hoke Icy Iverson, Mary Elizabeth Jia, Lisa Jobs, Tracy Johnson, Laurater Lewis, Kirsty Lewis, Helen McKenzie, Hooke, Hake Icy Iverson, Mary Elizabeth Jia, Lisa Jobs, Tracy Johnson, Laurater Lewis, Kirsty Lewis, Helen McKenzie, Hooke, Hake Icy Iverson, Mary Elizabeth Jia, Lisa Jobs, Tracy Johnson, Laurater Lewis, Kirsty Lewis, Helen McKenzie, Hooke, Hake Icy Iverson, Mary Elizabeth Jia, Lisa Jobs, Tracy Johnson, Laurater Lewis, Kirsty Lewis, Helen McKenzie, Hooke, Hake Icy Iverson, Mary Elizabeth Jia, Lisa Jobs, Tracy Johnson, Laurater Lewis, Kirsty Lewis, Helen McKenzie, Hooke, Hake Icy Iverson, Mary Elizabeth Jia, Lisa Jobs, Tracy Johnson, Laurater Lewis, Kirsty Lewis, Helen McKenzie, Hooke, Hake Icy Iverson, Mary Elizabeth Jia, Lisa Jobs, Tracy Johnson, Laurater Lewis, Kirsty Lewis, Helen McKenzie, Hooke, Hake Icy Iverson, Mary Elizabeth Jia, Lisa Jobs, Tracy Johnson, Laurater Lewis, Kirsty Lewis, Helen McKenzie, Hooke, Hake Icy Iverson, Mary Elizabeth Jia, Lisa Jobs, Tracy Johnson, Laurater Lewis, Kirsty Lewis, Helen McKenzie, Hoc
Mary Beth Appell, Susan Auer, Michel Barrle, Brick Boomhouse, Mary Box, Bileen Cbronn, Mara Riba, Briche Murcher, Anno Burger, Anne Eckert, Jake Frazier, Frankenstein, Joe Friziermeyer, Susan Gage, Megan Grieer, Jennifer Gunter, Juice Heaton, Catherine Hegerine, Pamela Hettner, Susan Hines, Edith Howard, Elizabeth Nickel, Christopher Doyle, Stephanie Strake贾斯·Dense Lacoxia, Kimberly Ann Manka, Catherine McNichols, Alexandra Monchell, Susan Myers, Elizabeth Nickel, Susan Sargent, Ashley Richardson, Karen Seitz, Elizabeth Shahn, Marcella Sievailis, Jil Singer, Laura Smith, Mary St. Clare, Susan Steiner, Amanda Stout, Wendy Widale
Tracy Barrett, Angela Bell, Jean Bertays, Amy Christine Cavaliere, Christian Marshman, Charles McGraw, Andrew Mitchell, Patricia Lang, Kim McDowell, Alain Shewra Torrey, Stacey Sullivan, Karen Tayler, Isohee Baker
Chi Omega
Alpha Phi
Lisa Abrahamham, Carol Apel, Barbara Birnail, Lilia Riesebo, B罢oose Bann, Sandra Bunte, Sus Castello, Amy Dorky, Amy Eathery, Kay Eland, Amy Zamora, Anita Rieger, Marissa Thai Fraly, Susan Gallian, Karen Haegele, Sarah Hederson, Jennifer Herron, Mary Holl, Sally Hodgson, Kristin Koehler, Alison Lowcewong, Mary Eileen Mallen, Debra Martin, Michelle Maach, Jennifer Meier, Alex Tilbury, Joan Weidner, Nancy Ponrose, Deangela Palmer, Chelly Reinhardt, Michelle Rielle, Staci Roberts, Gretchen Tinsley, Daniela Weiss, Shawna Sharp, Carol Speer, Stewart Cliause, Kelly Tumpfort, Kara Troulson, Salma Tauris, Christine Tricard, Tricard Ware, Anne Williams, Susan Zechner
Delta Delta Delta
Cynthia Baker, Connie Biggs, Carla Bower, Heather Brown, Charmaine Hockley, Laura Clark, Sara Clark, Murda Debeja, Nancy Porter, Darlene Dobson, Kathryn O'Brien, Susan Grace, Layle Harrison, Tma Tillhouse, Paramele Kaitheen, Kathleen Hopkins, Sandra Jenkins, Kristin Moe, Daniel Johnson, Julie Karron, Pameela Kauffer, Nancy
Lungereh, Laurie Kay Leiker, Kely Lyman, Kathleen Meek, Cari Minder,姜丽伊, Olivera Perryman, Mariann Phillips, Monica Philipot, Lisa Rosenberg, Tracy谢胜, Ann Stanley, Michelle Stuart, Linda Sturd, Nora Sweeney, Michelle O'Neill, Daniel Winslow, Vera Jecola, Vanna Jole, Anne Walker, Jennifer Warrick, Erin Watts, Wilichenkem, Karen Wiggs, Lisa Wolf, Elaine Woodford
Sigma Kappa
Sigma Delta Tau
Doe AmrArmbrister, Regina Belshei, Kristi Blase, Lisa Carson, Mickey Concord, Christine Concord, Michael Davis, Michelle Davis, Cheryl Franklin, Michèle Friedman, Teresa Horton, Kai-Pu Hong. Michèle Fiedtmann, Sarah Kohn. Michèle Lewis, Dena Me Crae, Chris Nelson, Kim Ankina, Anita Ridt, di Scott, Nina Sibby, Nicholas Ridt.
Audrey Berkowitz, Karyn Brickman, Lisa Carroll, Mia Galaia, Minda Goldstein, Joe Goldman, Leslie Hermercue, Liam Isaacs, Thomas Henshaw, James Hosier, Amy Shapley, Amy Shapley, Hope Spector, Ulisa Mullman.
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Feb. 3 - Feb. 14
8
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Monday, Feb. 3 1986
Regents ask Legislature for more wages, may get improved fringe benefit package
By Mark Siebert Staff writer
The Board of Regents asked the Kansas Legislature in Topeka last week for $2.6 million in salary and fringe benefit increases for employees.
What Regents employees may get is a vastly improved fringe benefits package which both a Regents and a University of Kansas official say is an attractive alternative.
Stanleykoplik, Regents executive officer,made a request to the House Ways and Means Committee Wednesday which called for a 7 percent salary increase and a 1 percent addition to faculty retirement.
"The governor has made an interesting proposal in relation to retirement benefits," Koplik said.
"I think it should be examined."
Gov. John Carlin's investment budget, although it doesn't include a salary increase, would have the state pay the employees' share of the retirement program.
Currently, the retirement fund is made up of 11 percent of the employees' salary. Unclassified employees now contribute 5 percent while classified employees contribute 4 percent. The state pays the remaining 6 or 7 percent.
The Regents schools are the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
Sidney Shapiro, chairman of University Senate Executive Committee, said the governor's proposal, although it didn't include a salary increase, was a big step in the right direction.
"If you compare faculty com-
pension at KU and K-State, we really lag behind," he said. "The fringe benefit package at the two schools is the worst in the Big Eight."
Shapiro said that not increasing salary probably wouldn't hurt in the recruitment of new teachers because employee take-home pay would still increase. Retirement benefits normally deducted would remain in employees' paychecks.
Koplik said improving teacher benefits was crucial because in the next 25 years, two-thirds of the faculty in Kansas and the nation would need to be replaced.
"Our greater problem is on the fringe benefit side rather than the salary side," Koplik said. "If we can get rid of the fringe benefits item we would be immensely better off."
BONNER SPRINGS — A 42-year-old Wyandotte County man was named yesterday as a suspect in the death of a police officer found in her patrol car with a gunshot wound to her head, authorities said.
United Press International
She was parked in a dimly lit vacant lot filling out reports and gave no indication she was in trouble, a spokesman for the Wyandotte County Sheriff's department said.
Maureen Kelly Murphy, 28, was on duty when she was shot Friday night, officers said.
Suspect named in police killing
Police said they had obtained enough information to consider the man a suspect and were holding him in custody until formal charges were filed.
As soon as the investigation was complete, the entire file was to be reviewed by the Wyandotte County District Attorney for charges to be filed, said LL. Ron Miller of the Kansas City, Kan., police department.
Results from an autopsy performed Saturday afternoon determined Murphy died from a single gunshot wound to the head, authorities said. Several bullet fragments were recovered from Murphy and her patrol car.
"We know she was shot from outside (the patrol car) and from a distance," Miller said.
Two homes in the neighborhood were searched after the shooting occurred. The man being questioned
lived in the area, said Undersheriff Tim Johnson.
Fifteen officers assigned to the investigation followed up on about 60 leads, and some evidence was obtained from the homes, said Miller.
Bonner Springs police received a 911 emergency call at 8:08 p.m. from a person who said Murphy had been hurt, said Johnson.
"It appeared she was still in the process of completing a standard police report on something," Johnson said.
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
9
Solid rockets malfunction doomed shuttle from the moment of blastoff, officials say
United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Shuttle crews practice techniques to survive many emergencies during their prenecture launches but Challenger's crew was doomed from the instant the spacepsaces's solid rockets ignited for blastoff last Tuesday.
Of all the failure scenarios thought possible with the space shuttle, problems with the ship's two powerhouse solid rockets are among the most unforgiving and, many astronauts say, the most deadly.
"Let me put it this way, the solid rockets have to work," flight director Tommy Holloway said after Challenger's July 29 engine shutdown five minutes and 45 seconds after launch.
Film released Saturday by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration shows a tongue of flame emerging from near the base of Challenger's right-side solid rocket
The flame apparently came from a joint between two fuel segments, allowing 5,900-degree fire to spew out.
and washing over the rear of the ship's giant external fuel tank.
The official NASA review board has not drawn any conclusions about the accident, but experts think the heat from the flame either burned through the tank to detonate its explosive fuel or heated its walls enough to raise internal pressures to a point that resulted in rupture, setting off a titanic explosion.
Sources said unreleased NASA films of the launch indicated the problem may have developed at the moment the rockets were fired at liftoff and worsened as the flight progressed.
In any case, Challenger's crew never had a chance.
Astronaut Robert Overmyer, a veteran shuttle commander, said in an interview after Challenger's July 29 mission that it would be difficult, if not impossible, in event of an
emergency to get away from the booster when they were firing.
"If one has a big burn through and the auto (steering) system can't keep you going straight you can try all sorts of things but there's no way to shut off an SRB." he said.
The solid rocket boosters, SRB's, fire for about two minutes to provide the initial push toward orbit. In emergencies, they can be shut down early only by sending radio destruct commands to fire explosives that open the casing and neutralize thrust.
The boosters are attached to the shuttle's external tank with a ball and socket assembly on the forward end and struts at the rear. When the rocket's fuel is exhausted, connecting pins are fractured with small explosives and two gangs of small solid rockets fire to push the casings away from the tank.
But while they are still firing, the ball and socket assembly could prevent the crew from separating the rockets early.
Pope unharmed by firecracker in India
The Associated Press
NEW DELHI, India — Police arrested a man they said appeared deranged after he tossed a noisy but harmless firecracker at the end of a Mass celebrated by Pope John Paul II yesterday.
The firecracker raised a plume of smoke about 40 yards from John Paul, who was leaving Indira Gandhi Stadium after saying Mass before about 25,000 people. It burned the carpet, but hurt no one.
Already tight security was increased for John Paul's 10-day tour of 14 cities, and police in the next city on the tour, Ranchi, rounded up about
100 people considered potential troublemakers.
Before the disturbance, John Paul applauded efforts by Christians and others to relieve the misery of India's millions of poor.
Vatican spokesman Joaquin Navarro said the pontiff heard the firecracker's loud bang but gave no sign of concern.
But a Vatican official, who asked not to be named, said several members of the papal entourage were concerned about the blast. The 65-year-old pontiff has survived two assassination attempts.
POLice said the man, Dominique Ouseph, was charged with mischief
"It appears he was of unsound mind," said Deputy Police Commissioner Umesh Kumar Katna. "He said he did it just to draw the pope's attention."
and violation of the explosive substances act.
Katna said Ouseph was carrying an unspecified document bearing President Reagan's name and White House address. He said Ouseph was about 40 and a Roman Catholic from southern Kerala.
Police and security officials first said the man threw the firecracker to welcome John Paul and denied he was arrested. They did not explain the change.
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Services held for shuttle crew
From Kansan wires
With prayers and tears, the nation yesterday remembered the lost crew of space shuttle Challenger in church services and memorial services where the astronauts grew up, went to school or got married.
The lost crew members were: Gregory Jarvis, Christa McAuliffe, Ronald McNair, Ellison Onizuka, Judith Resnik, Francis Scobee and Michael Smith.
In Beaufort, N.C. Smith's picture was fastened to one of seven flag poles at the city limits. A sign on the pole read, "He lived well, laughed often, and loved everything. He accomplished his task, and left this world a better place than he found it."
About 350 people jammed the Wesley United Methodist Church in Lake City, S.C., for a memorial service for McNair. Hundreds more stood outside the red brick church listening to loudspeakers.
In Christa McAuiliffe's hometown, Concord, N.H., third-grader Sky Courtney, wrote of McAuiliffe, "She was brave to go that far . . . I feel that she was a part of me . . . Even that I did not meat her I feel misser-boll."
"McNair was determined to be upward bound and heaven bound," the Rev. Jesse Jackson prayed." He took the wings of the morning and now his soul is at rest with thee."
In Kaiha-Kona, Hawaii, over 300 people attended a memorial Mass at St. Michael's Catholic Church for Onikura, a Buddhist. It was the last of four services at the church, which was full each time.
"For a period of a week, the United States was drawn together in one family," said the Rev. Patrick Bergin. "At that time, there was no man or woman, there was no white or black, no Jew nor Gentile, no Christian or Buddhist, we're simply all in the family of man."
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Children had watched television sets in every Concord classroom as shuttle's rockets roared to life Tuesday and then exploded in a spectacular fireball over Cape Canaveral, killing McAuliffe and her six companions.
"We pray that you may receive the souls of these your servants," Mayor Edward Koch said as several hundred New Yorkers looked on.
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Teachers throughout McAuliffe's hometown for months had fueled their pupils' excitement with the flight of the nation's first teacher in space.
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In New York, howitzers shot a seven-gun salute beneath chilly gray skies in Central Park to honor the seven dead astronauts.
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The mayor intoned the names of the astronauts and said they "died in the service of their country and the service of all mankind. Their memory will be with us always."
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University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Monday, Feb. 3 1986
American recalls WWII Marcos
United Press International
WASHINGTON — A retired Army general remembers Philippe President Ferdinand Marcos as an authoic World War II guerrilla fighter.
Retired Brig. Gen. Donald Blackburn suggested recently that the chaos that accompanied liberation might have wiped out records of the undercover unit Marcos said he led.
Military records, released last month by the National Archives, showed that in 1947 and 1948, the Army rejected Marcos' claim of having commanded a guerrilla band named Ang Mga Maharika, the Noble Ones, during Japan's wartime occupation of the Philippines.
"No such unit ever existed," the Army records said. They called Marcos' claims absurd.
Marcos, nearing the end of a tough campaign for re-election, angrily rejected the information in the records.
the information in the Record
Blackburn, who operated with
guerrilla forces, said Marcos was on the staff of Lt. Col. Russell Volckman, the leading guerrilla commander in Northern Luzon.
"I guess I met him on a couple of occasions" in late 1942 and 1945, Blackburn said. "One of the reasons Volckman pulled him in there was because of his legal background. There was a tremendous amount of civil-affairs problems then."
Blackburn said Volkman often smoke highly of Marcos' capabilities.
Blackburn said the Army findings on the Maharlika force were baloney, pointing to the voluminous records of Maj. Jig. Charles Willoughby, intelligence chief to Gen. Douglas MacArthur.
Willoughby's three volumes on "The Guerilla Resistance Movement in the Philippines" contain three references to Marcos.
one refers to Ang Mga Maharika,
saying, "This guerrilla unit is
commanded by Lt. Col. Ferdinand Marcos,
an ex-M lawyer and a G-2
(intelligence) on Bataan. He is 30 years old, a first lieutenant in USAFE (the U.S. Army in the Far East) at the time of surrender. He studied law at the University of the Philippines. Marcos is believed to be in Manila directing operations of the unit."
Another reference, in the personalities index, lists Marcos as "leader of the Maharlika, active in Northern Luzon since mid-1943 as an independent organization engaged largely in sabotage."
A third reference lists 15 members of a subunit of the Maharilka known as "dragon hunters" and "the northerners." Blackburn said he seemed to remember that many of the 15 belonged to Volckman's organization.
Someone could have been a guerrilla even if he was not storming Manila, Blackburn said, because during 1943 and much of 1944, guerrilla forces were told to collect intelligence.
Costa Rica expects close vote for president
The Associated Press
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica — Costa Ricans turned out in record numbers to vote yesterday in a presidential election that many observers predicted would be a close race between two candidates, both considered to be moderates and pro-American.
Election day was a balmy day of celebration in the form of flagwaving and horn-honking for this tiny nation, which is Central America's oldest, most stable democracy.
The contest was viewed a toss-up between two of the six contenders, Oscar Arias, 45, and Rafael A. Calderon Jr., 37.
Arias, a London-trained economist, was the candidate of the governing National Liberation Party. Calderon, a lawyer and son of a former president, represented an opposition coalition known as the Social Christian Unity Party.
The other four presidential candidates were expected to share no more than 5 percent of the total vote, which officials said would exceed 1 million for the first time in Costa Rica's history.
The winner will be inaugurated May 8 and will succeed President Luis Alberto Monge, who by law cannot re-election.
Voters also were electing two vice presidents, a 57-member national legislature and more than 1,000 state and municipal officials.
Long before dawn, fleets of privately owned airplanes, cars, trucks and buses manned by party faithfuls began fanning out around the country to take voters to the polls.
Most Costa Ricans do not own cars, and the two large parties each organized an army of vehicle owners to help get out the vote. Polling hours were 5 a.m. to 6 p.m.
From Washington, the Reagan administration let it be known it could live happily with either Arias or Calderon, although Calderon is the
more conservative of the two and a champion of private enterprise.
Costa Rica historically has enjoyed good relations with the United States, a bond that has become firmer since the leftist Sandinista revolution in neighboring Nicaragua topped dictator Anastasio Somoza in 1979.
In 1982, Monege inherited an economy near collapse and has managed to restore it to relatively good health.
Still, perhaps the biggest problem facing the new president will be the country's $4.5 billion foreign debt, one of the highest per capita in the Third World. Costa Rica spends well over half its export earnings to service that debt.
Another great problem for the new president will be Costa Rica's relations with Nicaragua, which deteriorated sharply in recent years and have been marred by dozens of border incidents.
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"The life of the church has been relatively unaffected," they said. "Worship services and other activities continue as before. The only change is that a permit is needed to hold any service off church property and permits are generally being granted."
WASHINGTON — U.S. Methodist missionaries in Nicaragua have told their bishops that despite accounts to the contrary, church life has been relatively unaffected under the Sandinista government's state of emergency.
The $2\frac{1}{2}$-page letter from the four United Methodist missionaries to the United Methodist Church's Council of Bishops challenges accusations by conservative and Roman Catholic groups that the Sandinista government is cracking down on religion in Nicaragua.
In November and December, evangelicals in the United States and Nicaragua reported what they called a campaign of harassment and intimidation—including middle-of-the-night arrests, seizure of religious literature and long interrogations— against evangelical leaders in Nicaragua, especially leaders of the Campus Crusade for Christ.
Church life in Nicaragua changed little, U.S. Methodist missionaries tell bishops
The Dec. 14 letter was prompted by a Nov. 14 resolution by the bishops' council expressing concern over alleged abuses of human rights in Nicaragua because of the state of emergency measure.
United Press International
"News of the measure has been managed in the United States to make it appear that we are under a state of seige," the missionaries wrote. "That is not true.
In addition, the Sandinista government has been involved in a long struggle with the Roman Catholic Church hierarchy in Nicaragua whose leader, Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo, has said the persecution against the Catholic Church was worse now than under the regime of deposed dictator Anastasio Somoza.
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Monday, Feb. 3 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
11
Hoppen hurts knee will have operation
United Press International
LINCOLN, Neb. — Senior center Dave Hoppen will undergo arthroscopic surgery on his left knee Friday and probably will miss the rest of Nebraska's
Dave Hoppen
1970
basketball season, the Husker sports information office said yesterday.
yesterday.
Physicians Pat Clare and Tom Heiser examined Hoppen yesterday. Assistant trainer Jack Nickolite said the physicians found possible ligament damage.
Nickolite said Hoppen was most likely out for the season.
Nebraska coach Moe Iba said he
did not know who he would start in place of Hoppen. The Hustlers host Kansas State Wednesday night.
Hoppen said after the game, "I just twisted it. I planted it and then turned."
"Hoppen twisted his knee while committing his third personal foul with 7:28 left in the first half at Colorado," said Tom Simons, associate sports information director. Nebraska went on to win 77-60.
He came back in the second half but left with 18:50 remaining after he went down again.
If Hoppen does not return, he will finish his career at Nebraska as the Big Eight Conference No. 3. player scorer with 2,167 points — 23 short of No. 2 Barry Stevens, who had 2,190 for Iowa State from 1982 to 1985.
Wayman Tisdale of Oklahoma set the conference career scoring record of 2,661 points.
Cowboys upset ISU; Sooners top Mizzou
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Just when Iowa State looked as if it might turn the Big Eight basketball race into a three-team affair, along came Oklahoma State and cut it back to two.
The Cyclones seemed ready to challenge the Kansas-Oklahoma domination after a 77-74 upset of fourth-ranked Kansas in Iowa during the week. But Saturday in Stillwater,
Basketball
Roundup
篮球框
Okla., Oklahoma State Coach Paul Hansen's lightly regarded Cowboys trimmed Iowa State 67-65 in overtime.
The sixth-ranked Sooners had all of Missouri they wanted Saturday before finally subduing the Tigers 88-84. Rounding out the conference action, Nebraska was on the road to clobber the hapless Colorado Buffs 77-60.
Oklahoma State 67, Iowa State 65 (OT)
Oklahoma 88 Missouri 84
Iowa State outscored Oklahoma State 23-10 in the final minutes. But a free throw by Oklahoma State's Jason Manuel allowed the Cowboys to tie it at 60-60 and send the game in overtime. Then A Bannister hit three straight free throws in overtime and helped the Cowboys take charge. Terry Faggins led the Cowboys with 16 points. Jeff Grayer led the Cyclones with 24.
Missouri built a nine-point lead before Oklahoma's never-say-die play and the Tigers' foul troubles resulted in the Sooners' 45th consecutive triumph at home. Three Missouri starters, Mike Sandbothe, Dan Bingenheimer and Jeff Strong, were out of the game with five fouls apiece when the final buzzer sounded. Sooner center David Johnson scored 18 of his 20 points against the weakened Tiger defense in the second half.
Nebraska 77, Colorado 60
Brian Carr scored a season-high 15 points for Nebraska, which shot a sizzling 71 percent while taking charge of Colorado in the first half. But the victory was dimmed by an injury to Dave Hoppe, Nebraska's center and the third-highest scoreer in Big Eight history.
Top Twenty games
Chris Washburn and Charles Shackleford scored 16 points apiece to lead North Carolina State to a 54-51 victory over No. 8 Kentucky yesterday.
In other games yesterday. No. 12 Georgetown edged No. 14 Louisiana State and Illinos beat No. 20 Purdue 80-68.
In Top Ten games on Saturday. No. 1 North Carolina came back from Thursday's loss to Virginia to beat Clemson 85-67. No. 2 Memphis State was upset by No. 19 Virginia Tech 76-72. Duke, ranked fifth, raised its record to 20-2 with a 89-78 victory over Wake Forest. No. 11 Syracuse stopped Water Berry and the No. 7 St. John's Redmen 68-64. No. 9 Michigan manhandled Wisconsin 91-64. The tenth-ranked Nevada Las Vegas Rebels beat Utah State 87-79.
6.41
46 52
5 4
MANHATTAN — Danny Manning took an ally-oop pass from Greg Dreiling and stuffed it in during Saturday's game at Ahearn Field House.
Javhawks spoil Hartman's script
By Frank Hansel
By Frank Hansel
Associate sports editor
MANHATTAN — The script couldn't have been more perfect. The decorated general spurring his troops on to one last victory over their most fierce enemy.
This scene, which would have been more appropriate in a war film, took place Saturday at Ahearn Field House.
The decorated general, Kansas State head coach Jack Hartman, had
six straight times.
announced two days before the game that he was resigning at the end of the season. This would be the last time the Wildcats would face their intrastate rival, the Kansas Jayhawks, in Manhattan.
Men's Basketball
A Wildcat home victory would have been a fitting conclusion to Hartman's career, but either the Jayhawks didn't get a copy of the script or they forgot to read it, because Kansas changed the ending of this movie with a 64-50 win.
Forward Danny Manning led Kansas with 18 points. Guard Cedric Hunter and center Greg Drelling each added 14 to ruin Hartman's last battle with Kansas in Manhattan.
On Thursday, Hartman announced he was resigning after 30 years of coaching, the last 16 with the Wildcats.
The Jayhawks have beaten K-State
Kansas head coach Larry Brown said after the game, "To be honest with you, I didn't know if we would win this game going in."
K-State forward Norris Coleman said Hartman's announcement probably had the Wildcats trying too hard to win the game.
"It was shocking news, but it's not like he's leaving for good," Coleman said. "He'll still be in the area. If he was leaving the area, I don't know what I'd do.
"A lot of people come to K-State because of Coach Hartman, and I would fall in that category."
Wildcat guard Joe Wright, who kept K-State in the game early with 12 first-half points, said the initial effect of Hartman's resignation had worn off by Saturday.
after, but come game time we were ready to play." Wright said. "Things just didn't come together for us."
One of those things was Coleman. He suffered through one of his worst shooting days as a Wildcat. The 6-foot-8 freshman, who was averaging 26.4 points in the conference season, connected on only 4 of 18 shots.
Much of the game he was guarded by the 6-foot-11 Manning.
"It affected us that day and the day
"I had my shots," Coleman said.
"He (Manning) played great defense, but I just wasn't banging them down."
Hartman said the Wildcats cold shooting set the tone early in the game.
"Our inability to get shots down was really damaging to us." Hartman said. "Norris in particular had a bad shooting day, and unfortunately we rely a lot on his scoring. If some of his shots had fallen, things might have been different."
The Wildcats shot only 38 percent for the game.
Hartman will have at least one more battle with the Jayhawks when the teams meet Feb. 22 in Allen Field House.
Kansas 64
Kansas State 50
Kansas
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Manning | 37 | 8-13 | 24 | 9 | 1 | 18 | 18 |
| Kellogg | 36 | 6-14 | 0-2 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 12 |
| Dresling | 34 | 6-14 | 0-2 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 14 |
| Thompson | 35 | 2-8 | 2-2 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 6 |
| Marshall | 11 | 0-3 | 2-0 | 4 | 5 | 1 | 6 |
| Turgeon | 6 | 0-1 | 0-1 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Piper | 7 | 0-0 | 0-1 | 6 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Viper | 27-57 | 10-16 | 38 | 17 | 12 | - | - |
Percentages: FG, 474, 47F, 825, Blocks.
Bots: (Thomas) 39, Turnovers: 11 (Hunter)
Cuttings: 14, Turnovers: 20
Kansas State
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Mitchell | 36 | 2-5 | 2T | 7 | 1 | 4 | 16 |
| Coleman | 38 | 4-18 | 0-0 | 5 | 3 | 3 | 8 |
| Meyer | 31 | 2-12 | 0-4 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 7 |
| Green | 37 | 5-10 | 0-0 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 10 |
| Wright | 40 | 8-18 | 3-4 | 3 | 1 | 19 | 15 |
| Simmons | 1 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Muff | 12 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Eddle | 2 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Walker | 2 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Walker | 31/44 | 8-10 | 8-10 | 0 | 7 | 18 | 50 |
Percentages: FG, 389; FT, 800. Blocked Shoots: 2 (Muff, Eddie); Turnovers: 9 (Green 3). Steals: 4 (Green 2) Technicals: Hartman. Hits: 45-30-27. Officials: Wulken, Kutz, Leimach
A
Kansas guard Evelle Viti presses Viki Street of Oklahoma. Kansas beat the Mo. 14 Sooners 85-67 Saturday at Allen Field House.
Late practice helps; KU tops No.14 OU
Bv Dawn O'Malley
Anything can happen now in the women's Big Eight Conference race, women's head basketball coach Marian Washington said Saturday.
Washington spoke after the Jayhawks broke a six game losing streak against Oklahoma with a 85-67 win over the Sooners in Allen Field House.
Sports writer
"We need to play consistent basketball here on out," Washington said. "It is a crazy series. We just need to play good basketball down the stretch.
The win tied them for first place with the Sooners. Both teams have
The Jayhawks had last beaten the Sooners 81-79 on Feb. 3, 1983.
The Jayhawks lost to Colorado 56-49 Wednesday in Lawrence. In that game, Kansas shot 29.9 percent from the field, its lowest percentage of the season. After the loss, Washington held practice.
Oklahoma guard Vickie Green scored 12 of the Sooners first 17 points, boosting them to a 17-16 lead, but Kansas pulled ahead for good with 10 minutes and 17 seconds in the first half when Toni Webb made a basket.
"It is a great win for us. Since the loss to Colorado, a lot of teams didn't see us as a Big Eight contender. A lot of teams underestimated us."
whose 35 points helped lift Kansas past the No. 14 Sooners, said the late-night practice helped the Jayhawks' defense.
"At the extra practice, we worked on blocking out," she said, "because that was what was hurting us. We didn't want another late practice."
Players not tall but competition is tough
Mustache 3-2-4-8, Phillips 2-4-4-8, Allison 3-2-5-11, Green 5-3-1-3, Streets 3-0-6, Willie 3-2-8, Brooke 2-0-2, Nozice 1-0-2, Moseley 2-0-1-4, Rogere 2-1-2, Totals 24 19-28-67.
Women's Basketball
"This is the Super Bowl to us," Scott Mann, Hutchinson third year law student, said. "Everyone wants to play to win. We are quicker than
Kansas forward Vickie Adkins,
Kansas 85, Oklahoma 67
Askins 19-9 to 12-3, Martin 3-4 to 7; Jennings 2-6; Otto
10-8; McDonald 5-7; Tolbert 3-2; Tablet 21-9 to 18-9
Bv Dawn O'Malley
At the second annual 5-foot-10 and under basketball tournament Saturday, the short men dominated the court in a big man's game.
Hattie Kansas 47-32, Toulouse - Oklahoma 20-
Kansas 20, Fouled out - Green 28-
rebounds - Oklahoma 40 (Witts 19) Kansas 45 (Martin
19) Oklahoma 64 (Witts 20) Kansas 20 (Oh)
10. Techniques - Oklahoma 40 (Witts 20)
The Anynaptics beat Complete Men
@39 to win their champion-
ship.
sports writer
the bigger guys because we are 5-10 and under."
Mann was captain for Sure Thing this year. His team was eliminated by the Asynaptics. Ten teams were entered in the tournament.
Last year, Mann played for the team that finished runner-up to the Asvnaptics.
In Saturday's championship game,
Complete Men jumped ahead 10-2 but
fell short 7-6 (4) in the final.
"We concentrated on defense and
used our quickness to win." Rob Swihart, Lawrence graduate student, said.
The Asynaptics had Kansas football defensive back Travis Hardy, linebacker Willie Pless and former junior varsity basketball player Kerry Zimmerman playing for them.
Hardy and Pless worked under the boards to pick up the rebounds. Both are good jumpers and Pless has a quick first step. Swihart said.
"In this game, most of the scores
run in the 50s and 60s," Hardy said. "There is more control. It is a run-and-gun game."
Fred Mahler, Lewood senior and a guard for Complete Men, said the Asynaptics had height and quickness advantages over his team.
"We were up 8-0 in the first two minutes of the game." Mahler said. "We played good defense and had a lot of three-point plays, but we were dead after playing four games. They ran us to death."
Sports Briefs
Arkansas beats KU; Wolf loses his match
FAYTEVILLE, Ark. — The No. 10 Arkansas Razorbacks destroyed the Kansas men's tennis team 8-1 Saturday.
"We competed hard but didn't take advantage of missed opportunities," Scott Perelman, Kansas's head tennis coach, said yesterday. "Arkansas is solid all the way through."
Kevin Brady, Kansas's No. 5 single seed, was the only Jayhawk winner on the court. He defeated Arkansas's Simon Robinson, 6-2,
Kansas players, Mike Wolf, Darin Herman and Reggie Hodges missed practice last week because of the flu.
Wolf, No. 1 singles player, lost his match to Razorback Bobby Blair, 5-7, 6-3, 6-3.
The Jayhawks record is now 2-1.
Simms leads NFC
HONOLULU — New York Giants quarterback Phil Simms threw for three second-half touchdowns, the last with 2-47 remaining, to rally the National Football Conference to a 28-24 Pro Bowl victory yesterday over the American Conference.
The Los Angeles Raiders' Marcus Allen provided the AFC's first two touchdowns.
He then hit Jimmie Giles of Tampa Bay with a 15-yard scoring strike to climax the NFC's comeback from a 24-7 halftime deficit.
Simms, making his first appearance in the National Football League's all-star game, passed 15 yards to Washington's Art Monk for a touchdown in the third quarter, and two yards to Dallas' Doug Cosbie early in the fourth.
The starting time of the Kansas-
Missouri men's basketball game
on Feb. 11 in Allen Field House has
been changed to 8:05 p.m.
Game time changed
The time was changed so the game could be televised statewide on the KSN television network (KSNT, channel 27, Topeka).
TODAY
Weekly line-up
Junior varsity basketball vs.
Washburn, 7 p.m., Allen Field House.
TUEDAYS
Women's basketball vs. Iowa State, 7:30 p.m., at Ames; junior varsity basketball at Cloud County, time to be announced.
WEDNESDAY
Men's basketball vs. Colorado, 7-30 p.m., Allen Field House.
Men's tennis. National ITCA singlesdoubles, Feb. 6-9, at Houston. FRIDAY
Swimming, Alumni weekend, al
Lawrence, Feb. 7-8; Track, Jayhaw
Invitational, 4 p.m., Anschutz Sports
Pavilion.
SATURDAY
Men's basketball vs. Oklahoma State,
3:05 p.m., at Stillwater, Women's
basketball vs. Oklahoma State, 7:30
p.m., at Stillwater; Track, Jayhawk
invitational, noon, Anschutz Sports
Pavilion, Swimming, men's and
women's vs. Nebraska, 2 p.m. Robinson
Natorium.
None
From staff and wire reports.
12
University Daily Kansan
Mondav. Feb. 3 1986
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
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POLICIES
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KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
publication.
* Above rates based on consecutive day insertion.
- Deadline For Board Applications: Feb. 20
Interviews: Feb. 23
For more info, stop by Sua Office, 4th Floor Kansas Union
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* Dialect is a 4 m. - 2 working days prior to
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised for change of price or a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in advertisement calls by calling the business number.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Computer Terminal with modern for rent $30/mo. 842-2822.
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only.
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
- Teasheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
ATTENTION STUDENTS WITH CHILDREN:
Come by the Student Assistance Center, 121
Strong Hall, for a listing of centers and licensed
home for child care in the Lawrence area.
864-3477
GUARANTEED LOAN
APPLICATIONS
1986-1987
Important Notice
Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to publication of advertising.
All Students who wish to be considered for a GSL for 86/87 MUST first file the ACT Family Financial Statement. This is a new requirement beginning with 86/87. The ACT-FFS is available today from Student Financial Aid, 28 Strong Hall.
—File the ACT-FFS at once!
Applications now available for SUA Officer & Board Positions
SUA
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement.
To the University Daily Kannan
• All advertisements will be required to pay in advance
- Deadline For Officer Applications: Feb. 17 Interviews: Feb. 19
Hunt-VCK with 3 movies, overnight 8.00 $s.
Snowmass 242, night 842; 6/21/2015, Mon sat
10am-5:15, Mon sat 5:15
NEEB A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union. **Rent' 19% C.V. T. V. 828 $9 am. Smiffy '74. 147 W. 342. 534 '71. Mon.-Sat. 8:30 - 9:00, Su-
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGAM:
TOPICS include overcoming mental blocks, preparing for examinations and listening comprehension, Monday. Feb. 7, 3:00-9:00 p.m., 300 Strong Hall FREE. Presented by the Student Assistance team. Hall, 694-4064. Last class this semester.
S.A.M.S. WANTS YOU!
You've always wanted to be a star! Enter the Celebrity/Rock Star Look-A-Like Contest, win the BAHAMAS TRIP!
S. A.M.S. is the biggest thing to hit KU since The Dav After.
Speaking about big, how about Liz (Titanic) Taylor? Enter the CELEBRITY/ROCK STAR LOOK-A-LUE COKE AS:
Cyndi Lauper
Pee Wee Herman
Elvis Presley
Elvis Presely
Joan Rivers (can we talk here?) or (anybody you look like) and win that CARIBBEAN TRIP!
Call 841-0750 for info.
It's a fun way to raise money for a good cause!
Sponsored by: MTV
KLZR
TV-30
Switch Watches
M. S. most often afflicts young adults before the ages of 18 & 35 with 200 incurable cases diagnosed each week.
(costumes in cooperation with 7th/Heaven
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 884-4358
LAWRENCE FLOAT CENTER - Winter Special -
3 floats for $81. Call 841-5496.
SIGMA KAPPA VAL-0-GRAMS: Fun, balloons,
candy, and your own message! Deliveries Feb.
14 between a 8 a.m. 6 p.m. $3.75 each. Stop by 1325
Campus Rd.
TUTORIS. List your name with us. We refer students to you. Student Assistance Center. Sting Hip Hop.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? Our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121
GOT A HOT DATE? Is your car clean? AT LAWRENCE AUTO CLEANING making your car look new is our speciality 6th and Maine. 788-9671.
SPRING BREAK **86** Do it right in Daytona with ECHO TRAVEL. The best trip for the best price. For more info, call Bill at 841-3856 or Jim at 842-8731.
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
1 & 2 bedroom apt. near campus. No pets. Spring
campus, 4501, cambridge; 841, 8222.
1 bed apt. Quiet. Big lawn. 331 Indiana. 165/mo.
Dep plus utilities. 841-6811.
2 ROOOMATES WANTED 4 bedroom house $850
3 BEDROOMS WANTED 6 bedroom house $1,199
4 KING AIRMANTRE right behind Dillons. 841-0191
3 BR house, East Lawrence, bus route. 1084
rebuild, insured. Double lot, gardening $475.00
3BR house, Insured. Double lot, gardening $475.00
APT. SWAP? Need f. roommate to share 1/3 costs or sublease need very nice, close to campus & downstown; lg. 2 Br APt. $350 low utilities. Would like 2 BR, or 3B, less than 794, 914, 841-360.
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live with us this summer. Plan ahead, lease not for next fall.
Available immediately; Large newly remodeled 1 br. Ap.培 class to campus $195,mo.843-9438.
Efficiency apartments and rooms for next men to campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-4108.
NAISMITH HALL Currently has a few spaces available for spring semester
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
(913) 843-8559
First come, first served, only a few twos to盟. 216 W 208th, on KU bus route, between Gibson and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We pay hot and cold water, you choose options, take a bath or a浴室, Call 843-6444 for appointment.
Furnished one bedroom apartment large enough for two people. Just two blocks from university off with street parking. No pets please. Phone 841-5600.
Luxury 3-bedroom Hanover Place Condominium
in the heart of the local occupancy. Need to
buy now, $75/month.
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: SHARE 2
BDREMED APT. (VILLAGE SQUARE APTS.).
CARPETED, A/C, SWIMMING POOL, ON BUS
STORAGE. MOVE IN IMMEDIATELY, FIRST
PAYMENT UNTIL FEBRUARY. CALL 843-0188
(DEFT) @ 843-9240 (ASK MANAGER).
Great 2 bedroom duplex for rent: $800 plus month utilities. Catch to bus rt. Call 842-1430.
Large bedroom for rent in roomy new house.
Close to campus and downtown. All the conveniences of home. Only $125/mo. and low utilities.
843-9438.
BOLSLEASE available Feb 15, 2 bedroom, water
bedroom. Send App Lesse Leap晨 14: 927-9797 after 5 p.m.
Room For Rent in a bedroom house only **89** a month. Go to Campus. Call 824-2990.
Study Atp, to Sublease. Furnished, very clean,
1715/mm Low demand. Call now 842-5210
601-9320.
MASTERCAFTER offers completely furnished 1.2, 2.0,
3.0 and 4.0 bunk beds all named campaul Camp
1-119, 841-529-7650 or
1-119, 841-529-7651.
FOR SALE
BE YOUR OWN BOSS! P.K. Popper located in downtown Lawrence is a run. Buy your own business or find some partners. GREAT advice from John McKinney, info. contact 843-9219 or Kelly 1-622-1987.
SUBLEASE NOW - 1 BDRM Hanover Place ap-
one one month free! 749-2970.
Two bedroom apartment for sublease. Two minute walking distance to vacant nice 100 sq ft house in the heart of Tampa.
Sublease immediately. 2 bm apt. no. Deposit. $175 pm plus utilities. 842-236 Steve.
Walk only inches to school! 2 bedroom apt. $927/month. 11th & Illinois. Male-842-7316.
NAIMISH HALL SUBLEASE CHEAPER than opening a new loft. For one male call celli Chevron at 718-253-4020.
Baseball cards and sports nollary. Buy, Sell
Baseball cards and sports nollary. Open 10-8 PM,
w. 3rd Street.
BASKETBALL SEASON TICKET, best offer.
748-279. Robert Lakeson. Please leave.
ALL SPORTS TICKET best offer 044-1653 after 5:30 SANTE.
Nice, new complete stereo system, three space
appliances and appliances for sale
Call 812-795-7000 at 7:30 p.m.
Comic Books, Penalties, Penthesiles, ets. Max
Comics. Open 10 a.m.-Friday. Sat & Sun 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Comics. Open 10 a.m.-Friday. Sat & Sun 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
etc. $250.00.841-7615.
Complete Studio Set for $149, VHS VCR very new
New keyboard
Commodore 64 computer w/monitor, printer,
1042-8315
For Sale Hands Space S53, 85 only 250 miles. Mint
sell xxs 749-7338 Think spring.
for $200, call 842-7521
Couch-bed $D. Double Bell Exercise $5, Men's
Ball Exercise $6, 824. 902. 603
824. 902. 603
FENDER AMPLIFIER, 60 watts, 2 instrument input $12/h, Mark/BM-2352. If you not have home entertainment, see below.
Set $165 - 794/738. Thirty per hour.
For Sale $150 - 825/840. Thirty per hour. w/math pc.
For Sale $125 - 845/860. Thirty per hour. bcf. $641-1,344.
Ext. GH 9750 for morrhouss.
Gift sale for sale. Yamaha chemical acoustic. Ex-
124-280-8325. (844) 627-5000. Esq.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U) repair
GOVERNMENT lax property from $1 087-697-0007
Halfer, 500 watt power amplifier. Brand new with factory warranty. $600. Tom 842-1510.
Headmaster 200cm skis, salamon 72 w/brake,
dinners, 51 inch picees, size 13, Nordica boot
(new). Best offer, call 841-4019. Leave message,
will call back.
Lady's Diamond Wedding Ring. Set. $350
Call 614-5440 (Tetaka)
Kenwood KR-AT0 receiver @ watts, 18 station
monitor, scan, 7 band equalizer, NearSierra
If you are interested in having a residential room within walking distance of KU call 842-3138. The structure is a two-story 3-4 bedroom home with additional office space and excellent of street view.
Mobile Home for Sale. Partly furnished 12 feet x
55 inches skirted,坠订 down £2,000. Phone 843-6583
Moly Power Wafh F70 Epson printer/typewriter
$u168 $0.9-sacrifice for $40.00, 841-7015.
accessories. Never used $25.19 1-313-723-5063
the STUDENT BASKETBALL TICKET for sale.
Prices vary.
RICKENMACKER 4001 ELECTRIC BASS. REX-
CENTER. Ask for Todd Koppenhaver at
415-632-5978.
RAC R66K X Cassette Deck, Phillips Model 406
Turbatable 13 in BW TTV Call Mark 7489 7561
Western Civilization Notes - Now on Sale! Make sense to use them. 1) As study Guide. 2) For class presentation. 3) For final exam. 4) Analysis of Western Civilization - available now at Town Creek, The Jayhawk Booksstore, and www.westerncivilization.com
Our SIP (SIP2) servers
Call Mark at 749-3787.
Electronic Basis.
CLINTON LAKE 2 BR with office on 1/2 acre
plus 2 car garage, near marina & swimming
beach AC, appliances included. Lawrence
schools, low taxes. $260.00 All offered consider-
sions.
HEWLETT PACKARD 740A (2 PEN) PLOT-
186A AT T2732E; MF, M-74,
CARLS CALL AT T2732E; MF, M-74,
1970 VW Bug. $650.00 negotiable. Call Larry B.
841-789-2672
AUTOSALES
1925 Plymouth Fury, 50,000 miles, excellent condition, clean inside out, no rust, $400. Call 842-6582-638.
1926 Datum Pickup Jack with camper shell. Engg great, very little rust, needs some work.
1927 Saturn Fury, 50,000 miles. Excellent condition.
1979 MG Midgear, $1500, 842-8328. Leave Message.
1979 P座 Sunbird, 6000, Automatic, AM/FM cassette. $1395 or best offer, Call Anil 841-3947,
844-3311.
75 VW Rabbit, 141k, 14k, 4 door, storefront, Rebuell
860, 862, best offer 864-8921 or
8921, Ask for Lukie 864-8921
1965 Schwin Mountain Bike - Relible transpor-
tion system
David B. George 742-866-6988
At True You Can Buy Jeep for $44 through the
True You Can Jeep. Get the facts today! Call
1-800-321-2670
Sell Just 1800 Olds Mobil Cutlass Station Wagon diesel. Silver Auto, power handle seats, ac. AM/FM cassette Good condition. $2999. Call 442-437
RABBIT^2 new radials, air, a camera, low mice,
sharp gray metallic paint. Moving must see.
PICKY
LOST/FOUND
Lot: Cross (gold) pen. If found please call
865-1416.
Found: Gray calico cat at 1603 High Drive. Call
843-7070 for Susan.
oat or Sloan: a pair of white Reebok aerobic shoes. Last seen on Jan. 27 in the women's locker room at Robinson. Please return to the sarcophage at 1643-117 after 9:30 p.m. No questions asked.
LOSE WEIGHT NOW. 10-29 lbs. per month on Herbal products. As seen on T.V. Call 827-6900. Mobile Locksmith. Fast Locksmith Service. Auto. Home Auto. Auto. Service. Responsible Phone. Call 749-3023.
MATH TUTOR - Bob Meers holds an M. in math from K. W. where 102, 103, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professionals who had completed a high school statistics. stat. # 40 per 60 minute session. Call 893-9423.
STATS Tutoring Service. Bus 368, math 386, etc.
For those who can afford the best. Call 842-1058.
BHRYRIGHT— Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-8421.
HELP WANTED
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Attention KU work study students the KU library system has several part time work study positions available. Consult job board on main level Watson Library or consult Ruth Hurt 884-3601.
FEDERAL OVERSEAS, NATIONWIDE JOB
181, 674-1014, Summer. Career! Call:
Guidedirectory, Applications, Listings, Newsletter.
181, 944-4444, Pts. G. S. 133.
every four week, $47/week, Tues. thru Sat, May thru August. Work consists of door-to-door data collection. Car and driver's license. 20 positions available. Send resume or letter of intent to: Sharon Rhoenas, RJN Environmental Assoc, 6700 Squbb Rd. S1, Resid. N21, Kasto KG6202
CREESESHIPS HIRING! $18;$30.00 Carribbean,
Hawaii, World! Call for Guide, Cassette,
Newservice! 916) 944-4344 X UKASCHURESCALE
Caregiver needed for infant girl in our home,
weekday afternoons. Must have job as a baby
caller after 5 p.m.
* on weekends. Keep trying. 892-6500.
Female aid in weekend A.M. 8:30-10 or P.M.
10:10-11:30 daily. No experience necessary
SUMMER CAMP JOBS, Northern Minnesota
Seeking qualified teachers & college students;
headminds & assistants for archery, crafts,
drama, rhythm & dance; dance, dance, boarding;
secretary-driver, Mid-June to mid-August. Apply
to Sherwood Forest Camp #302 and A.E. W.
www.summercamp.org
*call-time ECE teacher position in child care*
*teach three or four year olds. Call*
*KIDS, ask for Bee*.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16.80 $40.25 yr. Now
Federal I-81 308-667-6000 Ext. R78 for current
county
HUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Northeast. For a ree listing, send a self-addressed stamp ($.20). involve to Midwest Camp Consultants. 175 Red St. Maryland Heights, Md. 68943.
Help Wanted: Law student needs patient,
creative babysitter. Call 842-8766.
wanted, graduate student from Emperor to show
toward allure of its vicinity and university.
The professor was a master in his field.
Student Staff-Positioners-summer orientation 1986. Required qualifications: minimum 2.0 years, or Fall 1986 term, returning to or Fall 1989 term. Prior experience in first year job may apply. Desired qualifications: leadership abilities; knowledge of university programs and courses; experience in internship about university. Job descriptions and applications available in the office of educational service 123 Strong Hall. Dax by Fri. June 27.
oommer Jobs. National Park Co.'s 21 Parks, 5000
Openings. Complete Information $5.00. Park
Resort. Mission Mn. Co., 651 2nd Ave. W.N.
Kallisson. MT 39001
Wanted: Research assistant in the department of Systematics and Ecology to coordinate experimental pond studies. Undergraduate in Biology. Prior experience: 1966, $12,500. Contact John 'O' Brien, Haworth University of Kansas 864-8375 to apply and email: application.deadline@kansas.edu 186-EP/AA
AIRLINE HIRING BOOM: B143-1130 000
Stewardesses, Reservations
B143-1130 084-2144 y UAW143-1130
PERSONAL
Hayes and Vale, Matchchicks Incorporated, are pleased to announce the availability of Sheri and Michelle. They lovable young women are willing to attend any event true. Ask for them around 15th and Naisimath.
Hey Pam! Who is this Habakkuk guy anyway? A Hy农培radratt, no doubt.
Hey Snowbird! I am looking for a good looking athletic young boy who thinks it would be fun to play basketball. Let me know if you don't. I don't think you'll be disappointed. Find your child and respond to 1854, LaWrence, KS 69044.
Mark and Dan, How 'bout Ha-Back Rub? Love, Beth and Dana
Tired of tasting and turning? Do you awake feeling relaxed and well-rested? Cotton and foam core fusions are designed to tully support your spine and release tension in the back. North Lawrence (one block east of Mexican Restaurants) open Tu - Sat. noon to 5:30 or call 841-9443.
BUS.PERSONAL
$109-8360 Weekly Up Mailing Circulators! Noa!
Sincerely! Innerly rush self-addressed envelope: Success, PO Box 470 CDG, Woodstock,
TI. 40090.
Jayhawker Towers
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts.
for KU students
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- 10-Month Leases
* All Utilities Paid
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Do
- Air Conditioned
- Limited Access Doors Available
- Swimming Pool
- On Bus Line
- Free Cable TV
- Laundry Facilities
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Now leasing for spring
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
1603 W. 15th
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided. 843-7749
FREEWAY SINGLES CLUB. A NEW WAY FOR
TEAMS TO MEET FREEWAY
(021) 476-3822
Hand-earcrafted skirts, winkcultures and fantasies.
Order now for spring. SKWORKS. 729/1/3 Mass.
no.408 upatials. 842-573-923 for appointment.
His and Hers Beauty Designs. Quality hair care at reasonable prices. We use the finest hair products available and give you the personal attention you need. Licensed by Lindsey Fitch and Bernice Bardine. 842-559-1218 Connecticut.
DELI SPECIALS
a different deli special every day
Pastrami & Cheese
Today's Sandwich
Special: 16 oz. Drink
$2.55
THE KANSAS UNION
DELI
level 3
send a PURPLE PASSION bouquet for Valen-
tine and save your surprise! Halloween
in Vermont 7/24-8/1. $350.
VALENTINES!
THE
MUSEUM
SHOP
V-Postcards 15¢
V-Cards 50¢
V-Notes 25¢
Instant Valentines
Museum
of Natural History
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sundays
864-4450
SANDWICH
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padrée Island, Daytona Beach. Fort Lauderdale. Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas from only 80% and skiing at Bayland or Vail Mountain (75% or better). bags, more. Hurry, call Sunchest Tour for more information and reservations to lift free 1-800-321-9511 or contact a local Sunchest Representative to help you with your Spring vacation on Sunchest.
*CAMP COUNSELORS M-F - Outstanding Slim and Trim Down Camp, Cunnees, Dance, Dismantling Camp, Gymnastics, Volleyball plus. Separate girls' and boys camps. 7 weeks. Camp Cunnees College of Music, College of Nursing, California Contact; Michelle Friedman, Director, 647 Messel Drive, No. Woodruff, N.Y. 11581.
COMPENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care; confidential assured. Greater area call for appointment,
913-345-1400
DANCE WEAR SALE Laup warmers, body warm-ups, selected leotards and caps, capeto shirts, stationary. Sale ends Feb. 6th at DragonP! Dance Wear inside Pendragonats at 8th & Mast.
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
The Union's recording
of the day's entrees & soups.
TEL 800-664-1234
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Import passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course time permits.
Classified
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By GARY LARSON
THE FAR SIDE
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
2-3
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Sports
University Daily Kansan
13
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The Kansas track team put on a strong performance with two first place and four second place finishes.
coach Steve Kieffer said Kansas would have won the meet with 57.5 points if scores had been kept. Baylor would have finished second, followed by Iowa State, Kansas State, Missouri and Oklahoma State.
COLUMBIA, Mo. — A new indoor world-record pole vault was set by former Oklahoma State star Joe Dial at the Missouri Invitational Saturday.
Hazim's long jumps would have qualified him for the national indoor meet later this season, but Hazim scratched.
Jayhawks' Craig Branstrom placed second and Johnnie Brackins fourth, each leaping 6-8.
Dial's vault of 19 feet $4\frac{1}{4}$ inches edged Billy Olson's mark of 19.3$^\circ$ set Jan. 24 at the Albuquerque Invitational in New Mexico. Kansas' Scott Huffman finished second with a vault of 17 feet $4\frac{1}{4}$ inches.
The meet, which featured teams from Kansas, Missouri, Iowa State, Kansas State and Baylor, was not scored. However, Jayhawk assistant
Men's Track
David Bond also placed first for the Jayhawks in the triple-jump at 51-53. Brackets followed with a measure of 50-73.
Kiefer praised all of his jumpers, primarily Sharriff Hazim, for their performances. Hazim finished first in the high jump with a leap of 7.feet and fourth in the long jump with a jump of 24-61%. Kieffer said one of
Kansas' Courtney Hawkins finished second in the 60-yard high hurdles with a time of 7.54 seconds.
Kansas goes into action again on Feb. 7-8 in the Jayhawk Invitational at Anshutz Sports Pavilion. Kieffer said several teams will attend, including national power Texas.
Women prime for championships
Women's Track
Women's head track coach Carla Coffey said yesterday that the
COLUMBIA, Mo. - Only 12 members of the Kansas women's track team competed in the Missouri Invitational Saturday...
women who did not travel used the time to rest so they would be in top condition for the Big Eight championships Feb. 28-Mar. 1 in Lincoln, Neb
Shaula Hatcher won the mile in 5 minutes 3.35 seconds, her personal best.
"It was a good quality meet," Coffee said. "Most of the athletes performed well overall. We try to progress week by week. The key is weekly improvement.
"Everyone's times are coming down. This is the first time we have performed well in Missouri since I have been here."
Veranda O'Hara won the 600-yard dash in a personal best of 1.27.12.
Track team has strong outing
Sub&Stuff Drive-thru open until 2 a.m. Sandwich Shop 1618 W. 23rd St.
Sports writer
Denise Buchanan won the shot with a throw of 50½ feet. Buchanan qualified for the nationals with a throw of 50½ in December.
The mile-relay team comprised of O'Hara, Kim Jones, Mylene Maharajh and Trish Aubuchon won
in 3.58.39. The time was a personal best for the team.
Coffey said Buchanan had consistently thrown around 50 feet in the meets.
The only other Jawhack to qualify for nationals was Ann O'Connor. She will compete in the high jump.
The track team will compete in the Jayhawk Invitational this weekend at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
By Jim Subr
Swim teams beat the Cyclones
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
By a Kansan sports writer
It has been awhile since the Kansas men's swim team beat the Iowa State Cyclones. But this weekend the men were victorious over the Cyclones 34-49. The women's team easily handled Iowa State 82-57.
Swimming
The Cyclones were handiapped by the loss of Scott McCadam, one of their better swimmers. He was ill.
"The men did a real good job." Gary Kemp, head swim coach, said.
Kempf said the women's team went into the meet expecting to win because the Cyclones were in a rebuilding stage.
"The goal was to make improvements and progress," Kempf said. "That attitude carried over into the meet."
In the 1000-yard freestyle Chuck Jones and Brian Saunders finished 4:43.4 seconds and 4:44.9, respectively, a second better than the nearest Iowa State swimmer.
Kansas' Dave Nesmith finished first in both the 200-yard breast stroke and came from behind to win the 200-yard butterfly.
Marcie Herrold won the 1000 freestyle with her best time of the season, 10:16.5.
Chris McCool won the 100-yard freestyle in 47.73 seconds five-one-hundredths of a second over Cyclone swimmer Dennis Bennett.
Taryn Gaulien swept both the 200-yard and 100-yard butterfly in 2:05.6 and 57.8.
The women's team von all the individual swim events.
yesterday. "They were flexible under the circumstances. They won the close races."
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Specials
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Monday
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Tuesday
Wednesday
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14
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Monday, Feb. 3 1986
NATIONAL ASBESTOS
TRAINING CENTER
EPA- THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NATIONAL ASBESTOS TRAINING CENTER
EPA- THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Wilfredo Lee/KANSAN
Ken Baker, an employee of Star Signs & Graphics Inc., 641 E. 22nd St., adds the finishing touches to the new Asbestos Mobile Training Laboratory. Baker recently was working on the traitor that will be used to simulate emergency conditions asbestos workers may experience.
First asbestos mobile training lab recently created by EPA and KU
By Lori Poison Staff writer
The Environmental Protection Agency and the KU department of facilities operations have joined together to create the nation's first Asbestos Mobile Training Laboratory, the head of facilities operations said Friday.
Thomas Anderson, director of facilities operations, said the converted semi-trailer truck which houses the laboratory will be on display today in front of the EPA's regional office in Kansas City, Mo. The truck is designed to train workers in emergency asbestos removal procedures, he said.
"The object of training people is because there is asbestos all over the United States," Anderson said. "We have some asbestos at the University, and our people have been trained for it."
Asbestos is a known carcinogen that was once a common fire-proof insulator for buildings.
. The laboratory simulates actual emergency situations that asbestos workers may run into, Anderson said. It does not contain any actual asbestos.
The unit is completely self-contained. The interior has a collapsible removable shower, three types of floor coverings, several different kinds of ceiling tiles and various sizes and shapes of simulated asbestos-covered pipes.
As they would do in a real asbestos-removal situation, workers must wear disposable clothing while in the truck. This is to prevent any particles of asbestos being carried out on their clothing, Anderson said.
Anderson said the unit can be used in an emergency situation for asbestos removal.
The total cost of completing the laboratory was about $25,000. Anderson said. Thirteen KU workers have
"It can be used for many purposes," he said. "If we had a major problem, it can be used."
already been trained in the laboratory.
"If we would have had to send those people away to be trained it would have cost at least $1,000 per person plus their living expenses," he said.
It is required for all public employees who work with asbestos to be certified through the State Department of Health and Environment, Anderson said.
FREE DELIVERY 842-0154
Dale Grube, director of the National Asbestos Training Program in the division of Continuing Education, said the University received a $225,000 grant last year from the EPA. This grant established the National Asbestos Training Center and financed the cost of the laboratory.
In addition to the laboratory, the grant has financed short courses and conferences to train people for asbestos removal. Grube said. But the laboratory provides a hands-on training aspect that is not possible in a classroom, she said.
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quarters 4 Lbs. $1
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18 oz.
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KLEENEX
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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES ALL ADVERTISED PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEB. 9,1986 WE ACCEPT GOVT. FOOD STAMPS FOOD-4-LESS — 2525 IOWA — LAWRENCE, KANSAS STORE HOURS 8 a.m.-10 p.m.Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-10 p.m.Sunday
Leading passer Cedric Hunter could top season assist record tomorrow. See page 7.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY, FEB. 4, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 89 (USPS 650-640)
Rain Details page 3.
Fans to lose 400 seats for remaining games
Staff writer
By Frank Ybarra
Winter
Between 400 and 500 seats in the student seating sections will be blocked off during the remaining five home basketball games. Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director, said yesterday.
Rope or plywood barriers will prevent spectators from sitting in the top four rows of some student seating sections on the ground level of Allen Field House. Temple said.
But even with these seats declared off-limits, some people may have to stand if they wish to see the game, Temple said.
The seats will be blocked off because of complaints to the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board about a group of students who want to stand throughout entire basketball games.
The students are standing in areas of the field house where new bleachers were installed last fall. The top few rows of the new bleachers are six feet higher than those they replaced. As a result, KUAC received complaints from several fans who sat behind the new bleachers and could not see the game even if they stood.
An executive committee of the KUAC board decided Wednesday to solve the problem by blocking off some bleachers, but a final decision on which areas would be affected was not made until this week.
Temple said he would make a decision today on exactly how to block off the sections of the field house affected by the decision.
The board decided the sections that will be blocked off are the top four rows on the lower section of the south end and the top four rows of the lower section behind the KU bench.
The northeast half of the top four rows in the north section will be blocked off. The other half of the section won't be blocked off because there is no reserved seating behind that area, Temple said.
11 students still stand, he said, people sitting on the lower rows of the second level directly behind them also will have to stand to see the game. He said that at least six rows would have to be eliminated for the problem to be completely resolved.
"It is not the answer," Temple said, "It's a stoppage measure."
Anthony Redwood, professor of business and KUAC chairman, said the board did its best to find a compromise to the problem. He said it was unfortunate that some people still might be forced to stand throughout the game.
"We can only apologize to the large number of people that are affected and assure them that we'll be making changes for next season," Redwood said. "We sincerely regret the situation."
He said members of the board had been monitoring games against teams such as Louisville and Oklahoma, and they thought enough extra seating would be available to compensate for the lost seats.
Redwood said he would address a meeting of KUAC members at 3:30 p.m. today in the Burge Union and inform them of the decision made by the executive committee.
Local company decides not to lease new buses
Staff writer
By Juli Warren
Staff who brought road leading to four new buses for the Lawrence Bus Co. finally became inaccessible, according to the president of the company.
Duane Ogle, president of the company, said yesterday, "We couldn't work up a suitable lease between the three parties."
KU on Wheels would have used the new buses, but the bus company plans to announce to the Lawrence City Commission tonight that it has withdrawn its proposal to lease buses from the city.
Officials from the three parties — the city, Lawrence Bus Co. and the Urban Mass Transportation Act — have been discussing the proposal to use federal UMTA funds to help pay for the buses, said Price Banks, city planning director.
UMTA would have paid $475,000 and the bus company would have paid $118,000 of the cost of the buses. To get UMTA funds, the city would need to have control of the buses. The city then would be leased them to Lawrence Bus Co.
would recommend tonight that the commission drop the city's application for funds because they no longer had an applicant.
lawrence Bus Co. Banks said the planning staff
Ogle said he was leery of the proposal because the city would have retained the power to establish or change routes.
"The city would be the owner, even though we're paying the local match." Ogle said.
The company had planned to use the buses for KU on Wheels, but Tim Boller, transportation coordinator for KU on Wheels, said the Student Senate Transportation Board wasn't willing to let the city decide routes.
Boller said about $7 of each student fee was used for the KU on Wheels program.
Ogle said the present city commission indicated that they would not change routes but he was concerned that future commissions might.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the purpose of applying to UMTA money was to help Ogle get buses for KU.
program.
"We're not going to use student fees to run a route that the students wouldn't use," Boller said."
Terry Burkart/KANSAN
...
The trees in Marvin Grove are lost in a thick fog. The fog is expected to continue through today, the KU Weather Service predicted.
Delegates appointed for study
Fogged in
From Kansan wires
CAPE CANAVERAL Ela
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — President Reagan appointed an independent commission yesterday to investigate the shuttle explosion. NASA sources said the agency's own investigation was looking at the possibility that the booster rocket was assembled incorrectly.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration also reported that one of two sea bottom targets that some thought might be Challenger's crew compartment turned out to be a sunken helicopter and a small airplane.
See related story p. 2.
The surface debris search was expanded to as far north as Charleston, S.C.
Searchers have so far retrieved more than 11 tons of debris from Challenger, which weighed more than 310 tons without liquid fuel and solid propellant at time of blastoff.
Pathologists are examining human remains recovered from the Atlantic Ocean to see whether they are those of Challenger's astronauts.
The sources, who spoke on condition they not be identified, would not disclose any information about the remains but said the remains had been taken to a hospital at nearby Patrick Air Force Base to be preserved and studied.
At the White House ceremony introducing the new board, NASA acting director William Graham refused to comment directly on the report.
"On the issue of human remains, all I can tell you at this point is that we are sensitive to the issue of personal effects and to the remains of the astronauts," he said. "We have plans to treat them with great dignity and great privacy, appropriate to the respect that we have for them."
The agency acknowledged five days earlier that one bone section washed ashore, but has never said whether it was identified as coming from an astronaut. It cautioned that
See SHUTTLE, p. 5, col. 1
Transactions with minors targeted
Drug distribution laws may stiffen
Staff writer
By Abbie Jones
A bill that toughens penalties for the distribution of controlled substances to minors awaits a vote from the Kansas House, state Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said yesterday.
The House Judiciary Committee last month approved the introduction of a bill that made it a class D felony to distribute most controlled drugs to a person under the age of 18 on the first offense, Solbach said.
Controlled substances are any depressant, stimulant or hallucinogenic drug not available by prescription. Alcoholic beverages are not included, state Rep. Edin Bideau, R-Chanute said. Distribution of drugs such as cocaine and opiates would continue to be a class C felony.
Class C felons receive a minimum sentence of three to five years and a maximum of 10 to 29 years. Class D felons receive a minimum sentence of one year in the state penitentiary, Bideau said.
"An adult over 18 best be careful of who they are giving drugs to," said Bideau, one of the bill's sponsors.
Distribution to adults remains a class A misdemeanor on the first offense, but is a class D felony on the second offense
courtney Bideau said the proposal will "rope in pushers who give out free samples in schools," and bring Kansas in line with the two-thirds of the other states which have similar laws.
The present law says that the sale of drugs must be proven before the charge is a class D felony on first offense. Under the proposal, the sale does not have to be proven when the exchange involves a minor, he said.
Sobach, a member of the committee, said the bill was meant to discourage people from distributing
second offense
Persons convicted of class A
misdemeanors are punished by a maximum sentence of one year in the county jail.
See DRUGS, p. 5, col. 4
Fumes send employees to hospital
by Brian Kaberline
Staff writer
Three employees of E & E Specialties, 910 E. 29th St., were treated and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital after complaining of headaches and dizziness yesterday morning.
missions
Company officials first suspected a game but not think the problem was caused by a faulty exhaust system on a machine in the building.
Keith White, project manager for the company, said.
company, said.
The three employees were Connie L'Ecuyer, 22, Eudora; Russell Hoffer, 47, Liecrompton; and John Otero, 30, Lawrence, said Judith Hefley, hospital spokesman.
White said the workers were part of a crew working with a machine that produces cardboard. Four workers started to complain of headaches and dizziness about 10:45 a.m., and plant operations were halted at that time, he said.
The building was checked for gas leaks and the presence of any toxic
Hefley said the three had an unusually high carbon monoxide content in their bodies.
See GAS, p. 5, col. 1
Mark Mohier/KANSAN
I
Paramedics hoisted John Otero, 30, an employee of E & E Specialties, 910 E. 29th St., into an ambulance yesterday after he and two other employees complained of headaches and dizziness.
New computer system posts student's records
By Tom Farmer Staff writer
A more efficient system for recording completed academic requirements in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is being phased in, Robert Adams, associate dean of the college, said yesterday.
"Our present system is accurate but it's labor intensive," he said. "We're trying to design a system that is more efficient."
The Academic Requirements Tracking System is a computer program that posts the most up-to-date information on a student's progress toward completing the core requirements for a bachelor of arts or bachelor of general studies degree in the college.
Robert Lineberry, de of the college, said the ARTS system was designed to give information immediately and efficiently.
David Mannering, systems analyst and designer of the ARTS program;
The program will replace the current system of updating students' summary sheets by hand.
Adams began working on the ARTS program about 2½ years ago. It was used last semester for freshman advising. Adams said that within two to three years the system would be used to help advise about 11,000 students in the college.
said the computer system was more consistent than checking requirements by hand.
Instead of clerks checking off the completed requirements individually, the ARTS program extracts the information it needs directly from a student data base, where all liberal arts student records are kept, Mannering said. The program computes seven to eight summary sheets a minute.
Lindy Eakin, college budget officer, said the system cost the amount of Mannering's services plus $4.100 for an IBM mini-computer.
Adams said in the long run the system would be less expensive than the current process.
it will require less people than doing it by hand, and we won't need as much storage space," he said.
Adams said the process would update records once a semester instead of only once an academic year as is the case with the present system.
Albert Cook, associate professor of English and coordinator of undergraduate studies and advising for the English department, praised the new system.
"It it updates fast and it's virtually automatic," Cook said. "Students can even make copies of them to have for their own files. I think it's nifty."
2
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Feb. 4, 1986
Nation/World
News Briefs
FAA orders checks of older jumbo jets
WASHINGTON — The Federal Aviation Administration, concerned about possible severe cracks in the frames of older Boeing 747s, has ordered airlines to closely inspect the fuselages of up to 160 of the jumbo jets, officials said yesterday.
The sources said the expulsions over the weekend were linked to the arrest last month of a retired French non-commissioned air force officer on charges of spying for the Soviet Union.
Spokesmen for several of the large airlines that have a large number of Boeing 747s said inspections already were under way and were not expected to disrupt normal air service.
The emergency FAA directive, which was sent during the weekend to all Boeing 747 operators, calls for Boeing jumbo jets with more than 14,000 landings to be inspected within 25 flights, and newer ones within 50 flights.
4 Soviets expelled
PARIS — The French government said yesterday it expelled four Soviet diplomats, and official sources identified them as members of Moscow's military intelligence organization, the GRU.
The ministry would not identify the four diplomats, but news reports said they were military and commercial attaches at the Soviet Embassy.
Engine plant burns
HARRISBURG, Pa. — An eight-alarm fire burned out of control late yesterday at a plant that makes jet engine parts, and residents were warned to stay indoors for fear the blaze would release toxic fumes, authorities said.
About 16,000 people living within two miles of the TRW plant were asked to keep windows and doors closed and to shut their ventilation systems as a precautionary measure, said police Lt. Carroll Wagner.
"An evacuation is now unlikely, although we're geared up for it, should it occur," said Mayor Stephen Reed.
From Kansan wires.
Services held for shuttle crew
From Kansan wires
On the day Challenger should have returned to earth, memorial services continued for the seven crew members of the space shuttle.
In Concord, N.H., Christa McAuliffe's family and friends mourned her death yesterday at a private memorial mass.
The somber service ended with a singing of "America the Beautiful."
Steven McAuliffe, 37, his children, Scott, 9, and Caroline, 6, and an estimated 500 invited guests and family members attended the service at St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church.
McAuliffe's parents, Edward and Grace Corrigan of Framingham, Mass., also attended, along with
The services, which were closed to the public and media, included a reading of McAuliffe's remembrances of his wife.
memorial service in the tiny farm town of Lake City, S.C., for mission specialist Ronald McNair.
space teacher finalist Niki Wenger of Parkersburg, W. Va., and New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu.
The Rev. James Leary, who married Steven and Christa McAulife in 1970, celebrated the mass, said Dick Carozza, spokesman for the Roman Catholic Diocese of New Hampshire.
Black balloons and black ribbons along MeNair Boulevard — the main street for the 5,600 residents of Lake City — symbolized the community's grief.
St. Peter's, the McAuilliefs' parish church, was decorated with roses and carnations. Police cordoned off the street in front of the church and directed mourners to the rear door.
The shuttle was scheduled to touch down at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida yesterday after what would have been six days in orbit.
The street had been named for McNair after his first shuttle flight in 1984 — a flight distinguished by his saxophone solo from orbit. On Sunday, a crowd of more than 1,000 overflowed the Wesley United Methodist Church for a religious memorial service.
At Concord High School, students returned to school yesterday for the first full day of classes since last Tuesday's explosion of Challenger.
Schools were closed in Lake City for the day, and school district officials announced they would be closed every Feb. 3 in McNair's honor.
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, recalled the last words from shuttle commander Dick Scobee — "Roger, go at throttle up" — before the Challenger exploded.
Election may affect Philippine bases
"These are far more than just their courageous epitaph," Glenn said at a memorial service at Firestone High School in Akron, Ohio, where Judith A Resnik was valedictorian in 1966.
"They are America's history and they are America's destiny, and they will turn tragedy into triumph once again," said Glenn, who put the U.S. manned space program in orbit in his Friendship 7 capsule in 1962.
United Press International
Other tributes included a public
MANILA, Philippines — The future of two key U.S. bases in the Philippines has become a primary issue between President Ferdinand Marcos and opposition candidate Corazon Aquino in their campaigns for Friday's election.
ine bases' payrolls and supply contracts pump about $300 million into the economy each year, in addition to the $180 million in U.S. military and economic aid provided in lieu of rent for use of the bases.
The United States has six installations in its former colony, but only two are regarded as critical to projecting U.S. military might in Asia and the Indian Ocean — the Subic Bay Naval Base and Clark Air Base.
political football with the security of the Philippines. In a speech, she pledged to honor the bases' leases through 1991.
"At the same time, however, I must state with candor that no sovereign nation should consent that a portion of its territory be a perpetual possession of a foreign power." Aquino said.
These are the largest U.S. overseas bases. Defense analysts think the bases cannot be duplicated in their entirety anywhere else.
bases. But despite the bases' apparent economic benefits to the cash-starved country, many Filipinos think that their presence reduces national sovereignty and provides a pretext for U.S. intervention.
Marcos repeatedly has said that he favored allowing the bases to remain after the treaty covering them expires in 1991, provided a future agreement spells out respective obligations. He says the bases act as a deterrent to regional conflict and offer a balance of power to the Soviet military presence at Cam Ranh Bay, Vietnam
Bomb hurts 7 in Paris on fashionable street
"We see no contradiction between the presence of U.S. military facilities in our territory and the country's long-term goal of a peaceful, free and neutral Southeast Asia," his platform states.
United Press International
Aquino has left the bases' fate after 1991 uncertain, prompting Marcos to accuse her of playing
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Three of the victims — two men and a teenage girl — were hospitalized in serious condition, authorities said. The four others suffered minor burns.
A police spokesman said, "There was no doubt it was of criminal origin."
No one claimed responsibility for the blast.
The explosives went off at about
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ctothing store as crowds of early-evening window shoppers strolled in the chic area.
"I was in one of the shops when I heard the explosion," a young man said. "I ran out, and people were lying all over the ground. There was a lot of blood."
Policie said the bomb was placed in a garbage can outside the Galerie Claridge, a luxury clothing store along the Champs-Elysees, a boutique-lined boulevard popular with tourists.
The explosion comes less than two months after a Dec. 7 bombing of Printemps and Galeries Lafayette department stores that injured 39 people.
Haitian leader scoffs at possible elections
United Press International
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — President Jean-Claude Duvalier, who has declared a state of siege to combat anti-government rioting, scaffed at the idea of elections yesterday, saying "I am president for life."
been country.
But the president, who inherited power from his father, Francois in 1971 scoffed at the suggestion and said he would continue working for the good of the Haitian people, according to state-owned Radio National.
Then he sped through the countryside in a motorcade of 30 jeeps, with sirens blaring.
bean country.
"I am president for life. What elections are you talking about." Radio National quoted Duvalier as saving to a foreign journalist.
The $2\frac{1}{2}$-hour drive, with Michele Duvalier chaffeing her husband in a beige land cruiser, coincided with a statement by Secretary of State George Schaltz calling for democratic elections in the Carib-
The station also said the president dismissed with a smile the question of whether there was a coup d'etat Thursday, the day before the White House erroneously announced he had fled.
The guard was recalled to the plant yesterday after Gov. Rudy Perpich ordered an additional 300 guardsmen Sunday night into Austin to reinforce 500 already in the community. Perpick called in the guard to maintain peace Jan. 21, but ordered the troops to withdraw to a nearby armory last week.
The National Guard resumed patrolling the plant's main gate yesterday, allowing what company officials said was a full complement of employees to get to their jobs. The workforce included more than 400 permanent replacement workers and 350 union members. More than the expected 750 showed up for work.
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Razor blades reportedly were found in two packages of hotdogs and there were reports of punched cans of Spam and chill. One man was injured after eating a Hormel-made hotdog when part of a razor blade stuck to the roof of his mouth last weekend. All the incidents have been in the Twin Cities area.
The strikers demonstrated yesterday outside the Mower County Law Enforcement Center where Ray Rogers, a union consultant, met with law officers. Rogers said the meeting was designed to find ways to conduct the strike peacefully.
He said as more guardsmen were called to Austin and more and more strikers turned out, "eventually someone will get hurt. We don't want that."
State officials found evidence of tampering of Hornet products in six stores in the Twin Cities area. State and federal agriculture officials were scheduled to meet yesterday to determine whether the tampering was related to the five-month strike.
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Law enforcement officials rejected the union's request that arrests be delayed to allow the frustured strikers to engage in civil disobedience, but said they would check further with authorities.
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
Couple found shot in Shawnee home
SHAWNEE — A Shawnee couple, both KU alumni, were found shot and killed in the bedroom of their home yesterday.
The bodies of Ronald Brown, 25, and his wife, Ramona, 23, were discovered by a relative at 3:42 p.m., said Shawnee Police Major Chester Hall, command officer handling the case.
Our autopsy was performed last night, but police released no details.
Court date delayed
A new court date has not yet been set in the appeal of a Nov. 6 decision on Ronald M. Smith, Overland Park junior, who was arrested in April for unlawful consumption of alcohol by a minor.
Smith's appeal originally was scheduled for Friday.
Smith was sued by Harrison "Ace" Johnson Jr., owner of the Sanctuary, 1401 W. Seventh St. Johnson sued for $500, the amount he had to pay to the Alcohol Beverage Control Division when Smith was arrested at Johnson's private club in April. The judgment against Smith was for $510, including $10 for court costs.
James E. Rumsey, attorney for Smith, requested a new court date in mid-February because the original date was not cleared with him.
Woman assaulted
A 27-year-old KU employee was threatened and assaulted Saturday evening by her ex boyfriend, Lawrence police said yesterday
The man forced his way into the victim's apartment in the 500 block of Frontier Road, beat the victim and then told her he would kill her if she called the police. Police said this was not the first time the man had assaulted the victim.
The victim did not receive medical attention and did not press charges against the man, police said.
Exemption exams set
The Oral Communications Exemption Examinations are scheduled for Feb. 12 and 13. Students who pass this exam are exempt from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences oral communication requirement.
Students interested in taking the exemption exam should sign up by Feb. 7 at the communications studies department, 3090 Wescoe Hall.
The exam will include a 6 to 7 minute informative speech on a topic of the student's choice and a 2 to 3 minute impromptu speech. Three instructors from the communication studies department will evaluate the speeches.
Annual information and an exam schedule are available by calling 864-3633.
Weather
Today will once again be cloudy with a 40 percent chance of rain and a high temperature in the mid-to upper-40s. Northwest winds will blow at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be cloudy with a low temperature in the low 30s. Tomorrow should be partly cloudy with a high temperature in the low 40s.
From staff and wire reports
General wins support of her college cadets
By Sandra Crider
KU Army ROTC cadets were apparently at ease when their regional commander came to inspect the University's program yesterday.
Staff writer
The cadets listened to the general's comments and later enthusiastically emphasized the general's uniqueness.
"She's not what you think a typical general would be," said Tom Cummings. Lawrence senior.
Brig. Gen. Myrna Williams is not only unusual for being the first woman to command an ROTC region, but also for the positive attitude that is present in everything she says, the cadets said.
From her headquarters in Fort Riley, Williamson commands college and high school ROTC programs in Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.
Darrell Beck, Newport News, Va., sophomore, said, "I think she is a super woman. I like her high motivation and her attitude toward success."
Williamsia said she had many opportunities to succeed or fail and she tried to make the most of her chances.
In her 25 years in the Army, Williamson has seen many successes. She has served as a basic training battalion commander at the U.S. Army Military Police School in Fort McClellan, Ala.
She has held a position at the Pentagon as Chief of the Management Support Office, which is part of the Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Research, Development and Acquisition.
Williamson recently was appointed the U.S. delegate to the Committee on Women in the NATO Forces. She will attend a meeting of the committee in The Hague, Netherlands, in May.
Amy C. Mackenzie
She has run into problems along the way, but Williamson's determination will not allow them to get in the way, she said.
Suzy Mast/KANSAN
Brig. Gen. Myrna H. Williamson tells cadets the importance of a positive attitude to overcome obstacles. Williamson commander of the regional Army ROTC, was at KU yesterday to inspect the local unit.
"You can spend so much time on negative vibrations that you'll be just as ineffective as if the enemy had come in and taken over," she said.
She advised cadets who might be facing obstacles because they were minorities to do the same.
Clinton McCrae, Topeka senior, said, "I feel personally she stands as an example for a lot of women.
"Ignore the little people and get on with the mission," Williams said. "If you take care of your mission, the Army will take care of you."
"She went through a lot to get where she is."
Williamson said she hoped she presented a good role model and an image of an approachable leader to her cadets.
Tom Trossen, Overland Park senior, said that last summer he spent 49 days at Fort Riley, where Williamson is in charge of the cadet
.
training camp. He said he saw the general every day he was there.
"She takes care of the soldiers and makes sure that everyone is doing well," Trossen said. "I think that's the finest quality a leader can have."
McCrae said he also had met Williamson while at training camp last summer.
"The first time I saw her I was lying in the mud," McCrae said. "I looked up and saw she was a woman and a general, so I got up and stood at attention.
"She asked, 'Are you having fun, cadet?' I said, 'Yes, Ma'am.'"
To Williamson, it's all part of the territory.
Committee invites comment
South Africa talks planned
By Lori Polson
Staff writer
Stan Writer
The University Senate Human Relations Committee is sponsoring a series of public hearings next week about KU's involvement in South Africa, Caryl Smith, dean of student life and member of the committee, said yesterday.
"The committee would like to get a comprehensive look at how the University community stands on this issue." she said.
The hearings will be from 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. on Feb. 12 and 13 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The committee is looking for information on activities relating to South Africa on campus and public opinions on divestment, said Janet Jackson, secretary at the college honors program, who is coordinating the hearings.
"The hearings will be set up so any individual wanting a chance to speak will be able to do so if they make an appointment," she said.
The South African government has a policy of apar-
theid, a form of racial discrimination.
Todd Seymour, president of the Kansas University Endowment Association, said the Endowment Association would send information to the hearings this year, but would not send a representative.
"At this time, we do not plan to have anyone from the Endowment Association speak," he said.
In the past year, some students and faculty have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
Any organization or individual may participate in the hearings by making an appointment with Jackson at 864-4225.
A person or group can schedule from five to 20 minutes to speak, Jackson said. After the maximum time allowed, the committee will ask questions to that person or group for up to ten minutes, she said.
Jackson said she has had some people call to schedule speaking time but there still were several time slots available.
Vernell Spearman, director of minority affairs and member of the committee, said the purpose of the hearings was to gather information and public opinions about the issue of South Africa.
After the hearings, she said, the committee will meet and make a recommendation to the University Council. The recommendation will be the committee's opinion on how the University should deal with South Africa issues raised on campus, she said. The recommendation is not binding, she said.
"I'm sure that based on the information gathered from the hearings, we will be making a recommendation," she said.
Smith said the issue of South Africa had been an continuing concern and interest to the University. Last April, a similar forum was conducted, she said.
After the forum last year, the University Council presented a resolution asking the Endowment Association to divest.
Mild winter eases budget woes
Staff writer
By Russell Gray
Staff writer
The sight of a facilities operations employee working in near blizzard conditions to make sidewalks and streets safe for students has become a distant memory.
Memories of high, often overbudget costs of dealing with the weather also have faded as Kansas experiences an unusually mild winter.
According to the National Weather Service in Topeka, 25.5 inches of snow had fallen by this date in the winter of 1983-84 and 26.0 inches in 1984-85, but only 9.1 inches have fallen this winter.
Bob Porter, associate director for plant maintenance, said that if Lawrence wasn't hit with heavy snow in March or April, his department would save about half to two-thirds of what it would spend for snow removal in a normal winter.
The department will be able to spend money it saves from snow removal in other maintenance areas such as repairing streets, laying
asphalt or cutting curbs for the handicapped. Porter said.
Porter said he thought the University had saved about 30 percent in heating costs. Although the heat hasn't been turned down, heat blowers haven't run as much, which saves electricity.
Last year, snow removal cost the department $63,696. Porter said. No figures are available yet, but he said his department was below normal cost for this time of the season.
The heat is scheduled to be turned off March 15; And probably won't be turned off any earlier, he said.
Donald Kearns, director of parking services, said that he thought parking services had saved money but that he didn't know how much. Kearns, however, isn't optimistic about the rest of the winter.
"Of course, winter's not over," he said.
"I think it's going to snow some more," he said. "We've been lucky."
but Duane Ogle, president and general manager, hasn't put the savings in his ledger yet.
Parking services pays facilities operations to remove the snow from parking lots, Kearns said.
The mild winter also may have saved the Business Bus Co. money.
The bus company saves money on maintenance during mild weather, although the number of cash fares goes down slightly, Ogle said. The bus company won't know how much it has saved until the end of the season.
Under a contract between Student Senate and the bus company, the company receives a set amount, rain or shine, for campus services. When the weather is bad, the company spends more money.
Porter said, "I don't remember a winter this mild. I'll take it if we can get it."
Porter may not get it for much longer, according to Phil Diseler, meteorologist for the National Weather Service, who echoed Ogle and Kearns' pessimism.
Lawrence still may be blanketed with up to 15 more inches of snow by the end of the season in March.
Computerized thermostat to cut Union's utility bills
By a Kansan reporter
Efforts to install a computerized energy management system at the Kansas Union were postponed yesterday because of weather but should begin within a few days, Pat Beard, head of maintenance at the Union, said.
Jim Long, director of the Union,
said the system, which will cost about $85,000, was the result of an energy management study conducted about two years ago. The installation project should take about six months, he said.
The system is expected to chop 20 percent to 25 percent off the Union's annual energy costs, he said. The
Union spends about $860,000 a year for heat and electricity, he said.
The new system will automatically control the temperature in the Union, he said. There are plans for the system to control the lighting also, but initially the system will control only the heat.
- The system now in place is manually controlled, Long said. Workers must check thermostats throughout the building to control the heating system.
Beard said the new system would be installed by the Honeywell Corp. Representatives of Honeywell will first examine the building to determine where the computer mechanisms will be located before any work begins, he said.
Staff writer
By Peggy Kramer
P.K. Popper up for sale before first anniversary
Tomorrow, P.K. Popper, 6 E.Ninth St., will celebrate its first anniversary. To customers' surprise, the first P.K. Popper for sale ads were published on Friday.
Kelly Parks, co-owner of the business which sells flavored popcorn and frozen yogurt, said yesterday that the decision to sell was the best thing for her and her partner. Parks, 21, is an occupational therapy major and will soon do an internship, possibly on either the East or West coast.
"Beth and I work as a team and I didn't want to leave her to run the business alone." Parks said Sunday.
Parks and Beth Kasher, both Omaha juniors, had the idea of owning their own popcorn business during Christmas break of 1984. After generating ideas from a popular popcorn shop in Omaha and researching the popcorn market, the students wanted to try on their own.
Parks said it was hard to tell when the shop would be sold but she already had heard from people who wanted to continue the business.
"I would love it if students bought it. Our school work didn't suffer and we learned to plan our time well," Parks said.
Meg Huerter, Omaha junior and an employee of P.K. Popper, said, "It
Huerter has worked at P.K. Popper since September and said some people came in every day to buy a bag of popcorn.
personally makes me very sad that the business is up for sale."
Janelle White, Independence graduate student, said she bought popcorn from the store at least once a week.
"I have bought five of the popcorn canisters and have received three. They are good personalized gifts and P.K. Popper will mail them for you," White said.
In May, P.K. Popper added frozen yogurt to complement the sale of popcorn. P.K. Popper offers vanilla and chocolate frozen yogurt and nine toppings.
Parks said though the yogurt was a good addition, people still favored the different flavors of popcorn, especially caramel. In addition to caramel, there are four other choices: plain, cinnamon, cheese and sour cream.
"I have never had a business class, but I have learned a lot about inventory, taxes and marketing," said Parks. "The business has been a great thing, anyone can do it."
Parks said she handled most of the public relations and Kasher took care of the books.
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4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday., Feb. 4, 1986
Ignorance shouldn't be a security measure.
Secrecy isn't security
University officials have taken a 10-day vow of silence about what exactly has happened lately at the KU nuclear reactor.
Another flatbed truck with another cask was parked at the reactor center and left around 11:30 a.m.
On Sunday, there was more activity at the center. Again, the public was barred from the building.
It is known that Jan. 28, the reactor's uranium fuel was removed and hauled away in a 40,000-pound, fire-shielded cask on the back of a flaibed truck.
Security has been tight at the reactor, as is usual in the transfer of radioactive materials. The public was barred from the building when the fuel was removed, and students were told by a guard at the door that classes that day were canceled.
But no one will talk about what was happening.
KU officials say the public is
in no danger and that the tight security is normal procedure under Nuclear Regulatory Commission guidelines.
Robin Eversole, University Relations director, said detailed information about the activities would not be available until the middle of the month. She said the secrecy of the events was to protect the public.
The slogan "seat belts save lives" is not an empty one. Highway troopers often are quoted as saying that in years of working accident scenes, they seldom, if ever, unbuckle dead bodies from wreckage.
No statements have been issued concerning movements at the center. Only when an observer made an educated guess did Harold Rosson, coordinator for the reactor dismantling process, confirm last Tuesday that uranium fuel had been removed.
Some security measures are certainly justified when potentially hazardous materials are being transferred. Barring the public from the building is understandable.
But the public shouldn't have to wait two weeks to find out exactly what happened and whether there was any danger. Knowledge is not a risk.
Social gains in belt law
Yet, many Kansans have been reluctant to buckle up and so the state legislature is considering a mandatory seat belt law. People caught traveling in cars without their seat belts on will be subject to a $25 fine if the bill before the state senate becomes law.
Mandatory seat belt laws work. In other states and countries where the laws are in place, people buckle up as a matter of course. The 20-second action becomes a habit.
datory seat belt laws are another example of government interference in the private lives of citizens.
Some will argue before the Kansas legislature that man-
While there are valid civil libertarian arguments against such laws, this is a case where the harm to personal liberty is far outweighed by the private and social benefits of the restriction.
Kansas already has a law requiring children under 4 to be restrained in a car seat while traveling in cars. Kansas airline passengers already are required to buckle up as part of the preparation for their flight
A law requiring all passengers to be restrained while traveling in cars is no more offensive. Once the action becomes habitual, few will complain about the limits on their personal choice.
A fitting tribute
Pioneers of space ought to be so honored.
In the past, pioneers have been honored by landmarks bearing their names.
The seven people who died aboard the space shuttle Challenger were on a journey to explore the heavens and chart new territory. Their deaths have led to a deeper contemplation of space and its vast wonders and dangers.
But the tragedy of the shuttle explosion has overshadowed an incredible success in another area of space exploration.
Just four days before the Challenger disaster, Voyager 2 passed within 50,000 miles of Uranus, almost 2 billion miles away from Earth.
The unmanned spacecraft, which has been speeding toward this rendezvous since it was launched in 1977, began
beaming back sheaves of information on the mysterious Uranus only weeks before the shuttle disaster.
In these recent transmissions, astronomers have learned 100 times more about Uranus than they had in the two centuries since it was discovered.
Among Voyager 2's finds are 10 previously undiscovered moons, and schoolchildren in California are suggesting that they be named for the 10 American astronauts who have died in attempts to search the skies.
Naming the moons for the seven people aboard the shuttle and the three who were killed on a launching pad 19 years ago seems to be a fitting tribute for those pioneers who did their job brilliantly and died reaching for our stars.
News staff
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Lauretta McMillen ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry ... Campus editor
David Giles ... Sports editor
Brice Waddill ... Photo editor
Susanne Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nixon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Cliff Edwards ... Clearly manager
Caroline Innes ... Production manager
Pallen Lee ... National manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
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--recognizing that an eagle is inside the egg. They don't talk about eagle fetus viability or trimesters or potential life. They don't recognize any difference between eggs and eagles. They are both eagles.
OBVIOUSLY MARCOS IS STILL UPSET ABOUT THE CHARGES OVER HIS WAR RECORD!
REELECT
FERDINANDBO
©1926 MUNI HALL
Just another bad call by the Court
My y-2-year-old nephew, Scott, is the coolest thing since airplanes. Being around him gives me intense joy. When I consider abortion, I can't help but think of him.
What are we doing with life — that most wonderful of gifts? Who has lied to us and told us that abortion is OK?
How much blood must cover our hands and our hard hearts before we realize what we're doing?
It wasn't always this way. Before the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, abortion was illegal. Fourteen years ago, abortion was considered murder. Fourteen years ago, we didn't consider these babies as hunks of tide.
But today, the federal government and the Supreme Court say they don't exactly know when this tissue becomes a human. They talk in vague terms as viability, and fetuels and trimesters. They ponder what would become of this tissue matter if allowed to live.
If you kill a bald eagle, you have committed a federal crime and may be punished by a stiff fine and up to one year in jail. If you destroy that same eagle's egg, you are still liable for the exact fine and tail term.
Yet this same government has no trouble deciding when an eagle becomes an eagle.
The government has no problem
PETER W.
It is only with humans that we seem unsure of what is and what is not life. We have been lulled into thinking that this murder is just another clinical procedure, done on patients. Human beings become tissue, murder becomes convenience and the whole process is somehow legitimized.
Tim Erickson Staff columnist
There arises a problem from this mentality. This tissue, that we refuse to call life, doesn't always die after it is aborted. It lies outside the womb, struggling to live.
The Philadelphia Inquirer, in a 1981 series, called this the "dreaded complications," and estimated that 40,000-50,000 babies a year live after being aborted.
This problem is dreaded because there is little case law to guide the
courts concerning "semi-humans" and their legal and moral rights. It is an unwelcome gray area for all concerned.
The following case histories are well documented and concern the "dreaded complications."
1975. Massachusetts: A physician was convicted of manslaughter for neglecting to give care to a 24-week infant that was aborted.
Witnesses said he held the infant down and smothered it. He was the first American physician ever convicted on charges of failing to care for an infant born during an abortion.
The conviction was overturned by the Massachusetts Supreme Court.
1979, Florida: A nursing supervisor told of a live birth where the infant was dumped in a bedpan without examination, as was standard practice.
"It didn't die," the nurse said. "It was left in the bedpan for an hour before signs of life were noticed. It weighed slightly over a pound."
Excellent care enabled the baby to survive. The child, now five years old, has been adopted.
But let's be cold and rational. Let's deal with the law. People will stand up and shout, "I know my rights. Keep your laws off my body!" They will proclaim their constitutional
rights as defined by the Supreme Court. They will use the law as their defense.
But this supreme lawgiver has a history of bad calls. From its inception, the Supreme Court has handed down terribly erroneous opinions. Roe v. Wade is just another bad call.
The same court that allows abortion said it was OK to own blacks in its 1857 Dred Scott v. Sandford decision. It is the same court that upheld a ban on the Sunday sale of toy submarines and loose leaf binders in the 1961 McGowan v. Maryland case.
Three semesters of studying the Supreme Court has left me with an indelible impression. In their quest to define the law, they often pervert it
Just because the Supreme Court OKs something does not automatically make it right or just. It only makes it the law.
Higher principles are involved here. Abortion is not another form of birth control or a right of privacy. It is quite simply murder, regardless of what the Supreme Court says.
You cannot abdicate responsibility or morality by quoting the Court. The cries of 20 million murdered babies fill our ears, and in our acquiescence we are all found guilty.
Innocence of oil no longer affordable
It is remarkable how innocent we once were about oil. Before the great energy crisis of the winter of 1973-74, we pulled up to the pump and said, "Fill it up," and that was that. In even more innocent times, I remember pulling in for a buck's worth of gas and driving my imported beetle on it for a week.
How the world changed for American consumers after the mid-'70s. Presidents Nixon, Carter and Ford preached the gospel of "energy independence," and the experts predicted gasoline at the pump would hit $2 a gallon before the long lines thinned out.
The country was so sick of gas lines, many motorists were prepared to see the $2 price if that meant an end to roads and hassles.
Now we have a new scenario in the slippery world of oil, and this one is the most elusive of all. It is possible the price of crude oil could fall so low on the world market as to make us all sick, economically speaking.
At the most basic level, the large oil-producing countries are in the midst of a game of chicken, the object of which is to see who blinks first.
The chief antagonists are Saudi Arabia and Great Britain. But any number can play, and often do,
depending on the day of the week.
The big issues over which the large oil producers are battling it out are price and levels of productivity.
Because of the high levels of its reserves and its enormous per capita wealth, Saudi Arabia has long considered itself the natural leader among oil producers. It wants to impose discipline on the rest of the major producers for two reasons.
The large oil-producing countries are in the midst of a game of chicken,the object of which is to see who blinks first.
First, the Saudis argue that unless the producers are "disciplined," the world market price could fall drastically because world demand has remained low for the past five years or more.
Second, Saudi Arabia correctly reckons that the black gold in the ground will not be there forever. By holding down production, the Saudis argue, oil producers will get a higher
Robert C.
Maynard
Oakland Tribune
.
price and extend the life of their precious resource.
One thing and another over the years has prevented the oil producers from achieving consensus on this key point. Two major producers, Iran and Iraq, are in a wasting war. Some producer countries, Mexico and Nigeria chief among them, have yet to recover from the recession of 1982-1983 and the consistent slackening in world oil demand.
As if that were not enough, the Saudi goal is further frustrated by Great Britain's North Sea oil fields. The government of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher has consistently refused to play the oil game by Saudi rules.
Great Britain has sought to follow Thatcher's free market inclinations. Her government went further and dismantled the British National Oil Corp., the principal function of which had been to keep the price of North Sea crude oil artificially high.
As much as any target, the present oil glut is aimed at bringing Britain
into line. Saudi Arabia has led the way in flooding the market place with oil. In search of whatever dollars there are to be earned, the other major producers have followed suit.
Oil production is more than 2 million barrels a day in excess of demand. Thus the glut, and thus the potential worldwide disaster. The spot and futures prices fell below $20 a barrel last week, but a more realistic world price is probably about $24 a barrel, a good 15 percent below what it was a year ago.
As the price continues to slide banks holding the long-term debt of producer countries are becoming more and more nervous in the face of potential massive defaults.
If the world price were to hit $15 and stick for any period of time, the impact on such oil-dependent economies as that of Texas would be devastating. Indeed, in due course almost all sectors of the American economy would be affected.
Eventually, we might see a time when a buck got you more than a gallon of gas, but the economy would by then not be a pretty sight. That is why we cannot be innocent about oil anymore. Too good a deal on gasoline in the near future could be the sign of a disaster in the making.
Mailbox
King favored boycott
I want to make two comments on the discussion of South Africa last week.
First, your reporter missed probably the most important thing State Department spokesman William Jacobsen had to say Monday. Jan. 27
He said, when questioned about the official rhetoric of South Africa and the Reagan administration, "Don't take it too seriously." He said that included him.
It became transparent at that point that the purpose of his visit was to shed a crocodile tear or two, say to the
audience, "isn't it awful... but complicated" and attempt to convince the audience that there was no need to actively form solidarity with the South African struggle for human, national and democratic rights.
In other words, he came to slow the growth of groups interested in South America.
Phill Kline, chairman of the Kansas Federation of College Republicans, claims that opposition to divestment is not compatible with the ideals and vision of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
Second, it never ceases to amaze me how people try to bolster their arguments by using the reputation of great men. It becomes ridiculous when the great man chosen is in total disagreement with their lack of action and arguments.
"No nation professing a concern for man's dignity could avoid assuming its obligation if people of all
On Dec. 10, 1965, Human Rights Day at Hunter College in New York City, King addressed the South Africa question and stated, "the time has come to utilize non-violence tully through a massive international boycott which would involve the U.S.S.R., Great Britain, France, the United States, Germany and Japan."
states and races were to adopt a firm stand."
In the same speech, King indicated his belief that foreign investment propped up South Africa.
It is obvious that King's ideal and vision are in complete disagreement with Phil Kline's argument for continued U.S. economic ties with the racist regime and the refusal of Chancellor Gene A. Budig to urge the Kansas University Endowment Association to break its ties.
Karl Shepard Kansas City, Mo. graduate student
Tuesday, Feb. 4, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Shuttle
Continued from p. 1
the bone could be that of an animal or remains from missing fishermen or
All but one of the 11 segments of the Challenger rocket casing that ruptured and shot out a jet of flame 15 seconds before Challenger exploded had been used before without incident, NASA said.
In Houston, sources said investigators were checking the theory that a tiny gap between the two lower segments of fuel in the right-hand booster may have let 6,000 degree gases burn through the rocket's steel seam.
Sources said such a gap might have been caused during assembly by
damage to the rocket casing or to the fuel, which has the consistency of hard rubber, or by misalignment of the rocket segments.
The booster casings, which parachute into the sea after a normal flight, were designed to be used repeatedly in an effort to save money.
After each flight, the casings are put under magnetic particle examination to look for cracks and defects, then are pressure tested and inspected once again before being filled with fresh fuel, a rubbery mixture of ammonium perchlorate and aluminum.
"It's something that has proved
itsself during the first 24 launches," Graham said of the booster reuse. "We have reused those cases again and again."
Photographs of the last 15 seconds of Challenger's flight showed a jet of flame shooting like a blowtorch out of the rocket at or near a seam between two casings that had each flown on one previous mission. Five of the other segments had been used twice.
The president, acting on the day the Challenger would have returned to Earth, gave the commission, which is headed by former secretary of state William P. Rogers and Apollo astronaut Neil Armstrong, 120 days to report its findings.
In announcing the appointment of the investigation commission, Reagan said, "As we move away from that terrible day, we must divert our energies to how it happened and how it can be prevented from happening again."
Armstrong, who has participated in other accident investigations, said finding the precise cause of the Challenger disaster wouldn't necessarily be an easy job.
Killed in the explosion were Francis Scobee, Michael Smith, Judith Resnik, Ellison Onizuka, Ronald McNair, Gregory Jarvis and teacher Christa McAuliffe.
A calculator, valued at $250, was stolen between 9:30 a.m. and 10 a.m. Sunday from a backpack in the lobby of Naismith Hall, KU police said yesterday.
An AM-FM cassette stereo radio, valued at $300, was stolen between 7:30 p.m. Friday and 5:30 a.m. Saturday from a parking lot in the 2500 block of Redbud Lane. Lawrence police said thieves used a chunk of concrete to break the driver's side window to enter the car.
A bike, valued at $470, was stolen late Friday afternoon from a shopping center parking lot in the 900 block of Iowa Street. Lawrence police said.
Gas
As a safety precaution, the company planned to have the gas company and the Kansas Department of Health and Environment present when the machine was rested this morning. White said.
Continued from p. 1
White said company officials now think the incident was caused by a broken damper on the machine the
substances that might have been released. The Lawrence Fire Department and the Kansas Public Service Co. Inc. both tested the building thoroughly. Neither reported anything out of the ordinary.
White said he initially thought the workers might have succumbed to a combination of the high humidity outside, steam released from the machine and the fact that some of the workers affected recently had been ill.
A Toyota Corolla Hatchback, valued at $7,000, was stolen between midnight Friday and 2:30 a.m. Saturday from the parking lot of a bar in the 200 block of Locust Street, police said.
On the Record
Robert Graham, an operator at the company, said despite all that occurred he doubted that there was a serious problem.
three hospitalized employees were working with. The broken damper prevented the exhaust system from operating properly.
Golf bags and clubs, valued together at $800, were stolen between 3 a.m. and 10 a.m. Saturday, from a parked car in the 2500 block of Redbud Lane, police said.
Graham knew of one person who said that he smelled something but he didn't experience anything out of the ordinary.
headache, said, "People just started dropping."
Graham said that many of the company's employees had recently been laid off.
Graham, who said he also had a
E & E takes good care of its employees, he said, and everyone affected was checked and given the rest of the day off.
Smith said E & E produces point-of-purchase displays for several companies such as Hallmark Cards.
A radar detector and cash,
valued together at $355, were stolen
between 10:30 p.m. Thursday and 7 a.
m. Friday from a car parked in the
1500 block of West 22nd Terrace,
police said.
Drugs
Continued from p. 1
distributing drugs to minors but might affect college students who use drugs at parties.
A prosecuting attorney could technically charge a student who passed a marijuana cigarette to someone under the age of 18 with a class D felony, he said.
"The concern I have for Lawrence is that it could get relatively innocent people in a college setting charged with serious crimes," he said. "It could be very harsh legislation if
you had a prosecuting attorney who wanted to use it.
"The good public policy is that it gives the prosecuting attorney a much bigger hammer for distributing drugs to minors." Solbach said. "I don't oppose the prosecuting attorney having that as a tool."
Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, said the bill would help crack down on the sale of drugs to minors. It would be used on a case-by-case basis.
"I have no sympathy for anybody that distributes drugs to a minor," Flory said. "I think it's a justified provision. It could be well utilized to fit the particular case."
Solbach said a college student might want to ask the age of a person before he hands him a drug at a party.
"Make sure you check the L.D. of the person sitting next to you," he said.
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Campus/Area
Tuesday, Feb. 4, 1986
Plea bargain reached in Nebraska slayings
United Press International
FALLS CITY, Neb. — One of three people charged in the torture slaying of a man whose body was found in an unmarked grave on a survivalist farm pleaded guilty yesterday to second-degree murder in a plea agreement.
Timothy Haverkamp, 23, entered the plea before Richardson County District Judge Robert Finn, who ordered a pre-sentence investigation.
Haverkamp pleaded guilty in the April 30, 1985 torture slaying of James Thimm, 26, whose body was found in an unmarked grave on a farm near Rulo. Authorities contended that Thimm was a member of a
survivalist cult who fell out of favor.
rivalist cult who fell out of favor. Havekamp told Finn he took part in the torturing of Thimm, which included whipping and shooting the ends off some of his fingers. Authorities also said Thimm was placed in a grave and shot in the head after his legs were broken.
"Yes I did participate in those turtures that I mentioned," Haverkamp told Finn, who told the defendant a guilty plea to second-degree murder meant he was admitting he killed Thimm intentionally.
Haverkamp, who was in court with his attorneys, James H. Cain Jr. of Auburn, Neb., and Daniel E. Wherry of Lincoln, Neb., earlier had pleaded not guilty.
Development plan sought State panel to hire consultant
TOPEKA "The Legislative Commission on Economic Development voted yesterday to hire a consultant to help the Kansas Legislature interpret and adopt recommendations in KU reports on attracting new industries to the state.
The Associated Press
Braden, R-Clay Center, said the commission would focus on a report issued in January by the Institute for
House Majority Leader James Braden, the chairman of the commission, said its 10 members decided to hire Beldon Daniels of Cambridge, Mass., who has helped to create comprehensive economic development programs in more than a dozen states.
Public Policy and Business Research at the University of Kansas. It will recommend action the Legislature can take this year to enhance economic development in the state.
Tax breaks for businesses and several new economic development programs were among the report's 34 recommendations.
The KU institute, led by KU business professor Anthony Redwood, also recommended that the state exempt all computer parts and machinery used to manufacture computers from some state taxes, including the sales tax.
"The commission was formed to study the Redwood report and to report to the Legislature on which recommendations should be implemented this session as well as those that we can adopt in the future." Braden said.
Senate Minority Leader Mike Johnston, D-Parsons, who is a member of the commission, said he thought Daniels would be paid between $20,000 and $25,000 in salary and
expense money to meet with the
panel for about 18 davs.
The commission was formed as the result of a resolution that the House and Senate passed unanimously Thursday. Six Republicans and four Democrats have been appointed to the commission.
Private school advocates seek state tax deductions
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Spokesmen for public and private schools debated before the House Education Committee yesterday whether parents who send their children to parochial schools should be able to deduct part of the expense on their state income tax returns.
In written testimony given to the committee, a spokesman for the Kansas Association of School Boards called the proposal "a destructive blockbuster which diverts public money from where it's needed: the public schools and other state responsibilities."
However, a spokesman for the Kansas Catholic Conference said the measure would constitute recognition by the Legislature "of the important role non-public schools play in educating 8 percent of all Kansas school children," which he says saves Kansas taxpayers $80 million a year.
and carried over to this session. Both the education and tax committees must endorse it to get it to the House floor for debate this year.
This proposal differs from previous attempts at providing parents of children attending private schools with a tax break. For one thing it is a tax deduction, not a tax credit.
Parents could deduct a maximum $500 from their adjusted gross income for the tuition, textbook and transportation costs they pay on behalf of a child in kindergarten through sixth grade, or $700 for grades 7 through 12.
Parents of public school children also could deduct actual expenses — to the same maximums — that they must spend for books, fees and special clothing or equipment required for regular classroom courses, but not for athletics or other extracurricular activities.
Parents of private school students would have much higher expenses, because most of them pay tuition charges.
Opponents argued that the bill would drain public financing.
On Campus
A seminar, "Is the Homosexual My Neighbor? Another Christian View," will be at 4:30 p.m. today in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1204 Oread Ave.
A film seminar on the Peace Corps will be at 4:30 and at 7 p.m. today in Room 4040 Wescce Hall.
at 5:30 p.m. today in Room 130 Robinson Center.
S.A.M.S WANTS YOU!
A dessert potluck for graduate women, sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, will be at 7:30 p.m. today at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building. Table service and beverages will be provided.
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Feb. 6 - 8:00 p.m.
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all cover charge proceeds donated to M.S. by participating bars.
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9
Sports
Tuesday, Feb. 4, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Jayhawks fight to stay on top in Big 8
By Dawn O'Malley
7
Sports writer
In order to win tomorrow night's game at Iowa State, the Kansas women's basketball team will have to control the tempo of the game, Kansas head coach Marian Washington said yesterday.
Iowa State
14-5. (Big 8: 3-3)
7:30 tonight
at Ames
IowaState
The Jayhawks play at 7:30 p.m. in Ames.
"We are going to do everything we can to beat them," Washington said, "My theory is we will work for 40 minutes and we won't play dead. We have to play all out."
The Jayhawks go into the game tied with Oklahoma for first place in the Big Eight. Both teams have 4-2 records. Kansas has a 12-7 overall record.
Women's basketball
The Cyclones come off a 62-49 victory over Oklahoma State on Saturday. Iowa State is tied for third place in the Big Eight with a 3-3 record. The team is 14-5 overall.
Last year, the Cyclones finished the Big Eight season in seventh place.
"This is a key match-up because Kansas is tied for first," Iowa State head coach Fam Wettig. "We are breathing down their necks."
Kansas' 56-49 loss to Colorado on
dissatisfied still waters both Washington.
'I don't ever want to play like we did against Colorado,' Washington said. 'It reminds you how not to play.'
The loss temporarily put the Jayhawks in second place. However, the team bounced back to beat No. 14
"The Oklahoma win helped us. Our character came out on the floor." Washington said. "It was a confidence builder."
Oklahoma 85-67 Saturday and moved back into the first place tie.
Wettig said Iowa State hadn't done anything special in preparation for the game against Kansas.
Both Washington and Wettig agreed this was the closest the conference race had been in years. Washington has coached for 13 years. This is Wettig's second year.
Iowa State is led by center Stephanie Smith, who has averaged 17.5 points and 7.2 rebounds a game.
"This is a real good start for us," Wettig said, "to get out of last place."
The Jayhawks will play without forwards Regan Miller and Jill Killen. The two collided in a practice last week and reinjured their knees. They both had injured knees earlier in the seson.
Probable Starters
Kansas
Iowa State
F 33 Lisa Dougherty (5-8)
F 25 Vickie Adkins (6-1)
F 40 Kelly Jennings (6-5)
G 24 Eveltte Ott (5-7)
G 40 Toni Webb (5-8)
lowa State
F 22 Monica Missa (5-11)
F 11 Sandy Hafner (5-9)
C 45 Stephanie Smith (6-1)
G 24 Etta Burns (5-7)
G 12 Jane Lobenstein (5-7)
BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
| | Conference All Games |
| :--- | :--- |
| W. 1 L. Pct. | W. 1 L. Pct. |
| Oklahoma | 4 2 667 | W. 1 L. Pct. |
| Kansas | 4 2 667 | 13 6 684 |
| Iowa St. | 4 2 667 | 13 6 684 |
| Missouri | 3 3 500 | 11 8 579 |
| Colorado | 3 3 500 | 13 6 684 |
| Kansas St. | 3 3 500 | 12 8 674 |
| Oma St. | 2 4 333 | 12 9 571 |
| Nebraska | 2 4 333 | 9 1 473 |
N.C. stays No.1; Kansas drops to sixth
The Associated Press
North Carolina, which suffered its first defeat of the season last week, remained atop the Associated Press' college basketball poll, although the Tar Heels were not the unanimous choice for the first time in three weeks.
After winning their first 21 games of the season, the Tar Heels fell at Virginia 86-73 on Thursday, then beat Clemson 85-67 on Saturday. The team received 58 first-place votes and 1,235 points from the nationwide panel of sportswriters and broadcasters.
unbeaten until last week.
The Tigers, 20-1, lost on the road at Virginia Tech 76-72 on Saturday and fell one spot in the voting with the only other first-place vote, 1,931 points, 29 more than No. 4, Duke, 20-2.
Oklahoma, 20-1, moved from sixth to fifth, followed by Kansas, 20-3, which had been fourth but suffered a 77-74 loss at Iowa State last week. Michigan, 19-2, jumped from ninth to seventh with 860 points, 41 more than Syracuse, 17-2, which jumped from its 11th place ranking last week with a 68-46 victory over St. John's.
Nevada-Las Vegas, 21-2, improved one place from last week, while St. John's, 20-3 and seventh last week, rounded out the Top 10.
Georgetown, which defeated Louisiana State 74-72 on national television
Sunday, led the Second 10, followed by Kentucky, Bradley, Notre Dame, Virginia Tech, Louisville, Texas-El Paso, Indiana, Western Kentucky and Alabama.
Western Kentucky, 17-3 and leader in the Sun Belt Conference race, and Alabama, 15-4 and in second place behind Kentucky in the Southeastern Conference, are both making their first appearance in the Top 20 this season.
Richmond, which last week made its first appearance in the Top 20 since 1954, dropped two of three games to 164, fail to 17-3. The Spiders lost to Old Dominion 62-59 and Virginia Tech 71-67 before saving the week with a 67-47 victory over William & Mary on Saturday.
Associated Press Top 20
1. North Carolina 22-1
2. Georgia Tech 17-2
3. Memphis State 20-1
4. Duke 20-2
5. Oklahoma 20-1
6. Kansas 20-3
7. Michigan 19-2
8. Syracuse 17-2
9. New -Las Vegas 21-2
10. St. John's 20-3
11. Georgetown 17-3
12. Kentucky 18-3
13. Bradley 22-1
14. Notre Dame 14-3
15. Virginia Tech 18-4
16. Louisville 13-6
17. Texas-El Paso 18-3
18. Indiana 14-5
19. W. Kentucky 17-3
20. Alabama 15-4
Irish beat Maryland
From Kansan wires
Maryland, 11-10, took only its second lead of the game, 37-35, with just
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Sophomore guard David Rivers scored 18 points last night, leading No. 18 Notre Dame to a 69-62 victory over Maryland.
BASKETBALL
TOP TWENTY
ROUNDUP
Notre Dame, 15-3, came back at the 13:03 mark in the half, beginning an eight-point run to go up 51-43.
St. John's 85 Providence 61
1:10 gone in the second half on a basket from junior guard Keith Gatlin.
Maryland's senior forward Len Bias led all, scorers, hitting for 25 points, while John Johnson and senior forward Tom Jones added 12 points each.
NEW YORK - Walter Berry scored 29 points and Mark Jackson contributed 16 assists last night, leading No. 10 St. John's to an 85-61 Big East triumph over Providence.
St. John's, 21-3 overall and 8-2 in the Big East, trailed briefly in the opening moments, but surged to a 46-32 halftime lead and led by as many as 22 points midway through the second half. Providence, which fell to 10-11 and 2-8, has lost four of its last five.
Louisville 74, South Carolina 72
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Senior guards Jef Hall and Milt Wagner scored 16 points apiece last night to lead 15th-ranked Louisville to a 74-72 Metro Conference victory over South Carolina.
Louisville led by 14 points several times during the second half, the last time at 61-47 with less than eight minutes left. South Carolina then scored 12 straight points to close to 61-59 with 5:30 to go.
KU has commitment from 3 local players
By a Kansan sports writer
Lawrence High offensive lineman Chip Budde said yesterday that Kansas' athletic and academic quality and the chance to play near home were primary factors in his decision to play for the Jayhawks this fall.
Budde, who made an oral commitment to attend Kansas last Saturday, said he would sign a letter-of-intent Feb. 12, the first day high school football players can officially sign to a school.
The 6-foot-2, 235-pound senior said that although he received interest from Harvard and Air Force, the decision was between Kansas and Colorado.
He said his positive impression of Jayhawk head coach Bob Wiley.
FOOTBALL
individual rather than an athlete swaved him toward Kansas.
"Some coaches are just all business when it comes to playing football for them," he said. "Coach Valesente is a personable guy who took a sincere interest in myself as a person and not just as a football player."
Budde will be part of a package deal for the Jayhawks. Budde said he would be joined by his teammates and close friends Craig Stoppel, a running back, and Bill Sutter, also a lineman.
BASKETBALL
Kansas also received an oral commitment from Olathe South's Brad Hinkle, a consensus all-state selection as a quarterback and a defensive back.
Chris Magerl/KANSAN
Star player
Making the most of the unseasonably warm afternoon, Shaun Lang, 2920 W. 19th Street, rams home another two on the courts at Sunset Hill Elementary school, 901 Schwarz Road. Lang and his friends spent Saturday afternoon dreaming of the big time on the less-than-regulation height goal.
JV tops Washburn in overtime game
Sports writer
Bv Matt Tidwell
After being down by eight at halftime, the Kansas men's junior varsity came back to claim an 88-33 overtime victory over the Washburn junior varsity last night in Allen Field House.
Kansas scored the first two points of the overtime and never looked back. The Jayhawks out-scored Washburn 16-11 in the overtime to get the win.
"Scoring the first two points in an overtime is going to be a key to any win." Kansas coach R.C. Buford said. "But I think we looked a lot better in the second half. I think we played better defense and hit the boards harder. We dictated what we wanted to do."
It was Washburn that controlled the game in the first half as the Ichabds used superior size to outmuscle Kansas underneath.
Fancy shooting by Washburn in the first half made things harder for
Kansas defensively.
"They shot 63 percent in the first half, but I think part of that was because we weren't playing good defense." Buford said.
For Kansas, Jerry Johnson led scoring with 26 points. Johnson scored five consecutive points, including a three-point play after a layup, in the overtime to lead Kansas.
Kansas 88, Washburn 83
Patterson 3-4-3-9, Dawning 9-3-2-1, Burton 4-4-8-12,
Wallach 4-0-6, Davenport 6-4-9, Dunlair 2-1-1, 5-
Holthus 0-0-0, Thompson 0-2-0, Davenny 3-0-6,
Fisher 1-0-2, Tots 34-15 18-83
Barnes 4-12, Wurz 3-1, Wurz 0-2, Heyner 7-17, Handel 6-12, Barnes 5-12, Wurz 0-1, Heyner 7-17, Handel 6-12, Barnes 5-12, Stallings 7-0, 14-15, Blanco 0-0
Cedric Hunter played tough defense against Kansas State's Benny Green during Saturday's game in Manhattan. Hunter scored 14 points and had six assists in the Jahaywah win. He needs three assists to break the Kansas season record.
Hattie Washburn 2, 44; Karaun 3, 45. Regulation 72-72. Total foul—Washburn 2, 14; Karaun 15. Fouled out—Patteron Rebounds 43 (Burtion, Davenport 6). Interference 44 (Burtion, Davenport 6). (Paterson 7). Kanaus 18 (Witt 5). Technicals—None.
Jacki Kellv/KANSAN
10
Hunter nears KU season assist record
Needs three assists to top Valentine
By Matt Tidwell Sports writer
The third time Cedric Hunter passes for an assist during tomorrow night's game against Colorado, he will break the Kansas season record
"It's definitely easier to get assists when we run the break. I'd say about half of them come when we run the break, and the others happen when I throw the ball in the middle."
If Hunter continues at his present average (7.3 assists a game), Hunter will have at least 241 assists at the end of the season — breaking the Big Eight conference record of 237 set by Nebraska's Brian Carr last year.
While at Kansas, Valentine was an all-round player who not only held
of 168 assists set by former All- American Darnell Valentine in 1981.
Cedric Hunter
the Jayhawk assist record but also was the team's leading scorer averaging 15.4 points a game.
In Hunter's role as point guard, the 6-foot junior from Omaha concentrates more on running the Kansas offense, including hitting the open man, than he does on scoring.
"I'll open, Coach Brown wants me to shoot the ball." Hunter said yesterday. "But mainly, he wants me to get the ball out well on the fast break and hit the open man."
It's been Hunter's execution of Brown's offense that has allowed him to hit the open man more than any other Kansas player.
"He's had a terrific season," Brown said. "He went through a period when he worried about his free throw shooting, but I think he's improved on that a lot. He really helps us in so many ways."
"I think it helps if we can get out and run like we have been," Brown said. "Assists come much easier when you can run the ball. When you see more zone defense it's tougher. In the man-to-man, you're able to penetrate more, which Cedric is very good at."
Brown said the Kansas offense was ideally suited to Hunter's ability to find the open man.
HUNTER PROFILE
(2)
Cedric Hunter
Hometown: Omaha, Neb.
Age: 21
Family: Parents, Alfred and Carolyn Hunter
Class: Junior
Background: At Omaha South High School, led the state in scoring as a junior, 27.3 points a game. He was a Converse All-American his senior year. At Kansas, he has averaged 6.1 points and 4.4 assists a game.
Hunter said his assists had come in two categories, off of the fast break and in the half-court game when the Javahawk slow down their offense.
"It's definitely easier to get assists when we run the break," Hunter said. "I'd say about half of them come when we run the break, and the others happen when I throw the ball in the middle to Greg (Dreiling) or Danny (Manning)."
As the Big Eight conference race continues, Hunter said his role wouldn't change much. He'll keep looking for the open man.
"I'll keep playing the same way," he said. "That's our style of play and
I don't see my role changing much.” NOTES — Hunter has had over 10 assists in four different games this season, including 14 against Duke.
Sports Briefs Miller will resign as Ohio State coach
BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
Conference All Games
| State | W | L | Pct. | W | L | Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Oklahoma | 5 | 1 | .833 | 5 | 1 | .833 |
| Kansas | 5 | 1 | .833 | 20 | 3 | .870 |
| Missouri | 5 | 1 | .571 | 10 | 3 | .870 |
| Iowa St. | 4 | 3 | .571 | 13 | 7 | .650 |
| Nebraska | 3 | 3 | .500 | 13 | 6 | .684 |
| Arkansas | 3 | 3 | .500 | 13 | 6 | .684 |
| Kansas State | 1 | 5 | .166 | 13 | 8 | .631 |
| Colorado | 1 | 6 | .000 | 8 | 11 | .621 |
Tomorrow's games
Oklahoma State at Oklahoma
Colorado at Kansas
Kansas State at Nebraska
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State basketball coach Eidon Miller has resigned, university sources said yesterday.
The Buckeyes 10-9 this season, including 4-5 in the Big Ten after consecutive losses to Minnesota and Iowa.
Miller compiled a 167-113 record since taking over as Ohio State coach in 1976 after the retirement of Fred Taylor.
Team needs officials
The Kansas track team is looking for interested students to work as officials for this weekend's Jayhawk Invitational at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
Officials also are needed for an indoor meet Feb. 16 and for the Kansas Relays on April 19-20.
Those interested may pick up applications in the Kansas track office at 143 Allen Field House.
Bryant is nominated
NEW YORK — Bear Bryant, winner of 326 games in almost 40 years as a head coach, was a
Bryant died in 1983, 37 days after retiring as coach at Alabama, where he had been since 1968.
unanimous choice yesterday for the National Football Foundation's College Football Hall of Fame.
Bryant coached at Maryland, Kentucky and Texas A&M before moving to Alabama. He compiled a total record of 328-106-7.
From staff and wire reports
7 Pats are drug free, doctor says
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Seven members of the New England Patriots who tested positively for drug use during the past year will continue to be checked on a random basis, the head of the team's drug program said yesterday.
The group includes two players whose tests showed they had been drug-free for six to eight months, said Dr. Armand Nicholi, who also is the team's psychiatrist.
Some of the players questioned why the tests were continuing, Nicholi said.
"If players are clean for six to eight months, we stop consultation but (continue the) test," he said.
He also said tests done on the seven players had been negative since Jan.
Nichiola all seven players were tested during the week before the Patriots' 46-10 Super Bowl loss to the Chicago Bears on Jan. 26.
8
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Tuesday, Feb. 4, 1986
Gramm-Rudman will trickle down
Law will increase states' deficits
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Most state governments, many of which now enjoy budget surpluses, will be plunged into deficit spending under the Gramm-Rudman law that will rob them of $12.4 billion in 1987, according to a study released yesterday.
The study, conducted by the Villers Foundation, the National Council of Senior Citizens and the Service Employees International Union, said 40 state governments would run deficits if they tried to offset the cuts in federal spending in 1987.
The new budget-balancing law, which goes into effect March 1, requires across-the-board cuts in all government programs if lawmakers fall to come up with an alternative way to reduce the national deficit.
"The automatic cuts under Gramm-Rudman-Hollings will devastate the middle class and the poor, the old and the young, residents of rural and urban areas and affect people in all regions of the country," said Ronald Pollock of the Villers Foundation, a non-profit advocacy group for the elderly.
REDUCED AID/Kansas
Projected losses in federal aid to Kansas under the Gramm-Rudman deficit reduction law.
If Gramm-Rudman is triggered in 1987, federal funds for state and local
- Highway aid: 37.8 *
- Financial aid for college students: 12.8
- Medicare: 12.8
- Special education programs: 7
- Social services block grants: 5.8
- Community development block grants: 5.4
- Wastewater treatment grants: 5.2
- Low income energy assistance: 4.4
*Figures in millions of dollars
Source/Fiscal Planning Services Inc:
governments will be cut by more than $10 billion, the study said. Cuts in two big entitlement programs — Medicare and student financial aid — will add another $2.4 billion to the states' losses.
William Hutton, director of the National Council of Senior Citizens, said in a news conference that the budget-cutting law is "a mindless instrument of fiscal policy which makes
computers and bureaucrats the final arbiters of our future."
Hutton said the cuts also would reduce drastically federal and state programs for the elderly such as nutrition services, senior centers, low-income energy assistance and Medicare.
The country's most populous states will lose the most money under the law, which hits California and New
York the hardest with cuts of more than $1 billion each.
Texas, Pennsylvania and Illinois would lose more than $600 million, and Ohio, Florida and Michigan each would lose about $500 million, the study said.
"Could the states recover from this?" Pollock asked. "The answer is an emphatic no."
Many states have balanced-budget laws, and many now enjoy surpluses, the study said.
However, sparsely populated states in the West and New England would be affected drastically on a per capita basis. The five hardest hit, the study said, will be Alaska, Wyoming, Montana, Vermont and South Dakota.
Pollock called for increasing revenues by closing corporate tax loopholes, making corporations pay a minimum fair share, and decreasing fraud and waste in defense spending to reduce the deficit.
Leaders of the country's public housing and community development agencies also called for a federal tax increase to reduce the deficit and asked for level financing in housing and development programs.
Reagan's address will center on U.S. families
WASHINGTON — President Reagan's State of the Union address tonight is not expected to contain dramatic calls for action but will center on the American family, including plans for a review of welfare programs.
Aides said Reagan's speech would last only 20 minutes — about half the length of recent addresses — and would feature somewhat punchier rhetoric than his first four. The president is withholding until Thursday a delivery to Congress of a 40-page list of legislative, administrative and foreign policy initiatives.
United Press International
The address, to be delivered at 7 p.m. before a joint session of Congress, was delayed a week because of the space shuttle Challenger disaster last Tuesday.
The president is expected to call for a Cabinet-level study of the $110 billion spent on a variety of federal welfare programs, with a report due on Reagan's Oval Office desk by Dec. 1.
Reagan also will propose an evaluation of federal programs and strategy to meet financial, educational, social and safety concerns of families.
As part of a family emphasis; the president plans to highlight the programs that will protect and preserve the American family within the constraints of budget cuts.
There was speculation in the White House that the administration could save money and move some of the poor above the poverty level by giving cash benefits rather than financing specific aid programs.
He also will address the problem of affordable health insurance covering catastrophic illness so life savings would not be wiped out by prolonged or severe medical problems.
State-owned Israel radio and television reported that the Reagan administration told Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres and Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir that Scharansky would be included in an impending exchange. The broadcasts stressed that no formal announcement had been made by either the Israeli government or the White House.
The New York Times quoted Reagan administration officials as saying the agreement calls for Shcharansky and three or four Western spies held by the Soviets to be released Feb. 11 in Berlin. In return, an equal number of Eastern bloc agents jailed in the West would be released.
State Department spokesman Charles Redman said whether Shcharansky would be released in a spy swap was a hypothetical question.
"These are things of tremendous importance to us all and if the Soviet Union decides to move forward in some of these areas, I'm sure it will be a positive development," he said.
Rep. Benjamin Gilman, II,
reportedly involved in the negotiations,
said serious and sensitive
warnings about war, but he
declined to give any details.
In addition, Reagan is expected to announce he will ask Treasury Secretary James Baker to undertake a study of a possible world currency conference and report by the end of the year. The high value of the dollar relative to other currencies has played a key role in U.S. trade troubles.
Shcharansky, a Jew, has been seeking permission to emigrate since the 1970s. He has served eight years of a 13-year sentence for spying for the United States. The founder of a Soviet Monitoring Group to check human rights violations by the Soviets, he is in Perm labor camp, 500 miles east of Moscow.
According to the reports, the East German and West German agents will be swapped on Glienice bridge between East Berlin and West Berlin, where captured U-2 pilot Gary Powers was exchanged for Soviet master spy Rudolf Abel in 1962.
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He is expected to pay tribute to the seven astronauts who lost their lives in the explosion of the Challenger. Aides said no money has been put into the 1987 fiscal year budget, which is to be delivered tomorrow.
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WASHINGTON — Secretary of State George Shultz declined comment yesterday on reports that Anatoly Shcharansky would be released in an East-West spy swap but said the plight of Soviet dissidents was of tremendous importance to the administration.
However, Reagan will reaffirm that the space program will go on and once again express his determination to pursue his anti-missiles Strategic Defense Initiative, better known as Star Wars.
Aides said Reagan will describe the state of the economy as good and will stress the need to make the government fiscally fit by starting the Gramm-Rudman balanced budget law. Aides were confident that Reagan would continue to oppose any new taxes and would make it clear that he wanted to continue the military buildup.
The West German newspaper Bild, quoting sources in Moscow, first reported that agreement had been reached on the largest East-West spy swap since World War II.
The Blid identified the two key agents to be freed as Yevgeni Deliakav, a Soviet spy arrested in 1985 in Koln.
Foreign policy will take a backseat in the address, but Reagan was certain to castigate Libya's Moammar Khadiya and notify Congress he would seek military aid for rebels fighting the governments of Nicaragua, Afghanistan, Angola and Cambodia.
Although a source in New York's Jewish community said the swap could be any day now, White House
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House votes to require warning labels on snuff
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United Press International
The Associated Press
Deal for Western spy remains unconfirmed
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
WASHINGTON — The House, faced with mounting evidence that youths are turning to snuff and chewing tobacco as alternatives to cigarettes, voted yesterday to require health warning labels on smokeless tobacco and to ban their broadcast advertising.
1307 Mass. phone: 843-1151
The bill would require one of three rotating warning labels to be added to tins and pouches: "This, product may cause oral cancer." "This product may cause gum disease and tooth loss," or "This product is not a safe alternative to cigarettes."
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Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce health subcommittee, said he hoped the labels would persuade teen-agers not to take up "this filthy habit."
The bill was reluctantly supported by most of the tobacco industry as the favored alternative to a myriad of state labeling requirements.
Rep. Thomas Bliley Jr., R-Va., a tobacco industry supporter who blocked consideration of the bill last year, told the House he would not attempt to delay the bill
The Smokeless Tobacco Council, a trade organization, helped draft the compromise bill, although executive director Michael Kerrigan said the industry still thought warning labels were not needed.
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4
Jim Cobb, a state health official who is coordinating the study, said workers would go to 500 randomly selected homes in the city's dilapidated southwest side, where most of the 43 AIDS victims live.
Researchers with the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta and the Florida Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services said yesterday that they hoped to study about 1,000 people in Belle Glade, a community of about 20,000 in southeast Florida.
deficiency, a fatal disease that destroys the body's ability to fight other illnesses.
"You have a high incidence of AIDS in Beille Glade, and no one knows why," Cobb said. "It would be prudent epidemiology to examine (every) theory. You can't turn your face to this kind of issue."
Study to research high rate of AIDS in city in Florida
United Press International
BELLE GLADE, Fla. — Researchers will begin studying Belle Glade residents next week to try and determine why the migrant farming community has the highest AIDS rate of any city in the United States.
As of Jan. 24, there were 43 confirmed cases of acquired immune
Those studied will be .tesed for AIDS, given a brief physical examination and questioned.
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
NEW HYATT TO OPEN SOON ON THE SMU CAMPUS
It's the first of its kind. Never before has the luxury, comfort, and leisure of a Hyatt been combined with the excitement, activity, and all-out fun of a prominent university.
Chris Yanney, the proprietor and manager of the Hyatt Nyanky apparently came up witht the idea when a friend of his from Kansas wished to come visit the school and he realized for the first time that there were no such establishments built anywhere on the campus. When we asked Chris
about it he told us, of "course it's very exclusive; it has to be—it's what the clientele wants. What we offer is this: an escape, excellent company, and the finest in cuisine. In exchange for this, the guest simply signs a short contract in which he she promises to drink and be fun during the stay. It's all about it. You get it from Yannie. This latest of campus getaways is scheduled to open in the last of February and is surely to be one of the Haytt's greatest successes.
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KANSAS UNION
Vision Quest Video
VCR & Tape Rental
2449 Iowa, Holiday Plaza 749-3127
Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m., Sun. 1 p.m.-6 p.m.
Memberships only $9.99 -
includes 2 free movie rentals
10 movie punch card $14.99
day rent a VCR & return it on Thursday ONL
Tuesday rent a VCR & return it on Thursday ONLY $5
UNLIMITED SALES AND MANAGEMENT GROWTH POTENTIAL
QUALIFIED APPLICANTS:
- We seek successful motivated individuals to market a revolutionary product line on a full or part-time basis.
- Scientifically DOCUMENTED, and FDA approved nutritional formulas which result in high energy and weight control.
PRODUCT PLAN:
- Advantages of being on the ground floor of a major marketing network.
- Unique compensation plan provides IMMEDIATE unlimited earnings potential.
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:
1
Integrated Asset Management (214)851-5870
Local seminar to be held
Thursday, Feb. 6 2:00 p.m.
at Alderson Auditorium (In the Kansas Union)
Tuesday, Feb. 4, 1986
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 2.90 4.25 6.60 9.30
21-25 3.10 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 Monday 4 p.m.
Thursday Wednesday 4 p.m.
- Consideration of pre-paid classmates' advertising.
- Blind hot ads - please add a $4 service charge.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be pla in person or simply by calling the Kaiser business office at 804-4358.
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement
- must be牙齿切除 *
* must be provided for classified or
* classified dental advertisements.
- In the University Idyll Karttai *
* All advertisements will be made to pay in advance
and will not be published.
ATTENTION STUDENTS WITH CHILDREN-
CENTER by the Student Assistance Center, 123
Stall Hall, for a listing of centers and licensed
homes for child care in the Leavenger area.
correct insertion of any advertisement
* No reflux on cancellation of pre-paid classified
- Words set in ALE CAPS count as 2 words.
* Words set in BLD FACE count as 3 words.
* Deadline is 4 p.m. — 2 working days prior to
- %hry earned rate discount
* Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only.
classified display advertisements
- Classified display ads do not count towards mon-
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Blind box ad+—phase add a $4 service charge,
* must checks all accompany all classified mailed ads
VIEW WITH WINDOWS ON TERRAIN
$90/mo. 842-2622.
DEALING WITH THAT UNASYMMETRIC FEELING:
home for child care in the Lawrence area.
COMMUNITIES: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Computer Terminal with modem for rent
$30/mn. 847-2922
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
learn to initiate conversations, make new friends,
feel comfortable around others, Monday,
February 10, 6:30:00 p.m. FREE! Please
regard to attend at the Student Assistance
LAWRENCE FLOAT CENTER - Winter Special
3 floats for $5. Call 841-5496.
NEED A RIDER/RIDE! Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
**Bent' 10:0° C TV T. V 8:28 m.m. Smity #' TV**
1447 W. 32nd 84:35 (975) Mon.- Sat. 9:36 - 10:45
Sat. 10:45 - 12:30 (975) Sun.-Mon.
S.A.M.S.
WANTS
YOU!
It's time to enter the Celebrity/Rock Star Look-A-Like Contest
sponsored by MTV, Swatch Watches in cooperation with
KLZR 106, Seventh Heaven and TV30
sponsored by
Who do you look like?
Call 841-0750 for more info.
Help tie up and bust M.S.
3. most often afflicts young adults between the ages of 18 & 35, with 200 new uncurable cases diagnosed each week.
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight. @99.66
Smitty's TV, 1447 W, 2nd. 842-751. MSTU
TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer us to you. You student with us Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hill.
WANT TO HIRE A TUZOR? our list of students tutor. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strom.
GOT A HOT DATE? Is your ear clean? AT LAWRENCE AUTO CLEANING making your ear looks newer is our specialty. 6th and Mainland. 749-5671
FREE DEMONSTRATION Philippin Slück
Fighting Art. Thursdays, February 7 at 7:00 p.m.
and April 1 at 9:00 p.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
SPRING BREAK **86** Do it right in Daytona with ECHO TRAVEL. The best trip for the best price. For more info call Bill at 841-3856 or Jim at 842-8731.
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to provide the music for your next party. We use a 1960s band called "Band of Doo-Doo" that can accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in Lawrence, Manhattan and Salem. Call 814-9434 or www.phasefour.com.
FOR RENT
& 2 bedroom apts. near campus. No pets. Spring semester. Davi 493-106, evenings 841-3232.
bid. apt. Mini. big lawn. 331 Indiana. 165/mo.
with Dep. plus utilities. 841-6831.
3 BH lounge, East Lawrence, thus route 1845.
Cook's Suites, 207-667-3500 after 8 p.m.
and utilities. Phone 202-667-3501 after 8 p.m.
APT. SWAP need 1 roommate to share 7/8 com-
fort. APT. SWAP $30 plus low maintenance.
lg. 2 BR apartment $350 plus low interest.
You are tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkley Flats.Vacancies available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 843-2116.
Available immediately; Large newly remodeled 1
br. Apct. closes to campus $105/mi. $43-9436.
MASTER CHAIR offers completely furnished 1, 2,
and 3 bed rooms apart for all new room. Call
(804) 769-2350 or visit www.masterchair.com.
NAISMITH HALL
Currently has a few spaces available for spring semester
NAISMITH HALL
First come, first served, only a few two left. At 216 W. 51th on, KU bus route, between Gibson's and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We hot and cool water, you choose options, bathtub or bath or balcony. Call 843-6446 for appointment.
1800 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
(913) 843-8559
Large bedroom for rent in roomy newer house.
Close to campus and downtown. All the conveniences of home. Only $125/mo. and low utilities.
843-9438
Luxury 3-bedroom Hanover Place Condominium
w/garage WB immediate需求。Need to
share a bedroom with guests.
Room For Rent in a bedroom house only $99 a month. Close to Campus. Call 842-2900.
SUBLEASE available Feb 15, 3 bedroom, water
connection to Best Apts. Lease Thru Aug.
8/24/2027
SUBLEASE NOW. 1 BDMH Hanover Place ap.
One month free rent! 749-2970
One month free Post! + 20%vac
Sublease Immediately 2 hours 6 pm. No deposit
All offers valid at www.casino.com
$175 month plus annuity. 624.23 save
Walk only in school to 2 bedroom apt.
No deposit required.
Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. [ilus] saidaid. B49 4-813-485.
FOR SALE
ALL SPORTS TICKET best offer 84-1652 after 5:30 SATUANCE
BASKETBALL SEASON TICKET. best offer.
748-2791. Robert Maldonado. Please leave
BE YOUR OWN BOSS! P.K. Popper located in downtown Lawrence is up to run. Your very own business or find some partners. GREAT BUSINESS EXPERIENCE. For further info.
Basketball cards and sports nortglain. Buy, Sell
Baseball cards. Baseball cards. Open 10-4 M-S.
W. and Z. street Street
Complete Stero Set for $140, VHS VCR very new for $290, call 800-341-5678
Concord HLP-116 audiophile car stereo, 118/-
times technos RHS-04B autorerverse deck, full
back amplifier.
Couch-bed $20, Double Hilt Exercise毯 $25, Men's &
Women's Golf Clubs $25, 824-903-6
FENDER AMPILEFER, 60 watts, 2 instrument
input $10/bit, Master/848-7523. If not home, leaf
inventory.
For Sale Hoodie Spree 85, only 500 miles. Must Sell $235. 749-738. Think spring.
For Sale: HP-41CV calculator w/math pc,
manual & cases 185. Scott 814-1344.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U. repair).
Call 811-687-6009
Fax 811-687-6004 for information
Guitar for sale. Yamaha-classic acoustic. Excellent condition. Only 75. Call 831-2916.
Hafter. 500 watt power amplifier. Brand new with
warranty. $800. Tom 842-1510.
october 10, 2015
to boot, scan,安娜 279
nodings
bioshark
to call, offer, call 810-109. Leave message.
call back to us.
Kenwood KR-7A0 receiver 60 watts, 18 station
antenna, 7 band equalizer, Sacrificio 900
atan.
CLINTON LAKES 2 BR with office on 1/2 acre plus, 2 car garage, uear marina & swimming beach. AC included. Appliances included. Lawrence low taxes. $25,000. All offers considered. 746-938-3400.
Lady's Diamond Wedding Ring Set. $350
negotiable. Call Pam 354-4190 (4196)
Mobile Home for Sale. Partly furnished 12 feet x
square, fitted, tied down $2,000. Phone: 843-653-891
7.
Western Civilization Notes: On sale! Now on sale! Makes a great gift for anyone preparing, 3). For exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization 'available now' in our bookstore. The Jayhawk Bookstorers, and Oread Bookstores.
CRUISHPSEHS HIRING! $18;$40.00 Carribbean, Hawaii, World! Call for Guide, Cassette, Newswireclc (916) 944-4444 X UKRUSCHSACRUE
Caregiver needed for infant girl in our home, weekday afternoons. Must have child-care experience and transportation. Call after 5.0 p.m. in
Must sell: HP-1CV calculator, w/card reader and
accessories.Never买: $250, 1.927-378-603.
RICKENBACKER 4001 ELECTRIC BASS Excellent condition. Ask for Kodkoppenhaer
HELWETT,PACKARD 7402A (2 PEN) PLOT-
7401B (2 PEN) CABLES: CALLS
AVI AT 797358, MAF. 7.4
AVI AT 797358, MAF. 7.4
Female aid in weekend A.M. 8:30-10 or P.M
10:00-11:30 daily. No experience necessary.
AUTO SALES
HP-41 CX calculator excl. cond, case; instruct,
case; instruct.
HP-41 CX calculator $150. $149-1509 everm
before 10. K.C. R. S.
1979 Pontiac Suburb, 6500, Automatic, AM/FM compatible, 1895 or best offer Call Anil 641-354-8728
Forty-hour week, $4.75 hour, Tues., thir day, Sat.
thru August. Work consists of door-to-door data
collection. Car and driver's license required. 20
positions available. Send resume or letter of
intention to: Sharon Rines, RJN Environmental
Roadside Kid, Sie 213, Mission, KA 60029
011/432-1477
1975 Plymouth Fury, 50,000 miles, excellent condition, clean inside out, no rust. 493-842-6832.
1976 Datum Pickup truck with camper shell. Engine good, very little rust, needs some work.
1976 Pontiac Bonanza.
Must Sell 1800 Old Mobil Cutlass Station Wagon
diesel. Silver Auto, power handle seats, ac,
AM/FM cassette. Good condition. $2999. Call
824-427-123
RABBIT "83" new radialis, air mirror, low miles, grey metallic paint, moving. Maintown soil should be used.
1953 Schwinn Mountain Bike - Relible transportation with few miles. Base 642-8593.
www.swinnmountainbike.com
HELP WANTED
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $185.00 $495.25/yr. Now:
GOVERNMENT JOB 1 603-967 0060 Ext. R975 for current
location.
Full-time ECE teacher position in child care center for three and four year olds. Child
75 WV Rabbit, 141k, 149k, 4 door, storei, rebelu
carburator $600.00 usb best offer 848-422 or
848-423
SUMMER CAMP JOBBS in the Northeast. For a free listing, send a self-addressed stamp (# $39). envelope to Midwest Camp Consultants, 1755 Red Coat, Maryland Heights, MO. 80494.
Attention KU work students study the KU library system has several part time work position studies available. Consult job board on main level Watson Library or contact Ruth Hurst 864-3601.
Student Staff Positions-summer orientation program 1980. Required qualifications: minimum 2.0 gpa, returning graduate or first year graduate students may apply. Desired qualifications: leadership activities, interpersonal communications skills; enthusiasm about university. Job descriptions: position offered by
Wanted: Research assistant in the department of Systematics and Ecology to coordinate exp. with students interested in natural science required. Starts March 1986.
Salary $1,250. Contact John O'Brien, Haworth University of Kansas 964-8435 to apply and for more information. Application deadline 18-64 AA/EP
summer Jobs, National Park Co.'s 21 Parks, 5000
Openings. Complete Information $5.00. Park
Rest. Mission Mm Co., 651 2nd Ave. W.N.
Kallan, MT M9901
suspect about university job descriptions,
and that a federal education service 123 Strong Itall. Due by Fri.
September 26.
Wanted: graduate student from Emperor to show KU students around its vicinity and university campus. Send resume by e-mail to emperor@ku.edu.
**selp Wanted:** Law student needs patient,
reactive babysitter. Call 843-8766.
LOST. gray long haired cat, male Persian. If you find it, please call 841-3848.
LOST/FOUND
AIRLINE HIRING BOOM1: $414-829-3000
Canton, Wisconsin, 98144-9444 U XAW153
Cassette, Newyork, 98144-9444 U XAW153
Lost: Cross (gold) pen. If found please call 864-1416.
or stolger a pair of white Reebok aerobic shoes. Last Mon Jan. 27 in the women's room. Last Mon Jan. 28 Please return to the service desk or call Valerian at 865-1179 after 17:30. No questions asked.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TIM-Day early day, late day.
I will be my baby my feet my toes I still love you. From your best friend
PERSONAL
Hayes and Valk, Matchmakers Incorporated, are pleased to announce the availability of Sheri and Michelle. These lovable young women are willing to attend our free tour. Ask for them around 15th and Naksham.
Hey Snowbird I- am looking for a good looking athletic lady who thinks it would be fun to swim in the water. I don't think you can be disappointed. Find your shorts and swimsuit wherever they're hiding and go swimming.
Hey Pam! Who is this Habakkuk guy anyway? A Harvard graduate, no doubt.
Mark and Dan, how 'bout Ha-Back Rub? Love, Burt and Dan.
SAVE OUR SEATS! You paid for them. If you do, to the KUAC decision to remove student seating this season, call Monte Johnson and voice your opinion at 843-3143. Don't take this decision.
Tired of treading and turning? Do you awake feeling relaxed and well-rested? Cotton and foam core futures are designed to fully support your spine and release tension. BLUE HERON (north-west) North Lawrence (one block east of Mexican Restaurant) up to Sat. noon to 3 or call 844-9443.
BUS. PERSONAL
810-3600 Weekly/Up Mailing Circulars! *No*
aue! Sincerely! Interested rush self-addressed
envelope! Success, PO Box 470 CDG, Woodstock,
IL 00098.
His and Hera Hair Designs. Quality hair care at reasonable prices. We use the best hair products available for men and women to deserve Hair Design $7, permits $5 and up with haircut included. Linda and Bacir 641-900, 1218
SKT CULTUR RISING!
Skateboards & Accessories
QUALITY STUFF ONLY
^
BEST WORKOUT IN TOWN - LAWRENCE
BERMOCS, M-W-F S 3:0 P.M. LAwrence School of
ballet, 8th & Sermont, Cathe Thompson 841-8264.
First class is free.
UPTOWN BICYCLES
1337 Mass.
749-0638
JUNE 21 GMAT
THE
MUSEUM
SHOP
CALL US AT 1-800-555-TEL
COMPREHIENTIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE-
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater area; Call for appointment: 913-436-1400
VALENTINES!
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
The Union's recording
of the day's entrees & soups
THERE'S STILL TIME TO PREPARE
KOOKI
*CAMP COUNSELORS - M/F - Outstanding Slim and Trifin Campo, Cenema, Dance, Shimmy, Juggling. Specializes in plus. Separate girl' and boys camp, 7 weeks. Separate girls' and boys camp, 7 weeks. Manhattan, Pennymayne, Carolina, California. Contact: Dr. Nicole Friedman, Director, Sir Howlett Dr. No. Woodner N., Y. Nailsham.
Instant Valentines
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach. Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang岛/Port Aransas from only 820, and skiing at Sea Lion or Vail from only 730. Take bags, bags, bags, ... Harry, call Sunchase Tours for more information and reservations to toll free 1-800-431-5911 or contact a local Sunchase resort. Visit our Spring Break counts, count on Sunchase.
Jayhawker Towers
ON CAMPUS
V-Postcards 15¢
V-Cards 50¢
V-Notes 25¢
Stamley H. KAPLAN
Educational Center Ltd.
TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SACRE 1939
STAMLE H. KAPLAN
Educational Center Ltd.
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts.
for KU students
Of Natural History
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sundays
664-4450
for KU students
Museum
- For 2, 3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- Individual Contract Option
- 12 Month Lease
- 10-Month Leases
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors
- Available Air Conditioned
- Air Conditioned
- Swimming Pool
- On Bus Line
Free Cable TV
- Furnished or Unfurnished
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 imprinted specialties plus speedy and reliable delivery. You design it or let it be printed. 2201. B51 384 (Behind Geb) #81 - 644-348.
Now leasing for spring
Rent '19' Color T.V. $28.95 a month. Smitty's TV.
Rent '19' Color T.V. $28.95 a month. Smitty's TV.
50% Off
Any Single Service
8 Tanning Lounges
Tan daily without waiting
Facial Tanners
Hot Tub/Whirlpool
Hot Tub/Whirlpool private rental or good
Aerobics
Weight Facilities
Sauna or get
$10 Off
lowest price, best service best tan
We Guarantee
expires
2/8/86
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza 841-6232
Sweets For Your Sweetie. Color Portrait. A
Valentine's Day sneeze. Special Sweil.
790-4611.
The sun is out, the sunglasses are in! The ETC.
Shop. 732 Mass.
a different deli special every day
DELI SPECIALS
Today's Special:
Bagel with Meat
Small Soup
16 oz. Drink
$2.30
THE KANSAS UNION
Modeling and theater portfolio -- shooting new beginner or professional, call for information
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed Tshirt. 748-161.
Hirten’19 Color T $2.98 a month, Curtis
Mabens, 14 W.3rd, 42.83753, Sat. 9-10:
9:30-10:30, 10:30-11:30
All cotton old timer shirts. New shipment and colors in the FTC. Shop 732 Mass.
Class Ring Day—Why wait for the ring man when its ring day every day at Balfour House. 935 Mass. Float Connection. Floating is believing. $10.00, 14 E. 818 St. 748-7717.
SANDWICH
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School! Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided. 841-7740.
FREEYWAY SINGLES CLUB. A NEW WAY FOR
BOOKING. 804-3617 MEET THE MEDIA
BOOKING: 804-3617
Hand-crafted clocks, windowcapes and fantasies.
For appointment: 808-347-6277 or appointment
on 309 upstairs, 845-3277 eve for appointment.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa 1.1, and 1.2 of course, fidelity. Travel w/insurance.
SERVICES OFFERED
LOSE WEIGHT NOW. 10-29 lbs, per month on Herbal product. As seen on T.V. Cal. #842-7960. Mobile Locksmith. Fast Lockout Service, ReKeying-Dadbolts, Complete Auto Service.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
LAWYER
HARPER
EDITING, structure, data analysis, papers,
theses, dissertations. M.A., Ph.D., student, ex-
cellent.
STATS For Training Service. Bus 368, math 526, etc.
For those who can afford the call. Call 842-1055.
BIRTHRIGHT-- Free F pregnancy Test. Confidential Counseling. 843-4821.
MATH TUTOR - Bob Means holds an A. in math in K.u.W., uber 602, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring proficient students and scored a 98 on the statistics exam. $6 per 40 minute session. #483-9932.
TYPING
curate and affordable typing. Judy, #894-795.
13-1-4 TRIO Word PROCESSING. Experienced.
Conscientious. Reliable. Rush Jobs Accepted.
Call: #894-311.
24-Hour Typing, 10th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dissertation papers. Copy to campus
phone or fax.
1-2-3 Dependents, Accurate, Professional, WORLD
PBSING: These, diaries, papers, booklets,
catalogs.
University Daily Kansan
A3 professional typing. Term papers, Theses,
papers in technical journals, using IBM EISM
III Computer Applications 942-5448
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing
on a computer with a mouse. 5 Day same day
availability 844 Illustration 844 Illustration
BLOOM COUNTY
LONely, NO
HAITIRE &
ISLAMS
WERE DOOMED.
HELP IT,
WHY AREN'T
I SEASICK
ANYMORE ?
A. L.SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers. Phone 832-8657 after 5:30.
ACQUARE TYPING, word processing, and spell checking. Low calls. Rate 463-7592
Ace Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable,
friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes.
Word processing. Document uploading.
vice available. One block from campus. 642-2576.
AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing/Typing. Corrections. Proofreading. Graphics.
Document upgrading. Pre estimates. 749-1188
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service.
TRANScription also; standard cassette tape.
843-8877
THE FAR SIDE
DISSERTATIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY Service
available on shorter student papers (up to 30
pages) Cat Kathy. Mommy's Mummy. 483-3788
JACKIE'S TYPE. Most anything most accurately Experienced IBM, 814-0320
Dissertationals, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs experience. Phone 842-2310 after 5:30; Barb. English B.A. Trying and tutoring. Spelling correct, overnight service available. Great rates
Letter perfect papers and resumes. WRITING
LIPELINE, 841-3469.
WANTED
EXPERIENCE TYPIST Paper terms; paper
experience will correct spelling.
Phone 816-6544, Mrs. Wright.
TYPEING: FAST AND ACCURATE u. 8 years
experience. FAST, reasonable rates. b-1635-031
**QUALITY TYPING** Letters, then, dissertation,
applications, applications *Splitting corrected*
**Call 825-7491**
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing service. E-mail: top-notch-services.com, thesis, letters, forward printing, etc. 842-7500.
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share great brand-new apartment very close to campus. Microwave, W&D, dishwasher, $130/mo. Call 841-5515 anytime.
TYPIING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, lefters, applications. Resumes Have M.S. Degree. B41-6254.
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED for lrg. 1
bedroom, 2 bedroom apt. on bus route. $104 a
month plus 1/3 utilities. Call Mark or Mitch.
842-4992.
Female non-mobile ASAP, 2 bedroom w/pot,
BIG plus 1/2 utilities. Close to bus route. Call
911 for assistance.
Male roommate召唤 $100/mo. 2 blocks from
campus. Excellent deal. Call 813-6823.
F/1M roommate needed to share excellent
2 bedroom apartment, $150 a month + 1/4 utilities
$160 per month.
NEED EXTRA CASH? We Want To Buy Your Used Stereo Equipment, Working Or Not. Amps, Receivers, Speakers, Turbulates, Car Stereos, Cassette Ducks, Bring It By For Instant Cash, Lawrence Custom Radio 914 W. 29rd SL. 96218-0511. Call 914-837-1100. All utilities paid. Call 914-837-1100.
Need a male to continue my leave in Jayhawk
Need 140m to 150m. All utilities paid. Call 843-6466
Call 843-6466
Male roommate wanted: to share a new and spacious house with garage in a nice suburban neighborhood.
Needed immediately: Used IBM or PC, PC printer by Feb. 7. Pay cash.
(9137-786-790)
(9137-786-794)
Need female roommate to share apartment
route. Contact, close to campus, on bus
route. Call 841-9035.
Nonanaking, female roommate needed to
substitute 2 bedroom apartment. On bar rent: $125
per month. Residency fee: $600/year.
Non-smoking, Male Roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom house near campus. W/D, cabiletts in front of property.
Non-smoker, male to share very nice condimentum w/microwave, washer and dryer, dishwasher, fireplace, sunroom, cable TV, etc. $175.00 usm all utilities paid. Call Carl. Curt. Roommate: 4-bedroom duplex $125/mo) plus 1/2-room for 1775 ask for Rich. Keep Leave Answer
Two graduate students or mature couple needed to share a bed or bedroom in a vety of settings.
Spar api. Large private BR. Half of rent is $128.
No utilities. Bill 843-1809.
Visiting professor from Japan needs small furnished apt, with in walking distance of Spence Museum of Art for March & April. Call Art History Depot. 864-4713.
Wanted: Male to take over contract in Nailsmith.
For more info, call Jay at 749-6984.
By GARY LARSON
1
"Once in a while couldn't we just have some pasta?"
1986 Universal Press Syndicate
2-4
WE'RE
TINNY FEET
IN THE AIR...
HOLY
MACKEREL!
I PO BELIEVE
IT'S... IT'S...
YES!
by Berke Breathed
ANON ONLYPOO !
-VIVA CONSTEAU!
77
10
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Tuesday, Feb. 4, 1986
Findings of drug use may not lead to firing
By Lynn Maree Ross
Staff writer
Reports of drug testing of company employees and prospective employees may have some people upset, but a loophole in employment law may prevent employers from taking action against those who test positive for drug use.
Classification of alcoholics and drug addicts as handicapped could prevent employers from keeping alcoholics or drug users out of the work force.
Elinor Schroeder, professor of law specializing in labor and employment law, said last week that the Employment at Will doctrine gave employers the right to fire an employee or refuse to hire someone without a reason. But she said the doctrine had exceptions.
An employer, she said, can't fire or refuse to hire someone on the basis of race, religious preference, sex or handicap.
A subsection of the Federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973 defines a handicapped individual as any person who has a mental or physical impairment that substantially limits one or more life activities; has a record of such impairment; or is regarded as having such an impairment.
Impairments defined as handicaps include drug addiction and
alcoholism, said Mona McCoy, executive director of Independence Inc., 1901 Haskell Ave. Independence Inc., provides transportation and counseling services for the disabled, including alcoholics and drug users.
McCoy said she thought drug testing was an invasion of employee's privacy but employers also had their rights.
"An employer has a right to expect the person they hire to have the qualifications to do the job," she said.
If drug tests are used to screen new employees, McCoy said, the test should be given to everyone.
"Consistency is the watchword," she said.
McCoy said even if a person had a history of substance abuse, that should not be the basis for discrimination, but it frequently was.
The loophole in the employment law may look like a victory for those concerned about drug testing, but it has a twist.
A person filing a complaint of unfair employment practices must prove he is handicapped because of a problem with drugs or alcohol.
Mark Mohler/KANSAN
Schroeder said the courts had to decide how to define an alcohol or drug abuser. Even if someone is an alcoholic or drug user, it may not affect job performance.
Help from my friends
Darrell Riche, Omaha senior, and his wife, Brandy, spend the afternoon photographing Herman, one of Darrell Riche's Sculpture I, SCUL 253, projects. Darrell Riche said he was shooting Herman yesterday for his Photography I,
JOUR 310, class.
Meteorologists are in demand,prof says
Bv Grant W. Butler
Staff writer
More KU students should look into the possibility of careers in broadcast meteorology, a KU professor said Sunday.
"I'm surprised that given the reputation of the school of journalism and the reputation of the department of meteorology that we don't have more students enrolled," said Max Utsler, associate professor of radio-TV.
"There's definitely a job market for television meteorologists. I'm surprised more students don't pursue that option."
"It's one of the most difficult jobs to fill because you have to find someone with the science and journalism backgrounds who can also be a performer," he said.
Utsler said that when he was in the television industry in 1983, it was hard to find qualified meteorologists who also had experience with television performance.
"You're asking someone to wear a lot of dif-
ferent hats."
A student graduating as a trained scientist and a journalist is going to have greater ability to market himself, Usler said.
"For a student who might be considering being a television meteorologist, we have a good program for them here," he said.
Joe Eagleman, professor of meteorology, said there were 12 students studying broadcast meteorology at KU.
"Many of the TV stations are beginning to go with people trained in meteorology as opposed to people without training, so students are beginning to go for that," he said.
Because KU's atmospheric sciences program began in 1982, Eagleman said, many students haven't realized that broadcast meteorology is an option available to them.
A successful television meteorologist needs
more than a knowledge of science, Eagleman said.
"They should be a skilled forecaster, and they ought to have some courses in television performance as well," he said.
Steve Bergstrom, Medicine Lodge senior and a broadcast meteorology student, said he always had been interested in meteorology but the possibility of being a television weatherman was what made him also seek a journalism degree.
"It's tough to get a job without a journalism degree," Bergstrom said. "Because when you start out you usually do the weather only on weekends."
A journalism degree, he said, makes a person more attractive to a television station because he can report news events during the week.
to have his bachelor's degree in journalism by the end of August.
Bergstrom said he earned his bachelor's degree in meteorology in May, and he planned
Terry Bryant, weekend meteorologist for KSNT in Topeka, graduated last December with degrees in meteorology and journalism.
The extra emphasis in journalism gave him a better background to do weather forecasting on television, he said.
People starting out in broadcast meteorology usually had to start in small markets, Bryant said. The medium and large broadcast markets are hard to get into, but after a year of experience, the market is wide open, he said.
"You produce your own weather segment," he said.
A lot of work goes into each broadcast, Brvant said. but the effort is worth it.
"There's a lot of work that goes into preparing those three to four minutes on the newscast," he said. "A lot of people think it's a lot of work, but I like it."
Programs benefited by merger
By Sandra Crider Staff writer
The recent union of a lone department and a professional school will benefit both programs, the school's dean and the department's director said last week.
The School of Pharmacy voted Jan. 28 at a faculty-student meeting to incorporate the department of Health Services Administration.
Howard Mossberg, dean of pharmacy, said, "I'm optimistic that, with some of the services that my office will be able to lend, we will have a symbiotic relationship that will help the program."
The department was established by the Board of Regents about five years ago, Davis said, and is the only program of its kind in the state.
About 50 part-time and full-time graduate students will earn a degree that will enable them to be administrators in hospitals, health maintenance organizations, large clinics, nursing homes and health insurance companies.
The program lasts two years for full-time students. Some classes are taught at the Regents Center in Overland Park to accommodate part-time students who work in the medical profession. Davis said.
Demands for better health care combined with decreasing finances make the role of the administrator increasingly important, he said.
"The field is becoming more like a business dependent on cash cost, yet we have to maintain the accessibility of health care for everyone." Davis said.
He said managers in health services had to deal with moral issues too.
"We are facing the question of whether people should be denied health care just because they are indigent," he said.
Davis said the program prepared students to operate in the volatile, increasingly important field.
II
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Skiing
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 5, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 90 (USPS 650-640)
Snow
Details page 3.
Searchers may have found rocket booster
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Searchers may have found one of Challenger's two rocket boosters yesterday, which could be a valuable piece of evidence in the investigation of the space shuttle's explosion. NASA said.
"Sonar soundings indicate a solid rocket booster may have been located," a National Aeronautics and Space Administration statement said. There was no information on the precise location.
There also was no indication of
whether it was the right booster, which is the chief suspect in the liftoff explosion that destroyed the shuttle and killed its seven astronauts Jan. 28. Challenger had two such boosters to help propel it into space.
CBS, meanwhile, said that at least part of the shuttle's main crew compartment had been located and that some of the personal effects of the astronauts floated to the ocean surface. NBC said some of the human remains brought to shore in recent days had been identified as belonging to the seven astronauts.
NASA spokesman Richard Young
adhering to a self-imposed agency rule, said, "We don't have any word from the investigation board about that."
"if the booster is from the right side,
"we have a very valuable piece of evidence for the (accident) review board." Mizell said.
Recovery of the booster might show whether a leak in the thick metal casing caused a tongue of flame to heat the huge external tank, setting off the blast. This flame was seen in film, although its origin was not clear.
Engineers could gain much
knowledge just studying the burn patterns or the joints on the side of the thick rocket casing. Mizell said.
Chief objects of the search besides the right booster are the crew compartment, with its cockpit voice recorder and electronics that monitor and record spacecraft systems.
Two NASA ships with sonar and robot submarines that can see hundreds of times better than the human eye continued scanning the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean 40 miles offshore in water 1.100 feet deep.
With any surface debris scattered ever wider by strong ocean currents, the Navy pulled out its ships, leaving only four Coast Guard vessels, four fixed-wing planes and two helicopters. There had been 10 aircraft and 15 ships on Monday.
NASA yesterday crossed off seven of 17 targets — objects seen in sonar soundings — after a closer look by
robot submarines showed they were not parts from the shuttle.
The agency also said it was in error Monday when it said two interesting soundings were old wreckage of a helicopter and an airplane. There were no sonar sounds at all, spokeswoman Sarah Keegan said yesterday.
Members of an interim investigation board were flying to Washington to make their first report to the presidential panel that is charged with finding out how the explosion happened and how another can be prevented.
KUAC to postpone changes in seating until next season
By Frank Ybarra
Staff writer
Staff writer
After making a decision to eliminate 400 seats in Allen Feldt Field, the executive committee of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation decided yesterday to postpone any seating changes until next season.
Anthony Redwood, professor of business and chairman of the KUAC, told a meeting of the KUAC that committee members went to the field house yesterday afternoon to examine how the bleachers would be blocked off.
After looking at possible arrangements of rope and wooden barriers, the members decided that the bleachers could not be physically blocked off without guaranteeing that people would not climb under or over the barriers. Redwood said.
William Hanna, Newton senior and a student representative on the KUAC, said he went with the executive committee to look at the situation.
The committee was concerned with how the barriers looked and about possible confrontations with anyone who tried to sit in the blocked-off areas, he said.
who tried to sit in the office during Redwood said after the meeting that the committee's decision became moot upon examining the possible barriers.
"If we could have physically done it, we would have stuck with the decision," he said.
who were standing in areas of the field house where new bleachers were installed last fall. The new bleachers are six feet higher than those they replaced. As a result, fans who sat behind the bleachers could not see the game even if they stood.
The problem with the seating came about after the KUAC received complaints about a group of students who were standing throughout entire basketball games.
see the game board. On Monday, Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director, said between 400 and 500 seats in student seating sections would be blocked off.
would be scheduled. Redwood said that even though the committee discovered it was not practical to block off the seats this season, a solution still had to be found for next season.
After the next KUAC meeting on April 15, he said, a committee would be formed to find a solution to the problem for next year.
bem for next year:
The new committee would consult with some of the students who were standing during games this year, Redwood said.
Jason Krakow, Prairie Villa sophomore, is one of the fans who stands behind the KU bench at the games.
"I never gave it much thought until it became an issue," he said. "It will be a thought of mine now."
Krakow said, however, that he might be more conscious of the fans who were seated behind him.
'America is on the move'
United Press International
Speech urges fiscal fitness
WASHINGTON — President Reagan challenged the nation last night to "win the race to the future" by pressing ahead on a course of fiscal fitness and military strength to reassert America's place of world leadership.
Assessing the accomplishments of his tenure and embracing anew the goals of his conservative agenda in his fifth State of the Union address, Reagan told Congress and a nationwide television audience. "We have done well, but we cannot stop at the footshills when Everest beckons. It is time for America to be all we can be."
Through his 30-minute litany,
Reagan spoke directly to the nation's children about the challenge of the future and repeatedly emphasized the role of family in American life.
He announced a major review of welfare programs — at the federal, state and local levels — with a goal of developing by Dec. 1. a plan to break the hold of the "welfare culture" on the nation's poor and ensure that such assistance leads to "real and lasting emancipation."
The president also directed Health and Human Services Secretary Otis Bowen to report by year's end with recommendations on how the government and private insurance companies might join forces to protect the elderly against the devastating costs of catastrophic illness.
Security at the Capitol was tighter than usual, prompted by increased fears of terrorism, an issue to which Reagan made only a passing reference. Guards with bombsniffing dogs patrolled the grounds, access to the building was limited and identification was carefully checked.
Reagan opened his address in the House chamber — packed by members of Congress, the Cabinet, the justices of the Supreme Court and other luminaries – with a reference to last Tuesday's Challenger explosion.
The speech was devoid of specific recommendations to Congress for
See REAGAN, p. 5, col. 1
ALEXANDER WELCH
Mary Burger/KANSAN
Chris Butler, Coffeyville junior, scrubs the face of the Moses statue in front of Smith Hall. The statue was being cleaned yesterday in preparation for the premier of the film, "Moses: The Creation of a Heroic Sculpture." The film, which documents the 15-year making of the statue, will be shown at 8 p.m. Feb. 14 in Dyche Auditorium.
House bill may halt cut-rate liquor costs
By Abbie Jones
Staff writer
Penny and dime draws may be prohibited under a House bill pinning stifter restrictions on Kansas club owners.
The proposal says no price can be set that is lower than that charged to all other buyers of drinks during that week and prohibits owners from selling liquor as part of a meal package. Last year's legislation said no price could be set that is less than other drink prices during that day.
The proposal would prohibit club owners from selling an alcoholic beverage for less than it costs the establishment, said State Rep. Robert H. Miller, R-Wellington.
"We are trying to actively discourage heavy drinking in clubs," said State Rep. Robert Vancram, R-Overland Park. "Extending it to an entire week will discourage clubs or taverns from offering all-you-can-drank nights, or penny-a-pitcher nights."
Members of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee are now studying the proposal and will hold a hearing within the next two weeks.
The measure also says it is illegal to sell a pitcher to one person and requires clubs to post a price list for all drinks.
liquor legislation passed last year. Some club owners had side-stepped certain provisions of those laws, he said.
"It's going to need some fine tuning," he said. "That's what this is designed to do."
"The government is trying to step in and regulate our total business," he said. "It would be some big changes, but it wouldn't be anything we couldn't handle."
Doug Compton, owner of the Mad Hatter, 700 New Hampshire St., said the government's involvement in liquor bills hurt the industry.
Vancur said he thought the legislation was difficult to enforce, but would probably pass through the committee with some modification.
Miller said the proposal was designed to eliminate holeoles in
Compton said his Thursday night deal which offers 1-cent draws of beer for a $5 cover charge was to reward his patrons who bought drinks all week. Compton said the Mad Hatter would drop the cover charge and sell draws for 15 cents if the bill became a law.
Vancrum, vice chairman of the committee, said the intent of the changes were to keep people from drinking too much at one time.
"I might as well hand my liquor license over to the legislature," Compton said. "It's not free enterprise any more."
Some KU sales tax policies to change
By Leslie Hirschbach
Staff writer
A sales tax audit at the University in March may lead some departments to reassess their current sales tax practices, an official from the Kansas Department of Revenue said.
Kansas sales tax statutes now allow for different interpretations at each university, he said. Guidelines need to be set to insure that each university adheres to the statutes in a similar way.
Harley Duncan, secretary of the revenue department, said he called for a sales tax audit at Kansas State University last year, and at KU this year, to set precedents for other Regents schools.
tion that if you're not a profitable institution, you're tax exempt," he said.
The audit has two purposes, Duncan said. One is to insure that the universities have been paying and collecting sales taxes. The other is to make sure that tax exempt purchases are being used for educational purposes.
There is a common misconcep-
Marvin Thompson, internal auditor at K-State, said the department of revenue found the university liable for about $100,000 in back taxes. Ten departments are protesting the decision, he said.
the libraries, the yearbook and the student union suffered large financial setbacks, according to Thompson.
He said the audit at K-State hurt its library more than other departments because the library had not been charging a sales tax for 5-cent copies from photocopy machines.
"They had to pay sales taxes for three years of previous business, which was in the neighborhood of $10,000 liability," he said. That amount included interest.
Recently, The Rock Chalk Review, a variety show that raises money for the Lawrence United Way, began paying sales taxes on ticket sales after being advised by the University comprotiler's office.
Jim Ranz, KU dean of libraries, said the libraries began paying sales taxes on the receipts from copy machine sales a few months ago at the suggestion of the University legal counsel.
Paying sales taxes for copies may hurt the library, he said, because it might have to raise the price of photocopied material if the financial
burden became too heavy
If the price of copies is raised, Ranz said, the collections could suffer because students may tear pages out of books to avoid paying for more expensive copies.
"We want to make our collections available to students and hold copy prices down," he said.
compete John Allison, executive director of the show, said organizers hadn't paid sales taxes because they thought
See AUDIT, p. 5, col. 4
Petition requests help to decrease vandalism
By Peggy Kramer Staff writer
Four KU students have organized a petition requesting help in reducing vandalism in the residence hall parking lots, the organizer of the petition said Monday.
Bond said the petition would be sent to everyone who would be involved in the project, including the Association of University Residence
Kelly Bond, Reynolds, Ga., graduate student and the organizer, said the petition would ask for improved security, increased police patrol of residence hall parking lots, improved lighting and repaired potholes.
Halls and the KU police.
"There has been a lot of vandalism going on and nobody's doing anything about it," Bond said. "We haven't set a goal for the number of signatures, but we hope to have enough to show that we have a representative voice."
Sgt. John Brothers, crime prevention and community relations for KU police, said last Thursday that there were 11 separate burglaries to automobiles in the Daisy Field extension parking area.
Since Jan. 1, 15 burglaries have occurred in the residence hall parking lots. Eleven of those occurred on Jan. 30. Brothers said.
Scott Danenhauer, Denver junior and Ellsworth resident, said his car window was broken Thursday and the glove box was rummaged through, but nothing, including the stereo, was taken.
Brothers said, "There are officers making extra patrols of the Daisy Field parking area, but we don't have the money or the people to put an officer there full-time."
People should be aware that automobile burglaries don't only
The residence halls and Jayhawket Towers have the largest concentration of parked vehicles, he said, and there is crime potential wherever the population is concentrated.
happen at night, he said. Last fall there were six or seven burglaries during the day in the Daisy Field parking area.
Brothers gave some tips to help discourage vandals.
He said people should park in well-lighted and well-travelled areas, keep their automobiles locked and valuables either locked in the trunk or not in the car at all.
Even though car alarms can be beneficial, he said, they can also be expensive and the extra-sensitive ones can be a nuisance to the owner.
ones can be a master door.
Dannenhaer said locking the doors
See PETITION, p. 5, col. 4
2
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
News Briefs
Airline attendants lose jobs in layoff
MIAMI - Layofs took effect yesterday for 1,010 Eastern Airlines flight attendants and the Air Line Pilots Association said it had mailed ballots to its members to authorize a Feb. 26 strike against the financially ailing carrier.
WASHINGTON — The Haitian government has allowed chartered airplanes to land in the island country's second largest city, Cap-Haïtien, to pick up Americans, and most of them have left, the State Department said yesterday.
Eastern announced last month it would lay off 1,010 flight attendants and cut the salaries of the remaining 6,000 flight attendants by 20 percent.
The department said Monday that the Cap-Haitien airport had been closed because of the rioting in the country and that permission was being sought for charter flights to pick up a small group of Americans. In addition to the charter flights, the Haitian government has given permission for a small missionary-owned private aircraft to fly into Cap-Haitien every morning to bring out Americans who want to leave.
On Monday, ALPA's 27-member Master Executive Council, meeting in Atlanta, voted unanimously to set the Feb. 26 strike date against Eastern.
New anthem wanted
Flights leave Haiti
Nation/World
GARDEN GROVE, Calif. — A TV evangelist has asked President Reagan to replace "The Star Spangled Banner" as the national anthem because the reference to bursting rockets is a painful reminder of the space shuttle explosion, church officials said yesterday.
Rev. Robert Schuller, host of the "Hour of Power" TV show, said he objected to the lines, "and the rockets' red glare, the bombs bursting in air." He suggested that "America the Beautiful," which was sung at the national memorial service for the astronauts, be made the new national song.
From Kansan wires.
Mississippi blast kills eight
United Press International
CRYSTAL SPRINGS, Miss. — An explosion and fire demolished a furniture and appliance store yesterday, killing at least eight people, sending a huge mushroom cloud into the air and shattering windows of nearby businesses.
"We think it is a natural gas leak, but it is under investigation," Capt. Mike Cole of the Crystal Springs Fire Department said. "Eight people are dead and one injured — seriously."
Cole said the blaze was brought under control within 30 minutes, and
firefighters were sifting through the rubble of the Watkins Furniture and Applicance Co. searching for more victims.
"Right now we're mostly concerned with trying to find the bodies," Cole said.
"It blew the back out of the building and then the front, too. There was a big mushroom cloud when it went up. It was pretty bad."
"There were some people in there shopping at the time. I'd say three or four at the most." Cole said.
Copiah County Sheriff Tommy Jackson said the injured man, Paul Edward Brown, 18, was rushed by medical helicopter to the University Medical Center in Jackson.
The victims were burned beyond recognition and were not immediately identified, but Cole said about half the victims were believed to be
employees of the store, owned by Amos Wattkins.
"He was virtually blown through a window. He was on fire," Jackson said.
Watkins' son, Clint Watkins, is one of five candidates in the city's mayoral election, which was being
held yesterday. He was not in the store when it exploded at about 3 p.m.
The sheriff said the metal building was equipped with natural gas heaters hanging from the ceiling.
Jackson said there was no indication of foul play in the blast, which rocked the central Mississippi town of 4,900 about 20 miles south of Jackson.
Cole said the windows in a nearby service station and doctor's office were shattered by the thunderous blast, but suffered no other damage.
Israeli warplanes capture Libvan jet
United Press International
JERUSALEM — Israeli warplanes intercepted a private Libyan jet carrying 12 people, including a Syrian political delegation, to Damascus yesterday and forced it to land in Israel.
The Israeli military then conducted a five-hour search for terrorists on the jet before allowing it to leave.
Syria protested the seizure, calling the action an "obvious violation of international law," and called for an
emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council.
But Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir defended the move, calling it a necessary precaution.
The twin-engine executive jet, which left Tripoli, Libya, yesterday morning, was near Cyprus when Cypriot air traffic controllers lost contact with it about 1 p.m.
Two Israeli jet fighters intercepted the plane near Cyprus and ordered it to accompany them to an Israeli airfield, where it landed about 30 minutes later.
Among those on the Libyan plane
was Abdullah al Ahmar, assistant secretary-general of Syrian President Hafez Assad's ruling Baath party. an Israeli spokesman said.
About 6:30 p.m., Israeli military authorities cleared the plane for takeoff. The jet rolled down the runway and lifted off with its flying lights doused to prevent photographers and television crews from filming its departure, a witness said.
The Israelii warplanes forced down the Libyan plane in the belief that "persons involved in planning an attack against Israel" were on board,
an Israeli military spokesman said.
After an examination of the plane and passengers, the Israelis said they allowed the aircraft to leave with all 12 people aboard for Damascus.
Sources close to Israeli intelligence later said the capture of the American-made Gufstream might have been a mistake.
The Israelis apparently were hunting for radical Palestinian leaders who were attending a meeting of Middle Eastern guerrilla groups in Tripoli.
1 million cheer Aquino at final rally
United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — More than 1 million Filipinos, some demanding the execution of President Ferdinand Marcos, flooded a seaside park yesterday in a significant show of support for challenger Corazon Aquino in the last major rally of her campaign.
Philippine presidential debate canceled
The gathering in Luneta Park was the largest anti-government rally in Manila since August 1983, when an estimated 2 million Filipinos attended the funeral of Aquino's husband, assassinated opposition leader, Benigno Aquino.
United Press International
Many of the opposition supporters wore yellow T-shirts and ribbons. The color yellow has become a symbol of protest since Benigno Aquino's murder.
Firecrackers lit the night sky and yellow balloons bearing Benigno Aquino's portrait were released as Mrs. Aquino arrived amid chants of "Cory, Cory."
MANILA, Philippines — The great debate of the Philippines presidential election apparently fell victim yesterday to conflicting demands of the two candidates.
ABC News announced Monday that President Ferdinand Marcos and opposition candidate Corazon Aquino
would appear on its "Nightline" program on a live satellite linkup from Manila.
ment's Commission on Elections raised the legal point, both candidates came up with their own plans to get around the ban.
But nobody seemed aware that the timing of the program would require the candidates to hold their debate Thursday morning Manila time, well into a ban on campaigning for 24 hours before the Friday election.
After the chairman of the govern-
Marcos, who earlier agreed to do the ABC program, decided it was not dignified for the only debate of the election to be handled by American television and shown only in the United States.
Most of the nation's top opposition leaders appeared at the event. Former publisher Joaquin "Chino" Roces, 73, received the biggest aplause when he vowed to storm the presidential palace if Corazon Aquino were cheated in the election Friday.
The crowd chanted, "Hang him,
hang him. Kill him, kill him," referring
to Marcos, as Marco's running
mate, Salvador Laurel, recited a libary of "sins" Marcos is thought to have committed during his 20 years in power.
In her remarks, Aquino predicted the liberation of the Philippines in Friday's voting.
"February 7 will be the beginning of our liberation," the 53-year-old widow said at the final rally of her
Marcos was scheduled to hold the final rally of his re-election bid today at the same park.
campaign. "Freedom is as near as the coming of dawn."
In an address earlier in the day, Marcos alluded to Aquino's threats to lead daily demonstrations if she lost the election because of fraud.
"We are capable of handling anything you may start."
PARIS — A bomb exploded yesterday in a Latin Quarter bookshop frequented by college students, injuring at least three people, sparking a raging fire and sending screaming customers fleeing for safety.
Witnesses said they heard a muffled explosion in the basement of the Gilbert-Jeune book store at about 7:30 p.m. About 70 people were inside at the time.
The blast came as an Arab terrorist group claimed to have set off a bomb Monday that injured eight people on the tourist-packed Champs-Elysees only a short time before police defused another bomb found atop the Eiffel Tower.
Flames quickly engulfed the building as 100 firefighters fought to control the blaze. A fire department doctor said at least three people suffered lacerations and burns but were not seriously injured.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blast.
The explosion came fewer than 24 hours after a bomb explosion in a garbage can at a mall on the Avenue de Champs-Elysees. That explosion injured eight people, three of them seriously.
In a letter to a French news agency, a group calling itself the "Committee of Solidarity with Arab and Middle Eastern Political Prisoners" said it was responsible for the bomb on the Avenue de Champs-Elysees.
The letter said the group, which was previously unknown, was seeking the release of two Arabs and an Armenian jailed in France.
Twenty minutes later, an employee at the Eiffel Tower found a small explosive device in a public bathroom at the top of the 984-foot tower. It was timed to go off at 1 a.m. yesterday, an hour after the tower closes to the public, police said.
The bomb exploded at 9:40 p.m. at the Galerie du Claridge shopping mall on the fashionable Champs- Elysees, damaging about 10 stores.
Police were uncertain whether the two bombs were planted by the same group. No one immediately claimed responsibility for the tower bomb.
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University Daily Kansan
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News Briefs
Police arrest student driving stolen BMW
A 20-year-old KU student was charged with possession of stolen property after police arrested him yesterday afternoon. He was arrested after police saw him driving a car in the 1200 block of W. 15th Street.
Three passengers, all KU students, were questioned but not arrested.
Police said the car, a $40,000 BMW, was reported stolen in Florida late in December.
Kwik Shop robbed
A woman stole cigarettes and an undisclosed amount of cash during an armed robbery at Kwik Shop, 845 Mississippi St., early yesterday morning, Lawrence police said.
The woman entered the store, purchased some cigarettes, then reached into her purse and told the cashier that he was being robbed. She then reached into the register and grabbed the money.
Police said they were looking for a black woman, 5 feet 4 inches, 120 lbs, in her late 30s. She was driving a brown four-door car with a Johnson County license plate and was last seen driving west on 9th street
Thomas to get award
Helen Thomas, United Press International White House bureau chief, will receive the 1986 William Allen White Foundation Award for Journalistic Merit.
Thomas will receive the award Feb. 10 at the William Allen White Day luncheon at the University of Kapsas.
Robert B. Wellington, editor of the Ottawa Herald and the White Foundation president, will present the award to Thomas.
Award honors peace
An award of $250 will be given this semester to an outstanding student interested in peace research and conflict resolution.
The E. Jackson Baur Award, which is being presented for the first time, is named for an emeritus professor of sociology.
Students interested in applying for the scholarship can contact Scott McNall, professor of sociology. Nominations, which are due March 14, are also being accepted from professors.
The award can be used to support research, travel expenses or the cost of manuscript publication and preparation. Awards also can be be made for work in progress or work already accomplished.
McNall said the intent of the award was to call attention to and reward such research.
The awards committee will be McNall; Howard Baumgartel, professor of psychology; and Tom Beisecker, associate professor of communication studies.
Weather
Today will be cloudy and cold with a 50 percent chance of snow and a high in the mid-30s. North winds will be 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be cloudy and cold again with a 50 percent chance of snow and a low in the mid-20s. Tomorrow will be cloudy and cold with a 40 percent chance of snow and a high in the low 30s.
From staff and wire reports.
Tobacco warning label may be required
TOPEKA — If legislators in Washington don't pass a law requiring warning labels on chewing tobacco and snuff packages, the legislators in Topeka just might.
By Mark Siebert
Staff writer
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee heard arguments yesterday in support of a proposed bill that would make it illegal in Kansas to sell tins or other chewing tobacco containers without a warning label.
The label would read: "Warning:
The use of this product could cause
guitar observer.
Any person violating the law would be guilty of a class C misdemeanor punishable by a maximum of one month in jail, or a fine not exceeding $500 or both.
oral cancer and other mouth and gum disorders."
Nationally, the U.S. House of Representatives on Monday approved a bill that would not only require warning labels on smokeless tobacco but also ban their broadcast advertising.
One of three rotating warning labels would be required on tobacco packages: "This product may cause
oral cancer," "This product may cause gum disease and tooth loss," or "This product is not a safe alternative to cigarettes."
State Rep. Charles Laird, D-Topeka, said if the federal bill passed the Senate and became law, it would supersede the bill now introduced in the Kansas House.
"We should go ahead and pass this and let the fed know we're serious about it," Laird said. "I think it be nice to show our concern
and let people in our state know we're concerned."
He said tobacco companies were not fighting the bill in Congress because they would rather deal with a federal law than different laws in each state.
Committee chairman Robert Miller, R-Wellington, said the committee would not take action on the bill soon, but would wait to see what Congress did.
Stephen Zeller, an oral surgeon from Topeka, told the committee about the dangers of smokeless tobacco and showed slides of cancer
victims to support his stance.
"There is no doubt in my mind that smokeless tobacco causes cancer," Zeller said. "It's a fact."
Warnings are needed to avoid an epidemic of oral cancer in the years to come, he said.
The two most common types of oral cancer linked to smokeless tobacco are squamous cell carcinoma and verrucous carcinoma. Zeller said.
Squamous cell carcinoma, he said, is responsible for 90 percent of all oral cancer. It is also the most dangerous because it can spread to other parts of the body.
Class teaches unusual path to self-defense
By Barbara Shear
Staff writer
The way of least resistance is a different approach to self-defense.
The approach, called Shaolin Yi Tao Gung Fu, is a style of self-defense that Robert Sprackland developed by combining traditional styles of martial arts with his own techniques. He teaches the style in a class at 7 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Lawrence Community Center, 115 W. 11th St.
Sprackland, a graduate student in education,
said he tried to teach his students to use physical
instruments.
1983
"The purpose is not to kill your attacker," he said. "We don't have the right to take something away that we can't replace."
The purpose of the class is to liberate the individual mentally and physically, he said.
"We try to get rid of the irrational fears people have and get them to understand that fear." Sprachland said. "We also try to get people to know their limitations and recognize the ones they give themselves."
Many of the students in the class said they benefited from this type of self-defense. One class member said the class helped her in other aspects of her daily life.
Wilfredo Lee/KANSAN
"Besides feeling more confident, it teaches balance," Judy Peterson, a KU graduate, said. "I found my quicker reflexes and it has widened my perinerval vision."
Other students in the class said the art built character and made them more confident.
"It has made me more assured," Bridget Patti, Lawrence freshman, said. "I feel better about myself and don't let people push me around anymore."
Even though the art centers on physical self-defense, most people in the class have found that they haven't had to use it.
Joseph Bicknell, Prairie Village senior, said he had used it mentally, but not physically.
James Minor, 933 Kentucky St., uses Shaolin Yi Tao Gung Fu techniques to throw Joseph Bicknell, Prairie Village senior, during a simulated knife attack. They were participating in a self-defense class last night at the Lawrence Community Center, 115 W. 11th St.
Lee Beletis, New York graduate student, said she found that people had more respect for her when they discovered that she knew martial arts. However, she said, she did not advertise it.
"When people find out that you know martial arts, then they want to fight," she said.
Sprackland has been practicing martial arts for 28 years.
"It was total infatuation," Sprackland said. "I was watching a 90-year-old instructor being attacked by six large guys. He defended himself without moving his feet at all."
Student Senate hopes to get hot line
By a Kansan reporter
Student Senate wants a telephone hot line to be installed in the Kansas Union to improve communication between the officers and students, the student body vice president said yesterday.
Amy Brown, vice president, said the hot line would be installed by March and would consist of a telephone answering machine
available to students 24 hours a day.
Students could use the hot line to voice opinions, questions or complaints about Senate affairs.
"A lot of people may be too intimidated to come into the office themselves," she said.
Brown said the Senate planned to use the line to poll student opinion on Senate issues.
The line also could be used for general questions and Senate officials would refer students to the proper office, Brown said.
The hot line would not try to be a counseling or crisis service, nor would it try to provide services already supplied by the University Information Center, she said.
Brown said the Senate was accepting bids for equipment and maintenance for the line and should know the cost by next week. The proposal will then go before the full
Senate for approval.
Krista Thacker, El Dorado sophomore, said she was interested in Senate issues because she was involved in student government in high school.
"If the Student Senate issues were advertised more, then I think students would call in to the hotline," Thacker said. "I don't think it would be used a lot, but I think it would be used a little."
By Russell Gray
Staff writer
Police today refused to comment on the shooting deaths of two former KU students discovered Monday afternoon.
Autopsies have been performed, and the investigation is expected to be completed in about two days, police said.
According to police, the shooting in Shawnee of Ronald and Ramona Brown probably took place Sunday afternoon, because Monday's newspapers were still on the couple's front lawn.
head, police said. There was no sign of a forced entry into the house or a struggle.
Mr. Brown, 25, graduated from the University in 1983 with a degree in general studies. Mrs. Brown, 22, also was a former KU student.
Both died of gunshot wounds to the
After graduating from the University, Mr. Brown was a sales representative for a computer company. He also worked as the head of marketing and marketing analysis for Crystal Computers in Lenexa.
Mr. Brown graduated from
Mrs. Brown Mission South High School
in overland Park, Mrs. Brown graduated from Shawnee Mission East in Prairie Village. The couple was married on May 19, 1985.
In May 1985 the couple opened a personalized gift shop called Namesakes, which they operated until their deaths.
While at the University, Mr. Brown was a member of the Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity, 2000 Stewart Ave.
John Hess, a KU graduate and fraternity member, said Brown was a very nice, quiet person.
"I thought it was a tragedy," Hess said. "He always seemed very much like one of the rest of us."
Mike Pautler, St. Louis senior and fraternity member, said, "Ron was a nice guy."
University hit by flu and colds
Staff writer
By Lynn Maree Ross
Loungs and sneezes have plagued students and faculty at the University of Kansas in the past week, but the school continues to function.
"Some have dragged themselves to class and then dragged themselves home again," she said.
Elaine Vick, secretary in the physics and astronomy department, said last week that many teachers had taught classes when they should have been home in bed.
Dave Barnhill, secretary in the School of Architecture and Urban Design, said the incidence of illness at the school had been higher than usual. Almost everyone on the staff, if they didn't have sick, at least had flu-like symptoms, he said.
The latest round of illness also has affected Robinson Center, the University bookstores and the bus service.
Allan Heinze, director of physical education and recreation facilities, said that both the students using the center and the center's staff had been bothered by illness. The number of students using the center has dropped from about 1,500 students each day to only 1,200 students.
He said at one point, six staff members were sick. However, illness has not curtailed activities at Robinson.
"We have quite a bit of backup," he said. "Overall, we've been able to keep the shop open."
Mike Reid, assistant manager for the Oread, Burge and Kansas Union bookstores, said he was having problems because of sick employees.
The bookstores are busy because students are coming in to get special refunds, he said. With 10 of his 60 employees ill yesterday, customer assistance was the area most affected.
Another service area that has been affected by illness is the Lawrence Bus Company.
Bus Company
Duane Ogle, manager of the bus company, said the illness had caused healthy employees to work overtime.
Ogle said, "Everyone is going to get their share of it, I suppose."
Watkins Memorial Hospital has seen its share of sick students, too.
James Strobel, director of Watkins,
said doctors treated about 250 students on a usual day. But last week, on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, 325 students came in for treatment each day.
Richard Schaffer, a physician at Watkins, said about 50 percent of the patients had flu-like symptoms. He was reluctant to say whether the illness was influenza, an acute infectious disease characterized by fever, muscular pain and inflammation of the respiratory tract.
The only way to confirm that the illness is influenza, he said, is to run studies three weeks after onset of the symptoms.
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University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Other alternatives
The recent decision by G.D. Searle to remove the Copper-7 and the Tatum-T intrauterine contraceptive devices from the U.S. market means that before long, this method of birth control will become a thing of the past in this country.
According to Searle, the product is safe. Searle blames the cost of defending lawsuits, many of which they say are unwarranted, and the increasing cost of insurance due to the product liability litigation.
The demise of the IUD is good news to the 14,000 women who filed suit against A.H. Robins Company and to the 775 women who have filed suit against G.D. Searle.
The A.H. Robins Company and Johnson and Johnson's Ortho division previously withdrew their IUDs from the U.S. market following an outburst of lawsuits.
The lawsuits have charged that the devices caused pelvic inflammatory diseases, ectopic pregnancies, perforated uteruses and sterility.
But lawyers for the women who are suing Searle say the company has known since the late '70s that their product could be dangerous for young women who have not had babies.
The million American women who currently are using the two IUDs have been told by Searle and by the FDA that they need not remove their devices immediately, although they should be removed after three years of use.
But if this is a cover-up in any way mirroring the cover-up attempted by A.H. Robins when the Dalkon Shield came under fire for its safety, then Searle has a great deal to answer for.
These women deserve to know the true reasons behind the company's decision. If the company is removing the product for economic reasons and the product is as safe as they say, the women may have nothing to fear.
Women using the IUDs would do well to see their doctors and discuss their alternatives, bearing in mind the relative safety of other methods and the risks inherent in dispensing with birth control methods altogether.
Unwanted pregnancies certainly are not desirable, but neither is the use of unsafe contraceptive methods. There are other alternatives, and they should be explored.
Pre-empted drama
It seems these callers weren't upset about shots of the astronauts' families reacting or even about the overdose of instant analysis the networks offered.
They were peeved that their soap operas were being preempted to cover the accident.
The in-flight deaths of seven American astronauts did not provide enough of a continuing saga to replace some people's make-believe tragedies for even a single day.
Some network officials stood up for the callers. An ABC spokesman passed off the complainers as being devoted fans,
Network spokesmen say they always receive calls from soap viewers when programming is interrupted. When Egyptian President Anwar Sadat was assassinated, ABC reported 6,000 such calls. The calls even came when President Reagan was shot and programs were pre-empted.
and another said, "It's not that these people are heartless. It's the repetition."
More than five hours of any news commentator can get old, but there were several other considerations to take into account on Jan. 28.
From the beginning, there were hundreds of unanswered questions. Everything happened so fast, nearly everyone was at a loss for possible causes. But the networks had to bank on the hope that leads would arise, statements would be made and news conferences would be held. For the most part, they were correct.
There was also the matter of respect. Somehow, the network bosses found the shuttle tragedy coverage more deserving of air time than the latest developments in daytime drama.
When John F. Kennedy was shot, the networks canceled all regular programming from Friday afternoon until after the funeral Monday. At that time, perhaps America's weekend sports enthusiasts were not as insensitive as today's devoted soap opera fans.
Drivers enjoy cheap gas
Fill'er un
An oil production war bet ween OPEC and non-OPEC nations has created a glutted market, and a resulting tremendous drop in oil prices.
Gasoline prices have dropped more than 20 cents a gallon in some areas. Most experts agree that prices will rebound but are unsure when.
Although the situation is serious to oil producers everywhere, oil consumers are
likely to have little sympathy, remembering that OPEC's price-setting after the 1973 Yom Kippur War started the upward spiral in gasoline prices, which eventually climbed well above $1 a gallon.
But for now, oil users are enjoying the drop in prices. The industry's problems give all of us a chance to fill'er up for semi-reasonable prices once again.
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Lauretta McMillen ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry ... Campus editor
David Clinton ... Sports editor
Brice Waddill ... Photo editor
Susanne Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nixon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Lori Eckart ... Classified manager
Carolina Innes ... Production manager
Pellen Lee ... National manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and home town, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest tickets. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansen newroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
The University Dally Kanese (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, *118 Stauffer Flint Hall*, Lawrence, KA, 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at the U.S. Postal Service. Students are charged in Douglas County and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $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.
SHUTTLE
PROGRAM
NASA
04866
No end to trinkets for lovers of gore
An acquaintance has made me the gift of an Oriental weapon called a throwing star — a pretty little thing that looks like a Christmas tree ornament.
It's metal and is shaped like an eight-point star. Each of the points is a needle-sharp edge, and if you throw it at something, it will tear, or stick in the target. And if your target is a person, it would maim or even kill.
About 25 different kinds of throwing stars. Three-pointers to eight-pointers. Two inches to almost 5 inches. And stars that fold up so you can carry them safely in your pocket until you find somebody you want to puncture.
There's something called a nunchaku, which is a couple of heavy sticks joined by a short chain. It is used, I'm told, for whacking people on the head. A bat probably would do
This person gave me the throwing star because he's a concerned citizen, and he's alarmed at the fact that you can buy such things at a store in Chicago.
A sampling
The store has a catalog, which I've been thumping through. And it sells — over the counter or through the mails — a wide variety of the kind of weapons that are seen in the bloodier kung fu movies.
B. J. K. M.
Mike Royko Chicago Tribune
just as well, but these are prettier and can be concealed in one's pocket.
If the poor guy is still thrashing about, you can dispatch him with your ninja shoge knife, or your steel blade kama, both of which are ax-like devices that look like stockyard tools.
For more serious aficionados of mayhem, there are samurai chains, which are long chains that have weights on the ends. You whip them through the air at your enemy, they wrap around your enemy's neck or head, and — being! — no more enemy.
There are a variety of throwing knives, as well as a knife that has a handle that can be used as brass knuckles. That's useful, should you have a fit of compassion and decide to bash in an adversary's teeth, rather than carve him up.
And it gets better.
There are blowguns, for shooting spike darts. And heavy leather gloves that have as many as 16 sharp
spikes sticking out of them. If you give somebody a punch in the chops with one of those, no more chops.
If you're the slapping type rather than a puncher, no problem. There's a half-glove you strap on your hand and wrist that has four spikes sticking out of the palm.
Or if you really want to kick a guy when he's down, you could slip a thing over your shoe that gives you snikes on the ball of your foot.
There are swords and spike wristbands, sticks for bashing or poking, and even key chains that can also be used for poking out eyes or splitting heads.
But the most original device — at least for somebody who doesn't like crowded elevators — is a thing that looks like a small, folded telescope. You press it against somebody's ribs, touch a button, and a powerful spring thrusts it to full length. It's a cinch to break two or three ribs.
Maybe you are asking, "Why aren't there laws against these things being sold?"
There are. In Chicago, you can't sell them to anybody under 18. Of course, you can sell them to anybody over 18. And they can give them to somebody under 18.
And that's why the police have
been finding more and more of these things in the pockets of street gang members. The throwing stars, the cops say, are a hot item among the little thugs. So is the rib-buster.
"Those nunchakus were big for a while," a policeman told me, referring to the sticks-and-chain weapon, "but not so much anymore. The problem with those was that if you don't know what you're doing, you can whack yourself on the head."
I'm not sure whether this trend is good or bad. On the one hand, it is alarming that the street gangs have all these throwing stars, knife-knucks, rib-busters and studded gloves.
On the other hand, maybe it means that those who use these trinkets can't get guns.
As to the question of why it is legal to sell them in Chicago and most other cities, that's easy. It's legal because the lawmakers haven't made it illegal.
Why haven't they? Maybe they just don't know. There is so much they don't know.
Or maybe they figure that in a society where any psychopath can buy his own arsenal, why worry about a few stars — as long as you don't get them in your eyes.
Mailbox
Not children's cross
I've been observing the truly absurd lately, both in the press and on TV
It seems that many psychologists and elementary school teachers are intent on turning the shuttle accident into a cross that children should be obliged to bear. They use phrases like "emotional trauma" and "lifelong scars."
I heard on one news show, a teacher said to his class, "How many here couldn't sleep last night because of the terrible shuttle accident?" And as he said this, he began raising his own hand. Virtually every student in the class followed suit.
This kind of behavioral patterning is a pathetic, misguided and melodramatic crock of knee-jerk nonsense!
I am also tired of hearing the constant singular reference to Challenger passenger Christa McAuliffe with no more than a secondary comment about the other humans aboard. (Can you name them?)
It is my belief that those professionals who think it will affect an inordinate number of children are functioning in an academic vacuum.
We all feel deep grief at some time or other. Our children will experience such difficult emotions soon enough. But I do not believe the event of Jan. 28 will, or should, traumatize the children of today. To the contrary, I would be concerned if it did.
Pav for athletic job
research assistant professor Center for Biomedical Research
In response to the editorial on Jan. 31, concerning two Kansās high school athletes who were suspended for receiving benefits from a school booster club, I offer the following comments:
The problem of "corrupting" athletes with hidden remuneration is less a matter of corrupting the athletes (or the holy institution of "amateur athletics") than that of corrupting the natural, free and open marketplace.
Why should age be a determining
factor for whether an athlete receives compensation for services rendered? Would anyone dare suggest that adolescent entertainers not receive decompense for their efforts?
Where service is rendered and mutual (uncoerced) agreement is reached concerning compensation for such services, only a circumvention of the laws of the marketplace can prevent institutions from paying fair and commensurate duty.
The "purer state" referred to in the editorial is one of an institutionalized exploitation that bars athletes, particularly collegiate, from trading their services in the free market.
If there be a pure state of athletic competition it should reflect the ideals of our society. Those ideals allow that the best among us of various abilities and talents be compensated in a manner that reflects our contributions and attributes — a value to be determined by the open and competitive marketplace.
Discover art classes
Fred Preilberg Kansas City, Kan., junior
As one ponders the question of whether to attend a small college (public or private) or a large institution such as the University of Kansas, a basic question that is often asked "Will I receive a well-rounded liberal arts education accompanied by close, personal instruction?"
More often than not, the large university is accused of creating programs that are lacking in breadth, with class sizes of such magnitude that personal instruction becomes a virtual impossibility.
As a graduating senior, I decided to deviate from the established senior tradition of fulfilling all remaining elective requirements needed for graduation with "pud" courses.
One of the courses in which I am enrolled is Fundamentals of Drawing and Painting (ART 120), and I am discovering things about the world and myselfa that I never considered before. I now look at everything through eyes that are beginning to see the artistic potential and beauty
of innumerable things around me that would have gone unnoticed before this personal artistic renaissance.
Fundamentals of Drawing and Painting is open to non-art majors only and has opened not only my eyes, but also those of my classmates. The artistic talents of the students in the class range between both ends of the spectrum, and there is no pressure to produce great masterpieces.
But there is a prevailing attitude in the classroom of freedom of expression, and the instructor is very willing to discuss artistic theory and aid the students in exploring a new frontier in every class meeting.
Why, then, is there no graduation requirement at the University of Kansas to take one introductory art course?
Courses such as western civilization, English and speech all accomplish their purpose, but wouldn't a course that exposes the student to general artistic theory and artistic expression seem to be complementary to a well-rounded liberal arts education?
Mark Weis
Markettter series
Headline misleading
The headline in the Kansan on Jan. 30, about an officer shooting a reeling rocket, was terrible on the following bases:
The public usually relates the word "officer" to a policeman.
The "reeling rocket" was not "shot" by any stretch of the imagination. It was blown up in flight by a radio controlled charge.
As headlines are supposed to show the reader the key points, then they should be accurate.
Gordon F. Sargent Lenexa graduate student
With a little thought I think a more useful headline could have been composed, such as "Runaway rocket destroyed in flight," or something similar.
The "reeling" was not relevant to the story. What was relevant was that the rocket was not under control and by its trajectory could have landed on the Florida coast.
Give Senate a chance
After reading the article concerning the Student Senate retreat (Kansan, Jan. 27) I couldn't help but notice the bias the reporter had against the Senate.
It seems that the same people who attack the Senate for its lack of organization, disunity and parliamentary squabble are now attempting to undermine the Senate's chance to work together and put into practice the ideas that have floated amicably through the past several Student Senates.
I have followed the Senate for the last year. All I have witnessed is useless, unproductive partisan politics. I have watched the last three Senates flounder in their own internal problems.
Issues that sounded good and undoubtedly could have benefited the University and its diverse student body have not been put into practice because of exactly the problems David Epstein and Amy Brown were trying to address with the Senate retreat.
It makes me wonder if those who so relentlessly attack the Senate really care about the University or simply the furthering of their own special interests.
Epstein's attempt to unify the Senate and its diverse elements into a workable, productive unit should be applauded, not condemned. If the Senate can learn to cooperate and get the issues that are important to us all through the Senate floor and into action, the students could finally realize what their Senate can do for them.
The weekend retreat to the Doubletree hotel by the entire Senate can only help to mold the Senate into a productive unit.
This is what all students want. Why criticize Epstein for his bold and long overdue action? Let's pull together behind the present Senate and give it the opportunity to succeed.
Maybe this time the students can experience what the Senate can do for them. Give them a chance — it's about time.
John Blackshire Leawood junior
---
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Reagan
Continued from p. 1
legislation, which was to be covered in a 40-page laundry list to be delivered to Capitol Hill tomorrow. It was repleate, however, with many goals and promises he had enunciated in the past, including:
A vow of no tax increases, either as part of a tax code overhaul or to help cut the budget deficit. "Some in Congress say taxes must be raised," he said. "Well, I'm sorry. They're asking the wrong people to tighten their belts."
A declaration of his belief an arms control accord can be reached "if the Soviet government wants an agreement that truly reduces nuclear arms."
A promise to continue his military buildup despite budget constraints and to pursue development of his Star Wars anti-missile program.
A determination to scale the role of government in American life and
spur the economy, because "an ever-expanding American economy" is the best way to beat the deficit.
A call for the line-item veto so he could cut spending. Challenging those who say the deficit cannot be controlled through spending cuts alone, Reagan said that if given that power, "I'll take the responsibility. I'll make the cuts. I'll take the heat."
Just hours after an ABC News poll showed Americans to be more pessimistic about the future than a year ago, Reagan declared, "Tonight we look out on a rising America — firm of heart, united in spirit, powerful in pride and patriotism."
"America is on the move," he said. While mixing foreign affairs concerns with his domestic agenda, Reagan repeatedly returned to economic questions, lacing together his conservative program with the accomplishment of the nation's goal both at home and abroad.
Speaking with the aid of teleprompters, Reagan set the tone for the coming political debate with an admonition that the challenges confronted in 1986 "will set our course for the balance of the decade, indeed for the remainder of the century."
"After all we've done so far," he said, "let no one say this nation cannot reach the destiny of our dreams. America believes. America is ready. America can win the race to the future — and we shall."
Reagan, scheduled to send his fiscal 1987 budget to Congress today, promised the spending plan would meet the $144 billion deficit target of the Gramm-Rudman balanced-budget law without cuts in defense, tax hikes or hurting the less fortunate.
Reagan also went down the conservative agenda, vowing to work to oppose legalized abortion and to promote prayer in schools.
didn't always help. If people want in they are going to break the window and cause damage anyway, he said.
Continued from p. 1
Brothers said that last year there were fewer car burglars concentrated in the Daisy Field extension area than the year before.
Petition
Fred McElhenie, director of
residential programs, said he didn't think the extension parking area was more prone to vandalism than other areas. However, he said, if there continued to be a problem, the Office of Residential Programs would work with other offices to find a solution.
He said lighting and unpredictable
visits by the police would be good deterrents.
At the AURH executive meeting last night, it was decided to discuss the security problems with Brothers, sald Drew Blossom, AURH president.
Audit
Continued from p. 1
charities were exempt.
The Jayhawker Yearbook will also begin paying sales taxes to the department of revenue this year, said Mike Mainey, business manager.
"The first payment was over $1,000," he said. He predicted that the yearbook would pay a total of $2,500 to $3,000 from this year's revenue.
Mainey and Pat Kehde, the yearbook adviser, met with a University comproller in late September and were advised to begin paying sales taxes, he said.
The price of 1886 yearbooks wasn't raised, he said, because people had
already bought copies for $19.
Next year, he said, the price of yearbooks would be raised to help pay the tax. He didn't know how much the price would increase.
K-State began to pay sales taxes on books last year after the audit
The K-State student unions also were assessed taxes for purchasing utensils for the dining rooms and kitchens.
Jim Long, director of unions, said KU unions hadn't made any recent changes in sales tax policy because they already charged the tax.
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6
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
Are open parking spaces in sight? Study will tackle parking problem
By Lori Polson
Staff writer
The KU Parking and Traffic Board will conduct a comprehensive campus parking and engineering study to try to alleviate overcrowded parking lots, a Parking Services official said yesterday.
The Senate Executive Committee heard the plans for the study yesterday at their monthly meeting.
The study will consider the feasibility of building a mass transit system on one edge of campus, said the official, Donna Hultine, assistant director of Parking Services. The
The limited number of parking spaces at the University often causes frustration for faculty members and students who cannot find a place to park, she said.
system would include a large parking lot with shuttle buses for transportation to and from campus.
"I do think there must be more people up here with cars this year," she said.
George Crawford, chairman of the Parking Services board, said the study would examine existing parking spaces and policies at the University. The firm doing the study will
then make recommendations for improvements to the board, he said.
"There is definitely a need for this study," he said.
Hultine said, "We do have a parking problem at the University. We hope the study will make some major proposals."
Plans already are underway to build two new parking lots on campus, Hultine said.
Friday is the final day for firms to present bids for the study, Hultine said. The study, financed by Parking Services, will begin this spring and conclude by Dec. 1. It will examine parking problems during the spring and fall semesters.
Greg Wade, campus landscape architect, said one lot, containing 50 parking spaces, would be built on the east side of the Computer Center.
The lot east of Watkins Hospital will be expanded by 30 parking places, he said.
"We are drawing up the blueprints now," he said. "I expect work will begin sometime in the next construction season, which begins in May."
SERVICE QUALITY
The city planning commission had recommended that the commission vacate 11th Street, but not 12th and 13th streets.
Mayor Mike Amyx said the city commission had instructed the planning commission to consider alternatives, but they apparently had not.
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That plat shows the rights of way for 12th and 13th streets extended west from Western Hills into the undeveloped subdivision.
Linda Lubensky, a spokesman for a Western Hills neighborhood association, said residents were concerned that if the right of way was not vacated and through-streets were constructed, the condition of the streets would deteriorate and they would require pavement.
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The subdivision in question is immediately east of some undeveloped land for which preliminary plats have been drawn.
Vacating the rights of way would prohibit the construction of streets and require the city to maintain the streets' oiled surface, according to city staff members.
City commissioners last night scheduled a study session to consider alternatives to vacating rights of way to streets in the Western Hills subdivision.
City considers maintenance of streets
The idea of extending 11th Street to the west also was raised at that time.
1234567890
If the rights of way are not vacated, it would allow the construction of streets, but would not trigger their construction, according to staff members.
In December, Western Hills residents requested that the City Commission vacate the rights of way for 12th and 13th streets on the western limits of the subdivision.
Staff writer
By Juli Warren
VISA
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Entries due in 208 Robinson by 5 p.m. Thursday, February 6
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Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
7
Prof wants new judge in 7-year-old lawsuits
By Lori Poison Staff writer
The attorneys for a KU associate professor of English filed two petitions to remove a U.S. District Court judge from two cases against the University of Kansas.
Myra Hinnan, the professor, has asked that the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals remove District Court Judge Richard D. Rogers from hearing the cases.
Fred Phelps Jr., a member of the Topeka law firm that represents Hinman, said yesterday that Hinman was convinced that he thought he was based in her cases.
Hinman wants Rogers removed from the cases because he refused to act on them promptly. Phelps said.
In 1979, Hinman filed a sexual discrimination suit against the University. The same year, she filed a suit against Lawrence attorney Oln Petefish and the Kansas University Endowment Association
In the second suit, Hinman alleges that Petefish agreed to represent her interests in the matter of her late husband's estate, but instead tried to
donate the estate to the Endowment Association
Both Rogers and Hinman were unavailable for comment yesterday.
Margie Phelps, also a member of the law firm, said Hinman's petitions asked the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to review Roger's actions in both cases.
"We are trying to get a higher court to make the judge act," she said. "He (Rogers) has let the case sit for seven years."
Phelps said she expected the circuit court to make a statement about the petition within the next month.
The law firm has filed 17 petitions against Rogers, asking that he be removed from cases involving their clients. Phelps said the other 15 petitions were not connected to the Hinman cases in any way.
Last fall, Hinman objected to the appointment of Deanell Tacha as U.S. Circuit Court judge for the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Tacha was then the KU vice chancellor for academic affairs.
On Campus
Janet Hamburg will speak on "Laban Movement Analysis: Looking at the Dance of Life" at 11:40 p.m. today in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1204 Oread Ave.
Mohamed El-Hodial will speak on "Current Issues in the Egyptian
Economy' at noon today at Nunemaker Center.
The KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in the Multipurpose Room in Robinson Center.
Dungeons and Dragons will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Trail Room in the Kansas Union.
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A bike valued at $370 was stolen from the backyard of a house in the 1000 block of Tennessee Street between 8 p.m. Sunday and 9 a.m. Monday. Lawrence police said yesterday.
A bike valued at $384.95 was stolen from the Kappa-Sigma fraternity, 1045 Emery Road, between 6 p.m. and midnight Saturday, Lawrence police said yesterday.
Funded by student activity fee.
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8
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
S. African editor to give speech
By Tim Hrenchir
South African newspaper editor Donald Woods, who will speak on campus tonight, was banned by the South African government in 1977 from writing and speaking publicly and from being in a room with more than one person.
Staff writer
Woods was punished for his editorials against the government and was prohibited from returning to his job at the East London, South Africa, Daily Dispatch.
Woods, who left South Africa in
1977, will speak on "Aparthid and the Tragedy of South Africa" at 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The speech is part of the University Lecture Series. Jim Scaly, assistant to the chancellor, said the appearance was part of a continuing University effort to promote understanding of apartheid.
As special adviser to the 49-nation Commonwealth Secretariat at London, Woods is a staunch advocate of economic divestment in South Africa. He has testified before Congressional committees and toured
college campuses for several years, talking about the use of divestment to put economic pressure on South Africa.
The Secretariat is the primary agency that coordinates all commonwealth activities.
While in South Africa, Woods was an outspoken opponent of the government's segregation policy of apartheid.
He was subject to South African publication laws that restricted criticism of the government and was prosecuted seven times for violating
those laws.
After he left South Africa, Woods was appointed director of the Lincoln Trust. a foundation that supplies information about apartheid to the international media.
- Woods has written three books on South Africa.
The first, "Biko," is a biography of black leader Stephen Biko, who died in South African police custody. Woods, who was a close friend of Biko, published evidence that Biko was killed by police.
Food stamp proposal gets good review in committee
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A proposal to exempt food stamp purchases from state and local sales taxes met little opposition from the House Assessment and Taxation Committee yesterday. The bill's sponsor said the state faced being cut off of the federal food stamp program without the exemption.
Rep. James Lowther, R-
Emporia, said he introduced the
measure because a provision in the 1965 federal Farm Bill required that all states exempt the Department of Agriculture's food stamps from all sales taxes. Lowther said Kansas was one of 17 states that now taxed food stamp purchases.
Without the exemption, Lowther said, the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services in October will receive receiving around $70 million in food stamps.
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Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
University Daily Kansan
9
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10
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
Teachers support program
United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — One of the finalists to become the first teacher-in-space aboard the space shuttle Challenger, which exploded after liftoff, said yesterday that he provided overwhelming support of a resolution to continue the program.
Kent Kavanaaugh, a chemistry teacher at Park Hill High School, sent copies of the resolution to the 105 finalists urging that manned space exploration not be halted because of the deaths of teacher Christa McAulife and the six other crew
members of Challenger.
Kavanaugh mailed the letters containing the resolution last week. He asked that the teachers call Park Hill High School with their support, then sign and return the document to him.
"Even as the fiery image of the Challenger explosion burns bright in our memories, our collective commitment to the USA's teacher-in-space and civilian-in-space programs today remains stronger than ever," the resolution states.
By yesterday morning, the deadline day for calling, Kavanaugh had received 78 positive responses
and no negative responses out of 96 expected. He said he did not expect to hear from the group of nine finalists from which McAuliffe was chosen because they were at NASA stations across the country and would not have received their letters in time.
Plans are to present the resolution sometime this week to President Reagan. Kavanaugh said he would probably ask the finalist from the District of Columbia to give Reagan the resolution.
"I would hate to see that for millions of children their last relationship to the teacher-in-space program was a fireball," Kavannah said at a news conference at his school. "It would be very sad if this is where it ends."
Oner teachers who have returned their signed resolutions also sent letters expressing their support of the program, the document Kavanaugh drafted and their feelings about the disaster.
"I'm sure we've all had an equally devastating week. The fact that you have been strong enough and resourceful enough to draft this resolution reconfirms my commitment to a truly amazing group.
State's second elk herd being started
The Associated Press
CANTON — An attempt to establish a second free-ranging elk herd in Kansas is underway using animals from the Maxwell Game Refuge near here.
Kansas Fish and Game workers
have been culling elk from the 50-head head at the central Kansas refuge east of McPherson for several days. By yesterday morning, they had an adult bull, a young bull and three females.
The elk allow workers in a Fish and Game truck to get close because for
several weeks the truck has been used to haul a small trailer full of sweet-tasting range cubes to the herd. Once the cubes are dropped off, the truck circles around and tranquilizer guns are used to shoot medicated darts into the animals choosen for capture. The drugged
elk, sometimes two at a time, are loaded into a trailer and transported to holding pens.
The workers draw blood from the animals for tests to make sure they are disease free, said David Case, a commission wildlife information specialist.
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A bill that would increase the penalties for distribution of drugs to children was one of seven measures given tentative approval yesterday in the Kansas House.
The drug proposal would change the status of the crime from a misdemeanor to a felony.
Rep. Edwin Bideau III, R-Chanute, said the penalties would apply to transfers of drugs between adults and children when authorities were unable to prove a sale had taken place.
However, Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, warned that the penalty could apply even to people who do not use drugs, such as those who pass a marijuana cigarette along to someone sitting next to them at a rock concert.
Sobbach sarcastically suggested that if someone finds themselves in such a situation after the bill is
passed, they should check the person's identification before passing along a marijuana cigarette.
Under the proposal, penalties for distributing drugs to minors would increase from the current maximum sentence of one year in a county jail to one to 10 years in the state prison system.
The House also approved a bill that would allow people to refuse emergency medical service on religious grounds.
The bill quickly came under fire by rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden City, who offered a successful amendment that would allow only adults to refuse emergency services. Heinemann contended that the state has a responsibility to protect children regardless of their religious beliefs.
"I can foresee many incidents when someone is called to the scene of an accident and the parent says, 'No, I want to pray.'
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Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
11
Democrats stress need for change
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Democratic leaders, never able to crack President Reagan's personal popularity, responded to his State of the Union speech last night by blaming him for many of the nation's ills. They also stressed that changes were needed now to win the "contest for the future."
Sen. George Mitchell of Maine, the head of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, opened and closed the Democratic response to the president's speech with warnings that the prosperity of the future depended on the difficult decisions of today concerning items such as the budget and trade deficits.
"The issue is not the outcome of old debates, or of the last election." Mitchell said.
"History won't wait for us to
quarrel about the past. We're already engaged as a country, as a people, in a contest for the future."
In addition to pushing the theme of the future, the televised response to Reagan, after the president's prime-time address, spoke of Thomas Jefferson and Harry Truman and normal Americans trying to improve their lives.
Also participating in the response were Reps. Thomas Daschel of South Dakota and William Gray of Pennsylvania, chairman of the House Budget Committee. Also, former Virginia Gov. Charles Robb and Missouri Lt. Gov. Harriett Woods, a Senate candidate.
Robb, a Marine Corps veteran, warned that military spending alone "won't make us strong. It's time to focus on what we get for our money."
Head of shelter delivers State of Homeless speech
WASHINGTON — Hours before President Reagan's State of the Union address to the nation yesterday, homeless advocate Mitch Snyder delivered a State of the Homeless speech at his downtown Washington shelter.
United Press International
Snyder, head of the Community for Creative Non-Violence, said his view of the nation differs greatly from the president's.
"We see a government, irresponsible and inefficient, cheerfully spending $600 for toilet seats and $8,000 for hammers for an already-blaeted military, while, at the same time, mercilessly slashing housing, food
and jobs programs," Snyder told a small gathering of shelter residents.
Standing on the steps of the shelter, Snyder delivered a personal message to Reagan.
"Mr. President, it does not matter how smoothly you deliver your speech tonight," he said. "One fifth of our nation is ill-housed, ill-clad and ill-nourished. That, Mr. President, is the state of our union."
Following speeches by Snyder and Robert Hayes, attorney for the New York-based National Coalition for the Homeless, six homeless children gave their own views on what it's like to live in a federally subsidized hotel for displaced families.
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Reagan says 1987 budget will meet cut
comprehensive health associates • free pregnancy tests • abortion services/ counseling • gynecology • contraception
United Press International
Overland Park, KS / 913-345-1400
WASHINGTON — President Reagan said yesterday his 1987 budget, expected to total near $1 trillion, would meet the Gramm-Rudman spending cut target without cutting Social Security or raising taxes, while continuing his military buildup.
Though Reagan did not list specifics in his upbeat State of the Union address, his budget, which comes to Congress today, is expected to include severe cuts in health programs, housing and other middle class social spending, and Democrats said yesterday that they weren't going to let Americans forget what Reagan was proposing.
Reagan said passage of the Gramm-Rudman balanced budget law "gives us the historic opportunity to achieve what has eluded our national leadership for decades — forcing the federal government to live within its means."
But Reagan disagreed with members of Congress who say taxes must be raised to meet the Gramm-Rudman deficit reduction plan without devastating budget cuts in many programs. Almost no one has suggested a general tax increase but many are looking to an oil import fee or a minimum tax on businesses as a way to raise revenue.
"It's time we reduced the federal budget and left the family budget alone," Reagan said. "We do not face large deficits because American families are undertaxed. We face those deficits because the federal government overspend."
The Mortgage Bankers Association blasted Reagan's plan to push for higher fees on government guaranteed home mortgage loans through the Veterans Administration and the Federal Housing Authority.
Reagan also said the United States "will meet our commitment to national defense" while pledging to hold the defense spending increase to the "bare minimum." Pentagon officials say that "minimum" increase will total 3 percent.
While backing Gramm-Rudman, Reagan said it was not enough and called again for a constitutional amendment to balance the budget and the power to veto individual items in appropriations bills.
Some on Capitol Hill have declared Reagan's budget "dead on arrival" but O'Neil and House Budget Committee Chairman William Gray, D.Pa., are planning to resuscitate it — at least for a while.
Earlier yesterday, House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said the White House had led Congress to believe last week that there would be 30 eliminations of departments, agencies and 'bureaus in Reagan's budget, which would show a deficit of just under the Gramm-Rudman target of $144 billion for fiscal 1987.
O'Neill pledged to bring Reagan's budget up for a vote in the House, and charged that the president's pollster had warned Republicans not to talk about the administration's budget cuts.
Rep. Mary Rose Oakar, D-Ohio,
called that approach to budget cutting
"hynocrisy."
Reports have indicated that Medicare and Medicaid will face cuts and recipients will be asked to pay higher premiums, though Reagan has pledged not to cut Social Security. The military will get a 3 percent hike, up to $311.6 billion, according to House Armed Services Committee chairman Les Aspin, D-Wis.
"He wants to cut Medicare and Medicaid over a five-year period by $50 billion, at the same time increasing Pentagon spending," she said.
"It's devastating. It shows his priorities are to clobber the elderly and poor. He may have said Social Security is not on the table, but Ronald Reagan has found another way to devastate older people."
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12
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
Traces of cocaine and pot found in body of Nelson
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Tests have revealed traces of drugs or alcohol in the bodies of singer Rick Nelson, his fiancée and five band members who were killed in a New Year's Eve airplane fire, officials said yesterday.
Reports released by the National Transportation Safety Board showed small amounts of metabolized cocaine and a compound of the prescription painkiller Darvon in Nelson's blood and urine samples. His blood samples also showed traces of metabolized marijuana.
Everyone on the plane except
the pilot and co-pilot had some evidence of drugs or alcohol in their blood, said a spokesman for the University of Utah's Center for Human Toxicology.
Metabolized means the drugs has already been consumed by the body and the amounts detected were left after use, the spokesman said.
"We cannot, however, determine when the drugs were taken, but it was probably up to 24 hours prior to the crash." he said.
Nelson, his fiancée, Helen Blair,
and five members of his Stone Canyon Band died in a fire that forced his propeller-driven DC-3 to make an emergency landing.
BOSTON — A mounting number of doctors joined a work slowdown to protest the state's soaring malpractice insurance premiums yesterday while officials rushed patients who were refused orthopedic surgery at affected hospitals to major medical centers.
United Press International
With 25 to 50 percent of the obstetricians and orthopedic surgeons in Massachusetts withholding services, hospitals arranged to transport patients by helicopter if necessary to other facilities for treatment.
"It was gut-wrenching for me to transfer two patients with fractures," said Dr. John T. Stinson, an orthopedic surgeon in Medford. The patients were transferred from Winchester Hospital to the New England Medical Center.
Doctors protest by stopping work
"Having practiced orthopedic surgery all my adult life, it went against every fiber of my being," Stinson said.
tors are not involved in the slowdown, reported a significant increase in cases, noting patients with broken bones were transferred from facilities where orthopedic surgeons refused to perform surgery. Teaching hospitals pay the premium costs and are not involved in the job action.
The New England Medical Center, whose doc-
The exact number of physicians participating was not known. The Massachusetts Hospital Association said more than 250 doctors had stopped performing surgery or accepting new obstetric patients. But the Massachusetts Medical Association estimated the number to be around 600.
Dr. William McDermott, executive vice president of the physicians' organization, said, "We believe many more doctors have had to do this — about half of the people working in each of the two specialties (orthopedics and obstetrics)."
"We hate doing this," Stinson said, adding how surprised he was when both patients he referred said they completely understood.
" "Stick to your guns, one woman told me," Stinson said. He also said he could not afford to $50,000.
he would owe on April 30.
Richard Pozniak, spokesman for the Massachusetts Hospital Association, said the association was appealing to doctors to go back to their normal practice patterns until the Legislature can take action on the malpractice issue. The Legislature has vowed to address the crisis by April 30. Doctors are particularly angry over a Dec. 27 ruling by the state Division of Insurance that hiked some malpractice premiums by more than 60 percent retroactive to 1983.
"The Legislature has known about this for two years," said Dr. Barbara Rockett, president of the Massachusetts Medical Society. "We informed the state a crisis like this would occur.
Patricia Jones, spokeswoman at Cardinal Cushing Hospital in Brockton, where all 10 orthopedic surgeons say they will not respond to emergency room calls or perform elective surgery, said four Boston hospitals and one in Rhode Island were on standby for emergency helicopter services or ambulances.
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PUBLIC HEARINGS
SOUTH AFRICA
Feb. 12 & 13
Jayhawk Rm, KS Union
7:30 - 10:30 pm
The committee seeks information on activities relating to South Africa on campus, opinions on divestment, and advice and recommendations on the positive educational role university governance can play in the issue of South Africa.
Any organization or individual may schedule hearing time by calling Janet Jackson, 864-9225.
University Senate Human Relations Committee
David M. Katzman, Chair
Martie Aaron
Cynthia Baldwin
Donald Brownstein
Robbi Ferron
Lisa Hund
Dana Manweiler
Carvi Smith
Vernell Spearman
Stanley Sterling
Ellen Sward
Michael Wyly.
FRESHMEN
David M. Katzman, Chair
Martie Aaron
Cynthia Baldwin
Donald Brownstein
Robbi Ferron
Lisa Hund
Dana Manweiler
Caryl Smith
Vernell Spearman
Stanley Sterling
Ellen Sward
Michael Wyly.
LAMBDA SIGMA, the
LAMBDA SIGMA, the sophomore coed honor society is now accepting applications for its 1986-87 membership. A minimum of a 3.0 G.P.A. is needed for application.
Applications may be picked up at 216 Strong Hall.
Any questions, call Matt Roesner at 843-8690.
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Sports
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
University Daily Kansan
13
COLUMBUS NATIONAL
Craig Sands/KANSAN
Randy Eccker, Colorado's assistant basketball coach, demonstrates how to get inside position. The Buffaloes practiced last night at Allen Field House. Kansas and Colorado will tip-on tonight at 7:35 p.m.
Tar Heels overtake Georgia Tech in OT
United Press International
ATLANTA — The North Carolina Tar Heels, which have made a habit of late-game poise to maintain their top ranking, provided another clutch performance last night.
North Carolina trailed No. 2 Georgia Tech by 13 points with less than 12 minutes left. However, the Tar Heels used a 9-0 spurt to tie the score and force overtime play.
In the extra period, Joe Wolf converted four free throws in the final minute to lift the No. 1 Tar Heels to a 78-77 triumph over the Yellow Jackets.
"We just had a tremendous second half," North Carolina head coach Dean Smith said. "We did the things we had to do to catch up and win.
"Things looked bad for us at one time when we were 13 points down. But we never faltered. We never thought of the rankings, at least I know I didn't, and I'll bet Tech didn't either."
The Tar Heels, 23-1 overall and 2-1 in the Atlantic Coast Con
ference, trailed 59-46 with 11:56 left in regulation. Wolf, a 6-foot-10 forward, scored six points in the 9-0 spurt.
North Carolina tied the score 70-70 on a turnaround jumper by Brad Daugherty with 55 seconds left and neither team was able to score again before overtime.
Daugherty, a 7-foot senior who had 22 points, got the first basket of overtime. Wolf, who had 14 points, sank two free throws with 46 seconds remaining to give the Tar Heels a 76-72 edge and contributed two more points with 11 seconds left to give North Carolina a 3-point lead.
Georgia Tech, 17-3 and 6-2, dominated play in the first half, building a 42-32 lead with freshman Tom Hammonds getting 12 points. With Mark Price hitting from the outside in the opening minutes of the second half, the Yellow Jackets, who lost to North Carolina 85-77 on Jan. 25, maintained their lead until the Tar Heels began their stretch run.
Four freshmen to start for Buffs
By Matt Tidwell
Colorado will scrap its usual starting line-up in favor of four freshmen and one sophomore against Kansas tonight at Allen Field House, Buffalo head coach Tom Apke said yesterday.
Sports writer
only one regular starter, freshman
Matt Bullard, will remain in Apke's
Colorado
Men's Basketball
8-11 (Big 8, 0-6)
7:35 tonight
(106 km)
at Lawrence
CUJ
new line-up. The benched starters include Randy Downs and Mike Rei
Downs is perhaps the biggest sur prise of the four benched players. Although he's been slumping, Downs is still the Buffalooes' leading scorer, averaging 13.7 points and 6.7 rebounds each game. In the Jayhawks' last meeting against Colorado
"We're hoping this new line-up can get some things going for us," Apke said. "Randy hasn't been playing well lately, and Scott (Wilke, a 6-foot-9-inch freshman center) will start the game."
Downs scored 16 points and grabbed five rebounds.
Apke said Kansas had a well-balanced team and it could take more than a revised line-up to beat the Jayhawks, especially at Allen Field House.
"Randy's always seemed to play well against me," Dreiling said. "He's got some quickness and he's been around awhile. He's real experienced."
Kansas center Greg Dreiling was scheduled to draw Downs defensively.
"When you add all that up it becomes really scary for us to have to play our young kids in that kind of environment." Apke said.
Colorado is 8-11 overall and 0-6 in the Big Eight, Kansas, which is tied
for the Big Eight lead with Oklahoma, is 20-3 and 5-1 respectively.
A Jayhawk victory will break the all-time Kansas winning streak at the field house. Kansas is looking for its 29th consecutive win. Tomorrow night's game will be the first for the Jayhawks at home since their 71-69 win over Louisville on Jan. 25.
Kansas won last Saturday 64-50 over Kansas State in Manhattan. The Jayhawks got their 20th win earlier than any other Kansas team since 1970-71.
Colorado arrived in Lawrence yesterday afternoon and had a chance last night to practice in Allen Field House.
"I don't know that getting a chance to practice here is such a big deal," Apke said. "When you do it that way you usually can't practice as long and you can't control the practices as well."
Apkie said the Buffaloes had to arrive a day early to all of their conference stops because of poor travel accessibility from Boulder.
Probable Starters
Colorado
NOTES — Manning is averaging 21.0 points in Big Eight play and 16.1 on the season... Kansas has taken the last four games from the Buffs. Colorado last won 89-85 on Feb. 29, 1984, in Boulder... Dreiling has made 25 of his last 32 shots from the floor.
F 50 Scott Bullard (6-1u)
F 23 Ken Cunenberg (6-3)
C 54 Scott Wilke (9-6)
G 33 David Kuoeman (6-4)
G 21 Jeff Pénix (6-0)
Kansas
F 25 Danny Manning (6-11)
F 44 Ron Kellogg (6-5)
C 30 Greg Drelling (7-1)
G 35 Gus Thinpinson (6-5)
G 22 Gedric Hunter (6-0)
Gentry to see other side of Colorado
By Matt Tidwell Sports writer
When the Colorado men's basketball team takes the court tonight for pre-game warm ups, don't be surprised if a few of the Buffaloes stop
PETER NELSON
Alvin Gentry
by the Kansas bench to shake hands with Jayhawk assistant coach Alvin Gentry
For much of the past eight years.
Gentry and the Buffaloes are very familiar with each other.
Gentry has been sitting on the other side of Allen Field House as an assistant coach for Colorado.
"I don't think it'll have any special significance for me," Gentry said. "I look at it as just another conference game that we have to win."
Gentry was hired this season to replace Bob Hill, who took an assistant coaching job with the New York Knicks of the National Basketball Association.
"I'll be real strange watching the kids you recruited play against you," Gentry said. "But that's strange for anybody who changes jobs and stays in the same conference."
Gentry said he would dismiss any sentimental feelings for his old team tonight. His job is the same no matter who lines up against the Jahwacs.
Gentry's new team is quite different from his old one. The Jayhawks have a winning program while Colorado fans have had to sit through losing seasons three of the last four years.
"I think the people at Colorado do a good job," Gentry said. "The team is just really young. If people are patient with them I think they'll turn the corner."
Gentry said his old boss, Colorado coach Tom Apkie, and Kansas coach Larry Brown were similar. In Brown's case, superior talent has meant the difference between a good team and a mediocre one.
"I think they're both very good coaches on the floor," he said. "They both do a great job teaching players. I think Coach Brown has had a lot
more talent to work with.
"A player like Danny (Manning) can make a huge difference on a team, and Coach Brown has benefited by having great players like that."
Gentry said he had made a smooth transition into the Jayhawk system because Brown had helped him fit in by giving him some major responsibilities.
"I think Coach Brown tries to make it so that you’re involved with all aspects of the game," he said. "I really respect him for that."
Gentry was a high school all-stater in Shelby, N.C., and later played for Bob Cremins, now the Georgia Tech coach, at Appalachian State University.
Track athlete puts new life into jumping
Sports writer
By Jim Suhr Sports writer
Branstrom competing again for 'Hawks despite injuries and doctor's warnings
A severe spinal injury and a concussion might force most athletes to quit.
But for KU high jumper and decathlon competitor Craig Branstrom, it only presented another challenge — a challenge Branstrom is willing to risk his life for.
Doctors have warned Branstrom that after two shocks to his spinal system, one more could result in permanent paralysis or death. A spinal injury in 1984 left Branstrom temporarily paralyzed.
He said his experiences, however,
had made him more of a competitor,
and dying while doing something he
loved was worth the risk.
1980
Branstrom, unable to move any part of his body or even talk, lay on the concrete for 45 minutes as paramedics attended to what they thought was a broken neck. His eyes welled up from the rain because he was unable to blink. The voices of the curious spectators who gathered around him seemed muffled.
Craig Branstrom
At that moment, Branstrom said,
he thought as if he were alive but felt
dead.
BRANSTROM PROFILE
Branstrom's troubles began as a freshman on a rainy and overcast afternoon April 7, 1984. While attempting a high jump at the Kansas State Invitational, Branstrom landed incorrectly or the unusually soft pits and struck the pavement. The impact bruised his spinal column and severed a nerve.
Family: parents, Marv and Alice Branstrom.
"Everyone gathered around me and stared at me," he said. "I thought I was at my own funeral and they were looking at my casket for the last time."
Branstrom, who said his injuries had not affected the height he could jump, is back this year. He said he thought it would be a successful season.
Class and Major: junior in psychology.
Hometown: Half Moon Bay, Calif.
Age: 21
In his first competition of the year last Saturday, Branstrom defied the doctors and placed second in the high jump at the Missouri Invitational. He jumped 6-feet-8.
Background: One of six Jayhawk team captains. Tied for fourth at the 1984 Big Eight Indoor Championship with a leap of 6-9 $ _{1/2} $ in the high jump. Set KU freshman decathlon record. Named all-league in football, basketball and track in high school.
After a week at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Branstrom slowly began to regain feeling in his body.
The recovery wasn't easy on Branstrom. He was forced to redshift the rest of the season. He said the time he spent away from the track made him feel hateful and question his faith in God.
And compete he did. Branstrom
"I wondered at first why God would do something like this to people," he said. "But now I understand it was the will of God to confront me with such a situation, it's made me a stronger Christian."
During the next summer, a weakened Branstrom underwent physical therapy near his home in Half Moon Bay, Calif., to rebuild his body. He was determined to compete again.
returned for his sophomore season to the dismay of his doctors, who felt he wasn't ready to compete. Subsequently, they pulled him out of several meets during that season, but they didn't pull him out of one.
In that meet, Branstrom received a severe concussion after he polevaulted past the landing-pits and struck the cement again. It was then, he said, that the doctors warned him of the life-threatening consequences of another accident.
Doctors once again stepped in and forced Branstrom to miss most of the remainder of the season.
Rick Attig, his jump coach, said Branstrom was determined to be a winner.
"He's a very intense competitor." he said. "Sometimes he can get too competitive, even to the point where
"If I had to give up track and field, I would be miserable," he said. "My mother and father said they would rather see me die doing something I loved rather than be miserable."
Branstrom said the side effects of the injury now caused lower back pains and hesitation when he jumped, but his experiences had made him a better competitor.
"Whenever I consider cutting corners in practice or anywhere else, I think about how a paraplegic would trade places with me any day," he said. "Coach (Steve) Kueffer always told me that I don't have to run, I get to run. I'm thankful."
he gets down on himself when he doesn't do things right."
A determined Branstrom said he would never give in.
R.
Splish Splash
Chris Wright, Lincoln senior, practices for a dual swim meet this weekend against Nebraska. Wright, a middle-distance freestyle swimmer, was preparing for the meet with the rest of the women's swim team yesterday at Robin son Natalorium.
Mary Burger/KANSAN
Sports Briefs
Valesente suspends four football players
Four KU football players have been suspended from the team indefinitely, head coach Bob Valesente said yesterday.
The players suspended are defensive end Amonte Holloman, defensive back Kevin Harkless, tight end Jeff Anderson and offensive lineman Wes Hendricks. Both Anderson and Hendricks were red-shirted last season
In a prepared statement, Valesente said the players were suspended for "failing to live up to the academic and football program standards."
The statement declined to comment on what prompted the suspensions, but it said they would remain suspended until the incidences for which they were suspended could be reviewed properly.
junior varsity wins
The statement said the players involved would retain their scholarships.
Rodney Hull and Jerry Johnson each scored 21 points in leading the Kansas junior varsity basketball team to a 76-72 win over Cloud
County last night at Concordia.
Kansas lea 36-35 at halftime and improved its record to 11-4.
The single elimination tournament will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday on the main basketball courts in Robinson.
Tournev entries due
Entries for the co-recreational basketball tournament are due at 5 p.m. tomorrow in 208 Robinson Center.
Registrations for the racquetball singles tournament also are due by 5 p.m. tomorrow in 208 Robinson.
The racquetball tournament will begin at 1:30 p.m. Sunday at the Robinson ract球 court.
3 Bears take honors
Running back Walter Payton was named the National Football Conference offensive player, linebacker Mike Singleton was the defensive player and Mike Ditka was the coach of the year.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Super Bowl players and coaches dominate the list of award winners for the 16th annual 101 Banquet honoring top performers in professional football.
From staff and wire reports
14
2014
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 |
| 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 Tuesday 4 p.m.
Wednesday Wednesday 4 p.m.
Classified Display ... $4.40
... commercialtech
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 ads. No overburns allowed in classified displays ad.
POLICIES
- Deduction is 4 p.m. — 2 working days prior to publication.
- 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
until credit has been established.
* Tear sheets are not provided for classified or
to The University Daily Kansas.
• All advertisers will be required to pay in advance
- Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount.
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 Kansan business office at 804-4358
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only.
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in
- Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
- this earned rate discount.
* Samples of all mail order items must be submitte
- Blind box ads - please add a $4 service charge.
* Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- no university degree will be required to pay in advance
* Will credit has been established
ATTENTION STUDENTS WITH CHILDREN:
Come by the Student Assistance Center, 121
Strong Hall, for a listing of centers and licensed
homes for child care in the Lawrence area.
No responsibility is assumed on the work.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified
no refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified
YOU CAN STILL ENTER!
IT'S NOT TOO LATE
Hillel
Board Meeting
Tonight!
9:30
Hillel House
940 Mississippi
Yearbook pictures
will be taken.
IMPROVE YOUR READING COMPREHEN-
ANCE
hours of instruction. Tuesday, February 11, 18
and 25; 7:30-9:30 p.m.Material fee $1.81. Register
with the Office at 123 Strong Hall, 812 Strong
864-404. Class area limited.
IRISH.
College Fun will turn ugly at the Kappa Sig Place. When Mark says to Wendy "No more shall I chase." Bring all of the Chi-O's and I'll bring my boys, Then we will get pinned and we'll make lots of noise
Love,
Dr. Rock Chalk
FACT:
DEALING WITH THAE UNESCAFE FEELING:
learn to initiate conversations, make new friends,
work in a group setting, attend February 10, 6:30-9:00 p.m. FREE! Please
register to attend at the Student Assistance
Center.
The Celebrity/ Rock Star Look-A-Like Contest. Call 841-0750 for info. Sponsored by: Swatch Watches MTV
In Cooperation With:
KLZR
TV-30
M. S. most often afflicts young adults between the ages of 18 & 35 with 200 new uncurable cases diagnosed each week.
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lobby, Kobassa Kansas Union.
Computer Terminal with modem for rent.
$30/no. 842-9222.
IMPORTANT NOTICE "THE HAWK" will be participating in the
"BUST M.S."
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
national fund-raiser on Thursday Feb. 6.
because of this eve "Barrel Night" will be moved to Wednesday (this week only)
It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK A Campus Tradition Since 1920
LAWRENCE FLOAT CENTER - Winter Special:
3 flats for $50. Call 811-949-6892
RVCH, TVC with 2 movies, overnight 89G. Smith's RTV, 1447 W, 23rd, 842-575. Mon.-Sat.
SPRING BREAK SKI THE SUMMIT $250, 4 days, Include Summit lift passes, transportation, lodging and ski rental. Call Eric Rhodes by Friday, MA-8133.
NEEDED RATE TO HOLD TANKS FOR NEEDLE
NEEDS TANKS FOR
Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
Rent-19" Color. T.V. $82.98 a month. Smith's TV. 1447 W. 23rd. 842-5751. Mon.-Sat. 9:30 9:00; Sun. 1-5.
TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer您 to student you. Student Assistance Center (123) Stall Hall
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121
FREE DEMONSTRATION Philippine Stick
lighting at 7:30 p.m. by m.p.m.
Room A, Room Robinson, Room HGX
GOT A HOT-TATE? Is your car clean? AT LAWRENCE AUTO CLEANING making our car look newer is our speciality. 6th and Maine. 7.58-5271
SPRING BREAK 86 Do it right in Daytona with ECHO TRAVEL The best trip for the best price. For more info, call Bill at 841-3856 or Jim at 842-8731.
ENTERTAINMENT
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to pro-
vide a room with sound system that can fill, any size room and can accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in
Lawrence, Manhatten and Salina. Call 841-945-4844.
WE'RE JAMMIN'
ALL WEEK LONG
AT THE
ROCK CHALK
BAR
Wed. 2/5— Joe Moon Acoustic Jazz
Thurs. 2/6— Dow Jones And The Industrials
Fri. 2/7— The Catfish Swing Band
Sat. 2/8—L.A. Ramblers
12th & Oread 842-9469
FOR RENT
Available immediately; Large newly remodeled kit
Akt.急件 to resume $195/mo/89-9346
Available March 1: beautiful 2 BH apt. on bus
route 5 minute walk to campus, downtown '7ew
carpet, clean, spacious, $330/mo plus low
utilities 81-5797, 81-5566, 84-349.
1 bed room, apt near campus. No pet. Spring 2014. 2 bedroom apartment. 1 bed apt. Quiet. Big rent. 321 Indiana. 165/mo.
NAISMITH HALL Currently has a few spaces available for spring semester
3 BR house. East Lawrence, bus route 1984
and 1985. HVAC system $875.00 and
Utilities. Phone 200-294-7561.
1 block from campus. Your own room Kitchen
parking. quiet, clean, quiet to parking.
parking.
First come, first served, only a few two feet. At 310 W.itch in the on-cue route, between Gleason and Crescent, we can rent chairs units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We install floor carpeting, extra卫生巾 or balcony. Call our office at 612-754-9838.
NAISMITH HALL
APT. SWAP? Need f. roommate to share 1/3 conta or sublease久 nice, close to campus & downsize your room. Must be BR, $00 or less, 789-491, 841-6001. Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkley Flats Vacancies available now and this summer plan, ahead, please for next fall!
Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 842-4188.
1800 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
(913) 843-8559
Luxury 3-bedroom Hanover Place Condominium
/garage, WBHP, immediately needed. Need to
be on site within 10 minutes.
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: SHARE 2
BEDDAM EPT. (VILLAGE SQUARE APT.).
CARFETED, A/C, SWIMMING POOL, ON BUS
STUBS TO MATERIALS TO MEET 410 plus
LEASE TITLES INCLUDE WORKSHOP AND
PAYMENT UNTIL FEBRUARY. CALL 885-01588
(JEFF), OR 892-3490 (AS KANAGER.)
close to campus. Can after 7:00 p.m. 892-9368
SUBLEASE available Feb. 15, 12. bedroom, water paid, $245 at Jayhawk West Apts. Lease thru Aug. 13, 842-9972 after n. 5 m.
For rest. 2 bdrm, brand new apt. 1 1/2 blk from Kansas City $300/mo. plus utilities. Sublease a room in Kansas City for $495/mo. p.m. and Pam #4263/2 after 5 p.m. Keep trying. Large bedroom for rent in room newer house. Close to campus and downtown. All the conveniences home. Only $125/mo. and low utilities.
SUBLEASE NOW.1 BDMR Hanover Place apt.
One month free rent! 841-1212.
- **pacious one bedroom apartment for sublease,**
great for 1 or 2. On bus route, water paid, gas,
low utilities. Furnished $220. Unfurnished
$200. Call 749-8091 after 5 p.m.
Studio Apt. to Sublease, Furnished, very clean,
$175/mo Low deposit. Call now 842-2710.
Sublease Immediately. 2 Mdn apt. no. Deposit $175 mnt plus utilities. $349-381 Swee.
Stonehouse now = 2 nite a.m. pk. 9 p.m. and vary
close to campus at 7:30 p.m. later 9:48 p.m.
Walk only inches to school 2 bedroom apt:
$275/month 11th & Illinois Maley 842-7316.
827/month, 11th & Illinois. Maley 842-7136
MASTERCRAFT offers completely furnished 1, 2
and 3 bedroom apartments all near campus. Call
842-1212, 841-3555, 749-2415.
$175 p/month plus utilities 842-339-Steve
Sublease now 2 BDRM Apt. Very nice and very
well maintained. Call us at (800) 265-2581.
LOST/FOUND
Found: Little pursue full of money at corral of
Alumni Place. Please叫 K U P D. 844-538
I'll be very happy to help you with it!
Found outside of Naimish / 1/2 labrador - 1/2 cookerpaniel puppy - black with brown and white. Call 841-3879 ask for Leslie or Robyn or 841-6867 ask for Denise.
LOST. gray longhaired cat, male Persian. If you find it, please call 841-3948.
Reward offered for return of black back pack. No questions asked. Call 843-8587.
We found your puppy on Sat. Feb. 1st. int. between 11th and 17th on Vermont. The boy was as young as his mother, but we got him a new dog.
HELP WANTED
Attention KU work study students—the KU library system has several part time work study positions available. Contact job board on main level Watson Library or contact Ruth Hurst 844-3601.
BabySitter for 5 month old infant, general housekeeping and ironing in our homes. Tues. & Thurs. 12-5. Must have reliable transportation. References cost $3.50 per hour. Call 847-7327.
CASH PAID DAILY. Dominie's Pizza is now accepting hire to 10 drivers. If you are a self-motivated, high energy person, you could become part of the world's Pizza Delivery company. You can work for us. Our drivers make $5-$8 per hour and more. You must be 18 years or older, have a car, current driver's license and proof of insurance. Apply吧. We accept job titles and Iowa. No phone calls, please. EOE, m/7.
CRUSSEISHP HIRIGN! $18-$300 Carruben,
CARRUBEN
Newservice! (910) 9444-444 XUASCRUSEP
Female aid in weekend A.M.; 8:30 to 10:30 or P.M.
daily No experience needed 799-088.
Forty-hour week, 47/4/2015, Tues. thru Sat, May thru August. Work consists of door-to-door data collection. Car and driver's license required. 20 positions available. Send resume or letter of interest to: Sharon Rheares, RJN Environmental Inc., Suite 212, Ste. M12, Ks6032 913/432-1477
Full-time ECE teacher position in child care
four years old, four year olds. Call
kids.RIDS, for help.
GOVERNMENT JOBS, H1B 404.00 $125,297.00; New
Hall: Call 1-866-876-4000 Ext. R759 for current
job(s) in the job listing.
Help Wanted: Law student needs patient,
helpful babyssitter. Call 842-8766.
OVERSAN JOBS, Sam's Club, round Europe, S.A. Amherst, Australia. All fields, 990 $200 mo. sightseeing. Free info. Write JC, PO Bx 52 KS-1. Coral Del Mar, CA, 92625.
COULD YOU BE
A BOSTON NANNY?
Are you a loving, nurturing person who enjoys spending time with children? Join us at our next event where we come to Boston to care for children through our agency. Live in lovely suburban neighborhoods, enjoy excellent schools, stay in cozy quarters and limited working hours.
our round-trip transportation is provided. One trip commitment or write. Ms. Flatch, Childcare Placement Serv-icer, 2018 Westview Drive, Brookline, MA 02416 (814) 515-6524.
Point O' Gines and Brent Lake Campus in Adirondack mountains. New York State hosts competent watercracking students, waterwalking. Live with children, great opportunity to learn about nature. Visit Alen Brenn, 118 Eighth Street, Providence Rhode Island 62906. Call 401-331-7997. Interviews on campus Feb. 12. Sign up in 223
PROGRAM ASSISTANT/RESEARCH AID
Midwest Council on Aging, 40% time, $400/noon
Begin Feb.17. Contact prof. Jill Quadagado
University of Kansas, 864-4113 for complete job description and application. Deadline Feb. 12.
EoA/Al employer.
Wanted: Research assistant in the department of Systematics and Ecology to coordinate experimental pond studies Undergraduate in a Biology major. Apply to Salary $1,250. Contact John F. Brionw, Ironworth University of Kansas 864-4735 to apply and for complete job description Application deadline
Summer Jobs, National Park Co. 21 Parks, 5000
Mt. Hood, N.Y. 11462. Job #1-830.
Resident Mission Mo. Co. 613 A.D. Ave. WN, 812-
W. 75th St.
Student Staff Positions—summer orientation program 1980. Required qualifications: minimum 2.0 gpa; returning to KU for Fall 1988 term. Must have a Bachelor's degree or may apply. Desired qualifications: leadership skills, interpersonal and university programs and activities; interpersonal competence and enthusiasm about university. Job descriptions and applications available in the office of educational service 122 Strong Hall. Due by Fri. April 30.
PERSONAL
AIRLINE HIREING BOOM!! $314-239.00
Stewardesses, Reservations! Call for Guide,
Travel Agent & Inspection.
- and just wait till you see HABAKKUK!! / Pam
BUS. PERSONAL
Wanted: graduate student from Emperor to show KU student to vicinity and university.
I'll use a simple Markdown format for the text.
Wanted: graduate student from Emperor to show KU student to vicinity and university.
Hayes and Vats, Matchmakers incorporated, are pleased to announce the availability of Sherril and Michelle. These lovable young women are willing to make men's dreams come true. Ask for them.
$10-$250 Weekly/Up Mailing Circulars! Our
quietly! Sincerely interested rush self-addressed
envelope. Success, PO Box 470 CDG, Woodstock,
IL 60098
Hey Pam! Who is this Habakkuk guy anyway? A Harvard graduate, no doubt.
Hey Snowbird I am looking for a good looking boy to play with me. Go head south to play golf and sink up the sun. As我-me I don't think you will be disappointed. Find your girl. I'll go to box 1854, Lauren KS 60044
to box 1854, Lauren KS 60044
Need custom imprinted sweatsuits, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event? 1 & M Favors offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specialties plus reliable delivery. You design it or it be our talented staff. 220, Wk 211 (Belmont Gibson) 811-4349.
1234567890
T
Mark and Dan, How 'bout Ha-Buck Rub? Love,
Beth and Dana
SAVE OUR SEATS! You paid for them. If you are opposed to the KUAC decision to remove student seating this season, call Monte Johnson and voice your opinion. 848-651-910. Don't take this decision sitting down!
To Joan The Warrior. How about sharing a coke together, Gauniel is fun but I'm more interested in knowing you. I know your name but not your number, Valvieu.
AFRICAN
ADORNED
JUST ARRIVED!
THE POPULAR HAND-WOVEN
KENYA BAG WITH LEATHER
BACK AND WORKS
S E. th. 842-1376
Complimentary hair conditioner
SPRING BREAK on Lake at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas from only 80% and skiing at Sea Mountain or Vail Resort. All resort packages, bags, more. Hurry, call Sunchease Tours for more information and reservations to toll free 1-800-321-5911 or contact a local Suncheese Resort for an appointment. Your Spring break counts. count on Sunchease.
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
The Union's recording
of the day, s.aintea A. sugis
with all of our hair cuts Tina, Donis, Cathy with Paul Mitchell products
Wimmer. Are you reading this? Good. Always read the Personalists, you never know what you'll learn.
Ultimate
749-0771
'CAMP COUNSELORS - M/F- Outstanding Slim and Trim Down Camps. Tennis, Dance,滑冰, Dance classes. Separate girls and boys camps. 7 weeks. Camp Camelot on College Camps at universities. Contact: Karen Olivahera, Contact: Kerry Friedman, Director, or Hewlett Dr. No Woodmere, N.Y. 11581
JAYHAWKS!
GO
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Domino's Pizza is now selling Pizza at home basketball games.
Sec. 6 & 17 Level 3
COMPHEREHSIVE | HEALTH ASSTOCIATE:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater
medical area. Call for appointment
913-346-1400
Personal Financial Planning
The ABCs of
Sweets For Your Love. Color Portrait. A Valentine's day Day Present! Sweet Studio 749-1011
JUNE 21 GMAT
THERE'S STILL TIME TO PREPARE
This program will explore ways to build a sound financial base. Topics to be discussed include:
* Goal Setting
* Credit Development
* Budgeting
* Limited Investments
CLASSES 1st week of STARTING February
Stanley H KAPLAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD
TEST INVESTMENT SPECIALISTS SINCE 1968
CALL DAYS, EVENING & WEEKEND
(913) 341-1220
CO
GREENS
Rent.' 19% T. V. $2,88 a month. Smity TV a 1447 W. 147 d. 8435-7371. Mon 9:30-10:30. Sun 1-3: Modeling and theater performances. call for information. Studio and theatrical calls, call for information. Swell Studio, 749-1611
PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
Weekly Beer Special
Feb. 5 - 11
Wiedemann 12 pk $3.52
Busch 12 pk $4.17
Black Label 12 pk $3.52
Coors Light 6 pk $2.69
Miller Lite 12 pk $5.32
Thursday.
Thursday,
Feb. 13, 1986
7-9 p.m.
VALENTINES!
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center Call 864-3552
Instant Valentines
V-Postcards 15¢
V-Cards 50¢
V-Notes 25¢
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course, fines.
THE
MUSEUM
SHOP
Regionalist Room, Kansas Union
Museum of Natural History
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sundays
864-4450
Close-Chest Cutlest! We have hundreds of close-chest chesst in stock. These are all factory fresh closed-chest chesst made for warm days or wear in wine or paint finishers. Prices starting at only 819. These are offered on a 1st come 1st serve basis. Hurry to Midwest Furniture and 728 New Hampshire Lawrence. Kawanau 66044.
THE FAR SIDE
Sleepers Must Go! Our warehouses are overloaded and more on the way. Choose from twin, full, or queen size, all upholstered in long wearable hems. The bed is customizable to any decor. Dairy size sleepers start at $188 or terms. See at Midwest Furniture and Waterbed Center, 738 Newbury Hill, Lawrence, KC 60014.
The sun is out, the sunglasses are in! The ETC.
Shop 728 Mass.
Thousands of R & R albums - 82 or less. Also collectors items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Quintillies B11 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or trade all music styles.
Tired of tussing and turning? Do you awake feeling relaxed and well-rested? Cotton and foam core fufuats are designed to fully support your spine and release tension. BLEU HERON (North Lawrance) (one block seat of Mexican休息室) Up-Tun, down to 5:30 or call 841-9443.
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed Shirtray 794-1611.
DELI SPECIALS
a different deli special every day
Class Ring Day—Why wait for the man when his ring day every year at Bailour House in 393 Maul. Must be at least 18 years old.
AEROBICS, M-W-F 1:30 P-M. Lawrence School of Ballet, 8d, Wermouth Court. The Chapel at 614-594-7231.
Spinach Lasagna
Today's Special:
Small Salad
16 oz. Drink
$2.25
THE KANSAS UNION DELI
LEVEL 3
All cotton old timer shirt, New shipment and colors in the Old. FHN, Shon. 723 Mass.
Bunk Beds! Just received several bunk beds. We have a extra sturdy wood bankbed, with built in containers. Complete with steel rails and water ladders. Includes Water Ladder. 738 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS
Hand-crafted kits, winkd sculptures and fantasies
Order now for spring. SKYWORRS 9/12 (Mast
Room) at Skylight Designs. For larger sizes,
His and Hera Hair Designs. Quality hair care at
reasonable prices. We use the finest hair products
available and give you the personal attention you
need. Haircuts are cut included. Linda and Bernice
865-340-8391, linda.linda@skylightdesigns.com
Rent' 19% Card T V $28 a month Curtis
Mathews 147 W. 32d W 842-575 Mon.-Sat. 9-31
JOHNSON COUNTY
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 attracting customers. The profithe in classified. Make the cash flow in today. Place a classified ad.
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
By GARY LARSON
МОООOOO
FAЯМИЯВОВ
Моoo
Eventually, the chickens were able to drive a wedge between Farmer Bob and Lulu.
BLOOM COUNTY
CAPTAIN COSTAWAY!
WE ARE PEERLY, YES,
PEERLY HONORED TO
BE HARNED THE 600'
SHIP CAMP00...
CCCP
ПИКТОС ЧИП КНПР ?
ВЫЕ ПКИРОТ?
СССР
by Berke Breathed
OH! FRENCH !
VES. OF COURSE !
NATIONALLY, JFM
QUOTE FLUENT IN
FRENCH_
CCCP
ПКНРС!
( SPIES !)
QUICHE ?
WHY CERTAINLY
WEE' LOVE
SOME QUICHE!
CCCP
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
University Dailv Kansan
15
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive driver's license in four weeks without parental testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841-7740.
FREEWAY SINGLES CLUB A NEW WAY FOR
MEETING TO MEDIA TO MEET
BROCHURE: 297-6413
FOR SALE
All sports ticket. Best offer. 842-1133 9 a m through noon, M-F. Steve Robinson.
BASKETKILL SEASON TICKET best offer.
789-2701. Kobert Maldonado. Please leave
ALL SPORTS TICKET best offer 864-1652 after 5:30 Sunnale
Bauceball cards and sports nottaigli. Buy, Sell
Bauceball cards. Bauceball cards. Open 10-9 M-S.
W 23rd, W 28th
BE YOUR OWN BOSS! P.K. Popper located in downtown Lowney is up for sale. Run your own business or find some partners. GREAT info. contact 863-2431 or Kely 1-822-1977.
Acria skib soos, 10-12. best offer. 943-3963
Comic Books, Playbooks, Pentouses, etc. Max's
Comics. Open 11-5 Tuesday-Fri. Sat. & Sun. 10-5. 811
New Hampshire.
Concord HPL-154 audiophile car stereo, $105/
technique BH-154 avuore cassette deck, full
price. (Call 627-839-4939).
Couch-bed $20, Double Belt Exerciser $25, Men's &
Women's Golf Club $25. 824-9063
Complete Stereo Set for $140, VHS VCR very new for $200, call 843-6828.
manual & case $185, Scott 941-1344
GOVERMENT HOMES from $1 (U repair).
For Sale: HP-41CV calculator w/math pc.
manuals & case 5817 Scott 941-1344.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U. repair).
Also违权销售. Call II 875-687-6000
Guitar for sale. Yamaha classical music. Excellent condition. Refund 40%. Call 828-491-2014.
Haffer, 500 watt power amplifier. Brand own with
power supply. $600. Tom M82-1310
Headmaster 200cm waist, salena 72 w/brake
Headmaster 200cm waist, salena 72 w/brake
(New best offer, call 84-109-287, Leave message,
email)
King size waterbed, 35mm camera and lenses.
Call after 4 p.m. 841-5018.
Classified Ads
Lady's Diyond Wedding Ring Set. $350
negotiable. Call Pam 354-4190 (Topaka)
Must sell HP-41CV calculator, w/ card reader and
accessories. Never use 8320, 9113-727-5063
- living room set sofa, love seat, 2 arm
- dressing table, mirror, light fixture,
All for $110.8474-8474.84
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
equipments.forsale.ie@gmail.com
Received from $98, turnstiles from $15, speakers $15 a pair. Tape decks, boxes and car stereo, all completely reconditioned and warranted. Lawrence Custom Radio, 914 w. W12d. Sect.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) Makes sense to use them. 3) Analysis of Western Civilization; available now at Town Crier, The Jayhawk Booksstore, and
William "THE REFERRIGATOR" Perry posts only $3.00. 864-6677.
CLINTON LAKE 2 BR with on/12乘 acre
plus 2 car garage, near marina & swimming
beach. AC, appliances. Lawrence
low taxes. $28,000. All offers consider-
740-800
HP-41C calculator; excel. cond.; case. instruct;
HP-81B calculator; Excel. $150; $164-1800 event
before of K.C., R.S.
AUTO SALES
915 Plymouth Fury, $30,000 miles, excellent condition, clean inside-out, no rust, $400. Call 843-6823. 976 Datum Pickup Truck with camper shell. Engg很好, very little runt, needs some work.
1697 Foxton Sambir, 62000, Automatic, AM/FM cassette, $135 or best offer. Call 841-354-8147.
1985 Schwinn Mountain hike - Reliable transportation with very few miles. Call 843-860-9886
Must Sell 1800 Olds Mobile Cutlass Station Wagon diesel. Silver Auto, power handle seats, ac, AM/FM cassette. Good condition. $2999. Call 429-4217.
RABBIT. "It new radicals, air, cassette, low mite, sharp gray metal paints, Motion must sell"
SERVICES OFFERED
LOSE WEIGHT NOW. 10-29 lbs. per month on Herbal products. As seen on T.V. Call 842-7696.
Mobile Locksmith Fast Lockton Service, Keys Keen; Dollars Completes Auto Service
Services
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-5716.
STATS Tutoring Service, Bus 388, math 326, etc.
For those who can afford the best, Call 842-1058.
BIRTHRIGHT—Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
EDYTING, structure, data analysis, papers, theses, dissertations M.A. Pd., student, education.
MATH TUTOR - Bob Mears holds an A, in math K to U, where 802, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring profes-sors from 1974-1984. 65 per 40 minute session. Bq 843-902-832.
TYPING
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error Typing. 1081 semester in Lawrence
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A-3 professional typing. Tern paper, Thesas.
B-2 professional typing. Use, et al. Using IBM Selectric
II. Responsible: 843-244-9240
A. L.SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers. Phone 842-8687 after 5:30.
Absolutely Your Type) Word processing, typing
and typesetting (the type of the user)
available. 844 Illinois. 843-6181.
845 Illinois. 843-6188.
ACCURATE TYPING, word processing, and spell checking. Low calls. Rate 843-7929.
- proccessing. Accurate, affordable,
enough. Proofreading. Dedicated,
term paper. Descriptions. 24-hour
service available. One block from campus. 842-2576.
AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing/Tying. Corrections. Proofreading. Graphics.
Document uploading. Free estimates. 740-1118
DISSERTATION / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE
student paper students paper (up to 8)
pages) call Mommie's Mommy? 843-783-
9 before p. m. Please.
Earns Its Keep
$9350.00 Jetta 4-Door
The 1985 Jetta Diesel's responsive handling and agile control repay you with sheer driving enjoyment. The exceptional roominess repays you with plenty of comfort. And the economical performance* repays you with genuine savings — again and again and again.
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- Use "estimated city mpg" for comparison with other cars. Mileage may vary with speed, trip length, mileage. Actual highway miles will probably be less.
Letter perfect papers and resumes. WRITING LIFELINE. 841-3409.
QUALITY TYPING Letters, those, disasserts,
applications. application. Signed corrected
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Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs.
English B.A. T typing and tutoring. Spelling correction, overnight training available. Great rates.
EXPERIENCED TYPEB, Term papers, theses.
IBM Correcting Select, I will correct spelling.
IBM Correcting English Grammar.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
disseminations, papers, letters, applications.
Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
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TYPING: FAST AND ACCURATE s. 8 years professional: experience. Rate rates: 841-6935.
FEMALE BOOMMATE WANTED to share great brand-new apartment very close to campus. Microwave, W&D, dishwasher, $130/mo. Call 841-5851 anytime.
Male roommate requests $100/mo. 2 blocks from
*mouse*. Excellent deal. Call 843-0823
WANTED
Female non-amoker ASAP, wTp q/wpt. wpi/+
BPL 1/2 plus 1/2 utilities Close to bus route. Call
*BPL* to get details.
Female roommate to share two bedrooms apart-
ment or very close to campus
$895.00 | $685.00
Tutor in ECE 319 (Basic Circuit & Devices)
489.3714
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED for lrg. 2 bedroom, 2 bedroom apt. on bus route. 810 a month plus 1/3 utilities. Call Mark or Mitch. 482-4992.
NEEDED. Female to share fully furnished 2 bedroom apartment. Peace negotiate Call Jen. Phone: (415) 797-6055.
*eEEED EXTRA CASH?* We Want to Buy You Used Steel Equipment. Working Or Not. Amp. Speakers. Turntable. Car Steres. Console. Laptop. PC. Cassette. Lawrence公信 Radio 910 W, 23rd W. 841-5511.
Need a male to continue my leave in Jayhawk
Need a male to continue my utility pass Call 863-344
at 300.9 a.m. for Wake
Needed immediately? Used IBM or Zemnith. PC monitor and printed by Peb. Pay cash.
Need female roommate to share apartment
needs. Please call close to campus, on bus
route. Call 841-4043.
Nostrisking. Male Roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom house near campus, WD, cabine, attached unit. Applicants must have a Bachelor's degree in nursing or related.
Non-smoking, male to share very nice accom-
nonition w/mirrored, washer and dryer,
dishwashers, fireplace, numroom, cable TV, etc.
$175.00 per all utilities paid. Curtis B4, 481-7472
ROOMMATE to share 2 BR App. $112.50 plus 1
unities. Furnished. Bus route. Jim84-9873.
Roommate: 4-bedroom duplex. $125/rmo. plus 1
unit. 84/175-976 for Rich. Keep leaving. Lease
Share apc. Large private BR. Half of rent is $128.
No utilities. B43 814-1639.
Wanted immediately: female roommate to apartment at Malls. $150 plus 1/2 electric. Call
Two graduate students or mature couple needed to share a 6 bedroom house in a very nice & quiet neighborhood. Call 842-9738 after 7:00 p.m.
Visiting professor from Japan needs smail front door for walking distance of Spencer Museum of Art, March & April. Call Art History Dept. 844-4713.
ROOMMATE WANTED grad student or professional preferred, to share large two-bedroom house within walking distance of campus. Bedroom w/studio or office. Call Mark at 842-8283.
Are you interested in a Summer Internship?
Are you interested in knowing what employers look for in potential employees?
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1986
a major pharmaceutical firm, will discuss these and other issues on.
Are you interested in a sales position after graduation?
MERCH. SHARP, and DOHME
Contact the Office of Minority Affairs, 864-4351, for additional information.
ADAMS ALUMN CENTER 7-9 p.m.
Contact the Office of Minority Affairs, 864.4351, us
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
1033 Mass. Downtown
ALL HAIRCUTS $6
Quality Haircuts at
Reasonable Prices
No app. necessary - Closed on Mons.
Sound vibrations
ITT
Get into the game!
BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320
543 Tennessee, Lawrence, KS (913) 841-7083
Rau Valenciano
Mobile Sound Entertainment for That Special Occasion
VCR w/2 movies-$9.66
(overnight Mon-Fri)
Store Hours:
Mon-Sat: 9:30-9 /Sun: 1-5
SMITTY'S TV
1447 W 23rd 842-5751
yello sub DELIVERS 841-3268
Friday, February 7
Yosemite National Park Summer Employment in California
Representatives of Yosemite Park & Curry Company will be on campus
Housing available to applicant only. For further information and application, contact
- We seek successful motivated individuals to market a revolutionary product line on a full or part-time basis.
University Placement Center 223 Carruth-O'Leary
- Scientifically DOCUMENTED, and FDA approved nutritional formulas which result in high energy and weight control.
Yosemite Park & Curry Company
Yosemite
National Park
California 95389
(209) 372-1236
EEO/AAP/H/V
This will be a group presentation. We will be interviewing for Seasonal Positions in Hotel, Housekeeping, Kitchen Food Service, Retail, and Support Facilities with starting dates beginning March 15 through June 30.
QUALIFIED APPLICANTS:
PRODUCT PLAN:
- Advantages of being on the ground floor of a major marketing network.
UNLIMITED SALES AND MANAGEMENT GROWTH POTENTIAL
- Unique compensation plan provides IMMEDIATE unlimited earnings potential.
at Alderson Auditorium (In the Kansas Union)
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:
Integrated Asset Management (214)851-5870
Local seminar to be held
Thursday, Feb. 6 2:00 p.m.
842-1212 Delivery During Lunch Also
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W.23rd
Southern Hills
Shopping Center
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11a.m.-4p.m.
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843 MASSACHUSETTS
MENS
MENS SUITS SPORTCOATS SWEATERS SLACKS DRESS-SHIRTS TIES-BELTS OUTERWEAR LADIES SWEATERS SKIRTS SPORTSHIRTS SLACKS
Alterations on sale merchandise slightly additional.
Open Sundays 12-5
Mastercard VISA American Express and Discovery accepted
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Thurs. 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
16
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1986
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Prices Good Thru February 11, 1986
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...
Political suicide
Farce hides harsh themes in banned play. See page 6.
SINCE 1839
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, FEB. 6, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 91 (USPS 650-640)
Cold Details page 3.
The students are very happy to be able to enjoy the ceremony. The teachers are also very happy to be able to teach their students.
Tammy Stude/KANSAN
David Epstein, student body president, and Amy Brown, student body vice president, present a plaque to Deanell Tacha, former vice chancellor for academic affairs. The plaque was from the Student Senate honoring Tacha for her appointment as 10th Circuit Court judge. Epstein and Brown presented the plaque to Tacha yesterday at a reception in her honor at the Kansas Union. See story page 3.
Gold cards tarnish for some
KLZR losing student fans
By Monique O'Donnell
Staff writer
Lawrence's radio station KLZRFM changed to attract new listeners with new hits, but some students who were loyal to the station's old format refuse to listen
On Dec. 30, KLZR formed a cooperative with a Dallas-based Satellite Music Network. The station adopted the network's rocking hits format and has since become unpopular with some students, Tim Savage, Overland Park sophmore, said yesterday.
Savage said he had written a letter to the editor of the Kansan advising other students who had complaints about the station's new top-40 format to send their KLZR lazer gold cards back to the station.
Bob Newton, station manager for KLZR, said that since Savage had his letter published in the Jan. 21 issue of the Kansan, 26 people had sent their cards back to the station.
The station offers the lazer gold cards to listeners. Card holders are entitled to various prizes and price reductions at some Lawrence businesses.
Terry Brown, Valley Center sophomore, said KLZR had lost its personal touch because they no longer played a variety of music. Before they changed their format, the station played music which was not necessarily on the top-40 charts.
"I don't listen to radio much any more," Brown said. "Top 40 music doesn't appeal to me. It's the image of the bands, not the quality of their music, that gets them on the charts."
Brown said the station also featured the disc jockeys from the
Dallas station, which he didn't like.
Dallas season, when he didn't call "I listen to the station the other day and the announcer sounded really sleazy," Brown said.
Newton said he thought it was odd that people didn't like the new DJ's. They are star announcers with great voices, he said.
Brian Courtney, DeSoto senior, also sent a letter to the editor complaining about the station's new format. He said he had received a letter from the station in response to his complaint.
The letter he received, Courtney said, explained that the station had joined the network because national surveys indicated a greater audience for this type of broadcasting.
"It doesn't make sense." Courtney said. "When you do market surveys you should look at the market. Lawrence is different because college students are a bit more progressive in their musical tastes."
Courtney said that he heard a lot of complaints from other students but that he thought few would complain to the station, because it would be easier to turn the dial than to call the station.
Newton said the switch was primarily a business decision instead of a response to a decrease in listeners. He said the change was an effort to increase the audience and improve on a coming trend in music.
"I used to be able to listen to KLZR and have variety, without having to switch the dial all the time," Courtney said.
majority of people who just turn on the radio and want to hear the current hits.
The problem, Newton said, is that the station's old format had a small group of loyal listeners who were more interested in music than the
Because Lawrence does not have its own radio rating system, Newton said, information on changes in the number of people listening to the station is not available now. The station does hire a rating service, but it is too soon after the format change to pinpoint changes.
But Newton said the satellite network had proven successful in 36 markets throughout the country and this was what the station took into consideration when it changed the format.
"The people who were intensely loyal to our station feel like we've messed with a good thing," he said. "Of course they'll be upset because they liked us the way we were."
"We don't want to lose that personal touch, but we are a business," he said. "We get our money from businesses advertising with us and we're trying to reach a larger audience for our advertising customers."
Newton said he didn't disagree with the complaints the students had, but even though some students had sent back their lazer gold cards, the station had received 300 requests for new cards from listeners.
Some students remain optimistic. Brown said he hoped the switch would work out like it did when Coke tried a new formula and then later brought back the original Coke. The station, he said, might realize the old format was more appealing to its listeners and return to the old way.
Reagan urges budget cuts
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, beginning a five-year drive to eliminate federal deficits, proposed a $994 billion fiscal 1987 budget yesterday that would cut deeply into domestic programs but continue increases in military spending.
In compliance with a new budget law, the proposal projects a deficit of $144 billion, which still would be the fourth largest shortfall in history.
The president asked Congress to have faith that his recommendations would do the job, but many legislators said his plan was economically questionable and politically impossible.
"I don't think there are 25 votes in the United States Senate for the budget," said Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J.
Even an influential Republican, Sen. Pete V. Domenici of New Mexico, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, said the deficit goal mandated by the new law could not be met by Reagan's proposed spending cuts with a tax increase.
The president also proposed selling federal assets, some outstanding loans owed to the federal government, and federal land and buildings.
Reagan again ruled out general tax increases to trim deficits and said that in addition to broad spending cuts, some programs should be eliminated, including Amtrak, the passenger rail service, and the Interstate Commerce Commission. In all, about 90 programs would be killed.
He also recommended requiring able adult welfare recipients to look for work, increasing premiums for Medicare insurance for the elderly, and capping Medicaid spending for the nation's poor.
Reagan wants a nearly 12 percent military spending increase before adjusting for inflation. The plan would continue every large weapon system under development unabated.
He added, "We can hardly back
Education faces axe in Reagan's budget
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The administration, willing to inflict "a certain amount of pain" to reduce education spending, proposed deep cuts in vocational education and student aid yesterday and dared critics to come up with a better plan.
The proposed education budget for fiscal year 1987 would cut spending for vocational education in half and cut out aid to 20 percent of college students who are now eligible for financial aid.
It would increase money for teacher incentives, magnet schools and government research for studies and statistics, and allow for a $1 million Christa McAuliffe scholarship program for teachers in honor of the New Hampshire teacher killed on the shuttle Challenger.
"In some cases our budget will produce a certain amount of pain," said a top Department of Education official in announcing an total proposed budget of $15.2 billion, down $3.2 billion from 1986's $18.4 billion.
But he said the effects would not hurt as much as raising taxes or
failing to reduce the federal deficit.
"It's better than taxing taxi drivers to pay for kids to go to school to become lawyers," another official said.
He said the proposed budget "puts us on a firm floor to debate" and dared colleges to criticize it without coming up with alternatives.
He said they would be happy to discuss serious proposals.
Education Secretary William Bennett said federal spending represented less than 7 percent of the nation's revenues and state funding was rising.
"Under this budget every student that wants to get a college education will be able to do so," Bennett said. "I know they certainly don't, but out the
. . . perhaps in some cases choosing a lower-cost institution."
"We certainly don't rule out the possibility in some cases of some students having to make choices
But the National Education Association accused the administration of closing the book on education reform with a 15 percent education budget reduction that
See EDUCATE, p. 5, col. 2
away from our defense buildup without creating confusion among friends and adversaries alike about our determination to maintain our commitments and without jeopardizing our prospects for meaningful arms control talks."
Reagan's new Pentagon request totals $274.3 billion in actual outlays, up $15.9 billion or almost 6.2 percent compared with the current year after the March 1 cuts already required by
Staff writer
the balanced-budget law are taken into effect.
But because much of the Pentagon's purchases take place over several years, Congress focuses on Reagan's budget authority request, which includes long-term money to acquire ships, planes and missiles. This would jump by $33.2 billion or 11.9 percent to $311.6 billion in the year starting Oct. 1.
Bv Frank Ybarra
See BUDGET, p. 5, col. 1
Brown asks fans not to stand
Basketball head coach Larry Brown gave two pregame talks before last night's game against Colorado — one to his players, the other to his fans.
About an hour before the start of the Kansas-Colorado basketball game, Brown gave a short talk to the fans who were sitting behind the KU bench.
bleachers could not see.
Brown told the fans sitting in the section not to stand throughout the entire game. He asked them to cooperate and only stand during moments when the game was exciting.
The problem with the seating came after the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board received complaints about a group of students who were standing throughout entire basketball games.
The students were standing in areas of Allen Field House where new bleachers were installed last fall. The new bleachers are six feet higher than those they replaced. As a result, fans who sat behind those
Brown said he had seen a decrease in enthusiasm after the KUAC Board distributed a letter before the Louisville game to the students asking them not to stand through the whole game.
"The last thing any of us want to see is if we infrize on you." he said.
But Brown, in answer to a student's question, said fans in the section needed to sit because many people who sat behind them could not see the game, even if they stood.
Also before the game, the KUAC Board placed a letter on the reserved seats on the second level of the field house behind the KU bench.
The letter explained the board's decision and told fans the board appreciated their patience.
But Brown's influence seemed to carry a lot of weight with the students.
Kip Strauss, Prairie Village freshman, and Steve Brown, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, have sat behind the KU bench for most of the games this year.
Before Brown came out, both said
they would stand the entire game if they thought the game was exciting. But after the coach spoke, they said they would do what he asked.
"He's a belluva coach and he definitely knows what he's talking about," Strauss said.
Kenneth Noever, a Lawrence resident who sits in the second level behind the bench, said he didn't hear what the coach said, but he thought a statement by Brown would help.
After Brown finished talking to the fans, they applauded.
Noever said that he had leg problems and could not stand through the whole game and that his view often was blocked by students who stood.
"It takes cooperation on all parts," he said.
Even after Brown's statement, several of the fans in the section behind where the students stand said they were unhappy that the athletic department had built the seats without realizing that the students
Bill stiffens enforcement of drug laws
See SEATING, p. 5, col. 5
Members of the Kansas House of Representatives voted 119 to 1 yesterday to make it a felony instead of a misdeanor to distribute drugs to a person under the age of 18.
A bill now awaiting Kansas Senate approval may make one think twice before passing a joint at a concert, although the chances of getting caught are small, a local police officer said yesterday.
By Abbie Jones
South African urges sanctions
State Rep. Diane Gjerstad, D-Wichita, was the only legislator to oppose the bill.
Police don't have the manpower to arrest people who smoke marijuana or give it to other people at concerts, said Sgt. D阿拉德 of the Lawrence Police Department. Police normally try to stop drugs at the door and maintain order during concerts.
Staff writer
"How could one policeman hold
See DRUGS, p. 5. col. 2
See DRUGS, p. 5, col. 2
By Tim Hrenchir Staff writer
An exiled South African newspaper editor last night urged economic sanctions against South Africa and divestment from its businesses.
Woods has spoken against apartheid on more than 100 college campuses in the last seven years and has testified before congressional committees about the use of divestment to end apartheid.
"The one hope of stopping bloodshed in South Africa is massive economic pressure," said Donald Woods, former editor of the East Loadon (South Africa) Daily Dispatch. Woods spoke to about 200 people in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union as part of the University Lecture Series.
Jim Scaly, assistant to the chancellor, said Woods' appearance was part of a continuing University effort to promote understanding of apartheid.
Apartheid is a form of racial segregation practiced in South Africa.
Woods said the main effect of economic sanctions and divestment would be psychological. Such actions would show the South Africa government it could not count on help from other countries.
He said South Africa's oppression of blacks was based, in part, on fear. Other reasons include hatred and a deep reulsion that sometimes takes on maniacal tendencies.
When he was editor of the Daily Dispatch, Woods was subject to 22 publication restriction laws, some that restricted criticism of the government. He was prosecuted seven times for violating those laws, and in 1977 was banned from writing and speaking publicly, and from being in a room with more than one person.
He escaped from South Africa in 1977, dressed as a priest.
"Prostitution and cocaine selling
Woods is a special adviser to the 49-nation Commonwealth Secretariat in London. The Secretariat is the primary agency that coordinates all commonwealth activities.
Woods criticized organizations that refuse to divest in South African companies because of potential profits. He said those companies are supporting an immoral government and could make profits in other immoral manners.
will raise even more money," he said.
Every dollar invested in South Africa goes for a government that uses guns and tanks to shoot black people."
Woods said United Nations economic sanctions had been stalled by vetoes from the United States and Great Britain. South Africa conducts a massive, highly financed campaign to maintain U.S. and British support.
Several myths about apartheid have been spread in the United States, Woods said. These include beliefs that tribalism is still a large factor in South African politics and that the country's blacks would suffer more if apartheid ended.
Black South Africans clearly want divestment and economic sanctions, he said.
The speech was followed by a question and answer session
If blacks are harmed by a change of government, Woods said, they are prepared to pay that price because it will save them from the worse fate of continuing anarheid.
In response to one question, Woods called President Reagan's policy toward South Africa a fatal policy that killed many people.
STATE UNIVERSITY OF PUERTO RICO
Tammv Stude/KANSAN
Donald Woods, former editor of a South African newspaper, talks about the segregation of blacks in South Africa. Woods was banned in 1977 from writing and speaking publicly in South Africa because of his anti-apartheid beliefs. He spoke to about 200 people last night in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
2
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
Nation/World
News Briefs
Hostages released in airline hijacking
GRAPEVINE, Texas — A man with a knife took 205 passengers and 11 crew members hostage on a Delta Air Lines jumbo jet yesterday and held them for nearly two hours after landing at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.
Airport police arrested Ralph A. Hughes, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., after a struggle with FBI agents. No one was hurt, officials said.
Officials did not announce Hughes's demands. Hughes boarded the plane in Florida.
Paris bomb hurts 9
PARIS — An exploding bomb injured at least nine people in a sports store in the crowded Les Halles shopping complex yesterday. It was the third bomb blast in Paris in three days, raising the total number injured in the explosions to 20.
No one took responsibility for the bombs, but the respected newspaper Le Monde earlier said police suspected that Arab terrorists were responsible for Monday's explosion on the Champs-Elysées and Tuesday's blast in a book store in the Latin quarter.
Farmer kills himself
WAYNESBORO, Ga. — A 67-year-old farmer shot and killed himself Tuesday 20 minutes before his 700-acre farm was to be auctioned for unpaid debts. It was the latest in a series of violent incidents linked to the farm crisis.
"He just couldn't stand to see his whole life go on the steps of the courthouse," Deborah Jennings said after her father, L.D. Hill III, shot himself at his cast Georgia home.
Train kills DuPont
WESTTOWN, Pa. — A one-car train hit a station wagon at a railroad crossing yesterday, killing Alexis Felix DUpront IV, a member of one of the wealthiest families in the United States, and slightly injuring four children he was taking home from school.
Police said DuPont's car was pushed over an embankment.
From Kansan wires
Challenger investigation continues
United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Twisted fragments and debris from the shuttle Challenger were displayed yesterday in a vacant hangar as recovery crews at sea tried to find one of the ship's rocket boosters.
Search teams near the Florida coast spent the day focusing on about a dozen undersea targets. The search included an area where, according to officials of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, one of the ship's two solid rocket boosters may be resting
The official investigation into the disaster moved to Washington where the first meeting of a presidential shuttle commission is scheduled today.
A report by NASA's own review team was expected to shed light on possible causes of the Jan. 28 explosion that killed the seven-member crew 73 seconds after blastoff.
Only two pieces of official film have been
The remains of the billion-dollar shuttle were shown laid out on a grid in a hangar at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.
released, one showing a strange exhaust plume before the shuttle's fuel tank exploded.
There was no evidence of a crew module or other main structures, and most of the debris was unrecognizable. NBC reported that 17 feet of a 20-foot-long self-destruct package once attached to Challenger's external tank had been recovered and that it was not detonated in the explosion as earlier suspected.
As for the sunken booster, NASA spokesman Hugh Harris was unable to say when the rocket, if it is one, will be pulled to the surface. It was also not known which of Challenger's two boosters it might be.
Sources in Houston have said engineers suspect problems with a seal between two of the rocket's lower fuel segments allowed 6,000-degree flame to shoot out. That could have burned through the nearby external fuel
NASA spokesman John Lawrence said any effort to separate Challenger from its main fuel tank and booster rockets while the boosters were still firing probably would have broken the craft apart.
tank or raised internal pressure in the tank enough to cause its rupture.
The information from Lawrence contradicted earlier speculation that Challenger might have been able to abort its mission and glide to an emergency landing in the ocean or at the Florida spaceport. That step, even if possible, would have required that the crew take action in the nearly 15 seconds between the failure of one rocket and the explosion.
Finding Challenger's right-hand booster rocket would be a boon to investigators.
NASA spokesman James Mizell said engineers would be able to examine the seal between the fuel segments, analyze the remaining propellant to determine if it burned
properly and glean other important clues about the disaster.
The search for shuttle wreckage has turned up an estimated 12 tons of debris, including torn sections of the outer skin that surrounded the shuttle's crew compartment, sections of its wings and fragments of the fuelel.
But NASA officials said the ship's blasted crew cabin had not been found. They refused to confirm or deny increasing reports from sources that claim body parts have been recovered that may be related to the explosion.
The search for surface debris, while continuing, has wound down with attention now focusing on the undersea targets near the Kennedy Space Center.
Engineers at the shuttleport received permission to power up the shuttle Columbia yesterday and to begin routine processing, but officials stressed no flights are scheduled pending the outcome of the review.
Philippines brace for elections
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines – President Ferdinand E. Marcos, at his last rally before the election, yesterday accused his opponents of sowing hatred and revolution during the presidential campaign. Opposition candidate Corazon Aquino called him an old dictator whose time had passed.
Yesterday was the last legal day of campaigning before tomorrow's
Speaking in a Manila park during a heavy rain, Marcos addressed these remarks to Aquino and her supporters: "Slow down, you children of little brains, you're no match for the administration.
"I ask my opponents to stop what they have begun. You have sowed an atmosphere of hatred, anger and revolution. Now I say to you, the government of the Philippines is not defenseless."
Aquino told a crowd in her home province of Tarlac that Marcos was her only enemy. She blamed him for the 1983 assassination of her husband, Benigno, who had been the president's main political toe.
message issued by her headquarters that her campaign of people power had won, "and as the old dictator lurks in his palace with his dwindling band of cronies. . . I warn him: Do not cheat the people on Friday."
Marcos has been in power since 1965 and has ruled by martial law since 1972.
An official U.S. delegation of 20 members in the Philippines, led by Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., and Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., will observe the elections.
She said in a final campaign
Before leaving Washington, Lugar said they would feel free to criticize
any election abuses they found.
Marcos had called the early election in an effort to show critics at home and in the United States that he was still popular and had the strength to deal with a growing communist insurgency.
The president's party projected that he would win with 56 percent of the vote. Aquino has said she needed 65 percent to provide a cushion against vote fraud.
Reporters and observers estimated Marcos' final rally crowd at 150,000, less than one-third of total that cheered Aquino on Tuesday night.
Stopping Libyan plane was wrong, Peres says
United Press International
JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Shimon Peres, swamped by Arab and European condemnation, said yesterday that Israel made a mistake when it intercepted a Libyan en route to Syria and held it for five hours to search for terrorists.
Conceding that no terrorist suspects were aboard, the Israeli military Tuesday night allowed all 12 passengers and crewmen to fly on to Syria after the forced stopover at an Israeli air base.
"It was clearly a mistake," Israel radio quoted Peres as telling a closed
session of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee in the Knesset, Israel's parliament.
Israeli television reported that three planes left the Libyan capital of Tripii on Tuesday at about the same time bound for Damascus.
One of the two planes not in intercepted by Israel was carrying senior Palestinian officials, the television said.
Peres' admission that the operation went awry contrasted with the view of his defense and foreign ministers, who defended the seizure of the Gulfstream jet bound from Libya to Syria.
Meat poisoning threat prompts reward offer
United Press International
AUSTIN, Minn. — Geo. A. Hormel & Co. offered a $10,000 reward yesterday to catch those responsible for an extortion letter threatening to poison products of the strike-bound company, the FBI said.
The reward offered came amid 40 reports of package tampering in the Minneapolis area and on the eve of a rally by Austin meatpackers to discourage replacement workers from entering Hormel's flagship plant.
Union and company officials met again yesterday in an attempt to end the bitter strike, which began Aug. 17, but no progress was reported.
The FBI said it was investigating the tampering incidents and the anonymous letter sent to a Minneapolis TV station Tuesday.
we are going to start injecting a deadly poison at the plant and in stores within 1,000 miles of Austin," the letter said. "Hormel has no way to stop another Tylenol case."
Academy announces contenders
United Press International
HOLLYWOOD — "The Color Purple," the inspiring story of a rural black woman in the South, and "Out of Africa," a sweeping love saga, won 11 Oscar nominations each yesterday and lead contenders for this year's Academy Awards.
"Prizii's Honor," a black comedy starring Jack Nicholson as a Mafia hit man, and "Witness," the suspense thriller harrison Harrison Ford as a big city cop in Amish country, each won eight nominations.
Those four movies were nominated for best picture, along with "Kiss of the Spider Woman."
Although "The Color Purple" is widely viewed as being among his most ambitious works, Steven Spielberg, one of the industry's most celebrated directors, failed to win a nomination.
Ford and Nicholson were both nominated for best actor, along with James Garner for "Murphy's Romance," William Hurt for "Kiss of the Spider Woman" and Jon Voight for "Runaway Train."
Nominated for best actress were Meryl Streep for "Out of Africa," Anne Bancroft for "Agnes of God," Whoopi Goldberg for "The Color Purple," Jessica Lange for "Sweet Dreams" and Geraldine Page.
WHO WERE THOSE GUYS?
THAT BUZZED THROUGH THE CLUB ON THUR. NIGHT...IF YOU'RE OUT HERE BY 11:00 TONIGHT YOU'LL BE IN FOR A TREAT. ALL THE CONTESTANTS (ABOUT 20) THAT ARE ENTERING THE K.U. PORTION OF THE NATIONAL M.S. CELEBRITY/ROCK STAR LOOK-A-LIKE CONTEST WILL BE PRESENTED FOR YOUR APPLAUSE, VOTING, AND ENJOYMENT. DONATIONS WILL BE TAKEN AT THE DOOR TO HELP BUST M.S.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
Campus/Area
3
News Briefs
Services scheduled for Shawnee couple
Services for Ronald and Ramona Brown, two KU alumni found shot to death Monday in their Shawnee home, will be at 2 p.m. today in the chapel of D. W. Newcomer's Sons in Overland Park.
There will be no visitation.
There will be no visitation. Burial will be at Johnson County Memorial Gardens Cemetery.
City Commissioner Howard Hill said yesterday that he didn't know who had shushed his car's tires during a commission meeting Tuesday night, but he thought the incident was a cowardly act.
Shawnee police would not release information yesterday about the investigation into the couple's deaths. Mr. and Mrs. Brown died from gunshot wounds to the head.
Official's tires sliced
Hill said he parked his car in a lot across the street from Lawrence City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets, at 6:50 p.m. When he returned at 11:30 p.m., his car was resting on its
Hill said his car had been singled out because it was the only one in a full parking lot that had its tires slashed, but he didn't know why.
"As far as I know, no one is mad at me." he said.
Lawrence police said the tires were apparently cut with a thin-bladed instrument. Hill's car tires were also slashed Dec. 29 while his car was parked in the driveway of his home.
Hill said the police had no suspects. Most people he had disagreements with as a commissioner or as director of KANU-FM would come and talk to him about the problem, he said.
Committee OKs bills
The Student Senate Finance Committee approved a bill last night requesting $750 to help cover the cost of bringing speaker Joan Peters to the University of Kansas.
Peters is a former ABC Middle East correspondent and author of "From Time Immemorial." The Minority Affairs Committee will invite Peters to speak at McGraw-Hill to discuss the Arab-British conflict.
The Finance Committee also approved a bill requesting $172 for the partial support of The Pteridactyl's Egg, a magazine published by the KU Sword and Shield club.
Endowment gets gift
The Kansas University Endowment Association has received $6,700 from the estate of Hazel Lee Simmons, a 1928 KU graduate and longtime Lawrence grade school principal, the Endowment Association said yesterday.
Simmons, a native of Centropolis, taught in Lawrence schools for 42 years and was principal at Cordley Elementary School from 1937 to 1965. She died Jan. 29, 1984, in Lawrence.
Weather
Today will be cloudy and cold with a 30 percent chance of snow. The high temperature will be in the mid-to upper 30s. North winds will blow at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be cloudy with a 30 percent chance of light rain or snow. The low temperature will be around 30.
KU reception honors new judge Tacha
Hundreds bid official farewell
By Russell Gray
From staff and wire reports.
Staff writer
Piano music played softly amid the dull buzz of faculty conversation.
Deanell Tacha, smiling and shaking hands vigorously, said goodbye for two hours to members of KU faculty and administration at a reception in honor of her appointment as a judge in the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
KU executive vice chancellors and vice chancellors played hosts at the University reception for Tacha at the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union.
No replacement has been found yet for Tacha, former vice chancellor for academic affairs. Her successor is expected to be announced sometime in April.
fairs, said the reception was paid for by the Kansas University Endowment Association. The Endowment Association can pay for events that the state can't pay for.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student af-
The University had the reception yesterday because when Tacha's appointment was confirmed, the University was closed for semester break. Ambler said.
Amber said that he had expected several hundred people to attend the reception but that halfway through he thought that number had been surpassed.
"I think I personally will miss her because I think she was a champion for improving undergraduate educational and support services." Ambler said.
Tacha was committed to improving instructional and advising programs and was supportive of the computer enrollment, he said, all o which this is part of a quality undergraduate education.
K. Eileen Allen, professor of human development, who attended the reception, said she got to know Tacha well because Tacha's son had stayed at the Edna A. Hill Child Development Laboratory on campus.
"Deanell has been a person on faculty and in governance who has always listened and responded to faculty needs or students' needs," Allen said.
Tacha said she still would live in Lawrence
and commute to Denver, where the 10th Circuit meets one week every two months.
The court was in session all last week, Tacha
The court was in session at last week, Ketan said, and she enjoyed it. Tacha is one of three new judges on the circuit.
Tacha has decided to stay in Lawrence to be close to the people at the University.
Her family has accepted her transition well and her children have kept her appointment in the proper perspective, Tacha said.
Allen said, "One of the amazing things about Judge Tacha is that she is always able to manage family, career and still be a warm pleasant person and a good friend."
Policemen will back plate law
By Mark Siebert
Staff writer
TOPEKA — A bill that would require two license plates on most motor vehicles in Kansas by 1888 has the support of the Kansas Highway Patrol and the Lawrence Police Department.
State law enforcement officials said yesterday that the proposed law would make the identification of vehicles easier and safer for the police and for other drivers on the highway.
The Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee discussed the license-plate bill but delayed taking action.
The bill would require two license plates on most vehicles except motorcycles, mopeds and vehicles with a gross weight of more than 12,000 pounds.
New plates would cost $2 each, the same amount they cost now.
Annual registration rates will go up 50 cents if the bill passes.
10 cents if not on paper.
Committee chairman Bill Morris, R-Wichita, said the committee was waiting for information on how the bill would affect county treasuries that handle car registration fees.
Nancy Welsh, Douglas County treasurer, said she thought the only problem facing the county would be effecting a new state system.
"I don't think the larger problem will come from the treasury standpoint," Welsh said. "The problem is going to come with the individual."
Kansas would join 30 other states that require two plates. The only neighborring state that requires just one plate is Oklahoma.
Kansas had a similar law at one time, Kansas Highway Patrol Lt. Bill Jacobs said. It was repealed because it was too expensive. Plates are no longer replaced every year, which makes the law less expensive, he said.
Maj. Ron Olin of the Lawrence Police Department did not attend the meeting but said the bill had some advantages.
"Strictly from a law enforcement standpoint, I think it's a good move," Olin said. "It doubles the possibility of a license plate being identified by a victim."
"Considering the primary purpose of license plates, to afford identification of the vehicle and registered owner and to assure compliance with the registration laws, our mission would be greatly enhanced through a two-plate application." he said.
Col. Bert Cantwell of the Kansas Highway Patrol told the committee that the patrol strongly supported the bill.
Cantwell said the proposed law would allow quicker identification of vehicles, giving officers a longer period to prepare themselves mentally and physically before stopping a vehicle.
ROBERT LEE AND HERBERT MILLER
Michelle Brouillette/KANSAN
Heated creativity
Debra Seeger, Mission junior, gets a helping hand from Olli Valanne, associate professor of design. Seeger worked on soldering techniques yesterday in a jewelry-making class.
Assistant director to leave
Assistant director to leave Denke takes N.C.State position
By a Kansan reporter
Mark Denke, assistant director or residential programs, will leave the University of Kansas on Feb. 21 for a similar position at North Carolina State University.
"It is a good opportunity and I will be doing some of the same work, but with additional responsibilities," Denke said yesterday.
residence life at North Carolina State.
On March 1, Denke will become the associate director of housing and
Fred McElhenie, director of residential programs, said, "We are happy for him, but at the same time we are sorry to see him leave. He is an extremely talented man."
Denke came to KU as director of Oliver Hall in 1978. The next year he became assistant director of residential programs.
McElhennie said Denke had several responsibilities at KU, including producing office publications, giving information to prospective and current residents, advising the Association of University Residence Halls and training staff members in the living units.
McEllenbie said the office had not yet replaced Denke but was in the process of recruiting possible candidates for the job.
Computer frustrating for school
By Sandra Crider Staff writer
The School of Engineering's new Harris 1000 computer can solve problems twice as fast as other campus computers. But recently, it has been causing problems even faster than it can solve them.
The $300,000 computer, given to the school by the Harris Corp. in October, has been malfunctioning periodically in the past month and also needs new equipment, several faculty members said yesterday.
"From a user's point of view, it's been kind of frustrating since the system has been down as much as it is up. It's not as good as Darwin, professor of engineering.
The gift was intended to teach engineering students to use computers in their work. But the computer's limited abilities have been frustrating to some professors wanting to assign computer work to students.
Karan Surana, associate professor of mechanical engineering, said that he wanted to use the Harris computers for his design classes but that there were only eight graphics terminals linked to the Harris 800 and 1000. He said the school would have to get more terminals before the computer became the standard tool for design students.
"The basic problem is that the terminals we bought are not compatible with the Harris software," he said.
The system also needs additional software, said John Ogg, assistant professor of aerospace engineering.
The corporation needs to write a new program that would allow the school to use the equipment it has, Ogg said.
"When we get the new program in, it will be a great tool," he said.
Despite the problems, most people at the school know that computers are expensive.
Kenneth Bishop, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, who oversees the technical aspects of the computer, said mechanical problems were taken care of as they occurred.
Equipment problems can only be solved with time and money, said Robert Zerwekh, associate dean of engineering.
Computers become obsolete very quickly, and software and maintenance are needed to prolong their lives, he said.
"Computing and computers tend to eat up a lot of dollars," Zwerek said.
He said individual software programs could run into the thousands of dollars and maintenance for the Harris 1000 and the $1½-year-old Harris 800 was about $60,000 a year.
In spite of the problems involved, faculty and students who work with the Harris 1000 said it was a definite plus to keep the school moving in the lightning-quick computer age.
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University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
know.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A bill that would shorten residency requirements for the seven state Board of Regents schools from one year to six months is a piece of legislation to be applauded.
Bill would benefit state
The bill, which passed the House Ways and Means Committee, would allow students to pay in-state tuition after living six months in Kansas. It also would allow those who moved to Kansas for jobs to gain immediate residency.
Although the bill passed in committee on an easy voice
At the University of Kansas,
out-of-state students now pay
$1,517 per semester, while
instate students pay $615.
vote, its opponents in the House stand ready to pounce.
Their argument is logical: If people stop paying more money for tuition to state schools, the state will lose money. The problem is no one knows how much.
The Board of Regents figures the loss could amount to about $250,000.
A shorter residency requirement would attract more students to Kansas schools and with them, an increase in revenue to the state, blowing a hole in an otherwise logical argument by combating the potential monetary loss.
The media, not wanting to look as if they are impeding the progress of the investigation into what went wrong, are not complaining too much. But the fact is that NASA was not as cooperative as it should have been in supplying prompt information.
NASA also acted in an unnecessarily heavy-handed manner when it impounded network tapes of the explosion.
Naturally, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration was sensitive about the release of information last week following the explosion of the shuttle Challenger.
It was almost five hours before Jesse Moore, NASA's shuttle program director, announced what most Americans already knew. The shuttle had exploded. There were no apparent survivors.
The impounding of material available to the press is usually reserved for matters of national security, when the country is at war and the information might be useful to combatants, or when secrecy is required for some other justifiable reason.
Lack of public concern
But the explosion of the shut-
The networks have said they would gladly have handed over any tapes or information that would aid in the investigation. It is in the interest of the media to maintain a cooperative relationship with government agencies in similar situations.
But it also is in the government's interest to maintain an honest, open relationship with the media as far as possible. The government is supposed to act for the people and the media are an important link to the heart and mind of the public. NASA's actions showed its lack of concern for that public.
Neither was the explosion of the shuttle a matter of national security as far as has been determined. It is unlikely that NASA would have risked carrying secret military cargo on such a well-publicized flight with the first truly private citizen on board.
Finally, because we are not in a state of war, no plausible explanation remains as to why NASA acted as it did.
te was no secret. Millions of people in offices, schools, factories, stores and homes immediately tuned into television sets to witness the gory instant replays.
Time to end contra aid
As the Reagan administration searches for ways to reduce the federal deficit at home, it also needs to look abroad.
In the next few weeks, Congress will again assist aid to the contras, who are rebels in Nicaragua.
Rep. Michael Barnes, D-Md., sent a letter to President Reagan two weeks ago saying that Reagan's present policy left the United States only two choices: Abandon the contras and sustain a foreign policy
But now, the administration is seeking to resume military aid, which will make up about two-thirds of a total contra aid package worth about $100 million, according to estimates.
Last year the United States spent $27 million for humanitarian aid to the rebels. Military aid to the contras was cut last year because of congressional outcry after revelations such as that of the CIA's direct involvement in the mining of Nicaraguan harbors.
The United States should not increase aid to the contras.
Unfortunately, the coming election year may make it difficult to defeat Reagan's complete plan, because few congressmen will want to appear to be rejecting the president and favoring the Sandinistas.
setback,or get directly involved militarily.
Although the government in Managua is oppressive, the contrasts have not ended their own human rights violations or provided a political plan of what they would do in the event they came to power. Besides, the rebels are deeply divided.
The Contadora nations, supported by Central American nations, are calling for the United States to cease contra aid and to help find a diplomatic solution to the conflict.
It's time the United States stopped spending millions to support the contras. In the long and short run, the Contadora nations' suggestion is less of a burden for U.S. taxpayers.
News staff
News staff
Michael Totty...Editor
Lauretta McMillan...Managing editor
Chris Barber...Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry...Campus editor
David Giles...Sports editor
Brice Waddill...Photo editor
Susanne Shaw...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe...Business manager
David Nixon...Retail sales manager
John Williamson...Campus manager
Lor Eckart...Classified manager
Caroline Innes...Production manager
Pellen Lee...National manager
John Oberzan...Sales and marketing adviser
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**STILL WAY OUT IN SPACE,
VOYAGER II PHOTOGRAPHS
URANUS.**
中
CHARTING THE PLANETS
BECKONING TO US.
A spacecraft is orbiting a planet.
NASA
BECAUSE THE ALTERNATIVE IS FEAR OF THE UNKNOWN.
T
Satellite in space
THAT IS NOT A LESSON TO TEACH OUR CHILDREN.
AND ALTHOUGH SOME WILL DIE ON THE FRONTIER, FOLLOW WE MUST.
CHRISTA MCAULIFFE UNDERSTOOD THIS.
EXHIBITION
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Reaching for stars never a lost cause
Pick up almost a newspaper and there will be a page of death notices and obituaries. People die every day. Some die young, more die old. Some suddenly, some after a long illness. Rich, poor, unknown and famous.
We pay little or no attention to most of them. In smaller cities, people might look a little closer at the obits because there's more likelihood that they'll know the someone.
But in the big cities, most people don't give them a glance. Or if they do, they just skim the names.
And nobody says that this or that death is a great tragedy, a terrible loss. We don't say that about the death of strangers. People die. That's part of life.
Yet, millions of people around the world were plunged into deep sadness Jan. 28 because of the deaths of seven individuals who were strangers to almost all of us.
On the streets, you could find ordinary people staring into store windows at TV sets that showed the explosion of the spacecraft, and weeping at the sight.
People phoned me, most of them shaken, subdued, depressed, just wanting to talk to someone about the tragedy.
She said: "It's because they were doing it for us. They were represen-
I asked one elderly woman, who had surely seen much death in her lifetime, why she was so moved at the deaths of people whose names she wasn't sure of.
NURSING AFFILIATE
They're special because they were among that small minority who don't do what they do for the paycheck.
Mike Royko Chicago Tribune
elderly woman said about the seven being special.
They were the fortunate ones who have the brains, the drive, the vision,
In a sense, it's the same reason we mourn strangers in the uniforms of cops and firemen who die while doing their jobs. It's because they're representing us. We delegate and they do our dirty and dangerous work.
ting us up there, weren't they? They were special."
In a sense, it's the same reason we mourn strangers in the uniforms of cops and firemen who die while doing their jobs. It's because they're representing us. We delegate and they do our dirty and dangerous work.
And I suppose that's part of it. Yes, they were representing us. The human race is going to explore space because it's in our nature to go where we've never been. And maybe we have to if we're going to survive. But we can't all do it. We have to delegate. And are they our explorers. They push back the boundaries for the rest of us.
the physical gifts, to accomplish things that the rest of us can only marvel at. In Tom Wolfe's phrase: the right stuff.
And there was truth in what the
So, it really shocking when we see such special people die literally before our eyes; when we see a great, adventure venture into a video hgrer.
It was a tragedy, yes. But I can't help but think that even in death, maybe they were still among the lucky ones.
And it's a jaring reminder of our mortality. How sure are any of us that there will be a tomorrow when even the very special, the very gifted, can be gone in an instant; when all the dazzling technology, the brilliant minds of the space agency, the meticulous planning, the countless safeguards, can't guarantee that a disaster won't occur?
I've known so many people, and you probably have, too, who have quietly slipped away after lives of frustration, drudgery, failure, disappointment and sickness. People who never had a chance to climb the mountains of their souls. Or who had no mountains.
The seven people on the spaceship, even the schoolteacher, had all chosen to climb. They wanted to walk the edge, with all the risks it involved.
I'm not sure that the risk wasn't worth it. Maybe it wouldn't be for you and me and most of us who prefer to play it safe. But the next time a spaceship is launched, there will be people aboard who believe that what they're doing is more than worth the chance. There will always be such people, and each of them will tell you that they consider themselves lucky, no matter the outcome.
So, in feeling grief, remember that the seven were special in what they did with their lives, right up to the end.
As someone once put it: "If I reach for the stars, I might not touch them. But I won't come up with a handful of dirt."
Mailbox
Standers are true fans
The real pride of the Jayhawks is represented by the students who are willing to show up early for games and enthusiastically express their support and their pride in a team which is nationally ranked and inspires an important sense of school spirit within the campus environment.
We are writing with regard to Marty Kral's letter on respect. She considers the students behind the bench selfish and immature for cheering while standing up, and implies that the fans who are seated represent the "pride of the Jayhawks."
If you feel that you are at a physical disadvantage, you can show up a little earlier.
Obnoxious we are not; conscious of the fact that the Jayhawks deserve all the support we can give them, we are. Yes, there are "diehard" fans, and the Jayhawks deserve at least this much.
As for the rest of us, tall and short alike, we will continue to represent the real pride of the Jayhawks.
Neei Caps
Aspen, Colo. freshman
Andy Strohman
San Diego freshman
Noel Capps
Problem not lawyers
In the Feb. 3 issue of the Kansan, Victor Goodpasture launched his latest tirade of inanities against the legal profession. So now he thinks America has too many lawyers.
If the results of the trials that he mentions are as spurious as he assumes, why did the juries decide in that fashion? If indeed consuming too many Twinkies is not a valid defense for murder, then how was a jury so convinced in the first place?
If the lawyers were not profiting by their adventures, they would not be so engaged. The problem perhaps lies in the legal structure that allows such nonsense to be perpetuated, but not in the sheer number of lawyers.
Goodpasture — never one to refrain from jumping like a high-hurdler over logical fences — quickly decides that "lawyers never were interested in justice." This column, which is representative of his usual standards of analysis, proves just as correctly that journalists never were interested in truth in reporting.
Indeed, the sheer existence of such sordid tabloids as the Enquirer and the Star proves that there are too many journalists.
Goodpasture, whether he thinks so or not, represents this University with his articles. If this is the best he can do, then the School of Journalism should be ashamed, and instead of turning Green Hall "into a shelter for obsessive Twinkie eaters" as he suggests, Stauffer-Flint Hall should be razed and turned into a convenient parking lot.
Brian Stayton Mayfield senior
Ticket troubles
Being part of a society ruled by government, I try to do my share to obey law and order. Unfortunately, it doesn't always work out that way and sometimes I am punished by a fine for an occasional traffic or parking ticket. If I know I'm guilty, I have no problem with paying the fine.
Unfortunately, the handling of parking tickets on the KU campus is vastly different from anywhere else. At KU, your case is in the hands of law students, who act as "judges." Some of these "judges" make television's Judge Wapner look good. It's sad, but true.
My most recent case is a joke. I am a broadcast journalism student and part of my class requirement was to do newscasts at KJHK — the student-run radio station. Well, I got a ticket there last spring.
Usually, there are wooden parking permits at the station, which you stick inside your car. But on this particular day the permits at the station were nowhere to be found.
I hope all the law students can hear that tune the next_time they declare someone, "Guilty!" Unfortunately, the KU "judges" are the ones that are guilty. Remember, "judges," to make your checks payable to the University of Kansas.
I later found a ticket on my windshield. I fought it twice, with no success, and now I have to pay a fine of $7.50. Now, that may not sound like much money, but, frankly, I'd rather buy an album with that money than pay a parking ticket for which I wasn't guilty.
Roger Keys Glenview. Ill., junior
Choice is necessary
In response to Tim Erickson's column on the Supreme Court and the "bad call" of the Roe v. Wade decision (Kansan, Feb. 4), we would like to present a hitherto unpublicized opinion.
We do not like abortion; we hope that we are never faced with the prospect of making such a difficult choice. But it must remain our choice.
We are fully aware of your opinion. The same Constitution you criticize gives you the right to have your opinion printed. There is no law controlling your male reproductive capacities. Why should there be laws on ours?
Abortion is not a method of birth control and has never been advocated as such. It is a last resort for women in many painful and difficult situations. Would you rather have these women dead from botched illegal abortions? What if it were your wife; or sister? or daughter? Any woman can find herself with an unawanted or life-threatening pregnancy once reaching puberty. And in the United States, the age of sexual maturation has decreased rapidly.
compare an endangered species with the only creature who has the capability to destroy this world 50,000 times over? Making such a comparison seriously damaged your credibility for us.
As for your reference to the bald eagle and the punishment laws concerning the killing of this symbol of our nation, we ask: How can you
And concerning the example of the 24-week-old fetus that was allegedly murdered by the physician who "aborted" it, it is well known that no present-day physician would attempt to terminate such an advanced pregnancy intentionally. The risks to the mother are simply too great.
The Supreme Court has never claimed to be perfect. It is made up of humans, with prejudices and opinion, just like other humans. We agree with the decision it made in Roe v. Wade; we have disagreed with other decisions, past and present.
The Constitution was written to be amended. The decision to ban abortion was initially an amendment. To reverse the decision made in 1973 would be a serious de-evolutionary step in the growth of a democratic, free America.
We ask you: Would you prefer to have women free to choose their own destinies or see your 12-year-old daughter carrying your first grandchild?
Mary J. Rose
Leawood sophomore
Cheryl Scheer
Anchorage, Alaska, junior
Correction
Because of an editor's error, a letter to the editor in Tuesday's Kansan by Karl Shepard, Kansas City, Mo. graduate student, should have read, "Phill凯le, chairman of the Kansas Federation of College Republicans, claims that opposition to divestment is incompatible with the ideals and vision of the Rev Martin Luther King Jr."
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Budget
Continued from p. 1
On domestic spending, Reagan's proposal would increase spending for Medicare, the federal health insurance program for the elderly and disabled, and for Medicaid, the state-federal program for the poor. The budget also would allow for a 3.7 percent cost-of-living increase for Social Security beneficiaries next January.
But it includes a $2.6-billion cap on Medicaid spending, an estimated $1.3 billion less than what is projected for 1987 spending under current law.
It would increase premiums and deductible payments by elderly individuals for Medicare Part B coverage, which covers physician bills.
The premium increase next year would be only 90 cents per month for individuals, but sharply higher for states that use Medicare to insure their elderly poor. The deductible would go from $75 to $100.
Drugs
Continued from p. 1
back, corral and arrest 100 people," he said. "It's pretty hard to make arrests. Your action could trigger a riot."
The number of drug-related arrests probably won't increase if this bill passes, because the percentage of people who give away drugs is low, Dalquest said.
"Drugs are too expensive to give away," he said. "Normally people don't give drugs away unless they are going to create a market by getting the person hooked."
State Rep. John Solbach, Da prosecuting attorney the power to fill a gap in the legal system
Lawrence, said the bill was drafted to protect minors.
"It's bad enough to be selling drugs to an adult, but it's terribly serious to sell it to a minor." Solbach said.
But giving drugs to a minor at a party or concert may lead to the prosecution of someone who doesn't belong in the penitentiary, Solbach said.
Sobbach said that although college students may be prosecuted on offenses meant to nab drug pushers, the legislation would give
The present law says that the exchange of money must be proven before the charge is a felony on the first offense. The proposed law says sale does not have to be proven when the exchange involves a minor, he said.
"In instances when its hard to prove the exchange of money, you only have a misdemeanor," Solbach said. "On a misdemeanor you just don't have that heavy of a hammer.
Educate
Continued from p.1
would cripple states also facing shortfalls in social programs.
shortterm in social programs
Allen Ostar, president of the
raise tuition. The neediest students will be asked to pay more money, he said.
American Association of State Colleges and Universities, predicted states would have no choice but to
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Noever said that even though the fans in front of him did stand for awhile, he thought they had been polite.
He said he didn't think the Jayhawks' huge lead had kept the students in their seats, but rather Brown's speech.
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would stand and block the view of others.
Stephen Myrick, a KU alumnus, is one of those fans. He said he was upset with what he saw as poor planning by the athletic department.
Near the end of the game, when the Jayhawks neared the 100-point mark, fans started to stand. At one point the fans stood for almost one minute.
Seating
William Hanna, student representative on the KUAC Board Executive Committee, was at the game. He said Brown's remarks were helpful.
"Even if you're standing up you can't see the other end of the court," he said. "I don't think it'fair."
be a final solution to the problem."
Continued from p.1
But, he said, "It's sure not going to
Myrick added, however, that he was glad the students were enthusiastic and that he hoped that some solution would be found.
The taws demno the bench and in other parts of the lower levels stood only during brief periods of the game.
On the Record
A white gold diamond ring,
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Jan. 17 and Feb. 1 from a house in the 700 block of Locust Street.
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6
University Daily Kansan
Arts/Entertainment
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
Biting comedy disguises political themes
By Monique O'Donnell Staff writer
I
Semyon and his wife, Maria, fight in bed in an opening scene of the play. Maria is played by Juliet Nelson, Wichita freshman, Kevin Crawford, Lawrence junior, is Semyon.
The Sulicide, 8 p.m. Wednesday through Sun-
day in the Ingle theater in Murphy Hall. Ticket
price $25. For more information, call (314) 690-5700.
Have a seat in a black box. Watch closely as "The Suicide" unravels to become a very funny experience
Nikolai Erdman could hardly have chosen a more sinister title for the play he wrote in 1928. "The Suicide" is a satirical fracile, "a comedy with a bite," said actress Lin Holder, Lawrence doctoral student in theatre. She plays Serafima Ilinichna, the mother-in-law of the main character. Semvon.
Playwright Erdman was Russian, but "The Suicide" was banned in his own country because of its political overreach. Director Joe Brandesky, Lawrence doctoral student in theatre, will bring the play to life this week at KU's William Inge Memorial Theatre. The theatre often is called the black box, because it's small with black walls, floors and ceilings.
Holder said, "This play needed this theater. The Inge conveys a tremendous sense of intimacy. It would be difficult to create this kind of ambiance on a large stage."
With a cast of 22, choreography is important in the confined space of the Inge Theatre. Brandesky said. He uses vertical space to utilize the space as well as to symbolize the nature of the characters. Actors climb to the upper levels of a bare scaffolding if their character is less real and more like an abstraction.
Holder said "The Suicide" was not so much a political play as it was a play that focused on the life of one human being, Semyon. Kevin Crawford, Lawrence junior, portrays Semyon.
Photos by Mark Mohler
Learning to pronounce Russian names such as Semyon Semyonovich Podsekalnikov was difficult for some of the actors, and so, before each rehearsal, the actors chant all the names used in the play for their warm-up.
In the play, Semyon loses his job and can't get a permit to start working again. Everyone, especially his wife, thinks he must be terribly depressed about his unemployment.
Semyon is a down-to-earth person who never has confronted the idea of suicide, but he becomes influenced by the fears of his wife and friends. Their fear that he might commit suicide becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Semvon becomes the focus of different interest groups in his society. Every interest group wants to claim that the social injustice they oppose was the cause of Semyon's death. If he kills himself, his suicide letter could indicate many different causes for the tragedy. Alexander Petrovich Kalabushkin, played by Jay Karnes, Stilwell junior, sells the rights to Semyon's suicide to the different interest groups.
"The audience may have problems understanding the subtleness of the play." Holder said. "The play does not just condemn the Soviet system, but any system for degrading human beings."
Holder said that funny lines and dramatic gestures digressed from the severe theme of the play but that the final scenes were almost moralizing.
Holder called the play modified constructivism because no pretense is made that this is not a theatre. The audience will understand the concept, she said, and the brightly colored costumes in orange and pink will enhance the "fantasy realm of the grotesque" in the play.
I'll see you.
Seralima is ecstatic after her son overcomes his depression and begins to play the tuba. Lin Holder, Lawrence graduate student, portrays Seralima.
MENZIES
Jay Karnes, Stilwell junior, who portrays Alexander, tries to prevent Semyon from committing suicide. Semyon, the main character in "The Suicide," is portrayed by Kevin Crawford, Lawrence junior.
Creative, improvised solos will be stressed at jazz fest
By Grant W. Butler Staff writer
The University of Kansas Jazz Festival,
KU Jazz Choir I and the KU Jazz Ensemble I at 8 p.m. Friday in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
The High School District I Honor Band, the KJU Jazz Choir I and the KJU Ensemble I at The University in Cranehoff Theatre. Tickets are $1.50 for KJU students and $3 for the general public.
PENGUIN
The University of Kansas Jazz Festival is an ideal chance to promote jazz music and educate the public about the importance of jazz as an art form, the director of the festival said last week.
"There will be no trophy given to the band that plays the highest, the fastest and the loudest," the director, Ron McCurdy, instructor in music, said. "It will be a day of good music and sharing."
McCurdy said that groups such as the Manhattan Transfer had recently made jazz music popular but that jazz always should have a place next to the best classical music.
"Jazz should be right up there with Bach and Beethoven," he said. "It's just as important.
"I say that because we're talking about an art form that was created and developed in America. It's the only music that's truly American. It's the only music we can really call our own."
The jazz festival will emphasize the need for modern jazz musicians to be versatile and experienced in all types of music, including both classical and jazz, McCurdy said.
The improvisational solo displays this power and versatility, and should never be played or sung the same way twice, he said.
Mavis Rivers, who has recorded 11 jazz albums since her career began in 1961, is scheduled to be a guest soloist. Saturday night. She said the KU festival would be an exciting experience.
"I've always been fascinated by people who can ad-lib," she said. "It's absolutely marvelous when I go to festivals and see so many young people performing jazz."
"Improvisation is the one ingredient that mystifies the music. Improv is what keeps the music alive," he said.
Matt Cattingub, Rivers' son, also a scheduled guest soloist on Saturday, said that while people might not want to admit it, jazz had had a major influence on current American pop music.
Catingub, an alto-saxophone player, has written 5 original songs for the Louis Bellson Big Band, and his 1983 album, "My Mommy and Me," featured Rivers.
"The melodies and harmonies we hear today couldn't exist without jazz," he said.
Friday's concert features Vincent DiMartino and Leonard Cuddy as guest soloists.
Cuddy, a 1967 KU graduate who is a drummer for the U.S. Navy band, the Commodores, said festivals helped to keep the big band sound alive and allowed students to work with successful jazz musicians.
"When I went to KU there was no such thing allowed in the school." Cuddy said about the jazz festival. "So it's a real step forward for KU. Eighteen years ago it would never have happened."
DiMartino, a professor of music at the University of Kentucky, is an accomplished trumpet player in both jazz and classical music. He has worked with Chuck Mangione.
In addition to the two evening concerts, high school jazz bands and jazz and swing choirs will perform free concerts Saturday in Murphy Hall.
Film altered for American audience
By Grant W. Butler
Staff writer
Staff writer
Hollywood executives sit in their offices with a distorted view of who common Americans are and what they want to see in the movies, a disgruntled American film director said recently.
They're convinced Americans aren't as intelligent as Europeans, so movies need to be adjusted for American audiences, the director, Terry Gilliam, said of the Hollywood executives who delayed the release of his film, "Brazil."
"They're very frightening to talk to." Gilliam said last week. "They don't think Americans can think. Their view of America is very distorted."
Gilliam's frustration stems from the executives' attempts to coerce him into changing his film to suit an American audience after it already had been released in other countries.
"All studios exert pressure on all directors and all film projects that exist," he said. "There are no directors that have a golden relationship
Unfortunately, Gilliam's frustration with his producers is not unique, said Paul Campbell, professor of theatre and media arts.
with the studios where they can do whatever they want. What all directors want is artistic freedom, and that is attained by only a few."
Chuck Berg, associate professor of theatre and media arts, agreed that directors had to take orders from the studios.
"The movie industry is a business," he said. "Directors are expected to toe the line for the studio. They are an employee of the studio, and the film can, in fact, be taken away by the studio if they feel it is not meeting its maximum box office potential
"Directors have always had to dampen their artistic visions of a film because of box office considerations."
Although "Brazil" opened abroad last year and received good reviews from critics, the producers wanted it modified for American audiences.
Sid Sheinberg, president of MCA,
inc. which owns Universal Pictures,
Gilliam, who was the only American member of the Monty Python comedy troupe, is best known for his writing and cut-out animation. He has directed two other films, "Jabberwocky" and "Time Bandits."
asked Gilliam to cut the film and to restructure the ending for the American release. While unhappy about the prospect of cutting his work, Gilliam consented and removed about 20 minutes of footage. However, he refused to change the ending.
After the Los Angeles Film Critics gave the movie its 185st Best Picture award in late December, Universal agreed to open "Brazil" with Gilliam's ending. The film will go into wide national release on Feb. 14, and is scheduled to open in Lawrence on Feb. 28.
The film centers on the shattered life of Sam Lowry, played by Jonathan Price, who eventually is lobotomized as a result of blunders by the bureaucratic state.
The film's title is inspired by a popular song of the 1940s, which is the only thing Lowry can remember after his lobotomy.
While "Brazil" deals with serious subjects, such as reliance on computers and failing governments, Gilliam said, the film is more of a dark comedy that counterposes serious issues with the folly of society.
"Brazil" stars Robert De Niro.
Katherine Helmond, Ian Holm, Bob Hoskins, Ian Richardson and Price
Gilliam said he would like to think that the film opened on its own merits, but he said some credit had to go to the critics.
The stand taken by the Los Angeles critics is one that Campbell said he would like to see more often. Critics need to take stronger ethical stands on the movies they review, he said.
The main reason Universal demanded that Gilliam make changes in "Brazil" was a concern over money, Campbell said.
"The aim of the studio is to make money. The aim of the releasing organization is to make money. So certainly they manipulate film-makers in whatever way they can." Campbell said.
"Brazil" deals with the essence of the human spirit and the tremendous odds against it. The battle with Hollywood executives resembled the struggles of the human spirit portrayed in the film, Gilliam said.
"Life totally imitated art in this case," he said. "I was meeting people who were in the film and they were saying the same lines. I knew how the film ended, so it was very depressing."
'Secret Honor' reveals a new view of Nixon
By Leslie Wohlwend Skyrms Special to the Kansao
First "The Big Chill" came along to remind us that the radical youth of the '60s were just mixed-up kids. Then "Rambo" rewrote the Vietnam War so America could win. Now the quintessential figure of the late '60s and early '70s, Richard Milhous Nixon, is back. And if you thought the Nixon who arbitrated the umpire's strike was the new Nixon, wait until you see him in a reprise of his biggest role ever — the mastermind of Watergate.
Philippe, Bohne Hall in "Sacred Horse"
Phillip Baker Hall, the principal actor in Robert Altman's "Secret Honor," plays a Richard Nixon who, during his last days in the White House, is looking back over his life as he contemplates suicide. As the film opens, Nixon removes a gun from his briefcase and records short messages for his aide.
As he drinks more Chivas Regal, Nixon's monologue turns vehement; he begins tirades against his enemies both real and imagined.
He rails against the Kennedys,
Eisenhower, his mother, Kissinger
and a host of people who, he feels,
have done him wrong. He talks about
his last years in the White House, his
forced resignation and his pardon.
The movie script, which was written by Donald Freed and Arnold M. Stone from their play, uses dialogue from court transcripts and memoirs to enhance the reality of the drama.
The Nixon of Freed and Stone,
however, is not bound by documented speeches. The fictional Nixon says his involvement in and humiliation by the Watergate affair were byproducts of his "secret honor." He
Review
claims that he deliberately staged Watergate — the break-in, the coverup, the disclosure and the aftermath — to escape the machinations of a mysterious "committee of 100."
How a viewer reacts to Nixon's revelation apparently depends on what he brings to the film. Pauline Kael, writing for the New Yorker, says the tale helps the film dramatically and aesthetically.
However, some critics have denounced the film as an attempt to justify Nixon's actions by providing an honorable motive for his electoral machinations.
Movie goers will have the chance to bring their own perceptions to the revised Nixon when "Secret Honor" plays February 10 and 11 in Woodruff Auditorium.
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
7
All races share Black History Month
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By Brian Kaberline
Staff writer
What began as a week to commemorate accomplishments of blacks has grown into a monthlong celebration that can be shared by all races, local leaders of February's Black History Month said yesterday.
History month features black issues and culture, but it is an opportunity for the entire community to experience something different, said Michele Van, assistant director of the office of minority affairs.
"I see it as an educational adventure in a sense because the best way to dilute a lot of myths we have about each other is to experience each other." Van said.
The theme for this year's celebration is "The Afro-American Experience: The International Connection." Speeches, dances, museum exhibits and films have been planned by the office of minority affairs.
The idea of a celebration of the contributions of blacks in American
history began in 1915, when black historian Carter G. Woodson and what is now known as the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History started Black History Week.
The annual event since has grown into a monthlong celebration of Afro-American history, said Adrienne Rivers-Waribagha, spokesman for the KU Black Faculty and Staff Council. February was chosen because Frederick Douglass' and Abraham Lincoln's birthdays are during the month.
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
The Black Faculty and Staff Council is a campus organization that represents views of minority University employees.
The council has planned a series of KJHK radio spots on American black history, Rivers-Waribagha, associate professor of journalism, said. Each of the eight short spots was written and read by KU faculty members.
Friday through Sunday, Feb. 7-9: Big Eight Conference on Black Student Government, Columbia, Mo.
Feb. 10-16: Black History Month display by Watkins Community Museum. Display case level, 4 Kansas Union.
**Thursday, Feb. 13:** Susan Taylor, editor-in-chief,
Essence magazine, 7 p., mld. Alderson Auditorium. Free.
Saturday, Feb. 15: Minorities in the Law Day. Address by julian Bond, 7 o.m. Hoch Auditorium.
Film series "Two Centuries of Black American Art" and "Black Has Always Been Beautiful" 1 p.m., Spencer Museum Auditorium.
Sunday, Feb. 16: Film series. 1 p.m., Spencer Museum Audition.
"Alvin Alley: Memory and Visions." Introduction by Janet Hamburg, director of dance. 2 p.m., Spencer Museum Auditorium.
Monday, Feb. 17: Film series, 2 p.m., Spencer Museum Auditorium.
**Tuesday and Wednesday, Feb. 18-19:** Alvin Alley American Dance Theatre. 8 p.m. nightly, Hoch Auditorium. Tickets available at Murphy Hall Box Office.
Saturday, Feb. 22; African Student Night. 4 p.m. to midnight, Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 11th St.
Tower rack
Wine glasses
Promotional bag
Tuesday, Feb. 25: Luther Williams, president of Atlanta University (time and place to be announced).
Wednesday, Feb. 26: African Cultural Heritage — The Performing Arts. Ndubi Nwator, visitor professor of African studies. 7:30-9:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Free.
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University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
Course changes set for fall
By Tom Farmer Staff writer
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences officials are carefully studying significant curriculum changes that will go into effect in fall 1987.
The changes in requirements for bachelor of arts and bachelor of general studies degrees were approved by the members of the college assembly in May and now are being fine-tuned before going into effect for all students entering the college in fall 1987.
"It's like a blueprint in that the foundation has been laid," Robert Lineberry, dean of the College, said. "But now we must decide where the walls and windows must be placed."
James Carothers, acting associate dean of the college, said the new requirements were the most significant changes in the college in the 15 years he has been here. He said they were needed to ensure an encompassing, general education.
"The college degree, particularly the B.A., does not signify what it once did with particular skills and general habits in mind." he said.
The new curriculum will include changes in English, math and foreign language requirements and limiting of courses that will meet distribution requirements.
Specific changes in the requirements include a competency exam in Composition, ENGL 101, and Algebra, MATH 101, or Algebra and Trigonometry, MATH 102 or their equivalent.
Students entering the college who have taken ENGL 101 or MATH 101 or 102 at another university also would be required to take the competency examinations.
Students will have to start required English courses their first semester at the University, and will be required to start mathematics requirements by their second semester. In both areas, students will have to take courses consecutively until they have completed the core requirements.
This requirement will instill the necessary skills that students need throughout college, Carothers said. It is also important to avoid the problem of seniors lacking required courses at graduation time.
James Hartman, director of freshmen and sophomore English, agreed with Carothers.
"The skills it's intended to foster are used to build on in college," Hartman said. "There are presently seniors enrolled in ENGL 101."
Proficiency in a foreign language, either by exam or completion of the fourth-level course in a language also
will be required.
In the present curriculum, students can take one language for four semesters or two languages each for two semesters.
Carothers said the narrowing of choices in taking a foreign language was intended to make students more proficient in a single language, rather than having them barely able to communicate in two languages.
A non-Western culture course will be a new graduation requirement that acquaints students with the culture, society and values of a non-Western people, Carothers said.
Distribution requirements also will be stiffened by cutting the number of available courses that students can take.
For distribution requirements, students will be required to complete three courses in natural sciences and mathematics, social sciences and humanities, as they do now.
However, instead of choosing from among virtually any courses in these departments, they will choose from a list of principal courses designated by the departments. The principal courses, said Carothers, will focus on a general introduction to a certain area of study.
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Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
9
Autopsy performed on suspect
United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — An autopsy was performed yesterday on the body of a man authorities said hanged himself in a jail cell where he was held on a murder charge in the shooting death of a Bonner Springs patrol officer.
The suspect, Esteban A. Davis, 43,
Bonner Springs, was found dead
about 4:20 a.m., Wyndotte County
Underserhier Tim Johnson said.
Alan Hancock, Wyandotte County coroner, pronounced David dead at the scene. Autopsy results would not be expected before this morning.
Davis was alone in his cell in the jail's maximum-security section, which contains about five single-person cells. He apparently used a towel to hang himself, and no note was left behind, Johnson said.
Guards check on prisoners every 30 to 60 minutes, he said.
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation is conducting an investigation into the hanging. Authorities questioned prisoners and jail employees to
determine exactly what happened and at what time.
Davis was charged Monday with murder in the shooting Friday of Maureen Kelly Murphy, a 28-year-old officer. At that time, bond was set at $100,000 and a court appearance scheduled for today.
Harry Miller, an attorney who represented Davis, said he did not believe his client was guilty of killing the officer.
"I do know this, Esteban Davis was not a person I think was capable of cold-blooded murder," Miller said "He had denied to me vehemently having any responsibility for the killing and I have no reason at this point to doubt it."
About 2,500 friends and law enforcement officers paid tribute Tuesday to the slain officer, who was shot in the head as she sat in her patrol car filling out a report. Murphy, a 6-year veteran of the Bonner Springs Police Department, is survived by her husband, Det. Randy Murphy of the Kansas City, Kan., Police Department, and their daughter;
15-month-old Morgan Murphy.
Davis, who lived about 200 yards from where the officer's car was parked, may have been distressed about domestic problems at the time of the shooting, authorities said.
"Mrs. Davis went to a lawyer seeking to file for divorce," Nick Tomasic, Wyandotte County district attorney, said. "He attempted to assault his wife and children in the past and police responded. Officer Murphy was one that had responded."
Miller told a Kansas City area radio station that he had met with Davis on Tuesday night at the jail.
However, Davis' wife said she did
not believe her husband committed the crime.
"He became depressed during my conversation with him," Miller told KMBZ. "I suspected he was becoming despondent at that time."
Miller said that he took notes of the conversation and that Davis told him, "I want you to give this to my family, and write this down. Tell them that no matter what happens I didn't kill anybody."
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10
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
The Associated Press
State coffers may lose $7.8 million
TOPEKA - Kansas stands to lose 3.1 percent of its federal funds during the fiscal 1866 and 16 percent during fiscal 1987 under the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings federal budget deficit reduction law, the state House Ways and Means Committee was told yesterday.
Ray Hauke, a Legislative
Research Department budget analyst, said the state could expect a cut of $7.8 million coming from the federal government for fiscal 1986, which ends June 30, and a cut of $51.4 million for fiscal 1987.
Under the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings bill, automatic cuts take effect March 1 and Oct. 1 unless President Reagan and Congress can meet certain deficit reduction goals by
agreeing on other ways to cut the federal budget.
Hauke said the projected cuts are based on information supplied by the Federal Funds Information for States, a service of the National Conference of State Legislatures and the National Governors' Association.
The biggest cut Kansas can expect in fiscal 1986 is $2.4 million in welfare financing. Haube said. The next biggest cut would be $30,000 in low-income energy assistance, which is also in the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services budget.
The $53.4 million in projected cuts for next year for Kansas include $11 million in SRS programs; $6.2 million in federal highway aid; $3.5 million in education programs; $1.7 million in federal revenue sharing, and $1.1 million in job training funds.
Marine speaks on Grenada
Staff writer
By Debra West
The Marines that landed in the north port of Grenada completed a successful mission because they were well-trained and the citizens of the island trusted them, Lt. Col. Ray Smith said yesterday.
Smith, a former Marine battalion landing team commander in Grenada, was at the University of Kansas to deliver a speech sponsored by the KU Naval ROTC unit.
Military forces were sent to Grenada on Oct. 21, 1983, after a coup in that country. Contact with the outside world was severed, and a Canadian plane which was sent to evacuate anyone wanting to leave was denied permission to land.
U. S. forces landed in Grenada on 25 at oat, the Marines were to occupy the northern half of the island and the Army was to occupy the
southern half, Smith said.
Their mission was to defeat the People's Revolutionary Army, help the civilians of Grenada regain control of the government and to evacuate the 1,200 U.S. citizens in Grenada, he said.
Smith said the Marines captured two-thirds of the People's Revolutionary Army and 12 of the 16 members of the Ruling Military Commission that had taken over the government.
Only two members of the Grenadian army were killed and no Marines were killed. No buildings were destroyed during the invasion either, he said.
Smith said 16 people from the United States were killed in the South and 30 patients were killed when a mental hospital was bombed the first day of the invasion.
Smith said the Marines succeeded
because of their training and the help of the citizens of Grenada.
During training, Smith said, he made sure that the troop knew they were fighting the enemy and not the terrain. He wanted his troops to know their purpose was not to blow up buildings.
"This seems like a simple idea," he said, "but a lot of times it's overlooked."
Another important point was trust between him and his subordinates.
The people had liked Prime Minister Maurice Bishop and they didn't like Gen Hudson Austen, who was a Republican. The Bishop assassinated, Smith said.
People came to Smith, told him where the Grenadian forces were and offered their cars to the troops.
Smith said he had expected them to welcome the troops, but not as much as they did.
On Campus
*Melinda Power, an attorney,
will speak about "Puerto Rico's
Independence Movement" at 3:30
p.m. today in 108 Green Hall.
The speech is sponsored by the
National Lawyers Guild.
A free film, "Four Pioneers," which is part of the dance history film series, will be shown at 4 p.m. today in 252 Robinson Center.
The KU Ki-Aikido Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center.
"La Operación," a film about the forced sterilization of women in Puerto Rico, will be shown at 6 p.m. today after the Latin American Solidarity rice and beans dinner at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
The film "Charlie Brown in Spanish" by Gabriel Garcia Marquez will be shown at 7 p.m. today in 4002 Wesco Hall.
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Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
11
Jarvik defends artificial hearts
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The developer of the artificial heart told Congress yesterday that its use in humans needed less federal regulation, but other experts testified that permanent implantation should be suspended.
Robert Javik, president of Symbion Inc., which manufactures the device that bears his name, said, "In life and death situations, this need not be regulated as heavily as it has been."
But George Annas, professor of health law at Boston University, said, "Permanent artificial implants should be suspended because of the devastating results they have had on subjects and their families, because their original justifications are no longer valid, and because the consent process is too primitive to protect the rights and welfare of human subjects."
DeVries disagreed, saying, "I would not implant an artificial heart if I did not think it would give the patient an increased quality of life."
The witnesses testified before the investigations subcommittee of the House Committee on Science and Technology.
William DeVries transplanted an artificial heart in William Schroeder, who has lived for 14 months.
Three plastic pumps implanted in 3 days
United Press International
who has lived for 14 years.
Schreeder's son, Mel, said that
The third patient in the United States to receive an artificial heart this week was awake and alert yesterday, but another developed a low-grade fever that had her doctors puzzled.
On Sunday and Monday, artificial hearts were placed in the chests of a 40-year-old woman in Tucson, Ariz., and a 39-year-old man in Pittsburgh. On Tuesday a 41-year-old man in Houston received a mechanical heart.
In Minneapolis, the first woman to receive an artificial heart was reported making good progress since the mechanical pump was replaced Friday with a human heart.
The latest patient was identified by the Texas Heart Institute as
Harris Kent, a retired Armed Forces officer from El Paso.
"We had been sustaining the patient on the intra-aortic balloon pump for seven days, but the condition of the patient deteriorated," said Bud Frazier, a physician involved in the implant. "There was no heart available, and it became a life-saving procedure."
In Tucson, Bernadette Chayre,
40, remained in critical condition
at University of Arizona Medical
Center and developed a low-grade
fever in her third day of life with
an artificial heart.
Jack G. Copeland, who directed the implant of the banned mini-Jarvik with emergency federal consent, was puzzled by the fever.
"Dr. Copeland doesn't know the answer yet," a spokesman said.
Wolfe also said the use of artificial hearts in patients awaiting human heart transplants should be put on hold until more data on patients is collected and evaluated.
Jarvik said three of the eight patients treated with the Jarvik-7 heart "were bridge-to-transplant patients, two of whom are at home now in excellent condition."
when confronted with imminent death, "Dad chose life and the artificial heart."
Annas, focusing on legal and ethical issues, said, "Ethics and law have taken a distinctly back seat to notions of scientific advance."
Annas said the government had been unable or unwilling to supervise or control implant experimentation. He called for additional controls to safeguard the rights and welfare of human subjects.
He said recipients of artificial hearts had died or suffered "devastating and disabling strokes or seizures and experienced serious bleeding problems."
"It is possible to make the argument that the initial implant in Barney Clark was justifiable," he said of the first recipient of an artificial heart. He said it was not then known it would "cause such devastating results."
Sidney Wolfe, representing the Public Citizens Health Research Group, said it was unfortunate the
Federal Drug Administration had "refused to stop further permanent implants now despite the tragic and unacceptable results on the first wave of people in whom the Jarvik heart was implanted."
"It is no longer possible reasonably to make this argument," Annas said.
Risk of contracting AIDS almost nil, doctors state
BOSTON — People who share toothbrushes, bathtubs, toilets and towels with AIDS patients run virtually no risk of infection, debunking the myth that that dreaded disease can be spread by casual contact, doctors said yesterday.
United Press International
Blanket testing of military personnel and calls for the quarantining of AIDS patients are unnecessary and motivated by fear rather than fact, said the physician who spearheaded
the research at New York's Montefiore Medical Center.
The four-year study of 101 people who were close family members of 39 AIDS patients showed no evidence that they had contracted the illness despite sharing toilets, baths, showers and kitchen utensils with the victims.
Only one of the 101 family members - a young girl born to an infected mother - ended up having a problem related to the acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
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Turn on to Mexican Radio Live!
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Feb. 25 at 8 p.m.
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Learn to: initiate conversation make new friends adjust to new social situations.
3rd Show in the sellout Standing Room Only series
ALL HAIRCUTS $6
Free! Monday, February 10 6:30 to 9:00 p.m.
Representatives from the University of Kansas School of Medicine will be on campus to visit with students on an individual basis on the following dates:
PRE-MED STUDENTS
Tickets Available at the SUA Box Office!
- Monday, February 17
Quality Haircuts at Reasonable Prices No appl. necessary - Closed on Mons.
come in & see us.
To attend, please register at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-4064
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Interested students may schedule a 20-minute appointment. To do so, see the Pre-Med Secretary at 106-C Strong Hall. Office hours posted.
INDOOR TRACK MEET to be held in Anschutz
Sponsored by Recreation Services
Entries due, Tuesday, February 1
Meet will be held Wednesday.
Entries due, Tuesday, February 11
February 12, 7:30 p.m.
For specific event information come by 208 Robinson or call 864-3546
BUFFALO BOB'S
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Served with tater curl fries, fritter, bread, pickles and choice of small side dish
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12
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
Stores ordered open in Haitian crackdown
United Press International
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The feared "Tontons Macoutes" secret police patrolled the streets of Port-au-Prince yesterday as the government ordered businessmen to reopen their stores and factories under threat of imprisonment.
In a related development, the Greek government said it turned down a request for asylum from President-for-Life Jean-Claudie Duvalier, who last week denied U.S. reports he had fled the country to escape the strongest wave of opposition during his 15-year rule.
tion during the visit. A government spokesman said the request was made two or three days ago in Caracas, Venezuela, through Costas Dimadis, the Haitian ambassador.
The Swiss government announced it also had rejected a request from the Haitian ambassador for Duvalier and his family be allowed to stay temporarily in Switzerland.
Most businesses in the downtown area of the Port-au-Prince opened late, but appeared to comply with Duvalier's order.
The order was the second directive to the business sector in three days and appeared to be part of a strategy by the government to stamp out a revolt with force.
A foreign diplomat said several managers of assembly plants, a key source of employment for 60,000 Haitians, left the country over the weekend because they were not sure in the tense atmosphere whether their safety was assured.
Among those who left were the managers of the U.S.-owned GTE Sylvania Electronics Plant and Brewton Fashion, the diplomat said.
A law, issued in 1957, the year Francois "Papa Doc" Duvailer came to power, provides for prison terms of three to six months if businesses do not open normally. Francois Duvalier was the father of Jean-Claude Duvalier, who is sometimes called "Baby Doc."
Some businessmen said they had recieved threatening anonymous phone calls.
the feared Tonton Macouthes, whose name means "bogeymen," have been accused of human rights abuses and of having a license to kill
Proposed budget calls new GI Bill too costly
WASHINGTON — The administration announced yesterday that it wants to eliminate the new GI Bill, which it says is too costly, and replace it with the less-generous post-Vietnam education plan in effect before July 1985.
United Press International
In President Reagan's new fiscal 1987 budget proposal, the administration said: "The new GI Bill does not appear to be cost-effective in recruiting and may also encourage personnel to leave the military in order to take advantage of its benefits."
The new GI Bill, officially known as the "All-Volunteer Force Education Assistance Program," is available to any who enters the military between July 1985 and July 1988. It allows them to have $100 a month deducted from their pay for 12 months.
After three years of service, the individual is entitled to a basic monthly education assistance benefit of $300 a month for up to three years.
The administration wants to eliminate the program as of Oct.1.
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Questionnaires for membership in Mortar Board, a highly respected senior honor society, are available in 214 Strong and Nunemaker Center. A 3.0 cumulative GPA is required. Deadline for applications is Thurs., Feb. 20 at 5 p.m.
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Sports
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
University Daily Kansan
13
Manning's early surge leads KU over century mark
30
By Matt Tidwell
Sports writer
Scott Wilke, Colorado center, and Greg Dreiling wait for the reteee's call during their game at Allen Field House. The Jayhawks won the game last night 100-64.
Danny Manning scored 14 of the first 16 Kansas points as the Jayhawks grabs an early lead and beat Colorado 100-64 last night in Allen Field House.
The win was Kansas' 29th in a row at home. The Jayhawks are now 21-3 and tied for the Big Eight lead with Oklahoma at 6-4.
Colorado, using a revised starting lineup with four freshmen, attempted to slow the game down early, but the Jayhawks converted several Buffalo turnovers into fast-break baskets to post an early lead.
Ron Kellogg scored first for Kansas by hitting a jump shot on the Jayhawks' first possession. Manning, who was the high scorer with 20 points, followed with 14 straight points,
"Our turnovers resulted directly info quick hoops for Kansas," Colorado head coach Tom Apke said. "I thought Manning was terrific. I'm more impressed with him every time I see him. He's certainly one of the top players in the nation."
Kansas led by ten points, 18-8, for the first time when Kellogg hit a jump shot with 12 minutes, 12 seconds left in the half. The Jayhawks made more than 65 percent of their remaining field-goal attempts and forged a 54-28 halftime lead.
"I'm happy." Brown said. "I was concerned if we were ready to play at first, but Danny - was really something."
'Apkie colored Came into the game wanting to slow down the tempo but that nearly all the Colorado turnovers — 20 in the game, 14 in the first half — were converted into scores for Kansas.
In the second half, the Jayhawks kept leads of between 25 and 30 points. With six minutes left, Kansas head coach Larry Brown pulled all of his starters and played reserves for the remainder of the game.
"When we made half-court defense play half-court offense we played reasonably well," Apke said, "but they just got too many two-on-one and three-on-one fast break opportunities and there was really nothing we could do in that situation."
After Manning's early surge, it was the Jahayhins' patient offense that allowed Kansas to keep control of the game.
"We just passed the ball around a lat tonight and did a good job of attacking," Dreiling said. "We were feeling really loose coming in and we played well."
Kansas' Calvin Thompson scored 18 points and had his best offensive performance since Jan. 4 against Memphis State.
"It didn't take too long for us to come out of the shoot tonight," Thompson said. "I think we concentrated a lot more on making the extra pass and hitting the open man. Danny's play certainly helped us early."
Kansas reserves scored 42 points in preserving the win.
"It was nice to see those guys come in and build on the lead," Dreiling said. "They kept attacking and played real tough defense."
The home winning streak wasn't the only Kansas record to fall. Jayhawk guard Cedric Hunter had seven assists and broke former Kansas All-Commerce Darnell Valentine's record of 170. Hunter has 175 assists this season.
"I'm proud to see Cedric break the record in 24 games," Brown said. "Darrene is a great player and that speaks highly of Cedric."
Brown said the new Allen Field House winning streak record also meant a lot to him.
"I'm proud," he said. "A lot of people should be proud. Our students should be proud. We've played a tough schedule in doing it, so that's something to be proud about." Jayhawk notes — Kansas guard Mark Turgeon celebrated his 21st birthday and scored eight points with six assists last night . . . Colorado falls to 8-12 overall and 0-7 in the Big Eight . . . The Buffaloes' high scorer was freshman Matt Bullard with 15 points . . . Kansas shot 61.9 percent as a team.
Kansas 100 Colorado 64
Colorado
Countryman M FG FT R A R T TP
24 2-6 1-2 1 2 1 2 1 5
Bullard 30 1-5 5-6 5-6 7 2 2 14
Kilkenny 15 6-12 0-6 0-6 1 2 4 10
Kilkenny 15 6-12 0-2 1-2 1 2 4 10
Penix 28 4-7 0-0 0-0 2 1 1 8
Reid 10 1-1 0-0 0-0 2 1 1 8
Lep 10 1-2 0-0 0-0 2 1 1 8
Downs 5 1-2 5-1 0-1 2 2 3 10
Downs 23 5-8 0-1 0-1 2 2 3 10
Williams 13 1-3 0-1 0-1 3 1 3 2
Yowell 17 2-4 1-1 1-1 2 1 2 4
Robinson 26,33 12,33 13,34 12,34 12,34 12,34 12,34
Towns 17 24 31
Totals 26-53 12-19 23 12 64
Percentages: FG. 491, FT. 632. Blocked Shots: 3 (Bulldar 2). Turnovers: 20 (Bullard, Penix, Williams 3). Steals: 3 (Penix, Lee, Robinson 1). Technicals: None.
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | Tp |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Manning | 22 | 9-11 | 2-8 | 3 | 1 | 10 | 29 |
| Kellogg | 23 | 5-8 | 4-4 | 2 | 2 | 10 | 4 |
| Drilling | 25 | 2-7 | 4-2 | 2 | 2 | 14 | 4 |
| Hunter | 22 | 1-1 | 0-0 | 3 | 7 | 1 | 18 |
| Thompson | 22 | 8-1 | 0-4 | 3 | 7 | 1 | 18 |
| Joseph | 19 | 5-8 | 2-6 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 38 |
| Turgent | 10 | 3-4 | 2-2 | 0 | 6 | 4 | 1 |
| Piper | 22 | 2-4 | 3-4 | 0 | 3 | 1 | 7 |
| Barry | 8 | 0-2 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 0 |
| Campbell | 10 | 3-4 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 6 |
| Jr. Jhson | 7 | 1-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 6 |
| | 10 | 0-2 | 9-4 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 10 |
| Totals | | 39-63 | 23-1 | 37-28 | 10 | 30 | 100 |
Percentages: FG: 619, FT: 710. Blocked Shots: (1) Manning 1; (3) Drelling, Hunter 2; Steals: 13 (Manning 3); Technicals: None.
Half: Kansas 54-28. Officals: Pickett, Turlington, Harris.
A. J. PALEK
Sooners roll over Oklahoma St.
From Kansan wires
NORMAN, Okla. — Tim McCalister scored 24 points to lead a parade of six Oklahoma players in double figures as the fifth-ranked Sonners rolled over Oklahoma State, 106:84, in Big Eight Conference basketball last night.
Melvin Gilliam hit a running jumper at the 16:40 mark to put Oklahoma State on the scoreboard.
The victory was the 46th straight at home for the Sooners, who improved to 21-1 overall, 6-1 in the Big Eight. Oklahoma State fell to 12-8 overall, 3-4 in the conference.
The Sooners blew the game open early, taking an 11-0 lead before
Oklahoma State got 21 points from Andre Ivy, 16 from Jason Manuel and 14 from Gilliam.
Kansas State 64. Nebraska 54.
LINCOLN, Neb. — Norris Coleman scored 26 points to lead Kansas State to 64-54 win over Nebraska in a Big Eight Conference basketball game last night
Coleman, who played basketball in the Army for four years before enrolling at K-State, hit 12 of 22 field
goal attempts and pulled down eight rebounds.
Nebraska played without its leading scorer, center Dave Hoppen. He injured his knee against Colorado on Saturday and is out for the season.
Eight points by Coleman early in the second half helped stretch the Wildcats' seven-point halftime lead to 38-27. K-State led by as many as 20 points late in the game, but the Cornuskers closed the gap behind Harvey Marshall's shooting.
Joe Wright added 21 points for the Wildcats, who raised their record to 14-8 overall and 2-5 in the conference.
Dayton upsets Notre Dame 67-65
From Kansan wires
DAYTON, Ohio — Ed Young scored 20 points and Negile Knight converted six crucial free throws in the final minute last night to help Dayton in a 67-65 victory over 18th-ranked Notre Dame.
Notre Dame's Donald Royal cut the margin to 59-57 with two free throws. Knight, a freshman guard, then put in his six free throws and Goodwin, the nation's leading free-throw shooter, hit two to keep the
and took the lead for good, 57-55, on a jumper by Damon Goodwin whi 2:18 remaining.
Flyers out front.
Mark Mohler/KANSAN
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Dwayne Washington's dazzling display of shooting and passing in the second half last night sparked No. 7 Syracuse to an 84-61 Big East victory over Seton Hall.
Syracuse 84, Seton Hall 61
KANSAS
25
COLORADO
50
21
Kansas' Danny Manning passes the ball beyond the reach of Colorado defenders to a teammate. Manning scored a game-high of 20 points last night.
Thompson ends shooting slump
Rv Frank Haneal
Dayton, 13-8, led 37-34 at halftime
added two free throws and ended up with 18 points.
Associate sports editor
The Colorado Buffaloes, the door-mat of the Big Eight this season, not only gave Kansas its record setting 29th consecutive win at Allen Field House, but they also provided guard Calvin Thompson a chance to break out of his mild shooting slump.
Forward Danny Manning led Kansas with 20 points.
Thompson, a 58 percent field goal shooter this year, has struggled in the first half of the Big Eight season connecting on only 46 percent of his floor shots. Then Colorado came to town.
Thompson picked apart the Buffalo defense, hitting eight of 11 shots last night in the Jayhawks' 104-64 win. He
The 18-point performance was Thompson's most productive scoring game since he scored 21 against Memphis State on Jan. 4.
"We really concentrated on making the extra pass and hitting the open man." Thompson said after the game. "Coach just told me to go out and shoot. I had more open shots tonight. And I took them."
Most of those shots came in the first half when the Jayhawks opened up a 54-28 lead. Thompson scored 13 first-half points on six-of-eight.
shooting from the floor.
Thompson scored his first basket of the game with 11 minutes, 19 seconds left on a fast-break layup on an assist from guard Mark Turgeon.
Kansas head coach Larry Brown said that Thompson, a 51 percent career field-goal shooter, looked more relaxed against Colorado and that it showed in the way he played.
"He seemed so much more confident tonight, and that is really good."
Thompson came out of the game in the first half and had his knee ice.
"It just popped," Thompson said. "There's nothing wrong with it. I'm all right."
Jayhawks lose in overtime to ISU
By a Kansan sports writer
The Kansas women's basketball team dropped an overtime game to the Iowa State Cyclones 68-60 last night in Ames.
The game was tied 56-56 at the end of regulation, but the Cyclones outscored the Jayhawks 12-4 in overtime.
Kansas forward Vickie Adkins led
all scorers with 24 points. However,
Women's Basketball
for the second time in her collegiate basketball career; she fouled out.
Kansas had a five-point lead with 1:23 remaining in the game but was unable to hold off an Iowa State rally to tie the score at 56 in regulation time.
Kansas 60 (OT)
Hafter 1:2,4 Mussel 0:4,6 Smith 3:6,9 Boden 2:2,0 Lobenstein 7:4-18 Burns 4:2-18 Horvath 0:10 Gleiner 0:0-0 Bush 0:0-0 Olsen 1:0-2 Thacker 4:0-0 H'ell 0:0-0 Jasper 1:0-0 Jasper 19:2-10 64-88
Adkins 8 & 9.4, Dougherty 2 & 1.5, Jennings 3 & 3.9,
Brown 8 & 9.2, Hancock 2 & 1.6, Stroughy 8 &
Stroughy 7, Total 10, 200 pts.
Total fouls - Colorado 23, Kansas 24, Fouled
out- Addams, Lobenstein; Rebounds - Colorado 43
Rebounds - Cleveland (Won'ting 14),
Aces - Colorado 50 (Lobenstein); Kansas 6
(Dougherty, Ot 2), Techniques - Webb.
Sports Briefs
KU's Wolf, Center to play in Houston
Kansas tennis team members Mike Wolf and Michael Center will begin competition today in the ITC CA National SinglesDoubles tournament in Houston
Wolf, Kansas' No. 1 player, and Center, the No. 2 player, qualified for the doubles tournament by winning the ITCA regionalists last fall. Wolf also won his region's singles title, qualifying him for the field of 32.
The men's singles final will be televised nationally by the Public Broadcasting System. The date of the broadcast are pending.
Wolf, Center and the rest of the Jayhawks will meet Northwestern an Feb. 14 in Chicago.
Hall of Fame tabs 3
Walter "Waddy" Young, college football stars who died in combat during World War II, yesterday were named posthumously to the National Football Foundation's College Hall of Fame. Also named was former Columbia quarterback Paul Governali.
NEW YORK - Al Blozis and
In making the announcement, Foundation chairman Vincent dePaul Draddry said the three would be inducted next fall through special ceremonies on their schools' campuses.
Young, an end, starred for the Sooners in the late 1930s. He played professional football for two seasons.
Blozis was a member of Georgetown's undefeated 1939 team and 1941 Orange Bowl squad. He also set the national college shotput record.
They also will be honored at the 29th Annual Hall of Fame Awards Dinner in December in New York.
Swimmers face Big 8 rival Nebraska
From staff and wire reports.
By Dawn O'Malley
The rivalry between the Kansas and Nebraska women's swim teams continues in Robinson Natatorium on Saturday.
Sports writer
At last year's Big Eight Conference championships in Lincoln, Neb., the Cornhuskers stripped the Kansas title for the first time in 10 years.
"Losing last year opened up our eyes a little," Kansas head swim coach Gary Kempf said Tuesday. "We are still going to swim this like another swim meet.
"Nebraska is extremely strong, yet so are we. We keep doing better every weekend. We wear in a race and compete. That's what it is all about."
The Kansas women's swim team has not lost a dual meet in ten years in Robinson Natoriatrium, and it hopes its awkward's meet continues the streak.
The Jayhawks already have met the Cornhuskers twice this season. The Jayhawks won the first meeting
Swimming
at the Big Eight Invitational in November. The Cornhuskens won the second round in the Nebraska Invitational in December.
"Anyone who is familiar with the conference realizes that there is a tremendous rivalry between Kansas and Nebraska," Nebraska women's head swim coach Ray Huppert said. "It is a good rivalry that brings out the best in the athletes."
Huppert said he wasn't preparing his team any differently for Kansas.
"This is just the steppingstone to the Big Eight championships," he said.
Kansas middle-distance swimmer Susan Spry said, "It is going to be a fight to the finish. I hope we're on top."
Because of injury or sickness, only 16 of the 22 women on the Nebraska
team will travel to Lawrence, Huppert said.
"I don't want to release the names at this point," Huppert said. "I will make a more definite decision later this week."
Nebraska men's head coach Cal Bentz said the team had some help.
The entire Nebraska men's team will lead to Insurance
The Nebraska men's team hasn't tared as well as the women's team.
"All the losses have been to ranked teams," he said. "We seem to be improving but there are injuries and shoulder problems."
The Nebraska women's team is 9-2. It lost dual meets to Louisiana State and Southern Illinois. The Kansas women's team is 6-1.
"We want to win the meet," Bentz said. "The best line will be in."
Kempf said his lineup would remain much the same. However, he did say that he had two surprises he
would unveil at the meet. He would not elaborate.
He said the Kansas men's team hadn't had as good a year as the women. Its record is 4-4. That doesn't mean team members from being optimistic.
Jayhawk men's tri-captain Chris McCool said, "The men are continuing to improve. At each meet we are more competitive and it will be the same thing this time.
The meet is scheduled to begin at 2 p.m.
The Kansas teams will have one more meet before the Big Eight championships March 6-3. They will also play Arkansas on Feb. 15 at Robinson.
This weekend marks the sixth annual alumni weekend for former
Kempf said he expected about 25 former swimmers to attend the reunion. They will test their skills against one another in a swim meet before the Kansas-Nebraska competition.
14
University Daily Kansan
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(COMMUTERS): Self serve Car Pool Exchange
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Computer Terminal with modem for rent.
$30/mo. 842.2822
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NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kanaus Union.
Rent' 19.0° T. V $2,88 m. month. Smarty's T.V.
14:1 W. 342-67531. Mon. Sat. 9:00 - 9:00
Sat. 9:00 - 9:00
Rest-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $9.66.
Rest-VCR with 3 movies, 2nd bd/43$1.85) Mon.
0-9:30, Sun. 1-5.
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The Celebrity/Rock Star Look-A-Like Kick-Off Party!
Gammons—$1 plus draws
The Hawk—$2 plus draws
Coburns—$2 plus draws
8:00 p.m.
Fact:
all cover charge proceeds donated to M.S. by participating bars.
M. S. most often afflicts young adults between the ages of 18 & 35 with 200 new uncurable cases diagnosed each week.
WANT TO HIRE A TUZOR? See our list of
tutors. Student Assistance Center,
121 Strung
TUTORS. List you name with me. We refer students to you. Student Assistance Center, 121强华路 I.
FREE DEMONSTRATION Philipino Stick
Fighting Art. Thirteen, February 6 at 7:00 p.m.
Friday
SPRING BREAK, SKI THE SUMMIT $290. 4do,
days includes Lift summit lift, transportation,
lodging and ski rental. Call Eric Rhodes by
Friday. 843-8153.
SPRING BREAK 86 Do it right in Daytona with ECHO TRAVEL The best trip for the best price. For more info, call Bill at 041-3856 or Jim at 849-8731.
GOT A HOT DATE? Is your car clean? at LAWRENCE AUTO CLEANING making your car look years new is our speciality 6th and Maine. 749-5671.
ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE DJ DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 749-4713.
we would love to see you. We are wired up to write the music for your next project. You can wifi sound system that can fill, any size room and accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in our store include Outdoor and Salina. Call 614-843-9421 or (913) 827-8484.
FOR RENT
1 block from campus. Your own room. Kitchen and living room privileges. Adequate parking. Parking spaces.
3 BR house, East Lawrence, bus route 1864,
retail, immulated. Double lot gardenbed. $725.00
per sq. ft.
3dbm. Newer 1/2 duplex, Super Nylon 4/20m
Northland Wooden 1 - 451-795-3820 - 1-854-3653
Nordland Steel 1 - 451-795-3820 - 1-854-3653
APT. SWAP I need f. recompense to share 1/2 coins or subdue less nice, close to campus & downcount; i.g. 2B BR $350 plus low utilities; would like BBR $30, or less; 79-149, 841-560.
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkeley Flats. Vacancies available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 843-2116.
Available immediately; Large newly remodeled 1 br. Apct. alt to campus $105/mi. 943-9438.
Available March 1: beautiful 2 BR apt. On bus route: 5 minute walk to campus, downtown, New carpet, clean, spacious, $330/mo plus low utilities. 81-579-718, 81-556-526, 84-344-89.
Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 842-4185.
Sublease Now-2 BDRM Apt. Very nice & very close to campus. Call after 7:30pm. 849-9378.
SUBLEASE NOW-1 BDRM Hanoeve Place apt. One month free lift. 841-1212.
Spacious one bedroom apartment for sublease,
great for 1 or 2. On bus route, water paid, gas,
low utilities. Furnished $220, Unfurnished
$200, Call 749-3691 after 5 a.m.
Studio Apt. to Sublease, Furnished, very clean
$175/mo, Low deposit. Call now 824-2710.
First come, first served, only a few two left. At 2106 W. 8th St., on KU bus route, between Gibson's and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. You pay hot and cold water, you choose options, eat at a kitchen or bath or balcony. Call 843-6446 for appointment.
For rent: 2 bdrm, brand new, 1.1/2 ftb from Kansas Union $350, plus utilities. Sublease a possibility. Call Chuck Ledom 843-3228 a.m. 5-p. and Pam 843-0335 a.m. 5-p. Keep trying.
Furnished one bedroom apartment near University & Downtown. Most utilitarian paid with off street rentals.
Large bedroom for rent in roomy newer house.
Close to campus and downtown. All the conveniences of home. Only $125/mo. and low utilities.
843-9436.
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: SHARE 2
D BedROOM APT. (VILAGE SQUARE APTS).
CARPETED A/C, SWIMMING POOL, ON BUS
STOP, SUBLEASE TO MAY $140 PLUS
THE FIRST
PAYMENT UNTIL FEBRUARY CALL 845-681
JEFF). OR 842-940 (SK MANAGER)
SUBLEASE available Feb 15, 2 bedroom, water paid, $35 at Jayhawk West April. Lease thru April.
Sublease now - 2 BDRM Apt. Very nice and very close to cmauu, call after 7 o.n.m. n.429.9738
FOR SALE
MASTERCAST offers completely furnished 1,
3 and 8 bedroom apartments all on one campus. Call
(405) 623-2781 or visit www.mastercast.com
All sports ticket. Best offer. 842-1133, 9 a.m.
through noon, M. Steve Robinson.
Baseball cards and sports notignal - Buy, Sell
and Trade J D's Baseball cards. 104 M-15
8
VHS VCR very new for $200, call 042-6582
Concord HPL-518 audiophile car stereo, 410$/h.
Technics RSB-108 autoveriser case deck, full
phone number.
www.concordaudio.com
Couch-bed $40, Double Basket Exercise $25, Men's &
Women's Golf Clubs $25. 842-9063
DRUMS: LH-41CY 7pc set w/cymbals, hardware,
sess. $500; Pearl 5 pc set w/Zidljian cymbals,
sess. $500; Pearl 5 pc set w/4781 cymbals.
For Sale: HP-41CV calculator w/math pcc,
manual & case $85; BSI 6911 - 3444.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $ (U) repair(
Call 817-605-6000
Give information for info.
Guitar for sale. Yamaha classical acoustic. Excellent condition. Only 875. Call 843-2916.
Halfer. 500 watt power amplifier. Brand new with
factory warranty. $600. Tom 842-1510.
Headmaster 200cm skis, salamander 72 w/brake bindings, 51 inch poles, size 13. Nordica boots (new). Best offer, call 841-4019. Leave message, will back call.
High Sierra Mountain Bike. Like new. FIFFEREN. Gatchel lock included. Cuit 844-56420 after 5 years.
King size waterbed, 35mm camera and lenses.
Call after 4 p.m. 814.5018.
Lady's Diyor Wedding Ring Set. $350
negotiable. Call Pam 341-4190 (Topeka)
Matching living room set. love seat, 2 arm chair. Good condition. Good good condi. All for $10 delivered. 841-7834.
Must sell- HP 412V calculator, w/ card reader and
mustistell-Never used 8208- i313- 727-2603.
Receivers from $2, turnibles from $1, speakers $1 a pair. Teepee deck, boxes and car stereo, all completely reconditioned and warranted Lawrence Custom Radio, 914 W. 2rd St.
Babyssetter for 5 month old infant, general housekeeping and ironing in our home. Tues. & Thurs. 1-2. Must have reliable transportation. References required. $3 per hour. Call 887-2827
William "THE REFEIGERATOR" Perry pets
only $3.00. 844-607-672
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sales 'Makes sense to use them.' 1) An study guide. 2) For class analysis. 3) A book. 4) Analysis of Western Civilization 'available now at town, Crest' The Jayhawk Bookstore, and
AUTO SALES
HP-41 CV calculator, excel. cond., case. instruct,
case. instruction. $150 - 16149 - 16404 eventually
in KS, RS.
LABBIT- '83 new radish, air, cassette, low mile, miler,
mower. Moving must sell. Mowing must sell. Mowing must sell.
842 909 698
Must Sell 1800 Old Mobile Cultivation Station Wagon AM/FM camera. Good condition. $299 Call
DIAMOND RING: LADIES 1'/4carat Marquise cut with two 10-point baguettes. White gold. Appraised over $600. Sacrifice $295. Call 842-2496. Answering machine.
1985 Schwinn Mountain Bike - Reliable transportation for very few men. Base 742-8689
www.schwinnmountainbikes.com
LOST/FOUND
Found outside of Naimihat, 1/2 lbarzbar, 1/72
white. Found inside of Naimihat, 1/2 lbarzbar,
1/72 white. Call 841-7495 for Lesk or Hobart or
White.
85 Toyota驾d truck. Only 8000 mi. Great credt.
n' asking $795, 842-233 after 4.
Found: Little purge full of money at corral 648 and Alamut Place. Please K P U D. 864-5572.
LOST! Gucci watch with sentimental value. Lost
in the yarrow around 12/12/86. Return: Calm
Ferrie 484-6166.
HELP WANTED
Reward offered for return of back black pack. No questions asked. Call 843-8255.
LOGST. gray longhaired cat, male Persian. If you find it, please call 641-3848.
ASH PAID DAILY. Domino's Pizza is now accepting hires to 10 jobs. If you are a self-motivated, high energy person, you could work with us in the kitchen. We pay cash commissions on delivery daily. Our drivers make $5-8 per hour and more. You must be 18 years or older, have a car, current driver's license and proof of insurance. Apply by phone, email or online. Town, phone calls, EOE, m/
We found your puppy on Sat. Feb. 1st. between lath and Ffb on February. You loved him as much as he loved you.
CRUISERHIPS HIRING! $18-$30.00 Carribean,
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New Service! 911-9444-7444 UXAUSKRACEF.
Female aid in weekend A.M., 8:30 to 1:00 or P.M.
10:00 to 11:30 daily. No experience necessary
Help Wanted: Light housekeeping Monday & Wednesday afternoons. 943.3386.
GOVERNMENT JOBS, $16.00 - $29.20 yr. Now
Hiring, Call 851-887-6807, Ext. R978 for current
OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, yr. round. Europe,
S.A. America, Australia. All fields: 9000-2000
mightseeing. Free info. Write LC, PO Bx 52-K1-
Coron Del Mar, CA 092832.
PROGRAM ASSISTANT/RESEARCH AID for Midwestern Council on Aging; 49th, $400,000 per year. Apply to University of Kansas, 864-411 for complete job description and application. Deadline Feb. 13.
Point O' Pines and Brant Lake Camps in Adirondack Mountains, New York State, seek competent instructors and experienced waterskiers. Live with children, great opportunity to participate. Visit www.allanbrent.com, write Allan Brenn, 115 Eighth Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02966. Call 401-331-7967. Interviews on campus Feb 15. Sign up in 232
Putt-Put Golf course now taking applications
through Friday 5pm-7pm until Feb. 12
lst and渡月.
Student Staff Position-summer orientation program 1986. Required qualifications: minimum 2.0 gpa; returning to KU for Fall 1986 term. Undergraduates and first graduate students should have a background in abilities; knowledge of university programs and activities; interpersonal communications skills; enthusiasm about university Job description requirements; successful completion of educational services 123 Strong Hall. Due by Fri.
embassia about university. Job description and applications available in the office of educational services 123 Strong Hall. Due by Friday, Feb. 14, 1986. A E O. E.
Summer Jobs. National Park Co. 21 Parks, 5000
Openings. Complete Information $6.90. Park
Resort. Mission Mt. Co., 651 2nd Ave. W.N.
Kalispell. MT 59901.
Wanted: Research assistant in the department of Systematics and Ecology to coordinate experimental pond studies. Undergraduate in a BS or MA degree from an accredited salary $1,250. Contact John 8 Brien, Brown University of Kansas 864-4725 to apply and see application deadline 2-14. - EE/AM 94
Week-long positions for Assistant Instructors in Natural History Summer Workshops for Young People. Museums of Natural History KU, June 2-August 1. 15 hrs w/$k0.25; 20 hrs w/$k67.00. 15 hrs w/$k67.00, Director of Public Education, 602 J.Dyce Hill (933) 841-473. An equal opportunity employer.
AIRLINE HIRING-BOOM: $141-$39,000
Canton, Cassette, Newville-VC: 981-8444-UA XUW125
Canton, Cassette, Newville-VC: 981-8444-UA XUW125
Wanted: graduate student from Emporia to show KU students its vicinity and university. Send resume to: Emperor, 1200 W. Grand Blvd., Emporia, KY 72903.
GAYLESIBAN: Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to: TRANGLE TIMES, P.0.
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PERSONAL
Art-1 bet HABAKKUK wasn’t a geek! Dana, Bain and Lisa
Hey Snubbard I-1 am looking for a good looking boy. I'll be there with him. He'll head south to play golf and snap up the sun. As for me-I don't think you will be disappointed. Find your sharks and swimmers wherever they're hiding and swimming.
Hey Pam! Who is this Hibakkuk guy anyway? A Harvard graduate, no doubt.
Huppe, are ya havin' fun? Do ya waanna. dance? Tony Kimbo (64).
SAVE OUR SEATS! You paid for them. If you are seated in the KUAC decision to remove student seating this season, call Monte Johnson and voice your opinion (808-3145). Don't take this decision sitting down!
Mark and Dan, How 'bout Ha-Back Rub? Love,
Beth and Dana
Steve, see you at MABAKUK this weekend-what a show! your admirer
To Joan The Warrior. How about a coke together. Gaulet is fun but I'm more interested in knowing you. I know your name but not your number. Valkrie.
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101-8500 Weekly U/P Mailings Circulars! 101-8500 Weekly U/P Mailings Circulars! Success. Procurement Box 704 CDG, Woodstock. Success. Procurement Box 704 CDG, Woodstock.
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Padre Island $149
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V
His and Hers hair Design. Quality hair care at reasonable rate. We use the finest hair products available to us and we reserve the desire. Haireux $7, perm $25 and up with hairstyle included. Linda and Beryl $649, 1218
Silver Curtis
- 7 night hotel accommodations
MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Union's recording of the day's entrees & soups.
Only $360 per person!
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Send your love (or your good friend, family member, professor, student, pet) a SINGING Singing valentines will be sold by the Music. The Singing valentines are $12.13, 11.23, 8.17 and 2 on floor 3B Hall and in Murphy 11, 12, 8, 17 or on music library, or call 864-4784-5 for local calls for long distance Valentines. YAY IT IS A ONG!
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Feb. 5 - 11
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Wiedemann 12 pk $3.52
Busch 12 pk $4.17
Black Label 12pk $3.52
Coors Light 6 pk $2.69
Miller Lite 12 pk $5.32
M. F.9:5:30 841-7117 Sat.9:30-2 p.m.
Hand-crafted wide, windowcutures and fantasies.
Order now for spring, SKY WORKS 0/2 / Mast
2/4 / Mast. $195-$395.
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas or both and skiing at Steamboat or only 800 mL of water bags, more. Hurry, call Sunchase Tours for more information and reservations to lift 1-800-321-5911 or contact a local Sunchase Tours office or visit your Spring break count on sunchase.
OPEN HOUSE
in honor of
POLYNESIA
SUAN B. ANTHONY
BORN FEB. 15, 1820
Friday
2-4 p.m.
Feb.14,1986
sponsored by
The sun is out, the sunglasses are in! The ETC.
Shop. 732 Mass.
Rent' 19.0° T, V 328 W a month; Curtis
Mathes 147 W. 23rd. B424.8758; Mon.-T, 9:30
Mars 147 W. 23rd. B424.8758; Mon.-T, 9:30
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 218 Strong Hall
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
transcript of passport and course fees, line
portraits, Swells Studio, 749-101.
Modeling and theater portfolio - shooting now
Beginners in 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
price available on printed specialties plus speedy
and reliable delivery. You design it or it
will be printed in sweatshirts. 228 w. B1 (Belgium
bk) 811-4349
Thousands of R & R albums – 92 or less. Also collectors items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quantitrills B11 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles
VALENTINES!
Rent-1° TV • $28.90 6 month. Sunny. TV
14° W. 242. 837-742. Mon.-Sat. 9:30-10:00. Sun.
18° W. 242. 837-742. Mon.-Sat. 9:30-10:00. Sun.
18° W. 242. 837-742. Mon.-Sat. 9:30-10:00. Sun.
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
V-Postcards 15¢
V-Cards 50¢
V-Notes 25¢
THE
MUSEUM
SHOP
Instant Valentines
Museum
of Natural History
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sundays
864-4450
Tired of tussing and turning? Do you awake feeling relaxed and well-respected? Cotton and foam core futures are designed to fully support your spine and release tension. BLUE HERON FUTONS 6, dth & Locut, North Lawrence (one hour) for durability nurals) open Tu-Sat. to 10:30 or 11:40 844-18445
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve F*.
Custom printed Shirtlet, 740-101.
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School! Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841.7749
Want a new fun way to say I love you on Valentine Day. Try a VIDEO Lamp. AVAILABLE from 12 to 4 or by appointment. Now through Valentine Day at Adventure Lap Video
FREEWAY SINGLES CLUB A NEW WAY FOR
MEET THE MEDIA TO MEET FREE-
BOOKING: 1-800-4931
DELI SPECIALS
a different deli special every day
Class Ring Day - Why wait for the ring man when its ring day every at Bailour Hall 935 Mass.
Frito Pie
Today's
16 oz. Drink
Special:
$1.75
THE KANSAS UNION
DELI
level 3
SANDWICH
"CAMP COUNSELORS M-F/O - Outstanding Slim and Trim Down Camps. Tennis Dismantle, Dance, Skateboarding, Sports Instruction plus. Separate girls' and boys' camps. 7 weeks. Camp camelot on College campuses at Southern California. Contact: Michele Friedman, Director, 947 Hewlett Dr., No Woodmere, N.Y. N.1181.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater area Call for appointment 913-545-1400
THE BEST WORKOUT IN TOWN · LAWRENCE AEROBICS, M-W FO:3-P, M·P. Lawrence School of Ballet, 8 & Vermont, Cate Thompson 841-0264.
First class is free.
THE FAR SIDE
All cotton old timer shirts. New shipment and colors in. The FTC, Shop. 732 Mass.
SERVICES OFFERED
LOSE WEIGHT NOW. 10-29 hrs, per month on Herbal products. As seen on T.V. Call 892-7000.
Mobile Locksmith. Fast Lockdown Service, Keying-Delbots, Complete Auto Service, Reasonable Prices. Call 749-3023.
Prompt contrapassive and abortion services in
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in
Lincoln, 941-8716
HARPER LAWYER
1101 Mass.
Suite 201
749-01
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-8421.
EDITING, structure, data analysis, papers, essays, dissertations M.A. Ph., d. stud. documents
TYPING
MATH TUTOR - Bob Mears holds in A.M. in math K.U. where, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professor Mr. Schoenberg at K.U., then teaching 6 per 40 minute session. Call 843-9032.
Absolutely your "Type" word processing, typing
in HTML and saving the file available at
variety. 844 Illinois. 844-618-6011.
Available on Web (www.microsoft.com)
and mail.
BLOOM COUNTY
24-Hour Typing, 10th semester in Lawrence. Resumes, dissertation papers, Close to campus Best quality and fastest service 841-5066 A-1 professional typing; Tern papers, Thesex
1-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional. WORD
books. i.e., dataBook 841 - 972.
i.e., data.DATA 841 - 972.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing, Judy, 842-7945.
1-1-THO WORD PROCESSING. Experienced.
1-1-THO Reliable. Rush Jobs Accepted.
Bq 823-3111
A-3 professional typing Term papers, Thesis,
B-2 academic writing Using IBM Selectric,
I-1 Recommendations B8-3268
J-2 Journal Writing B8-3268
vice available 844 Illinois, 843-6161
ACCURATELY TYPING, word processing, and spell-
checking.
A. L SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers. Phone 842-8607 after 5:30.
Ace Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable, friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes. Microsoft Office Suite (vice available). One block from campus. 842-2576. AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Processing/Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics. Document uploading. Free estimate. 740-1138
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced;
JEANETTE SHAFFER— Typing Service;
TRANSCRIPT also; standard cassette tape;
843-8777
Dissertations, Theses. Term Papers. Over 15 years experience. Phone 842-3210 after 5:30. Barb. English B.A. T typing and tutoring. Spelling correction, overnight service available. Great rates.
DISSERTATIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics: ONE-DAY SERVED
available on shorter student papers up to 8p
(Monly) Mommys + 8p:43-378
before 9 p. m. Please
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Trying: Spelling/punctuation
Rules: blank space, 841-2072. Cases: **Lorem ipsum**
**Lorem ipsum** also: Lorem Ipsum.
Letter perfect papers and resumes. WRITING
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QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, disertations, resumes, applications, Spelling corrected
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional wordpress
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quality printing, e-mail送件
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experience typet for correct full cursive
phone 914-804-504, Mrs. Wright
TYPIING PLUS assistance with composition editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses dissertations, papers, letters, applications resumes. Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
WANTED
Lewar
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share great brand-new apartment very close to campus Microwave, W&D, dishwasher, $130/mo. Call 841-5251 anytime.
Bv GARY LARSON
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
"For crying out loud, Doris. ... You gotta drag that thing out every time we all get together?"
THIS IS A RUSSIAN
SUB AND YOU'RE
MAKING ANNOYING
CUTTER JOHN
AS SPIES ?!
THIS IS AN OUTAGE?
WANT DO YOU WANT ?
WORLD WAR II HEN? "WHERE"
"ROKY III" "AMERICA"
CANNOT BE DEFEATED.
YOU, YOU EVIL EMPIRE !
by Berke Breathed
A
SO GO ON!
SHOT YER MISGILES!
I DOUBLE PARE VA!
SHOT! SHOT!
SHoot!
SHoot!!
STOMP!
STOMP! STOMP!
AHWOOSH!!
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Sports
15
Classified Ads
Female roommate to share two bedrooms apartment.
Very nice and very close to campus. Call
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED for lrg. 12
bedroom, 2 bathroom apt. on bus route. $149
a maptil plus 1/3 utilities. Call Mark or Mitch.
648-4992
Male, nonsmoking roommate for 2 bedroom appl.
$112/week plus 1.5% utilities, call 3.00
800-242-7268
NEEDED Female to share fully furnished 2 bedroom apartment Price negotiated Call Jen
Need female roommate to share apartment
110/mo, 1/3 utilities, close to campus, on bus
parking.
Nosemasking. Male Roommate wanted to share 3
roommates. Male Roommate needed to have a
$130.00 plan / 1.7 utilities. Call 749-2961
Waited immediately; female roommate to share apartment at Malls: $150 plus 1/2 electric. Call
ROOMMATE WANTED grad student or professional preferred, to share large two-bedroom house within walking distance of campus. Bedroom w/ studio or office. Call Mark at 843-0255.
NEED EXTRA CASH? We Want to Buy Your Used Stored Equipment, Working Or Not. Amps, Receivers, Speakers, Turntables, Car Stores, Decacke Docks, Bring It By For Instant Cash, Lawrence Custom Radio 914 W. 23rd H. 60-8511. Non-smoking, male to share very nice comfort rooms. Kitchen, dishwasher, fireplace, sunroom, cable TV, etc., $175.00 or all utilities. Call Burd Curt. 481-4712. MOMMATE to share 2 RP Apt. $112.50 plus 2/ utilities. Furnished. Bus route Jm 841-8673.
Roommate: 4-bedroom duplex $125/no. plus
Rm@10-1775 for rich. For Rich, keep Leave
in.
Share apt. Large private BR, Half of rent is $138.
no utilities. B43-1039-8600
Tutor in ECE 319 (Basic Circuit & Devices)
892-3714
Two graduate students in mature coupled need to share a 4 bedroom house in a very quiet & quiet location.
Visitor professions from Japan need small furnished apt. with in walking distance of Spence Museum of Art for March & April. Call Art History Department. 844-4713.
ATLANTA — The president of the University of Georgia testified yesterday that his school admitted athletes with bad grades to improve the university's profit-making teams.
United Press International
Fred Davison, the president, was the last defense witness for the university in a suit brought by a professor who says she was fired for protesting special treatment of athletes.
The trial enters its second month Thursday. Jank Kemp, former coordinator for the school's remedial English program, says two university administrators violated her freedom of speech when they fired
Georgia sacrificed grades for money
Davison said on the stand that Georgia and other schools relaxed their admission standards in the early 1970s. At a later meeting with reporters, he clarified his remarks.
He said the National Collegiate Athletic Association relaxed standards in the 1970s and allowed athletes with only C averages to be admitted. The change let in football and male basketball players who were slow academically.
her for her complaints
Davison, president since 1967, said he did not approve of the automatic
Georgia requires its other athletes to have C averages and score reasonably well on their entrance exams.
admission of_scholarship_athletes with C averages in high school. But he said Georgia had to have the same enrollment standards as its athletic rivals because "we have to compete on a level playing field."
"You want me to go out of business unilaterally." he said when asked what would happen if Georgia required its athletes to make better grades than other schools required. "That would put us out of business athleticly."
Sports help draw people together, Davison said.
"It gives our alumni something to talk about, something to do," he said. "We have sports at the University of Georgia because our college sponsor
it. Those 80,000 people are in that stadium because they want to be there."
Kemp wants the U.S. District Court to make Georgia give her back her job and award her back pay and an unspecified amount of punitive fee.
Kemp went back on the stand after Davison. She denied she wrote term papers for two athletes, claiming she only assisted them in using the library and correcting their spelling and grammar mistakes.
She also denied that she repeatedly gave athletes falling grades.
Davison said he did not understand why the university should not accept academically poor students.
THE CASTLE TEA ROOM
yello sub
DELIVERS
841-3268
phone: 843-1151
THURSDAY
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 1,750 clubs 843-0540
the
Join the K.U.VIDEO CENTER (Membership Only $10.00)
JACK SPENCER KATHLEEN TURNER
PRIZA'S HONOR
poetry drama film
Fragrant love the moment
Love in all forms
The art of the heart
Soulful romance
★ 4 FREE tape rentals ($10.00 value)
★ 10% discount on purchases of new pre-recorded video tapes
★ 10% discount on purchases of used pre-
recorded outdoor tents (as available)
★ 10% discount on purchases of blank video tape
★ Students still receive their special student dividend on receipts (average dividend
GONE WITH THE WIND
Deluge doubled cassette
COME WITH THE WIND
Deluxe double cassette
- Membership open only to K.U. Students, Faculty and Staff
KU
KUBookstores
Video Center Kansas Union
1986 THE YEAR OF TIGER CHINESE NEW YEAR'S EVE DINNER PARTY
Chinese Dinner Lantern Riddle Dancing Party
神
Place: Lawrence Community Center
Time: 6:30 P.M. Saturday, Feb. 8, 1986
at door/ Member $4:00
Non Member $6:00
In advenance/ Member $3.00
Non Member $5:00
Admission:
Tickets on sale in SUA Box office
6 Washburn players receive suspensions
Yu-Chuen, Lin 749-3122
SuFang, Chen 843-4393
Winston, Chen 841-9760
TOPEKA — Washburn basketball coach Bob Chipman announced yesterday that he has suspended six of his players, including his three top reserves, for disciplinary reasons.
The Associated Press
Four of the players were suspended for the Ichabods' two Central States Intercollegiate Conference games this weekend at Fort Hays State and Kearney State, and two more were suspended indefinitely. Chipman said.
One of those suspended indefinitely is Washburn's No. 3 scorer, Marcelle Graves, a 6-foot-8 junior center from Chicago, Graves, who
sponsored by Chinese Students Association
has started some games this season,
is averaging 10 points a game. Also
suspended indefinitely was Calvin
Godine, a 6-2 junior guard from
Houston who is averaging 3.5 points.
The third top reserve who was suspended is Bob Sumler, a 5-8 freshman guard from San Diego who has averaged 4.4 points a game.
Sumler and three more players will miss tomorrow's game at Hays and Lansing.
The others are James Davenport, 6-7 junior forward from Atlanta; Tom Burton, 6-6 freshman forward from Topeka, and Pat Denney, 6-8 freshman center from Overland Park.
O O
Students & Faculty Make The Difference at Nabil's Restaurant
Nabit's
Students save 10% on Sundays
with KUID
9th & Iowa
Hilcrist Shopping Center
for parties of 5 or more, please call for reservations
11 a.m.-2 p.m.
5 p. - 10 p.m.
MILLER HIGH LIFE
Miller
Have Some Fun in the Sun with US! in Daytona!
7 days for only $229 $215 at the Holiday Inn Serf Side
Meet at the AKL house (2021 Stewart St.) for info, and sign ups at 3:00 p.m. Friday. Feb. 7 Refreshments Served
Refreshments Served
For more info.Call Tom 749-4957
Meet at the AKL house
Representatives of Yosemite Park & Curry Company will be on campus
Yosemite National Park Summer Employment in California
Housing available to applicant only For further information and application contact
This will be a group presentation. We will be interviewing for Seasonal Positions in Hotel, Housekeeping, Kitchen, Food Service, Retail, and Support Facilities with starting dates beginning March 15 through June 30.
Friday, February 7
University Placement Center 223 Carruth-O'Leary
Yosemite Park & Curry Company
Yosemite Park & C Yosemite National Park California 95389 (209) 372-1236 EEO/AAP/H/V
O
Turner promotes Goodwill Games
ROME — About 3,500 athletes from 59 countries have agreed to take part in the Goodwill Games in Moscow on July 5-20, a spokesman for the organizers said yesterday.
The event, the brainchild of television mogul Ted Turner, will feature 18 sports — artistic and rhythmic gymnastics, basketball, boxing, canoeing, cycling, diving, figure skating, handball, judo, modern pentathlon, sailing, swimming, track and field, volleyball, water polo, weightlifting and wrestling.
United Press International
Turner and his aides stopped in Rome on a promotional tour that took him to 12 cities in the United States and nine in the rest of the world.
Two Soviet officials and 10
VCR w/2 movies-$9.66
(overnight Mon-Fri)
Store Hours:
Mon-Sat: 9:30-9 / Sun: 1-5
SMITTY'S TV
1447 W 23rd 842-5751
VCRR w/ movies 88 88
athletes from the United States,
Soviet Union, Britain, France,
Spain and Italy accompanied
Turner.
Robert Wussel, executive vice president of Turner Broadcasting System, said one problem of conflicting sports schedules had been resolved.
"We asked the Hungarian federation to move the world volleyball championships, being held at the same time as our games, from Budapest to Moscow and we've got the OK," Wussler said.
Primo Nebiolo, president of the International Amateur Athletics Associations, said there would be no conflict in track and field scheduling.
Sound vibrations
643 Tennessee, Lawrence, KS (913) 841-7083
Rav. Velakevien, Rav. Velakevien
Mobile Sound Entertainment for That Special Occasion
SPRING BREAK
HALLEY'S COMET/NEW ZEALAND
EQUAPOLAR TOURS
$2599. Cheap!
Dark sky observing site with telescopes, and knowledgeable local astronomers
All air and ground round trip from KCI
Includes:
Hurry, seats are limited!
TOURS
(913) 842-4000
IT'S A WORLD OF
TECHNOLOGY
TRAVEL
SERVICES
K
Spend Valentine's Day with your SWEETHEART! Come in and eat, or we'll deliver to your door!
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 lattes for a small additional ch
Dine in, Corporate or Dinner.
You can always order extra toppings for a small Dine-in, Carryout or Delivery
Limit one pizza per coupon. Plaque presents coupon before dripping or upon delivery Not valid on Sundays or with any other offer Good only if participating Godfather's pizza Offer expires Expire Feb 28 No cash price limited service fee
Godfather's Pizza.
16
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Thursday, Feb. 6, 1986
Group's goal is abuse education
By Peggy Kramer
A campus task force has taken the first steps toward educating students about domestic violence and providing therapy for victims of abuse.
The Task Force on Violence was formed in October by Ruth Mikkelson Lee, associate director of residential programs. At a workshop at Emporia State University, Lee learned that violence in relationships had increased.
Lee decided there was a need at at the University of Kansas to provide assistance for victims as well as perpetrators.
The task force's speaker's bureau two weeks ago distributed a list of available volunteer speakers to residence and scholarship halls. Representatives from the halls can invite the speakers to their halls to speak about violence in a relationship.
The bureau is only the first of several projects the task force, still in its developing stages, will underwrite this semester, Lee said yesterday.
The 37-member task force will teach students to deal with their anger and to be aware of some pitfalls in relationships.
"We have placed a focus on helping men, women, single couples and married couples." Lee said.
Educational information and counseling will address mental and physical abuse, she said.
Lynn Heller, coordinator of health education at Watkins Hospital and a member of the task force, said words could be as damaging to a person as physical abuse.
Violence. Lee said, includes a variety of acts, including mental abuse, showing, beating or homicide.
To approach the different kinds of violence, the task force has divided into five committees and three subcommittees.
The task force includes representatives from the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, KU police, University Counseling Center, Watkins Hospital, Women's Transitional Care Services and the University Information Center.
Twenty-two members are residence and scholarship hall representatives.
A measurement committee will assess needs and conduct surveys on campus, an intervention committee will provide information on therapy, and a resource committee will gather
A publicity committee was formed to present information to students.
information on violence.
The three subcommittees are divided into programs on selfesteem, intimate relationships and anger management.
Tammy Jones, residence hall director at Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall and a member of the self-esteem subcommittee.
said some abuse problems stemmed from low self-esteem. The subcommittee is developing programs to help men and women feel more confident about themselves.
Sgt. John Brothers of the KU police is a member of the measurement committee. He said the committee would study violence in student relationships and gauge the progress of the task force.
Announcing the first Annual Kappa Kappa Gamma Bowl-a-thon for Special Olympics
bowling
Fri., Feb. 7, 10 p.m.- Sat., Feb. 8, 5 a.m. Royal Crest Lanes Spectators Welcome!
There are Christian bookstores, networks, albums,
yellow pages, movies...
But what does "Christian" mean?
Sounds as though "Christian" equals "correct".
And so much of it comes off being negative.
A Christian biologist rejects evolution
A Christian economist condemns "Commies"
A Christian politician ignores the needy
Or, Christian Brothers push wines.
Can there be Christian dancing, studying, coaching?
When "Christian" seems to equal "correct",
the Pharisees of Jesus' day come to mind.
To say Christian Church does make sense
because this Church is called to be concerned,
to be forgiven (as all Christians must),
and to give hope (not rejection joys in life).
"CORRECT" CHRISTIANS
JAZZ FESTIVAL
Tickets for the nightly concerts are on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office
Public: $3. KU Students $1.50;
Senior Citizens $2.
Oferta: Phone 913-642-3882
VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations
V
Lutheran Campus Ministry
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
Department of Music and Dance
Presents the
Music Concert
**Special Guests**
Matt Catingub-Auto Saxophone
Leonard Cuddy-Drums
Vincent DMartino-Trumpet/Flugelhorn
Mavis Rivers-Vocales
Kirby Shaw-CliancianConductor
Mavis Shaw-Cliancian
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS!
1204 Oread 843-4948
Sunday Worship:10:30a.m.
Jayhawk Invitation Jazz Festival
Friday & Saturday
February 7-8, 1986
The University of Kansas
Daily Sessions
Saturday, 8:30 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
Crafton-Prever Theatre
KU Jazz Ensembles I, II and III
KU Jazz Choirs I and II
Performing Groups
High School and College Jazz Ensembles
High School Jazz/Show Choirs
with
ZI STRONG HALL
SAC
Ph. 864-4064
Performing Groups
Nightly Concerts
8:00 p.m.
Friday-Adison Auditorium
Saturday-Saundry Prover. The剧院
Thompson-Crawley FURNITURE RENTAL 520 E.22nd Terrace 841-5212
A Social Skills Workshop for
Free/No registration Required. Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING
February 10, Monday 6:30 to 9:00 p.m.
That feeling which commonly occurs when: you enter a room full of strangers you see someone you'd like to meet you wait for an important interview you get on a bus or elevator
100 Smith Hall
10-1 item 10" Pizzas
842-1212 Pizza Shuttle says:
Get it together!
$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
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
JUST ACROSS THE BRIDGE
842-0377 403 N. 2nd 841-0012
---
UP & UNDER
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES FRIENDLY, DIVERSE ATMOSPHERE
free hors doer
DAILY SPECIALS IMPORTS EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
d o e r t e
live music
red,white & blue
lek.7-8
brett hodges
Bonus question
Who was Time's non-human Man of the Year?
For answer, see page 3
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY, FEB. 7, 1986. VOL. 96. NO. 92 (USPS 650-640)
Cold
Details page 3.
Benefit attracts bogus stars
By Monique O'Donnell Staff writer
B
It looked as if Mick Jagger, the Go-Go's and Billy Idol all turned out last night to raise money for a good cause.
But the stars were counterfeit. They were really KU students decked out for a celebrity look alike contest.
The event was part of the Students Against Multiple Sclerosis fund-raising campaign. It started at Coghurs, 737 New Hampshire St., and moved to two other halls during the evening.
At 9 p.m., the students arrived at Cogburres in costumes a la Dolly Parton and Billy Idol. Five girls, imponating the Go Go's, were only dressed in bathtowels with small bathing suits underneath. But Kristine Gordon, Overland Park sophomore, said she wasn't cold.
"No, we're fine," she said.
"We're having fun."
All participants wert on stage, and the audience voted for its favorite contestant.
Steve Vogel, chairman of SAMS,
said each person had two votes
because each had payed a $1 cover
charge of when they arrived.
Each contestant also was sponsored by people in Lawrence All the proceeds collected at Cogburns, The Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., and Gammons, 1601 W 23rd, will go to SAMS, Vogel said.
Multiple sclerosis is a neurological disease that most often affects people between the ages of 18 to 43, he said.
Other events in the SAMS campaign are a Valentine's Day Heart of Rock 'n' Roll Battle of the Bands featuring area rock bands Feb. 14, a fund raising dinner Feb. 21 and a rave/rock Alike competition Feb. 22.
The top fund-raising contest will win a trip to the Caribbean, donated by Holiday Travel Service, 2112 W 25th St., and will be able to compete for an MTV internship. Vogel said.
KU's football team also participated in the bar entertainment. About 25 football players dressed in tuxedos got on stage to perform the "MS. Shuffle."
Craio Sands/KANSAN
IS WANTS YOUR LOVE FOR YOU
LOOK ONLINE AND MESSE
4
Rex Boyd, Overland Park
sophomore, impersonates Mick
Jagger as part of a celebrity look
alike contest. The event, sponsored
by Students Against Multiple
Sclerosis, began at Cogburns,
737 New Hampshire St., last night
and proceeded to two other bars.
All proceeds will be donated to
SAMS and MS research
8 apartheid protesters acquitted
By Tim Hrenchir
Staff writer
A Douglas County District Court judge yesterday overturned convictions in eight criminal trespassing cases stemming from anti-apartheid protests last May. The judge upheld three convictions of protesters in other trespassing cases.
Associate District Court Judge Jean Sheard ruled seven protesters were not guilty of criminal trespassing during a May 9 demonstration at
Youngberg Hall, the home of the Kansas University Endowment Association. The court also acquitted one protester arrested at a May 3 demonstration at Youngberg Hall. All eight were arrested outside the building.
Shepard said there was no evidence the Endowment Association had authorized the KU Police Department to arrest anyone who was outside the building.
torney, represented the protesters. City Attorney Mike Glover was the prosecutor. The case was heard Jan. 29 in district court.
Shepard overturned the convictions of Gabrilele Otto, Lawrence senior; Kristine Learned, Mulvane sophomore; Judy Brow, KU library assistant; Clark Coan, a 1979 KU graduate from Lawrence; Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student; Aimee Alderman, Olathe
Jack Klinknett, Lawrence at-
junior; and Kathryn Steger,
Lawrence senior
Each was arrested during the May 9 rally.
The court also overturned the conviction of Jane Ungerman, Lawrence senior, who was arrested during a May 3 protest at the Endowment Association.
The court upheld convictions of three protesters who were arrested
See APPEALS, p. 5, col. 1
Deaths reported as Filipinos vote in bitter election
United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — Amid mounting reports of widespread ballot buying, intimidation by "goon" squads and violence that left at least 29 dead, Filipinos voted by the millions today in the bitter election between President Ferdinand Marcos and Corazon Aquino.
Opposition officials said 15 Aquino supporters riding to the polls in the challenger's home province of Tarlac were killed when a grenade was thrown into their truck.
The official Philippine News Agency said 14 other people, most of them opposition supporters, died in election violence in this nation of 54 million people, bringing the death toll to at least 80 in two months of bitter campaigning.
Election officials said 80 to 85 percent of the 26 million registered voters cast ballots, for a turnout of 22.1 million. They said they hoped for an accurate but incomplete projection of the winner in 24 hours and first results of the Manila vote by 11 a.m. EST. No results were available as of 6 a.m. EST today.
Reports of violence began reaching Manila only hours after the 86,000 polls opened at 6 p.m. EST, and mounted steadily by the time the polls closed at 2 a.m. EST. A "mount of reports of fraud and violence are piling up," an Aquino spokesman charged.
Police in the southern city of Davao said an opposition leader was shot and killed and another wounded by gunmen while on their way to monitor the bailout.
An independent monitoring group said a polluter in a helicopter was forced down north of Manila by two unidentified helicopters and
there is no word on the monitor's fate.
The nation's entire armed force of 250,000 soldiers and paramilitary police were on "red alert" to keep order. But a mini army of independent militia officers "goo" squids and armed men forced to leave polling stations.
A spokesman for the poll-watching Independent National Citizens Movement for Free Elections (NAM-FREL) said the "goons" manhandled some pollwatchers and smashed the cameras of others.
See related stories p. 12
"Right now it doesn't look too good," said Benjamin Lozare, an official of NAMFIRL which sent 50,000 monitors to the polls in the strategic Southeast Asian nation.
Sen. Richard Lugar, sent by President Reagan to head a U.S. poll-watching team, also said: "We've seen some irregularities in the sense of administration problems and slowness."
Most of the reports of violence involved attacks against supporters of Aquino, widow of opposition leader and Marcos' acrival Benigno Aquino, assassinated in 1983 at Manila Airport.
"We have just pulled our volunteers out of Danao city in Cebu because of massive intimidation and harassment of our workers," Lozare of NAMFREL said. "Armed men and goons have threatened them physically, and I understand some people have been injured."
Lozare said a helicopter with one of his officials was forced north of Manila by two unidentified helicopters. "The last word we heard from him by radio is that armed men
See ELECTION, p. 5, col. 4
Staff writer
By Abbie Jones
Opponents argue over abortion bill
Lobbyists from opposing sides of the abortion issue yesterday debated a House bill that would require doctors to keep a record on all abortions.
The House State and Federal Affairs Committee heard testimony regarding a bill that would require all doctors who performed abortions to keep a record of pregnancies that were legally terminated. The present law requires only hospitals to record the information. Other clinics and physicians report voluntarily.
"What we are seeking is to get the truth out," said EKerns, lobbyist for the Right To Life of Kansas. "Abortion reporting is a sham."
Kerns said the public needed to know the accurate number of abortions performed, methods of abortion, the conditions of the women a few months after the procedure and their ages.
"Clinics and doctors aren't reporting," he said. "If people see the true figures they will be appalled by what they see."
The bill says a yearly report must be sent to the state and must include the number of pregnancies terminated, the type of facility, its address and name. Names of women who received abortions would not be on the reports, and all information would be confidential.
Sarah Trulove, a board member for the Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights in Kansas who was not at the hearing, said abortions were
private and statistics were unimportant.
Trulove, who is also KU's assistant director of administration at the Hall Center for Humanities, said the antiabortion advocates wanted statistics for propaganda.
"I don't want to know how many abortions are performed," she said. "I don't want to know how many appendecties are performed. This is a private, personal issue. I don't see what else we need to know."
"It is simply another attempt to cause pain and suffering to the individuals and families who chose abortion," she said.
Belva Otl, director of public affairs for Planned Parenthood of Kansas, said the number of physicians who would submit reports under this bill would be unchanged.
"I don't think there is going to be any more who send in reports than me," he said.
my more who send in reports than what you have right now." Ott said. Pat Goodson, a spokesman for Right To Life of Kansas, said that 50 percent of the abortions performed in Kansas were not reported.
“Abortion cannot be equated with a tonsillectomy or any other medical procedure,” she said.
Opponents of the bill also say that requiring physicians or clinics to sign abortion reports would increase their chances of getting harassed.
Adele Hughey, executive director of Comprehensive Health Associates of Overland Park, said clinics already were victims of bomb threats.
Faculty opposes pension bill
By Leslie Hirschbach Staff writer
The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill in December that might drive faculty away by limiting the amount of money University employees could put into pension plans, Sidney Shapiro, Senate Executive Committee chairman, said yesterday.
Richard Mann, University director of personnel services, said the bill would limit faculty members to contributing $7,000 to their pension plans each year. They can now put up to $30,000 into their pension plans in a year.
The proposal hurts lower-paid faculty members who typically put more money away for retirement and other employees who want to put more than $7,000 away each year.
Shapiro said the current pension plan was an incentive to stay at the University for faculty members who could be making twice as much money elsewhere.
If the amount they can contribute is reduced, he said, faculty members will be.
"We've got to find ways of keeping people in universities by compensating them," Shapiro said. "It's an important feature in maintaining a
good faculty."
In November, Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, wrote a letter to Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole urging him to make sure the Senate didn’t pass the bill, which was called The Tax Reform Act of 1985. The bill will be considered by the Senate this year.
The bill, which was written in response to President Reagan's tax reform proposals, would do great harm to retirement plans of teachers in educational organizations throughout the nation, Cobb said.
See PENSIONS, p. 5, col. 3
Officials favor vicious-dog law
Staff writer
By Juli Warren Staff writer
Douglas County officials and city officials from around the county took one more step toward restricting vicious dogs last night at a meeting at the County Courthouse.
All cities represented last night
-Baldwin City, Leptonom,
Eudora and Lawrence — spoke in
favor of an ordinance that would
limit the number of most favored some sort of compensation to victims of dog bites.
walt of the proposed ordinance that he presented at the meeting was stricter than what the city officials wanted.
Chris Mackenzie, county counselor, said he thought the
According to the draft of the proposed ordinance, it would be illegal to keep or own a vicious dog within the county.
A vicious dog is defined as one which the owner knows or has reason to know has a tendency or disposition to attack when unprovoked, to cause injury or otherwise endanger the safety of human beings and which has attacked or attempted to attack a person.
County commissioner Nancy Hiebert said she thought the idea of the compensation statement stemmed from concern about the 3-year-old boy mauled in December by pit bulls in Eudora.
The family of the boy had no health insurance, she said, and faced large hospital and rehabilitation bills.
Hiebert said after the meeting that Mackenzie would hone down the draft of the ordinance, add the suggested compensation state-
See PIT BULL, p. 5, col. 1
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
News Briefs Neo-Nazi promises revolution will go on
SEATTLE — A defiant neo-Nazi, Gary Lee Barrengut, sentenced yesterday with four other gang members, vowed his group's violent white supremacist conspiracy to overthrow the U.S. government would continue, saying, "the blood will flow."
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Civil rights activists charged that police and soldiers forced blacks to move from their homes yesterday, as a government minister predicted the eventual election of a black president in South Africa.
Prosecutors said The Order, the neo-Nazi group, stole more than $4 million in bank and armored car robberies to finance a white supremacist revolution intended to wipe out minorities, Jews and white traitors.
Police and soldiers in armored trucks forced blacks to move from Moutse, northeast of Johannesburg, to the remote northern Transvaal province, said Ethel Walt, vice president of the Black Sash civil rights group.
Other members of The Order were named as suspects in the June 1984 murder of Denver radio talk show host Alan Berg, thought to have been killed because of his baiting of right-wing groups, and in the murder of Walter E. West, a group colleague suspected of being a security risk.
Blacks forced out
It was the first forced removal since blacks were marched at gunpoint from their traditional home at Magopa two years ago.
STRATTON, Colo. — Law officers using backhoes and shovels dug into plains in eastern Colorado yesterday looking for graves that could hold as many as nine bodies of transient ranchhands.
Police dig for bodies
The hunt centered on the Thomas R. McCormick ranch, about five miles south of Stratton. Three bodies already have been found.
McCormick was charged Tuesday with murder and kidnapping in the death of truck driver Hubert Donho, 62, who disappeared from a Colorado truck stop and whose body was found Jan. 30 in a field nine miles north of Byers, Colo.
From Kansan wires.
President-for-Life flees Haiti
United Press International
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Haitian President-for-Life Jean-Claude Duvalier fled the country for France early today, hours after gunfire erupted in the streets of Port-au-Prince, the capital of the Caribbean nation.
A State Department spokesman in Washington said a U.S. Air Force plane flew Duvalier out of the country he has ruled for 15 years. In Paris, the French Foreign Ministry reported Duvalier and his wife, Michele, were bound for France.
"I can confirm it. It's true. We did supply an Air Force plane," State Department spokesman Bohdan Demytrwyc said. He said the plane,
A French Foreign Ministry spokesman said Duvalier would come to France but that France was not his final destination.
carrying Duvalker and "a number of people with him," left Port-au-Prince at 3:46 a.m. EST.
"With the goal of facilitating the transition to democracy in Haiti, heading off grave trouble, and in liaison with the United States, the French government has decided to accept Mr. Duvalier in France before he goes to another country," the French spokesman said.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman in Paris said Duvalier, 34, and his wife, Michele, 26, left early today aboard a U.S. military jet with 22 other people, relatives and members of his
Demytrewcyk refused to say if Duvalier's flight was the result of a deal worked out with the United States and several Western European and African nations. He said the Haitian government would provide details.
CBS News reported Thursday night that Duvalier's departure was the result of negotiations and that a military-civilian junta would govern the poverty-streaked nation.
entourage.
The television network, quoting intelligence sources, said Morocco was one of several nations that might take in Duvalier.
In Port-au-Prince, a U.S. Embassy official who declined to be named said earlier the United States had
"expressed its concern to the Haitian government over the level of violence" under Duvalier, whose family ruled the Caribbean country for 28 years.
Gunfire erupted several times in the capital late yesterday, beginning around 8 p.m. local time and growing heavier towards 10 p.m.
The firing cakes hours after Duvalier ordered security forces to use restraint in a stiff crackdown that has claimed at least 50 lives in two months.
The government said between 50 and 60 people have been killed since Nov. 28 in widespread protests against Duvalier's 15-year rule. It was the first official estimate of the number of deaths.
At a private dinner in the White House, Mrs. Reagan surprised the president with a $20 gold coin minted in 1911, the year of his birth.
'The message from the Kremlin was a best wishes type of greeting from Soviet leader Mkailh Gorbachev relayed to the White House from Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin, an aide said.
World wishes Pres. Reagan a happy day
After signing a legislative agenda he wanted Congress to enact, Reagan said that for a birthday present, "I'd kind of like some of these things that we're doing to be accomplished and further advances to peace."
The White House later released a list of 79 countries that had sent greetings, in addition to more than 8,000 cards from private citizens throughout the United States.
United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, wash in songs, cakes and greeting cards that came from Kenya to the Kremin celebrated his 75th birthday yesterday feeling "only like 39" and wishing for world peace.
Reagan looked fit after a year in which he had surgery to remove cancer from his colon and a minor operation to remove skin cancer from his nose. He heard "Happy Birthday" led by Vice President George Bush at a prayer breakfast for 3,900 of Washington's power elite and received a full box of greetings that Bush said came from more than 100 world leaders.
26 meatpackers arrested
AUSTIN, Minn. — Twenty-six striking meatpackers who tried to stop replacement workers from entering the Geo. A. Hormel & Co. plant were arrested yesterday.
United Press International
Among the arrested was laor-
strategist Ray Rogers who pro-
promptly began a jailhouse hunger
strike.
Rogers was warned by a judge Tuesday that he would go to jail if he continued to violate an injunction against mass demonstrations, and was held without formal charges, said Fred Kraft, Mower
Countv attorney.
"We have 36 hours to issue the charges," Kraft said.
He said he was researching a possible charge of criminal syndicalism, which carries a fine of $5,000 and five years in jail.
Syndicalism is an infrequently used charge imposed on union leaders accused of encouraging their members to break the law during a strike.
In a statement from his jail cell, Rogers said he had begun the hunger strike to protest "today's wanton violation of workers' and the public's constitutional rights."
Rogers would not say under what conditions he would end his fast.
Kraft said Rogers would be held until a court appearance that was expected to be today.
Wayne Goodnature, Mower County sheriff, said the arrests were orderly and occurred when 26 pickets — five women and 21 men — refused an order to leave. They had walked up to a police and National Guard post on a road leading to the north entrance of the plant. Before the arrest, about 70
Before the arrest, about 70 strikers forced police and the National Guard to close a road to the Hormel plant for five minutes.
Tornadoes on Gulf Coast kill two
United Press International
Thunderstorms that spewed killer tornadoes over Texas rolled along the Gulf Coast yesterday, damaging buildings in north Florida.
marina at St. Marks.
Two people died and at least 35 were injured in tornadoes that plunged out of greenish-black skies in Texas. Two more were killed in a traffic accident during a blinding rainstorm.
In Florida, authorities said a tornado hit a Tallahassee middle school early yesterday. No one was hurt and classes continued on schedule, although five classrooms had to be closed because of water damage.
In the town of Mayo, a tornado or high winds overtured a house trailer and dropped a tree on another trailer. Another twister struck a
The worst of Wednesday's storms in Texas struck around the Houston area in Harris County. An 81-year-old woman was killed in a tornado that ripped through a trailer park, and a 30-year-old power company maintenance man died when his truck blew over.
In Dallas, two men died when their pickup truck struck a van parked in the emergency lane of an expressway during a driving rain.
Roofs were ripped off hangars at an airport outside Houston, damaging or destroying 300 airplanes. Three of the planes were hurled into a nearby lake. The storm set off the airplane emergency locator transmitters on dozens of the planes, and Civil Air Patrol volunteers worked through the night trying to find
The body of Barbara Leona Wilkerson, 81, was pulled from the wreckage of her mobile home at Bourdeaux Gardens Trailer Park. Several trailer houses in the park were flipped.
Aircraft ELTs trigger automatically during a crash to help search and rescue personnel locate the site as quickly as possible. The transmitters set off by the storm could have blocked actual emergency transmissions, authorities said.
Two victims remained in critical condition early today at Tomball Community Hospital.
"In Tomball itself, we had the high winds. I think the tornados just tree-topped us, just danced over the trees," said Tomball police dispatcher Dianne Wiater.
Salvage ship ready to lift heavy debris
United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A salvage ship capable of lifting 10 tons, was on call yesterday to raise sunken, rocket wreckage from the destroyed, shuttle Challenger, but NASA officials would not say what parts of the shuttle may be the target of such muscle.
ABC News last night broadcast a photograph of what appeared to be a damaged astronaut flight helmet that had been recovered from sea. National Aeronautics and Space Administration officials would not comment.
A 3-mile security zone was in effect around a point 15 miles east of Challenger's launch pad, and mariners were advised once an hour by radio that vessels were not permitted to enter the area.
Another less-restricted zone was established running 18 miles to either side of a line extending 72 miles out to sea.
A NASA spokesman said Challenger's left-side solid booster rocket might have been located based on sonar hits. It could not be confirmed what the targets might represent. The right-side booster also may have been located, but that could not be confirmed.
The object or objects also could be 'the shuttle's blasted crew module or its beefed-up engine compartment. Neither is known to have been, ecovered so far. As for Challenger's seven-member crew, the space agency will not comment on whether any remains have been found.
The Preserver, one of 11 salvage ships operated by the Navy, arrived on the scene from Virginia early yesterday. The 213-foot ship is equipped with diving equipment and two cranes capable of lifting up to 10 tons.
In Washington, a newly formed presidential commission conducted its first hearing on the accident and was briefed on shuttle systems by members of NASA's internal review board, appointed after Challenger exploded Jan. 28.
The commission members, including astronaut Sally Ride and moonwalker Neil Armstrong, were shown previously released photographs taken instants before the explosion of Challenger's 500,000-gallon external fuel tank that showed an apparent rupture in the right-side solid booster rocket.
Don't Make Spring Break Mistakes
Remember:
Remember:
1) Don't go unless you know where you're staying.
2) Don't waste a fortune getting there.
3) Don't waste valuable tanning time walking to the beach.
4) Make sure you're close to the night life.
5) Bring bathing suit and sunglasses.
PARTY
with Campus Marketing
1) Accomodations provided by Econolodge & Desert Isle.
2) YOU DRIVE (To the Party) 119
WE DRIVE (The Party Starts Here) 184
3) All hotels are ON THE BEACH.
4) We are within walking distance of the boardwalk & strip.
5) We do not provide bathing suits or sunglasses.
For sign up call Tim and Tony at 841-0409
Come to Gammons Wednesday, Feb. 12 for the Second Annual "Surf's Up" Party... Where a free trip will be given away!
watch for details Monday
THIS IS A SERIOUS PARTY
VISA
MasterCard
Huge Picture and Poster Sale!
100's to choose from LAST DAY TODAY! Friday, February 7
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Located in the Student Union Lobby, 4th floor
Art Repro & Laser Photo Art Frames available for laser photo art.
$4.50 or 3 for $12.00
M. C. Escher, Renoir, Van Gogh, Picasso, Seurat, Dali and many more also available. Cars, cities, animals, scenery travel posters, etc.
LOTS OF NEW PRINTS!
Sponsored by SUA Student Union Activities
1
Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
Police say man kills wife, shoots himself
the deaths of two former KU students in Shawnee on Monday have been ruled murder-suicide, the Shawnee police chief said yesterday.
Ronald and Ramona Brown were found dead in their Shawnee home, said Charles Stump, the Shawnee police chief. Police think that Ronald Brown shot his wife about 2 a.m. Monday and then shot himself.
Financial problems may have triggered the shootings, Stump said.
Ronald Brown, 25, graduated from KU in 1983 with a degree in general studies. Brown was a member of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. After graduation, he worked for several computer companies before opening a gift shop with his wife in May of last year.
Ramona Brown, 22, was a graduate of Shawnee Mission East High School in Prairie Village, Kan. She married Brown on May 19, 1985.
Teenager arrested
A Lawrence teenager was arrested by Lawrence police early yesterday morning for stealing $51 and a 6-foot teddy bear valued at $225. Lawrence police said.
Sgt. Dahlquest said police were called to the shopping mall at Sixth and Kasold about 1:30 a.m. Police saw two men near the mall who ran when police arrived.
Officers returned to the mall and found that the front door of Bear Land, 601 Kasol Dr., had been broken and a cash register had been pried open. The officers then found a 6-foot teddy bear in the back seat of a car parked at the shopping center. Dahq肆 said the car was owned by a relative of the juvenile.
Officers chased the juvenile before he was apprehended. Dahlquest said. The other man got away.
Local man killed
Police said they did not know the identity of the second man and had not recovered the money. Dahlquest said the two also were suspects in the theft of $90 from a gas station between 9 p.m. Wednesday and 5:30 a.m. yesterday.
A rural Lawrence man was killed in a hit-and-run accident Wednesday night near Stull, the Kansas Highway Patrol said.
ed in a hit-and-
Wednesday night
Kansas Highway Patrol sam.
George D. Smith, 55, of Rt. 6,
apparently had stopped his car in the middle of a road 1; mile when Stull had gotten out when he was struck, the highway patrol said.
Smith's body was found by a passing motorist at 8:30 p.m., the highway patrol said. There are no suspects.
Weather
Today will be cloudy and cold with a 50 percent chance of snow and a high around 30. Winds will blow to the north at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight and tomorrow will be mostly cloudy and cold with a 30 percent chance of snow. The low tonight will be 15 to 20 and the high tomorrow will be 25 to 30.
Because of an error, three men involved in a shooting-stabbing incident at 1319 Vermont St. were identified in the Jan. 28 Kansan by their race.
It is against Kansan policy to describe someone by race, ethnic origin or religion unless the description is relevant to the story or part of a detailed description of a fictive.
Apology
The Kansan apologizes for the error.
Brains battle in trivia bowl
By Grant W. Butler
What is the active ingredient in NutraSweet?
Staff writer
What was the only non-human that made Time magazine's man of the year?
From staff and wire reports.
When was the first World Series, who won it and in how many games?
The quiz bowl, which took place in the Kansas Union, was sponsored by Student Union Activities and Lambda Sigma.
Questions that are the stuff of trivia nightmares were fitting challenges for contestants in last night's first round of the University of Kansas College Quiz Bowl.
The semi-final and final rounds will begin tonight at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union.
"Some of these teams are really serious about winning," Bill Mar, Garden City sophomore and president of Lambda Sigma, the sophomore honor society, said yesterday.
Mar said a lot of work went into
putting together the tournament, but the final round would be worth it.
"This is pretty fun now, but tomorrow it will be the two best teams and they will win."
In a quiz bowl round, the four-member teams are asked tosse-up questions by a moderator, and the first team to answer correctly gets a shot at a bonus question. In a tosse-up question, the person answering cannot confer with team members, although discussion is allowed during bonus questions.
The team with the most points at the end of two 7-minute periods wins.
Sixteen teams participated in last night's first round. The team that wins the double-elimination tournament will receive a traveling trophy, and will then go to Central Missouri State University in Warrensburg, Mo., as KU's representative in the regional tournament on Feb. 21 and 22.
Gene Wee, program adviser for SUA, said the game was not new to college students.
been around for a long time," he said. "It was on TV in the 1950s and 1960s. When it went off the air, the Association of College Unions International decided it wanted to continue the contests."
"College bowl is a game that's
Elizabeth Souders, Stanley junior, a member of the Meadow Party Political Action Committee team, said this was the third year she had participated in the quiz bowl.
"I love Trivial Pursuit and Jeopardy, so it's good practice. It's the thrill-of-victory, agony-of-deefat thing. It's the adrenaline. You just get really excited."
"Sometimes there's a superstar who can answer all the questions or can answer just a few words of the question."
"People get pretty wrapped up in it," he said. "A team that flies and a moderator who reads the questions fast can make the scores go really high.
One strategy for success in the games, Wee said, is to form a team with all of the members having different majors.
The questions are harder this year, she said, but it all depends on the player's area of expertise.
A recent episode of Saturday Night Live lampooned the College Quiz Bowl in a skit called "Party School Bowl."
"Abraham Lincoln was a president of the United States. Name another?" asked guest host Chevy Chase.
After a long pause, an actor playing a student answered hesitantly, "Kennedy?"
The contestants had difficulty answering questions about government, math and logic, but displayed their cerebral expertise on synonyms for vomit and the gallon capacity of different types of beer kegs.
By the caliber of questions asked at the KU quiz bowl, observers could conclude that the participants were versed in more than mere parting.
Those who answered spartame, the computer and the 1903 Boston Red Sox in eight games probably could participate in more than the "Party School Bowl."
Epstein to see Budig today about lights
By Piper Scholfield
Staff writer
Epstein said he and Amy Brown, student body vice president, would begin lobbying the Kansas Legislature for support of the lighting proposal within the next two weeks.
Student Body President David Epstein will meet with Chancellor Gene A. Budig today to discuss the possibility of improving campus lighting.
Lt. Jeanne Longacker of the KU Police Department said that as a law enforcement agency, the police favored more lighting on campus even though statistics indicated the crime problem was not because of inadequate lighting.
A question Epstein said he would ask the chancellor was why an improved lighting plan had not been included in any chancellor's budget in the last five years.
Jayhawk Boulevard was the initial target of the lighting program because of the amount of traffic there, he said. If one well-lighted centralized walkway was provided on campus, students could follow that path.
Epstein he thought that everyone agreed that poor lighting was a problem on campus but that no one would pay for the improvements.
"It hasnt even been on the wish list." Enstein said.
Campus lighting has been an issue in every Student Senate election in the past five years. Epstein said the University or the state should pay for the lighting improvements, not the students.
Better campus lighting is needed to ensure the safety of students, he said.
Epstein said he based the importance of better campus lighting on a 1985 KU campus lighting and crime study. The study included the estimated costs of the plan, a map of poorly lit areas that needed improvement and the number of campus crimes committed between 1977 and 1983.
The study indicated that the largest number of crimes investigated occurred in areas of University housing. Most crimes were committed in the Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall area and at Stouffer Place.
Police favor better lighting. Longacker said.
"Right now we have the most inefficient lights; they light the skies and trees, everything but the ground," he said.
It initially would cost $50,000 to improve lighting just on Jayhawk Boulevard. Estein said.
Wilfred Lee/KANSAN
A Lawrence firefighter hoses down the door frame of The Wood Works, a subsidiary of Quire Industries. Fire broke out yesterday afternoon at the building, which was originally part of a World War II prison camp, near 11th and Haskell streets. No one was injured. MaJ, Don Morrow of the Lawrence Fire Department said that although extra equipment was used because of the building's size, the fire was brought under control in 15 minutes. The Wood Works produces computer furniture.
Center helps voiceless speak
Staff writer
By Lynn Maree Ross
Verbal communication requires thoughts, a pair of vocal cords, a breath of air and the physical ability to express an idea. But sometimes people, through disease or injury, lose the ability to speak.
The Communication Aids Center at the University of Kansas Medical Center helps those who can't express themselves vocally to choose an alternate means of communication, Hannah Fenley, a speech-language pathologist at the Med Center, said yesterday.
Tom Guyette, also a speech-language pathologist at the Med Center in Kansas City, Kan., said the patients couldn't communicate because of a disease or injury such as muscular dystrophy, cerebral palsy, stroke or amytrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease.
The first step in patient evaluation, Fenley said, is to look at the patient's motivation, language and speech skills and financial situation.
The center is located in the Hearing and Speech Clinic. Fenley works in rehabilitation medicine and sees children with various disabilities in the children's rehabilitation unit.
Motivation is important, Fenley said. The most difficult obstacle for many patients to overcome is feeling unacceptable because they can't communicate. Many times, once the patient or his family discovers the advantage of using a communication aid, the desire to communicate overcomes negative feelings.
Patients are referred to the center from within the hospital or by a family doctor or other speech and language clinicians.
The center uses a number of aids when evaluating a patient. The simplest and most inexpensive is a piece of heavy paper with pictures glued to it. The most complicated and expensive aid is a computerized alphabet and word board.
Fenley said evaluation was important. If the patient is evaluated improperly, he could end up with the wrong aid.
Fenley said the types of pictures used on the board would depend on the needs of the patient. If the patient is immobile, she said, he may only need pictures of a glass, a plate of food and a toilet.
For patients who are partially mobile, the center has a computerized board. It uses letters and words or pictures depending on the language skills of the patient.
work best. A person with Lou Gehrig's disease, he said, might be unable to move his arms and would use a computerized board.
For example, one of the communication aids requires the patient to hold a plastic board, marked with the alphabet, in front of his face. If the patient's arms are not strong or are immobile, that aid wouldn't be useful.
Guyette said the type of disease or injury the patient had played a big part in determining which aid would
Learning to use the proper communication aid is important for people who have no other way to express themselves.
"It allows you to be more independent." Guyette said.
Fenley said a breakdown in communication meant someone couldn't share his own thoughts.
Someone who is immobile and can only shake or nod his head to communicate has to depend on others, Fenley said. If the person wants something he has to hope that someone will ask him the right question.
"Spontaneity is so limited," Fenley said.
Students pay more at center
By Sandra Crider
Fifth-year education students are in a financial Twilight Zone.
An ad hoc committee composed of University staff and one student is examining the special needs of the education students who are somewhere in the void between undergraduate and graduate status.
Paul Haack, acting dean of education, said the ad hoc committee, which met last week, was formed last semester because the pioneer students in the fifth-year program were facing new problems.
Students who attend the Regents Center in Overland Park are paying more tuition for the same education they would receive in Lawrence. And under federal financial aid requirements, the fifth-year education students are neither undergraduates nor graduates.
There are not enough fifth-year teaching internships within the Lawrence community, so many students must take jobs in the Kansas City area and take supplemental courses at the Regents Center, Haack said.
At the Regents Center, students are charged more for higher level courses, although all credit hours cost the same at the Lawrence campus. The Regents Center does not charge extra for out-of-state students, however.
Haack speculated that the Regents Center had different fee policies because of the special nature of the students there. Most of them are part-time students who live in Missouri. In Lawrence, most of the students are full-time and Kansas residents.
Regardless of the reason for the different fee schedules, students who take internships in Kansas City do paying more for the same education.
Students do not see the purpose for the different fee rates.
"They feel it's not fair to be paying more when they're over there at our convenience and not at theirs," Haack said.
Sherri Williams, Wichita fifteen-year student, said the center gave the students a special waiver last semester because the students were unaware that their tuition would be missed. The school district required Williams said officials informed them that the exception was a one-time event.
"Teachers who taught us over here are no different than those in Lawrence," she said. "As a matter of fact, they're the same people."
Another main concern of the committee is the inaccessibility of financial aid to fifth-year students. They already have earned a bachelor's degree at the end of four years, but have not yet completed the program.
According to Jerry Rogers, director of student financial aid, fifth-year students are ineligible for undergraduate grants and for graduate Guaranteed Student Loans that are twice as much as the undergraduate GSLs.
"All they have to do is straighten out the classification of the students and they'll be fine." Rogers said.
Students caught in the middle are going where no class has gone before, Williams said. Part of the problem is that the school didn't have clear policies when the program began, and many of changes were made along the way.
The committee will meet Tuesday to discuss the details of a special loan proposal for fifth-year students that it will present to the Kansas University Endowment Association.
"It's a lot better program now than it was when we first entered it, but it's been kind of trial and error as they get the kinks ironed out," she said.
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4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
1
Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A divisive message
When President Reagan came before the American people Tuesday, they were especially unified after sharing the disaster of the space shuttle Challenger. Reagan wasted no time slashing through that bond by delivering a strongly partisan State of the Union address.
Spouting rhetoric such as "breaking free failed policies" and "real and lasting emancipation" from welfare, Reagan tried to sugar-coat his narrow, uncompromising wish list.
He called for more money for defense, restructuring the welfare system, more foreign aid, prayer in the schools, an end to legal abortions and, of course, no tax increase.
If any were hilled by his flowery words and vague promises, however, they were slapped awake by his budget proposal the next day.
True to his words, he asked
for a defense increase — $15.9 billion to be exact. That translates to a 6.2 percent increase overall and a 75 percent increase in the Strategic Defense Initiative.
Reagan's budget would reduce the number of students receiving federal financial aid by 20 percent —1 million people.
Much of the budget-skewing results of this hike are made up by his proposed cuts in education. The $15.9 billion increase in defense is more than the total proposed education budget, which would sustain a $3.2 billion cut.
From a president who says he wants to "create a ladder of opportunity," who says he worries about deteriorating schools and pins the nation's future on the young, this budget proposal is hypocrisy.
In his own words, Reagan is asking the wrong people to tighten their belts.
Return to the stars
Ad astra per aspera. To the stars through difficulties.
For staggeringly tragic reasons, the Kansas state motoro took on a new and deeper meaning as the whole world watched seven brave astronauts die in the fiery explosion of the space shuttle Challenger last week.
In the short history of space travel, the difficulties have never been so great. But the need for us to pass through those difficulties and head back to the stars is far greater.
The "we" of this is important. Common citizens must not be left out of future space shuttle missions.
With good reason, it seems worse that one of our own, a simple civilian, died on the Challenger. But Christa McAuliffe knew of the dangers, and future civilians will be even more painfully
aware of the terror that can happen in a matter of seconds.
One more highly skilled, experienced astronaut on the Challenger would not have made a difference in the doomed flight.
In her application essay, Mrs. McAulieff said she hoped her voyage into space would help "complete and humanize the technology of the Space Age." The opportunity for that brand of enlightenment, whether it comes from a teacher, a journalist or anyone else, must not be taken from our grasp.
The entire world will hold its breath when a shuttle again lifts from the launch pad, and the anxiety almost surely will overwhelm us. But that day must come, and the common man must be along on that flight to share in the tension and joy as we return to the stars through our difficulties.
Perhaps even more important, a non-astronaut perception of all of the wonders of space travel has to be included as a priority when the National Aeronautics and Space Administration once again turns its thoughts toward the sky.
Catalog shopping
Student Senate's plan to publish a guide to professors and classes is worth endorsing once again.
Plans by KU officials to change drastically the adddrop procedure make the decision to publish the guide even more necessary.
Granted, the University needs to reduce the crush of students who clog the enrollment center adding and dropping classes. But any change should catch only those who are abusing the system.
The University, concerned about students who use add-drop to shop for classes, wants to restrict the number of classes a student can change after enrollment.
The proposed guide to professors, although not a complete solution, could encourage
students to do their shopping long before the classes meet.
The guide, promised for March, would provide course descriptions, a course evaluation and the comments of the instructor. It could also include required texts, essay assignments and tests for the course.
Even if the guide succeeds, there's still no guarantee that it would solve the problems with add-drop.
The Senate needs to solve both problems for the guide to be successful. Professors, in particular, need to benefit by inclusion in the guide.
But if students want to shop for classes, it is far more convenient for them, and the University, if they can make informed decisions before they go to their first class.
News staff
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Lauretta McMillen ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Cody McCurry ... Computer engineer
David Giles ... Sports editor
Brice Waddill ... Photo editor
Susanne Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nixon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Lori Eckart ... Classified employee
Caroline Innes ... Production manager
Pallen Lee ... National manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone 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 fewer than 700 words. The
The Kanan reserves the right to re edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newroom, 111 Stuaffer Fint Hall.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 690-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater Flint Hall, Lawn, Kan. 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at the U.S. Postal Service on behalf of students in Douglas County and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence. Kan. 68045.
Names for hurricanes dealt a blow
The list of names that will be given to hurricanes this year is out. I've always wondered who picks these names and why they pick the ones they do.
For example, one of this year's hurricanes will be named Orlene.
Hurricane Orlene? Orlene isn't even a real name as far as I know.
The same thing happens every hurricane season. A brutal storm will hurtle toward the Atlantic seaboard, threatening loss of lives and millions of dollars of property damage.
Then the weatherman tells me it's *Hurricane Tamara* that's on the way, and I find it hard to be concerned for those poor people. I think something named Tamara could only be a light breeze, wafting in from the ocean.
A spokesman for the National Weather Service in Miami said it has lists of names, which are repeated every six years. This year's list will come up again in 1992.
These names are confusing. Who came up with this system of naming?
The only change to the list comes from a "memorable" storm, such as Hurricane David in 1979, which killed 1,100 people. These storms have their
The names are selected so as to have an international bent and not to offend anyone, he said.
I
Chris Barber Editorial editor
But it seems that the weather service really stretched for some of these names. A look at a few of this year's proves that just about anything goes.
There are few rules governing naming of a hurricane. Since 1979, every other one has to be a male name.
The World Meteorological Society in Switzerland coordinates the naming process. The hurricane season begins June 1.
Lisa, Mitch, Nicole, Otto (Otto?),
Paula, Richard, Shary (why not
Sherri, or Sherry, etc.? Who decides
these things?), Thomas, Virginie
(why not Virginia?) and Walter.
Hurricanes for the Eastern Pacific: Agatha, Blas (This is a Spanish first name, okay, but Blas? Why would you pick this name? Who made this decision?) Celia, Darby (Darby?) Estelle, Frank, Georgeette, Howard, Isis, Javier, Kay, Lester, Madeline, Newton, Orlene, Paine, Roslyn, Seymour, Tina, Virgil, Winifred (nothing needs to be said about these last four).
Are these appropriate names for potentially deadly forces of nature? This system of naming is wrong. Hurricanes should get names that give people an idea of what to expect.
Hurricane Fifi struck Honduras in 1974, killing 2,000. These people probably all were sitting in their homes still giggling from finding out the hurricane was named Fifi.
I also would find it hard to be frightened of Hurricane Fifi. The same goes for many of the storms that may come this year, such as Hurricane Seymour or Hurricane Virgil, no matter what the weatherman says.
A person who buys a big, snarling Doberman doesn't name it Karen or
Alfred.
They give it a name that fits its personality, like Snarling Killer Beast. The same should go with hurricanes! A weak hurricane could be called Paradise Sammartha. Who besides could be Dirk, or Butch or Bertha.
Really bad ones could be Hurricane Jesse James, or Hurricane Attila the Hun. The strongest ones could be Hurricane Lou Ferrigno or Hurricane Charles Atlas.
Then we would know what to expect
Weathermen would then only have to say, "Hurricane Dirk is on the way," and everyone would know to run for cover.
If he said, "Hurricane Percy is op the way," everyone would know to take their umbrellas.
Actually, we may never get to see Hurricane Winifred or Virgil. There were only enough Atlantic hurricanes to get about halfway through the list last year. The leftovers are just put on hold for six years.
But the names at least should let us know what to expect.
You just don't look at a storm with 80-mile-an-hour winds that is about to wipe out your home and call it "Mitch."
Maybe they should just call the wind Maria.
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Space may bring hangover's demise
The suggestion of Sen. Jake Garn, R-Utah, that too little is being done to reduce the traffic toll caused by drunken motorists certainly will draw no quarrel from me.
Clearly, we need to make the roads safer for sober speeders, senators and reckless drivers. I am wondering, however, whether the Utah Republican, head of a Senate space group, realizes that one of the space program's spin-offs may be counterproductive.
1 refer to studies of space sickness by a Canadian astronaut-trainee.
This project, as previously reported here, could lead to the development of hangover-free alcoholic beverages.
I hardly need point out the consequences such a breakthrough could have. If spared morning-after maladies, more motorists might be tempted to down a few too many
Dick West
United Press International
before getting behind the wheel.
Anyway, after hearing Garn's comment, I undertook a more careful reading of the magazine article in which the original material appeared.
This time I learned that both space sickness, of the type Garn experienced during his shuttle ride, and inebriation, which he deplored, have something do with the inner ear.
Granted that only in extreme stages are you or a drinking companion likely to pour a cocktail in your ear. But the alcohol goes there just the same.
It seems that dizziness, nausea and disorientation can be caused by an unusual motion of the fluids in the inner ear's semicircular canals, which are the balancing organs.
Zero gravity permits fluids to slush against the canal walls and much the same thing happens when a person gets sloshed. Alcohol that is lighter than the liquids we normally have in our inner ears mixes with the heavier canal fluids, resulting in a certain amount of sloshing.
"Both the astronaut and the drunk feel as though they are moving, even though their eyes tell them they are not." The magazine Omni reported.
That's putting it mildly. I've been in taverns where all the barstools seemed to be moving and the occupants along with them. No wonder the occupants missed their mouths and poured highballs in their ears instead.
In theory, the magazine said, if the alcohol and a heavier liquid mix in the right proportions, their effects on
the inner ear might cancel each other out.
Hear! Hear! Three cheers for the right proportions. But what are they%
right proportions. But what are they? Until such time as there is an ant-hangover drug on the market, ask the bartender to serve you deuterum oxide as a chaser. Any well-stocked bar should have a good supply.
We all know that water, the most commonly used chaser, is composed of hydrogen and oxygen.
But deuterium has twice the mass of ordinary hydrogen and should compensate for the oxygen imbalance in ordinary water.
It could be, of course, that all this scientific jargon makes your head swim. In that case, you are on your own.
Today's Philippine election is garnering almost as much attention in the United States as in the Philippines.
A Marcos victory would only ensure that the widest strong man the United States has ever backed would remain in power. A victory by Corazon Aquino would give control of the strategically vital Philippines to a woman who has no practical political experience whatsoever.
As the first serious challenge to Ferdinand Marcos' autocratic rule, the election will yield only an incompetent government head no matter who wins.
While Marcos has the financial support of his cronies and a political machine long adept at shenanigans, Aquino has behind her great public sentiment because of her enormously popular husband, Benigno Aquino was killed on the tarmac of Manila's airport upon his return from self-imposed exile in August 1983.
News reports confirm that Marcos organizers are paying the unemployed and ordering the military to appear in multi, or civilian dress, in "spontaneous support" at Marcos rallies. Aquino, capitalizing on accusations that Marcos ordered the killing of her husband, draws large, enthusiastic crowds at all her appearances.
Paul Campbell
Staff columnist
Under a previous agreement with Marcos, the United States must provide about $900 million in economic and military aid through 1989 for the use of the Clark Air Base and Subic Bay Naval Base. Since the Philippine economy is, by State Department reports, in its worst shape since World War II, the winner of the election will not be able to ignore the possibility of asking for more aid in return for continued operation of Clark and Subic Bay into the 1990s.
Marcos has said he would permit its continued use, but Aquino has said she would put the issue to the voters in a plebisite.
Despite reports to the contrary, Marcos contends that the NPA is surrendering in droves. Aquino has said that she would allow communities in his state to use the police violence. Should the insurgency succeed, the United States naturally would lose its access to the bases and its strategic presence in the region.
In addition to a faltering economy, the new government will have an entrenched communist insurgency to contend with. The New People's Army is reported by a recent issue of Commentary magazine as being one of the must brutal communist movements ever.
Because of increasing unsteadiness with Marcos and the growing threat of the NPA, Pentagon specialists are spotting other locations for the Air Force and Navy bases should the climate in the
An issue of the election itself is fairness. Marcos certainly will attempt to interfere with the voting and tamper with the tallying. The Commission of Elections is widely regarded to be stacked with Marcos loyalists, Should Marcos win, detractors in the administration and Congress will have ammunition against further support of Marcos.
Philippines deteriorate. Guam Thailand, and Australia are mentioned as possibilities.
Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., who gave Marcos a letter last year from President Reagan urging reform dismisses the Pentagon's apprehensions as unnecessary worrying.
Opinions are divided as to the out come of today's election. Marcos' initial prediction of a complete rout have been scaled down to "comfortable victory." Salvador Laureo Aquino's politically astute vice presidential running mate, claims that the moderates will come out in such force as to guarantee an Aquino victory despite election tampering.
Regardless, the future of the U.S. facilities at Clark Air Base and Sibue Bay Naval Base hangs in the balance, with the United States waiting for the results, hoping for a fair election. Untempered U.S. support of Marcos in his past years in power may result in a search for a new home by the 13th Air Force Command and the 7th Fleet.
The election, regardless of the outcome, will not ease the situation in the volatile Philippines.
Friday. Feb. 7, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Pit bull
Continued from p. 1
ment and send it to officials of each city to review.
Then, she said, the group of officials would meet a final time to pass an ordinance.
A county-wide ordinance must be the approval of each city to go into effect.
If it does not, any ordinance passed by the county commission would only be effective in the unincorporated parts of the county, which is the county's jurisdiction, she said.
Mayor Mike Amyx, Commissioner Howard Hill and Assistant City Manager Mike Wildgen represented Lawrence at the meeting.
Appeals
Amyx said after the meeting that Lawrence city officials might want to incorporate some of the changes discussed in the city's vicious dog ordinance.
'We're probably going to wait
Wildgen said he doubted the city commission would take any action soon.
and see what everybody does," he said.
One pit bull owner, Bot Billa,
Kansas City, Kan., said after the meeting that he had come to oppose the type of breed-specific laws that banned pit bulls from Shawnee.
About 20 people attended the meeting, and most seemed to agree with the direction the officials were taking - against all vicious dogs rather than just one breed.
inside Youngberg Hall on May 3. They were Learned, Otto, and Laird Okie, a 1983 graduate from Lawrence.
Shepard said that the three were given clear and adequate notice by KU police and that the trespassing law under which they were convicted was not unconstitutionally vague.
Continued from p. 1
10 hours of community service and told to pay court costs.
The demonstrators were protecting Endowment Association investments in companies that do business in South Africa, because of the country's practice of apartheid.
Ungerman said she was very pleased by the rulings. She said members of the KU Committee on South Africa
Each of the three was sentenced to
"The Endowment Association is still helping to maintain a system where racism is the law," she said.
would continue to speak out for divestment in South Africa.
Okie said that, despite his conviction, he would continue to be active in the KU Committee on South Africa and would not rule out the possibility of participating in similar protests.
Election
NAMFREL volunteers, Lazore said, were ordered to pull out of Manila's affluent business district polls after harassment that made their work impossible.
with M18s were approaching," he said.
Continued from p. 1
A NAMFREL spokesman said indelible ink put on the voters' fingers to prevent them from voting twice turned out to be "not-so-indelible" and washed off easily.
Catholic radio Veritas said one woman voter said she was paid 100 pesos — about $2.55 — for a carbon copy of her ballot, giving a vote for
At another polling place, the local election chairman was caught inserting Marcos calendars and 75 pesos — $3.95 — into each ballot, Namfrel said.
Marcos
another 44 monitors from 19 nations:
"We are not covering up anything."
Marcos said. "We are not going to hide anything."
Long lines formed even before the polls opened in the special election, called 16 months early under U.S. pressure to introduce more democracy. The Philippines is home to the two largest U.S. military installations in the Pacific - Subic Bay Naval Base and Clark Air Base.
Marcos predicted an easy ano honest win and welcomed Lugar plus
"Today is my day," Aquino said. "I have never been more confident in my life of anything. I am going to win and I owe it all to the Filipino people."
Aquino, 53, who cast her ballot in a wooden schoolhouse on her family's sugar cane plantation in Hacienda Lusita 50 miles north of the capital, predicted victory.
Pensions
Continued from p.1
In the letter, Cobb also objected to a federal income tax on university pension plans and a proposal that would impose rules that the pension plans must meet to receive favorable tax treatment.
The Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association and College Retirement Equities Fund an insurance company that handles many KU employee pension plans, defined
these rules to universities in a December letter.
The fund would become subject to federal taxation on Jan. 1, 1988, which would lead to the taxation of pension plans at 3,700 schools, said James G. MacDonald, chairman.
Cobb said these taxes would reduce existing pension benefits and increase the costs of future benefits.
MacDonald said another proposal.
would require KU administrators to prove that they were meeting certain design and participation rules.
Cobb said imposing the rules would be very expensive. The administration would have to pay for legal counsel and any plan changes to comply regularly with the rules.
The proposal would be difficult to enact because University employees have different retirement plans.
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CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL OF YOU FORTUNATE ENOUGH TO HAVE BEEN BORN DURING THE YEAR OF THE TIGER
THE TIGER: You are sensitive, emotional, and capable of great love. However, you have a tendency to get carried away and be stubborn about what you think is right; often you are seen as a "hot head" or rebel. Your sign shows you would be excellent as a boss, explorer, race car driver, or matador. Some Tigers: Marco Polo, Marilyn Monroe.
1986--YEAR
1986--YEAR OF THE TIGER SPECIAL
A special new dinner (including drink, soup, appetizer, and main dish) has been created especially to appeal to the appetite of Tigers. Your choice from eight new dishes. Or, just come sample one of the 50 new items on our 1986 menu.
As a salute to you, the House of Hupei offers a 20% discount for anyone born in a Tiger Year (1914, 1926, 1938, 1950, 1962, 1974, 1986), starting on Chinese New Year's Day February 9 and continuing until February 6, 1987.
Tigers providing proof of the year of their birth can get dinner half price on the night of their birthday during the Year of the Tiger (February 9, 1986-February 6, 1987).
HALF PRICE DINNER FOR TIGERS
TIGER DINNER SPECIAL
Those born in 1903, 1915, 1927, 1939, 1951, 1963, 1975, need not feel neglected. A similar discount awaits you in 1987-- THE YEAR OF THE RABBIT--starting on Chinese New Years Day February 6, 1987.
RABBITS:
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WITH EACH ORDER $8.95
APPETIZERS MAIN DISHES
EGG ROLLS OR Your choice of...
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KING CRAB MEAT WITH MUSSE ROOM
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RUSSIAN SOUP TRIPLE OR
STARTS FEB.8 1986
To make reservations early call 843-8070 2201
湖北
6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
Campus/Area
20 percent could lose aid at KU
By Lori Polson Staff writer
President Reagan's proposed budget cuts may put some KU students in a financial bind, the director of financial aid said yesterday.
The proposed cuts would decrease federal financial aid to 20 percent of the college students who are now eligible to receive aid.
Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said students from middle- to low-income families probably would lose the most from the cuts.
"It has to hurt somewhere along the line," he said.
Reagan presented his budget plan to Congress on Wednesday. It requested an immediate $1 billion cut in the Department of Education for fiscal year
1986 and additional cuts to save a total of $2.6 billion in fiscal year 1987.
Although the budget cuts won't officially affect students until the 1987-88 school year, Rogers said, there is a good chance that the interest rate on guaranteed student loans will be increased next year.
The 5-percent interest rate for GSLs probably will be raised to $1\frac{1}{2}$ percent next year, he said.
"One of the reasons the program is so expensive is because the government is paying all this interest for all these loans," he said. "The cost must be absorbed somewhere."
The government also may change its payment schedule for Pell Grants next year, he said. Pell Grants are free financial awards based on need.
Rogers said the amount of money awarded to each student might decrease but the University wouldn't know for sure until later this spring.
The Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant Program probably would be discontinued for the 1987-88 school year, Rogers said. If that happens, the University could lose $460,000 in aid to students
David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said it was too soon to tell whether the expected decrease in financial aid would cause a decline in enrollment at the University.
"It would depend on whether or not we would have the resources available to help those students who would not be able to attend school without aid," he said.
Black students to attend conference
By Brian Kaberline
Staff writer
Staff Writer
A group of students plans to leave today for a weekend of work and play at the 1986 Big Eight Conference on Black Student Government.
The conference, sponsored by the University of Missouri, will feature workshops and presentations for leaders of black student organizations as well as a gospel music program, a student pageant and parties for the students and their advisers.
Although the conference is directed at students from Big Eight schools, students from across the
country plan to attend, conference organizers said yesterday. The theme for this year's meeting is "A People United Will Never Be Divided."
The delegation from the University of Kansas will include Vernell Spearman, director of minority affairs; Michele Van, assistant director of minority affairs; officers of the Black Student Union and the winners of KU's Mr. Ebony and Miss Essence pageant.
Eddie Watson, president of the BSU, said many students planned to attend the conference and the Inspirational Gospel Voices, a KU group, would
perform in the gospel program.
KU's Mr. Ebony and Miss Essence for 1986, Anthony Butcher, St. Louis freshman, and Karen Franklin, Kansas City freshman, will vie for the titles of Mr. Ebony and Miss Essence for the Big Eight conference.
Speakers for the conference include Michael Middleton, one of the founders of the conference, and Thomas Jenkins, president of Lincoln University in Jefferson City, Mo. The keynote address will be delivered by syndicated columnist William Raspberry.
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Served with tater curl fries, fritter, bread,
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THE TASTE THAT WON THE WEST
719 MASSACHUSETTS
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KANSAS SPORTS
BAR & GRILL
Open 11-5 every Sunday
$100----1/4 Ib. Burger & Ch
$200----Large Pitchers
$100----Bloody Marys &
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7th & Mass. Private Reciprocal Club 749-1347
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Register and pay $15 material fee at the Student Assistance Center,
121 Strong Hall.
Six hours of instruction
Tuesdays, February 11, 18 and 25
(Six hours of instruction.)
ZI STRONG HAL
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121 Strong Hall. Class size limited
CONGRATULATIONS 1986 PHI KAP INITIATES
THE TWENTY-FOURTH EDITION
Your Brothers
PRE-MED STUDENTS
Representatives from the University of Kansas School of Medicine will be on campus to visit with students on an individual basis on the following dates:
- Monday, February 17
- Monday, February 24
- Monday, March 3
- Monday, March 17
- Monday, March 24
Events Take Place:
Friday, Feb 14
Kansas Union
Ballroom
Tickets $4
at SUA Box Office
- Monday, April 7
Interested students may schedule a 20-minute appointment. To do so, see the Pre-Med Secretary at 106-C Strong Hall. Office hours posted.
The Fanatix
PARTY #2
how about last night?
Sons Of Liberty
AGAIN NEXT WEEK
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1603 W. 15th
843-4993
Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
7
On the Record
A 1976 Datsum, valued at $2,000,
was stolen at about 7 p.m. Tuesday
from a parking lot in the 2400 block of
Kresse Road, Lawrence police said.
Sunglasses, two cassette tapes
and a radar detector, valued together
at $320, were stolen Wednesday or
yesterday from an unlocked car in
the 2900 block of Stratford Road,
police said.
On Campus
Stereo equipment, a microwave, a camera and jewelry, valued together at $1,900, were stolen between 9 p.m. Wednesday and 1 a.m. yesterday from two KU students' apartment in the 2400 block of West 25th Street, police said. Thieves entered by forcing open a sliding glass door.
*Peter Erlander will discuss "The History of the Farm Crisis" at 12:30
p. m. for today's Brown Bag Lunch in Room 309 of the Burge Union.
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about ecology or political injustice' without seeing the religious context,' Haralson said.
American Entrepreneurs will pay you to become an entrepreneur. Your resume will be on our Nationwide Videotex Network. You will enjoy the importance, status and prestige of being a successful entrepreneur. Get the information to get the mega bucks February 7, 7:30 p.m. at the Holidome. (KU applications limited to 150 for February).
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
The 50-minute presentation has 3,000 slides, music and dialogue. Twenty-four projectors flash such images as pollution, idols, poverty, joy and depression on a 50-foot-wide screen accompanied by music and dialogue.
He said the show was aimed at college students and raised questions such as "Why am I in school?" and "Where am I going in life?"
The goals of the presentation were to stimulate thinking about God and to make people aware that he existed in society, according to Art Oden, Sterling sophomore and president of the KU chapter of Intervarsity Christian Fellowship.
Monthly income checks for you . . . right now.
Ronald Reagan, President
Habakkuk is the name of a minor prophet in the Bible, Odean said. Habakkuk questioned God about many of the events that occurred during his day, just as the film questions events of the 1980s.
Edmund Haralson, campus minister for the Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, said even though the show was designed to stimulate thinking about God and religion, it spoke to a broad audience.
Slides showing sunsets, carnivals, Vietnam and poverty accompanied by soft rock music and thought-provoking dialogue composes Habakuk, a presentation held last night.
"...this is the revolutionary age of the entrepreneur."
"It's the largest show of its kind," said Kim Haley, leader of MMCP Productions, a group that is taking the show to college campuses across the United States.
The show, held in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union, was sponsored by
Film aims to arouse thoughts on God
people to come away from this show thinking."
Nationwide Videoet Network catalyzing America's future — today
"The show is trying to make people aware of God, that he is pertinent today as well as in the past," he said. "We are not trying to shove this idea down their throats. The show is more awareness-raising. We want
(Offer not limited by age, sex, race or gradex.)
"We've had people come out of the film saying, 'That was a great film
AMERICAN Entrepreneurs
AMERICAN Entrepreneurs
The show is in its second week of a three-month tour. The presentation has been traveling since 1980 and was on KU's campus in 1983.
By Barbara Shear
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the Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, a conservative, evangelical Christian movement.
AEN
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University Audio/video
2319 Louisiana Lawrence
841-3775
MasterCard
8
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
Wheel spins $25,000 to four
United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Four people, including a St. Louis electrician who wied for a prize on his birthday, won $25,000 yesterday by spinning the money wheel in the first jackpot finalist game of the Missouri Lottery.
No one won the top prize — $1,035,246 — which included the $1 million jackpot and an additional amount based on statewide sales of lottery tickets. Only the first person to hit the jackpot would receive the additional amount. The $1 million now is added to next week's jackpot final game.
Thomas P. Schulze of St. Louis said he would use part of his winnings to help defray the cost of college for his 16-year-old daughter.
He said he bought his ticket at a St. Louis bar called, "Off Broadway," where he was doing the electrical wiring. Since he won, he said he has bought more tickets.
"I have another entry ticket in my pocket, and I want to give it to them today," he said.
There were 30 people chosen to spin the wheel for a chance to win a top prize. They were selected in a random drawing from more than 42,000 tickets which qualified for this game. The 30 people were awarded a total of $179,500.
The other three top winners — Larry V. Gass of St. Joseph, Mo., Ed Jarman of Bolivar, Mo. and Dena Nuzum of Sedalia, Mo. — also were elated.
"When you work all your life, it's hard to come up here and go home with this amount," said Nuzum, a 38-year-old hair stylist.
Gene R. Lapetra of Kansas City, Kan., won $10,000 and plans to take a vacation.
Kansas does not have a lottery, though state officials are discussing whether one should be instituted.
Two other winners also were from out of state: Robert A. Alder Jr. of Lenexa won $1,500 and Joseph J. Cannella of Alton, Ill., won $1,000. Illinois has a state lottery.
Lori A. Young, 61, of Mountain View, Mo., came the closest to winning the $1 million when the ball landed in the slot but fell out. She won $1,500.
There are 100 divisions on the wheel, and each person who spins wins money. There are 33 places worth $1,100, 23 worth $1,500, 20 that pay $2,000, 15 worth $10,000, eight worth $25,000 and one worth $1 million.
The wheel was surrounded by a black ring with numbers on it which could be moved to let a finalist place his lucky number beside the $1 million jackpot slot.
The checks were-handed out after the taping of the show, with federal income taxes withheld.
Lottery officials bar newsmen from filming the Jackpot game
United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Officials of the Missouri Lottery yesterday prohibited television news cameramen from taking their equipment into the studio for the first "Jackpot Finalist" game.
Thirty people had the opportunity to spin a wheel and win more than $1 million. No one won the top prize, but four people did win $25,000 each.
The wheel spins occurred at the studios of public television station, KCPT-TV. An abbreviated taped version of the event was scheduled to be broadcast on a statewide network of nine television stations at 5:58 p.m. and 10:28 p.m.
Camera crews from two Kansas City television stations, WDAF-TV and KMBC-TV, and a Springfield station that attemp
red to cover the lottery as a news event were not permitted in the studio.
"All of the media are invited to come in," Pam Koupal, director of communications for the Lottery, said.
However, KCTV-TV, Fairway, Kan., a suburb of Kansas City, Mo., won the contract to produce the 3½ minute game show. Based on that contract, television news cameras from other stations were barred, Koal said.
"What amazed me this morning was that here we are attending a public event in a public television station and TV news is barred from covering it." Michael Sullivan, news director for KMBC-TV, told United Press International.
Sullivan said he wanted to cover the game as a news event, not as a program.
---
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Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship presents
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THE GUARDER
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一
HERE IS THE GOD OF HEAVEN?
The prophet Habakukkul cites out in a world like our own, filled with violets and the God of good! More than two dozen projections, fully automated. An original score. A multi-image look at the meaning of history, faith and security.
GABARRUR
704 Mass.
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we also deliver
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Feb. 6, 7, 8 at 8:00 p.m.
Matinee Feb. 8 at 2:00 p.m.
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it's F/X ...it means Special Effects
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STARTS FRIDAY AT A SPECIALLY SELECTED THEATRE NEAR YOU
Rollie Tyler is the movies' best special effects man.
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It's F/X ...it means Special Effects
A DODI FAYED JACK WIENER Production A ROBERT MANDEL Film "F/X"
BRYAN BROWN BRIAN DENNEHY DIANE VENORA CLIFF DeYOUNG Music by BILL CONTI
Production Designer MEL BOURNE Director of Photography MIROSLAV ONDRICEK Executive Producer MICHAEL PEYSER
Written by ROBERT T. MEGGINSON & GREGORY FLEEMAN Produced by DODI FAYED and JACK WIENER
R RESTRICTED UNDER 17 REQUIRES ACCOMPLISHING PARENT OR ADULT GUARDIAN
Directed by ROBERT MANDEL
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Let the others brown-bag it. You're calling Domino's Pizza for a tasty, nutritious lunch delivered to your office in less than 30 minutes. Make an executive decision. Reach for the phone and order lunch from Domino's Pizza.
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Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
Nation/World
University Daily Kansan
9
Pope prays for victims
United Press International
MANGALORE, India — A weary Pope John Paul II prayed yesterday for the souls of victims who died in the 1984 chemical leak at a Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, calling it one of the tragedies that accompany man's efforts to make progress.
Exhausted after hours in 95-degree heat, the 65-year-old pontiff completed the sixth day of his hectic 10-day tour by kissing the glass coffin containing the remains of St. Francis Xavier, one of the church's greatest missionaries.
At a service attended by about 300,000 people in Mangalore, 1,120 miles south of New Delhi, the pope prayed for the 1,700 to 2,500 people killed in the Dec. 3, 1984, chemical disaster in the central Indian city of Bhopal.
"The pope said the people killed in the accident at a Union Carbide pesticide plant were "victims of the tragedies that accompany man's efforts to make progress."
He said those who survived the accident had suffered greatly. "I pray that they will experience the fullness of fraternal solidarity of which they have need," he said.
An estimated 200,000 people were injured. Thousands of people, most of them slum dwellers, still suffer lung aliments that prevent them from working.
The pope was dehydrated and tired after two open-air services yesterday. Vatican spokesman Joaquín Navarro told reporters, but John Paul perked up after a 20-minute rest.
The pope also prayed for "the Lord to send abundant rain down upon the parched land" of the surrounding, drought-struck area. Several in the crowd fainted from the sweltering heat.
The pontiff later returned to Goa, where he viewed the remains of St. Francis Xavier — one of the church's first and greatest missionaries in India.
He kissed the glass over the saint's
head and viewed the corpse's feet, one toe of which was bitten off by an overly devoted worshipper in 1854, two years after the saint's death.
Earlier in Goa, John Paul told a crowd of 200,000 at a mass that the church must work to heal ideological and ethnic differences among people.
In every country, he said, "can be found opposing groups and factions, rivalries arising from prejudice and ideologies, from historical stereotypes and ethnic barriers — none of which are worthy of our human dignity."
The pope has been buoyed by the warm reception he received in southern India, which contrasted with the polite but cool welcome he got from relatively small crowds in New Delhi at the beginning of his tour.
Southern India, with a history of Christianity dating back to 52 A.D. is the home of the country's most fervent Catholics. Christians, however, make up less than 3 percent of the country's 750 million people.
5 men killed when coal pile collapses underneath them
United Press International
FAIRVIEW, W.Va. - Five men inspecting a conveyor system at a coal plant were killed yesterday when the coal pile they were standing on collapsed and buried them, officials said.
The accident occurred about 9:50 a.m. at Consolidation Coal Co.'s Loveridge preparation plant in northern West Virginia, said Paul Kverderis, a spokesman at the company's headquarters in Pittsburgh.
Three of the victims were Consol engineers and the other two worked for an outside contracting company, Kvdersis said. The names of the victims were not released pending notification of their families.
"Apparently, the five had climbed atop the coal pile to inspect a conveyor system," Kvederis said. "The coal pile collapsed beneath them, trapping them."
The first victim was recovered at 10:40 a.m., and the last victim was removed from the pile almost 30 minutes later, he said.
Emergency crews used shovels for nearly an hour in an attempt to rescue the trapped men. All were reported dead at the scene.
No other employees were involved, and there were no other reports of injuries, Kvederis said.
Pat Brady, a staff assistant with the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration office, confirmed the company's version of the accident.
"My understanding from the representative we had at the site was that they were on the coal pile. They were looking at a tripper belt on the conveyor system, but that's very preliminary," he said.
If the men were standing on the pile, Brady said, it may be a violation of federal safety regulations.
"We have federal regulations requiring them not to walk on a pile like that," he said. "But we must determine what the exact scenario was."
THANK HEAVENS KINKO'S IS OPEN SUNDAYS.
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HABARRUR
VIOLENT CRIME IS ON THE RISE: WHERE IS GOD'S JUSTICE??
Feb. 6, 7, 8
8 p. m.
Feb. 8
2 p.m.
Kansas Union $3 Donation
Elijah McCoy
1986 BLACK HISTORY CALENDAR
Elijah McCoy
Andrew C. Wol
Elijah McCoy
Madame C.J. Walker
Garrett A. Morgan
Dorothy Boulding Fe
Madame C.J. Walker
Garrett A. Morgan
Tuesday INSPIRATIONAL GOSPEL VOICES — Mini Concert. Free and open to the public.
February 4 7 to 8 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Student Union.
Nina Dobson
Wednesday "APARTHEID AND THE TRAGEDY OF SOUTH AFRICA", Donald Woods, Writer, Broadcaster and Lecturer. 8 p.m. — Kansas Union Ballroom. Free and open to the public. Sponsored by the University of Kansas Lecture Series.
Friday- BIG EIGHT CONFERENCE ON BLACK STUDENT
Sunday GOVERNMENT, Columbia, Missouri.
February 7-9
Charles B. Dr.
Monday- Sunday BLACK HISTORY MONTH DISPLAY by Watkins Community Museum. Display Case, level 4 of the Kansas Union. February 10:16
Thursday SUSAN TAYLOR, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, ESSENCE
February 13 MAGAZINE. Free and open to the public.
p.m., Alderson Auditorium.
PENGUIN
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Saturday "MINORITIES IN THE LAW" DAY. Keynote address by Julian February 15 Bond. 7 p.m., Hoch Auditorium. Sponsored by BALSA.
FILM SERIES — Sponsored by Spencer Museum of Art. "Two Centuries of Black American Art" & "Black Has Always Been Beautiful", 2 p.m., Spencer Museum Auditorium.
Sunday "Two Centuries of Black American Art" & "Black Has Always February 16 Been Beautiful", 1 p.m. — Spencer Museum Auditorium. "ALVIN AILEY: MEMORY & VISIONS", 2 p.m. Spencer Museum Auditorium. Introduction by Janet Hamburg, Director of Dance at KU.
Monday "Two Centuries of Black American Art" & "Black Has Always February 17 Been Beautiful", 2 p.m., Spencer Museum Auditorium.
Tuesday & Wednesday ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATRE, presented by the KU School of Fine Arts Concert Series, 8 p.m., nightly in Hoch February Auditorium. Tickets available in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats reserved.
Saturday AFRICAN STUDENT NIGHT, sponsored by the African Students February 22 Association, Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 11th, 4 p.m. to 12 midnight.
Tuesday LUTHER WILLIAMS, PRESIDENT OF ATLANTA UNIVERSITY,
February 25 Atlanta, Georgia (time and place to be announced).
Wednesday "AFRICAN CULTURAL HERITAGE" — The Performing Arts — February 26 Professor Nubidi Nwafer, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Free and open to the public. Athletes are invited by the Office of Minority
Activities are sponsored by the Office of Minority Affairs unless otherwise indicated. MONTH 1986
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10
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
Mother is arrested after 9th baby dies
United Press International
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. — Officials said yesterday that they had investigated a mysterious string of nine child deaths in one family and failed to find any suspicious until the ninth death, which led to charging the mother with murder.
A statement by the children's mother, Marybeth Timning, to police regarding the most recent death and an extensive autopsy brought a charge of second-degree murder against Timning on Wednesday, Gerald Looney, state police captain, said.
Tinning, 43, is charged with killing her 4-month-old daughter, Tami Lynne, who died Dec. 20, 1985. Laboratory tests showed the baby was smothered, officials said.
Tami Lynne was the ninth Timing child to die before the age of five during the last 14 years. The previous eight deaths are now considered suspicious, police said. Timing and her husband, Joseph, have no remaining children.
Officials said they had run into dead ends when investigating the previous deaths because the deaths always were listed as due to natural causes.
Three of the investigations had gone the full route. Richard Nelson, Schenectady police chief, said. A call to the state's child abuse hotline began the current investigation.
Nelson said several sources contacted both his department and John Poersch, Schenectady county district attorney, after Tamy Lilne's death.
The investigation began immediately, he said.
As in two of the previous deaths, Robert Sullivan, Schenectady county chief medical examiner, first thought the death of Tami Lymne was due to sudden infant death syndrome. But because of the 'Tinnings' history, more laboratory studies were ordered and it was determined the infant had suffocated.
The state police forensic unit, formed last year to aid criminal investigations, was brought in to review autopsy results and medical records. An autopsy had been performed on six of the Tinning children, officials said.
A release from authorities listed the deaths of the Tinning children and a report in the Albany Knickerbocker News added the cause of deaths as follows:
Jennifer, Jan. 3, 1972, at the age of 7 days of respiratory failure.
Joseph, Jan. 20, 1972, at 2 years of cardio-respiratory arrest.
Barbara, March 2, 1972, at $4 \frac{1}{2}$ years of brain edema.
- Timothy, Dec. 10, 1973, at 14 days of survival, infant death syndrome
Nathan, Sept. 2, 1975, at 5 months of acute pulmonary edema.
Jonathan, March 24, 1980, at 3 months of cardio-pulmonary arrest.
Mary Francis, Feb. 22, 1979, at $3_{1/2}$ months of sudden infant death syndrome.
Michael, March 2, 1981, at $ \frac{2}{3} $ years (no cause available).
*Tami Lynne, Dec. 20, 1985, at 4 months of suspected suffocation.
Mike Horton-Special to the KANSAN
(1)
Robert Hafferkamp, a landscaper for the department of facilities and operations, endures the cold and snowy weather to rake leaves. Hafferkamp and other landscapers worked yesterday afternoon to clear the campus of fallen leaves.
Raking it in
ST. LOUIS — The Missouri Court of Appeals didn't buy the story of a man who said his wife's lover was shot in the stomach by his shotgun-wielding poode.
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Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
Nation/World
University Daily Kansan
11
Hospitals plea for relief
United Press International
BOSTON — Hard-hit hospitals with backed-up emergency rooms and dwindling operating room schedules clamored yesterday for relief from soaring malpractice premiums.
The premiums have prompted a slowdown by half of the state's obstetricians and orthopedic surgeons, who are protesting the premium increases.
"Our ability to treat patients is being affected," said spokesman Robert Johnson at Norwood Hospital, where all of the obstetricians have stopped seeing new patients and the orthopedic surgeons have ceased surgery.
Orthopedic patients caught in the doctors' protest are being transferred by ambulance to other hospitals. With five orthopedic patients being transferred within a 24-hour period, Johnson said, the
immediate result was a backup in the emergency room.
Norwood Hospital administrators, along with others running hospitals in similar situations, have been telephoning the office of Gov. Michael Dukakis and legislators in hopes of getting a speedy solution to the skvrocketing rates.
The physicians are protesting an average 62 percent hike in malpractice premiums that will climb to between $40,000 and $60,000 a year beginning April 30 — fees many physicians say will eat up their income and savings.
The doctors are particularly angry over a Dec. 27 ruling by the State DiySION of Insurance which hiked the premiums retroactive to 1983 based on increasing jury awards and escalating claims,
"The situation has become acute," Johnson said on the fourth day of the job action. "And next
week we're going to see the impact on operating room schedules."
Noting that orthopedic surgery normally constitutes 10 percent of admissions, Johnson said, the curtailment of services would have a significant financial effect.
Spokeswoman Rigney Cunningham said, "The problem is reaching crisis proportions. We're telling legislators they have a responsibility to the community to act soon."
At Newton-Wellesley Hospital, where 75 percent of the obstetricians stopped accepting new patients, administrators invited lawmakers to come to the hospital and discuss the situation.
She said pregnant women without doctors were being advised to go to other obstetricians or the hospital's prenatal clinic for treatment by nurse practitioners.
First case of child giving AIDS to his mother reported by CDC
United Press International
ATLANTA — Federal health officials reported the first case of a child giving AIDS to his mother yesterday but said the incident did not indicate that routine contact could cause the disease.
The national Centers for Disease Control said the 2-year-old child contracted acquired immunity deficiency syndrome through a blood transfusion and passed it on to the mother during nursing care that involved extensive unprotected exposure to the child's blood and body secretions and excretions.
"Transmission of the HTLV-3-LAV (AIDS) infection from child to parent has not been previously reported," the CDC said.
The CDC, which has said there has been no evidence to show that AIDS
is spread by casual contact, said "the contact between the reported mother and child is not typical of the usual contact that could be expected in a family setting.
"None of the family members of the over 17,000 AIDS patients reported to CDC have been reported to have AIDS, except a small number of sexual partners of patients, children born to infected mothers, or family members who themselves had other established risk factors for AIDS."
It said seven studies involving over 350 family members of both adults and children with AIDS had found no evidence of AIDS transmission within families other than among sex partners, children born to infected mothers or family members with risk factors for AIDS.
One such report published this
week in the New England Journal of Medicine concluded that the risk of acquiring AIDS through household contact was virtually non-existent.
Dr. Harold Jaffe of the CDC's AIDS task force said, "This mother was extensively involved in the nursing care of her child, both in the hospital and the home. That care caused her to have frequent contact with the child's blood, and she was presumably infected through that contact.
"This is not the situation we would see for the majority of family members treating AIDS patients. In no way do we think this represents some kind of casual contact transmission. It is an unusual case."
The CDC said the mother did not take precautions to prevent infection with the AIDS virus, such as wearing gloves.
Doctor says serum causes false results
United Press International
CHICAGO — AIDS antibodies have been found in a common blood preparation used in warding off measles and hepatitis, but federal authorities did not tell physicians about it, a doctor said yesterday.
A person cannot contract AIDS by being injected with gamma globulin, the blood preparation, because it contained only antibodies to the AIDS virus and not the virus itself. However, the preparation can trigger a positive AIDS antibody test, said Dr. Donald Steele, a California dermatologist.
Such a false report could devastate a patient emotionally and subject a physician to legal liability, Steele said in a letter to the Journal of the American Medical Association.
A spokesman for the Food and Drug Administration, while not disputing the facts, said Steele was overreacting to a theoretical problem.
"We're not even aware of a case where (a false positive test) has occurred," said Dr. Thomas Zuck of the FDA's Blood and Blood Products division. "There's an enormous number of theoretical cases possible when you're dealing with something like this."
Zuck said he was not surprised when Steele told him that two samples of gamma globulin had turned up positive for antibodies to HTLV-3, the virus thought to be responsible for the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. He said gamma globulin was derived in part from the blood plasma of hepatitis victims, many of whom also have been exposed to the AIDS virus.
Although the FDA knew it was possible that an injection of tainted preparation could cause the false positive test, Zuck said, the agency chose not to make a public statement
Zuck said it had not been proven that contaminated gamma globulin could trigger a positive AIDS test.
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V
12
University Daily Kansan
Philippines Election
Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
PHILIPPINES/Almanac
- People:
Population: 55.5 million. Language: Filipino, English (both official). Ethnic groups: Malays (the majority); Chinese, Americans and Spanish are minorities. Religions: Roman Catholics — 83 percent; Protestants — 9 percent; Muslims — 5 percent.
Dongguan.
Geography:
Economy:
Capital: Quezon City, pop. 1.1 million. (Manila, 1.6 million, is the de facto capital). Area: 115,831 sq. mi. The country consists of about 7,100 islands; about 95 percent of the population lives on the 11 largest islands.
Electronics
Chief crops; Sugar, rice, corn, pineapple. Minerals: Cobalt, copper, gold, nickel. All natural resources belong to the state.
Only Philippine citizens or corporations that are 60 percent owned by citizens can exploit the natural resources.
Government:
Republic, Head of state. President Ferdinand Marcos. Marcos became president in December 1965. Martial law was declared in September 1972 and lifted in January 1981. At that time, Marcos was elected to a new 6-year term, winning 88 percent of the vote.
Reagan wants to maintain Philippine bases and amity
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — No matter who wins the election in the Philippines, the United States will attempt to maintain its military bases there, as well as the historic friendship between the two nations, President Reagan said yesterday.
Reagan was asked about the election race between President Ferdinand Marcos and Corazon Aquino during an Oval Office photo session. Asked how he would judge whether the outcome of the election was free and fair, Reagan said, "That's up to the people of the Philippines to decide."
The president refused to comment
on such matters as Aquino's lack of access to television in the campaign, saying it would be improper for him to criticize their method of conducting the election.
Reagan said, "The United States and the Philippines have had an historic friendship for many years, and we want it to continue. When they have made their decision, which is theirs to make, as to the future government, why we will seek to go along with their decision and to maintain our relationship with the Philipines."
In response to a question, Reagan said the United States wanted to maintain its military bases in the Philippines.
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1986 THE YEAR OF TIGER CHINESE NEW YEAR'S EVE DINNER PARTY
Place: Lawrence Community Center
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Chinese Dinner Lantern Riddle
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Dancing Party
MANILA, Philippines — A spokesman for Corazon Aquino charged yesterday that millions of fake ballots had been handed out to military commanders to ensure President Ferdinand Marcos' victory in today's presidential election.
Admission:
Tickets on sale in SUA Box office
Aquino says fake ballots given
Yu-Chuen, Lin 749-3122
Su-Fang, Chen 843-4393
Winston, Chen 841-9760
United Press International
Rene Sagusag, Aquino campaign spokesman, said 2.2 million phony balloons were delivered to Brig. Gen. Cesar Tapia on Tuesday at Awang Airport in the central Mindanao province of Cotabato.
sponsored by Chinese Students Association
Sagusug said the information was obtained from reliable sources. His
He quoted a telegram from Omar Dianalan, a recent defector to the political opposition from Marcos ruling New Society Movement, the KBL, as saying, "KBL leaders, particularly mayors and their goons," were threatening violence against Aquino supporters.
Saguisag said the ballots were to be distributed secretly throughout the southern island of Mindanao by private aircraft. He did not say who gave the ballots to the officers.
charges could not be independently confirmed.
"Unless election postponed, blood-shed inevitable," the telegram from
The fighting also would be used as an excuse to move ballot boxes from precincts to town halls and private warehouses where they could be easily rigged, he said.
Marcos; ruler of the Philippines for 20 years, called the election in November — 16 months ahead of schedule — while under pressure from the United States to institute political and economic reforms.
The Aquino spokesman said preparations for vote fraud appeared to be under way throughout Mindanao, where troops were deployed to battle command insurgents.
The United States has urged Marcos to hold fair elections and has sent a team to monitor the balloting. Reagan administration officials had hinted that aid to the Philippines would be increased if the voting was judged to be fair.
Mindanao said.
Saguisua quoted opposition representatives as saying 513 ghost precincts, had been added to election rolls in Cavite Province, across Manila Bay from the capital. He said the precincts represented 180,000 non-existent voters.
He said a mock war against pro-Marcos goons dressed as communist guerrillas was raging in five towns.
U.S. won't run election interference
United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — Sen. Richard Lugar, head of a delegation sent by President Reagan to observe today's election in the Philippines, said yesterday that Washington had no intention of interfering with the outcome.
But he warned that friends of the Philippines would want to know the results as quickly as possible and urged election officials not to prevent a civilian watchdog group from rapidly tallying the vote.
"Twenty of us been asked by the president to come — not to advocate, not to argue, and not to proscribe and not to judge — but simply to observe," said Lugar. R-Ind.
Lugar, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, heads a 20-member White House group sent to observe the contest between President Ferdinand Marcos and challenger Corazon Aquino.
Lugar denied that the presence of U.S. warships at the U.S. Subic Bay Naval Base north of Manila was connected to the vote.
"The United States has absolutely no interest in influencing this election with the use of warships — the use of anything for that matter," he said.
The presence of the White House team and more than 130 other international observers has prompted charges of meddling in Philippine internal affairs despite Marcos' personal invitation to foreigners to monitor the polling.
"We make an appeal to all who have something to do with the election system to make certain the Namrel volunteers have the voting results as rapidly as possible so that all of us, especially friends of the Philippines . . . will know as rapidly as possible what has occurred." Lugar said.
Unofficial quick counts of the vote will be released by both the government's Commission on Elections, or Comelec, and an independent watchdog group, the National Citizens Movement for Free Elections, or Namrefel.
blocked by provincial election officials who must sign the returns before the group's 500,000 volunteers could transmit them to Manila.
Jose Concepcion, Namfrel chairman, said he feared his planned Operation Quick Count might be
THERE'S STILL TIME TO PREPARE
The White House delegation will monitor voting in eight regions.
APR. 19
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1
Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
13
Seven-footers to stage rematch
Kansas needs win over Cowboys to stay atop league standings
By Matt Tidwell
Sports writer
Kansas center Greg Drelling has no problem remembering the Jayhawks' last game against the Oklahoma State Cowboys.
In the Jayhawks '95-72 win Jan. 18.
7-foot-1 Dreiling went head-tohead.
Oklahoma State
Men's Basketball
12-8. (Big 3, 8-4)
in tomorrow
(channel and 27)
at Stellwater
with the Cowboys' 7-4 inch freshmen center Alan Bannister.
Bamsteris rated 22 points and con-
tinually beat Dreiling with hook shots.
The Jayhawks will get another shot at Bannister and the Cowboys at 3:05 tomorrow afternoon in Stillwater.
"We need to keep the ball out of his hands on offense," Dreiling said. "I'll just have to keep him further out on the floor and away from the basket.
Dreling didn't talk about any special strategy against Bannister—a player who Cowboy head coach
Paul Hansen recruited from Bolton, England — but said he benefited by getting advice on how to play against the league's tallest player.
"Coach Manning said that when he used to play against Artis Glimore, he would meet him at the free throw line to try and keep him away from the basket." Dreiling said of assistant coach Ed Manning.
Bannister has cooled off since the Kansas game. He is averaging seven points and 3.5 rebounds a game and is one of the figures in just three other games.
Still, Drelling said he was convinced that Bannister was not to be taken lightly.
"He leads the league in blocked shots (37, 2.1 a game), so that's got to tell you something about the guy," Drreling said.
Head coach Larry Brown said he was impressed with the Cowboy center but was concerned about the hook shot Bannister used effectively several times against Kansas.
"He walks (travels) every time, and he uses his off-arm to push-off." Brown said. "That's an automatic foul in the pros. As soon as that off-
arm comes out they call it."
Dreiling said Bannister's non-shooting arm was in his face throughout the game.
"Yeah, I felt it." Dreiling said. "I felt it on my head, across my face, on my lip. I'm hoping the officials will become more aware of it."
Kansas, 21-3 overall and tied for the league lead with Oklahoma at 6-1, comes into the game fresh from Wednesday night's 100-64 thrashing of Colorado.
Oklahoma State, 12-8 and 3-4, also played Wednesday and lost to
The Cowboys beat the Iowa State Cyclones 67-65 Saturday in Stillwater. The Cyclones gave Kansas its last conference loss, 77-74 Jan. 28 in Ames.
Besides Bannister, the Cowboys look to guard Terry Faggins, who averages 13.5 points a game, and forwards, Kyvy, who scored 21 against Sonson.
Faggins and Ivy each scored 13 in the last game against Kansas, but Brown said it was Bannister who caused Kansas the most problems.
"He's going to be a great player
and he's a force in our league," Brown said. "But I don't think we'll change the whole game to try and stop him."
Jayhawk Notes — Danny Manning went 10-for-10 from the field and scored 21 points in the first Jayhawk-Cowboy game...The Jayhawks made 69 percent of their field goal attempts in the first game. Hansen is 7-9 against Kansas while Brown owns a 5-1 mark against the Cowboys. Dreiling scored nine points and grabbed five reboundes in the first game against the Cowboys.
Probable Starters
Kansas
F 25 Danny Manning (6-11)
F 44 Ron Kellogg (6-5)
C 30 Greg Drilling (7-1)
G 35 Calvin Thompson (6-6)
G 22 Cedric Hunter (6-2)
Oklahoma St.
F 44 Jason Manuel (6-7)
F 30 Terry Faggins (6-5)
C 50 Alan Bannister (7-4)
G 40 Melvin Gilliam (6-2)
G 10 Roshon Patton (5-1)
MASK
30
55
Kansas center Greg Dreiling and Oklahoma State center Alan Bannister will square off tomorrow when the sixth-ranked Jayhawks travel to Stillwater to battle the Cowboys at 3:05 p.m.
'Hawks tune up for big meet
By Jim Suhr
Sports writer
Sports Center
The KU men's and women's track teams, in preparation for the Big Eight Indoor Championships later this month at Lincoln, Neb., will host the Jayhawk Invitational today and tomorrow at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
The invitational, which will not be scored, begins for both men and women at 4 p.m. today and resumes at noon tomorrow. The Jayhawks will face several midwestern junior colleges and universities, including Big Eight rivals Kansas State and Colorado. Wichita State and Oklahoma Baptist also will compete. The women will compete against the same teams plus national power Iowa.
Bob Timmons, men's head track coach, said yesterday that six members of the men's team would compete today at the Oklahoma Track Classic in Oklahoma City. The Jayhawks that will compete in Oklahoma are pole vaulters Scott Huffman, Lance Adams and Chris Bohanan and jumpers Sharrieff
The Classic will be held in the Myriad Sports Complex, the site of this season's National Collegiate Athletic Association Indoor Championships. Timmons said the six Jeyhawks would have an opportunity to get used to the wooden runways at that complex in time for the championships.
Timmons said for the rest of the team, the Jayhawk Invitational would serve as a stepping stone for the Jayhawks, who are preparing for the Big Eight meet. He said because scores would not be kept for the meet, his athletes would concentrate on their finishes as individuals rather as a team.
Timmons said he hadn't looked beyond this weekend's meet. He said the smaller schools, which would not be as strong as the larger universities, would send individuals who would push the Jayhawks.
Those performances, Timmons said, would help determine who will compete in which events for the Jayhawks in the conference meet.
"They may not necessarily be 'powered,' he said of the smaller schools. "But if you combine the skills, they will have it to be a touch meet."
On the women's side, head coach Carla Coffey said Kansas also would use the meet to get ready for the Big Eight championships. She said, however, she expected quality competition from the schools that attended — primarily from Iowa and Colorado.
"We have to have a team effort," she said. "Our people want to do well, and we expect them to go out and give 100 percent."
The Kansas women will be without shot putter Denise Buckingham to compete this weekend in the Husker Invitational in Lincoln, Neb.
Coffey said Buchanan, a junior who has already qualified for the national meet in the shot put, would travel to the Husker Invitational for competition that would push her more.
OU faculty wants tournaments changed
United Press International
Oklahoma faculty has asked Big Eight officials to quit scheduling tournements during final exams and said they may not allow athletes to make up tests when conflicts arise.
The Oklahoma faculty recently passed a resolution saying the faculty deplores being asked to make exceptions to its rule, which does not allow exams to be rescheduled for athletic events.
The faculty handbook says exams should be reset for individuals if there is a serious illness or a death in the family and for certain academic conflicts.
Faculty senate president David Levy said the question arose because of several requests for rescheduling final examinations on behalf of athletes by coaches.
"When a faculty member receives a request, the faculty member is reluctant to put a student athlete in the terrible dilemma of deciding to take the final exam with his classmates or participate in the sporting event." Levy said.
But he said the faculty felt it threatened the integrity of exams to have students take them at different times.
Big Eight Associate Commissioner Prentice Gautt said the conference had heard similar complaints from Nebraska.
"The concerns are more with the number of contests played," said Brinkman. "Final exams are just one of the problems. The only real
Del Brinkman, Kansas Big Eight faculty representative, said athletes' schedules always conflicted in some way with classes.
Brinkman said it would be difficult to schedule tournaments to avoid conflicts with final exams because they are given at different times at different universities.
answer is to cancel all spring sports because there are always conflicts "
Gautt said the conference would discuss tournament schedules at a later date.
Officials said most of the scheduling problems occurred in the spring when baseball and softball conference games were played.
"The conference is here at the pleasure of our conference institutions," Gautt said.
Gautt said coaches liked to set conference playoffs at the end of the semester so athletes would be in the best possible shape for NCAA tournaments which usually began when classes ended.
Cards want posters stopped
ST. LOUIS — The St. Louis Cardinals have asked the printer of a poster depicting an artist's rendering of the infamous call from Game 6 of the 1985 World Series to stop selling it.
Gary Blase, the Cardinals vice president of administration, yesterday said that attorneys for the National League champions sent a letter Wednesday to Tim White, 27, of Grand Island, Neb., asking him to halt sales and destroy his remaining stock of a poster depicting the ninth-inning call from Game 6.
the Cardinals," Blase said. "We had nothing to do with it and we did not approve it.
"What happened was Tim White is a good, solid Cardinal fan and the call and the game in the World Series upset him. The Cardinals obviously appreciate strong support of all our fans but this gentleman went a little too far. Unfortunately, he wanted to have a little fun and put this poster together."
"The poster was unauthorized by
The poster, produced by Rideren Printing Co., sold for $15 and had been advertised locally in a St. Louis newspaper. The poster depicts Cardinals pitcher Todd Worrell having his foot on first base with the ball in
his glove ahead of the Kansas City Royals' Orge Jarta and in plain view of ampire Don Denkinger, who is making a safe call.
White said he could not give an honest count but estimated he had sold somewhere between 450 and 700 posters.
Blase said he wanted to discount reports the Cardinals were planning on using it for a "Poster Day" promotion. He also said reports that Anheuser-Busch Co. Inc. distributors would sell the poster were false.
"we sent him a cease-and-desist letter," Blase said. "We asked him to stop selling the poster. If he doesn't, it's for the lawyers."
Duke topples Virginia by eight
From Kansan wires
Virginia, which upset No. 1 North Carolina last week, was unable to capitalize inside. Duke smothered Virginia center Olden Polynige and limited him to 7 points, the first time he did not finish in double figures this season.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. -- David Henderson and Johnny Dawkins scored 20 points each last night to lift No. 2 Duke to a 77-65 victory over No. 2 Virginia in an Atlantic Coast Conference game.
The Blue Devils broke to a 34-20 halftime lead and expanded the margin to 46-27 with less than 16 minutes to play. Virginia made a late flurry and cut the lead to 5.
Duke, 21-2 overall and 8-2 in the ACC, received 16 points from Mark Alarie, Virginia, 14-6 and 4-4, was led by Mel Kennedy's 23 points, Andrew Kenndy added 12 and Richard Morgan 11 for the Cavaliers.
Duke, which has not lost to Virginia since Ralph Sampson graduated in 1983, took control late in the first half, using a 16-3 run to break from an 18-17 lead.
Duke jumped to a 19-point lead before Virginia started nibbling away. A flurry of 7 points in 58 seconds by Morgan brought Virginia within 11 with 10:29 to play. A steal
and layup by Tom Calloway with 4:09 left trimmed the lead to 64-59, but Virginia came no closer.
Georgia Tech 87, North Carolina-
Charlotte 78
ATLANTA — Freshman Tom Hammonds scored a career-high 24 points as second-ranked Georgia Tech overcame a sluggish first half and downed North Carolina-Charlotte 87-76 in a basketball game last night.
N. C. Charlotte, 5-15, held a 42-37 lead before Tech opened the second half with a 9-0 run, then took command with a 13-2 spurt to hand the 48ers their 10th loss in a row.
Hammonds, who hit 10 of 12 shots from the field, Mark Price and Bruce Dalrymple keyed a 13-2 run with four points each as Tech stretched a 58-57 lead with 9:53 remaining to 71-59 with 7:22 to play.
The victory lifted the Yellow Jackets to 18-3 on the heels of Tuesday night's 78-77 overtime loss to No. 1 North Carolina and going into Sunday's clash with No. 3 Duke in Durham, N.C.
Michigan 80. Purdue 79
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — Roy Tarpley scored 16 points and No. 8 Michigan overcame poor free-throwing late in the game last night to hold off Big Ten ten Feardur 80-79.
Despite missing the front end of one-and-one situations four times in the final two minutes, Michigan was able to improve to 20-2 overall and 8-2 in the league.
The Wolverines took the lead for good with 8:25 left on a 3-point play by Gary Grant that made the score 64-61.
Todd Mitchell scored 21 points for Purdue, 16-7 and 5-5, while Troy Lewis had 17.
Butch Wade contributed 13 points for Michigan. Antoine Joubert and Richard Rellford each scored 12.
Louisville 103, Virginia Tech 68
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Billy Thompson scored 21 points and Herbert Crook added 19 last night to lead No. 16 Louisville to a 103-68 Metro Conference romp over No. 15 Virginia Tech.
The Cardinals posted their highest scoring game since 1983, when they beat St. Louis in Staples.
Dell Curry, Virginia Tech's star guard who averages nearly 24 points a game, was held to 13, with only 4 in the second half. Keith Colbert and Bobby Beecher added 13 apiece for the Hokies.
With its four straight victory, Louisville improved to 15-6 overall and 4-2 in the conference. The Hokies fell to 18-5 and 4-3.
Hunt
Weight Training
Mike Horton/Special to the KANSAN
Mark Hanna, Kansas City, Mo., junior concentrates on his workout in the weight room at Robinson Center. Hanna was working with the rest of his physical conditioning class yesterday.
Mike Horton/Special to the KANSAN
Sports Briefs
Jayhawks lose twice in tennis tournament
The KU men's tennis team suffer a doubled setback yesterday at the ITCA National Singles-Doubles tournament in Houston.
Mike Wolf, the Jayhawk's No. 1 player, lost to Richard Bergh, of Long Beach State, 6-3, 6-3, in the first round of the singles competition.
Wolf and the Jayhawk's No. 2 player, Mike Center, lost to Ricky Leach and Tim Pawsat, of USC, 6-4, 6-4, in the first round of doubles competition.
The consolation round for singles and doubles will be played today.
Surgery for Marino
NORMAN, Okla. — Oklahoma forward Anthony Bowie could miss tomorrow's game against Iowa State because of an injury, university officials said yesterday.
MIAMI — Miami Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino will undergo arthroscopic knee surgery in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., it was announced yesterday.
The surgery, which is not expected to be serious, will be performed today by J.R. Steadman. A team spokesman said the surgery was designed to find any loose fragments in Marino's right knee and remove them. It is the third straight year Marino has had surgery on the knee in the off-season.
OU star on crutches
Bowie left Lloyd Noble Center on crutches Wednesday night after Oklahoma defeated Oklahoma State 106-84.
OU sports information spokesman Larry McAlister said doctors determined Bowie had sprained his ankle. They placed Bowie's ankle in a walking cast.
Bedford suspended
MEMPHS, Tenn. — Memphis State center William Bedford has been suspended for two games by the National Collegiate Athletic Association for violations last spring, officials said yesterday.
Bedford, a 'foot junior and the fourth-ranked "Tigers" leading scorer, will miss tomorrow's nationally televised game against Nevada-Las Vegas and Monday's game against Metro rival Florida State.
The suspension apparently stems from several incidents last spring when Bedford drove cars loaned to him by MSU boosters, a violation of NCAA rules.
From staff and wire reports.
14
University Daily Kansan
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ATTENTION STUDENTS WITH CHILDREN:
Come by the Student Assistance Center, 121
Strong Hall, for a listing of centers and licensed
homes for child care in the Lawrence area.
homelink in the Lawrence area
MUMUERES Car Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Computer Terminal with modern for rent.
rmb./mo. 842.2822
- Nonrepayments of discounts and fees on one or more orders
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DEALING WITH THAT UNASYME FEELING:
learn to initiate conversations, make new friends,
speak fluently in English and French,
February 10, 6:30-9 p.m. FREE! Please
request to attend at the Student Assistance
Hillel
Falafel Dinner
Sat, Feb. 8
5:00
$1 members
$2 non-members
Hillel House
940 Mississippi
DEALING WITH THAT INNEY FEELING
Monday, Feb. 10, 8:00-9:00 p.m. jmt. 100 Smith Hall.
Presented by the Student Assistance Center, 121
Strong Hall, St. 406-4064.
IMPRPVE YOUR READING COMPREHENE-
HIS instruction of lecture, Tuesday, February 11, 18
and 25, 7-9:00 p.m. in material B1. Register at the
student Assistance Center 123 Strong Hall.
CALL 612-453-6750.
**14th Rent* 20% C TV V B 23rd Smithy's TV.
147 W 38th 025-7211 Mon. Sat. @ 9:30 - 10:00
Sunday @ 11:30 - 12:00
LAWRENCE FLOAT CENTER - Winter Special-
3 floats for $00 811-549.58
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $9.60.
Smitty's TV, 147 W, 148-231; bd43-751; Mon, Sat
Sat, Sun, Wed, Thurs, Fri, Satur, Sundays
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4350
S.A.M.S.
WANTS
YOU
at
The Heart
of Rock 'n' Roll
Valentine Day
Battle of the Bands!
The Fanatix
Sons of Liberty
All of the Above
Absolute Ceiling
The Breakers
Pariah
Altered Media
Friday, Feb. 14
Kansas Union Ballroom
Tickets $4
on sale at
SUA Box Office
all proceeds go to M.S.
SPRING BREAK, SKI THE SUMMIT $250. 4 days, includes lift山岳 lift, transportation, lodging and ski rental. Call Eric Rhodes by Friday. 843-8153.
TUTORS: List your name with you. We refer studyStrong to you. Student Assistance CenterStrong to you.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of
tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121
Strong.
GOT A HOT DATE? Is your car clean? AT LAWRENCE DATE! CLEANING make your look years earlier is our speciality. 6th and Maine.
748-5071
ENTERTAINMENT
Don't send out for Suki - instead come taste our tropical style. Bajan Carnival Festival Party Feb. 21, from 5-7pm at Music in Town's Best Mix of Music in Town. #423-909-8700. $7.95 you get a bounce of great music. Music from museums and grand pianos.
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE DJ DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 789-4733.
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to pro-
vide the following services: a sound watt sound system that c-n-f vault, any size room and can accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in A-1643-5843 or Salina. Call 618-5433 or (913) 827-8948.
FOR RENT
1 block from campus. Your own room, Kitchen and living room. Adequate parking. Wheelchair access.
3 BR house. East Laurence, bus route 1844, 800-657-9222. Parking allowed. Phone 606-667-2222. Phone 200-667-2222 a.p.m.
8½ bcm. Newer 1½ dupe, Super Nice, $420/mo.
Northland Wood 1 - 463-776-391, EMA: 1-831-562-391
APT. SWAF? Need I roommate to share I/2 costs?
Yes, down to lg. 2 bedroom; lg. 3 bedroom; Ap30 + up low lift.
I'll use the two rooms for you.
Would like a 2 BR, 80 or less. 794-1491. 841-3601.
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkeley Flats Vacancies available now and stay. Plan ahead, please for new next fall. 841-2116. 841-2116.
Available March 1: beautiful 2 BR apt. On bus route: 5 minute walk to campus, downtown. New carpet, clean, spacious. $330/mo plus low utilities. 841-5797, 841-5566, 842-3449.
Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 842-418-405.
Sublease Now 2-DIM Apt. Very! nice & very close to campus Call after 7:00 p.m. 934-9738.
close to campus. Call after 7:00 p.m. #849-9738.
First come, first served, only a few left. At 218 W.ishong on KU bus route, between Gibson's and Ningbo University. All students with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We pay hot and cold water, you choose options, square foot, carpet, extra bath or balcony.
For rent: 2et, brand new apt. 1,1/3 bks from Kansas Union $350/mo. plus utilities. Sublease a possibility. Call Chuck Leduc 843-3238 8 a.m. p. and Pam 842-0335 5 a.m. Keep trying. Furnished one bedroom apartment near University & Downtown. Most utilities paid with off street lines.
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: SHARE 2
BEDROOM APT. (VILLAGE SQUARE APTS).
CARPETED A/C, SWIMMING POOL, ON BUS
UTILITIES. MOVE IN IMEDIATELY, FIRST
PAYMENT UNTL, FERRIARY. CALL 843-0188
(JEFF), OR 843-3040 (ASK MANAGER).
SUILBASE &VAIIALIBER
SUILBASE &
SUBLEASE NOW. 1 BDMM Hanover Place apt,
one month free rent! 841-1212
Spacious one bedroom apartment for sublease,
great for 1 or 2. On bus route, water paid, gas,
low utilities. Furnished $220, Unfurnished
$200. Call 749-3691 after 5 p.m.
Studio Apct. to Sublease Furnished, very clean,
$175/mo. Low deposit. Call now 842-2710.
close to campus, call after 7:09 p.m. 843-9738.
MASTERCAFFT offers completely furnished 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments all near campus. Call 841-1212, 841-3255, 749-2415.
LOST/FOUND
Found: Little pure full of money at center of chamber and Alumini Place. Please K, U, P, D-844-5572
Found outside of Naismith, 1/2 labrador - 1/2 cockspur paniel pig - black with brown and white. Call 841-2679 ask for Leslie or Robyn or 841-6867 ask for Denise.
LOST. Gucock watch with sentimental value. Lost
in the arcnm around /21/68. Reward Call
Number 409-5119.
LOST. Two Tulip Rings in 5th floor bathroom of Watson Library (2/4) - Ruby and Emerald; can't be replaced, sentimental value. If found please call Angelia418.2846. They are very special.
DHAMOND RING: Ladies' 1/4 carat Marquise cutie with 10 two point baglining. White gold. Appraised over $295. Sacrifice $295. Call 842-2496. Answering machine.
Reward offered for return of black back pack. No questions asked. Mail 943-8255.
To the guy who found my watch at McDonald's, please call again, 841-4341, for reward.
We found your puppy on Sat. Feb. 1st. Between
17th and 18th Vanuatu. Do you love him as much?
You will be glad that I have them.
HP-41 CV calculator, excel, cond. case, instruct,
case, instruction $100; $145-1950 even numbers
to K.; KC. R.
FOR SALE
Baseball cards and sports northeast. Buy, Sell
Basketball cards and sports northeast. Open 10: 8 M-S,
W 21rd Street. Basketball. Open 10: 8 M-S,
W 21rd Street.
All sports ticket. Best offer. 842-1133. 9 a.m.
through noon, M-F. Steve Robinson.
BASKETBALL SEASON TICKET, best offer. Call Diane at 482-4904.
Concord HIPL-518 audiophile car stereo, $198/-
cover, cheap, taurus and turlight, full warranty,
cheap, cheap taurus and turlight.
William "THE REFERRIGATOR" Perry pests
only $3.00. 844-667-671
Comic Books, Penthouse, penthos. et Matex
Comics. Open 1-15 Tue-Fri, Sat. & Sun 10-5: 8: 31
GOVERNMENT HOMES from (U) *Repair*.
ADDITIONAL tax property Call 811-607-600-600.
New hammast
VHS VCR very new for $200, call 942-6828.
MUDS: Ludwig Tp. set w/cymbals, hardware,
sat. 5481 Pearl p 3 set w/dZijidian cymbals,
hardware. sat. 5481 Overland Park (1) 6481-7981.
Double-sized handed, band-made file. $75.
For Sale: Symk Barg Poly-800 $60 DDM-110
At 847/7780 $150 Plevy amp $150 calm T10
@ 847/7780
AUTO SALES
Hafer 500 watt power amplifier. Brand new with factory warranty. $600. Tom 843-1516.
room set set; love seat, love bed, 2 arm
clutch chair, two foldable table. Very good condition.
All for $100 per person.
High Sierra Mountain Bike. Like new. Fifteen speed. Cited lock included. Call 644-8543 after 6 p.m.
*all Sports ticket for sale*
Call 842-0583 before it a.m. or after 7 p.m. Keepying.
Mobile Home For Sale. 12 x 20 feet. Partly
nished. Will take-payments.
$200 down-$150 mo.-$200. Buyer-pay-all-bill.
453-6330
King size waterbed. 35mm camera and lenses.
Call after p. 4.m. p.150-581.
Lady's Diamond Diamond Ring. Hset $50
negotiable. Call Pam 334-4190 (Topeka)
Guitar for sale. Yamaha classical classical. Excellent condition. Only $75. Call 843-2916.
Western Civilizationizations *On sale* Now on Sale! Make them use to teach us. 1) As study guide. 2) For class review. 3) As study guide. 4) Analysis of Western Civilization! available now at Town Crime, The Jayhawk Booksrout, and www.westerncivilizations.com.
1974 Pontiac GT0, new paint, overbeat, and much more. Harve, a must see. Cause 842-3002 evening.
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE.
Receivers from $20, tarrises from 11's speakers
and up to 15's stereo. Receive all the stereo, all completely reconditioned and warranted.
Lawrence Custom Custom, 914 W. 91st St.
1963 Schmitz Mountain Bike - Retirable transportation with very few miles. Bike 842 906 8258
Plane ticket to Phoenix, Arizona for Spring break. Great price! Call 864-2192 or 740-3635
85 Toyota dair truck. Only 8000 lbs. Great cond.
asking $7996. Ask 24232 after 1.
85 Toyota dair truck. Only 8000 lbs. Great cond.
asking $7996. Ask 24232 after 1.
Caber ski boots, 10-12, best offer. 843-3963
Must Sell 1980 Old Mobil Cabliss Station Wagon diesel Silver Auto, power handle seats, ac, AM/FM cassette. Good condition. $2999 Call 842-4317
RABBIT 92 new rediana, are cars, moving low miles,
Moving must sell below market. 842 929 9000
Art. I bet HABAKKUK wasn't a geek! Dana, Bath,
Dana.
PERSONAL
HAPPY 109 DI. Can't wait to sip champagne in a hot tub. - Mike
HAPPY BIRTHDAY KRISTEN. Wishing you the best always. Love, Mohamed
Mr. Smith's always been partial to older men
Niger, Rishuw, Bidwah, Wolebh, Hobbi
Steve, see you at HAMKURK this weekend-what a show! you at the admirers
Preview our Brazilian Carnival in Lawrence
watch it happen in Ribe. Tune to the Today Show
To Joan The Warrior. How about sharing a coike together. Gunlet is fun but I'm more interested in knowing you. I know your name but not your number. Vakkyrie.
BUS.PERSONAL
TJW. Congratulations on becoming a real PGD!
norrow night. Happy anniversary loo-
sh. Spook
810-$560 Weekly/Up Mailing Circular! "a
notice! Sincerely interested rush self-addressed
envelope! Success, PO Box 470 CDG, Woodstock,
IL 62008"
fashion
eyeworld
LONDON STATION ROAD
841-6100
5 flats apartment
32nd floor
free wifi
free dining
free bar
the best value on sight
All cotton old timer shirts. New shipment and colors in the ETC. Shop 732 Mass.
Want a new way to say I love you on Valentine Day. Try a VIDEO VALENTINE. Available from 12 to 4 or by appointment. Now through February 16, visit www.vidyo.com and VideHillcrest Center Store. 842-923-6868
in sight
Float Connection Floating is believing Special $10 14 E. 8th St. 749-000
dressed of firing and turning? Do you awake feel relaxed and well-resolved? Cotton and foam four fuchs are designed to fully support your spine and release tension. BLUE HERON (these are sold with Lawrence) one sock映出 of Mexican Food Suit-Up; to 5:30 or call 841-9443.
Hirs and Hairs Hair Design. Quality hair care at
their location. Specially available for
available and give you the personal attention you deserve. Haircuts 7, perm $23 and up with hairdresser included. Linda and Service 84-5960, 1218
"CAMP COUNSELORS M-F" Outstanding Slim and Friendly Campers. M/F, Slimm, Dimm. Camp counselor plus plus
Class Ring Day—Why wait for the ring man when you have a class? Visit the WEST BEST WORK IN TOWN · LAWRENCE AEROBECS, M-W-F (30:P-M, Lawrence School of Baller, 1sth a. Vernon, Cermouth, Thompson Bridge 41-054).
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
The Union's recording of the day's entrees & soups.
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed Shirttart. 749-1611.
50% Off
Anv Single Service
8 Tanning Lounges
Tan daily without waiting
Facial Tanners
THE
MUSEUM
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VALENTINES!
$10 Off
Hot Tub/Whirlpool
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Facial Tanners Hot Tub/Whirlpool
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EUROPEAN SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
Weight Facilities
25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza
841-6232
V-Postcards 15¢
V-Cards 50¢
V-Notes 25¢
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care, confidential assured. Greater area, clinic. Call for appointment.
913-545-1400
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol tending, upon successful completion, transportation provided. 841.7740
GAYLESBIAN: Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stumped, self-addressed envelope to: TRIANGLE TIMES, P. O. Box 5629, KOIM 64106.
Museum of Natural History
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sundays
864-4450
Modeling and theater portfolio - shooting now
begins to Professionals, call for information
Hand-crafted kits, wildeculture and fantasies.
Order now for spring, SKYWROWS 1/2 Mass
order.
ON CAMPUS 2-Br. Apts. for KU students
Jayhawker Towers
for KU students
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- 10-Month Leases
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors
- Air Conditioned
- On Bus Line
- Free Cable TV
- Swimming Pool
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Now leasing for spring
Nien' 10°. Rent $7. T V $23.90 a month. Curtis Matheson, M. w. W. 2nd; wrd. S. 243 (Men., Mam- 81; Fri., 86).
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
The sun is out, the sunglasses are in! The ETC.
Shop. 732 Mass.
Sweets For Your Sweetie Color Portrait. A
Sweets for Your Valentine's Day Special. Swell
740-811-611
Thousands of R & R albums—82 or less. Also collectors items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quartlets 811 New Hamphire. Buy, Sell, or trade all styles music.
a different deli special every day
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts,
glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-corning
event! J & M Favors offers the best quality and
price available on imprinted specialties plus
a super reliable delivery. You design it or let
it be printed. W201, 2018 (Gibbon Gabion)
814-4349
DELI SPECIALS
Today's Special:
Corned Beef & Cheese Sandwich 16 oz. Drink $2.55
THE KANSAS UNION DELI
level 3
HELP WANTED
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas from only 881. Deux lodgekeeping, parties, goodie bags, more..Hurry, call Sunchease Tours for more information and reservations toll free 1-800-321-5911 or contact a local Sunchease hostess or call the Spring break counts...count on Sunchease.
BabySitter for 5 month old infant, general housekeeping and ironing in our home. Tues. & Thurs. 12-5. Must have reliable transportation. Required $3.50 per hour. Call 847-2837 for application
CASIH DAILY. Doniola's Pizza is now accepting applications to hire 10 drivers. If you are a self-motivated, high energy person, you could become part of the world's I Pizza Delivery company. Please call the office at (804) 527-6320. Our drivers make 85-48 per hour and more. You must be 18 years or older, have a car, current driver's license and proof of insurance. Appley-Belton Drives Iowa. No phone calls, please. EOE, m/fl
GOVERNMENT JOBS, $16.400 $29.300 yr. Now
1-800-667-4087 Ext. R758 for current
job.
CRUERSEISHP HIRINGI $16,000-$45,000 Carribean,
Bahamas; New York; Miami; Melbourne;
New!ervices! NOW 9444-8444 XUKAUSCRUESEF
Female aid in weekend A.M.; 8:30 to 10:30 or P.M.
10:00-11:00 daily. No experience necessary.
Send your love (or your good friend, family member, professor, student, pet) a *SINGING VALENTINE* Singing valentines will be sold by the library on or before December 11, 12, 4 & 5, on 3rd floor Bailey Hall and in Murphy Hall near the music library, or call 864-784-184 for local calls and $2 for long distance Valentines.
Help Wanted:后勤 housekeeping Monday & Wednesday afterlights. 843-3388.
OVERSEAS JOURNS Summer, yr. round Europe,
JOURNALS of the American Society of
Science Searches Free online Write LC. BP 80-KS 82-
83
Week-long positions for Assistant Instructors in Natural History Summer Workshops for Young People. Museums of Natural History. KU, June 2-August 1. 15 lhrs w/85k$25; 20 lhrs w/867.00. July 4-September 3. Director of Public Education. 602. J. Dyche (914.84) 641-432. An equal opportunity employer.
**Intent*'19.4 Color T.V. $82.88 each. Smarty TV $147.3 Ward 3.923-7571. Mon-Sat; 9:30-10:00. Sun-1:31 fast impassport, portfolio, resume, naturalization passport, portfolio of courses, hard portals, Studio Scula, 749-1611.
Point O' Pines and Brant Lake Campes in Adirondack Mountains, New York State, seek competent people to teach-swimming, sailing, canoeing and waterkipping. Live with children, great opportunity, salary commensurate with experience. Call or email: lisa@northshore.edu Rhode Island 02986. Call 401-319-7977. Interviews on campus Feb. 12. Sign up in 223 Carruth or C-Leary.
Putt-Putt Golf course now taking applications Monday through Friday 5pm-7pm until Feb. 12.
ATRINEL HIRING BOOM: $141-$399,000
Newmarket, Reservoirs Estuary
Newmarket, Reservoirs Estuary
+644-785-3244 +644-785-3244
Student Staff Position-summer orientation program 1986. Required qualifications: minimum 2.0 undergraduate degree or equivalent, or a Master's Degree Undergraduate and first year graduate students may apply. Desired qualifications: leadership abilities; knowledge of university programs and programs of study offered in the institution; enthusiasm about university. Job descriptions and applications available in the office of educational services 123 Strong Hall. Due by Fri. March 14.
PROGRAM ASSISTANT/RESEARCH AID for Midwest Council on Aging, 400-hour, $400/mo. Program must be approved by the University of Kansas, 864-411 for complete job description and application, Deadline Feb. 12.
Summer Jobs. National Park Co., 21 Parks, 5000
Openings. Complete Information @ 85.00. Park
Resort. Mission Mtn Co., 651 2nd Ave. WN,
K13, MT 99001.
BLOOM COUNTY
IRONING: in my home, Shirts, pantz, 75 - Skirts,
1. Next day service 841-9089 after 12:30
SERVICES OFFERED
Write ad here:
$N1 $next day service 84-10-20 after 12.30
LOSE WEIGHT NOW 10-29 the previous month on
Women's Health at 84-716 or 84-7900
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in
Lawrence, 84-716
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Mobile Locksmith Fast Lockout Service
Kaying Services Auto Servic
Process Cases CD-60234
EDITING, structure, data analysis, papers, theses, dissertations M.A. D.p. student, etc.
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-8421.
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. using IBM Selectric III. Reasonable: 842-3246.
TYPING
ACCURATE TYPING, word processing, and spell checking. Call. News 831-7592.
MATH TUTOR - Bob Meems holds an A in math from K. uU, where 902, 102, 110, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professional students. He began session 6:45 pm; sessions 6:35 pm to 40 minual session. Call 849-902-5307.
Absolutely Your Type: Word processing, typing and editing. IBM U05-8/6, 9-M; Same day service available. 844 Illinois, 8434618.
curate and affordable typing, Judy, 842-7945
1-1-TRIO WORD PROCESSING, Experienced,
Conscientious, Reliable, Rush Jobs Accepted
Call 842-3111.
24-Hour Typing, 10th semester in Lawrence.
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus.
Accessible print versions. A3 professional typing. Term papers, theses.
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Used IBM Selectric.
A.L. SMITH TITHY/Dissertations, these,tem
tapes. Phone 942-8657 after 5:30.
Phone: ___-___
checking. Low rates. Call 843-752-9130
Ace Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable,
friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes.
Mailings. Resumes. Mailings. Video available. One block from campus. 843-257-6376
DEFENDABLE, professional, experience
CHKSHIPPING, standard; standard case
1-3-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional, WORD
1-3-3 Note: these dissertation papers, paper-
books, etc. are available.
DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY Service
available on shorter student papers up to 30
papers. Monthly $4.99; Mummy $5.99; 49-387-
before 8 p.m. Please.
Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yr.
experience. Phone 942-2310 for 3:30 a.m.
English B.A. T typing and tutoring. Spelling cor-
lection, overnight service available. Great rates.
Email b.a.taylor@utah.edu
Letter perfect papers and resumes WRITING
LIPELINE, 841-3409
OUT! LET CUTER
JOHV OUT YOUYOU
RAMBO TONKURERS!
QUALITY TYPING Letters, these, dissection
applications, applications, Spelling corrected.
Call 827-2941
QUALITY TYPEING. Letters, these; dissertations;
applications. Mail corrected. Call B2-5714.
Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Classified Heading:
| | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 11-words | $2.60 | $3.75 | $5.25 | $8.25 |
| For every % words added | $30* | $50* | $75* | $1.05 |
THE FAR SIDE
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
Classified Display
1 col. x 1 inch = $4.40
---
By GARY LARSON
2-7
"You know those teeny tiny little birds that walk around so trustingly inside a crocodile's mouth? Well, I just been eatin' those little guys like popcorn."
NOW NER IN BUS BUG
TROBLE! THIS WILL BE
AN INTERPURITIONAL INCIDENT! THERE'LL BE
WORDS! LONG WORDS!
GEORGE SHULTZ MAY EVEN RISE HIS VOICE!
by Berke Breathed
ON THE WHOLE
I'D RATHER AGE IN
PHILADELPHIA.
1
Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
University Daily Kansan
15
Classified Ads
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ing, Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics,
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EXPERIENCED TYPEP7 Term papers, IBM Corresponding Selectric. I will correct spelling errors in TYPEP7.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional work processing, mancripts, resumes, letters, themed reports.
WANTED
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share great brand-new apartment very close to campus.
Microwave, W&D, dishwasher, $130/mo. Call 841-5015 anytime.
Female roommate to share two bedroom apartment. Very nice & very clean to campus. Call
Female roommate 4/2 B/R trailer. Furnished #78a a month plus 1/2 tuitions. Call 743-4928
Female roommate wants to share apt. above.
Bookmark $125.00 per month. 842-671-9000
Male, nonimmoking roommate for 3-bedroom apt:
$177/hr plus 1/3 minimum utilities; call after 9:00
Share apt. Large private BR. Half of rent is $128.
nollipliers.BAID.M4000
NEEDED. Female to share fully furnished 2 bedroom apartment. Price negotiated. Call急聘电话.
NEEP EXTRA CHAIR?** We Want To Buy Your Used Stuere Equipment. Working Or Not, Amps, Receiver Speakers, Trundlehouses, Gar Stereo Heads, Audio/Video Accessories, Lawniture Radio High 4 W, W2nd 4 B5-511. Need female roommate to share apartment $100/mo, 1/3 utilities, close to campus, on nue
Nomaskining. Male Roommates wanted to share 2 bedroom homes on your campus. Wd,巢包, includes laundry room, kitchen, bathroom.
non-amoking, male to share very nice compartment wintowheeves, washer and dryer, kitchen appliances, refrigerator, $175.00 /m, all utilities paid; Call Cart. 841-4712. ROOMMATE to share 2 BR Apt. 815.125 +1/2 utilities. Pursued Burned. Route Jim 841.8675. TUcer in EC 319 (Basic Circuit & Devices)
Visiting professor from Japan needs small furnished apt, with in walking distance of Spence Museum of Art for March & April. Call Art History Depot. 844-7133.
Wanted: Basketball tickets for the K-State game on Feb. 22. Please call 914-6283.
Wanted immediately! female roommate to share
apartment. Mall: $130 plus 1/3 fee. Call
Two graduate students or mature couple needed to share a bedroom house in a very nice & quiet neighborhood. Call 842-9738 in 7:00 p.m.
ROOMMATE WANTED grad student or pro-
essional preferred, to share large two bedroom
house within distance of campus.
Bedroom w/studial or office. Call Mark at 842-0253.
Brighten Someone's Day Be Romantic...Have Fun...
Send a Valentine Message
Try and Reach the person you've been wanting to meet... Rekindle a Relationship... Enhance One...
C
For a special touch a could be placed with your ad for .50 extra
A
Come by the classified counter in 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
FRESHMAN
LAMBDA SIGMA, the sophomore honor society is now accepting applications for its 1986-87 membership. A minimum of a 3.0 G.P.A. is needed for application. Applications may be picked up at 216 Strong Hall.
Any questions, call Matt Roesner at 843-8690.
1867
1867
Aztec Inn
MEXICAN and AMERICAN FOOD
MON.-FRI.
(11:00-2:00)
LUNCHEON BUFFET
(burritos, cheese enchiladas,rice beans, tacos)
ALL YOU CAN EAT
$4.25
TUES. & SUN. ALL YOU CAN BUFFET
Nights plus SALAD BAR
$5.25
EVERYDAY WELL DRINKS and MARGARITAS
only $1.50
reciprocal with over 300 clubs 841-564f
A Social Skills Workshop for DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING
That feeling which commonly occurs when you enter a room full of strangers you see someone you'd like to meet you wait for an important interview you get on a bus or elevator
February 10, Monday 6:30 to 9:00 p.m. 100 Smith Hall
ZDI STRONG HALL
SAC
Rt. 864-4061
Free/No registration Required.
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
Sports clinic treats all types of injuries
A weaver may seem out of place in the Sports Medicine Clinic at Watkins Hospital, but the clinic's purpose is to treat physical activity injuries not just sports injuries, the director of the clinic said yesterday.
By Lynn Maree Ross
Dr. Larry Magee, the director, said more people could identify with the title of sports medicine clinic than could identify with a physical activity injury clinic.
Staff writer
The clinic was opened, Magee said, because a number of people were coming to Watkins with sports injuries. But since the clinic opened last fall, Magee and Mike Chapman, chief physical therapist at Watkins, have treated patients with a variety of injuries, even someone who dropped a pan on his foot.
Magee and Chapman combine their skills to give each patient complete care. Magee said Dr. Pat Walker also helped in the clinic.
Susan Cannell, Lawrence graduate student in design, is working on her graduate project, weaving about six hours a day. She came to the clinic yesterday for a follow-up look at her shoulder.
Using a model of the shoulder, Magee explained to Cannell what was causing the sounds she was hearing. Magee said she had an overuse syndrome.
The fact is that it's still crackle pop. Like it needs a little oil in there," she said, referring to the shoulder joint.
Magee said, "She has tendonitis." Cannell grimaced. She is on a tight schedule and can't afford to lose much time.
one's using the same muscles and tendons but to a greater degree than other people," he said.
Magee and Chapman treat an average of three to four patients a day. The most common injuries are knee and ankle strains or sprains, with activities such as running, football and basketball accounting for 40 percent of the injuries treated. However, about 20 percent are because of weight lifting, softball and martial arts.
"We need to get your arm in condition," he told Cannell. "You may have to get in a routine where you stretch before you weave."
Chapman said, "You're like a tournament player who plays and never works out."
Linda Farha, Wichita graduate student, came in yesterday with a knee injury. She hurt the knee in December when she slipped on some ice. Chapman showed her some exercises that would strengthen her knee. He also told her what types of exercise she could do and what types to avoid.
"It's the pounding, the stops and starts that you don't want," he said. Later, Farha said she was glad she came to the clinic
1984
The sports medicine clinic is open daily from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. and the first visit is free. Follow-up sessions with Chapman cost between $6 to $18, depending on the amount of time the visit takes.
"I learned a lot," she said. "I think it's good that I could ask questions, that they explained everything. That's good for them and it's good for me."
Chapman said the fee was about one half that charged at other hospitals and the student policy covered therapy for a limited number of visits. X-rays cost about $43. Magee said he wasn't sure whether X-rays were covered by the student insurance policy.
Mike Chapman, chief physical therapist, and Dr. Larry Magee, director of the Sports Medicine Clinic at Watkins Hospital, combine their talents to treat injuries caused by physical activity, not just sports-related injuries. Chapman is holding a model of a knee joint, one of two anatomical models that he uses to explain patients' injuries to them.
Bryan Graves/KANSAN
Student shoots for region pool title
By James Larson Special to the Kansar
A lot of people shoot pool for recreation or a small wager, but Ron Creekmore is shooting for a national championship.
Creekmore, Lenexa sophomore, defeated Kevin Anderson, Overland Park sophomore, seven games to two in the finals of the KU Pocket Billiards Championship at the Kansas Union on Jan. 26. That earned him the right to play in the 64-play Region 11 Tournament at Southwest Missouri State in Springfield tomorrow.
He needs to place first or second to advance to the Nationals in Athens, Ga., in early April.
"The worst part about being a pool player is the pressure," he said. "I'm just learning to handle it better but
standing over a tough shot when first place is on the line you agony. It's also the reason you play."
Creekmore has only been playing pool for two years. He learned by watching pool on television and practicing at home.
"I tried to see if I could do what you could do, but felt like if they could do it I as could!"
Creekmore said that Willie Mosconi, a 15-time world pocket billiards champion, had the most influence on his game. Mosconi also holds the world record for the longest run in straight pool with 526 consecutive shots made.
you're going to imitate someone, it ought to be him."
When he's not playing competitively, Creekmore likes to stroll around the table and explain the strategy behind his shots before attempting them. He calls shots and then makes them, and he even predicts where the cueball is going to be after the shot.
"If I seem to make a big deal about Mosconi it's because he's regarded as the greatest cueman in the history of the game," Creekmor said. "If
Creekmore practices two hours every day. While practicing nine-ball Wednesday night, he failed to pocket the ball only twice in 63 shots. In nine-ball the shooter starts with the one ball and pockets* the balls in numerical order, instead of shooting at whatever looks the easiest.
"Not bad," he said after his performance. He didn't seem to notice that some people had stopped to watch him play.
Faust's contract has two escape clauses
Faust also could leave Akron if it does not become a NCAA Division I school by Dec. 1, 1897.
The contract reads: "It is understood the University will make every reasonable effort to establish the program as a Division I football program by the 1987 football season."
At a Dec. 17 press conference announcing that Faust would become Akron's coach, he was asked if the contract included an escape clause.
United Press International
"I'm not interested in running," he answered.
"I was born and raised a Buckeye, and I'm happy to be back here," Faust told a media gathering.
The five-year contract, signed by Akron President William V. Muse on Jan. 8, is worth $70,000 a year.
Akron, a member of the Division I AA Ohio Valley Conference, has applied for membership in the MidAmerican Conference. Acceptance would enable the Akron Zips to join the Division I ranks.
'Hawks set to continue OSU reign
AKRON, Ohio — Although new Akron head football coach Gerry Faust has said he was not interested in another job, his contract includes two escape clauses.
The Kansas women's basketball team plays Oklahoma State at 7:30 tomorrow night in Stillwater.
By a Kansan sports writer
The former Notre Dame and Cincinnati Moeller High School coach agreed to a contract that includes a stipulation that he can leave the school if he accepts a job in the Big 10, the Atlantic Coast Conference or at Notre Dame.
The game will be the 11th time the two teams will have played against each other. Kansas holds an 8-2 series advantage over the Cowgirls.
The Jawhawks are 4-3 in the Big Eight and 13-7 overall. Oklahoma State is 3-4, 12-10.
Women's Basketball
12.10 (B 8-3-4)
7:30 p.m. tomorrow
at Stillwater
Kansas
Oklahoma State
Probable Starters
F 33 Lisa Dougherty (5-8)
F 25 Vlokie Adkins (6-1)
C 40 Kelly Jennings (6-5)
G 24 Evelute Ott (5-7)
G 30 Toni Webb (5-8)
Order your Valentine's Day bouquet early from a wide variety of flowers!
F 10 Angela East (6-1)
F 34 Jamie Siesen (6-1)
C 23 Clinette Jordan (6-0)
G 13 Alia Duncan (5-7)
G 24 Daherna James (5-7)
Oklahoma State
Owens FLOWER SHOP
Happy Birthday
843-6111
846 INDIANA*
PIRATE 75 YEARS
1955-2025
WILLOW PALO
CHECKERS NIGHT OWL SPECIAL
no coupon necessary
2214 Yale
Fri. & Sat. ONLY 10 p.m.-3 a.m.
2 16" One Topping Pizza & a six pack of pop
ONLY $12.00 (tax incl.)
841-8010
{and first semester seniors}
Questionnaires for membership in Mortar Board, a highly respected senior honor society, are available in 214 Strong and Nunemaker Center. A 3.0 cumulative GPA is required. Deadline for applications is Thurs., Feb. 20 at 5 p.m.
ATTENTION JUNIORS
---
MORTAR BOARD
CHECKERS
SATURDAY
KU BASKETBALL
SPECIAL
16" Pizza w/2 toppings
$5.99 & $1.50 Pitchers
11 a.m. - midnight dine-in only
dine-in only
no coupon necessary
2214 Yale
841-8010
CHECKERS
11
16
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 7, 1986
Yosemite National Park Summer Employment in California
Today, February 7
Representatives of Yosemite Park & Curry Company will be on campus.
This will be a group presentation. All Majors ... Freshmen, Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors are welcome!
We will be interviewing for Seasonal Positions in Hotel, Housekeeping, Kitchen, Food Service Retail, and Support Facilities with starting dates beginning March 15 through June 30.
Housing available to applicant only.
G
For further information and application contact University Placement Center, 223 Carruth-O'Leary.
Yosemite Park & Curry Company Yosemite National Park California 95389 (209)372-1236 EEO/AAP/H/V
7
I
Field house's student section biggest in Big 8 See page 11.
Home court advantage
SINCE 1839
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, FEB 10, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 93 (USPS 650-640)
Cold
Details page 3.
Prof sends info home of election
Bv Leslie Hirschbach
Staff writer
Nobleza Asunción Lande has been getting first-hand information about the Philippine elections from her husband, Carl.
Carl Lande, professor of political science, was sent to the Philippines in January by the Asia Society, a New York based foundation for public education of Asian culture, to study Philippine politics.
A turbulent election is taking place in the Philippines between Corazon Aquino, wife of slain opposition leader, Benigno Aquino, and Ferdinand Marcos, the current president.
Yet she remains extremely calm about the election that some have said could lead to a revolution, even though her husband is studying amidst periodic outbursts of violence.
Asuncion-Lande, professor of communication studies, was born in the Philippines and has relatives living there.
Any Filipino, she said, can tell you that elections in the Philippines are turbulent. The citizens' reactions to this election aren't any different from their reaction to other elections, she said.
"Sometimes I ask him what he's doing these days and he tells me to just quit worrying about him," she said.
But, she sometimes worries about her husband getting caught in the violence, she said.
"Filipinos are very passionate and keen on expressing thoughts and ideas." she said.
Carl Lande, who graduated from Harvard in the late 1950s with doctorate degrees in government and politics, is the only academic member of the group sent to study in the Philippines.
Daniel Bays, director of the center for East Asian studies, said Lande was nationally recognized as a pioneer expert in Philippine politics. Lande has about 35 years experience in Philippine studies, and is frequently called by the national media for comments when something happens there. Bays said it was an honor for the University and Lande to be the only academic member selected by the Asia Society.
Asunción-Lande said her husband was one of a few Americans in the Philippines concerned about the long-term effects of the election. Many are concerned only with the short-term results.
Much of the violence of the election has been blown out of proportion by the media in the United States, she said.
"I think they should keep cool, observe what's going on, and not try to influence what's going on, she said.
Workers sav Philippine ballots falsified
"I think there has been some exagregation," she said. "There is an ex
The Associated Press
--known as Namfrel, had Aquino in the lead by 5,576,319 votes to 4,806,166 for Marcos, or 53.7 percent to 46.3 percent.
MANILA, Philippines — Thirty computer operators marched out of the government's election commission yesterday, claiming the ballot-counting that showed President Ferdinand E. Marcos defeating Corazon Anuino was falsified.
Meanwhile, an international observer group accused Marcos partisans of vote-buying, intimidation, snatching ballot boxes and tampering with election returns in Friday's special presidential election.
The computer operators wept on each others' shoulders after parading single-file out of the Marcos-appointed commission's counting center.
"What's posted on the tabulation board does not tally with the computer板, and we don't know who is doing it," a woman former said.
The woman, who refused to give her name, told the Associated Press that workers spotted the problem Saturday night when Aquino was leading in the commission's count by 100,000 votes. By noon yesterday, Marcos had taken the lead.
By this morning, with 28 percent of the precincts reporting, the commission's unofficial tally gave Marcos 3,056,236 votes to Aquino's 2,903,348, a split of 51.28 percent to 48.72 percent.
See LANDE, p. 5, col. 1
An independent count by the National Movement for Free Elections, a citizens' ballot-monitoring group
The Namfret tally represented 40.14 percent of the Philippines' 86,036 precincts. Final election results from the Philippines' 7,100 islands are not expected for days.
After the workers — 27 women and three men — marched out, tabulation was suspended. The total number of workers tabulating was not known but there were 300 computers in the center.
forts. Savellano said the commission's count was based on authenticated tally sheets which are beyond doubt and which anyone could see.
Citing the difference between the two counts, Political Affairs Minister Leonardo Perez said he would seek the assembly's approval to terminate all other vote-counting immediately.
Marcos, who initially predicted an 80 percent landslide, was hard-pressed throughout his first seriously contested campaign since 1969. In that election Marcos defeated former Sen. Sergio Osman Jr.
In 1972, Marcos imposed martial law, which lasted until 1981. Marcos then won another election, but no significant opposition parties fielded a candidate. Marcos has held power for 20 years.
Certification of the election result is up to the National Assembly, which was due to begin its own separate canvass today.
Marcos' latest six-year term was to expire in 1987, but he called the special election to show domestic and foreign critics, particularly in the
Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., co-leader of a 20-member U.S. delegation observing the elections, said the election was "teetering on the brink of disaster but still in place."
United States, that he still enjoyed overwhelming support.
Speaking on ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley" in an interview from Manila, Lugar said, "No one has any idea who's ahead."
A Lawrence firefighter, above, uncoils a hose in a smokey warehouse at the FMC Corporation. 9th and Maple streets. Two firefighters, right, carry out a comrade who is pretending to be injured.
图
Machine feigns fires
By Brian Whepley
Where there's smoke there's fire.
But that wasn't the case Friday when the Lawrence Fire Department used a new artificial smoke-making machine to simulate fire conditions.
Jerry Karr, training officer for the department, said the machine was used to recreate the confusion and disorientation that firefighters experienced in smoke-filled buildings.
Monday Morning
The department used the machine to fill a warehouse at the FMC Corporation's phosphorus plant at 9th and Maple streets to simulate a real fire.
The machine that creates the fake smoke sounds like a chainsaw. Firefighters filled the building with the artificial smoke, which smelled like formaldehyde, and then practiced rescue drills.
Firefighters often become disoriented in smoke-filled buildings because they can't see where they are going, Karr said, and toxic gases created by burning materials further increase confusion.
Firefighters acting as victims were placed inside the warehouse and other firefighters tried to rescue them. The firefighters followed the firehoses so they wouldn't become lost in the thick smoke.
FMC Corporation has drilled with the department many times, said Dennie Steffen, personnel manager at the plant. FMC has a brigade at the plant that responds to emergencies in the plant. Members of the emergency brigade strapped on oxygen tanks and also took part in the rescue drills.
Karr said firefighters had found that people caught in burning buildings usually could
The most common places victims are found are near doors, windows and walls. Fire fatalities usually are found in those spots, Karr said, because the victims are trying to get out but are overcome by smoke or toxic gases.
The smoke-making machines haven't been on the market very long, he said.
New York City public schools have used the machine to educate children about fires, he said. Because so many arson fires take place in New York, the firefighters tried to lessen the fear so the children could react rationally and get out of burning buildings.
Lynn Marotz, a registered nurse at the department of human development and family life, said that because children were so afraid of fire they needed to be familiarized with fire conditions.
Marotz said she was watching the drills to see whether the smoke-making machine could be used to show children what to do if a fire occurs.
By Debra West
Staff writer
After almost five years of business as a tavern, the West Coast Saloon, 2222 Iowa St., opened Saturday night as a private club.
Shaun Trenholm, owner of the club, said he thought it was only a matter of time before the tavern was forced to change to a club, so he decided to do it now.
"No beer bars are going to make it when the age changes to 21," he said. "Why would anyone go to a tavern when they can have everything at a club?"
Trenholm said to change his bar from a tavern to a club he had to change his liquor license and the plumbing and electrical fixtures behind the bar. He also had to build extra storage area for the liquor.
Memberships to the club cost $10. The membership isn't reciprocal, because law requires that a club receives 50 percent of its receipts from food to be reciprocal, he said.
The graduated change in the drinking age from 18 to 21 in Kansas is
Regular customers of the tavern don't need to worry about any change in atmosphere, Trenholm said.
"I don't want it to be like Gammons," he said. "It's a mellow place
where you can come to shoot pool and have a few drinks."
Other Lawrence taverns also plan to change to private clubs, but some owners said they thought taverns could still be successful.
Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe. 1340 Ohio St., said he thought the Hawk would remain a tavern.
A bill now in the Kansas House Federal and State Affairs Committee would give taverns another advantage, because clubs would no longer be able to have ladies' nights or dine draw nights, he said.
Wallace said there were no laws now that would eliminate 3.2 percent alcohol beer. Therefore, taverns would be able to remain in business.
Taverns had some advantages, he said. They pay lower taxes than clubs, so they usually serve less expensive drinks.
Doug Compton, owner of Bull Winkles Bark, 1344 Tennessee St., said Bull Winkles also would remain a tavern because of its size.
The proposal says no price can be set that is lower than that charged to all other buyers of drinks during that week and prohibits owners from selling lourin as a meal package.
"It only holds about 50 people. There will always be enough people."
Hall residents grab a Coke and a smile
By Peggy Kramer
Staff writer
Students in all residence halls will have the real thing by tomorrow.
Fountain Coke machines were installed in the cafeterias of Gertrude Sellard's Pearson-Corbin and Joseph R. Pearson Halls Thursday and in the cafeterias of Oliver and McColum Halls Friday.
Residents of the halls will have access to the complete Coca-Coa beverage line, Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said Friday.
Classic Coke, Diet Coke, Sprite, Diet Sprite, Mr. Pibb, and Cherry Coke will be available.
Ellsworth and Hashinger Halls will receive the Coke fountains sometime today and the machines will be operating in Templin and Lewis Halls tomorrow. Stoner said.
Drew Blossom, president of the Association of University Residence Halls, said pop served in the cafeterias was something the students had had on their wish list for several years.
Students were excited, Blossom said. They now can drink pop with cafeteria meals without paying 50 cents for a can from the vending machines.
He said AURH first began thinking about installing the pop machines in the cafeterias last November and suggested the idea to the office of student housing during contract proposals last semester.
Specifications for the bid proposal were borrowed from Ohio State University and the University of Tennessee. The $45,700 bid was given to the Coca-Cola company in Atlanta, Stoner said.
"It is going well so far," he said,
"we hope the pop up a positive change
Stoner said that in July, the office of student housing had begun to discuss the possibility of installing
pop fountains in the residence hall cafeterias. By the end of the summer the decision was made to purchase the machines.
See SODA, p. 5, col. 3
Group wants ban on student voting in county
By Juli Warren
Staff writer
Citizens who think that KU students should not be allowed to vote in county elections will soon get a chance to voice their opinions.
But several government officials and a professor questioned the feasibility of prohibiting students from voting.
Petitions asking, in part, that students who are temporary residents be barred from voting, should be circulated sometime this week by members of Douglas County Citizens for Responsible Development, Barbara Richardson, secretary of the group, said yesterday.
About 40 members of the group decided two weeks ago to circulate
the petitions and send them to state legislators.
One legislator, State Sen Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said he disagreed with the petition's pro- change the residency requirements.
Student turnout in local elections, Winter said, is low, and students who vote do so responsibly.
"The facts don't bear out the idea that students are voting in elections where they don't know anything." Winter said.
"Students should have the opportunity to decide whether they're more closely tied to their home community or here, where they spend nine months of the year," he said.
Daryl Richardson, president of the
The citizens group has been vocal in its opposition to the bypass, for which $4 million in general obligation bonds were issued last summer.
Barbara Richardson said last week, "The most important thing, we feel, is the bypass part."
group, said after a recent meeting that group members thought students were more liberal and would vote for costly projects such as a proposed bypass south of Lawrence.
The first half of the petition deals with students voting and the second half opposes the law that allowed Robert Stephan, state attorney general, to decide last summer that a public vote was not required to issue the bonds.
The petition states that letting students vote even though they are not permanent residents "has created untold problems by upsetting the normal balance between taxpaying voters and voters who have no financial interest in the welfare of the community."
Winter and State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said legislators would consider any petition sent to them.
However, Branson said, the legislation that the group wanted would have applications in all counties with institutions of higher education.
"To get through the Legislature, it
See PETITION, p. 5, col. 3
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Monday, Feb. 10, 1986
News Briefs
Mandela's release predicted by wife
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — The wife of jailed black nationalist Nelson Mandela said yesterday that the government apparently wanted to release her husband, but had not told her he would definitely be freed.
After visiting her husband yesterday in the maximum-security Pollsmoor prison in Cape Town, Mandela said she had not been contacted by the government but predicted that her husband would be released within a few months.
Mrs. Klinghoffer dies
NEW YORK - Marilyn Kinghoffer, the wife of the disabled American tourist who was shot and thrown off the Achille Lauro cruiser line by terrorists last fall, died of cancer yesterday at age 88.
A spokeswoman for the family said Klinghoffer had been undergoing chemotherapy since the fall of 1984.
Klinghoffer's husband, Leon, 69, a retired manufacturer who had suffered a stroke, was killed by Palestinian hijackers Oct. 7 and his body was thrown into the Mediterranean Sea.
Hormel set to reopen
AUSTIN, Minn. — Striking meatpackers called a strategy meeting yesterday to plan protests for today's opening of Hormel & Co.'s slaughter section. The plant has been closed since a bitter walkout began nearly six months ago.
For slaughtering to begin, farmers must be allowed to enter the plant with their pigs — something union members may try to prevent, officials said.
Charles Nyberg, Hormel vice president, said about 500 former union members have crossed the picket line and the company has the 1,025 workers needed to resume hog slaughter.
From Kansan wires.
NASA group wants booster records
Unifed Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The commission investigating the Challenger disaster yesterday asked to see all records involving shuttle solid rocket boosters amid charges that NASA knew of possibly catastrophic problems with the rockets before the fatal launch.
While Navy divers scoured the ocean floor for submerged shuttle wreckage with little known success, the national Aeronautics and Space Administration refused to comment on a report citing a history of problems with the shuttle boosters and prior warnings about possible failures.
the challenger tragedy has been conducted under a thick cloud of secrecy. But officials privately acknowledged awareness of problems with seals between booster rocket fuel segments on many past flights.
NASA's internal investigation into
William P. Rogers, former Secretary of State and chairman of the president's commission on the disaster, asked NASA yesterday to produce all internal documents and reports of investigations dealing with problems relating to seals on the booster rockets.
A spokesman said the commission will examine the data in executive session today and hold a public meeting tomorrow at a location yet to be determined.
NASA issued a statement late yesterday that said the agency was assembling all internal documents and reports pertaining to investigations of seals on the booster rockets and that a NASA spokesman would be on hand to answer questions after tomorrow's commission meeting.
The Challenger disaster appears to have been triggered by a rupture at or near a seal joining the lower two of the shark's back, boosters, rockets in the shark's right-side booster, rocks.
The escaping flame apparently heated Challenger's giant external fuel tank enough to raise internal pressure to the rupture point, setting off a titanic explosion that blew the shuttle apart and killed its seven-member crew.
The New York Times reported yesterday that agency documents showed top shuttle managers knew of potentially dangerous problems with seals around shuttle booster rocket fuel segments last year and that internal memos were circulated as late as December listing concerns about possible failures.
During assembly, or stacking, of the boosters at the Kennedy Space Center, the lower rim of the upper fuel casing is lowered into a groove that runs around the top of the section underneath. The two are joined by 177 steel pins.
Two synthetic rubber O-rings that run around the interior of the joint form a primary and secondary seal
2 bodies recovered in Canada train crash
The Associated Press
HINTON, Alberta — The first two bodies were recovered yesterday from the smoking rubble of a head-on train collision in which 29 people were presumed dead.
Tractors, earth-movers and railroad cranes pulled apart mangled locomotives and cars from a west-bound, 114-car Canadian National freight train and an eastbound, nine-car Via Rail passenger train that collided Saturday morning.
Officials said the freight train was on the wrong track.
Each train was being pulled or pushed by three engines at a pretty fair rate of speed, said Alex Rennie, manager of public affairs of Canadian National's Edmonton office. They collided on a stretch of single track about 10 miles east of Hinton. In all, 122 people were thought to have been aboard the two trains.
"There are five engines piled up there. They have burned. Most of the bodies are beneath that rubble," said Derrick Pounder, deputy chief medical examiner for northern Alberta, speaking to reporters at the crash site.
He said it could take a week to recover all the bodies.
Three people were hospitalized in Edmonton, Alberta's provincial capital about 175 miles east of the crash scene, and three others were treated for minor injuries at the hospital in Hinton and released yesterday morning.
Pounder said all the others who were injured were well or were "walking wounded."
More than 24 hours after the collision, white smoke still flowed from the wreckage where Rennie said an
open car carrying dry sulphur had overturned.
Ruined rail cars were strewn along the tracks running through a forest in the foothills of the Canadian Rockies. The accident occurred near Jasper National Park.
The first two bodies recovered, those of a locomotive engineer and a passenger, were both from the passenger train.
Pounder said a composite list based on checks with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Via Rail and Canadian National indicated 122 people were on the trains.
Searchers comb sea, coast after huge wave tips boat
United Press International
BODEGA BAY, Calif. — The Coast Guard searched yesterday for four people missing from a chartered fishing boat hit by a freak wave that pitched 17 people into the sea. Five bodies have already been recovered.
A Coast Guard helicopter, two patrol boats, the 92-foot cutter Point Chino and a shore crew were searching Bodega Bay and the shoreline around Bodega Rock for the missing people. The 65-foot Merry Jane pitched to the side when it was struck by a huge wave late Friday afternoon.
three crewmen and 48 passengers and was returning to port at 4 p.m. when it was struck from behind by a sudden wave about 10 to 16 feet high. The boat was about a quarter mile off shore.
"We're still searching. We've got daters and coroners on the scene," she said.
Rich Tiesto, the boat's owner and operator, said the Merry Jane left Bodega Bay at 7 a.m. Saturday with
"The boat pitched to the side, tossing 17 people overboard," Tiesso said. "We had a flat, calm ocean with a fairly large swell — nothing unusual. It could have been a sneaker wave."
A Coast Guard statement said the Sonoma County Sheriff's office had reported that five of the people recovered died but that identities had not been established.
Hospital officials in Santa Rosa and Petaluma said yesterday that five of 22 people taken to four local hospitals remained hospitalized in stable condition.
Pope advises self-control, not birth control, in India
United Press International
BOMBAY, India — Pope John Paul II, taking his crusade against contraceptives to one of the world's most overpopulated countries, said yesterday that discipline and self-control were the only acceptable means of birth control.
The pope spoke to a crowd of about 200,000 in a park in the heart of Bombay. To support the Roman Catholic Church's opposition to artificial means of birth control, he quoted Indian independence leader Mohandas "Mahatma" Gandhi:
but by a life of discipline and self-control. Moral results can only be produced by moral restraints."
"This, dear brothers and sisters, is the church's profound conviction," said the pope, who waited until the next-to-iasst day of his 10-day visit to discuss birth control.
"How is the suspension of procreation to be brought about? Not by immoral and artificial checks,
The Indian government sponsors a birth control program because of fears that continuing overpopulation will hinder the development of the nation and its 684 million people.
The speech was unusually restrained for the pope, who has vigorously defended the church ban on artificial birth control.
The crowd in Shivaji Park listen quietly and politely to the pope.
Departure of leader calms city
From Kansan wires
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — After two nights of wild rejoicing and mob retaliation against the hated secret police of the ousted Duvalier regime, life began returning to normal yesterday in this slum-ridden city of 1 million people.
Jean-Claude Duvalier became Haiti's President-for-Life in 1971 at age 19 on the death of his father, Francis "Papa Doca" Duvalier. He fled to France on Friday on a U.S. Air Force plane with about 25 family members, guards and associates, after the United States and Jamaica convinced him to step down in the face of mounting violence.
Trashed, burned-out shells of businesses that were associated with the 28 years of Duvalier family rule bore silent violent to a celebration that turned violent, killing at least. 100 people and causing great damage.
A military civilian council assumed interim control.
45 82 71
Duvalier's departure sparked riots and revenge killings against the Tonto Mautes, the Duvalier dynasty's dreaded private militia.
Reporters said Macoutes were beaten and hacked to death with machetes Friday and Saturday.
France granted Duvalier and his party temporary refuge while it searched for a country willing to offer them permanent asylum. Several already have refused.
The French are expected to approach some of the 25 French-speaking African nations.
Meanwhile, residents of the tiny French Alps town of Talliores circulated petitions yesterday calling for Duvalier's eviction from their town.
The provisional military-civilian council Saturday announced Haiti's new Cabinet. The Cabinet is expected to issue its first communique today, including a date to reopen schools closed Jan. 8 because of national unrest in this impoverished Caribbean island nation of 6 million people.
The national government radio yesterday announced that a member of the new Cabinet, Minister of Justice Gerard Gourge, formerly president of the Haitian Human Rights Commission, had obtained the release of 26 political prisoners.
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
2 killed, 4 injured in 3-vehicle pileup
Two people were killed yesterday and four seriously injured in a three-vehicle pileup on U.S. 24 in Jefferson County, according to the Kansas Highway Patrol.
The two killed, who were riding in the same car, were identified by the patrol as Eunice Pilgrim, 65, and Marjorie Harris, 58, both of Perry.
A westbound car driven by Richard Perkins, Teuka junior, crossed the center line about 1:30 a.m. and collided head-on with the car driven by Pilgrim, a patrol dispatcher in Teuka said.
Perkins and a passenger in Pilgrim's car, Grace P. Smith, 70 of Lecompte, were in satisfactory condition at Storm-Vail Regional Medical Center in Topeka.
A westbound pickup driven by Annette Robinson, 41, of Holton, rammed into Perkins' vehicle in a collision, the dispatcher said.
Robinson and her husband, Don,
44, were in serious condition at St.
Francis Hospital and Medical
Center in Topeka.
Dean in finals for job
An Ohio State University official confirmed yesterday that Robert Lineberry, dean of the KU College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is one of five finalists for the position of provest at Ohio State.
Lineberry declined to comment on his nomination as a finalist, saving it was a personal matter.
Charles Babcock, a member of the selection committee, said the position would be filled sometime this month.
Fall injures student
A 24-year-old KU student was critically injured near Potter Lake Friday afternoon when he fell and hit his head.
J. David Markham, Lawrence special student, was running down some stairs near Carruth O'Leary Hall at about 4 p.m. when he fell and hit his head on a sidewalk, Duane Filkins, supervisor for Douglas County Ambulance Service, said yesterday.
Filkins said Markham was unresponsive when ambulance emplovers arrived.
Markham was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital at 4:30 p.m. A hospital spokesman said Markham then was transferred to the University of Kansas Medical Center by helicopter at 5:15 p.m.
He was listed in critical condition yesterday.
KUEA gets $10,000
The Kansas University Endowment Association recently received $10,000 from the estate of a 1909 KU graduate, the Endowment Association said Friday.
The bequest came from the estate of Nina M. Hester, who died April 12, 1984, at age 97. Hester, a homemaker, lived in Lawrence for more than 70 years.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy and cold with a high temperature of about 20. Winds will blow from the northeast at 5 to 15 mph. The low tonight will be zero. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and cold with a high in the 20s.
From staff and wire reports.
1982年
Diane Dultmeler/KANSAN
Yun Ching Lin, a former elementary school teacher from Taiwan, leads a children's choir at a Chinese New Year's Eve party in the Kansas Union. Saturday night's party celebrated the beginning of the year of the tiger and was sponsored by the Chinese Student Association.
Rumors of violations prompt official letter
University officials have responded to rumors that final oral examinations for doctoral students have not been open to the public as required by the Graduate School catalog.
By Sandra Crider
Staff writer
George Wooyard, associate dean of the Graduate School, said recently that the office sent letters last week to the faculty heads of graduate divisions in response to rumors of incidents where individuals were being denied access to the defense of dissertations.
Jawrence marks year of the tiger
"The business of the University is to engage in research and in the generation and transmission of knowledge," Woodyard said. "This is one of the forms in which that is accomplished."
He said the exams were both oral and public to preserve the old European tradition of students sharing their knowledge with society. The openness of the exams also helps to maintain the free exchange of information on which the University operates.
As specified in the Graduate School catalog, the examinations must be publicized so the public may attend.
After dinner, demonstrations of Chinese culture were given. For example, Chinese and American school children sang a traditional Chinese folk song.
The party, sponsored by the Chinese Student Association, began with a dinner consisting of more than 10 different Chinese dishes. The preparation of the food took three days, said Yu-Chuen Lin, president of the association.
Staff writer
By Brian Kaberline
She said she thought the faculty members probably were trying to protect their students from having to face strangers in a stressful situation.
The room was packed with Chinese students and staff members of the University of Kansas as well as other families and American host families.
The New Year's Eve celebration in
About 225 people gathered Saturday night at the center, 115 W. 11th St., to welcome the coming of the year of the tiger and to remember the traditions of a distant home.
The office had heard about the incidents but had not verified them, he
Several faculty members said they knew of incidents where the open policy was violated, but refused to comment as to the specific nature and sources of the event:
said. The letter was meant to be a reminder to the faculty at large about the rules regarding the oral defenses.
Outside it was a typical February night in Lawrence. The cold wind hurried the regular crowd to the downtown bars for the weekly celebration of another week gone by.
Pam Houston, assistant to the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, is in charge of graduate studies. She said she, too, had heard rumors that people were not allowed to attend some oral exams.
"They don't want to make it any more tense for the students than it already is." Houston said.
Woodyard said, "We can't really preclude people from participating in the exam. To do that would be adverse to the open nature of the University.
But inside the basement of the Lawrence Community Center the cold grayness gave way to a warm, festive atmosphere. It was no longer February in Lawrence, it was New Year's Eve in China.
The faculty members may think they have the students' best interests in mind, she said, but they are violating Graduate School policy.
James Chiang, a KU graduate,
said he came back every year to see
his Chinese friends. Chiang, who now
lives in the Kansas City area, said his
Eddy Hwang, an adviser to the association, said Chinese people also wished each other good luck in the coming year by hanging banners. The banners contain sayings that stress the new beginning of a new year, he said.
China and Taiwan is like Christmas in the United States, Chin-Chih Tseng, president of the Free China Club said. Families gather together to spend the holiday with each other.
Although the people celebrated the same customs and traditions Saturday night, they gathered for different reasons. Some came to see old friends, others to remember home and still others to experience something new from another culture.
Another custom is the giving of a small red package or envelope to children by older family members and to unmarried older people by married couples. The envelopes contain money and symbolize a wish that the coming year be filled with luck and happiness.
Lin said other customs accompanied the New Year's celebration. Some are still practiced in the United States, but others have been given up by many Chinese students at KU.
family skipped some of the traditions, but he still planned to give red envelopes to his children.
"I don't like to put a lot of credence in rumors." he said.
Tseng said she enjoyed relearning the different parts of Chinese culture that she had forgotten. She said the party was a review in Chinese culture.
Letters, telephone calls and the company of friends must substitute for being with family for many Chinese students.
"It brought back all of those memories," she said. "All Chinese know that wherever you are, you have to go home for this celebration."
The celebration is important because it is a chance for Chinese people to be Chinese in this country, he said.
Hwang, a graduate student, said he would call his wife, who lives in Taiwan, to wish her a happy new year.
Many of the children were born in the United States and all attended American schools, he said. The song was an effort by the Chinese community in Lawrence to teach the children their heritage.
He said Chinese people had to work to keep their own customs alive. An example of this was the song by the school children.
Committee considers food shop in Towers
By Peggy Kramer
Staff writer
Jayhawker Towers residents might have a place to cure their late-night munchies if a study now underway indicates that a fast-food shop in the complex would be feasible.
"The study is only in the talking stage, and it would be premature to say what projects are being considered," Bob Richeson, chairman of the committee conducting the study and food service manager for the Kansas and Burge Unions, said yesterday.
The five-member committee of Richeson and four representatives from the Unions plans to finish the study within a month and present a report to James Long, director of Kansas and Burge Unions.
Richeson said the committee would consider which kind of fast food service or shop would best be accepted, the hours it might be operated, its cost and parking.
Long said that after he received the study, he would discuss the terms with the Towers management and the office of student housing. They would make the final decision on what the best option would be.
Long said, "The committee is doing the ground work and we don't expect any major changes this semester."
Students should be given credit for the idea, he said. He filed a request with union food service after the office of student housing considered students' suggestions.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said the food shop probably would be built under the office complex in Tower E.
Stoner said other suggestions included a delicatessen, a yogurt shop and a pizza place.
Lori Bloom, Washington, D.C., senior and Jayhawker Towers' representative for the Residential Programs Advisory Board, said another possibility would be a room with vending machines and video games. Students started discussing possible projects and the problems associated with them in October, she said.
Tom Berry, Northfield, Ill., sophomore and Towers resident, said the Towers was a central location for a fast food shop and were close to Daisy Hill residence halls.
Staff writer
By Russell Gray
'Professor Profile' informs listeners of school research
A series of public service announcements began recently to inform Kansans of the variety of research being done at Board of Regents schools and the benefits of that research.
The series, which began in January, is titled "Professor Profile," and is sponsored by the Kansas Information Network and the Regents.
The Regents schools are the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
Six professors from each of the Regents schools participated in the production of 60-second announcements, Frank Barthell, electronic media coordinator for the office of University Relations, said yesterday.
It also was a matter of publicizing work not normally publicized, said Barthell, who produced KU's announcements.
ting topics important to people in the state and informing listeners of a faculty member's research contribution in that area, Bartell said.
The selection of professors and topics was a combination of pinpoint-
The Kansas Information Network has 30 stations statewide, but none in Lawrence. The only station in Lawrence that has carried the announcements is KLWN-AM.
The station received two for January and two for February, Lee said. The station will receive announcements from all the Regents schools.
Lee said he would be glad to continue running the series and will do it twice a day
Bill Lee, program director for KLWN, said his station was running the announcements at least twice daily.
2 profs push for research center
By Tom Farmer Staff writer
Through the current efforts of two faculty members, an institute for North Atlantic studies may be formed at the University of Kansas within four to five years.
Daniel Gahan, research associate for the Hall Center for the Humanities and one of the organizers of the institute, said establishing a program for North Atlantic studies was significant because of the importance of good relationships among the United States, Canada, Great Britain, Ireland and Scandinavian countries.
"We see the North Atlantic communities as having a lot in common," Gahan said. "It's misleading in thinking that North American and European countries are so different."
Ted Wilson, director of the center, also is working to establish
the institute.
Wilson said the University had traditionally been strong in British writing, courses, Irish studies and English history. But there was a need to build on these strengths and introduce a studies program combining them with Canada and the Scandinavian countries.
If the two professors are successful in their efforts, the institute will emphasize research on relations and similarities and differences in the countries.
"The thrust thus far is to try to increase research and understanding," said Wilson. "We want to look at the inclinations of people in the North Atlantic region."
Gahan and Wilson began working on the institute in August and have taken steps toward its establishment.
A series of five lectures on Canadian issues was financed by the Canadian government. Canada,
according to Gahan, is willing to give money to projects that increase people's knowledge of the country.
The next lecture in the series will be March 20, when Elsbeth Cameron, from the Department of Literature at the University of Toronto, will discuss the Canadian novel.
KU libraries will benefit from the institute with $40,000 worth of books on Canadian history, literature, sociology and science, to be donated by the Canadian government in the next five years.
"Canada is more like the U.S. than any country in the world," said Gahan. "They are moving closer to free trade with the U.S., but yet, a student cannot learn Canadian history here."
Arrangements for a Danish historian to teach modern Scandinavian history in the spring of next year also have been made.
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University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Monday, Feb. 10, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
To an anxious friend
You tell me that law is above freedom of utterance. And I reply that you can have no wise laws nor free enforcement of wise laws unless there is free expression of the wisdom of the people — and, alas, their folly with it. But if there is freedom, folly will die of its own poison, and the wisdom will survive. That is the history of the race. It is the proof of man's kinship with God. You say that freedom of utterance is not for time of stress, and I reply with the sad truth that only in time of stress is freedom of utterance in danger. No one questions it in calm days, because it is not needed. And the reverse is true also; only when free utterance is suppressed is it needed, and when it is needed, it is most vital to justice. Peace is good. But if you are interested in peace through force and without free discussion — that is to say, free utterance decently and in order — your interest in justice is slight. And peace without justice is tyranny, no matter how you may sugar-coat it with expediency. This state today is in more danger from suppression than from violence, because, in the end, suppression leads to violence. Violence, indeed, is the child of suppression. Whoever pleads for justice helps to keep the peace; and whoever tramples upon the plea for justice temperately made in the name of peace only outrages power and kills something fine in the heart of man which God put there when we got our manhood. When that is killed, brute meets brute on each side of the line.
So, dear friend, put fear out of your heart. This nation will survive, this state will prosper, the orderly business of life will go forward if only men can speak in whatever way given them to utter what their hearts hold—by voice, by posted card, by letter or by press. Reason never has failed men. Only force and repression have made the wrecks in the world.
William Allen White
Emporia Gazette, July 27, 1922
At the end of this season, college basketball will lose a great coach and an even greater man.
Fond farewell
The assistant coaches, players and students at that other school out West will miss Hartman next year, and all of college basketball will be affected by his leaving.
He is an honest and fair man in a profession where those attributes are much needed. He's been personally responsible for shaping hundreds of young men into finer athletes and finer people.
He also wins. A lot.
Jack Hartman last week announced that he will retire at the end of this season after 30 years of first-rate coaching, the past 16 at Kansas State.
At K-State, Hartman has coached three Big Eight championship teams and seven NCAA tournament teams. He has taken two squads to the
final eight of the NCAA tournament and has felled plenty of giants along the way. By the end of the season he will have nearly 300 wins at K-State and more than 500 career wins.
Since announcing his retirement, Hartman has said publicly that he worries about the image he is leaving behind. He said he feared that people viewed him only as a stern, stone-faced grouch at the side of the court, when he actually enjoyed small children and long hours spent fishing.
But he has accomplished far more than the record books can prove. He has provided a role model for other coaches to study and learn from.
He need not worry. Those who know him also know that peeling back the rigid exterior reveals all of the soft spots and special feelings that make him a really good man who also happens to be a great coach.
A state with financial troubles needs to look at previously rejected alternatives to help its sluggish economy. Kansas is such a state.
The Legislature is considering a state lottery to raise money for education and ease the state's financial woes.
The proposal now goes before the full House. It must pass both the House and the Senate by two-thirds vote to be placed on the November ballot.
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee approved a proposal last week that would allow the Legislature to permit, license, regulate and tax horse and dog races.
Another source of needed income would be a constitutional amendment to allow parimutuel betting on horse and dog racing.
The Legislature's control over taxing of the races means
a healthy increase in state revenue.
Horse or dog races also would give a boost to state tourism, and bring in out-of-state dollars as bettors flock to the races. This would be especially true if a race track were built near the Kansas City area.
Lotteries and pari-mutuel betting can be negative experiences for a state if handled improperly, or by the wrong hands.
But, as Rep. Michael Peterson, D-Kansas City, says, "We don't legislate morality. We can set policy. We can start programs."
Peterson is right. The state would have control of who runs race tracks because it must issue licenses. But the Legislature first needs to concern itself with finding ways to help the state's economy.
Part-mutuel betting is a safe bet as a quick and easy way to give Kansas a monetary spark of life.
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Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone 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 fewer than 700 words. The
The Kanan reserves the right to reedit or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 StuartFri Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid by mail to the University of Kansas at $27 a day in Douglas County and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
POSTMASTER: Hall address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Shuttle crash affects media, young people
Even before she became a journalist, my daughter had reservations about the way reporters sometimes behaved in pursuit of a story. We watched in Washington during Watergate as television crews chased principals in the scandal down alleys after Sunday worship.
Out of college and four years into the business, reportorial decorum or lack thereof — still is one of her favorite subjects. Because she works for a newspaper in New England and we live in California, I usually hear her complaints and observations by long-distance on Sunday nights.
Five days after the shuttle crash, she had a different opinion of the performance of the press. Despite all the commentary that was poured out by the media, I had not heard anyone make the point that my daughter made quite the way she made it.
She said the nation's journalists did fine jobs and remained on excellent behavior throughout the tragedy. Watching lots of television, she said she was proud of the manner in which journalists respected the privacy of
N. E. BADGEY
Robert C.
Maynard
Oakland Tribune
the families of the Challenger astronauts.
At Concord High School in New Hampshire, when the reporters were asked to leave the auditorium, they rose as one and departed, she said. Teacher Christa McAulife's students and colleagues were able to grieve in peace.
Because she remembers media stakesouts in Washington, she was startled to see the press display such hard-hitting images of one of the biggest stories of our time.
The press, she thinks, is not receiving the credit it deserves.
Even so, there was one bad habit journalists covering the tragedy had not broken, especially in New England. It is what we call at our dinner table the inevitable irrelevant comparison.
"Give me a break," my daughter said. "I cannot stand to hear or read once more about how this tragedy touches us the way the Kennedy or King assassinations did. This was an event unto itself. In my mind it compares to nothing.
"Why do we always have to make things fit into classes and categories? Some things defy all previously known categories. That was Challenger and the deaths of the seven."
School children were gathered in classrooms across the country to watch Christa McAuliffe go into orbit and send back lessons from her classroom in space. Instead, they received an instant lesson on the fragility of life. I agree with my daughter; many aspects of this tragedy have earned it the designation unique. And even that word sounds trivial.
Social psychologists will have to tell us one day why it is that the Challenger tragedy has made so many young people eager to go into
space. You would think the opposite would occur.
Not so, said my daughter. She wants to go.
"I guess I've seen the worst that can happen to you," she said. And it was over quick. When you think about it, that's not a bad trade. You risk instant, probably painless, death. But on the other hand, imagine if you make it, what it must be like to be out in space."
Christa McAuliffe's death on the edge of the future has made many young people aware of the fact that a new frontier is beckoning, that their generation will ride rockets into the 21st century.
So when daughters tell fathers how they feel about space travel, those are not altogether theoretical feelings. Daughters could become part of a larger plan before fathers fully adjust to long-distance from New England.
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Manson's futile parole battle continues
Well, Charles Manson is back in the news, as good-humored as ever.
For the sixth time since his imprisonment in 1971 Manson was rejected parole. However, he has shown that his image has changed. No longer is he a psychopathic young hippie murderer and cult leader.
Now, he's a 51-year-old, scruffy fellow who wears a swastika on his forehead and says he spends his time making dolls of scorpions with the power to torment. He said this in a speech he wrote and delivered to the parole board Tuesday. And the speech goes on.
If released, he promised he'd move to Libya, Iran or join the revolution down south somewhere to try to save his life on Earth. He said his dream remained one of worldwide revolution.
After plea for parole, a three-member panel of the California Board of Prison Terms held a private conference for almost an hour. After serious consideration, they decided not to release him.
The question remains, why was parole considered in the first place?
Evan Walter
Staff columnist
A
Did some attorney dimly hope that Manson could perform the impossible and act like a normal human being for a short time in front of the panel? Possibly they then could forget his nsychopathic record.
Also questionable is why it took the parole board so long to talk over something like this. Unless Manson thought his promise to endure revolution in Libya or Iran would make his release appealing to the panel, his pared sounded more like a request for mental asylum than freedom.
The Manson case is repugnant, but there also is in a dry sense some humor in it, particularly in the demonstration of the courts. Observe.
Here is a short summary of the facts.
In 1969. Manson, along with four of
his worshippers, were convicted of slaying actress Sharon Tate and six other people. Manson was given a life prison sentence, almost two years later.
Psychology experts studied Manson and concluded that he suffered delusions of grandeur and had an extremely distorted view of reality. They used words such as "megalomaniac," "psychotic" and "schizophrenic" to describe him. Also, they discovered he lacked any, compassion for other people, as if the murders don't already tell that.
His name has been used in various psychology textbooks to typify the most dangerous types of mentally deranged individuals.
And now, keeping in mind that life sentences often don't last 20 years, he returns requesting parole. Stephen Kay, the Los Angeles County chief deputy district attorney, describes Manson as "a caged, vicious, wild animal who, if released, would once again be free to prey on innocent victims."
Manson then goes in front of the board to give a 30-minute speech,
confirming every word of Kay's statement.
The panel then supposedly takes a long, hard look at the situation to reach a decision most people would take two minutes to make. For all we know, they may have spent the time drinking coffee and talking about their families.
They then decide he'll go back to prison, but comfort him by saying he'll be eligible for parole again in three years.
That is perhaps the best way to deal with Manson. Because what happens if within the next three years, Manson discovers the trick that psychopaths often do — to act normal and repentful for 30 minutes in front of the parole board and somehow manage to gain parole?
No one wants to see him, once again strike California — or Libya or Iran — as one of the most notoriously celebrated crazies resuming work on his life dream of world revolution.
A different dream exists in the minds of free men with common sense — that Manson never discovers that trick.
Mailbox
Article misleading
The article "Findings of drug abuse may not lead to firing." (Kansan, Feb. 4) is quite misleading. I particularly object to the description of provisions in the Federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973 that relate to alcoholism and drug addiction as "a loophole in employment law."
Alcoholism and drug addiction are, however, treatable conditions. A person whose job performance has been affected by abuse of alcohol or other drugs can return to full efficiency following successful treatment
Alcoholism and drug addiction are indeed listed among handicaps in the 1973 Act, and handicapped individuals are protected from being refused employment or fired on grounds directly related to their handicap.
It is fully reasonable, and has been, common practice for much of the past decade, that an employer require employees whose job performance is affected by these handicaps to take action to improve their job performances, or lose their jobs.
Nothing in the Rehabilitation Act prevents such a course of action; the handicap has been recognized and an appropriate probationary period allowed for the employee to deal with the problem. Unlike the "drug testing" described in the article, no invasion of privacy has occurred, since the intervention has not focused upon substance abuse but upon job performance.
Many large corporations have found that treatment—often through company-funded Employee Assistance Programs—makes good sense. It protects what may be years of company investment in a valuable employee by returning him or her to full efficiency. Often, treatment is less expensive than training and developing a new employee.
The Rehabilitation Act continues to protect employees even after successful treatment. Under its terms, a past history of alcoholism or drug addiction is considered irrelevant to whether an individual can perform a specific job. The law does not protect an employee whose job performance remains inadequate because of abuse
of alcohol or other drugs.
George Wedge associate professor English and linguistics
the entire tone of your article, especially its description of the carefully reasoned inclusion of alcoholism and drug addiction as handicaps as "a loophole in employment law," reflects a blantant misunderstanding of the law and its intent, as well as ignorance of how the law has worked over the 12 years of its existence.
It is not, as the current jargon would have it, a matter of choice — it is really a simple matter of life or no life. All pregnant women know a life-
Right to life
I applaud Tim Erickson's column on the error of the Supreme Court on the abortion issue (Kansan, Feb. 4). I applaud the Kansan for publishing it. Would that we spoke this frankly about all issues in the life of the nation rather than skulk in the ignorant shadows of euphemisms and newspaper.
exists inside of them; it becomes a matter of conscience whether a woman acknowledges that life as human.
The Supreme Court, in its slip-shod Roe vs. Wade, danced around the term "life," refusing to rule on "when life begins." Yet it went right on to say that a woman could nevertheless destroy what is obviously potential life up to the third trimester.
That is pure contradiction. And that is what we are living in this country: we spout about equal rights and human rights when we cannot even admit the frightening evil in ourselves of our unfeftened willingness to extinguish innocent life.
It is only when people such as Erickson raise the cry, when we begin to address the uncomfortable reality of creation, that we will be ready to grant abolition to unborn life, the same abolition as blacks received from the slavery of being tagged as non-humans.
Scott Bloch
Scott Bloom Lawrence third-year law student
Monday, Feb. 10, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Lande
Continued from p. 1
pectation in thinking that the Philippines is a little U.S. That's not so."
Corruption in politics is a way of life there, she said.
Ascencion "Toots" Schultz, 2014 Miller Dr., moved to the United States from the Philippines when she was 17. She said fraud and violence during elections was nothing new to her.
"Marcos got rid of the crooks and became the biggest crook of all," she said.
"I saw people getting beat up as a kid because they didn't vote for the right person," she said.
Marcos, she said, who had been president of the Philippines for 20 years and had many supporters, was corrupt.
Many older Filipinos support Marcos because they don't think a woman can run a government, she said. The younger generations are breaking away from that train of thought.
Schultz said she didn't favor either candidate.
Aquino, she said, was very naive politically. Aquino had, however, given the young people in the Philippines a cause. The young people realize they can help themselves, and don't have to rely on the United States for help. Schultz said.
Schultz said serious violence might break out in Manila if Aquino won the election and Marcos didn't concede. No extensive revolution would occur, she said, because the Philippines were too spread out to provide any unity among the people.
Aquino supporters and Marcos supporters have been fighting for years, she said. Civil disturbances and demonstrations in Manila and other larger cities would probably be the extent of the violence.
"It will be bloody," she said. "I may sound cynical, but that's the way it always is."
Diane Taylor, dietician at Olivei Hall, said the machines were ready for Friday's lunch, and it was too soon to tell how smooth the transition would be.
Soda
because the students requested it."
The students were surprised to get pop with their meal and word of the new beverages spread quickly, she said. The fountain is only available
Continued from p. 1
during meals, and it is locked after meals;
Before pop was added, the drink selection in the cafeterias was milk, tea, water and Fanta. Fanta is similar to orange and grape punch and is a pop substitute. Taylor said.
Brian Pheifer, Olathe freshman and JRP resident, said, "I was impressed with the variety of Coke products. I was surprised that we got it so soon because we were encouraged to finish the grape drinks first and we haven't."
Some students have been bringing in large cups for beverages, especially pop, but few dieticians anticipated that the large cups would become a problem.
"We don't expect any problems
with students filling up big cups, but students aren't allowed to take filled cups out of the cafeteria," Taylor said.
Debbie Wulf, Coffeyville sophomore and GSP resident, said food supervisors at GSP didn't allow students to bring in big cups because they were supposed to use the glasses the cafeteria provided.
Petition
Continued from p. 1
would need strong support in the other Regents' districts," she said.
During her campaign, Branson said, she found that many students registered and voted at home for people they recognized.
Of those that have registered here, she said, "The ones that have talked to me seem to study the issues and weigh both sides pretty carefully."
director for the Kansas secretary of state's office, said that for voting purposes, state statutes defined residence as "the place adopted by a person as such person's place of habitation."
"There is nothing in the law that says you're either permanent or temporary." Reinhart said.
John Reinhart, public information
Francis Heller, professor of law,
said he thought the group was
overestimating the effect of the student vote.
"My first reaction on this thing was: 'These poor people haven't thought about the realities of this,'" Heller said.
Patty Jaimes, Douglas County clerk, estimated last week that between 4,000 and 5,000 KU students were registered to vote in the county.
Heller said he also questioned whether students voted liberally.
He said that in the 18-20 age group the vote was divided about the same as any other age group except 60 and older, which is more conservative.
Heller said that students were counted in the federal census, so the city got its share of state property taxes on the basis of the census count.
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University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Monday, Feb. 10, 1986
Cancer funds and awareness raised
By Lynn Maree Ross Staff writer
The Kansas division of the American Cancer Society raised over $2 million last year, and at the same time educated people about cancer and cancer prevention.
"Until cancer hits you, you close your ears to it. When it does hit you, you don't know what to do," said Virginia Long, public information chairman of the Johnson County American Cancer Society.
Long was one of 10 people who spoke at a Douglas County cancer society meeting Saturday at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. The meeting focused on the need to further educate the public and how to accomplish that goal.
Visibility of the society through fund-raisers is one way to make the public more aware of cancer and cancer prevention, said Natalie Haren, chairman of Kansas division standing crusade committee.
committee. The best fund-raisers are those tailored around a community, she said. The University of Kansas is part of the Lawrence community.
Two KU students, Keith Ott, Overland Park junior, and Lisa Bixby, Chanute junior, are working together this semester to raise money for the society.
Ott, president of the Owl Society at the University, said the junior honorary society donated money to the cancer society every year, but he would like to see it organize an annual fund-raiser. Two years ago, the Owls sold daffodils for the society, but last year the group didn't have the time or the resources to do it again.
Bixby said she was recruited by the local cancer society to help with fundraising in the residential community. She and Ott decided the task would be easier if they worked together.
Ott and Bixby are organizing Daffodil Days, which is part of the society's fund-raising crusade. The state society provides the order forms and handles delivery of the flowers to the groups that participate.
Ott said he and Bixby planned to approach as many local businesses as possible. Their hope is that the businesses will buy the flowers and donate
Restaurants also are on the list, he said. Ott and Bixby said they hoped the restaurants would buy dappers to put on tables and near cash registers.
them to local nursing homes.
Ott said he didn't know how students at the University would respond to Daffodil Days. Members of the honor society will to go to fraternities, sororites and residence halls to tell the students what the group is doing.
Lyn Walther, president of the Douglas County cancer society, said Ott's and Bixby's enthusiasm for the fund-raiser was much appreciated.
Most people don't realize that good nutrition, a positive attitude and exercise are important elements in preventing cancer, Walther said. And students will be more likely to listen to their peers than anyone else, which is why getting young people involved in promoting the society is so important.
"So much can be done from a preventative stand point," she said. "If we've done nothing but save one or two lives, we've really accomplished something."
Kansas Alumni magazine may be revived, editor says
Language Acquisition?" at 7:30 p.m. today in Room 207 Blake Hall as part of the linguistics colloquy.
By Tim Hrenchir
new social situations, meeting people and starting conversations. Call 864-4064 to register.
Staff writer
communications director for the University of Kansas Alumni Association said yesterday that she thought publication of Kansas Alumni magazine, suspended last year, would be renewed in June.
On Campus
■ Virginia Gathercole, professor of linguistics at Florida International University, will speak about "Does Frequency of Input Play a Role in
The Student Assistance Center will sponsor a speed and comprehension reading class from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. tomorrow.
Multipurpose Room in Robinson Center.
"It looks like we're going to do a magazine in June, but it will be different from the old format," said Jennifer Jackson, communications director and Kansas Alumni editor.
Publication of this year's January and June issues of the semi-annual magazine was suspended last July by the Alumni Association's board of directors because financing was unavailable and the board wanted to find a format that would better serve its readers.
The University Placement Center will present a workshop, "Interviewing II: How not to interview," at 3:30 p.m. today in Room 3 Lippincott Hall.
The Alumni Association published a newsletter in January and then published a tabloid this month. It also plans to publish tabloids in March and April.
The Student Assistance Center will sponsor a program, "Dealing with that Uneasy Feeling," at 6:30 p.m. today. The program will focus on becoming more comfortable in
Award winners were announced Jan. 15 in Kansas City, Mo., at the annual District VI meeting of the council. District VI includes 200 universities, colleges and independent schools in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa, Colorado, Wyoming, North Dakota and South Dakota.
The Kansas Alumni magazine and tabloid last month won seven awards, including five first-place awards, in a regional competition sponsored by the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education.
The KU Kompo Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in the
The magazine won a first-place award for alumni magazines, and the tabloid won first place in the alumni newspaper-tablio category. Dan Reeder was editor of both the magazine and tabloid.
the tabloid also won first place in the visual design, complete unit or series category. Christina Jepsen was art director for the tabloid.
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Kansas Alumni magazine-writer Valerie Mindel won first place in the feature-magazine article category, for her article, "The Great Sheriff Race of 1970." Reeder said the story was about George Kimball, who ran unsuccessfully for sheriff of Lawrence in 1970.
Magazine writer Chuck Marsh won first place in the in-depth analysis category, for "To The Core," about KU core curriculum.
Get into the game!
The magazine won a second-place award in periodical cover design, for the cover on its June 1985 issue.
DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING
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Come by the classified counter in 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
ASK
Legislative Assembly
The only Associated Students of Kansas Legislative Assembly of this year's legislative session will be held Sunday, February 16.
Some of the issues to be discussed include:
Teacher Scholarships Study Programs
State Work State Scholarships
Be a part of it
Contact the ASK Office in the Student Senate Office 105B Kansas Union
864-3710
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
7
Coke
3 DIEA TANJAURIS
ENRIMETO INTELIGENTE
Mark Mohler/KANSAN
Travis Kart, 9, son of Bill Karl, McLouth, fires a rubberband-shooting Bubba gun at can targets as Dan Wholzhauser supervises. Travis was at yesterday's K & K gun show at the Holiday Inn Holdome, 200 McDonald Drive.
Students craving to be boss start video production firm
By Barbara Shear
Staff writer
Two students were tired of being told what to do, so they became their own bosses.
Jeff Sheetz, Lawrence junior, and Derrick Reicheneker, Kansas City, Kan., senior, recently started Derrick Michaels Video Production.
"We were tired of working for other people," Scheetz said. "I had video experience and Derrick had business and marketing experience, so we decided to start a video business."
The production company works out of Adventureland Video, 925 Iowa St.
Scheetz said they went to the store's owner, Ron Murphy, and told him about their video production company idea.
Although the company has been operating only since the beginning of October, both men said they thought business would be very good.
"We had people talk to us about weddings and sports," Scheetz said. "We had some people approach us about taping the indoor little league soccer."
Reicheneeker said their first client was the bridal show at the Holiday Inn Holdmile, 200 McDonald Dr., on January 26.
On the Record
A University of Kansas Athletic Corporation employee reported the theft of $165.18 from a desk in Parrot Athletic Center between 5:30 and 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, KU police said yesterday.
A Templin Hall resident reported that his mattress, lamp and chair, valued together at $163, were stolen from his room between Dec. 15 and 18, police said.
A ski jacket, wallet, duffel bag and 24 cassette tapes, valued together at $670, were stolen from a KU student's car in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street between 11:30 p.m. and midnight Saturday, Lawrence police said.
the Sigma Nu fraternity, 1501 Sigma Nu Place, between 7:30 and 9:10 p.m. Saturday, police said.
**Beef** and other groceries valued together at $238.11 were stolen from a grocery store in the 1700 block of Massachusetts Street at 5:50 p.m. Saturday by suspects who loaded up a grocery cart and left without paying, police said.
A credit card, cash and several pairs of glasses were stolen from a KU student's car parked in the 1400 block of W. Seventh Street, police said.
THERE'S STILL TIME TO PREPARE
A Lawrence woman had a wallet and cash, valued together at $152, stolen from a grocery cart at a store in the 2300 block of Louisiana at 2:45 p.m. Saturday, police said.
A radar detector valued at $260 was stolen from a KU student's car at
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THE ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER
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Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved
For reservations, call 913/864-3982 VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations
8:00 p.m. nightly
Tuesday & Wednesday, February 18-19, 1986
Hoch Auditorium
Presented by the KU School of Fine Arts Concert Series
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Partially funded by the Mid-America Arts Alliance, Kansas Arts Commission and National Endowment for the Arts; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and KU Endowment Association; a University Arts Festival event.
The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater is sponsored by Philip Morris Companies Inc.
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8
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Monday, Feb. 10, 1986
Best students leaving, study says
United Press International
WICHITA — A newspaper study published yesterday indicated that more than half of 1,359 Kansas high school students who were National Merit semifinalists from 1970 to 1980 have left the state.
Roughly 25 percent of those students were living, working or studying in Texas and California, the article said.
The six-month study by the Wichita Eagle-Beacon concluded that Kansas' brightest young men and women were flocking to big cities to pursue
education or white-collar, high-technology jobs often not available in the Sunflower State.
The newspaper said its study suggested that Kansas, traditionally an agricultural state, had not followed a nationwide movement that began in the 1970s toward a post-industrial economy.
The National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test, taken by high school students in their junior year, is widely recognized as a strong measure of academic potential. Kansas had 152 semifinalists in 1985.
about 71 percent of the 1,926 Kansas high school students who were National Merit semifinalists in the 1970s. It found that 58 percent of the students surveyed had left Kansas
The newspaper was able to contact
Nearly 90 percent of the semifinalists have left their hometowns and have moved elsewhere in Kansas or out of the state.
Illinois students taste haute cuisine
Among the study's findings:
"We're exporting our wealth," said Anthony Redwood, executive director of the Institute for Public Policy and Business Research at the University of Kansas.
The Associated Press
UBRANB, Ill. — The mystery meat of college folklore is not on the menu at a University of Illinois dining room.
Instead, it's likely to be chateauband for two, served by candlelight, with fresh flowers on the table and classical music in the background — at least once a week.
Each Friday, students scramble for a chance to eat at a tiny
restaurant in Allen Hall called Reservations Only.
They might select the Chinese shibu bow appetizer, steamed buns stuffed with pork, egg and sausage in oyster sauce; an orange and jicama salad; a pear with grated cheese, topped with a raspberry; a spicy Africa chicken groundnut stew; carrots and grapes sautéed in butter with a sweetened vodka sauce; crepes suzettes; and a beverage.
The check: $4.50 plus a punch of
their meal ticket — worth about $1.10.
Reservations Only was created by Maria Ramos, campus director of MCHS.
Ramos also wanted a place where she and a few colleagues could get away from administrative chores and do what they enjoy most — create haute cuisine.
Most students are grateful. One said, "My only regret is that my stomach isn't bigger."
TOPEKA — Gov. John Carlin's reorganization order for the Kansas Department of Agriculture is just the tip of the legislative iceberg facing lawmakers in the fifth week of the 1986 session.
United Press International
Farm board reorganization order to confront Legislature this week
The Legislature also will begin chipping away at issues such as a mandatory seat belt law, a special fund for gambling revenue and implementation of an economic development study. The fifth week also may see some progress in legislation on medical malpractice, annexation and banking.
The reorganization order for the Board of Agriculture, which Carlin said he would issue today, would eliminate the board's power to appoint the secretary of agriculture. Instead, the new board would be an advisory board to the governor and he would appoint its secretary.
The governor must file his executive order by tomorrow. If lawmakers do not act on the order within 60 days of the filing, it will become law. The current structure of
the 12-member board was established in 1872.
Lawmakers also will try to make sense out of the Kansas Economic Development Study. The Legislative Commission on Kansas Economic Development — created by the 1986 Legislature — scheduled its first meetings for today and Thursday to discuss how to implement the so-called Redwood study.
The House Judiciary Committee will try to wrap up work on medical malpractice legislation. Committee Chairman Joseph Knopp, R-Manhattan, said he expected fireworks in the final week of committee work on the controversial issue.
Malpractice victims are to testify before the committee today. Knopp said he expected the panel to take final action on the bill on Thursday.
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee was expected to receive a report today from the Alcoholic Beverage Control Division on the problems of enforcing the state's new drinking age. During the 1985 session, lawmakers passed
legislation that would gradually raise the legal drinking age for 3.2 beer from 18 to 21.
The committee also planned to discuss a bill that would tighten the state's ban on happy hours. The bill would remove a loophole in the 1985 law that allowed cut-rate drink prices if the prices were offered all day.
After a hearty legislative menu today, tomorrow is Pancake Day, which usually draws many state officials to Liberal for the annual pancake race with the women of Olney, England.
Tomorrow also is the deadline for introduction of bills by individual legislators. The deadline usually brings a last-minute crush of bills.
The House Ways and Means Committee plans to discuss Thursday a bill that would earmark the proceeds from lottery and parimutuel gambling to a special gaming fund. The bill would send 60 percent of gambling revenues to economic development, 30 percent to counties' reappraisal costs and 10 percent to correctional institution construction.
The heat is on.
This summer may be your last chance to graduate from college with a degree and an officer's commission. Sign up for ROTC's six-week Basic Camp now. See your Professor of Military Science for details But hurry.The time is short The space is limited.The heat is on BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS 864-3311/3312 Contact Captain Kennard, Room 206 Military Science
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Monday, Feb. 10, 1986
Nation/World
University Daily Kansan
9
U.S. influence in Lebanon cools
United Press International
WASHINGTON — After the loss of 300 American lives and a diplomatic defeat in Lebanon, the United States has decided it cannot prevent Syria from either destroying that country or taking it over.
The Lebanese government of President Amin Gemayel, disillusioned by U.S. unwillingness to bring its superpower influence to bear, has specifically asked the United States not to intercede.
As a result, the United States, which had 1,000 peacekeeping troops in Lebanon two years ago, did not even make any official comment when Syrian-backed troops shelled the Lebanese presidential palace.
That is the building where Secretary of State George Shultz negotiated his May 17, 1983, agreement that was supposed to lead to the withdrawal of Syrian and Israeli troops from Lebanon.
Two years ago, the United States was giving Lebanon $250 million in aid. This year, the State Department has asked Congress for only $2 million for Lebanon — in effect, just enough to pay the interest on former loans now coming due.
Gemayel and his forces control only a tiny series of enclaves in and near Beirut. The symbol of Gemayel's power, the stone Baabda palace overlooking Beirut, is regularly pounded with artillery fired by Syrian-backed forces.
The Syrians, who remained in Lebanon, are now the largest military force in the country, and the Israelis control only a thin slice of territory near their northern border.
The Syrians have now decided to make their presence permanent and more than military with their peace accord that they want Lebanese leadership to sign. The accord would make Lebanon a Syrian satellite.
A State Department official who read over the accord recently told a Lebanese-American, "This is worse than anything the Soviets ever expected Czechoslovakia to sign."
Among other things, according to U.S. officials, that makes the release of the American hostages in Lebanon, who are believed held by Iranian-sponsored terrorist groups, more remote.
Gemayel has repeated his vow not to sign the accord and, according to Lebanese diplomats, considered resigning his post but has now changed his mind — apparently signalling a new and destructive round in the Lebanese tragedy, with Syrian-backed forces conducting a war of attrition and terror in the streets of Lebanese cities.
The United States, which suffered the loss of 241 Marine lives in an October 1983 blast and has lost another 50 lives in two embassy building blasts, has steadily reduced its presence and power in Lebanon.
WASHINGTON — President Reagan's budget has been presented as the great spending slasher, the blueprint for a shrinking government. But a tour through the 700-plus page detailed version reveals vast inconsistencies.
United Press International
Budget cuts are inconsistent
For instance, Reagan wrote of his reluctance to attack the family budget with taxes — but he proposed an increase in the White House's household budget.
Reagan decided to ax small business loans but requested more money for processing an anticipated increase in business and personal bankruptcies this year.
Perhaps the strangest logic is that the budget proposes an increase in the amount allotted members of Congress for mileage when gasoline prices are falling. And many lawmakers are looking to a gasoline or oil tax as a way to raise revenue on the theory that most people won't notice.
Reagan submitted his $994 billion fiscal year 1987 budget to Congress last week. The budget called for $38 billion in spending reductions in almost every area but Social Security, no new taxes and an increase in financing for the military.
The budget is an attack on government services. In detail, that attack sometimes breaks down.
The Reagan budget dropped financing for the National Cancer Institute from $1.3 billion to $1.2 billion. The Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental Health Administration financing was cut from $958 million to $892 million. But AIDS research got an extra
But AIDS research got an extra $213 million next fiscal year
At the White House, the budget called for financing for the repair, alteration, refurnishing and improvement of heating and lighting. It included an increase of funds for electric power and fixtures from $4.5 million to $4.9 million.
Fishermen were hit two ways — at work and at play.
The budget calls for a new federal
marine recreational fishing licenses, of $10 per angler with receipts to be shared equally between the federal government and individual states.
News analysis
The commercial fishermen's contingency fund, used in the past to provide compensation to commercial fishermen for damages or loss of fishing gear in rough water, was terminated.
The Reagan budget called for credit programs of the Small Business Administration to end next year. But in this year's supplemental request, the administration asked for $1.2 million to finance an additional 200 deputy clerk positions for three months to compensate for the projected increase in bankruptcy petition filings and related workload in the district courts.
The budget does not say which employees get raises, but contains an increase for IRS workers.
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Kansas Union Burge Union
10
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Monday, Feb. 10, 1986
Mardi Gras revelers gather for finale
United Press International
NEW ORLEANS — Thousands of revelers jostled for curbside positions yesterday to see 11 Carnival parades, featuring marching bands and ornamentally decorated floats, snake through the city as the climax of Mardi Gras drew near.
Sightseers flooded into the city for the festivities that end tomorrow on Mar迪 Gras, the day before Ash Wednesday and the beginning of Lent. Mild weather swelled the audience to its biggest level since the start of the pre-Lent Carnival season in January.
While thousands of people lined parade routes, others stayed home putting the final touches on Mardi Gras costumes that will range from gorillas to guerrillas.
Yesterday's biggest perade was the celebration of Bacchus, with its 27 floats and reigning television personality, John Ritter. Another crowd favorite was Venus, an all-woman "krewe," that honored Jane Pierce, wife of President Franklin Pierce.
The Krewe of Mid-City went down Canal Street, making sure to live up to its French motto, "Pour la Joie de Vivre"," For the Joy of Living.
Even city buses got into the act.
A well-dressed, middle-aged man dropped to his knees at the corner of Canal Street and St. Charles Avenue and pleaded with riders in the Thoth Parade to toss him some trinkets.
flashing, "It's Carnival Time" on signs normally reserved for destinations such as Desire or Jackson streets.
"Look at that, will ya. The guy's on his knees begging. Don't that beat all," said a police officer, reaching up to snatch a plastic cup thrown by a masked woman.
Police said crowds had been
unusually well-behaved. They credited mild weather, saying cold weather often encouraged an increase in drinking.
But the final week of the Carnival was married by the stabbing death of a Houston man who had visited New Orleans for Mardi Gras every year since the early 1970s. Carl Schemnayder's body was found Friday in a pool of blood in his French Quarter hotel room, police said. He had been stabbed seven times in the chest and three times in the throat.
Police arrested two San Francisco men and charged them with murder.
Filmmakers' profit answers Soviet critics
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Soviets complain that Hollywood projects such as "Rambo" and "Rocky IV" are fostering anti-Soviet feelings. But as far as the entertainment industry and the U.S. government are concerned, that's show biz.
in the United States.
"The job of the filmmaker is to entertain audiences, not to be a political instrument," said Jack Valenti, president of the Washington-based Motion Picture Association. "They tell stories that they think people want to see. It has absolutely nothing to do with political propaganda."
Hollywood, too, has responded with barely a shrug since the Soviet government newspaper Isvestia lashed out last month against what it called "vituperative anti-Sovietism"
Isvestia said Hollywood fomented such attitudes by turning out such Anti-Soviet products as the movies "Rambo-First Blood Part II," in which a Vietnam veteran tries to rescue Americans in Indochina, and "Red Dawn," about a Soviet invasion of the United States.
The not-too-surprising reality, according to industry spokesmen, is that Hollywood revolves around what sells and entertains, not what a government finds offensive.
"People who are concerned about the Cold War want to cool it down and are upset (about such films). But it's unmistakable that it's profitable," said Harry Chotter, production executive at Filmvest Inc. in California.
Warner Brothers' motion picture division, said he found the anti-Soviet movies politically offensive but would defend anyone's right to make them.
"A corporate officer has a responsibility not only to himself or herself but to board members and stockholders to make movies that are profitable," he said.
Not everyone agrees with Hollywood's profits-first outlook.
Independent producer Mark Rosenberg, former president of
"I never thought I might think the Soviets had a point, but I think that Hollywood has never been long on a general sense of moral responsibility." said veteran Hollywood columnist Marilyn Beck.
Communist villains seem to be what's profitable now. "Rambo," grossing $150.4 million in box office receipts, was the No. 2 movie movie of 1985 "Rocky IV," the box office hit
about the legendary Philadelphia boxer's triumph over a bullying Russian rival, had grossed $119 million in its first nine weeks of release as of last weekend.
Sylvester Stallone starred in both of the "Rambo" movies and in "Rocky IV."
Irv Ivens, president of worldwide marketing for MGM-UA, noted that the entertainment business "usually picks up on what's self-evident" as a popular theme for a movie. MGM-UA produced "Rocky IV."
"I think we're selling, entertainment," Ivers said. "I don't think it's anything political at all."
Charles Z. Wick, director of the U.S. Information Agency, said he raised the Ivastia criticism when he met with Soviet officials last month to arrange the upcoming U.S.-Soviet cultural exchange.
Two LA policemen killed by pipe bomb
LOS ANGELES — Detectives launched an investigation yesterday into the explosion of a booby-trapped pipe bomb that killed two veterans of the Police Department's bomb squad as they tried to defuse it at a movie makeup artist's home.
Officers, in what police described as a sweeping investigation, returned to the residential neighborhood in North Hollywood and began collecting shrapnel and other evidence from Saturday's explosion.
Detective Arleigh McCree, 46, head of the department bomb squad and an international expert in explosives who helped investigate the Beirut barracks bombing in 1983, was killed instantly as he tried to defuse the powerful bomb.
The LAPD's Anti-terrorist Division, Criminal Conspiracy Section and Organized Crime and Intelligence Division also investigated the blast, which occurred several hours after officers entered the home of Donnell Morse, a Hollywood makeup artist and hairdresser. Morse was suspected in the Feb. 4 attempted murder of an entertainment industry union official.
United Press International
Morse was arrested Saturday morning in the union-related ambush and later was booked for the officers' deaths.
Ron Ball, 43, another bomb expert and a 17-year department veteran, was declared dead at the Center of North Hollywood.
Witnesses said the explosion blew a hole through the roof of the garage.
McCree and Ball were sent to Morse's home in the San Fernando Valley after police found two pipe bombs in a garage storage area while searching for the weapon believed used in the shooting of Howard Smit, a business agent for Local 706 of the Makeup Artists and Hair Stylists Union.
Police Chief Daryl Gates said one of the officers apparently realized he might be confronting a booby trap just before one of the bombs blew up.
"One of the officers said just before the explosion that 'there seems to be trip devices,' '' the chief reported.
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Gates, on the verge of tears, said it was the first time in his memory that police bomb squad officers had been killed in the line of duty. He said McCree Knew what he was doing and was considered one of the best bomb squad technicians in the world.
Police said they did not know why Morse was keeping the bombs.
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LAMBDA SIGMA, the sophomore honor society is now accepting applications for its 1986-87 membership. A minimum of a 3.0 G.P.A. is needed for application. Applications may be picked up at 216 Strong Hall.
Any questions, call Matt Roesner at 843-8690.
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TUES: Film-"Secret Honor" Chess Club-7 p.m. (Trail Room)
WED: Film-"They Drive By Night"
Sailing Club-7 o.m. (Pardon C)
THU: Playboy Magazine's Playboy Advisor will discuss love & sex - 7:30 p.m. Kansas Ballroom (free)
Film - "Kamila" Champions Club-8:30 p.m. (Trail Boor)
Films-"Choose Me"; The Man Who Fell to Earth
SAT: Films-"Choose Me"; "The Man Who Fell to Earth"
SUN: Film-"The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter"
WED: Jim- They Drive By Night
Sailing Club 7-p.m. (Parlor C)
Film: "Kamila Champions Club 8-30 p.m. (Tall Room)
FRI: Romance on the Hill-Valentine's Day at the Day infront of fresh flowers, photographs, candy, carriage rides 8-9 p.m. $1-Burge Bandstand-"Homestead Grays"
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AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
JOB DESCRIPTIONS AND APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN 122 STRONG HALL DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATIONAL SERVICES DUE BY FRI. FEB. 14, 1986
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REMEMBER YOUR VALENTINE!
STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
Desired Qualifications:
Representatives from the University of Kansas School of Medicine will be on campus to visit with students on an individual basis on the following dates:
Desired Qualifications:
Leadership abilities; knowledge of University programs and activities; interpersonal communications skills; enthusiasm about University
PRE-MED STUDENTS
Required Qualifications:
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Term. Undergraduates and first year graduate students may apply.
- Monday, February 17
- Monday, March 24
- Monday, March 17
- Monday, March 3
- Monday, February 24
- Summer Orientation Program 1986
- Monday, April 7
Interested students may schedule a 20-minute appointment. To do so, see the Pre-Med Secretary at 106-C Strong Hall. Office hours posted.
Feb.14
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Tickets available at the SUA office and Mr. Guy downtown for $4, $5, and $7.
1
Monday, Feb. 10, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
11
KANSAS
23
Jason Manuel, Oklahoma State forward, restrained Archie Marshall, after a shoving match between Marshall and an Oklahoma State player Saturday at Stillwater.
Cheering starts before game
Bv Matt Tidwell
Sports writer
STILLWATER, Okla. — The loudest cheer from the Kansas fans at Gallagher Hall on Saturday came long before the Jayhawks took the floor to do battle with the Oklahoma State Cowboys.
The small contingent of Kansas fans spent the moments before tip-off craning their necks to see a small vision perched on a press-row table.
As the national anthem was just about underway in Stillwater, Iowa State was winding down its 73-70 victory over Oklahoma in Ames. The Sooners' loss put the Jayhawks, who went on to beat Oklahoma State 85-69, alone in the first place in the Big Eight conference.
"We could see it on their faces when we came out," Kansas guard Cedric Hunter said. "We wanted to be on top and we knew we'd have to play hard to stay there."
But the Kansas players and coaches didn't have much time to savor their new conference lead. And
Men's Basketball
if anything the Sooner's loss made Oklahoma State want to play the role of the spoiler.
"I'm sure Oklahoma State heard about it too and that probably made them play harder." Kansas center Greg Dreiling said.
The Cowboys stayed close to Kansas in the first half behind the 14-point first-half performance of senior guard Terry Faggins. The Cowboys trailed 42-36 at halftime.
Three fights broke out in the first half. The third one was a bench-clearer.
The question after the game centered on who started them.
"Let me put it this way." Kansas forward Calvin Thompson said. "We didn't want to go out there and put on a boxing match. We're well-coached, and we're not going to go out there and start anything."
The first Jayhawk-Cowboy game on Jan. 18 also was a physical contest and Kansas head coach Larry Brown
said the fights Saturday were dispointing.
"It was disappointed that the game got out of control." Brown said. "It was kind of chaotic and I think it was hard for the kids to concentrate on basketball."
Kansas outscored the Cowboys 12-2 in the first five minutes and coasted the rest of the way for the win.
The Jayhawks, who wore their red uniforms for only the second time this year, increased their record to 39-15-6. The Cowboys dropped to 12-9 and 3-5.
Kansas now has one-game lead with six conference games left, including a Feb. 24 match-up with Oklahoma in Norman.
"It sort of sent a chill through everybody when we heard about it," Dreiling said. "We still don't have it locked up though. That (the Oklahoma loss) is by no means the conference championship for us."
"I think it helped us to know that we have a bigger lead." Kansas guard Mark Turgeon said. "It's an incentive to win on winning."
Schedule favors 'Hawks Kansas to play 4 of final 6 games at home
By Frank Hansel
Three weeks ago, Kansas head coach Larry Brown said the Jayhawks were at a difficult part of their schedule because they had four of their first six conference games on the road.
By Frank Hansel
Associate sports editor
Now Kansas, which opened up a one-game lead in the Big Eight, will have the luxury of playing four of its final six conference games at Allen Field House.
The schedule takes on added significance since the Jayhawks have not been beaten at the field house in 29 straight games, but Brown said the home court advantage didn't guarantee victories.
"I don't think the second time around it makes much difference," Brown said. "A lot of teams in our conference have won on the road."
But no one since the Oklahoma Sooners in 1984 has walked out of the field house with a victory. Missouri will be the next team to try to break the streak tomorrow night. Tip-off has been moved up to 8:05 p.m.
While the Jayhawks will play four of their final six games at home, the Sooners will have three home games and three away games. Oklahoma will be at home against Kansas, Kansas State and Colorado. The Sooners will travel to Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma State.
The Sooners easily defeated the Cornhuskers and Cowboys at the Lloyd Noble Center, where they have won 43 consecutive games, but they had to rally from a nine-point deficit in the second half to beat Missouri two weeks ago.
Earlier this season, Oklahoma nama-ly defeated Kansas State. 83-80 in
Manhattan and came away win. a four-point win at Colorado. The Sooners lost to the Jayhawks in Lawrence. 98-92.
Iowa State defeated Oklahoma 73-70 after losing to the Sooners by 13 in Norman.
"Iowa State's a good team," Brown said. "We lost by three there also (77-74). We still have to go to Norman, and we've got some tough games left in the conference."
Kansas' other remaining conference road game is at Colorado on
The Jayhawks main concern now is the Missouri Tigers. Kansas defeated Missouri 81-77 in January after having an 11-point lead in the second half
32 41
Kansas guard Cedric Hunter grabs a defensive rebound. Hunter had 18 points and four rebounds Saturday in thejahwaks' 85-69 win over Oklahoma State.
"I like their team," Brown said,
"They're quick and big and obviously well-coached."
The Tigers lost twice over the weekend. Nebraska missed Missouri 75-66 on Saturday, and No. 20 Virginia pulled out a 64-62 win over the Tigers yesterday in Columbia.
"They'll be coming in pumped up after the loss, and we'll have to put some pressure on them early." Kansas guard Cedric Hunter said.
Kansas 85 Oklahoma State 69
Kansas
Kunimitsu
| M | N | T | F | R | A | F | P |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Manning | 31 | 6-10 | 3-5 | 7 | 3 | 4 | 15 |
| Kettling | 33 | 7-14 | 4-4 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 15 |
| Dreiling | 17 | 4-5 | 1-3 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 9 |
| Hunter | 18 | 4-5 | 1-3 | 4 | 3 | 1 | 15 |
| Thompson | 36 | 4-7 | 6-7 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 12 |
| Marshall | 22 | 0-2 | 2-2 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
| Turgeon | 16 | 1-3 | 0-4 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
| Piper | 16 | 3-3 | 0-0 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
| Larsen | 39 | 14-4 | 0-36 | 27 | 16 | 10 | 4 |
Percentages: FG; 611, FT 731, Blocked Shots: 1 (Mannings art), 2 (Manning technology), 3 (Manning technology)
Oklahoma State
Manuel M FG FT A R A F TP
Manuel 6 1-2 1-1 1-1 1-1 1-1 1-1
Mike 36 6-0 10-0 10-0 10-0 10-0 10-0
Bannister 19 2-6 0-0 1-0 1-0 1-4 2
Faggins 19 4-8 1-4 0-0 1-0 2 4
Gilliam 28 3-8 1-0 1-0 1-2 2 6
Young 13 8-12 1-0 1-0 1-2 2 6
Young 28 4-6 3-7 6-2 1-1 21
Jones 9 1-4 0-0 1-0 1-2 2 2
Patton 21 3-4 1-0 1-0 1-2 2 2
Patton 20 20 15-15 15-15 15-15 24
Percentages: FG, 493, FT, 611, Blocked Shots: 4 (Bannister, 5) Turnovers: 10 (lvy 4) Steals: 5 (Gilliam 2) Technicals: OSU ball, Patton
'Hawks tie for conference lead with 68-51 win over Cowgirls
Half: Kansas 42-36. Officials: Mayfield,
Unruh, Stemberger.
***
By a Kansan sports writer
The Jayhawks are tied for first place with Iowa State, Oklahoma and Colorado.
Iowa State created the four-way tie
Kansas is 5-3 in the conference and 14-7 overall.
The Kansas women's basketball team found itself in a four-way tie for first place in the Big Eight Conference after its 68-51 victory over the Oklahoma State Cowgirls Saturday in Stillwater.
Women's Basketball
by defeating Oklahoma 82-71 Saturday in Ames. The Sooners had a onegame lead in the conference race. Colorado defeated Kansas State 69-57 in Manhattan to clog the league standings.
Center Kelly Jenning's 15 points and forward Vickie Adkins' 14 points led Kansas in scoring against Oklahoma State. Forward Angela East led Oklahoma State with 18
points. Guard Jamie Siess added 15.
However, both Jennings and forward Sandy Shaw fouled out of the game, and Adkins was ejected from the game after committing a flagrant foul.
After the Jayhawks got in foul trouble, they had to rely on their bench. Kansas guard Lisa Dougherty and forward Jackie Martin came off the bench to score 12 and 10 points each.
The Jayhawks were up 59-39 with six minutes left in the game, but the Cowgirls rallied off of 10 unanswered
Kansas allots more student tickets than rest of Big Eight
Student Seating in the Big 8
Kansas 46%
Percentage of total seating reserved for students = 5%
K-State 49%
Colorado 45%
Nebraska 35%
Iowa State 32%
Oklahoma 28%
Missouri 26%
Oklahoma State 18%
Source: KU Athletic Department
Bill Skee/KANSAN
Kansas allocates a greater percentage of season tickets to students than any other Big Eight Conference school except Kansas State, according to statistics compiled by Susan Wachter, KU assistant athletic director.
By Frank Ybarra
KU allots 7,000 seats out of 15,122,
or 46 percent, to its students while K-
State allots 5,500 out of 11,220, or 49
of its students in Ahearn
Field House.
Wachter said last week that she obtained the statistics by calling the conference schools.
Kansas does allocate, according to
Wachter, a greater number of student wear of the other two conferences.
The figures for the other Big Eight schools are;
Nebraska — 5,000 students out of 14,438, or 35 percent, in the Bob Devaney Sports Center.
Colorado — 5,000 students out of 11,199, or 45 percent, in the CU Events- Conference Center.
Iowa State sold 5,100, or 36 percent,
seats to its students, and Oklahoma
State sold 1,500, or 20 percent, to its
students.
■ Oklahoma — 3,000 students out of 10,871, or 28 percent, in Lloyd Noble Center.
**Iowa State — 4,500 students, out of 14,020, or 32 percent, in the James H. Hilton Coliseum**
Iowa State and Oklahoma State actually sold more season tickets to their students than they had allotted because some public seating was not sold.
Georgia Tech — 2,500 students out of 8,000, or 31 percent, in the Alexander Memorial Coliseum.
*Memphis State — 2,000 students out of 11,200, or 18 percent, in the Mid-South Collegium.
Oklahoma State — 1,300 students out of 7,400, or 18 percent in Gallagher Hall.
12,882, or 26 percent, in the Hearnes Center.
Also, Kansas State, Colorado and Nebraska students did not buy all of their season tickets.
Other top-ranked men's basketball teams reported these figures;
North Carolina — 7,500 students out of 21,444 or 35 percent in the Dean E. Smith Activities Center.
Kansas State sold 2,900, or 26 percent, of its tickets. Colorado sold 1,000, or 9 percent. And Nebraska sold 2,000, or 14 percent, of its tickets.
2 students air bleacher concerns in ad
By Dawn O'Mallev
In response to the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board's original decision to block off three rows of seating in Allen Field House, two students took out a personal advertisement in the University Daily Kansan to voice their disapproval.
Sports writer
Wichita junior Nola Gutzman and Kingman senior Carey Craig took out the ad to try to make the KUAC aware of their concerns.
The ad, which ran Tuesday through Thursday of last week, called for students not to take the decision sitting down and to call athletic director Monte Johnson.
"This is not a protest," Craig said. "It is just the way the athletic department was treating the students. The department didn't treat the students very well, like second class citizens."
Gutzman said he thought the athletic department was discouraging student involvement by stifling their spontaneity.
"The ad was placed because it is important for the students to see their team play." Gutzman said. "They are not encouraging student involvement."
As of Tuesday, the KUAC Executive Board reversed their decision to block off the seats.
Athletic director Monte Johnson said he had received four calls from students who had seen the ad.
"The callers just wanted to have their feelings on the record," Johnson said. "The calls were constructive."
Johnson said he had not seen the ad but nothing surprised him anymore.
Assistant athletic director Floyd
Temple said the department was pro-student.
"Students are an important segment to the program."
In the Big Eight conference, the Kansas athletic department allots a greater number of tickets to students.
"The athletic department is not directing anything against our students," Temple said. "We do care. The decisions made directly involved in the bleachers covered all the plus aspects. Nobody thought of the people standing up.
William Hanna, KUAC student representative, said the people behind the students wanted to see the game and the students thought their
Temple said it was not only the alumni who were complaining about the seating situation, but faculty, staff and other students as well.
right to cheer was being impeded.
"This is a conflict where there are no winners," he said.
"It is important to make sure the students do not get the perception of being alienated," Hanna said, "That is not the intention of the athletic department.
On two occasions before the ad ran,
Joe Courtright, Baxter Springs sophomore, said he had called Johnson to discuss his concerns about the seating in the field house. On both occasions Johnson was willing to listen to his concerns.
"Students don't stand to spite anyone," Courtright said. "Everyone should be able to see the games."
Temple agreed.
"Enthusiasm is super," he said. "I've seen it all, you don't have to stand to have fun."
12
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Monday, Feb. 10, 1986
Tigers lose two; Sooners upset
From Kansan wires
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Olden Polynice hit two free throws with two minutes left and Richard Morgan swiped a Missouri pass at the five-second mark yesterday, allowing Virginia to slip past the Tigers 64-62 in an intersectionsal college basketball game.
The lead changed hands 11 times, and three points was the biggest lead either team could mount in the second half. The first half ended in a 34-34 deadlock.
Missouri's Derrick Chievous hit a short jumper to put the Tigers on top 62-59 with 3:33 to play. Then Virginia's Tom Calloway trimmed one point from the lead with a free throw and Mel Kennedy tied the score at 62-62 with a bank shot from underneath.
Missouri brought the ball downcourt but guard Jeff Strong threw it out of bounds and a few seconds later Gary Leonard committed the foul that sent Polynice to the line for what proved to be the winning free throws.
Iowa State 73. Oklahoma 70
The win gained Iowa State its 14th-straight home game, its second big upset in less than two weeks and hiked its record to 14-7 overall and 5-3 in the Big Eight. The Cyclones defeated Kansas, which was ranked fourth at the time, 77-74 on Jan. 28.
AMES, Iowa — Jeff Grayer scored 13 of his 21 points in the second half, including his go-ahead basket with 56 seconds left, as Iowa State dumped fifth-ranked Oklahoma 7-30 in Big Eight Conference basketball Saturday.
Oklahoma, which had shared the Big Eight lead with Kansas, fell to 21-2 for the season and 6-2 in the conference.
Oklahoma stormed back from a 12-point deficit early in the second half to take a 64-61 lead. Tim McCalister's jump shot capped the run with 4:28 left.
Iowa State regained the lead at 65-64 on Jeff Hornacek's bank shot with 3:35 remaining.
Nebraska 75, Missouri 66
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Guards Brian Carr and Harvey Marvel combined
Marshall scored 13 points and Carr scored eight points in the final 10 minutes to rally Nebraska from a five-point deficit and enable the Cornhuskers to avenge a 68-46 home-court loss to Missouri last month. Marshall finished with 17 points and Carr 14. Nebraska improved its record to 14-7 overall and 4-4 in Big Eight.
for 21 points in the game's final 10 minutes to lift Nebraska to a 75-6 Big Eight victory Saturday over Missouri.
Missouri fell to 17-9 and 4-4.
Kansas State 79. Colorado'63
MANHATTAN — Norris Coleman scored 25 points Saturday to lead Kansas State to its first Big Eight Conference victory of the season at Ahearn Field House, a 79-53 rout over the Colorado Buffaloes.
Spreading a six-point halftime lead to 26 at the final buzzer, the Wildcats prevented the Buffaloes from breaking their eight-game losing streak in conference play.
Competition for Kansas' Mike Wolf and Michael Center ended Friday in the consolation round of the ITCA National Singles-Doubles tournament in Houston.
Colorado is 8-13 overall and 0-8 in the Big Eight, while Kansas State moved to 15-8 overall and 3-5 in the league.
Wolf, Center split consolation matches
Sports Briefs
Wolf, Kansas' No. 1 seed,
defeated Christian Schultz of Utah
6-4, 6-4, 3-6, 7-6 in first round of consolation play. Wolf lost his next match to Houston's Rick Marzenell 5-7, 5-7.
Wolf team up with Center, the Jayhawk's No. 2 seed, and downed Steve DeVries and Chris Schoop of California-Berkley 7-4, 6-3 in the first round of consolation doubles, Wolf and Center then lost to Kentucky's Pat McKee and Jack Van Emburg 7-6, 1-6-1.
Scott Perelman, Kansas tennis head coach, said yesterday that Wolf had played inconsistently and without sharpness since being stricken by the flui last month.
The Kansas women's bowling team finished third in the Region 11 championships yesterday in Springfield, Mo.
Bowlers finish 3rd
Head coach Mike Fine said the finish should guarantee the team an at-large bid to the sectional championships in March. A first or second-place finish at the sectional tournament would advance the Jayhawks to the National Championships.
Jan Weisel led Kansas with 178 average for nine games. Donna Kirk followed her with a 164 average.
Kansas was fourth in the tournament until it rallied in the last game to overtake Kansas State.
Wichita State, ranked No. 1, won the tournament and No. 14 Central Missouri State finished second.
The men's bowling team finished fifth in the tournament, but Fine said the team could still earn an at-large bid on the basis of it's success earlier this season.
Weekly line-up
Sporting events for Feb. 10-16
TODAY
WEDNESDAY
Men's junior variety basketball at Johnson County Community College. TOMORROW
Men's junior varsity basketball versus Johnson County Community College at Allen Field House, 5 p.m. Men's varsity basketball versus Missouri, 8:05 p.m.
Women's basketball versus Missouri at Allen Field House, 7:30 p.m.
Men's tennis at Northwestern. SATURDAY
Men's basketball versus Nebraska
1:05 p.m. Women's basketball versus
Nebraska, 5:15 p.m. Track, Nebraska
Triangular at Lincoln. Men's tennis at
Wisconsin. Women's tennis at
Southwest Missouri State. Swimming
versus Arkansas at Robinson
Natatorium, 2 p.m.
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
NEEDS YOU!!!
Student Union Activities is planning an exciting year full of concerts, speakers, movies, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas.
We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands.
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Special Events
SUA Travel
Outdoor Recreation
Indoor Recreation
Public Relations
Film
Forums
The Fine Arts
We need your help in these programs, experience is a necessity, however interest is required. For information stop by the SUA office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477. Student Union Activities.
Please contact by:
Monday, Feb 17
at 5 p.m.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
NEEDS YOU!!!
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Student Union Activities is planning an exciting year full of concerts, speakers, movies, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas... We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands.
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Special Events
SUA Travel
Outdoor Recreation
Indoor Recreation
Public Relations
Film
Forums
The Fine Arts
We need your help in these programs, experience is a necessity, however interest is required. For information stop by the SUA office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477. Student Union Activities.
Please contact by:
Monday, Feb 17
at 5 p.m.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Sweatheart Specials
KU Sweaters
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Natural Cotton
24.95
reg 32.95
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Browse our selection
of colorful
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Valentines!
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Sets
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Bookstore
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Jayhawk Bookstore
Spend Valentine's Day with your SWEETHEART! Come in and eat, or we'll deliver to your door!
I
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Limit one pizza per coupon. Please present
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not on Sundays or with any other offer.
Good only of participating Godfather's
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2 for 1
Tuesday
Mix or Match any Two of the Items listed below for the price of One.
Burrito
Tostada
Pintos’n
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All Day Tuesday 10:00 a.m.-1:00 a.m.
New Location
1220 W. 6th St. 1408 W. 23rd St.
Offer Good Every Tuesday thru February.
Specials
This Week’s Specials
Monday
Sloppy Joe
Onion Rings
16 oz. Drink $2.20
Tuesday
Hot Turkey Sandwich
Mashed Potatoes & Gravy
16 oz. Drink $1.60
Wednesday
Lasagna
Garlic Roll
16 oz. Drink $1.90
Thursday
Nacho Chili Pie
Choice of Sm. Salad
16 oz. Drink $2.20
Friday
Mexican Plate:
Burrito with Chile
Taco
16 oz. Drink $2.25
9-3:30 THE KANSAS UNION
Level 2 HAWK’S NEST
BELL
HORCH BELL
Specials
Specials
This Week's Specials
Monday
Sloppy Joe
Onion Rings
16 oz. Drink $2.20
Tuesday
Hot Turkey Sandwich
Mashed Potatoes & Gravy
16 oz. Drink $1.60
Wednesday
Lasagna
Garlic Roll
16 oz. Drink $1.90
Thursday
Nacho Chili Pie
Choice of Sm. Salad
16 oz. Drink $2.20
Friday
Mexican Plate:
Burrito with Chile
Taco
16 oz. Drink $2.25
9-3:30 THE KANSAS UNION Level 2 HAWK'S NEST
1
1
Monday, Feb. 10, 1986
13
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
University Daily Kansan
Classified Ads
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 3.90 4.25 6.00 9.30
21-25 4.20 4.75 6.75 10.35
For every 5 words add: 304 504 754 105
AD DEADLINES
POLICIES
Monday 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 screen inch
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words
* Dualface is 4 m. + 2 working days prior it
- Teachsheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
Classified display ads do not count towards m.
- Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University of DelawareKanelen
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
- Blind box ads — please add a $4 service charge.
* Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed.
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established.
- activated for cancellation of pre-paid class admission
- Boxed lugs - please add a $4 service charge.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days? These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansas business office at 804-4338.
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement.
* No refunds on cancellation of pm-paid classified.
- Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to publication of advertising.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ATTENTION JUNIORS and first semester
members: Information sheets for membership in
MORFAR BOARD Senior Honor Society are due
by December 15th. Available in 34h
强壮和 Nunenauer in 34h
Computer Terminal with modem for rent.
$30/mo. 842-2822.
DEALING WITH THAT INPUT FEELING Monday, Feb. 10, 6:30-9:00 p.m., 100 Smith Hall Presented by the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-404.
Hillel
Workshop:
Ellie LeCompte
co-director of Rape Victim Support Services will be speaking on the topic of
Tues, Feb 11
7:30
Hillel House
940 Mississippi
"Date Rape"
IMPROVE YOUR READING COMPREHENSEN-
tion by using the following lessons of instruction, Tuesday, November 11, 18 and 30; 7:30-9:30 p.m. materials #1. Register at the Assistance Center, 123 Strong Hall, B.
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
SU applications for President, Vice-President,
Treasurer and Secretary by Mon., Feb. 17th
SUA Board Member applications due by Thurs.
Feb. 20th, Questions? 843-3477
Rent-VCW with 2 movies, overnight $98
Smith's TV Fly, 144 W. 2nd, 84-701. Mon., Sat.
Saturday.
THE HEAT IS ON!
at The Heart of Rock 'n' Roll
Battle of the Bands!
Renew! Kelley* Color T. V. $28.98 a month Smarty's T. V.
14 Ward: 3rd B-425 7511, Sat. 8 noon - 9:00 Sun.
16 Ward: 3rd B-425 7511, Sat. 8 noon - 9:00 Sun.
The Bee
The Fanatix
Sons of Liberty
All of the Above
Absolute Ceiling
The Breakers
Pariah
Altered Media
The Heart of Rock 'n' Roll
Kansas Union Ballroom Tickets $4 on sale at SUA Box Office all proceeds go to M.S.
SPRING BREAK ask Do it right in Daytona with the following options: For move info, call Bill at 141 385 or Jim at 717-692-7600.
Want to coordinate entertainment and activities for the University of Kansas? Pick up your SUA application today! SUA Office, Level 1, Kansas Union.
FOR RENT
1 block from campus. Your own room. Kitchen
and office. Parking area. parking
parking. Cheng, Quan, 04-03-09
3 BR house, East Lawrence, bus route, 1864
rehab, insulated, double lot, 4825.000
square feet
3 bdm. Never 1.2 duplex. Super Nice. $450/no.
11 Northwood. 1-457-318. Evers 1-453-183
You are tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkley Flats Vacations available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. M43-2116.
Available March 1: beautiful 2 BR apt. On bus route, 5 minute walk to campus, downtown. New carpet, spacious, $330/mo. plus low utilities. 841.5797, 841.5506, 842.3449.
Efficiency apartments and rooms for men next to campus. Utilities paid. Call 892-483-1055.
Sublease Now 2-DBM Apk. Very nice & very cool! 100% waterproof. First come, first served, only a few left. At 216 W. 8th St, on KU bus route, between Gibbon and Walmatt. You'll find our room, gas heated kitchen, laundry machine, pay hot and cold water, you choose options, square foot, carport, extra bath or balcony. Call us today!
For rent. 2 hbm, brand new apt. 1 1/2 bks from Kansas Union. $350 plus, mo. utilities. Sublease a possibility. Call Chuck Lodge 843-3238 a m.-s. Furnished one bedroom apartment near University & Downtown. Most utilities paid with off street parking. No pets please. 841-5500.
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: SHARE 2
BEDDING APT. (VILLAGE SQUARE APTS).
CARPETED, A/C SWIMMING POOL, ON BUS
ROOMS. BEDDING APT. (VILLAGE SQUARE APTS).
MOVIE TUITS, MOVE IN IMEDIATELY, FIRST
PAYMENT UNTIL FEBRUARY. CALL 845-0188
(JeEP), OR 842-940 (ASK MANAGER).
SUBLEASE available Feb. 15, 2 bedroom, water paid, $85 at Jayhawk West Lease Amount 349
SUBLEASE NOW. 1.BDMR Hanover Place apt.
One month free room! 841-1212
Spacious one bedroom apartment for sublease,
great for 1 or 2. On bus route, water paid, gas,
low, heat utilities. Furnished $220, Unfurished
$200. Call 749-7691 after 5 p.m.
Sublease now = 2 BDRM Apt. Very nice and very
close to campus; call by 7:0 p.m. #849-9738.
close to campus, call after 7:00 p.m. 942-9738
MASTERTEC T offers complimentary unlabeled 1,2,
and 5 bedroom apartments all near campus. Call
841-1212, 841-3255, 749-2415.
ENTERTAINMENT
Don't send out for Suhi - instead take our crocodile style. Biravalian Carrival Part Feb 22
Don't send out for Stainless Steel Kitchen Sets, because they can't be used at Party Feb 22. Have a party? Call DJ Call Music Ben's Best Mix of Music in Town. 942-590-6750. $7.00 gets you 8 hours of great dance Music from music from Brooklyn to Las Vegas.
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE J DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 749-4713.
**PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to provide the music for your next party. We use a 120-volt power cord to operate the system and can accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in lawrence, Manhattan and Salina. Call 181-483 or 848-
FOR SALE
All sports ticket. Best offer. 842-1133. 9 a.m.
through noon, M. Steve Robinson.
BASKETBALL SEASON TICKET, best offer. Call Diane at 849-4904.
Baseball cards and sports northeast. Buy, Sell
84 W. 2nd Street. Open 10:16 M-S.
88W. 2d. Street.
CRAZY MIKE AND ROB announce their awe-inspiring sale. Guitar amp, technics turntable with cartridge. No reasonable offer refused, cash really talks. What a bargain! 740-2895.
Comic Books, Publisher, Penthouse, etc. Max's Comics Open 11:30 Tue., Fri., Sat. & Mon. 7-10 $5
VHS VCR very new for $200, call 842-6582.
Concord HPL-518 audiophile car stereo, 110$/-
concord, wireless and turbular, full warrang,
cheaply, cheap
Matching living room set; sfa; oak dress, 2 arm chairs, 2 footed coffee table. Very good condi-
tion.
DRUMS 149.7p tse p/cymbals, hardware,
ess. $500. Dawlip 5 p se w/Zijhion cymbals,
hardware, ess. $500. Overland Park (1) 681-7691.
Hardware, ess. $500. Spreaker Speakers, loud b acked 749-0124.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U) repair.
Call 855-632-0000 or
www.governmenthomes.com for information.
Higher Sierra Mountain Bike like New. Fifteen
cents. Clatel lock included. Call 864-3943 after 5
Haffer 500 watt power amplifier. Brand new with
halfer. £600. Tom 842-1516.
Western Civilization Notes: New on Sale! Make sense to use them: 1) As study guide. 2) For class presentation. 3) For analysis of Western Civilization available now at Town Crair, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and
Host: Red Irish Setter with distinct half full.
Loss: 85½ orange color, answer to cameroon
Call: 831-799-2060
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Receivers from $20, turntables for $11, speakers
for $90, amplifiers for $45, stereo all completely reconditioned and warranted.
Stereo Custom Radio, 94W. W3rd. St.
AUTO SALES
Mobile Home For Sale. 12 x 8 feet. Partly荒地.
Mobil Home For Sale. 12 x 8 feet. Partly荒地.
Mobile Home For Sale. 12 x 8 feet. Buyer-pay-all-bill.
Plane ticket to Phoenix, Arizona for Spring Break. Great price! Call 861-2924 or 790-8325
Need Money for School! 1880 Audl 5000s, loaded,
51,000 $, 8500 serious injuries 749-1782.
All Sports ticket for call 842-0582 before 11 a.m. or after 7 p.m. Keepying.
To the guy who found my watch at McDonald's, please call again, 841-6341, for reward.
LOST: Gucwit watch with sentimental loss. Lost at Hodgson Gym around 1/2/186. Reward: Caili
1942 Fontaine GT0, new paint, overland, and much more. Rare; a micke see. C6-243 evening.
RABBIT"RB 120 radial, air, cannette, low miles, shaggy gray, metal palm, Moving must sell
We found our puppy on Sat. Feb. 1st, between 4:30 and 5:30pm. We could not find much we can do. Call 842-3390. Can we help here?
LOST/FOUND
HELP WANTED
85 Toyota 4wd truck. Only 8000 lbs. Great cond'. asking $7996.84 - 8232 after 4.
V
LOST - Two Tall Ring in 8th floor bathroom of Watson Library (2/4). - Raby and Earendal; not be replaced, sentimental value. If found please call Angela-61-3296. They are very special.
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR. The University of Kansas, Division of Continuing Education, Kansas City, seeks an Associate Director Duties include scheduling of classes and staff members, supervise training of staff members, and manage curricula, assisting in the hiring and training of staff members, and serving as the public information officer for KLETC. Job duties include providing curriculum requirements be required. Post-Baccalaureate degree in an academic discipline related to law enforcement or a related field is required. Director of KLETC LARITY: $730,000 to $41,000. Application deadline. Must be received by 8:00 p.m. on Friday, May 25, 2016. Reqs. application, curriculum vitae, and names and addresses of three references. Starting date to employment: May 25, 2016. Burchell, 913-844-4968. The University of Kansas, Division of Continuing Education, Continining Education, Lawrence, KS 60403-2602. EE AA Employment.
Babysitter for 5 month old infant, home housekeeping and ironing in our home. Tues. & Thurs. 12-5. Must have reliable transportation. Required $3.50 per hour. Call 846-7257 for application
CASH PAID DAILY. Dominic's Pizza is now accepting hire to 10 drivers. If you are a self-motivated, high energy person, you could take over. You must be at least $5 per hour. We pay cash commissions on deliveries daily. Our drivers make $5-$8 per hour and more. You must be 18 years old, have a car, current driver's license and proof of insurance. Apply by calling 714-692-8327 and fax no phone calls. Please EOE, m/m.
CRUISESHIPS HIRING $16,300 Carribean,
Hawaii, World; Call for 616, Cassette,
Newservice! /1988 9444444 UKANASCRUCE
Bridges /1988 9444444 UKANASCRUCE
Fourth-week hour, *47/6 hours*, Tuesr. thur, Sat.
May thru August. Work consists of door-to-door data collection, Car and driver's license required. 20 hours
required. Applicants must be to Sharon Rhodes, RJN Environmental
Acoust; KSO 7000 Squub Rd, Ste. 312, Mission, Ka 68203
Graduate Assistant in the University Information Center, half-time position, $23.00 per month. Required qualifications: enrolled as graduate student at KU Spring semester 1986, thorough knowledge of KU ability to organize material and resources, knowledge of job experience and supervisory experience preferred. Send letter and resume to Pat Keldes, 405 Kansas Union, by phone, 5pm, Friday, February 14, 1986.
GOVERMIT JOBS, GOVERMIT JOBS, GOVERMIT JOBS, GOVERMIT JOBS, GOVERMIT JOBS, GOVERMIT JOBS, GOVERMIT JOBS, GOVERMIT JOBS, GOVERMIT JOBS, GOVERMIT JOBS, GOVERMIT JOBS,
Help Wanted - Part time 20 hours per week. Some office skills necessary. Apply in person at Whistle Stop. 2:3rd and Iowa. Wednesday February 12 or Thursday February 13 between 1:00 and 6:00
Help Wanted: housekeeper Monday & Wednesday afternoons. 843-3366.
OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, yr. round. Europe,
S.A. Amererain, Aa. Airs. All fields. 9000-2000 mo.
Sightseeing. Free info. Write LC, PO Bx 52-K1-
Corona Del Mar, CA 92825.
PROGRAM ASSISTANT/RESEARCH AID for
the University of Kansas. Begin Feb.
17. Contact prof. John Quigley,
University of Kansas. 864-411 for complete job
and application. Deadline Feb. 13.
EO/AA employment.
Putt-Putt Golf course now taking applications
Moody's through July 5pm-7pm on Dece
12. Leaflet #1114138
Student Staff Position-summer orientation program 1986. Required qualifications: minimum 2.0 ga, returning to KU for Fall 1986 ferns. Req. B.S. in Psychology or another specialty may apply. Desired qualifications: leadership activities; interpersonal skills of university programs and enthusiasm about university. Job descriptions and applications available in the office of Student Services, Day. Due by Friday, Feb. 14, 1986. A E.O.E.
Summer Jobs. National Park Co.'s 21, Parks, 5000
Openings. Complete Information $5.00. Park
Rock Resort. Mission Mtn. Co., 631 2nd Ave. W.N.
Kalilauri MT 99001
Week-long positions for Assistant Instructors in Natural History Summer Workshops for Young People. Museums of Natural History KU, JAN 2-August 1. 15 hrs w/$k05; 20 hrs w/$k67. 000. Contact Ruth Genrichen. Director of Public Education. 602, J Dyche Hall. (913) 841-4371. An equal opportunity employer.
AIRLINE HIRING BOOM! $314-$299,
Stewardess, Reservatior. Call for Guide.
Wanted: Req. 5 yrs of exp in a job as
Airline Hiring Officer.
1970
For thaun! Michelle and Sherri still don't have dates. We here at Haines at Hayes Matchmakers Inc., are quite disappointed by the lack of information regarding her availability, proculed us and asked us to find them dates. What could we do? We told them we'd try again. So call 841-7925 'ask for Keith' or 842-6900 'ask for Mckey' to meet the girl of your dreams. If you want to be really ready to meet you (or P), call Darn, I wreseri!
PERSONAL
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality
medical care, confidentiality assured. Greater
health area. Call for appointment.
915-345-1400
HAPPY BIRTHDAY BILL T.
Preview our Brazilian Carnival in Lawrence
watch it happen in Rio. Tune to the Today Show
at 10:30 a.m. on FOX.
"CAMP COUNSELORS - M/F - Outstanding Shim and Trim Down Camps; Dances, Tumble, Dance classes; Camp Music plus. Separate girls' and boys' camps. 7 weeks Camper campet on College Camps at Linden University of California. Contact: Michel Friedman, Director. H91 Heveler Dr. No. Woodmenes, N.Y. N1380
BUS. PERSONAL
810-5460 Weekly/Up Mailing Circular! No self-
interest Subject interested闲聊自修
envelope: Success, PO Box 470 CDG, Woodstock,
IL 60098
Ezroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841.7749
Float Connection
Floating
is believing
Special $10
电话
Grand Opening at our new location
GAYLESIBNIAN? Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stumped, self-address envelope to: TRIANGLE TIMES, P. o Rx 2642, KCMO 64196.
Heaven Sent
Southern Hills Mall register for a Free balloon bouquet ($30 value)
Sweets For Your Sweetest Color Portrait A
Valentine's Day's Perfect Special Swell
(90-491-6811)
Thousands of R & R album- $20 or less. Also collectors items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Quintilis B11 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles.
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
The Union's recording
of the day's entrees & soups
Thesis Binding
- Copying
- Typesetting
- Resumes & Flyers
--its ring day every day at Halloween House, 625 Massa.
THE WORKOUT HOME OF THE
AEROBICS M-W-F 1:30 P.M. Lawrence School of
Medicine, 940 E. 16th St., Thompson Bridge,
Thornton Hill. Thompson Bridge, Thompson
First class is free.
- Design & Layout
- Word Processing
- Laminating
25TH & IOWA
HOLIDAY PLAZA
Phone 749-5192
University
Materials
Center
Hand-crafted kites, windculptures and fantasies.
Order now for spring. SK WYORKS 79/21/8 Mass.
no. 308 upstairs. 842-527-9326 for appointment.
Hers and His Hair Designs. Quality hair care at
reasonable prices. We use the finest hair products
available and give you the personal attention you
need. Haircuts $7, perm $35 and up with hairdo-
hair included. Hair and Bendure $495, 1218
Connecticut.
a different deli special every day
DELI SPECIALS
Today's Cheese
Special: Sandwich
16 oz. Drink
$2.55
Italian Beef &
THE KANSAS UNION
DELI
level 3
Sandwich
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Patre Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas and/or the Gulf Coast from only $84. Deluxe bedding, patio gear bags, more..Hurry, call Sunchair Tours for more information and reservations 100 free 1-800-923-5811 or contact a local Sunchair Tours office to see if you can get your Spring break counts, count on Sunchair.
THE
MUSEUM
SHOP
Send your love (or your good friend, family member, professor, student, pet) a SINGING VALUE Songwriting Valuation Certificate. Send your Valuation Association, in 11, 12, 8, 13 and 3 on floor Bailey Hall and in Murphy Hall near the music library, or call 864-784-4781 for long distance Valentine'S YAY IT IS A NUNNY-LOONG distance Valentine'S YAY IT IS A NUNNY-LOONG distance
VALENTINES!
V-Postcards 15£
V-Cards 50£
V-Notes 25¢
Instant Valentines
Museum
of Natural History
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sundays
864-4450
Rent'-19% T. V. $28.0 a month. Curtis
Mabuse, 147 W. 3rd; 843-7878. Mon.-Sat. 10-3
mon., 10-4, 10-5, 10-6.
Imitant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, L1, and of course, line passport.
Modeling and theater portfolio -- shooting now
Begins in Professionals, call for information
Tired of testing and turning? Do you awake feeling relaxed and well-rested? Cotton and foam core futures are designed to fully support your spine and release tension. BLUE HERON FUTTONS, lb & Locum, North Lawrence (one each) or Northwest Armurants) hot Suit; to 3:30; to 8:41 or 844-1843.
Want a new fun way to say I love you on Valentines day. Try a VIDEO VALENTINE, $14.99. Available from 12 to 4 or by appointment. Now through Valentines Day at Adventure Land Video
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts,
glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming
event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and
price available on imprinted specialties plus
the latest designer apparel. See our talented artists. 220. W 25th (Behind Gibson's) 841-4349.
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed Shirtray 749-1611.
Class Ring Day - Why wait for the ring man when its ring day every at balfour Houset 625 Mass MA
Rent-19" Color T-Shirt $24.80 @ 6 month. Smiley & T-Shirt
$24.80 Bd, 32r 74tl $19.80 @ 9-10 month. Tommy & T-Shirt
$19.80 Bd, 32r 74tl $19.80 @ 9-10 month.
SERVICES OFFERED
WEIGHT LENGTH NOW. 10-29 lbs. per mL on Herbal products. As seen on T. V. Call 842-7600.
IRONING: in my home. Shirta, pants, 75- Skirta
1. Next day service 841-9209 after 12:30
***
*
Mobile Locksmith F fast Lockout Service, Re-
Mobile Locksmith Auto. Service,
Reasonable Price. Call 748-3023
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-5716.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, MN-8716.
EDITING, structure, data analysis, papers,
thesis, dissertation. M.A., ph.D. student, ex-
cellence.
BIRTHRIGHT = Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-2821.
MATTH FUORT - Bob Meers holds an M.A. in math from K.U. where 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He is a tutoring proficient with computer science and has been on campus statistics. #6 per 40 minute session. #63-903-822.
TYPING
accurate and affordable tieing. Judy, 842-7945
1.1.1 TWO WORD PROCESSING. Experienced
Concientiens Reliable. Rush Jobs. Call
842-3111
1-2-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional, WORD
1-2-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional, papers,
books, et al. Data Bank 841-6770
24-Hour Typing, 10th semester in Lawrence;
typing for court cases, close to campus
quality and fast delivery.
THE FAR SIDE
A2. professional typing; Term papers, Theses.
B1. Internet browsing; Using IBM Image
I3. Resolution: 842-256.
A. L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers. A.L. 943-8657 1: 50-30.
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing and editing. IBM/IBM 65K8-7, M-S-F, Samantha day text editor, Microsoft Word 95.
Ace Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable, friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes. Mailings. Email forwarding.voice available. One block from campus. 842-2676 AlphaOmega Computer Services. Word Processing/Typing. Corrections. Proofreading, Graphics. Document upgrading. Free estimates. 749-1188
Complimentary hair conditioner with all of our hair cuts with Paul Mitchell products. Tina, Denis, and Cathy. Ultimate, 14 E.6th St. 749-6797. DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced. JEANETTE SHAFFER — Typing Service. TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape.
BLOOM COUNTY
DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS /
Typing, Editing and Graphics, ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter student papers up to 30
days. Mommys Mommys, 484-387-388 before 8 n. Please.
Letter perfect papers and resumes. WRITING LIFELINE, 841-3400.
Distressations, Theses, Therm Papers. Over 15 yrs.
experience. Phone 453-2310 5:30; Barc.
English B.A. TYing and tutoring. Spelling corre-
tion, overnight service available. Great rates.
TYPLING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscript reviews, resumes, theses, letter writing, and more.
EXPERIENCED TYPEB. Term papers, these
IMM Correcting Selective will correct spell
phrases.
WANTED
THE WORLD DOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 841-3147
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share great brand-new apartment very close to "campus: Microwave, W&D, dishwasher. $130/mo. Call 841-5515 anytime.
Female roommate for quiet b/2 R trailer. Furnish rooms with month plus 1/2 utilities. Cell Num 7648-399. Keep Trying.
Female roommate to share two bedroom apartment. Very nice and very close to campus. Call
Female residence wanted to hire apt. above.
Jayhats Bookstore $125.00 per month. 843-6786
(612) 829-8868
Male, nonsmoking roommates for 2-bedroom apt.
$17/mo, plus 1/3 minimal utilities, for 5-100
sq.ft.
WANTED: COMPUTER for wordprocessing working or not. Need IBM compatible, dual disk monitor, monitor. Will consider printer or other IBM formats. Call 749-2196.
NEXT EXTRA CASH? We Want to Buy Your Used Stereo Equipment. Working Or Not, Amps, Receivers, Speakers, Turntables, Car Sterio, Cameras, Audio Cassettes, Lawrence Radio Common Radio 91 W. 23rd W. 842-5511. Nonsmoking, Male Roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom house near campus. ND, cable included. Call (704) 267-2011.
Wanted: Basketball tickets for the K State game on Feb. 22. Please call 841 6286.
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—it will for profit when you call classified W-2s or W-3s for help in writing an effective, fast-tacting, classified ad, and get going today.
Kansas Classifieds
19 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
By GARY LARSON
OK, stranger...
what's the circumference of the Earth?..Who wrote "The Odyssey" and "The Iliad?"...What's the average rainfall of the Amazon Basin?
Bart, you fool! You can't shoot first and ask questions later!
2:10
PSSST!
BINKLEY...
OVER HERE...
/
ON BEHALF OF MYSELF AND THE REST OF YOUR SUBCONSCIOUS ANXIETIES, WE THOUGHT YOU SULLED ON AND NOTICE REGARDING OUR PLAN TO JUMP OUT AND GRAB YOU THIS EVENING.
THANK YOU.
CERTAINLY.
by Berke Breathed
12
A CLOSER FULL OF COURTEOUS ANXIETIES
IS OF QUIBIOUS
COMFORT.
14
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Monday, Feb. 10, 1986
10-year dual streak broken
By Dawn O'Malley
Sports writer
The Nebraska Cornhuskers women's swim team did what other teams haven't been able to do in the last 10 years — defeat Kansas in Robinson Natatorium.
Nebraska ended the Kansas women's swim team's 10-year dual meet winning streak Saturday.
The Kansas women's swim team led the Cornhuskers going into the 400-yard freestyle relay. Cornhusker victories in both the 400 freestyle relay and the 400 medley gave them 14 points and the 88-55 victory. Kansas did not score in the two relays.
Tri-captain Chris Wright said yesterday that it had been a tradition for the women's team to go undefeated in the dual season at Robinson.
"We outswam Nebraska individually," Wright said. "But the relay points were the big turning point. We gave it our best, but Nebraska was a little bit stronger."
Nebraska also won the men's
Swimming
meet 70-43 over the Jayhawks.
meet 70-43 over the Jayhaws.
Both Nebraska teams are the defending Big Eight Champions.
"Kansas is not going to lose many meets," Nebraska women's head swim coach Ray Huppert said. "We went to the last races. I am tired of the close ones."
"We never should have lost." Kansas head swim coach Gary Kempf said. "Nebraska sneaked out. They did better. We did OK, but we did push them to the hilt."
In the 200-yard butterfly, the Cornhusker's Erin Hurley nosed out the Jayhawk's Becci Ream to win with a time of two minutes 26.07 seconds. Ream finished in 2:26.25.
"Nebraska is a good, good club," Kempf said, "and they better understand that we are too."
Jayhawk diver Lori Spurney held off Nebraska's Sherri Birmingham and Julie May to win both
the one-and three-meter diving board competition. Spurney qualified for nationals on both boards earlier in the season.
Kansas' Mike Prangle qualified for nationals Saturday on the one-meter board. He qualified earlier in the season on the three-meter board.
Nebraska's Lewis Meyers, Wes Zimmerman and Jim Huelskamp swept the three-meter diving.
Georaskia's Jon Linder edged out Kansas' Chuck Jones to win the 1,000 free style. Linder won at 9:42.60 to Jones' 9:42.95.
In the 500-yard freestyle, Jones led throughout the race but in the last 50 yards Nebraska's Mike Irvin overtook Jones. Irvin's time was 4:40.95. Jones finished at 4:41.52.
Irwin also won the 400-yard individual medley at 4:09.14. His closest competitor was Kansas' Karl Stumpf who came in at 4:19.25.
Kempf said his men's team matched the Cornhuskers.
Duke beats Georgia Tech 75-59
United Press International
DURHAM, N.C. — Duke won its battle of wits with Georgia Tech yesterday, in the process laying claim to the nation's No. 2 ranking and second place in the Atlantic Coast Conference standings.
The Blue Devils ran off with a deceptively wide margin of victory, 75-59, powered by a strong second-half performance by senior forward
Alarie hit five straight baskets in the first 4:19 of the second period to help Duke break away from a 34-33 halftime lead. His shot with 15:41 left gave Duke a 50-39 advantage.
"We really played an excellent second half," said Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski. "The first half we played very hard, but not all that smart. But in the second half we combined aggressive, physical play with extremely aggressive, intelligent play."
Georgia Tech coach coach Bobby Cremins agreed brains were the key.
"If there's anything wrong with us right now, it's that we're not playing with the intelligence we need," said Cremins.
Duke, winning its sixth game in a row and improving to 11-0 at home this season, ended up with sole possession of second place in the ACC with a 9-2 league record, 22-2 overall.
No. 2. ranking with Duke but fell to 18-4 overall and dropped into a tie for third in the ACC with North Carolina State at 6-3.
Alarie thought Duke's "killer instinct" at the start of the second half had more to do with the outcome than anything.
Georgia Tech shares the nation's
Alarie sank all seven of his second-half shots from the floor to finish with a game-high 24 points. Senior All-America guard Johnny Dawkins added 22 points for Duke.
"It was a great game for a half, but then Duke just totally out-played us," Cremins said. "They really got after us and pled very hard. They played some great, great basketball."
Shaula Hatcher trimmed nearly 20 seconds off the Kansas school record in the three-mile run Friday in the two-day Jayhawk Invitational at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
Hatcher's time of 16:40.4 broke the old mark of 16:59.9, set in 1890 by Maureen Finholm during the Big Eight Championships at Lincoln, Neb. Hatcher, who finished third in the event, also placed third as part of the distance medley team on Saturday.
KU 3-mile record shattered
By Jim Suhr Sports writer
The invitational, which was unscored, featured men's and women's teams from several midwestern junior colleges and universities, including Big Eight rivals Kansas State and Colorado. The women also competed against Big Ten power Iowa.
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Six members of the Kansas track team competed in the Oklahoma Track Classic in Oklahoma City, the site of this season's National College Athletic Association Indoor Championships. Competing in the meet gave the Jayhawks an opportunity to get used to the wooden runways at the complex in time for the championships.
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THE GRADER
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Bob Timmons, KU men's head track coach, said 13 of his Jayhawks had personal career bests in their events, while 19 others had their best times of the season.
In addition to Hatcher's school-record setting performance, the Jayhawk women had two first place finishes. Ann 0'Connor finished first in the high jump with a jump of 5-feet-10-inches and Trish Aubuchon won the 600-yard run in one minute, 27.85 seconds.
Kansas shotputter Denice Buchanan, who competed in the Husker Invitational, placed second with a toss of 50-feet-13-inches.
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A step closer
SINCE 1839
Jayhawks climb to No. 3 in latest UPI poll See page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY, FEB. 11, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 94 (USPS 650-640)
Still cold Details page 3.
Lobbyists discuss the costs of drinks
Staff writer
By Abbie Jones
TOPEKA - Liquor lobbyists yesterday tackled the fine points of legislation restricting the sale of alcohol in private clubs.
Members of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee heard opposing testimony regarding a bill that prohibits private clubs to serve a drink for less than it costs the establishment. No action was taken on the bill, but a vote is expected later this week.
John Lamb, director of Alcoholic Beverage Control, said he favored the portion of the bill forbidding sales at less than cost because some club owners now offer penny pitchers, which essentially provide a "drink and drown" special. He also said that enforcement of the law would not be too difficult.
"We have a pretty good idea of what a drink costs a club. We have a pretty good idea of what a bottle or glass of beer costs," Lamb said. "If somebody gets totally out of line then it's very obvious that they are selling at below their acquisition costs."
The bill says selling a drink at a price less than that charged all other purchasers of drinks during that week is illegal. Legislation passed last year prohibits lowering the price of drinks below other prices charged during that day — essentially eliminating happy hours.
The new bill also prohibits the sale of more than one pitcher to one person at a time or while unconsumed drinks are still in the person's possession. The law now prohibits serving more than two drinks to one person at one time.
Lamb estimated that 90 percent of the clubs in Kansas were complying with present legislation and that 5 percent were violating the laws unintentionally. About 5 percent of the private clubs are a consistent problem and probably would violate the laws anyway, he said.
"There are a certain percentage of private clubs out there that no matter what you do you're going to have problems," he said.
R. E. "Tuck" Duncan, a lobbyist for the Kansas Wine and Spirits Wholesalers Association, said the public needed to be educated about liquor and not subjected to more legislation.
Duncan distributed pamphlets and booklets for educating teenagers about alcohol and presented a recorded public-service announcement on liquor education by U.S. Sen. Nancy Kucsebaum, R-Kan.
“Are we going to say that those same events are now subject to the prohibition against serving more than two drinks at a time?” Duncan asked.
Duncan also said restaurants and country clubs had special functions and should be able to adjust drink prices as part of a package. At these functions, people also may pick up two or three drinks for their friends.
The Rev. Richard Taylor, director of Kansans For Life At Its Best!', a lobbying group, said a drinker wasn't capable of being educated when drunk.
"For 50 years, education has been the drug dealer," he said.
See DRINK, p. 5, col. 1
JAKE'S SPECIAL
Susan E. Craven
UNIVERSITY DAILY KAUFMAN
By Rob Karwath Special to the Kansan
Almost every weeknight,
Larry Brown sits at home
and plays with his favorite toy.
"We have one of those channel changers," his wife, Barbara, says, rolling her eyes and demonstrating her husband's click-click wizardry with her thumb. "The minute he gets home the TV comes on. He spends the rest of the evening watching basketball.
"Thank God we don't have a dish."
Welcome to life with Larry Brown. After a day of planning, worrying and coaching basketball for the third-ranked college team in the country, he's ready for yet another fix.
"Even when he's home he might as well be on the moon," says Barbara Brown. "Everything is basketball. He thinks it, he sleeps it, he eats it."
He knows it. And the New Yorker who once aspired to be a high school coach says he's happy with his life three years after chucking pro basketball and New Jersey for the college game and Kansas
"I feel comfortable," he says.
"That's probably the best word."
COACH
On and off the court,
basketball dominates
life for Larry Brown
At 9 a.m. on a bright January morning, Larry Brown slips off his jean jacket and drapes it over a closet doorknob in his office. The day begins with a sip of coffee from a white Styrofoam cup and a
See COACH, p. 6, col. 1
Drinking law's critics cry foul
By Abbie Jones
Critics are calling it modern day prohibition.
Amendments to liquor laws now brewing in a House committee pose tougher restrictions on the sale of alcohol. Club owners say it's inconsistent and tough to enforce. But legislators hope to curb excessive drinking in clubs.
"There are a number of hard-line prohibitionists who want to see us even drier," said Ken Wallace, chairman of the board of the Kansas Club and Tavern Association.
Wallace, who also owns the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., said the restrictions discouraged people from drinking in the bars and deny the state of tax revenue.
discourage investment in the state," Wallace said.
'Every restriction you're going to put on the business is going to'
John Lamb, director of Alcoholic Beverage Control, said the laws were designed to stop the abuse of liquor in clubs.
"We wouldn't have this legislation if people were responsible and not overly promoting excessive drinking." Lamb said.
A bill under consideration by the House Federal and State Affairs Committee prohibits the sale of drinks for less than it cost the establishment.
"That will essentially eliminate every special in the state," Wallace said. "There is basically nothing you could do to promote your business in terms of prices."
The proposal also says that no price can be set that is lower than that charged to all other buyers of drinks during that week and prohibits owners from selling liquor as part of a meal package.
Mike Kirsch, owner of Gammons,
1601 W. 23rd St., said the weeklong
provision would force club owners to
eliminate drink discounts during the
week. Bars would have to raise
prices because they couldn't survive on just the weekend revenue.
"To further tie our hands with an all weeklong price is a bad way to go," Kirsch said. "The price is going to have to be higher than most people's budget will allow.
"This is a free enterprise system, and we should have some flexibility in running our business."
Kirsch said the legislation eventually would drive people to coastal cities where legislation was not as tough and the social life was more exciting.
ple out of this state to the more cosmopolitan areas," he said.
The measure also says it is illegal to sell more than a pitcher to one person while there are unconsumed drinks in the person's possession.
"We're going to drive a lot of peo-
Ace Johnson, owner of the Sanctuary, 1401 W. Seventh St., said the laws wouldn't influence the amount people drink.
"People are going to consume what they want to consume," Johnson said. "Legislation like this isn't going to affect it at all."
Some of the bill's provisions would be difficult to enforce, Lamb said. ABC would have to rely on voluntary compliance of clubs or complaints from the clubs' competitors and patrons.
"We've always told the Legislature that it's difficult to enforce." Lamb said. "We'll do the best we can with what we've got."
Veteran journalist Thomas recalls four decades in D.C.
By Sandra Crider
Staff writer
When Helen Thomas stepped off the plane Sunday, her nails were painted a fiery red and her creased hands were covered with newspaper ink.
She laughed as she lifted her blackened palms and said, "Guess what I've been doing? I just finished reading the New York Times and the Washington Post."
Presidents since John F. Kennedy have seen their fates held in Thomas' hands because she can speak the words that release them from their trials.
For Thomas, it pays to keep those hands practiced and knowledgeable.
The president was trying to gracefully unite himself from an intricate, involved explanation about an issue that he evidently did not want to talk about.
The 65-year-old reporter visited the KU campus yesterday to take hold of a medallion for the 1986 William Allen White Foundation Award for Journalistic Merit. The award has been given to distinguished journalists since 1950 as part of the celebration of the Feb. 10 birthday of William Allen White, renowned editor of the Emporia Gazette during the first half of this century.
She said the first time she spoke the magic words to Kennedy, she realized the power in them.
"When I saw that he was groping
Thomas, United Press International's White House bureau chief, has helped close presidential press conferences since 1962 with those few words.
"Thank you. Mr. President."
John Mashek, chief of correspondents for U.S. News and World Report, said Friday from Washington, "She's a professional, from the top of her head to the tips of her toes.
for words, I said, 'Thank you, Mr. President', and Kennedy said, 'No, thank YOU, Helen.'
Thomas, a native of Winchester, Ky., graduated from Wayne State University in Detroit in 1942. She began at UPI in Washington writing radio news.
Her colleagues and competitors have classed her as top-notch, both in her tough reporting style and her personal generosity.
Mark Mohler/KANSAN
Thomas' hands seem to have a mind of their own when not attached to their familiar note pad and pen. Instead, they slice through the air to emphasize the words of her hoarse voice.
But if she detects business in the air, her eyes focus on their mark and her words are aimed accurately in short, forceful sentences.
"Not only is she outstanding as a journalist, but also as a person."
"They all promise an open administration. Then when they get into the White House, they decide it all belongs to them." Thomas said.
Thomas does seem to have two personalities. When chatting with those around her, her brown eyes gleam, her red-lipped smile is quick and her voice has a cheerful lilt.
She talked about the good intentions of presidents toward the press at the start of their terms compared to the trepidation that came with experience and mistakes.
Some presidents tried to woo the
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
AMERICAN ACADEMIES FOR TECHNOLOGY
press more than others. Lyndon Johnson took rejection particularly hard.
"LBJ would have given a press conference atop the Washington Monument if he thought it would help him win their support."
"After Nixon lost the gubernatorial race, he told the press. 'You're not going to have Richard Nixon to kick around anymore.' "
The crowd celebrating William Allen White Day stands in honor of Helen Thomas, winner of the William Allen White Foundation Award for Journalistic Merit, after her acceptance speech. Thomas, United Press International's White House bureau chief, was at KU yesterday to accept the award.
Thomas said others did not try to hide their disguise.
Mashek said he never knew who Thomas' favorite president was because she treated every president the same.
She does, nevertheless, have her tastes. Kennedy is at the top of her list, she said.
Thomas said Nixon always was trying to blame the media for his failures.
"I thought that he was inspired. He tried to urge young people into public service. He was all hope for a better world," she said.
Then, of course in 1969, he became president.
But, as Mashek said, she does not allow her preferences to get in the way of her work. She treats all presidents alike.
Many members of the press have become more like Thomas and less like servants paying homage to the White House since Nixon's fall from grace.
She said post-Watergate reporters tended to be more skeptical and tried to prove herself.
"They're all human beings. I don't put them on a pedestal, but I also think they should be treated fairly and objectively."
Thomas gained national recognition during the Watergate era because the wife of Attorney General John Mitchell, Martha Mitchell, chose to divulge privileged information to Thomas over the telephone.
Frank Cormier, former Associated Press White House bureau chief and keeper of the magic press conference words until his retirement, admitted he had been scooped often by Thomas during Watergate.
"She drove me crazy with all the phone calls she was getting from Martha." Cormier said.
Always being there to capture the story is just a part of doing a job that, for Thomas, isn't work.
Despite spending more than 40 years as a reporter in Washington, Thomas said, she thought she had not accomplished anything.
And if Thomas has her way, that last judgement will be a long, long time in coming.
"It's a constant striving to do a better job. You're only as good as your last story."
Although she may sometimes work 18 hours a day, she said, it was worth it because she had an "orchestra seat to instant history."
When asked whether she was considering retirement, her fist came down on an emphatic "No."
Celebration pays tribute to journalist
Staff writer
White, whose name adorns the School of Journalism, attended the University of Kansas before becoming the editor-publisher of the Emporia Gazette in 1895.
A few hundred journalists and friends gathered on the KU campus yesterday to remember the strong, but simple values of William Allen White on the 118th anniversary of his birth.
By Sandra Crider
Del Brinkman, dean of journalism,
said. "William Allen White stood for
some very basic values that stand the
relevant." He did well practice
what he prepared."
In 1922, White wrote an editorial,
"To an Anxious Friend," that won him a Pulitzer prize. The piece affirmed the rights of people on strike and the freedom of others to defend them.
Throughout his career, the renowned journalist defended freedom of expression, Brinkman said, and a year after his death in 1944, the William Allen White Foundation was formed to preserve that belief.
Foundation trustees meet every year on White's birthday to remind themselves of the basics, to discuss business and to give awards to distinguished journalists who exemplify White's dedication to the profession. Brinkman said.
"It really allows all of us to renew our commitment to freedom of expression and to the freedom of the press, and those are sometimes things that get lost in the shuffle these days," he said.
The foundation presented two
-
See WHITE, p. 5, col.1
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1986
News Briefs
South African police find five blacks dead
JOHANNESBURG South Africa
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Police found the bodies of five blacks who were bound, stabbed and burned with what has become known as the "necklace" — gasoline-soaked tires placed around them and set afire, police said westerday.
The killings appeared to be part of the struggle between rival anti-apartheid groups that differ on how to fight white-minority rule.
Press reports said the men might have been sentenced to death by unofficial people's courts operating in black townships.
PALERMO. Sicily — The largest Mafia trial in Italian history began yesterday, with defendants in steel cages and police escorting the judges who will hear charges such as drug smuggling and multiple murder against the 474 accused mobsters.
Authorities said 115 of the defendants were at large, including most of the high-ranking bosses who were indicted after a three-year investigation by five of Italy's investigators.
The corpses were found on a street outside the industrial center of Port Elizabeth.
Mafia trial begins
Stores pull Tylenol
The courtroom, which includes 30 steel-barred cages guarded by armed policemen, was built for the trial at a cost of $17 million.
YONKERS, N.Y. — A & P food stores pulled Tylenol from more than 1,000 stores in 26 states yesterday after authorities said a 23-year-old woman who had taken the drug died of poisoning.
Diane Ellsworth, 23, of Peekslaw, N.Y., died Saturday in the first such poisoning since seven Chicago-area people died after taking the pills in 1982, authorities said.
Tests confirmed that three other capsules in the same bottle contained cyanide.
From Kansan wires.
Group meets to declare winner
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — The government-dominated National Assembly held the first meeting yesterday on its official vote canvass, which by law will determine who won the disputed presidential election.
In the slow count of ballots cast Friday, the government election commission indicated that President Ferdinand E. Marcos was leading by 53 percent. An unofficial count by a citizens' poll-watching group of more votes indicated challenger Corazon Aquino ahead by the same margin.
The election was marred by violence, which continued yesterday. A gunman fired at about 50 Aquino supporters in an open truck, killing a 20-year-old man and wounding a woman. Aquino had delivered a speech from the truck earlier.
At the gathering in suburban Makati, Aquino had told 2,000 cheerful supporters she was "claiming the people's due."
"We are going to take power," Aquino said. "The people have won this election."
Aquino accuses Marcos of widespread election fraud in attempting to extend his 20 years of rule over this archipelago of 7,100 islands.
Both Aquino supporters and official U.S. election observers called the slow count an attempt by Marcos to manipulate the results.
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, leaving aside evidence of vote fraud, hailed the Philippine election yesterday as proof of a strong two-party system and urged the two sides to come together to make sure the government works.
Reagan urges two parties to work together
National Assembly members, two-
United Press International
President Ferdinand Marcos and challenger Corazon Aquino were neck-and-neck in unofficial tabulations. The administration called for accommodation by Marcos and restraint by Aquino once the results of the election are certified — a position that seemed to assume a Marcos victory.
As a team of U.S. observers arrived home, Reagan said the United States should not interfere in the election, although there was reason to question the fairness of the election.
"I think what we have to watch for," Reagan said, "is that in spite of all these charges, there is at the same time evidence of a strong two-party system now in the islands."
Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., who led the team of official U.S. observers, told reporters later on arriving at Andrews Air Force Base. "We have witnessed
democracy by millions of people who have a passion for it."
But, he added, "Tonight we are going to compose our best thoughts for the president and visit with him tomorrow morning. This situation is one that will not go away without a lot of thought," Lugar said.
Reagan will meet today with Lugar, head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., another member of the delegation, as well as Secretary of State George Shultz, to make a preliminary report on their findings and discuss what they found to back up charges that the balloting was tainted by scandal and coercion.
thirds of whom are from the president's New Society Movement, spent four hours debating rules for the canvass and then adjourned until this afternoon. The galleries were packed with Marcos supporters and Aquino loyalists who chanted their candidates' names. Thousands more gathered outside.
Returns at the end of the day from the so-called quick count by the government commission gave Marcos 4,017,277 votes, or 53 percent, to 3,610,099, or 47 percent, for Aquino, with 35 percent of precincts counted.
for Free Elections, a poll-watchers' group known as Namfrel, had Aquino ahead by 6,658,838 votes to 5,971,693, a 53-to-47-percent lead, with 60.4 percent of precincts reported.
The election commission's count was suspended after 30 computer operators walked out Sunday, charging fraud in the tabulation that showed Marcos leading.
Pedro Baraoidan, an army colonel who runs the commission's computer operation, said he was considering whether to file charges against them.
to sabotage the operation." Baraoidan said.
He said the 18-hour suspension was caused by an equipment breakdown, not the walkout.
A count by the National Movement
Radio Veritas, a Roman Catholic Church station, said eight more of the commission's 120 computer technicians walked out yesterday. Baraoidan.
More than 90 people have been killed in election-related violence since the campaign began Dec. 6.
Haiti official pledges to share wealth fairly
"My theory is that there was a plot
The 178-member National Assembly has 15 days to complete the canvass of vote tally sheets.
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The head of the interim government pledged yesterday to share wealth fairly in Haiti, where people were ground into poverty during three decades that made the Duvaliers and their friends rich.
Lt. Gen. Henri Namphy, president of the six-man interim government council, said at swearing-in ceremonies for the new Cabinet that there would be free elections by universal suffrage and a new, liberal constitution to create a real and working democracy. He did not set a date for the elections or elaborate on the new constitution.
Doc" Duvalier to power in 1957. He later declared himself president-for-life.
Duvalier's son, Jean-Claude, who succeeded at age 19 when he died in 1971, fled with his family and aides Friday in a U.S. military plane and is in France while the French government looks for a country that will take him permanently.
Haiti's last free election was the one that brought Francois "Papa
The remarks by Namphy, who is the army chief of staff, followed a weekend of celebration and violence. Haitians rioted, sacked homes owned by the departed dictator and his lieutenants, and hunted down members of the dreaded Duvalier private militia, the Tonton Macoute.
As many as 300 people were killed over the weekend.
Sub&Stuff
The Soviet Union sentenced Shcharansky in 1978 to 13 years in prison on charges of spying for Washington. Former President Jimmy Carter denied that the prominent government critic had ever been a CIA agent.
U.S., Soviet disagreement endangers spy exchange
monitoring human rights abuse in the Soviet Union, would be freed ahead of the other prisoners.
United Press International
The newspaper said that five convicted or accused spies to be released by the United States and West Germany would be flown to Berlin from Frankfurt, West Germany, just before the swap.
BONN, West Germany — The East-West prisoner exchange expected today nearly came unglued in an 11th-hour disagreement between Moscow and Washington involving Soviet dissident Anatoly Shcharansky, a newspaper said yesterday.
The daily Bild newspaper said the elaborately planned exchange expected today in Berlin was seriously endangered when the Americans refused a Soviet demand that the Jewish dissident be treated as an agent just like the others in the swap.
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Bild said the dispute was settled with the agreement that Shcharansky, who helped run a committee
Two of those were thought to be Karl and Kane Hoecher, a couple held by the United States for spying for Czechoslovakia.
The source said other avenues of investigation were wind shears aloft as the 4.5-million-pound shuttle stack climbed through a period of maximum stresses, and a seal leak between two segments of the booster rocket that caused a sideways thrust and put additional structural loads on the shin.
The presidential commission investigating the Jan. 28 accident met in secret session yesterday to discuss an internal memorandum last July warning officials of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration that shuttle flight safety was being compromised by potential failure of booster seals.
A space agency source, who declined to be identified, said such a scenario — first outlined yesterday in the industry magazine Aviation Week and Space Technology — is one of several possibilities under examination.
WASHINGTON — NASA investigators think Challenger's right booster rocket may have pivoted into the huge space shuttle fuel tank, crushing it and setting off the fireball that destroyed the ship and killed its crew.
Arriving for yesterday's commission meeting, chairman William P. Rogers said the New York Times story gave the impression that NASA had not told his panel everything it knew about the booster's history.
A focus of the investigation has been the possibility that a leak between segments of the right booster allowed a plume of flame to spurt toward Challenger's liquid fuel tank, either puncturing it or raising the pressure inside to cause the explosion.
Theory says rocket leak caused crash
The Associated Press
Aviation Week said a redesign of the joints might cause the next shuttle mission to be postponed a year.
The magazine said NASA's interim accident review board thought that the plume of fire jetting out of the side of the right booster rocket caused the bottom half of the rocket to separate from the tank.
"The lower portion of the booster, then rotated outward from the climbing vehicle." Aviation Week said. "As the bottom of the booster moved outward, its top section pivoted into the external tank and crushed the upper right side of the tank."
2. Seem unimpressed when he tells you he scored a hat trick in the third period.
3. Take his word for it when he tells you that 1984 was a very good year for Chardonnays.
1. When he mentions "The Bears," know they're from Chicago.
8 ways to get a man to ask you out again.
7. Compliment him on his taste in colors, even if he arrives in jeans and a T-shirt.
8. Tell him you'd ask him up for a Suisse Mocha,but you only do that on second dates.
6. Order something more exotic than a white wine spritzer.
5. Avoid, at all costs, letting him see you reapply your lipstick.
4. Laugh at his jokes, even when he forgets the punch lines.
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Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs Reckless hazing law proposed in Senate
TOPEKA — It would be a class A misdeemeanor for student organizations and other groups to recklessly haze new members under a bill introduced yesterday in the Kansas Senate.
The Senate Judiciary Committee sponsored the proposal, which would allow hazing victims to sue in civil court for physical or mental harm caused by such initiation rites.
The list of those liable in hazing lawsuits would be all participants in the hazing, any organization which authorized, commanded or tolerated the hazing and the local director, trustee or officer of the organization.
In addition, the bill would not allow those accused of recklessly participating in the hazing of another to defend their actions by saying the victim consented to the hazing and therefore assumed the risk of physical or mental harm.
Gift to provide funds
A class A misdemeanor carries a possible jail sentence of one year and a maximum $2,500 fine.
The Kansas University Endowment Association recently received $13,700 to provide scholarships for students in the School of Journalism.
The John Madden Scholarship Fund was established from the estate of Jessie B. Madden of Carmel, N.Y., in memory of her husband, who died in 1977.
John Madden, born in Mound City, studied journalism at the University and graduated in 1914. He worked as a reporter in the St. Louis area before moving in the 1930s to the New York City area, where he worked in financial advertising.
Jessie Madden, a Pleasanton native, graduated from KU in 1916. She was 89 when she died in 1984.
Contras topic of talk
Robert Miller, professor of sociology at Baker University, will speak Wednesday about contra activity in northern Nicaragua. The speech is part of the weekly University Forum at the Eucanimal Christian Ministries building. 1204 Oread Ave.
In January, Miller accompanied the U.S. Witness for Peace team to northern Nicaragua where the contra activity is concentrated.
Lunch will be served at 11:40 a.m. and will cost $3. Call 843-4933 by noon today to make reservations.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy and cold. The high temperature should be in the mid-teens with northeast winds 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be fair and cold with a low temperature of zero to 5 below. Tomorrow should be partly cloudy, breezy and not as cold, with a high temperature around 20.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, Jennifer Jackson Sanner's name was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Kansan. Sanner is the communications director for the University of Kansas Alumni Association and Kansas Alumni editor.
From staff and wire reports.
Needles, hot metal used in healing
By Barbara Shear Staff writer
When people are tired of pills and operations, a method from the Orient may cure their ailments.
Staff writer
A tiny needle enclosed in a metal tube is gently tapped into the skin. The tube is removed, leaving the needle placed firmly in the skin. After several minutes, the needle is removed, helping heal the patient's ailments.
Acupuncture, the process described above, massages and Moxibustion, or fate healing, were demonstrated last night in McColm Hall by a physical therapy student.
Shiro Iwae, Tokyo, Japan,
sophomore, demonstrated these
different types of Oriental healing to
a crowd of about 50 students.
Iwae first became interested in acupuncture, fate healing and massages when he lived in Tokyo. He received a degree in Oriental medicine and physical therapy from the Tokyo City College for the Blind.
"I wanted to be a doctor, but I couldn't because of my vision," he said. "The school I went to had a special program for my vision disability, so I just studied Oriental medicine."
One professor said he went to Iwae and really benefited from the acupuncture.
"I was involved in an accident two years ago," said Nubidius Nwafer, visiting professor of African studies. "I was tired of taking pills, so I had acupuncture. In the next few days, I felt so much better."
Iwae came to the United States because he was interested in English and wanted to be a fluent speaker. He previously worked in a Tokyo hospital for a year and a half.
Iwae also gave demonstrations of two different types of masses — Eastern and Western. Western massages involve touching the skin directly. In Eastern massages a towel is used to cover the skin before the massage is given.
Iwae said a towel was used in Eastern massage because of the different climate in Asia.
"The climate is a lot like winter in Kansas," he said. "People don't like to remove their clothing, so we use towels."
demonstrated both types of massage on Louise Caola, St. Louis senior. She said that even though both massages felt great, more pressure was used in the Eastern massage.
[Image of a young boy sitting on a table, holding his leg with his hand.]
The last part of Iwae's demonstration was Moxibustion, or fate healing. This involved applying heated metal to a wound to heal it.
"It felt like the blood was circulating more. It was relaxing as well as therapeutic," she said.
Pat Blanchard, Kansas City, Kan. senior, said, "The heat from the burning fumes penetrated my skin. It felt like someone put Mentholatum on my skin."
Iwae gave the demonstration not only because people had expressed interest in Oriental healing, but also to improve his English.
Shiro Iwae, Tokyo, Japan sophomore, prepares to insert an acupuncture needle into his leg. Iwae demonstrated Oriental healing techniques last night in the lobby of McColum Hall.
Wilfredo Lee/KANSAN
Western Civilization to exclude freshmen
By Tom Farmer
Staff writer
Beginning this fall, freshmen will no longer be able to take Western Civilization courses during their first year at KU.
A new format in the Western Civilization program will change the times courses are offered and to whom they will be available.
"We have felt that students really need the background of a year of college," James Woelfel, director of the Western Civilization program, said yesterday. "They especially need the two years of college English in order to deal adequately with the course."
Changes in the program were adopted by the Western Civilization Advisory Committee last fall to get faculty members more involved with the teaching of the courses and to give students a broader background in the study of Western thought, Woelfel said.
"We still see it as a reading program," said Woelfel, who is a professor of philosophy and religious studies. "The main purpose of lectures is to provide historical background and to make use of audio-visual aids."
Woelefl said that beginning this fall, Western Civilization I, WC 104, would be offered only during the fall semester and Western Civilization II, WC 105, would be offered only during the spring semester. The courses will
be listed in the fall Timetable as WC 204 and WC 205.
Under the present system, both segments are available each semester.
Woelfel said the program did not have enough full-time faculty members to teach both segments each semester. Three faculty members will give the lectures in addition to Woelfel.
Instead of being taught in a one hour discussion period each week, Western Civilization courses will be taught for three hours weekly. Two hours will be lectures by a faculty member and one hour will be a small group discussion led by a graduate teaching assistant.
Amy Anderson, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore, now is enrolled in Western Civilization 1. She said she probably would like the new program better because of the added lecture times.
"We seem to cover the material pretty well," said Braymen, who is enrolled in Western Civilization II. "I don't think taking it for three hours would make that much difference."
"I'm not the discussion type. And when midterms roll around I won't understand what's going on." Anderson said. "I think I could definitely get more out of the new system."
Ann Braymen, Topeka sophomore, said she preferred the present system.
Doctors determine student dies of aneurysm, not fall
By a Kansan reporter
A KU student who police thought fell and injured his head Friday died yesterday at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
John David Markham, 24, died of a cerebral aneurysm, said Lt. Jeanne Longaker of the KU police. Longaker said it was originally thought that Markham had fallen behind Carruth O'Leary Hall.
However, the Med Center determined that Markham had the aneurysm and then fell.
Markham, 512 Firecalls Drive, was found near Potter Lake on Friday afternoon and taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He was later transferred to the Med Center by life-flight helicopter.
Trey Humphrey, a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity,
1621 Edgehill Rd., said Markham was a member of the fraternity in 1981-82.
Longaker said KU police had no information about Markham's family except that they had been notified of his death. Information was not available from the Med Center.
Information about funeral arrangements was not available.
By Piper Scholfield
Budig supports campus lighting, sees progress in fall, Epstein savs
Chancellor Gene A. Budig voiced his support of improved campus lighting Friday, according to David Einstein, student body president.
Epstein met with the chancellor for an hour in a personal conference. He said he thought the results of the meeting had been very positive.
The chancellor thought something would be done to improve campus lighting by next fall, Epstein said. But what exact measures would be taken will not be known until later this month.
"The problem is still money," Epstein said. "I found out that the lighting improvements were on the Board of Regents wish list, and that $25,000 has been allocated for lighting."
But Epstein said he and Amy Brown, student body vice president, didn't thikh $25,000 was nearly enough to begin the lighting improvements.
"Any and I will still be going to lobby the Legislature for more money, but now we have the support of the chancellor," he said.
Epstein said that, in the past, student government had not been willing to work with the chancellor. The
chancellor is well-respected in the Legislature.
Better lighting on campus was part of Epstein and Brown's campaign platform last fall. Although initially only Jayhawk Boulevard would benefit from the improved lighting program, the proposal calls for improved lighting on heavily traveled paths and high crime areas on campus.
Jayhawk Boulevard was chosen as the initial target of the plan because of the amount of traffic there. If one well-litged path is provided, students will be able to follow that path through campus.
Omaha school launches war on suicide
United Press International
OMAHA. Neb. — Teachers at suburban Bryan High School yester-
day urged pupils grieving over three student suicides during the past week to seek help in handling problems in their lives.
Student council members and others joined to pass out yellow "We Care at Bryan" buttons while other students wore handmade white paper hearts with the words "Choose Life" written in red.
On Feb. 3, Michele Money, 16, a junior, died from a drug overdose, and Mark E. Walpus, 15, a sophomore, died the next day of a gunshot wound.
The school's teachers told their first-period classes of the Friday night shotgun death of senior Thomas Wacha IV. 18, at his home.
Wacha's funeral was yesterday. "All of us are going through very trying times. We grieve for Michele, Mark and Tom. While at the same time we must help others who are
also carrying heavy burdens," the teachers said in a statement read to students.
"There is no problem too big for us to handle if we get help with it and don't give up," the teachers said.
They asked the school's 1,246 students to pledge: "I will not make any big decisions, especially decisions concerning my health, safety, life and the feelings of my loved ones, without taking a day to think it over."
to the school. Parents, clergy and well-wishers called and Principal John McQuinn scheduled an afternoon "Celebrate Life" pop rally.
The Omaha Public School District once again dispatched psychologists
"Some students are afraid to come to school any more because they're afraid someone else might kill themselves," said John Querry, 18, a senior. "A lot of this talk about it is bringing up other people's memories about things."
Television and print reporters combed the hallways, interviewing students and peering into
classrooms.
"It's kind of upsetting to know that you get publicity for this kind of thing and not for something good like a good basketball team," said Kathy Stone, 15, a sophomore and student council vice president.
Student Council President Dave Jeck, 18, a senior, said, "I don't think that these suicides can be related specifically to our area.
"These suicides were caused by the same thing that causes every other suicide. They were depressed."
FEB.
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is only one month away...
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call for class schedule 842-1983 in the Malls Shopping Center
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One Month Membership $25 limit one coupon per person something nice for your heart or your sweetheart
If you fall down in the parking lot of the Desert Isle Hotel...you are within seconds of immediate medical attention at any of the following famous Daytona nightspots...Big Daddy's, the Hole Lounge, Ocean Deck, etc.
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For Details: Come to the "Surf's Up" party at Gammons tomorrow night.
Dress up for the beach and be automatically eligible for the FREE TRIP GIVEAWAY!
TIM AND TONY WILL BE TAKING RESERVATIONS AT THAT TIME
4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan
.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1986
Changing the rules
A joke told in the Philippines goes like this: President Reagan, Mikhail Gorbachev and Ferdinand Marcos are flying on an airplane that is about to crash.
Only one parachute is available. Reagan demands it because he is leader of the free world. Gorbachev demands it as leader of the Communists. Marcos calls a vote.
He counts and declares himself the winner, 14 to 2.
In reality, Marcos is a man who can't stand to lose.
The Philippine election Friday helped prove this.
Election observers walked away from ballot boxes Sunday, full of frustration at the widespread fraud by Marcos supporters.
One election worker said as she left, "What's posted on the tabulation board does not tally with the computer board, and we don't know who is doing it. We can't take it any more."
Corazon Aquino, Marcos' opponent, was leading in the election by 100,000 votes Saturday night.
Sometime between that night and noon on Sunday, Marcos had mysteriously jumped into the lead with 55 percent of the vote. This latest count was tabulated by the official Philippine vote-counting body, the Commission on Elections.
Namrefel, a citizens' pollwatching group, showed by their tally that Aquino still was leading Sunday.
Final election results will not be released for another five days.
What is known already is that something peculiar is happening in that Asian island. And it's not that those people can't count.
What is not unusual is the corruption that always has
been widespread in the Philippines.
Marcos, quick to outwit his opponents, called a snap special election to prove his popularity.
Martial law was lifted in 1981, but Marcos still was at the helm of his political game, one in which he could change the rules any time to keep from losing.
Under Marcos, it has not ceased. He began his rule in 1965, and after being twice elected president, Marcos ordered martial law in 1972, a year before he would have had to leave office.
Enthusiasm aside, Lyng faces one of the toughest jobs in the Cabinet.
But once again, no one wins when playing with Marcos.
Best of luck
In 1983, Marcos' main political rival, Benigno Aquino, was slain as soon as he returned from exile in the United States. Aquino was another pawn eliminated in the game.
Marcos continued to play, this time holding on to his pieces by his fingernails after growing unrest plagued the island and the Reagan administration scorned Marcos' political activities.
He said Sunday that he would consider declaring the election invalid and serve out the rest of his term — an old strategy, when the opponent is gaining, change the rules.
This time, Marcos was caught off guard. The Philippine Supreme Court did not declare the election unconstitutional. And Corazon Aquino has proven a serious contender who might even win
This time, no matter how many rules are changed, the result is that the game was dirty and Marcos, if he emerges as the winner, as he must, will appear as the cheating manipulator he has proven himself to be.
He brings to the job political experience and administrative abilities. Lyng directed California's agriculture department by appointment from then-governor Ronald Reagan.
In 1891, he was Reagan's leading candidate to be agriculture secretary, but Bob Dole, Senate majority leader, pushed for John Block's nomination because he wanted a Midwestern farmer in the position.
Richard Lyng, a Washington-based agriculture consultant, is the President's choice to be secretary of the department.
He has also served four years as an assistant secretary in the U.S. Department of Agriculture during the Nixon administration and one term as president of the American Meat Institute.
A new face at the head of the U.S. Department of Agriculture is getting an enthusiastic response from Washington officials, who say he may be just the man to bring real improvements to the beleaguered farming industry.
"Any farm group would have trouble throwing stones at Dick Lyng," says Bob Frederick, legislative director of the National Grahge, a general farm organization.
Unfortunately, there was optimism when Block took office, and he ended up dodging stones.
Block's pollyannaish attitude never helped matters. He kept telling the farmers that things would get better. They never did.
Block will step down next month. According to Frederick, the problems Lyng will assume are just as great or greater than the problems Block faced in his last three years.
Lyng will have to administer a new farm bill, projected to be the most expensive in U.S. history, that will be a possible target for administration or Congressional budget cuts. Also, the farm credit system is still weak despite an emergency bill passed by Congress.
Everyone certainly wishes Lyng the best of luck with his new job. Unfortunately, Lyng will need more than luck and enthusiastic support to help turn around the very real crisis in the farming industry.
Ma Bell offers 'voluntary' insurance
I'm mad, and not just a little. I almost fell for blackmail insurance.
I am sitting in my cold apartment, huddled against its only heat. I, like most students, am scraping on 25-centa-a-loaf Dillon's bread and bulk rice. My cupboards look like an advertisement for no-name foods, and I know which "TV Brand" colas are worth drinking.
News staff
I go to the seafood display of a local grocery store, only because it's on the way to the generic section. My paper towels come from Wal-Mart, as do many of my clothes. When I feel generous with myself, I turn the heat up to 67 degrees. This is not life at the Ritz, but I am匆忙 to be alive.
It is brought to you by Southwestern Bell, those people who charge you more for calling Topeka than it costs to call San Diego. They are the same people who charge you a $45 hook-up fee to flip a switch and enter your name into their giant computers. They are associated with that group who charged you rent for your old phone, then asked you to buy it from them.
"But," I say, "I have the comprehensive OHMS/OMS contract. That cable came with my Unison TP6432 and the label says that it meets Part 68 of the FCC rules. What's the deal?"
However, I am looking at this incredible yellow card I received in the mail. It does not make me happy. It amounts to a blackmail insurance. It amounts to blackmail insurance.
"Well," he says, "the telephone is covered by the FCC, but the cord that came with it is not. So when you dropped the phone and pulled the plug out of the wall, you were using standard wiring. That will be $45."
is G-379a telephone cable. You're not covered."
I was most offended by the way Southwestern Bell originally offered this service. If you did not want this "voluntary" OHMS/OMS option, you had to send them the stupid little yellow card back by March 15. Otherwise, it was automatic.
This little yellow card is offering me OHM5/OMS for only 90 cents a month. Who, for goodness sake, has
Is that the definition of "voluntary"? Is it voluntary when you must refuse an unsolicited service? It is voluntary when no response means yes? Is this Columbia Records without the bonus albums or what?
Southwestern Bell was flooded with calls from irate customers. The customers knew a sham when they saw one. So Ma Bell recanted. Now, if you want the service, you send in the "No" card. If you don't want the service, you do nothing. And if you already sent the card in, who knows what will happen. Confused? Join the crowd.
Of course, this great little OHMS/OMS contract doesn't cover all maintenance problems. For instance, "Some destruction or substandard wiring placed by the customer" is exempt. Does that mean I am covered if I accidentally pull the wiring out of the wall?
Remember those big thugs in high school? They hung out in dark corridors and bathrooms, offering protection from big thugs. It was such a reasonable price for this protection that you were hard-pressed to refuse. They had a subtle way of implying that "you needed this protection" just in case.
The Mafia had a similar way of protecting people from unsavory elements on the East Coast. It was so kind and caring, worried about your safety and the possibility of firebombing.
Now, Southwestern Bell is graciously offering us protection against the worry and anxiety of telephone service charges.
I am mad when I have to send me refusal card for something I did not request. I don't like getting unsolicited merchandise c.o.d. in the mail. I don't like automatic shipments coming every month "for my convenience." And I don't like this stupid yellow card I got with my telephone bill.
After saying all that, don't be surprised if my phone suddenly quits working. You will hear this pleasant Southwestern Bell recording telling you that my number is having difficulty. And there I will be in my cold little apartment, eating generic bread and wishing I had let them sign me up for OHMS/OMS.
I can see it now: The telephone guy comes in and begins to examine my wiring. He checks a few numbers on my cord and nods his head.
I am not losing sleep thinking about my telephone connections. When my phone is on the blink, I hit it. I paid $19 for it, and it works just fine, thank you.
PETER B. CRAIG
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Luuretta McMillen ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry ... Campus editor
David Giles ... Sports editor
Brice Waddill ... Photo editor
Susanne Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nixon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Lori Eckart ... Classified manager
Caroline Innes ... Production manager
Palien Lee ... National manager
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 Staffer-Fint Hall.
Tim Erickson Staff columnist
"I'm sorry. Mr. Erickson, but this
MARK WILKINS
HUMANITIES
**Letters** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and homerow, or faculty or staff position.
**Guest shots** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawen, Kanze, 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and on weekends. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
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Reagan should read book on contras
A man lying on his back.
The new book by Christopher Dickey is hair-raising in terms of the terror, torture and inhumanity portrayed by the U.S.-supported side in the Nicaraguan struggle.
President Reagan should read "With the Contras" before he pushes ahead for a return to military aid for the anti-Nicaraguan rebels while miting the possibility of a negotiated settlement.
Dickey quotes a contra in a bar in Honduras as saying, "You know there are people who learn to kill and love it."
The author goes on to say, "These are the men President Reagan has likened to 'freedom fighters.'"
Reagan also has likened their cause to that of the Founding Fathers and more recently has called them allies of the heart.
Dickey, a foreign correspondent for the Washington Post, depicts the role of the CIA in the covert attempt to overthrow the Sandinista government and the intense involvement of former Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza's guards.
"The fight continued, now, with no end in sight and the constant threat that the Reagan administration, having committed itself to the Sandinistas' overthrow, would finally decide it had no option but open direct U.S. military action if the contras faltered once too often or too badly."
Helen Thomas United Press International White House Reporter
"If you're going to overthrow anyone you have to do it pretty quickly," he quoted a CIA veteran as saying. "These operations always unravel — unless they take over a country — they always make a mess."
Dickey said CIA Director William Casey was listening to two voices, but was eventually won over by "cowboyism: a go-get'em attitude that said now was the time for the agency to win some certifiable victories over communism."
Much of the book focuses on the internal disputes and power struggles between the rebel factions. The spotlight is particularly on La Suicida, one of the rebel leaders, a former Somoza guard whose, excesses and rampages led to his own death at the hands of other contras.
Shortly after the news conference began, a bomb went off. Morgan was desperately hurt and Frazier, whose legs were blown off, died a slow death.
Pastora was rushed from the scene in a speedboat, leaving the reporters screaming for help.
Dickie writes that La Suicida was kept naked and interrogated for days before he was executed by the contras.
Shades of Vietnam and short memories.
"Reporters would not remember Pastora for his bravery there," the author wrote.
"Pastora's luck held," Dickey wrote.
He writes of the fatal news conference given by Eden Pastora, known as Commander Zero, who met with a handful of reporters after they had taken a hazardous journey to a dilapidated shack on stilts in the jungle.
In conclusion, Dickey writes;
He quotes one of the rebel leaders, Edgar Chamorro, as saying, "If you know too much, you owe too much. There are times when it is better not to know too much."
Among the reporters was Susan Morgan, stringing for Newsweek, and Linda Frazier, wife of an Associated Press correspondent.
He notes that the United States, which first said it was trying to interdict arms supplies from Nicaragua to Salvadoran rebels, had widened its original goals.
Dickey ties the rebel offenses to a step-up in Sandimista repressions and increasing reliance on Soviet support. In short, a vicious circle.
I'd like to quote two very credible sources on the subject of Contemporary Hit Radio in response to all the controversy surrounding the format change of KLZR.
What the people want
Mailbox
In the Feb. 6 Kansan, Bob Newton, KLZR station manager, stated that KLZR was a business supported by advertisers trying to reach the largest audience possible. Newton also made the distinction between the "listeners who were interested in music," and the "majority of people who . . . want to hear the current hits." The KU journalism textbook "Understanding Mass Communications," by De Fleur and Dennis supports Newton's statements.
It reads, "It's no secret that the people with low artistic and intellectual tastes far outnumber the people with highly developed tastes . . . this
crudle law of large numbers generally accounts rather well for the low intellectual and artistic level that prevails in American mass communications. Advertisers are looking for programs that will reach the largest possible number of purchasers of beer, soup and soap."
By keeping this philosophy in mind, one can understand why KLZR changed its format. Apparently, the average pop music radio listener is simply too stupid to be able to appreciate higher quality programming.
So who can blame KLZR, ZZ99,
Q104 and all the other contemporary
stations for providing the kind of
general public is able to enjoy!
Perhaps a quote from Elvis Costello's "Radio Radio" best sums up the feelings of KLZR's former "small group of loyal listeners who
Ray Velasque
Ray Velasquez 1983 journalism graduate
A vote for standers
Those individuals who are interested in music will just have to stay close to their turntables until the mediocrity and impotence of pop music is removed.
were more interested in music."
"They say you better listen to the voice of reason, but they don't give you any choice 'cause they think that it's treason . . . Radio is in the hands of such a lot of fools trying to anesthetize the way that you feel."
I was reading an article in the Feb. 4 issue of the Kansan, and was appalled to find out that the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation was considering closing off areas of the student seating sections. Personally,
I find it quite invigorating for fans to stand throughout entire ballgames
When I attended this year's Kansas-Oklahoma game, my roommates and I sat in the alumi section. After watching us four jumping up and down and screaming at the refs for an entire half, many of the older Jayhawk fans began to stand and yell with us. (Believe me, those alumni have the potential to get pretty rowdy if well-provoked.)
I can offer only one suggestion to KU fans: If the KUAC decides after this season to remove some seating, make up for the cheering that will be lost by the missing fans in those sections. I'm sure it can be done by the Allen Field House fans I've heard for the past four years. Go Jawhackys!
1
Mark Haworth Glencoe, Ill., senior
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1986
From Page One
5
Drink
Continued from p. 1
"Education is a total failure when it comes to prevention."
Chris Edmonds, a lobbyist for the Kansas Club and Tavern Association, said the bill discriminated against on-premise stores because off-premise establishments such as grocery stores, convenience stores and gas stations could sell liquor
below cost.
White
"With an increase in the drinking age, there is a shift in consumption," Edmonds said. "There is no decrease in the amount of beer sold or delivered by wholesalers."
He said that on-premise deliveries were down about 24 percent while off-premise deliveries were up 33
Emdons said he didn't think there was a correlation between happy hours and the number of drunken driving arrests and convictions.
percent.
"The price of a drink and the amount of liquor served have no effect on the number of drunk driving arrests," he said.
University Daily Kansan
Continued from p.1
awards yesterday. The 1986 William Allen White Foundation Award for Journalistic Merit was presented to Helen Thomas, United Press International's White House bureau chief. Each year, the award is given to a journalist who mirrors White's devotion to serve his profession and the
nation.
Jake Thompson, a Kansas City Times reporter, won the other award, the Burton W. Marvin Kansas News Enterprise Award.
firm built on pyramid investing.
The award honored Thompson for his exceptional investigative reporting on Culture Farms, a cosmetics
The awards were presented at a luncheon yesterday.
Other events were the annual meeting of foundation trustees, a reception for trustees' spouses and guests and a dinner Sunday night at the Lawrence Country Club.
The University Placement Center will present a workshop, "Interviewing II. Successful Interviewing," at 3:30 p.m. today in Room Llippincott Hall.
On Campus
Two free films "Appalachian Spring," music by Aaron Copland, and "Seraphic Dialog" will be shown at 4 p.m. today in Room 252 Robinson Center. Both dances were choreographed by Martha Graham, and the films are part of the dance history film series.
A seminar, "Is the Homosexual My Neighbor? Another Christian View," is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. today at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building. 1204 Aord Ave.
The Public Relations Student Society of America, will meet to hear Dave Nichols of Southwestern Bell speak about the competition in public relations at 4:30 p.m. today in Room
The KU Ki-Aikido Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in Room 130 Robinson Center.
308 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
■ Expressions, the KU Dance Club, will meet at 7 p.m. today in Room 242 Robinson Center.
Ronald Weiner and Thomas Luzier, both doctors, will speak at an Allergy Program sponsored by the Kansas State Nurses Association at 7:30 p.m. today at Lawrence Memorial Hospital in conference room 2-B.
The Student Assistance Center will sponsor a speed and comprehension reading class from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. tomorrow. Classes will continue on Feb. 18 and Feb. 25. Register and pay materials fee of $15 at the center, 121 Strong Hall.
'Unhappy hour' strikes patrons with $14 beers
United Press International
GILFORD, N.H. — Bartenders statewide will be serving $30 martinis and $14 beers in an "unhappy hour" this week to publicize soaring liquor-liability insurance costs.
Dewey Mark, who launched "The Great New Hampshire Unhappy Hour," said Saturday about 400 restaurants and lounges would participate in the publicity stunt today from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.
At B. Mae Denny's Restaurant, Mark said a martini with top-shelf gin would cost $30.20. A bottle of domestic beer will go for $14.25, and a snifter of imported brandy will fetch $40.
K-ZR 106
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*Mugs for $1.06
*KU Jayhawk megaphones for $1.06
*Nuges for $1.06
*Heart stationary and notepads for $1.06
*Valentine gift wrap for $1.06
*12 exp. Kodak film (selected rolls) for $1.06
*24 exp. roll of film or slides developed for $1.06
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7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
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100 100 95 84 74 64 54 44 34 24 14
WOMENS SINGLE CLASSES
100 100 95 84 74 64 54 44 34 24 14
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WOMENS DOUBLES CLASSES (Combined Team Weight)
100 100 95 84 74 64 54 44 34 24 14
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100 100 95 84 74 64 54 44 34 24 14
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100 100 95 84 74 64 54 44 34 24 14
Arm Wrestling Machine
Demonstration
Sat., Feb. 15
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$2.00 Cover
Contestants $1.00
$1 Well Drinks
11 a.m.-3 a.m.
SANCTUARY
7th & Michigan
843-0540
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THE
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Discussion on Love and Sex Thursday, February 13th 8:00
Kansas Union Ballroom
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Sponsored by Student Union Activities
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6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday. Feb. 11. 1986
COACH
Continued from p. 1
glance south from his desk to where Tradition hangs on the wall.
The smiles of the 1952-53 National College Athletic Association Western Regional champions beam from a framed photograph. Look closely. Their shoes are red. Larry Brown likes that.
"I want to do it the way they used to do it," he says. "Go to the red shoes and the red uniforms.
KANSAS
24
BASKETBALL
Brown has organized workouts at Allen Field House for Kansas Special Olympians.
With all eyes focused on the future for Brown and his team, Brown, the traditionalist, is conjuring up the basketball ghosts of Phog Allen, James Naismith, Clyde Lovellette and Wilt Chamberlain. Tradition always has been important to him. It's part of what has made the University of Kansas special for him during the last three years.
At Kansas, Brown says, he has found the right mix of tradition, home town and loving fans. After trying on Denver, Los Angeles and New Jersey for size, he thinks he's found the place that fits.
"When I came here and took this job, it was something I hoped would be permanent, where I could more or less have roots," he says. "I don't look at it any differently now.
"I like the people here, they allow me to be myself. I've been able to make a lot of friends. I can eat out, go to the doughnut shop or play golf. I feel like part of the community."
If one piece is missing it's Kristen, Brown's 18-year-old daughter from his first marriage. A KU student last fall, she returned to North Carolina at semester break to be with her mother. This semester she's enrolled at the University of North Carolina.
"I'm disappointed she's not
here. That was a highlight for me," Brown says. "My ex-wife out-recruited me."
Although Kristen no longer cheers her father from the student section at Allen Field House, thousands of others still do. In three years, Brown has built a special bond with "the kids," KU students.
That closeness was evident last Wednesday at the Colorado game when Brown quietly resolved the conflict between students sitting behind the bench and season ticket holders seated behind them.
Before the game, Brown circulated among the students asking them not to stand throughout the game as they had been doing. The students sat. Tempers cooled. A few words from Larry Brown was all it took.
"Students feel they know him," says John Fevurly, Tonganoxie junior and a student member of the Kansas University Athletic Corp. board. "Kids love to see a person in a high position come down and talk to them. He seems real."
Brown feels the admiration. When he pops onto the court at home games, the students behind the bench clamor to their feet and applaud thunderously.
A few of the "Lar-ee, Lar-ee" chants that echoed loudly during Brown's first two seasons still boom out. But his relationship with the students seems to have ascended to a higher plane.
Shouts aren't enough anymore.
Brown says of his popularity with students, "It's neat. I felt fortunate at UCLA that there was a common bond between me and the student body. I feel the same sense here."
Barbara Brown says of her husband, "In a way this is his Chapel Hill. He's pretty much found that here, as far as the atmosphere on campus and with the students."
Although her husband has found
The numbers on Larry Brown
Source: KU Athletic Department
Ticket sales
83-84 11.868
84-85 13.788
85-86 15.122
The numbers on Larry Brown
Source: KU Athletic Department
Ticket sales
83-84 11,868
84-85 13,788
85-86 15,122
Win-Loss record
W L Achievements
83-84 22 10 Big 8 Tournament Champions
NCAA berth
84-85 26 8 NCAA berth/Ranked 13th in
nation
85-86 22 3 Likely NCAA berth/Ranked
as high as third in nation
The numbers on Larry Brown
Source: KU Athletic Department
Ticket sales
83-84 11,868
84-85 13,788
85-86 15,122
Win-Loss record
W L Achievements
83-84 22 10 Big 8 Tournament Champions NCAA berth
84-85 26 8 NCAA berth/Ranked 13th in nation
85-86 22 3 Likely NCAA berth/Ranked as high as third in nation
Williams Fund donations, Brown era
Fiscal 83 $ 1,492,427
Fiscal 84 Williams Education Fund $ 1,767,573
Fiscal 85 Williams Education Fund $ 2,105,682
Williams Fund donations, Brown era
P fiscal 83 $ 1,492,429
P fiscal 84 William's Education Fund $ 1,767,373
P fiscal 85 William's Education Fund $ 2,806,682
home, Barbara Brown hasn't warmed to Kansas. She plans to graduate from KU in May with a bachelor's degree in journalism then go to work for a New York advertising agency.
"June 1." she says, beaming.
"He does a lot of recruiting on the East Coast, so on weekends I'll fly wherever he is. Or if he's somewhere during the week he'll fly into New York."
Of the impending long-distance relationship with her husband, she says, "It will be interesting. We're going to commute. It's worked the last two summers I've worked there.
The Browns' daughter, Melissa, 14, plans to follow her mother east to enroll in a Massachusetts prep school.
All of which leaves Larry Brown alone in Kansas, surrounded by his other family: his players, his assistant coaches and the fans who love him.
"This is the year, this is the button," proclaims a cardboard sign inside Rusty's Food Center, 901 Iowa St.
The button in question is pinned beneath the red scrawl. From its blue background pops a hand, wrapped into a fist, with the index finger raised in the No. 1 sign. To the left stand red and white letters: KU.
Lawrence abounds with Great Expectations these days, Larry Brown has the city and the University talking basketball.
At K-2 Sportswear LTD, 1023 Massachusetts St., fans are snapping up T-shirts depicting a Jayhawk stuffing a basketball over Texas. "Final Four Bound" taints the backsides.
"The town and the whole area have a different feel to them," says Laird Noller, a local car dealer and friend of Brown's.
With good reason, Lawrence travel agencies are booking dozens of trips to Dallas in March for fans fully expecting the Jayhawks to play in the NCAA Final Four.
Larry Brown doesn't want to hear about Dallas. For him, the
word symbolizes his latest challenge.
"The year, it's been difficult because there have been such unbelievable expectations," he says, "hearing everybody say, 'Hey, I'll see you in Dallas,' and 'We're going to the Final Four.'"
"It's been difficult," he says. "I find our kids are under a lot of pressure."
While fans smile, Brown broods.
Such is life for a coach who refuses
to let himself or his team get
caught up in the revelry.
The challenge draws out Brown's perfectionist streak. It's the foot-stomping, arm-waving Larry Brown that fans see on Wednesdays and Saturdays.
"I'm a competitor." Brown says. "The pressure's from me, not from anybody outside. Coaching is the only thing I know how to do, the only thing I care to do. So I want to do it well."
It's Larry Brown at the office.
But this year, Brown admits, he sometimes has let the pressure get to him.
"Coaching makes you do funny things." he savs.
ANS
There was the Oklahoma State game in which Brown lurged at a Cowboy assistant coach making a technical foul sign with his hands as Brown disputed a referee's call.
"If I had to do it all over again, I probably would have waited to say something to him," he says. "And I've said some things to referees that I wish I could take back. But it happens. You just have to go from there."
"I'm a competitor. When it' s over, it's over. I hope the fans understand that. It's not a personal ting."
Some of Brown's players have bridled under his perfectionist whip. But they say now that they think they understand "Coach."
"What happens on the court stays on the court," says guard Calvin Thompson, who considered quitting the team earlier this season largely because he thought he wasn't measuring up to Brown's expectations.
One problem was his weight,
which sometimes has ballooned 20
Brown celebrated his 100th collegiate win Dec. 23 after a 94-71 win over George Washington University
pounds over the 205 pounds Brown considers Thompson's playing weight.
But a heartfelt talk with Brown before practice one day eased Thompson's mind. He says Brown made him feel wanted. Now Thompson thinks he understands Larry Brown.
"The minute we step off the court we see this big smile and it's like, 'What's that?' " Thompson says, laughing. "We realize now that on the court it's business."
It's basketball on Brown's terms and in Brown's concept of the game. Few know it better than Thompson and this year's two other senior starters who Brown inherited from the team under Ted Owens.
In three years, Thompson has learned appetite control, forward Ron Kellogg has learned defense and center Greg Dreiling has learned agility.
"I've worked hard under Coach Brown." Dreiling says.
Says Thompson, "That's Coach.
That's his style. He's not going to change, and that's what I told the other players. I told them we had to adapt to him."
The doorbell rings on a Saturday night at Rian Gray's house in the Alvamar neighborhood. Outside on the stool stands Larry Brown.
On a working day for Brown, whose Jayhawks have just pulled off a 71-69 thriller over the University of Louisville on national television, he has come to visit a friend.
Like most seventh graders at West Junior High School, Ryan Gray's passion is sports, especially basketball. But he'll probably never play.
A tumor has grown inside Ryan's head since birth and now confines the 13-year-old to a wheelchair. But Brown makes sure Ryan doesn't forget about basketball.
Tonight he's stopped by to make sure Ryan knows the coach hasn't forgotten his good luck charm. Ryan was sick with a cold and had to watch the game from bed instead of his reserved spot a few spaces from the bench at Allen Field House.
Ryan Gray and Larry Brown met in the spring of 1984, shortly after Brown moved to his house four blocks east of the Grays' home. Their friendship has grown steadily closer since.
"There is a different Larry Brown," says Ryan's father, Cap Gray, a Lawrence physician. "In the heat of battle, he can be like a hard-to-please father. Outside the game he's a very gentle fellow."
Meet Larry Brown, nice guy. He greets his public at Becerros Mexican restaurant or Carol Lee Donuts with a soft "Hi" and a smile. He finds time to talk on the phone with a fraternity member and arranges to go to dinner and talk what else basketball.
He's the Brown who doesn't forget people like Ryan Gray.
Friends say the thing that most suprises them about Larry Brown is that he remains bigger than his ego.
"I've learned a lot about Larry Brown," says Cap Gray. "He knows where he stands in the national limelight but he has down-to-earth feelings."
"He always takes time to say hello to you, but it's more than that." says John Wooden, owner of the Wagon Wheel Cale', 507 W. 14th
St., and a golf buddy of Brown's "He makes you feel at home."
Athletic Director Monte Johnson, Brown's boss, says, "He always has the same temperament with everybody. He's laid back and unassuming. That's the way he was at the first interview we had with him, and he'll probably always be the same."
Barbara Brown says her husband is just plain shy.
Brown doesn't like to dwell on his personality. He smiles, glances at the floor and says, "I'm a regular person. It's nice to have people say nice things about you. But I'm like everybody else. I want to be liked."
"My best friends that I've known for 10 years and so can count on two hands the number of times they've been out with him other than at basketball games," she says. "He really is a private person. Socially he is very shy."
Brown's sensitivity shows in the way he sees his team — as family. On the walls of his office inside Parrott Athletic - Center hang framed photographs of graduated seniors: Tad Boyle, Carl Henry, Brian Martin and Kelly Knight.
"I want this to be the type of situation where the kids come back," Brown says. "Even if a kid leaves here, that doesn't mean we forget about him. He's still going to be a part of the family. That's part of coaching. It is a part I like."
Jeff Guoit still feels part of the family. A rising star at point guard on the team under Ted Owens, he rode the bench after Brown stepped in at the start of his sophomore year.
He transferred to Pittsburgh State University at the end of that year.
"He did everything he could to see that I was happy after I left," Guiot says. "The first year I was down here he wrote me a letter asking how I was doing. He treated me like I was still a member of the team. That's a good feeling."
"I left because it was pretty obvious that my playing time was going to be limited," Guiot says. "I went and talked to Coach Brown. We talked about where I wanted to go. He said he wanted to find me a place where I would play a lot of ball."
At Pittsburg State, Guiot is getting the playing time he wanted. But he still sees Larry Brown as a mentor and friend and wants to return to Lawrence this summer to work for a third time in Brown's basketball camp.
Shortly after 1 p.m., Larry Brown bumps back to his office, refreshed, invigorated — and sweaty.
He's just finished lunch — five miles of road padded over by a man whose left hip is worn from years of similar pounding and in no condition to withstand the punishment. At least that is what his wife and friends tell him.
But to clear his mind, Brown jogs.
"It's great therapy." he says
It's great therapy, he says. For once, basketball takes a back seat for Larry Brown. On a country road, downtown or through campus, he stretches his legs and forgets about picks, points and pressure.
But only for an hour.
At 3:30 p.m., the family meets. The squeal of sneakers on polished wood reverberates inside empty Allen Field House. At mid-court stands Larry Brown, hands on hips, immersed in basketball.
1
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
7
Club treats more than fitness
By Lynn Maree Ross
Staff writer
Lawrence Memorial Hospital's Wellness Center, thanks to Bob Billings, is nowhere near the hospital.
Jerry Waugh, senior vice president of Alvamar Golf and Country Club, 4120 Clinton Parkway, said yesterday that Billings, president of Alvamar, knew the hospital needed a place for the center and offered them space, rent free, for a trial period.
The center, which opened in November, occupies about 2,000 square feet of space left vacant when the Alvamar racquetball courts were moved into a new building.
Patie Fielding, director for the
"We don't just look at ourselves as an exercise program," she said.
safely. The center's goal is to make health management and exercise programs pleasant enough that people will continue on their own, she said. It also hopes to teach people how to take care of themselves when they exercise.
center, said the location was ideal because it was close to Alvamar, a proposed bypass around the city and the unfinished Holcom Recreation Complex. In addition, Lawrence is growing westward, which will put the center nearer to the community.
Although the center is listed in directories along with other local fitness centers, said Fielding, it is more than just another fitness club.
That goal includes going out into the business community with a back safety program and wellness checks.
The center is more medically oriented than other fitness clubs, she said, because it offers a fitness profile and programs such as cardiac rehabilitation, stress management, nutrition and back
safety.
Gary Spree, personnel manager at the K-mart distribution center, 2400 Kresge Road, said the center was doing a wellness check on distribution center employees. The information will be sent directly to each employee, and the company will pay half the cost of a fitness program for those who choose to participate.
Martha Murphy, personnel assistant at the Aeroquip Corporation Gustin-Bacon Division, 2901 Lakeview Road, said a physical therapist from the center came to teach a back safety course. She said she had learned a lot about the structure of the back and how to lift heavy objects properly.
While the center is designed for people of all ages, Fielding said, it only is used by a few KU students. However, that probably will change once the circuit and aquatic aerobic programs are available. The circuit program starts next week and the aquatic aerobics will start once it is warm enough to use Alvamar's outdoor pool.
WETMORE A fire early yesterday destroyed a hardware store owned by businessman Guy Stedman, whose Help the Farmers Inc. has provided financial assistance to hard-pressed farmers unable to make ends meet.
United Press International
Blaze guts hardware store of man who aided farmers
"It was my only source of income," Stedman said of the Wetmore Hardware and Lumber Co. "I'm totally broke now."
Volunteer Fire Chief Bob Dieckmann said the fire at the two-story brick building probably was caused by faulty heat tape wrapped around pipes to keep them from freezing.
"That's speculation right now."
Dieckmann explained. "That was the
only thing in the area where the fire started that had any electricity to it."
The fire was reported about 5:15 a.m. by Alan Fund, who lives two blocks from the building, said Dieckmann, Fund's brother-in-law.
"He stepped outside, smelled smoke, walked up there, saw what it was and called it in." Dieckmann said. "Right now, all we have are four brick walls standing. No ceiling. It's completely gone."
Destroyed were the hardware store, headquarters for Help the Farmers Inc. and the offices of a dentist and tax accountant, Dieckmann said.
He said there were no injuries.
Sedman said the fire consumed $70,000 worth of inventory at the hardware store.
Valentine's Day is Friday, February 14
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8
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1986
Group to discuss tall tales, tent shows
United Press International
LUBBOCK, Texas - The popular culture of Kansas, Texas and other Southwestern states, ranging from humor and western fiction to television and architecture, will be examined during a three-day meeting this week at Texas Tech University.
The Texas and Southwest Popular Culture Associations will meet Thursday through Saturday at the Museum of Texas Tech.
The popular culture of Kansas, Texas,
Oklahoma, Arkansas, New Mexico, Arizona,
Colorado and Louisiana will be examined by scholars
from across the country.
More than 20 topics will be covered — humor, architecture, ethnic groups, mystery, detective and science fiction, fantasy, sports, western fiction, televison, arts, museums, magazines, music, personalities, writers and outdoor entertainment.
Gary Cupp, a doctoral student at Texas Tech,
remembers the shows he saw in Missouri as a child.
He also toured with a tent show in 1969.
Tent shows and the pleasure they provided for millions is one of the topics to be covered.
"It's amazing how special tent plays were to people," Cupp said. "You can mention tent shows to people, and their eyes light up as they remember what was probably the only formal entertainment they had."
Cupp said a 1927 New York Times article estimated there were 400 traveling tent shows at that time — a trend that continued until around 1930. Most ran 40-week seasons and presented eight plays a week. Stops were made in some 16,000 towns, resulting in 96,000 performances a season and audiences which totaled 76.8 million people.
"That's 30 million more people than legitimate
theater was hitting at that time. It was a massive industry," he said.
Around 225 shows were traveling at the beginning of World War II. The Depression and the war proved to be hardships the shows could not overcome. In 1947, only 48 shows were left. In 1969, the year Cupp toured with the Schaffner Players, only two groups survived.
Another topic to be covered at the sixth annual meeting will be Texas popular oral narratives
While the stories are old, Davis said, they would be around centuries from now.
Kenneth W. Davis, Texas Tech English professor, said great storytellers were not limited to books but often were alive and well on the courthouse lawns or in the barbershops of Texas.
From Kansas, bootlegging, the Kansas Flint Hills and the daily life of a Dodge City buffalo man will be lecture topics.
Charges filed in drunk driving deaths of six
United Press International
WELLINGTON — An Iowa truck driver was charged yesterday with six counts of aggravated vehicular homicide and drunk driving in the deaths of six Kansans killed in a wreck on the Kansas Turnip.
Harold M. Hickey, 46, of Dallas, Iowa, was charged in his first appearance in Sumner County District Court, said Assistant District Attorney Kerwin Spencer.
Spencer said Hickey also was charged with driving at a speed in excess of reasonable prudence. Spencer said aggravated vehicular homicide was a
felony and carried a possible penalty of one to five years in prison.
"They (Kansas Highway Patrol troopers) said it was difficult for him to walk a straight line, and he had the smell of alcohol on his breath," Spencer said.
Spencer said Hickey's next court appearance was Feb. 20, at 1:30 p.m.
The accident on the ice-slickened Kansas Turnpike occurred about 8:30 p.m. Sunday about 20 miles south of Wichita near the Mulvane exit.
The wreck was the worst on the Turnpike since six people were killed in a two-vehicle crash Nov. 5, 1978, near Lawrence, a spokeswoman for the
Kansas Turnpike Authority said.
Spencer said troopers did not find any liquor containers inside the cab of the suspect's truck. He said the case would be based on Hickey's blood-alcohol content.
A southbound tractor-trailer rig driven by Hickey went into a skid, slid across the median and into the path of two northbound cars, a Ford and a Lincoln Continental, a dispatcher for the Kansas Turnpike Authority said.
The dispatcher said the wreck forced officials to close the highway's northbound lanes for nearly three hours.
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1220 W. 6th St. 1408 W. 23rd St.
Offer Good Every Tuesday thru February.
PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
TUESDAY TWO FERS
2—10" Pizzas with 2 Toppings & 2 Pepsis
1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center
$9.50 Value for only $8.00
Delivered Free No Coupon necessarv
HOURS
Mon. - Thurs. - 11a.m. - 2a.m.
We Deliver
During lunch
Sunday - 11a.m.-1a.m.
During
Fn.&Sat.- 11a.m.-3a.m
ΑΣΩ
Lunch
ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS ON CAMPUS Meeting tonight 7:30 Regionalist Room Kansas Union
Guest Speaker: Fr: John Platko The Orthodox Church: Its Relation to Society
McCall's Shoes
R
Downtown Lawrence
fanfares...says it all
829 Mass.
FLATTER YOURSELF
FASHION 1980s
Hours: Mon.-Sat.
McCall's Shoes
9 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Thurs.
9 a.m.-8:30 p.m.
Sun. 12-5 p.m.
PUT YOURSELF IN OUR SHOES
FRESHMEN, SOPHOMORES, &
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
TRANSFER STUDENTS
(Plus any other interested upperclassmen)
The 37th Annual
Principal-Counselor-Student and
Community College
Conference
will be held on
Thursday, February 13
in the Kansas Union
Each year the Office of Administrators sponsors a conference which brings to the campus high school principals and counselors and community college personnel for a program of academic and student affairs presentations. On the morning of the conference, these individuals meet with their former students who are treatment, nonthorpeans, or community colleges.
and student affairs presentations. On the morning of the conference, these individuals meet with their former students who are freshmen, sophomores, or community college transfers. They will also invite interested students to take part in this year's conference. It will be an excellent opportunity for them to learn about academic challenges and your concerns for the future here. Your participation helps the University build a stronger relationship with your former school, while students attend the conference will be meaningful one for you. Students attending the morning meeting will be excused from classes between 9:30 and 10:30 a.m. on the 13th. The following high schools and community colleges have indicated an interest in visiting with their former students in the Kansas Union. The list is:
Room Schedule for Student Conferences
9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
February 13, Kansas Union
B—Ballroom C—Cafeteria
Level 5 Level 3
COMMUNITY COLLEGES
Allen County, Iola — B
Barton County, Great Bend — B
Butler County, El Dorado — B
Coffeyville — B
Cowley County — B
Dodge City — B
Fort Scott — B
Garden City — B
Haskell — B
Hutchinson — Walnut Room, Lav
Independence — B Johnson County
Independence — B
Johnson County —
Council Room, Level 4
Kansas City Kansas —
Centennial Room, Level 6
Labette County, Parsons — B
Longwell, Kansas City, Mo. — B
Neosho County, Chanute — B
Pratt — B
KANSAS HIGH SCHOOLS
Arkansas City — C
Atchison — Alcove B, Level 3
Atwood — C
Augusta — C
Baldwin — B
Belleville — C
Bennington, Tescott — C
Bishop Mlege —
Cork II (Cafeteria), Level 3
Blue Valley (Stanley) —
Meadowlark Room, Level 3
Chanute —
Traditions Room, Level 4
Chaparral — C
Cimarron — C
Clafflin — C
Clay Center — B
Colby — B
Coldwater, Protection — C
Conway Springs — C
DeSoto — B
Dodge City — B
Downs — C
Effingham — C
El Dorado — B
Elkhart — C
Ellea — C
Ellsworth — C
Emporia — B
Erie, St. Paul, Thayer — C
Eudora — B
Fairfield — C
Field Kindley Memorial — B
Fort Scott — B
Frankfort — C
Fredonia — C
Garden City — B
Gardner — B
Goddard — B
Goodland — C
Great Bend — Alcove D, Level
Hays — B
Hesston — C
Hlawatha — B
Hightland Park — B
Horton — C
Hoxie — C
Hugoton — C
Hutchinson —
Cork I (Cafeteria), Level 3
Immaculata — B
Independence — B
Inman — C
Iola — B
J.C. Harmon — B
Jefferson North — C
Jefferson West — B
Jetmore — C
Junction City — Alcove C, Level
Kapsun Mt. Carmel —
Cottonwood Room, Level 3
Kingman — B
LaCrosse — C
Labette County — C
Lansing — B
Larned — B
Lawrence — Pine Room, Level 6
Leavenworth — Trail Room, Lev
Lincoln — C
Louisburg — B
Lucas-Luray — C
Lyndon — C
Macksville — C
Madison — C
Manhattan —
Governors Room, Level 4
Marie Des Cygnes — C
McLouth — C
Mission Valley — C
Natoma — C
Nemaha Valley — C
Neodesha — B
Nickerson — C
Norton Community — C
Olathe North —
Big Eight Room, Level 8
Big South
Olathe North — Big Eight Room, Level 5
Olathe South — Kansas Room, Level 6
Olpe — C
Osage City — C
Osawatomie — B
Ottawa — B
Paola — B
Parsons — B
Perry-Lecompton — C
Piper — B
Plainville — C
Pleasant Ridge — B
Prairie View — C
Protection, Coldwater — C
Rosehill — C
Rossville — C
Royal Valley — C
Russell — B
Sabetha — C
Sacred Heart — B
Salina Central — Alcove E, Level
Salina South — Alderson Auditorium, Level 4
Scott City — B
Seaman — Alcove A, Level 3
Sedan — C
Shawnee Mission East — Parc L, Level 5
Shawnee Mission North — International Room, Level 5
Shawnee Mission NW — Regionalist Room, Level 5
Shawnee Mission South — Parc A, Level 5
Shawnee Mission West — Oread Room, Level 4
Smoky Valley (Lindsborg) — C
Southeast of Saline — C
St. Mary's — C
St. Paul, Erie, Thayer — C
Stafford — C
Sublette — C
Summer — Alcove F, Level 3
Tescott, Bennington — C
Thayer, Erie, St. Paul — C
Tonganoxie — B
Topeka High — Kansas Room, Level 6
Topeka West — Big Eight Room, Level 5
Trego — C
Turner — B
Wabaunsee — C
Washburn Rural — Alderson Auditorium, Level 4
Washington (K.C.) — B
Wellington — B
Westmoreland — C
Wetmore — C
Wichita East — Woodruff Auditorium, Level 5, Left From
2 Wichita Heights — B
Wichita North — Woodruff Auditorium, Level 5, Left Back
Wichita NW — Woodruff Auditorium, Level 5, Center Fr
Wichita South — Woodruff Auditorium, Level 5, Right Fr
Wichita SE — Woodruff Auditorium
Auditorium, Level 5, Right Front Wichita SE—Woodruff Auditorium, Level 5, Center Back
Wichita West — Woodruff
Auditorium, Level 5, Right Back
Winfield — B
Wendotte — B
ILLINOIS HIGH SCHOOL
Nina Went. Skokie — B
MISSOURI HIGH SCHOOLS
Raytown -- B
Raytown South -- B
NEBRASKA HIGH SCHOOLS
Marian, Omaha — B
Millard North, Omaha — B
Millard South, Omaha — B
This is your opportunity to give feedback and information about your experiences at K.U. to you former high school and community college.
In case you have any questions concerning the conference, please contact the Office of Admissions, 126 Strong Hall, 864-3991
Y
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1986
sports
University Daily Kansan
9
Mizzou next challenge for 'Hawks
Kansas to use delay to protect leads
By Matt Tidwell
Sports writer
The last time Kansas played Missouri, the Jayhawks nearly blew an 11-point lead with six minutes left in the game and had to rely on last-second free throws to escape with an 81-77 win.
After the game, head coach Larry Brown said he was disappointed with the way his team handled itself in the game's final moments.
Missouri
Men's Basketball
17.10; B(8-4) 4-1
8:05 tonight
(10:00)
@lawrye
at Lawrence
TIGERS
After more problems in the closing moments of tight games and some advice from a friend, Brown made a decision — it was time to switch strategies.
"We've put in a new delay game," Kansas guard Cedric Hunter said. "We tried it against Oklahoma State, and it worked out really well."
The strategy, which is designed to protect lead leads, involves a wide-open offensive alignment with more passing and full use of the 45-second shot clock. After passing the ball for as long as possible, the Jayhawks run a set play.
If Kansas' rematch tonight against
the Tigers in Allen Field House is anything like the last contest, the Jayhawks may need full use of their new delay strategy — one Brown calls a semi-stall.
Brown said Pete Newell, a former United States Olympic coach and scout for Golden State of the National Basketball Association, advised him on the switch.
"Coach Newell saw us play," Brown said. "He told me that with the 45-second clock, and the fact that we're not too deep that we had ought to get a good delay game."
Kansas guards Hunter and Mark Turgeon ran the new delay game in the closing moments of the Oklahoma State game, and both said they were confident with the new system.
"I think the good thing is that if we have to run it again we'll have more confidence," Turgeon said. "It gets everybody moving more out on the floor. We keep it as spread out as we can."
Missouri comes into Lawrence after having dropped two games over the weekend — a 64-62 nonconference loss to Virginia on Sunday and a 75-66 upset at the hands of Nebraska. Both games were in Columbia.
The Tigers' record fell to 17-10 overall and 4-4 in the Big Eight, white
Kansas defeated Oklahoma State 85-69 on Saturday in Stillwater to move to 22-3 and 7-1, good for first place in the conference.
Hunter said the Tigers' two weekend losses could make for a hungrier Missouri team.
"They'll be coming in pumped up," he said. "We'll have to put some pressure on them early."
Missouri looks to sophomore forward Derrick Chievous and senior guard Jeff Strong on offense. The two are averaging 18.4 and 18.1 points respectively and are the sixth and seventh leading scorers in the Big Eight.
Jayhawk Notes — Kansas is ranked third in the current United Press International basketball poll. Greg Drrelling leads the conference in field goal percentage (64 percent), and Hunter is first in assists with 178. Former Olympic coaching great Henry Iba paid a compliment to Manning last week, saying, "Manning's touch with the ball, wherever he is on the floor, is the best I've ever seen." At Oklahoma State, Kansas had four players in double figures for the fourth straight conference
"We have to stop those two and (Missouri center Dan) Bingenheimer, so we have our work cut out for us," Kansas forward Danny Manning said.
game. As a team, the Jayhawks are first in the conference in field goal percentage (60 percent) but sixth in free throw shooting (65 percent).
Probable Starters
Kansas
F 25 Danny Manning (6-11)
F 44 Ron Kellogg (6-5)
C 30 Greg Drillig (7-1)
G 35 Calvin Thompson (6-6)
G 22 Cedric Hunter (6-0)
Missouri
F 3 Derrick Chievous (6-6)
F 4 Mike Sandebothe (6-7)
C 5 Dan Bingenheimer (6-9)
G 12 Jeff Strong (6-1)
G 24 Lynn Hardy (6-2)
BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
Conference All Games
W 7 L Pct. W L Pct.
Kansas 9 0.975 W L Pct.
Oklahoma 6 2.750 21 3.913
Iowa St. 5 3.625 21 4.967
Nebraska 4 4.500 14 7.667
Missouri 4 4.500 14 7.600
Kansas State 5 3.750 14 8.350
Okla St. 5 3.750 12 9.971
Colorado 0 8.350 18 3.131
Tonight's games
Kansas State at Oklahoma
Tennessee at Texas
Tomorrow's games
Iowa State at Colorado
Texas at Oklahoma
Nebraska
'Hawks ranked 3rd in UPI coaches poll
United Press International
NEW YORK — The Kansas Jayhawks, 22-3, took advantage of losses by Georgia Tech and Memphis State to move up two places to No. 3 in yesterday's weekly United Press International Board of Coaches college basketball ratings.
Kansas won both of its contents last week against Big Eight Conference opponents.
Nevada-Las Vegas, given an assist by Lady Luck last weekend, continued on its hot ice and advanced five places to No. 4.
The Rebels, winners of 14 games in a row and a loser only twice in 23 games this year, squeaked by previously ranked No. 4 Memphis State, 67-66, on national television Saturday and used that triumph to make the biggest climb among the top 10 ranked teams.
North Carolina, 24-1, which won two games during the week, including a 78-77 overtime victory over previously No. 2 Georgia Tech, remained in the No. 1 position for the 11th straight week.
Duke, 22.2, took over sole possession of the No. 2 spot which it had shared last week with Georgia Tech. The Blue Devils defeated Georgia Tech on national television Sunday.
Georgia Tech, 18-4, slumped three places to No. 5 after losing two of three contests, and Memphis State, 20-2, tumbled two places to No. 6.
St. John's, 21-3, won its only game of the week and moved up three places to No. 7, and Kentucky, 20-3, continued its climb up the ratings ladder by advancing four places to No. 8.
Michigan, 20-3, which split a pair of Big 10 Conference games during the week, dropped one place to No. 9, and Oklahoma, 21-2, fell four places to No. 10 after being upset by Iowa State on Saturday.
In the second ten, Georgetown,
19-3, remained in the No. 11 position,
followed by Bradley, 23-1. Syracuse,
18-3, suffered the biggest drop in the
ratings, falling six spots to No. 13.
Notre Dame, 16-4, beat Syracuse on Saturday and jumped into a tie at No. 14 with Texas-EI Paso, 21-3, Indiana, 16-5, was ranked No. 16 followed by Alabama, 17-4, which cracked the Top 20 for the first time.
Huskers can win without Hoppen
Honors keep rolling in for KU's Vickie Adkins
United Press International
LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska has shown there is life without Dave Hoppen, and Husker coach Moe Ia says the key is hitting outside shots without the big man inside.
"If we hit outside shots, and I don't mean 25-footers, I mean from about 18 feet, we play fairly well." Iba said yesterday. "If we don't hit them, it seems to affect our play."
Iba said doctors told him they think Hppen would have a sound knee once he recovered from the surgery.
Vickie Adkins
"He said it was a good game. I said the kids played real hard," Iba said.
Nebraska beat Missouri 75-66 in Columbia, Mo., on Saturday, playing without two-time All Big Eight center Hoppen, who underwent arthroscopic surgery on his left knee.
100
Ibs said he saw Hoppen on Sunday. He said Hoppen congratulated Iba and the Huskers on their performance against Missouri.
Nebraska, 4-4 in the Big Eight Conference and 14-7 on the season, hosts Oklahoma State on Wednesday.
By Dawn O'Malley
Sports writer
To add to her long list of honors, Kansas forward Vickie Adkins was named the American Women Sports Federation Player of the Week for her performance against the Oklahoma Sooners earlier this month in Lawrence.
In the Feb. 1 game, Adkins scored 35 points and grabbed 2 rebounds to lead the Jayhawks to a 85-6 upset victory over the then-No. 14 Sooners.
ADKINS PROFILE
She will be awarded the plaque during halftime of the women's game
Adkins' list includes honors such as two-time Kodak Midwest All-American; All-Tournament team for WRAL, a television station in North Carolina which sponsored the North Carolina State Classic.
Also in her collegiate career, she has been named to 12 all-tournament teams, including three this season.
She is ranked in the Big Eight's history as the 12th all-time scorer and 16th in rebounding. This season Adkins is averaging 22.2 points and 9.2 rebounds a game.
Washington said Adkins probably would have been Kansas' second alltime scorer if she hadn't missed so many games in the beginning of her career.
Marian Washington, women's head basketball coach, said last week,
"Your best players are your consistent players, day in and day out,
game after game. She is just great."
Hometown: Oklahoma City Age: 22
Background: Two-time Kodak Midwest All-American and All-Big Eight selection. Led Jayhawks with 20.4 points and 9.0 rebounds a game last year. As a senior at John Marshall High School in Oklahoma City, she was All-City, All-Conference, All-State and Oklahoma Player-of-the-Year.
Although Washington speaks highly of her player, Adkins said that she was not comfortable in her role as a leader on the women's basketball team. In fact, Adkins said she hated to speak in public.
Family: Mother, Rachel Adkins Class: Senior
It has only been in the last two
years Adkins has not been plagued by injuries. During her freshman year, Adkins was redshirted because she had knee surgery for torn ligaments in her left knee.
"At first I didn't like being red-shirted," Adkins said. "but I learned a lot from sitting out."
By sitting out Adkins said she refined her skills, and her shooting became sharper. And she is running more than she used to.
In her junior year, she missed the first six games with a hamstring injury.
"I like to have the ball in my hands all the time," Adkins said. "I love to shoot.
"My playing has improved each year on defense and scoring. I keep getting better."
Although Adkins is no stranger to basketball, she was not familiar with
the full-court game when she came to Kansas. She was used to playing six-on-six in Oklahoma, in which three players stay at one end to play offense and three stay at the other end on defense.
"Six on six was good," Adkins said,
"but I never had a chance to run. I love to run now."
Adkins came to Kansas with her sister, Barbara. Adkins' sister graduated last fall. She said they still kept in touch.
"Barbara and I always played together," Adkins said, "I always talk better to her. She offers constructive criticism."
But as her college basketball career begins to climax, Adkins is thinking about playing women's professional basketball in Europe.
"I want to go somewhere else and meet new people," Adkins said. "I love meeting people. Traveling excites the death out of me."
TONGIRL 23 Jayhawks 25
KU forward Vickie Adkins, who is averaging 22.2 points and 9.2 rebounds a game this season, has compiled a long list of bonors.
Task force to promote non-revenue sports
By Jim Suhr
Sports writer
A task force organized by the KU Athletic Department has decided to use promotions to attract fans to women's athletics and other non-revenue sporting events, a KU athletic official said recently.
Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, said the promotions, which would be sponsored throughout the semester by area businesses, would be used to bolster attendance for women's basketball, golf, softball, swimming, tennis, track and volleyball.
The coaches of those sports, along with Hunter, Athletic Director Monte Johnson and some faculty personnel, compose the task force.
They will continue tomorrow during the women's game against Missouri. At tomorrow's game, Maupintour, Eastern Airlines and the Athletic Department will award
Hunter said the promotions began at a Jan. 29 women's basketball game.
two free round-trip airline tickets to Florida to a fan in attendance.
smaller sporting events which Hunter said were neglected in attendance. The increased attendance, he said, would provide a solid base for future fan support.
"We felt the women's teams at Kansas were not receiving enough fan support and recognition for the
"Few people are aware of how competitive and fun to watch women's athletics are." Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director
"Few people are aware of how competitive and fun to watch women's athletics are," he said. "If we can get the students there with the chance to win prizes, we know they'll enjoy the game and come back again."
Johnson said promotions had been held for Kansas' two big sports, football and basketball, in the past. Transferring promotions to the smaller, non-revenue sports was only logical, he said.
Hunter said he did not know when or how many promotions would be held, but he said they would be advertised before the event.
"There are a lot of schools in the Big Eight who don't market their non-revenue sports," Johnson said. "But we don't want to overlook any sport here, several of which are at a championship level."
quality of their performances," Hunter said.
Mike Reid, assistant business manager of the Kansas Union and member of the task force, said he
Reid, Hunter and other members of the support group said they couldn't understand why non-revenue sports didn't attract more student support.
"It is at a higher level competitionwise now than it's ever been," Reid said.
There's no end to the possibilities we can explore with this group," he said. "Women's athletics is very exciting, it just takes a little exposure to make people aware of it."
He said news coverage, fan support and University financing were not equal to the support men's football and basketball received.
The women's program finished second last year to Nebraska for the Big Eight All-Sports crown.
Berry leads St. John's past Georgetown
thought women's athletics hadn't gotten a fair shake.
From Kansan wires
The Redmen have won nine of their last 10 and improved to 23-3 overall and 10-2 in the Big East, while the Hovas slipped to 19-4 and 9-3.
The victory, the Redmen's second of the season over the Hoyas and fourth straight on Georgetown's home court, snapped the Hoyas' eight-game winning streak.
LANDOVER, Md. — Walter Berry, playing with a sprained left ankle, scored 22 points, including 14 in the second half, and No. 7 St. John's held off a late surge last night to defeat No. 11 Georgetown 60-58.
With the Hoyas looking for a tying basket, Mark Jackson of St. John's stole the ball from David Wingate, and Shelton Jones sank 1-of-2 free throws for a 3-point lead with eight seconds left.
Berry, who injured his saturday
Berry and missed the second half of a
victory against Boston College, sank a pair of free throws with 2:35 remaining, but Johnathan Edwards hit a free throw with 1:21 left to cut the lead to 58-56.
Michael Jackson made a layup with three seconds to go, but Jones hit another free throw with two seconds left to account for the final point.
Rowan added 17 points for St. John's while the Hovas were paced
The Hoyas, employing a stifling fullcourt press, surged back from an early 5-point deficit with a 12-0 streak, holding the Redmen scoreless over a 6:04 stretch in the first half.
MEMPIH, Tenn. -- Dwight Boyd and Baskerville Hills scored 20 points each last night to carry No. 6 Memphis State to a 98-73 decision over Florida State in a Metro Conference game.
Memphis State 99, Florida State 73
The Tigers, 22-2 overall and 7-1 in the league, played their second straight game without 7-foot William Bedford, who is sitting out an NCAA
The Seminoles, 8-13 and 1-6, lost their 19th straight road game. Florida State has been giving up 86 points a game in the Metro Conference. Randy Allen led Florida State with 21 points and LaRae Davis added 14.
enforced two-game suspension for a rules violation. He will return for Saturday's game against Southern Mississippi.
North Carolina State 103, Brooklyn Col. 52
Other scores
Louisville 93, Virginia Tech 83
Phieffer 86, Elon 74
Sports Briefs
Sports Illustrated to feature Manning
Sports Illustrated reporters and photographers were in Lawrence last month and took photos of Manning in practice and play during the Jan. 18 Kansas-Oklahoma State basketball game in Allen Field House.
Sports Illustrated magazine will feature a cover story on Kansas sophomore Danny Manning in its Feb. 17 issue. The issue is scheduled to be distributed nationally tomorrow.
Manning will be pictured on the cover under the caption, "Star on the Rise."
Receiver commits
Smith, 5-foot-11 and 175 pounds,
is slated to sign with the Jayhawks
tomorrow, the first day national
letters of intent may be offered.
Quintin Smith has made an oral commitment to play for Kansas on a football scholarship next fall, the Dallas Times-Herald reported yesterday. At Houston Yates High School, he was the No. 1 receiver on Texas' large-class state championship team last fall.
Crew to sell puppets
sales will go toward the crew team's operating budget.
This year, the team allotted $50,000 for their budget. However, Sean Turner, crew manager, said the team's money was depleting.
The puppet will be for sale again after the men's home game against Nebraska on Saturday.
The profits generated from the
The $10 toy is a puppet whose arms can be manipulated from under its cloth to sock-it-to-you.
The KU Crew team will be selling the "Punching Jayhawk" at the end of the men's basketball game against the Missouri Tigers today in the main lobby of Allen Field House.
The budget covers costs for the coach's salary, travel expenses and the cost of new boats.
The crew team begins its season during KU's spring break in Austin, Texas for a regatta against Nebraska, Kansas State, Washburn, Wichita State, Minnesota and North Dakota,.
The senior guard went the distance and scored 16 points to go with his 13 assists. He also hit two clutch free throws in the final 20 seconds.
Hornacek gets honor
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Iowa State's Jeff Hornack was named the Big Eight player of the week yesterday for his hand in the Cyclones' 73-70 conquest of thenNo. 5 Oklahoma.
Hornacek won in a split vote over Kansas State's Norris Coleman, who had 51 points in victories over Nebraska and Colorado.
Cards name coach
ST. LOUISE — Gene Stallings, a Dallas Cowboys assistant since 1971, yesterday was named head coach of the St. Louis Cardinals. The entire coaching staff had been fired 15 minutes after their 1985 National Football League season ended.
Stallings said one of his first priorities would be to build a staff of assistants.
From staff and wire reports
10
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1986
Deliberations begin in Georgia lawsuit
United Press International
ATLANTA — A federal court jury began deliberations yesterday in the lawsuit of a former University of Georgia professor who charged she was fired from her job because she protested preferential treatment of athletes.
The jury of seven women and two men, which has three alternates, began deliberations, at the end of a six-week trial.
The trial produced testimony about athletes unable to read or write who were administratively exited from a remedial program so they could play in revenue-producing sports.
If a verdict is returned in favor of plaintiff Jan Kemp, it is sure to have repercussions at colleges across the country at a time of an uneasy balance between academics and athletics.
Kemp, who was fired as an English teacher in the university's developmental studies program in 1962, filed her suit against the director of the program, Leroy Ervin, and Virginia Trotter, vice president for academic affairs.
Kemp alleged that her dismissal violated her constitutional right to free speech and is asking restatement, back pay, actual and punitive damages.
Ervin and Trotter contend that Kemp was fired because she was insubordinate, created dissension and refused to do scholarly research.
In closing arguments delivered in a packed courtroom, Kemp's attorney, Patrick Nelson, urged the jurors to speak to school officials "in the only language they understand — money." He added, "I ask you to make it hurt."
Nelson said university officials never denied that Kemp was a good teacher. But he said Ervin began building a file on Kemp after she complained that he and Trotter were exiting failing students from the remedial program so they could play football.
Hue Henry, another of Kemp's attorneys, said Trotter and Ervin were "engaged in wrongdoing that they did not want to see the light of day." He said that after Kemp filled her suit, they set about to discredit her.
He said Kemp and other instructors did not object to tutoring athletes and helping them in every way.
Henry said that, had it not been for Kemp, "we would never, ever have known what is going on in that university."
"You do have to send a signal beyond this courtroom," Henry said. "It's got to be a substantial verdict or they won't hear it."
Hale Almand, representing Ervin and Trotter, asked the jury, "Was her conduct and actions. a reason for Ervin to remove her?
Almand said Kemp "is essentially assuming the role of the English knights of folklore, going out to do battle against evil."
"At the same time," Almond said, "she is portraying herself as absolutely without blame."
Almand maintained that Kemp was not fired because she protested preferential treatment of athletes but because she created dissension on the staff and refused to do scholarly research.
People often look down at a racquetball game.
Drawn to the noisiest court, they fold their arms against a three/foot wall, lean over the edge and observe the action in the nit below.
By Robert Rebein
Racquetball sparks fierce competition
Sports writer
At the Recreation Services racquetball tournament Sunday in Robinson Center, the people looked down on some very keen competition.
Thirty-eight students participated in the tournament, which featured one women's bracket and three men's brackets — novice, intermediate and advanced.
As the matches progressed on the courts below, those waiting to play scrutinized the action from above.
"Now there's a real head game going on down there," said Ted Eubanks as he watched an advanced
division match between Phillip Reed, Kansas City sophomore, and Greg Krentzman, Beverly Hills, Calif. senior.
"It's just like a game of chess." Eubanks said. "You got to think when you're playing racquetball, or the other guy will checkmate you."
Eubanks, 48, said he had enrolled in a racquetball class so he could compete in the tournament. He reflected on his own play as he watched the action below.
"I took third last year, second two years ago — now, nothing," he said. "I got beat by a kid I taught a lesson to last year. That's him over on court seven. I'm the old player here by 30 years. You'd think I'd be more patient."
Intramurals
He said that when in the pit, a player must have patience.
Krentzman took the best of three semi-final match in straight sets, 15-3 and 15-3.
"A big part of raquetball is timing, speed and endurance." Krentzman said. "But more than anything else you must be patient, waiting on the ball, knowing when to hit it. You have to think about your opponent, but you're also playing against yourself."
The players in the women's division very nearly had to play themselves — there were only two entries. Becky Randall, St. Louis junior, defeated Leslie Leece, Lawrence sophomore, 15-4, 15-0, to win a first place T-shirt.
"I love to play," Randall said. "It's a good stress release. When I'm mad, I come here and slam a few balls."
Vaulters take turns setting record
United Press International
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
World record holder Billy Olson
credits Sergei Bubka of the Soviet
Union with the recent increasing
number of world bests in the pole
vault.
Olson cleared 19 feet, $5\frac{1}{2}$ inches (5.93 meters) Saturday at the Vitalis/U.S. Olympic Invitational to top Bobka's nearly day-old world mark of 19-5.
Olsen's record also re-established the indoor pole vault best for the seventh time this season, a first in the history of the event. The world indoor mark has improved $3\frac{1}{2}$ inches, from 19-2/4 at the start of the season.
ching Sergje jump 19-8½ and thinking I couldn't do it."
"Like I said, Sergie revolutionized jumping, and it was a matter of adapting with him or getting out," Olson said.
"Sergei changed the outlook of the event," Olson said. "He revolutionized pole vaulting. I can remember sitting last summer in Paris and walt
Obviously, Olson and Dial adapted successfully to Bubka. The most noticeable change for Olson this year is his grip on the fiberglass pole. Instead of holding the pole at 15-9, the former two-time Indoor Track Athlete of the Year began holding the pole at 16-5. Bubka holds his pole at 16-10.
Since the Sunkist Open, held in January in Los Angeles, Olson said, he had been holding the pole at 16.5 and had broken the record three times.
Olson, who now has 11 world records in the pole vault, also pointed to an athletic feud between Dial, Bubka and himself as contributing to the recent number of world records.
Another change for Olson has been his health. Olson said moving to Dallas last year from Abilene, Texas, had helped him overcome his allergy problems, something he said hampered him in the past.
"I could spot him a little on the pole, but not a whole foot," Olson said. "When I first cleared 19 feet, I was holding the pole at 15-9."
"It's a very competitive group," Olson said. "On any given day, any one of us can break the record."
And with the rate that the world record has been failing, Olson said, he expected a new race to develop between the trio to see who could be the first human to vault 29 feet.
However, the men's intermediate division had 24 entries, and play progressed only to the quarter-final. A play is scheduled to be completed by Friday, according to Craig Mostafa, tournament supervisor. Mike Wade, Fontana sophomore, won the novice division
All other play was finishing when Krentzmian and Ross Halsey, McCook, Neb, senior, took to the court for the final in the men's advanced division. Krentzmian took the first game 15-7, but Halsey came back in the second game to tie it at six apiece.
Students Save 10% On Classifieds!
GUADALAJARA
SUMMER
SCHOOL
University of Arizona offers more than 40 courses: anthropology, art, bilingual education, ESL, folk music and folk dance, history, political science, sociology, Spanish language and literature and intensive Spanish. Six-week session. June 30-August 8, 1986. Fully accredited program. Tuition $480. Room and board in Mexican home $520.
EEO/AA
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Summer School
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University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ 865721
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Desired Qualifications:
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JOB DESCRIPTIONS AND APPLICATIONS
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DUE BY FRI. FEB. 14, 1986
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Fab. 10-14 10 a.m.-4 p.m. KU Bookstore-Kansas Union
DATE TIME PLACE
HKZR
KU Basketball KU vs VS MISSOURI Live Broadcast
KZR106
7:50 p.m. tonight Sponsored By
Sponsored By
Mrs. Winners Owens Flowers Ellena Ford
Jayhawk Bookstore
Gammons
Moto-Photo
Douglas County Bank
WENDY'S CHILI FEED IS BACK!
ALL YOU CAN EAT
99¢ plus tax
Tuesday 4pm-closing
Every Tuesday through February. Wendy's is serving up bowl after bowl of our hot, fresh chili for just 99¢ per person, plus tax. Bring the whole family!
CHOOSE FRESH, CHOOSE WENDY'S
No coupon necessary. Offer only in dining room. Cheese extra.
Not valid with other coupons or special offers.
TOPEKA
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Wendy's
99¢
plus tax
Wendy's
GOLD FARRINGTON
HAMBURGERS
LAWRENCE TOPEKA
523 W. 23rd Street 2027 Fairlawn • 2025 N. Topeka • 3250 S. Topeka
Because
We want your Valentine's Day to be special...
The Valentine Love Bouquet
Cash & Carry $13
Delivered $15
Lawrence
Floral & Gifts
Merry Christmas
- We Specialize
in Quality Roses Call now and order!
843-3255
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:30
939 Massachusetts
Thurs. & Friday open till 6:30
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1986
11
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KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the Kansas business office at 643-4538.
- Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
* Words set in BOLD FACES count as 3 words.
* Dialect is in 2 weeks of a work day twice.
- until credit has been established.
• Threats are not provided for classified
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Blink bids ad-sales + please add $4 service charge
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* All advertisers will be required to pay in advance
and make timely payments.
ATTENTION JUNIORS and 1st semester
scolars: Informative sheets for membership in
the University of Missouri at Columbia.
Thurs., Feb. 20 to 5. p.m. Available in 314
Strong and Numeraker center.
Computer Terminal with modem for rent.
$90/no. 842-2622.
INVITE YOUR READING COMPREHENIE-
MENT OF instruction, Tuesday, February 11, 18
and 25, 7-10: 9-30 p. m. Materials fee 41. Register at the Student Assistance Center 121 Strong Hall.
(612) 373-2100
Romance on the IIII. Take a romantic ride with your sweetheart by your side. Carriage rides through campus Friday 6-9 p.m.: $1, $2 reserved.
Tickets available SUA Office.
- Exercise tolerance or skim environment *
* No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified
LAWRENCE FLOAT CENTER Winter Special
3 floats for $50. Call 841-5496.
REASEACH PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP. Learn about: defining a topic; using the library; taking notes; and organizing writing the paper. Monday, February 4, 300 Stirling Hall, FIRES Preserved by the Student Assistance Center, HI 518 Holden Hall, 864-4044.
SUA Board Member applications due by Thurs.
Feb. 20th. Questions? 844-347.
Nent'10 Color 'C V $2.00 a month Smiley's Tiffy
Nent'14 W. 32rd B4.725-517, Mon. Sat. 3/20 - 9:00
Sun. 3/21 - 9:00
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight 99.66
Seat Bundle, 2nd w/ 834-7051, Mon.-Sat.
9:00, Sun. 1:5,
GOT A HOT DATE? Is your car clean? AT LAWRENCE AUTO CLEANING making your car look newer youre our specialty 9th and Maine 749-6871
Want to coordinate entertainment and activities for the University of Kansas? Pick up your SUA application today! SUA Office, Level 1, Kansas Union
SIA applications for President, Vice-President,
and Senior Vice-President by May, Feb. 17th
Questions 80-377
Dig #69 the Halloween costume: show it off the Brazilian Carnival party. Feb. 22, Elks Club. Brazilian Carribean party. Elks Club. Feb.22. Where the hone are?
SPRING BREAK #8 Do it right in Daytona with
EQTR TRAVEL The best trip for the best price.
For more info, call Bill at 841-3865 or Jim at
842-8731.
ENTERTAINMENT
Don't send out for Sushi - instead come tasy our tropical style. Bancarnat Cravant Part Feb 22.
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE J DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 749-4713.
item shop of Music in Town. 942-890-6700. 99% up
to 8 years of a great dance music Music from
the Brooklyn Dance Center.
would like to provide the music for your next party or a sound watt sound system that can fill, any size room and accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in (913) 827-4848 and Saline. Call 841-10454 or (913) 827-4848.
FOR RENT
and living room privileges. Adequate parking
space. Clean, quiet, coef. cd-748-6510
3 bdm. Newer 1/2 duplex, Super Nice, #420 mos,
191 North Lane 1 - 451-768-1, Evan 1.381 1-628
Available March 1: beautiful 2 BR apt. on bus route: 5 minute walk to campus, downtown. New carpet, clean, spacious. $330/mo. plus low utilities: 814.5797, 841.556, 892.349.
You are tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkeley Flats, Vacancies available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 843-2116.
Sublease Now 2-DBM Apt. Very nice & very close to campus. Call after 7:49 p.m. 943-8738.
2168 W.10th, on KU bus route, between Gibson's and Walmau. You'll find our room, gas heated tub, microwave, sink, hot water, pay hot and cold water, you choose options, square foot, carpent, extra bath or balcony. Call
Rest for 2 bdm, brand new apt. 1 1/2 bkm from Kansas Union, $30/m plus utilities. Sublease a possibility. Catch Chuck Ledom 843-3232 8 a.m. 5 p.m. Bailum 843-3232 9 a.m. 5 p.m.
Farmstead one bedroom apartment near University
and 15th Street with off street parking.
No pet please. 641-800-3272.
SUBLEASE NOW. 1 BDBM Hanover Place apt.
One month free rent. 841-1212.
Spacious one bedroom apartment for sublease,
great for 1 or 2. On bus route, water paid, gas,
heat, low utilities. Furnished $220, Unfurnished
Call 749-7691 after 5 p.m.
Sublease now - 2 IDBM Apt. Very nice and very
close to campa, call after 7 p.m. p. 843-9738.
MARTHELCAFT offers completely furnished 1, 2,
and 3 bedroom apartments all in new campus. Call
(406) 579-8800 for details.
FOR SALE
All apparel, all equipment:
a. m.Stephen Johnson
b. M.Peace Robinson
DGETAILBALL TICKET, best offer. Call
**Basketball cards and sports nonslug.** Buy, Sell and Trade. **Basketball card.** 10-6 M & P.
Comic Books, Playbills, Pentebones, etc. Miracle
Comics 1.0 to 1.9 Tue. Sat. & Sun. 10-8 $15
Comic Books 2.0 to 3.0 Wed. Thu. Fri. Sat.
JASKETBALL SEASON TICKET. best offer. Call
842-894-1004
CRAZY MIKE AND ROB announce their awe-
imspring sale. Guitar ampli, technics turntable with
cartridge. No reasonable offer retained, cash real-
ly available. 790-890.
HVS CVR very nice new
DRUMS:
1. bass kit in cymbals, hardware,
hardware, hardset $500, Width Park (1) 648-783,
double-sized waterbed, hand-mandrel 775
hardware, hardset $299
For Sale 1822 WV Serroco. Excellent condition.
New Pirelli F34 - 44 tires, high highway miles.
For Sale: brother automatic 12, correction
typwriter with case $90. or Best Offer: 841-5034
typwriter with case $120.
typewriter with case 300, of best order, 841-294-
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1. (U repair).
Cell Phone: 1-866-234-5222
Ext. GH-9788 for information.
500 with call volume signaled. Brand new with
new accessories.
Halfer, 500 watt power amplifier. Brand new with factory warranty. $600. Tom 842-1510
Matching living room set; love, love seat, 3 arm chair, 2 end table, coffee table, Very good condition.
Plane ticket to Phoenix, Arizona for Spring Break. Great price! Call 864-219-749 or 873-0323
Need Money for Schools 1980 Adult A008 5082, badeen,
510, $5,000, serious inquiries 749-782.
One All Sports ticket for sale. Call 842-0582 before
11 a.m. or after 7 p.m. Keepeping.
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Receivers from $80, turretables for 15, speakers for 25,
receiver for 30, microphones for stereo, all completely reconditioned and warranted
Lawrence Custom Radio, 914 W. 91st St.
Western Civilization Notes: On sale! Make a Maker's Kit for your classroom. Prepare preparation. 3. For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available at Town Crier, The Jayhawk Booksstore, and www.westerncivilization.com.
AUTO SALES
1942 Pontiac GT0, new paint, overhail, and more. Hare. may see a call. Must #2-822-3023 evening.
RABBIT* 2 new radials, air, cassette, low miles,
nibrary gray paint material. Moving must sell
directly to the dealer.
Regal-1978. Good body, sound mechanics, sound cassette. Asking $160. Call Larry after 6:45.
LOST. Two Tall Rings in 5th floor bathroom of Watson Library (2/4). Ruby and Emerald; can't be replaced, sentimental value. If found please call Annelia-81-2846. They are very special.
LOST/FOUND
Lost: Red Irish Sister with distinct half tail,
red orange collar, answers to cameroon
To the guy who found my watch at McDonald's,
Please call again, 841-4341, for reward.
We found your puppy on Sat. Feb. 1st. Int. between 10th and 11th at the vet, who took him as a pet. We call it *Lil Pup*. You can do it online: www.lilpups.com
Babysitter for 5 month old infant, general housekeeping and ironing in our Tues. & Thurs. 1-8. Must have reliable transportation. Cost $30 per hour. Call 647-2637 for application.
CASH PAD DAILY. Dominic's Pizza is now accepting applications to hire 10 drivers. If you are a self-motivated, high energy person, you could be a driver for this business. We pay cash commission on deliveries daily. Our drivers make $4-$8 per hour and more. You must be 18 years old, have a car, current driver's license and proof of insurance. Apply between 2-4 p.m. at ith and Noa. No phone calls.
SUMMER WORK/JOHNSON COUNTY. K49-hour weekday, # 4/57-hour, thurs. sunday, May thru august. Work consists of door-to-door data entry and office support. All positions available. Send resume or letter of intent to: Sharon Rhodes, RLN Environmental Assoc. 6700 Squibb Rd. SB, 121, Mission, KA 68202
GOVERNMENT JOBS. JI 1654.0 $8,000.0 $12,950.23r. New Call 1-857-657-600 Ext. Estr. R78r for current job location.
For shamai! Michelle and Sherri still don't have dates. We here at Hayes & Vale Matehmakers Inc., are quite disappointed by the lack of Worcester Hope. We're hoping to ask us to find them dates. What could we do? We told them we'd try again. So call 841-4708 (ask for Keith) or 842-6900 (ask for Mick) to meet the girl of your dreams. If you're looking for a date and you're 'm P, call)
Help Wanted: housekeeping Monday & Wednesday afternoons. 843-3368.
CRUISSEHSIPH HIRING! $16-$30,000 Carribean, Hawaii, World! Call for Guide, Cassette, Newsservice! 910) 944-4441 X 'LANSASCRUCE
Continuing student hourly position: book publisher need学生 who can type 40 (pls) documents in various office duties. Must be able to work mornings. 20/hr w/$7.50/hr Start immediately. I
Help Webmail. Time from 20 minutes per week to
help Webmail. Daytime hours: Monday to Friday,
Stop, 2pm and lateuow. Wednesday, February 19 or
Saturday, March 8. Saturday, March 10.
Putt-Putt Golf course now taking applications Monday through Friday 5pm/7pm until Feb. 12.
Girls just wanna have fun - at the Brazilian Caravelau Festival, Feb. 22, Elks Club.
Summer Jobs. National Park Co. 21, Parks 5000
Openings, Complete Information $5.00. Park
Resort. Mission Mn Co., 651 2nd Ave. W.N.
Kalispell. MT 59901
PROGRAM ASSISTANT/RESEARCH AID for Midwest Council on Aging, 49% rate, $400/mo. Application Deadline: May 27. University of Kannan, 844-111 for complete job description and application Deadline. Feb. 18.
OVERSHARES JOBS Summer, yr round Europe.
OVERSHRARES JOBS Summer, yr round Europe.
Sighting Free info. Write ILC, W2 85-K-11.
Sighting Free info. Write ILC, W2 85-K-11.
Student Staff Position-summer orientation program 1996. Required qualifications: minimum 2.4 ga; returning to KU for Fall 1996 term. Please submit resumes to the KU office and may apply. Desired qualifications: leadership abilities; knowledge of university programs and activities; interpersonal communications skills; ability to work in a team with applications available in the office of stational services 128 Strong Hall. D由 Fri-Fri to Saturday.
DN: 11 Am. Jur. 2d Jan. accs22, 70 Am. Jur. 2d
Jan. accs32. Numbu? Bubba?
BUS. PERSONAL
AIRLINE HIPING BOOM! $13-$39,000
Newleatherized, Reservoirable
Airplane Boom! $25-$45,000
UAWF! $80-$120,000
review our Brazilian Carnival in Lawrence it happen it happens in Rio. Todos the Today Show
PERSONAL
SKT CULTUR RISING!
Skateboards & Accessories
QUALITY STUFF ONLY
10-8360 Weekly/Up Mailing Circulars! Quotely Sincerely interest rush self-addressed envelope Success, PO Box 740 CDG, Woodstock, IL 60908
UPTOWN BICYCLES
1337 Mass.
749-0638
Creative, thinking singles find kindred spirits through the directory for educated singles. LOVELINE, P.O. Box 3026K, Lawrence, KS. One-issue membership $4.90.
Sweets For Your Sweetest Color Purple
A Lasting Gift Valentine's Day Special Swirl
A
OIMPREHENSIVE, HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentially assured. Greater Tampa City area. Call for appointment.
Float Connection
Floating
is believing
Special $10
*CAMP COUNSELORS - M/F - Outstanding Slim and Trim Down Camps; Tennis, Dance, Slim Sports Camp; Fitness Camp; Separate girls and boys camps; 7 weeks. Camelet on College Camps at aus. California Contact: Michie Friedman, Director; HI Stewart Dr. No Woodmere, N Y 11818.
1-800-555-2222
VALENTINES!
THE
MUSEUM
SHOP
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
The Union's recording
of the day's entrees & soups.
Enjoy the tropical climate of the Brazilian Carrival party, Feb. 22. Els Club.
University Daily Kansan
V-Postcards 15¢
V-Cards 50¢
V-Notes 25¢
Museum
GAYLESBIAN? Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stamped, self-address envelope to TRIANGLE TIMES, P.0 Box 26422, KCMO 84196.
Instant Valentines
of Natural History
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sundays
864-4450
Thousands of R & R albums - 42 or less. Also lese items. Sat, Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quantrill 811. New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles.
ON CAMPUS
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive driver's license in four weeks without paired testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided. 841.7749
a different deli special every day
SANDWICH
DELI SPECIALS
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts,
glasses, hats; plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming
event! J & M Favors offers the best quality and
price available on imprinted specialties plus
in-standable delivery. You design it and our
talented artists. 220. W8 (20th by Gibson's)
814-4549.
Rent' 19.7* Carton $82.98 a month *Smarty's YT*
1447 W. 3rd; 842-5751. StMon. S: 09-30-9; Sun: 1-5
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas from only 681 Deluxe lodging, parties, goodie bags, more. Hurry, call Sunchease Tours for more information and reservations to lift free suncheese in the local Suncheese Representative 'TOAY!' when your Spring Break counts...count on Sunchease.
Hoagie Sandwich
Jayhawker Towers
Today's Chips
Special: 16 oz. Drink
$2.30
2-Br. Apts. for KU students
Send your love (or your good friend, family member, professor, student, pet) a SINGING Vocal Meditation CD and the Music Therapy Student Association, Feb. 11, 12, 13, on 3rd floor Bailey Hall and in Murphy hall near the music library, or call 864-4794. Fax it to 864-4794 for long distance Valentines. SAY IT IN A KISION.
THE KANSAS UNION DELI level 3
- Individual Contract Option
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
- 9½-Month Leases
* All Utilities Paid
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors
- Academic Resource Center
- On Bus Line
- On Bus Line
- Free Cable TV
- Free Cable TV
- Laundry Facilities
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Apply Now for Fall/Spring
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
Tired of tasting and turning? Do you awake feeling relaxed and well-rested? Cotton and foam core fucures are designed to fully support your body. PUTONS, stb & Locust, North Lawrence (one blockset of Mexican Restaurants) open Tu-Sat. noon to 3 o'clock or call 841-9445.
Hand-crafted kites, windcultures and fantasies.
Order now for spring. SKW YORKS 729/12 Wass,
no. 208 upsiars. 842-327-932, for appointment.
Hirs and Hers Hair Designs. Quality hair care at reasonable prices. We use the finest hair products available and give you the personal attention you deserve. Hairs $7, per bundle $25 and up with haircut included. Linda and Harriet Bauer 934/129, 1218 Connecticut.
Rent-'19* Color T. V.$28.0 a month, Curtis:
Maherson 144 W. Yard B. 842-7537. Sat.-9:30
Mon.-11:30 Sun.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization
instant passport, portfolio, resume, course, four,
vitals. Svelu Studio. 749-1611.
portraits. Swells Studio 749-1611
Modeling and theater portfolios - shooting now.
Begins in Professionals, call for information.
Swells Studio 749-1611
Spring Break?
Tan Here In Lawrence
Protect Your Skin! Start Your Tan Now!
Complimentary
One Day Membership*
Check Us Out
Members and Non-members Welcome
We Guarantee lowest price best service best tan Expanded Hours 8 Beds No Waiting
$2 per tanning session
New customers only
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
25th & Iowa 841-6232
Want a new fun way to say I love you on Valentines Day. try a VIDEO VALENTINE, $14.95.
Available from 12 to 4 or by appointment. Now available at www.lavenderland.com/Lavender Land Video Hillcrest Shopping Center 82-6536
Warm sweat shorts, long sleeve T. Custom printed Shirtart. 749-1611
Class Ring Day – Why wait for the ring man when its ring day every day at Baird House. 935 Mass. THE BEST WORKOUT IN TOWN · LAWRENCE AEROBICS, M-W-F 3-10 P.M. Leward School of ballet, 9th & Vermont, Cathe Thompson 841-0264. First class is free.
1-1000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ask for curate and affordable typing, Judy. 823-7945.
1-1 TRO WORD PROCESSING Experienced. Concientes. Reliable. Rush Jobs Accepted.
TYPING
1-2-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional, WORD PROCESSING. Theses, dissertations, papers, books, etc. Data Word 84-4770
24-Hour Typing, 10th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus
and library. Mail resume to:
Walter L. Berman
503 W. 6th Ave.
Lawrence, MA 02793
A* professional typing. Term papers, Thesis.
A* professionals using. Using IBM Selectric
III Resumeable 842-3248
DISSERTATION / TIERES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY Service
available to shorter student papers (up to 30
papers). Mommy's Nursery. 348-3787
9 p.m. per phone.
A. L.S.M. TYPING/Dissertations, fheses, term papers.
Phone 942-6857 after 5:30.
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing and editing. IBM B6-5e, M6-5, M-F. More than 200 languages available.
Letter perfect papers and resumes WRITING
LIP FELINE. 841-3469.
Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs.
experience. Phone 842-2310 after 5:30. Harb.
English B.A. Tying and tutoring. Spelling correction,
overnight service available. Great rates.
Ace Word processing. Accurate, affordable,
friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes.
Word processing. Contact information.
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
LOOK... JUST
EXACTLY WHO
ARE ALL OF
YOU HAVING
IN THERE?
YOUR ANXIETIES..
FIGMENTS OF
YOUR FANCY,
THAT'S WHO..
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
Across town in the snake district
WHERE THEY ARE EVEN A
FREE PERTAINERS? MYBE
WE CULOU ARRANGE FOR
PHyllis SCARLELY TO
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YOU SOMETHING.
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bv Berke Breathed
WERE NIGHTMARES,
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12
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1986
No pretenses given at houses
By Debra West
Staff writer
Cooperative living at KU brings family life and responsibility to students looking for an alternative to apartments or residence halls.
"Living this closely with 30 other people, everyone knows everything about everyone," said Teresa Lawson, member of the Sunflower House, 1406 Tennessee St. "There are no pretenses. You are who you are."
The Sunflower House is home to 30 KU students, both male and female. At the Hillel House, 940 Mississippi St., six Jewish students live together, sharing cooking and grocery shopping duties.
Lawson, the renter at the Sunflower House and a former KU student, said the only requirement was that the students must be willing to cooperate with other residents.
Lawson's responsibilities as renter were conducting house tours for prospective residents and serving on an interview panel that chooses residents.
Each Monday, the residents attend a mandatory meeting. There they decide on house rules, discuss problems and sign up for jobs to do the next week.
Lawson said residents must learn to compromise. For example, when discussing landscape plans for the house, some people wanted to spend the least amount of money, while others were concerned more with the end result of the venture.
Jobs, which take about six hours a week, range from cooking the evening meal for all 30 residents to painting a wall. Lawson said.
Rent is $120 to $165 a month, depending on the size of the room rented, Lawson said. Each resident also pays $35-40 a month for the evening meals the residents eat together. Each resident is responsible for his own breakfast and lunch.
Students interested in living in the Sunflower House can contact the house. They must fill out an application form and are later interviewed by a panel of five house members.
All house members then vote at the weekly meeting whether to accept the prospective member. If the student is accepted, he is required to pass a test on the house handbook.
tions about the house. Lawson said.
Many students have misconcep-
"A lot of people think a bunch of hippies live here, but we have business majors and preppies," she said. "People who live here want to be individuals."
Hillel House offers cooperative living to Jewish students.
Melissa Miller, a two-year resident of Hillet House, said the house could accommodate six students. Rent at the house is $80 a month.
Miller, Overland Park senior, said the residents bought and cooked their own food but usually tried to eat at the same time. They share cleaning responsibilities, and on Fridays they invite other Jewish students to dinner at the house.
Janiece Friedman, adviser to the students at Hillel House, said the house was owned by the University Jewish Student Foundation. The house was bought to provide housing for Jewish students and space for programs and meetings sponsored by Hillel, a KU Jewish organization.
Miller said the requirements for Hilnel House are that the student be Jewish, active in Hilnel and willing to keep a kosher kitchen, meaning meat
On the Record
Forty wooden pallets were stolen from a grocery store in the 600 block of Kasolah Drive about 11:30 p.m. Sunday, Lawrence police said.
A KU student's bike and bike lock, valued together at $450, were stolen from a Hashinger Hall utility room between 10:30 p.m. Saturday and 3:00 p.m. Sunday, police said.
A Lawrence woman's purse containing credit cards, a checkbook, glasses and $90 was stolen from Watson Library on Saturday. KU police said. The contents, including the cash, were valued at $166.
Two makeup purses and makeup, valued together at $180, were stolen from a Kansas City, Mo. resident's car parked in the lot across from Lewis Hall, police said. Thieves entered the car by breaking a window.
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PUBLIC HEARINGS SOUTH AFRICA
Feb. 12 & 13
Jayhawk Rm, K5 Union
7:30 - 10:30 pm
The committee seeks information on activities relating to South Africa on campus, opinions on investment, and advice and recommendations on the positive education role universally governance can play in the issue of South Africa.
Any organization or individual gay schedule hearing time by calling Janet Jackson, 864-4225.
University Senate Human Relations Committee:
David M. Kateman, Chair,
Maitte Avon,
Gyvatha Baldwin,
Donald Brownstein,
Robbi Ferron,
Lisa Hund,
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SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
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Student Union Activities is planning an exciting year full of concerts, speakers, movies, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas...
We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands.
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Killing fields
Photographer recalls horrors of life under Khmer Rouge See page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY, FEB 12, 1986, VOL 96, NO 95 (USPS 650-640)
Cold Details page 3
Some say law not needed
Proposed hazing bill causes doubt
Staff writer
By Mark Siebert
TOPEKA — An attempt to make reckless participation in hazing illegal in Kansas has generated skepticism from the president of the Interfraternity Council and from University and law enforcement officials.
The Senate Judiciary Committee Monday introduced a bill in the Kansas Legislature that would make the hazing of new members of student, or any other, organizations punishable by a maximum fine of $2,500 and a maximum tail sentence of one year
Erik Hansen, president of the IFC and a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon, 1911 Stewart Ave., said that rules against hazing already existed and
that he didn't think a state law was necessary.
"I think the Legislature is wasting its time," Hansen said. "There's not a serious problem here at KU that I'm aware of."
The proposed law would prohibit any act of initiation that had a substantial risk of causing mental or physical harm.
A hazing victim could take civil action against anyone participating in the hazing, any local organization that authorized or tolerated the hazing or the director of the organization.
The measure also says that a person's consent or his knowledge of the risk in the hazing is not a defense in such a suit.
State Sen. Paul Burke, R-Leawood, said he requested that the bill be introduced because he thought attention needed to be focused on the issue.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said a hazing law was difficult to enforce because it was hard to hold an organization responsible for an act.
"If there is a crack in the law that initially let organizations off for hazing, we should fill that crack," Burke said.
He said opponents in the Judiciary committee were concerned that the bill repeated criminal laws already on the books in Kansas. The state doesn't have any laws specifically dealing with hazing.
"There have been instances of hazing periodically in our history," said Amber, "but we've not had the problems that other universities have experienced."
Hansen said that the IFC had rules against hazing and that each fraternity's national organization also set up its own guidelines. National organizations would revoke charters if hazing guidelines were violated, he said.
"It would take the prosecution out of the hands of the national fraternities and into the hands of law enforcement," Hansen said. "It would change who takes care of the problem."
Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, said he would support the
bill if the committee could show a need for such a law.
He said he could see where a law might apply but thought it could be over-legislating.
"I don't see too many problems that result in physical or emotional injury." Flory said. "If, in fact, they are occurring, they need to be dealt with."
Burke introduced similar antihazing legislation last February but withdrew the bill because of opposition by a number of Board of Regents schools.
He said the language was too vague and made it possible for school officials to be liable in a hazing lawsuit.
Plan would increase recruiting of disabled
Bv Lori Polson
Staff writer
The KU affirmative action board yesterday approved changes in the Affirmative Action Plan that would extend the rights of disabled persons beyond what the law now requires
Dave Shulenburger, associate dean of business and chairman of the board, said the revised plan would involve more than what was required by law to actively recruit students with physical disabilities to the University of Kansas.
Affirmative action is a program designed to eliminate discrimination in employment and educational opportunities on the basis of sex, race, physical handicaps or veteran status.
The government requires that persons with physical disabilities must not be denied admission to a state university on the basis of their disabilities.
The new procedures would consider physical disabilities, race and sex as positive factors in admission decisions, he said.
The revised plan not only would allow disabled persons to apply for admission to the University, but would make an active effort to bring more persons with disabilities here, Shulenburger said.
The rough draft will be sent to all members of the affirmative action committee for consideration before it is adopted, Shulen burger said.
Robbi Ferron, director of affirmative action, said the board had been revising the plan for more than a year. The final version, when approved, will be presented to Chancellor Gene A. Budig.
Shulenburger said this was the first time the plan had been revised significantly since its creation in the early 1970s.
"We're trying to make the plan more accessible," he said. "There are a lot of technical changes that need to be made."
George Wedge, associate professor of English and linguistics and a member of the board, said the proposed changes in the plan did not imply a shift in the University's affirmative action policy.
"We are in this to benefit those who may be economically or culturally disadvantaged because of their physical appearance," he said.
In other action, the board arranged to periodically examine admissions procedures to the University. The examinations will help prevent unjustified limited access to the University on the basis of race, sex or physical handicap.
Anti-apartheid activists to try quieter approach
Staff writer
By Tim Hrenchir
Three months ago, more than 100 protesters clapped, cheered and shouted in an anti-apartheid rally in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall.
But members of the KU Committee on South Africa say they now taking a quieter approach toward trying to convince the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest in radically segregated South Africa.
"Our emphasis now is less on protest and a little more on getting information about apartheid to the
Last May, two anti-apartheid protests resulted in about 65 criminal trespassing arrests at Youngberg Hall, which houses the Endowment Association. Committee members said the trespassing was an act of civil disobedience.
students and faculty," said Jon DeVore, Stilwell sophomore and a member of the committee.
In August, protesters demonstrated outside Hoch Auditorium during opening convoction, saying the battle for divestment
See PROTESTS, p. 5, col. 1
52 KANSAS 41
Kansas center Greg Dreling and forward Ron Kellogg go up for an offensive rebound against Missouri center Gary Leonard. The Jayhawks beat the Tigers last night, 100-66 in Allen Field House.
2 students get chance at Jeopardy
By Barbara Shear
Kayla Folger and Elizabeth Souders.
What two KU students have made it as finalists on the game show "Jeonardy"
Folger, Hoyt senior, and Souders,
Stanley junior, were two of eight people who made it as finalists yesterday during auditions for the show. Auditions were held twice yesterday and three times on Monday.
"This is fantastic," said Folger after she learned that she was chosen as one of the finalists. "I can't believe we did this."
Souders was equally excited and surprised about being chosen
"I can't believe we made it," she said. "I was worried that only one of us would make it. This is great."
Over the two days of auditions, 250 people tried out for the game show, said Greg Muntean, contestant coordinator for "Jeopardy."
"We get at least 5,000 people who audition each year," he said. "Out of that, we only use about 250 contestants on the show. Even though someone is chosen as a finalist, that isn't a guarantee that they will appear on 'Jeonardy.'"
After being chosen as a finalist, the possible contestants are told, beginning in June, when they will appear on the show. Taping begins in July and continues through December. Muntean said.
He said if people didn't make it as finalists in the contestant searches, he encouraged them to try out again.
"People can try out as many times as they want." Muntean said.
Souders said she and Folger were watching the show when they saw a commercial for a contestant search in Kansas City, Mo.
They then called for two days to the station that broadcasts the show, KCTV-5, and finally got an appointment for an audition.
Mary Pyle, Hutchinson freshman, also auditioned for the game show, but failed to make it as a finalist.
Pyle said she wasn't discouraged about the auditions.
"I had no idea what to expect," she said. "I was glad to go, though, for the experience. I had fun."
"I'm only a freshman," she said.
"Age has a definite advantage. There are many things I didn't know because I didn't live through them."
Everyone who signed up for an audition took a general knowledge test first. The exam consisted of 50 questions dealing with topics such as women, sports, the '30s and world cities. Individuals had 13 minutes to answer the questions.
"I answered 45 of the questions."
Souders said. "There were only two or three of those I was really shaky about."
Fourteen people passed the exam and went on to play mock "Jeopardy." Of these, eight people were chosen as finalists.
"We looked for people who played the game the best and had a lot of personality," Muntean said. "We wanted people with a lot of enthusiasm, energy and could talk loudly."
U.S. will support chosen leader
Reagan sees no fraud in election
United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan said last night that he had not seen hard evidence of fraud in the Philippines presidential election and that the United States would support any government chosen by the Filipino people.
Although he tried to avoid direct comment on the voting during his second news conference of the year, Reagan made it clear he considers the U.S. military bases in the Pacific archipelago the nation's most valuable outposts.
Some U.S. officials say those bases — the naval station at Subic Bay and Clark Air Base — could be jeopardized if anti-Marcos forces take power in the Philippines. Others suggest a failure to correct Marcos' abuses will encourage a growing communist insurgency.
Said he had not received a recommendation on changes in an affirmative action order requiring government contractors to set goals for hiring women and minorities. Reagan said he believed the rules had been twisted by the bureaucracy
Reagan opened his meeting with reporters by commenting on his fiscal 1987 budget, which some congressional foes have branded as DOA dead on arrival.
In assailing advocates of a tax increase to bankroll programs facing severe cuts under the Gramm-Rudman balanced budget law, Reagan said any tax bill that lands on his desk would "be 'VOA' — vetoed on arrival."
The president touched on several other topics during the session, including the release of Soviet disi-
under control. Congress shares that obligation."
"Nothing the court says should, or will remove our obligation to bring spending under control. Congress shares that obligation."
President Reagan
dent Anatoly Shcharansky, the longrunning administration battle over changing affirmative action rules and the harsh cuts in his budget plan. On these topics, Reagan:
■ Dismissed a court ruling against the way Gramm-Rudman calls for budget cuts, because "nothing the court says should, or will, remove our obligation to bring spending
and employers who "take the easy way out" and make the goals into discriminatory quotas.
■ Said he had no way of telling whether the release of Shcharansky, branded by the Kremlin as a U.S. spy, represented a change in Soviet attitude. But he noted that since his summit with Mikhail Gorbachev last November, "there have been other
Said the only U.S. rule in the abdication of Haitian President Jean-Claude Duvaiier was providing an airplane for his exile flight to France. Asked if the United States offered Duvaiier any advice before his departure, Reagan said, "No, and he didn't ask for any."
such cases, more than in a great many years. I'm encouraged. All we can do is hope that this will be a sigh."
Reporters posed 34 questions to Reagan, who said he was unable to, or would not, answer 11 of them.
As to charges of fraud in the election, Reagan said the delegation of observers he sent to the Philippines told him that there appeared to be fraud but that they had no hard evidence.
The White House announced earlier yesterday that Reagan would send veteran diplomatic troubleshooter Philip Habib to the Philippines to meet with political, religious and other leaders on how the United States could help nurture the hopes and possibilities of democracy.
Poison not suspected in local Tvlenol lots
Staff writer
By Lynn Maree Ross
Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules from the lot that poisoned a New York woman probably weren't distributed in Kansas, but some Lawrence pharmacists aren't taking any chances.
Diane Ellsworth, Peekskill N.Y., died Saturday from cyanide poisoning after taking some of the capsules. Tests confirmed that three other capsules in the bottle also contained cyanide.
Steve Paige, director of the Kansas bureau of disease prevention and control, said that because bottles from that lot number had been on the market since August and no problems had occurred until now,
A spokesman on the toll-free Tylenol hotline said Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules in packages of 24, lot ADF 916 with an expiration date of May 1987, were not being recalled. But people in the Bronxville and Yonkers, N.Y., area were advised to avoid capsules from that lot.
the problem was probably isolated to New York
Garth Hulse, director of the Kansas food, drug and lodging program, said a news release he received yesterday from McNeil Consumer Products Co. said Iowa, Nebraska and Michigan might have received capsules from lot ADF 916. Kansas, however, had not.
1
McNeil Co., based in Fort Washington, Penn., manufactures and markets Tvlenol products.
Five of the 14 Lawrence pharmacists are checking their stocks using the information released on local television and radio stations. Only one pharmacist has taken Extra-Strength Tylenol off the shelves.
Bill Schultes, pharmacist at Dillons, 1740 Massachusetts St., said he was keeping all ExtraStrength Tylenol on the shelves until he had heard from the company. The company usually acts quickly in this type of situation,
See TYLENOL, p. 5, col. 1
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
News Briefs
Crew member dies in desert jet crash
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. — Air Force officials are investigating yesterday's crash of an F-4 Phantom jet in the Mojave Desert during a routine training flight that killed one of two crew members aboard.
Maj. Ronald J. Faris, 34, the plane's flight engineer, died when the jet crashed north of Edwards Air Force Base, base spokeswoman Daria Pauly said. The pilot, Capt. Douglas M. Moss, 32, was able to eject himself before the crash and parachuted to safety, she said.
ALPINE, Texas — The U.S. government is reportedly investigating the case of a man dragged from a Mexican border jail by three bounty hunters and brought half-naked across the border to stand trial for the rape of a civic leader.
The fighter jet had taken off from the base on a proficiency training flight 10 minutes before it crashed, Paula said.
The suspect, Refugio Gonzalez, was being held in Ojinaga, Mexico, after fleeing a sheriff's deputy in Texas. The Mexican government had refused to extradite him.
Man taken from jail
Hot dog hazing ends
HOUSTON — The City Ethics Committee Monday came to the rescue of a transplanted New Yorker who has been trying for more than two years to get permission to sell hot dogs from a pushcart.
The committee berated Houston's legal and health departments for giving Shirley Rubenstein the old bureaucratic runaround.
The committee, which only issues recommendations, said the city set roadblocks to keep Rubenstein from even applying for a license to use her pushcart.
From Kansan wires.
Spv swap frees Soviet activist
The Associated Press
TEL AVIV, Israel — Anatoly Shcharansky, the Soviet human rights activist imprisoned for nine years as a spy, was flown to a tumultous, emotional welcome in Israel yesterday after he was freed on a snowy Berlin bridge.
The 38-year-old Jewish dissident had become known as the "prisoner of Zion," a focus for international Jewry and a symbol of Jews who are not allowed to leave the Soviet Union.
Also included in the East-West prisoner exchange on Berlin's Glienicke Bridge were five people held in the West on spy charges and three held in the East.
A U.S. official in Berlin identified the other prisoners freed from the East as Wolf George Frohn of East
Germany, Jaroslav Jaworski of Czechoslovakia and Dietrich Nistroy, a West German, all held in East Germany.
He said those sent East were Jerzy Kaczmarek of Poland, Yevgeni Semliakov of the Soviet Union, Detlev Schafenort of East Germany and Karl F. Koecher and his wife, Hana, of Czechoslovakia. The Koechers were held in the United States and the others in West Germany.
Shcharansky was freed first, apart from the others, to emphasize the U.S. insistence that he was not a spy. He was arrested in 1977 and a Soviet court convicted him of spying for the CIA, sentencing him in 1978 to 13 years imprisonment.
Prime Minister Shimon Peres and Foreign Minister Yelzhak Shamir
embraced Shcharanas as he and his wife Avital, who met him in Frankfurt, stepped from the Israeli executive jet at Ben-Gurion Airport. The ceremony was broadcast live on radio and television.
Shcharansky clasped his hands above his head in victory, then held hands with Avital as she introduced him to Cabinet members, helping him with his Hebrew. For more than a decade he has lived in Israel and campaigned for his freedom.
About 3,000 people gathered outside the terminal building cheered and waved as the Shcharanskys and Peres went inside to telephone President Reagan.
The 45-minute prisoner exchange was the latest of several on the Glienicke Bridge, a green metal structure across the Havel River between West Berlin and Potsdam in communist East Germany.
The snow had been cleared from a 4-inch-wide line in the middle of the bridge that marks the border between East and West. When he saw the line, Shcharansky said in English, "Look, no wall," and took a giant step over it.
He was met by Richard Burt, U.S. ambassador to West Germany. Shcharansky was not told he would be released until he arrived in East Berlin on Monday, U.S. and West German officials said.
He did not complain of health problems, U.S. officials said, although reports had indicated his health suffered during his time in prison and labor camp.
Philippine count of votes stopped
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — The National Assembly yesterday began the long-awaited official canvass of votes in the presidential election but called it off for lack of a quorum before a single vote could be tabulated.
The unofficial count by the government's Commission on Elections showed President Ferdinand E. Marcos ahead with 5,899,873 votes, or 52 percent and his rival, Corazon Acaro Aquino, with 5,844,368, or 48 percent, with 33 percent of the precincts counted following Friday's presidential elections.
However, the count by the National Movement for Free Elections or Namfrel, an independent poll-monitoring group, had Aquino ahead with
6,933,889, or 52 percent against Marcos' 6,281,510,
or 48 percent, with votes in 64 percent of the
precincts counted. The country has 26 million registered voters.
The National Assembly's count is the only one that is legally binding.
The latest victim of election violence was former Gov. Evelyn Javier, chairman of Aquino's campaign in the central Philippine province of Antique, who was killed by unidentified men yesterday outside the Antique provincial capital building.
Aquino, 53, appeared before foreign correspondents and read a statement in which she repeated that she had beaten Marcos and would take power.
meet with Aquino to discuss "the legitimacy of Marcos' holding on to power."
In the assembly yesterday, the number of legislators dwindled to below that required for a quorum as opposition assemblymen slipped out to
"Let me appeal to all friends of democracy and supporters of freedom abroad," she added. "Do not make the mistake, in the name of shortsighted self-interest, of coming to the support of a failing dictator."
In a televised interview by a selected group of local reporters and correspondents of three U.S. television networks, Marcos said he had won and asked Aquino to "forget all this childish display of petulance just because our figures don't match."
Kansas flapjack racer falls to English flipper
United Press International
LIBERAL — Shilly Welch used her aerobics training to dash through Liberal's icy streets in a time of 66.4 seconds, but lost the annual Shrove Tuesday Pancake Race by 1.4 seconds to the English champion.
donnet a surgical mask in addition to the required housewives' garb of skirt, apron and headscarf to help her brave temperatures around 10 degrees.
Elizabeth Ann Bartlett, a 29-year-old mother of two, ran the 415-yard course in Oliney, England, in 65 seconds to win the 37th Trans-Atlantic race, which is based on a 440-year-old English leg.
Welch, 25, a nursing instructor at Seward County Community College.
Bartlett beat out 21 other contestants.
Race rules state that each runner must flip her flapjack once at the start of the sprint and again at the end.
In a trans-Atlantic telephone call after the race, race chairmen from both sides officially stated their winning times and designated Olney the winner once again.
U.S. maneuver planned to assert airspace rights
Fleet in the Mediterranean, but there was no immediate confirmation that they had begun. The operations were to end Friday.
United Press International
The operations marked the second time in less than a month that U.S. ships came within striking distance of the Libyan gulf. This time, Libya also plans to conduct flight exercises in the same area.
WASHINGTON - Planes from two U.S. aircraft carriers exercised in central Mediterranean skies yesterday and poised to resume maneuvers near Libya in a renewed effort to assert U.S. rights to international airspace, officials said.
The maneuvers in the Tripoli Flight Information Region, or FIR, could have begun as early as 6 p.m. last night according to a notice of intent filed by the U.S. 6th
Renewal of $ _{f} $ U.S. flight maneuvers by the carriers Saratoga and Coral Sea apparently is intended to maintain pressure on Libya.
HANOVER, N.H. — Eighteen Dartmouth College students were arrested yesterday for trying to block ground crews from removing an anti-apartheid shanty from the college green.
Seventeen of the students were released on personal recognition pending a court appearance on criminal trespass charges scheduled for Feb. 25. The student who allegedly harassed police was charged with simple assault and released.
Campus crews removed the shanty after the arrests.
Removal of shanty protested
Nine students were arrested inside the scrap-wood shack. Eight others were arrested when they formed a human chain around the structure as a forklift and flatbed truck approached to cart it away, said college spokeswoman Laura Dcovitsky. Another student who began yelling at police was also arrested.
Five shanties were erected on the college green in November to protest Dartmouth's $63 million investment in companies doing business with South Africa.
Conservative students wielding sledgehammers destroyed three of the shanties Jan. 21, leading to a 30-hour sit-in at the office of college president David McLaughlin. He canceled classes on Jan. 24 to hold a campus forum on racism.
"We want to know what the hell is going on," said Will Horter, a spokesman for the protesters. "The point is the college said they supported them (the shanties). Now they're taking them down."
Dartmouth spokesman Alex Huppe said the college removed the shanties at his school.
"The town has sent us a letter yesterday giving us seven days' notice to correct the violations of the Hanover zoning ordinance. We are responding to that," said Huppe.
The Dartmouth Community for Divestment, which built the shanties, accused the administration of contacting town officials to press for removal of the shanties. Huppe denied the charge.
United Press International
Town officials said they had expressed their concern about the shacks to college officials last week, and told the college to remove the shanties within seven days.
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IT'S VALENTINE'S DAY AT HOUSE OF HUPEI!
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1
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Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
3
News Briefs
Services to be held for KU student today
A memorial service for Mr. J. David Markham, a special student who died Monday morning at the University of Kansas Medical Center, will be at 2 p.m. today in the Danforth Chapel.
Mr. Markham, 24, suffered a cerebral aneurysm while walking near Potter Lake Friday, and was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He later was transferred to the Med Center.
Survivors include his parents.
Col. Sanford and Ruth Markham,
New Market, England; a sister,
Elizabeth Ann Markham,
Washington, D.C.; and a brother,
Charles Markham, New Market,
England.
A memorial service also is planned in Mr. Markham's hometown of Southampton, N.Y.
Shop fire kills man
A Big Springs man died early yesterday morning in a fire at his workshop, the Douglas County sheriff said yesterday.
Ron Dahl, 46, died when a fire engulfed the workshop of his tree service at about 2 a.m., Sherif Rex Johnson said. Dahl was identified by dental records at 11 a.m. yesterday.
Johnson said he did not know why Dahl was in his workshop at 2 a.m. instead of at his house.
A friend of Dahl's told officers at the scene that there had been a chimney fire in the house sometime before 10 p.m. Johnson speculated that Dahl might have decided to stay in his workshop because of the chimney fire.
Johnson said the Lecompton Fire Department was called at about 2 a.m. after receiving a call from someone who received a CB message about the fire. When firefighters arrived, the building was engulfed. Johnson said.
Investigators think that there was a fire and an explosion in the building but do not know yet which came first, Johnson said. Chemicals that Dahl used in his tree service might have exploded.
Investigators from the Lawrence police, KU police, Douglas County Sheriff's Department, Lawrence Fire Department and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation were called to the scene, Johnson said. State fire marshals also were called in by the Lecompton Fire Department, which is routine in fire fatalities, Johnson said.
New street approved
The City Commission last night approved a final plat that could increase traffic west of Kasold Drive and between Yale and Harvard roads.
The commission accepted the dedication of rights of way and easements for the street, which will be named College Boulevard. It will connect Yale and Harvard roads west of Kasold Drive.
Price Banks, city planning director, said that because the plat met subdivision regulations, the planning commission and the city commission had little choice but to approve it.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny and warmer with a high of 20 to 25. The wind will be south to southwest at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be most clear with a low near 10. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy, windy and warmer with a high around 30.
Official says K-State leak broke code
By Leslie Hirschbach
Stan Warner
An unknown source at Kansas State University violated an unwritten code of confidence by revealing the names of nine finalists to replace K-State president Duane Acker, said the chairman of the search committee.
Staff writer
From staff and wire reports.
Chairman Jerome Frieman said that Saturday the Wichita Eagle-Beacon published a list of nine university administrators, including a former KU professor, as the finalists. It cited an unknown source close to the committee.
Frieman said the committee didn't have a final list of candidates and was still considering other qualified applicants.
The list would only cause problems for the people on it, he said, because finalists' coworkers might begin to ask them why they weren't happy with their current jobs and why they wanted to leave.
Charles Sidman, KU professor of history for 13 years and department-chairman for five years, was on the list. Sidman, who left the
University in 1978, is the dean of the college of arts and sciences at the University of Florida in Gainesville.
"It isn't really embarrassing, but I would just as soon have people not talk about me," he said.
Sidman said yesterday that he didn't want the publicity.
Sidman said the search committee contacted him shortly after the list was published and told him he was on a list of finalists. The committee didn't tell him that the list was inaccurate.
"I'm the kind of person that doesn't inquire into these matters," he said.
He assumed he was on a final list, but wasn't told anything specific. he said.
Sidman said the odds were good that he would remain at Florida because many qualified candidates were still being considered.
He said, however, that he had given his nomination much thought and was interested in
Robert Rufford, president of the University of Texas at Dallas and also listed as a finalist, said he wasn't happy about his name appearing on the published list
a job in Kansas, where he had spent the majority of his academic career.
He said that when the Eagle-Beacon contacted him last week about being a finalist, he had heard nothing from the committee at K-State.
"I presumed I was still being considered a candidate," he said.
The committee from K-State reached him shortly after the list was released and explained that he was on the list.
Rufford said the story had appeared Sunday morning in Dallas, and colleagues had already questioned him about leaving.
None of them had harassed him, he said, but it could be a problem later for him and the other candidates on the list.
Rufford said he was still looking at K-State, although he was happy at Texas. A career
move to Kansas was something he thought he should look into.
Frieman wouldn't confirm anyone on the list as a finalist.
"If I say one person is being considered, then everyone knows who isn't," he said.
Stanley Koopik, executive director of the Kansas Board of Regents and member of the 12-member search committee, said the people on the list were disappointed that confidentiality had been broken when they were told it had been published.
"These candidates enter these contests thinking there will be a degree of confidentiality," he said.
The committee is committed to secrecy, he said, but apparently hadn't worked hard enough to keep the information a secret.
He said, "We're hoping we don't lose anybody."
Writer tells of terrors in Cambodian prison
By Russell Gray
Staff writer
Dith Pran did what it took to survive — eating snakes, rats, lizards and grasshoppers, wading through swamps filled with skeletons and decaying bodies.
Pran did survive. He escaped from his communist Khmer Rugee and Vietnamese captors after $4 \frac{1}{2}$ years of imprisonment and hard labor' in Cambodia.
Pran, a Cambodian journalist, spoke to about 200 people yesterday at the University of Missouri-Kansas City about life in his native country.
The movie, "The Killing Fields," follows Pran's and American journalist Sydney Schanberg's escape from Cambodia. Schanberg escaped in 1975 and Pran in 1979. Pran saved Schanberg and other journalists by talking their captors out of killing them.
The Khmer Rouge, which killed nearly half the Cambodian population, gained control of Cambodia in 1975. Pran said. Vietnam took over in 1979.
"We believed that they would kill a few hundred people — the corrupt officials, the corrupt generals — but not the innocent people." he said.
Fighting spilled into Cambodia during the Vietnam War, he said. The leader of the country, Prince Norodom Sihanouk, sided with the Communists, helping them rise to power.
"For me, I survived because I told
them I was a taxi driver." Pran said.
After the Khmer Rouge imprisoned him, Pran said, he ate anything he could find, especially if he saw animals or birds eating it.
After a few hours in power, the Khmer Ruge began forcing people out of the cities and imprisoning and executing them, he said.
Craig Sands/KANSAN
Pran said that while working in the fields, he spent half his time working and the other half searching for food. If he wasn't working in the fields, it was harder for him to find additional food.
Everything in the movie was accurate, except that it was less violent and brutal than reality, according to Pran.
"I was lucky because I was alone," he said. "I didn't see my children starve."
"The Killing Fields' doesn't really end at two hours and 15 minutes," he said. "It is going on every minute around the clock around the world."
Under the Khmer Rouge, he said, children were taken from their schools and the elderly from retirement and put to work in the fields.
FREDERIC DAVID A. MURRAY
In Cambodia, it is taught that children and the elderly are to be respected, Pran said. Seeing them endure hard labor made him feel terrible.
"In order to survive, you keep it in your heart all the time," he said. "You just ignore it."
Pran said 98 percent of Cambodians were Buddhist. The Khmer Rouge tried to destroy all the temples, where school was taught. It wanted the children to learn only to plant rice.
Since Vietnam invaded in 1979, Pran said, the Khmer Rouge has taken to the jungle, which it makes hit-and-run raids against the Vietnamese every day. It receives arms from China.
The Vietnamese are a little better than the Khmer Rouge, Pran said. They arrest, torture and kill, but have no mass executions as do the Khmer Rouge.
Dith Pran speaks to about 200 people at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Pran, whose life as a journalist and prisoner was portrayed in the movie "The Killing Fields," described yesterday the atrocities that occurred in Vietnam and Cambodia after the fall of Saigon.
"I really don't understand why the holocaust still happens again and again," he said.
There are now 250,000 people in Thailand who have fled Cambodia, he said. The only way to get them home and end the current rule in Cambodia is through outside help.
The more powerful countries need to disarm the factions in Cambodia
and create the conditions for life as it was before the Khmer Rouge, he said.
Pran said he wanted to let the world, especially college students, know about the killing.
Listing of services to be published
Publication to help homosexuals
By Piper Scholfield
Homosexuals now have a guide to help them discover which businesses welcome their patronage.
KCINFO, Inc., a Kansas City corporation formed in October, also prints Personally, a gay community newsletter containing personal ads.
welcome their patronage, she said.
Barbara, Marketing Director for KCINFO and a KU student, said the publication of the Triangle Times resulted from a survey of Personally subscribers. The survey indicated that the gay community had no way of knowing which businesses would
KCINPo, Inc. is publishing the Triangle Times, which lists Kansas City area businesses and organizations of particular interest to gays
The guide includes listings of clubs, restaurants, attorneys and many other organizations and services that welcome gay customers. Barbara said any businesses could advertise in the Triangle Times — not just those owned or operated by gays.
Barbara and other sources in this story asked to be identified by only their first names.
The guide is updated bi-monthly and most new listings are obtained by word of mouth, she said.
Spinsters Books and Webbery, $101.2% Mainstays St., is listed in the Triangle Times as both a women's bookstore and a lesbian
"Anyone who offers services to gays may be found in the Triangle Times," said K.H., a member of the collective. "It's so gays can have a place to go and not be hassled."
tearroom. The business is run by a lesbian collective.
K. H. said Spinsters Books and Webbery received mail asking the business to advertise in the Triangle Times. A simple listing in the guide is free, but a more elaborate advertisement varies in cost, she said.
Richard, a gay KU student, said he had not experienced many problems with being harrassed in Lawrence. Homosexuals are the invisible minority and may go unnoticed in public, he said.
The bookstore carries books of interest to both homosexual and heterosexual women, K.H. said. The tearroom is a library, equipped with a teapot, where lesbians can congregate and socialize.
"There are just certain places, like J. Watson's, where I feel very uncomfortable because they cater to a very certain crowd," he said.
Although the guide seeks to make homosexuals aware of where they will be welcome, anyone who thinks they might have been the victim of homosexually discriminating acts may call 1-800-221-7044 for advice on what action may be taken. The crisis line is sponsored by the National Gay Task Force.
Warning on alcohol requested
By Abbie Jones
Staff writer
TOPEKA — State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, pulled from her desk a white cardboard bulletin that she hopes will hang in liquor stores across Kansas.
Warning: drinking alcohol during pregnancy can cause birth defects, the bulletin reads.
Branson has introduced a resolution encouraging the secretary of health and environment to develop programs to educate the public about fetal alcohol syndrome with pamphlets and bulletins. The resolution is before the Senate Public Health and Welfare committee.
The resolution requests, but would not require, that materials be posted in all establishments that sell liquor. It also encourages physicians and staff of all health units to provide information on the syndrome and asks hospitals and maternity centers to keep data on specific cases.
"Making people aware, we've got to start with that," Branson said. "More visibility makes the public more aware that drinking during pregnancy causes problems. The whole thrust of this is healthy babies."
Babies who suffer from fetal alcohol syndrome may have facial and organ abnormalities, growth deficiency or mental retardation resulting from excessive alcohol consumption during pregnancy.
The resolution says there has never been an infant born with fetal alcohol syndrome whose mother did not consume alcohol during pregnancy.
State Sen. Jack Walker, R-Kansas City, said the damage from the alcohol affected the structuring of the embryo two months into pregnancy.
The resolution also requests that the health department encourage educational programs and asks that teachers of childbirth and prenatal classes provide information on the effects of alcohol on unborn children.
The committee will vote on the resolution tomorrow. If passed, the issue will then go to the full Senate for approval.
"It will be able to prevent emotional and financial costs to the families and to the state, to say nothing of the damage it does to the individual," she said.
Walker, a physician at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said babies who suffered from fetal alcohol syndrome were typically premature and often had heart defects.
"It's pretty obvious that alcohol is a problem," he said.
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University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Pardons without merit
The case of General Dynamics indicates that the more powerful the criminal, the more lenient will be the treatment.
The Navy has announced that it has lifted its suspension of military contracts to the company, a suspension that was imposed only last December, and will not impose any further suspensions for past misconduct.
The Navy made this decision despite the fact that General Dynamics recently was indicted for defrauding the Pentagon, is facing at least three grand jury investigations and is the subject of 10 to 15 separate Defense Department investigations.
Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., chairman of a committee that has been investigating General Dynamics, called the move absolutely outlandish and compared it to former President Richard Nixon's pardon 12 years ago.
The Navy's agreement doesn't shield the company
from court actions. Nor does it prevent a judge or jury from imposing future fines or other penalties.
It doesn't make the honest taxpayer feel very merry. After all, it's his money that was used to buy the grossly overpriced products. And it's his money that will be used to pay for future contracts.
What it does do is tell big companies that it's OK to defraud the government. If the Pentagon wants your products, they'll deal with you anyway. You just get rid of a couple of scapegoat executives and continue on your merry way.
If Joe Citizen overcharged his customers for automotive parts, he wouldn't last too long once the word got around. Yet General Dynamics can cheat the Pentagon on billion-dollar contracts and all is forgiven within two months.
But that's what separates the average taxpayer from the corporate giants.
Not president for life
President-for-Life Jean- Claude Duvalier will have to find a new title.
Weeks of rioting sent the Haitian president into exile and cut short his planned lifetime rule. Duvalier is now in a French villa waiting for some country to grant his request for permanent asylum.
Duvalier, known as Baby Doc, inherited Haiti from his father, who was known as Papa Doc. With the country came the U.S. support that had bolstered the unpopular dynasty for 28 years.
While he ruled this hemisphere's poorest country, Duvalier and his cronies stored wealth in Swiss bank accounts from the aid the United States sent to the country.
In the end all that remained of that support was a one-way ticket on a U.S. Air Force transport to France. And the Swiss bank accounts.
Duvalier did not deserve even that much. The guns and clubs of his private militia, the Tonton Macoute, made his rule one of the world's leading human rights violators.
His human rights violations finally convinced the United States to withhold in January nearly $26 million in aid. This was the signal to Duvalier that it was time to leave.
It may also be a sign that Washington is no longer willing to subsidize the personal fortunes of petty dictators. Certainly that seems to be what the United States is telling President Marcos of the Philippines.
Whether this change indicates that the United States is committed to true democratic reform in these countries, instead of shifting support to some less-corrupt autocrat, remains to be seen.
Exceptions to the pain
The most popular president in recent history knows how to tell a good story. He knows how to make pleasing promises and how to gloss over unpopular points.
The good stories our popular president tells have usually held some blatant inconsistencies, and his 1987 budget proposal is no exception.
The president's budget proposal is out and, as promised, it has programs bleeding from the cuts. Nearly every program except Social Security suffered.
This was to be the year for cuts, the beginning of a new trend to tighten belts all over the country, the year to make a dent in the federal deficit. Few were to be spared the knife.
In the midst of these drastic reductions, however, Reagan thinks the household budget for the White House needs to be increased.
While family budgets around the country must be trimmed to the bare bones, Reagan finds a need to refurbish his place of residence.
He has said he doesn't want to tax financially strapped families who are trying to make ends meet with too little money, but he thinks the White House needs more money for repairs, alterations, refinishing and improved heating and lighting.
In another odd twist of logic, Reagan has found it necessary to ask for an increase in the mileage allotment for members of Congress — at a time when gasoline prices are falling.
But in a more realistic vein, Reagan has requested an extra $1.2 million for additional deputy clerks to process bankruptcies. It seems the administration is expecting an increase this year.
News staff
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Laurence McMillan ... Managing editor
Christie Barber ... Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry ... Campus editor
David Giles ... Sports editor
Brice Waddill ... Photo editor
Susanne Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nixon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Manager
Larry Edkert ... Classified manager
Caroline Innes ... Production manager
Pallen Lee ... National manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
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IT'S THAT O**@**☆
DOONESBURY! EVERY-
THING WAS FINE UNTIL
DUCE TURNED INTO A
ZOMBIE!
BABY DOC
©1986 MIAMI NEWS
Bogus beer may not fall to legislation
Having been raised in Madison, Wis., the home of real beer, going to school here on the prairie has been quite a switch for me.
Perhaps the first big difference any foreigner notices is the bogus beer sold in 3.2 bars and grocery stores. For a Wisconsin used to drinking beer, the idea of putting a cereal malt beverage in my mouth is pretty scary.
I often have wondered what will happen to this charming cross between beer and water once the statewide drinking age changes to 21.
The reality is that 3.2 beer still ma2 be around long after the drinking age is raised, mostly because of peculiarities within the Kansas constitution. Presently 3.2 beer may be consumed only by those persons born after June 30, 1966.
This age will be raised every year, until it conforms to the national age of 21 set by Congress. This national age requirement grants a 21-year-old the privilege to drink any alcoholic beverage. One would therefore assume that 3.2 beer would be phased
out and only strong beer would be sold.
Sadly, this is not the case.
In November, Kansans will vote on the introduction of the open bar into current law. In those counties where the liquor-by-the-drink amendment does not pass in November, drinkers can either become club members or continue to drink 3.2 beer in those taverns that remain open.
A city survey in Lawrence last year estimated that 19 percent of the 20.32 bars presently in existence would close.
Because of laws enacted over 100 years ago, the public tavern will no longer exist. Students who wish to drink will be forced into the more restricted and more expensive private clubs — all because an 1880 clause in the Kansas Constitution states, "The open saloon shall be and is hereby forever banned."
The present significance of this archaic wine is staggering. Because 3.2 beer is a cereal malt beverage and not an alcoholic beverage, it has allowed countless Kansans to go to
Jason Elder
Staff columnist
bars and drown themselves in weak,
tasteless beer in order to get ripped
without ever entering an open saloon.
This was and is an excellent method of circumventing silly laws, but this method has become obsolete in the face of current national law.
Liquor by the drink should have passed long ago. The present constitution reflects the outdated morals of a bygone era.
Temperance has never worked, and it is neither feasible nor desirable at KU, even to the limited extent practiced today.
Counterfeit beer is a good reminder of past attempts to legislate morality. In 1937, when 3.2 beer was first bottled and sold in Kansas to dodge prohibition, 3.2 taverns were a good way to avoid being seen at a speakeasy and pegged
as the local bad guy
The preamble of the Kansas Grand Lodge of 1877 stated that "the use of ardent spirits as a beverage is a fruitful source of most of the crime and suffering that afflicts humanity."
But people no longer believe that drinking alcohol and beating one's children are synonymous.
There is no need for 3.2 beer in Kansas' future, but 3.2 beer may be the only way to maintain a local bar if liquor by the drink does not pass in Douglas County. After the drinking age is raised to 21, traditional campus watering holes like The Wheel, the Hawk and Johnny's will either have to join the club system or continue to serve 3.2 beer.
of these establishments will no doubt close, disturbing many of their loyal patrons.
To move Lawrence out of the alcoholic dark age predicated by a century-old law, liquor by the drink must pass both statewide and in Douglas County. Vote for liquor by the drink in November, and the tastebuds you save by eliminating 3.2 beer may be your own.
Cap on malpractice is ploy by physicians
There is a very unseemly battle going on in our state legislature on the issue of medical malpractice.
The American Medical Association is trying to convince our legislature that the burden of malpractice suits is keeping young people from becoming physicians and is making the practice of medicine too expensive. Apparently a typical premium for malpractice insurance is $70,000 a year.
The AMA is very cleverly trying to paint this as a case of physicians versus lawyers — who, of course, are preying on the poor physicians.
The AMA wants a cap on the total recovery that a victim of medical malpractice can receive (in Kansas the proposed lid is $1 million) and a cap on the total amount of punitive damages recoverable ($250,000 in Kansas).
Under the present system, the physician committing the malpractice primarily is responsible for paying for his negligence. Physicians protect themselves by purchasing insurance, thus the gripe about the high cost of the premium.
This position of the AMA is not in the best interest of the patients of Kansas. Physicians are human beings; they make mistakes. When they make professional mistakes, their errors can cause serious bodily injury or death.
Under the proposed cap system, insurance premiums would go down, but we still would have to support the rehabilitation of those who could not afford it themselves.
If the AMA gets its way, the burden to pay the cost of the injuries will be on the victim.
Of course, either way, society is going to have to foot the bill for malpractice. Under the present system, we pay higher medical bills so physicians can pay for their insurance.
It is fair for the wrongdoers, not their victims, to pay.
As things stand now, physicians buy malpractice insurance to protect themselves from liability. Under the proposed system, that burden merely will be shifted to consumers.
Another problem with the proposed system is that its savings are illusory.
Chris Bunker Staff columnist
PETER MCDONALD
Consumers, at least the smart ones, will be forced to buy malpractice insurance to protect themselves from a physician's possible errors.
A new report by the federal government has found that the medical profession does a remarkably poor job of policing its own ranks. Physicians are reluctant to take action against their fellow practitioners. No wonder malpractice insurance rates are so high.
As individuals, consumers simply won't have the buying power that a physician does. The physician, in essence, protects all of his patients with his malpractice insurance, thus achieving economies of scale which he passes on to his patients in higher medical prices.
Remember the oil embargo? Now there is a glut of oil, but prices are well above their pre-embargo level and no one is complaining.
The real answer to high medical malpractice rates is for the medical profession to do a better job of weeding out the worst offenders from their profession.
Finally, the proposed system must be viewed as a money grab by physicians.
The same thing will happen in this case. As consumers of medical services, we are used to paying a high price for the service. If malpractice insurance rates go down for physicians, do you think physicians will turn around and lower their prices for medical services? Of course not. They'll merely pocket the difference.
Physicians might delay future cost increases, but in the meantime, they will pocket a handsome windfall profit.
This is a local issue, so your letters to your state representatives can make a difference.
Tell them to vote against the cap on medical malpractice recovery. Tell them not to be suckered by the AMA.
Mailbox
Children feel loss
In response to Professor Richard Sattilaro's letter on "the cross that children are obliged to bear" regarding Christa McAuliffe's death, I would like to express my opinion as a prospective teacher.
Many children across the country feel a personal loss as a result of the space shuttle tragedy. Many are upset, confused and even angry.
American children anticipated the flight ever since McAuliffe's selection was made. They followed her progress and training for many months, and to them this shuttle flight was special.
These children should be allowed to accept this tragic death and all the healthy feelings of grief accompanying it. Any help that teachers can offer to allow students to get in touch with their feelings ought to be encouraged.
While I agree with Mr. Sattillaro that all the attention has centered on McAuliffe and has left out the contributions of the other members of the team, it is not the fault of educators but that of the press.
Holly Bartling Topeka senior
Realizing dreams
It is in the nature of man to dream about the future. It is also in the nature of man to bring those dreams to reality.
Those of us who read science fiction literature and view science fiction television and films dream perhaps more than most about what tomorrow will bring. The dreamers of the past could only do that, dream.
The reality of life tells us that sometimes our heroes do die.
We who enjoy the science fiction television program "Doctor Who" have a hero who never dies, or so it seems. When it seems all is lost, he is reborn to pursue his adventures another day. Reality is different.
On Jan. 28, the spaceship Challenger and her crew perished in pursuit of bringing our dreams into reality.
We must always remember the
Tim Miller
They are gone, but their spirits will always be with us in our dreams of tomorrow and in the turning of those dreams into reality.
names of Scobee, Smith, Resnik,
Onizuka, McNair, Jarvis and
Maulife. They left all that was dear to them, faced danger and then passed beyond our sight.
Overland Park senior president, KU Doctor Who Appreciation Society
Mother of greatness
On Feb. 12, 1809, Mother Nature delivered twins - two of the greatest minds that shaped world history - Abraham Lincoln and Charles Darwin.
The mother of greatness
st still alive
Fit and Fertile
Like the Queen
In the hive.
There is room
In the sky
For every star.
When you are
True to yourself
Nature would do
The rest.
Anthony A. Alya Lawrence resident
Rude late arrivals
Lawrence residents and KU students and faculty were treated to the Tyrone Guthrie production of "Great Expectations."
After living in Lawrence for two years now, I'm beginning to expect to be irritated at any social gathering if KU students must be present.
Several members of the audience were students fulfilling a theater class requirement.
I paid to see the production, not the performance provided by the trickle of late arrivals who insisted on talking, laughing and stumbling around after the play had begun. Unfortunately, behavior such as this occurs at movies, lectures and concerts.
I think this provides another reason why professional entertainment bypasses places like Lawrence—a lot of people do not know how to act in public.
Rose Eieslard.
Lawrence senhbr
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Tylenol
Continued from p.1
but Schulteis said he hadn't heard anything more than what had been on the local news.
Tony Wilcox, at the Round Corner Drug Co., 801 Massachusetts St., said he had checked his stock but he hadn't removed any Tylenol from the shelves.
"It's too early to push the panic button," he said.
He said the Tylenol company had one of the most secure, tamper-proof bottles of anyone in the pharmaceutical industry.
tion he had was from the television and he had not removed any bottles from the shelves.
Wilcox said he hoped, for Tylenol's sake, that the capsules had been poisoned after the woman had opened the bottle. The possibility that the poison was added during the manufacturing process would then be ruled out.
He said some customers had asked about the problem and he had discouraged them from purchasing Tylenol for now.
"They all are behind the shelves," he said. "The customers have to ask for it anyway."
Marvin Breedhoff, pharmacist at Medical Arts Pharmacy, 346 Maine St., said the only inforna-
The bottles, he said, have three safety seals. The box is glued shut, the lid has a special plastic shrink wrap around it and a metal film covers the mouth of the bottle.
Juni Schooling, pharmacist at Raney Drug Store, 404 Maine St., said the 24-, 50- and 100-count bottles were filled from the same stocks.
Protests
Continued from p.1
would be a lively one this school year
"We've made an impact," DeVore said, "but I still think most students here don't really know what divestment involves."
Committee members will work toward that goal tonight in a hearing before the University Senate Human Relations Committee in the Jayhawk
burea
thin
burea
india
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
india
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
india
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
india
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
india
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
Some committee members will take part at 1 p.m. Sunday in a seminar on non-violent action at the School of Law, Bunker then. Seminar lectures will focus on South Africa.
Chris Bunker, Shawnee law student and a member of the South Africa committee, said members of his committee were scheduled to speak from 9:10 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., then answer questions for 10 minutes. Bunker said no demonstrations were planned for tonight.
Navy divers wearing pressurized suits were lowered 120 feet to the ocean floor yesterday 18 miles east of the cape where the National Aeronautics and Space Administration suspects the two-stage satellite booster is resting. A Navy
A March 6 debate on divestment is scheduled at the School of Law between Bunker and Phil Kline, Shawnee law student.
Finding Challenger's right-side booster rocket, which ruptured and apparently triggered the explosion that destroyed Challenger and its crew, could provide clues to how the failure occurred.
Salvage teams and Navy divers stood by to continue mapping the ocean floor in an effort to find Challenger's two solid rocket boosters and the satellite rocket thought to have been blown from the shuttle's cargo bay.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — An elite team of Navy divers may have found the remains of an unfired satellite rocket booster blown from the space shuttle Challenger.
The presidential panel investigating the disaster is scheduled to arrive at the Kennedy Space Center tomorrow for a two-day tour to gather information on the Challenger launch.
The painstaking search in murky waters off the coast of Florida for shuttle wreckage entered its third week. Spaceport managers sift through data on Challenger's fatal flight for a review of the disaster by the presidential panel.
Room of the Kansas Union. Hearings begin at 7:30.
What caused the "abnormal plume" is a subject of hot debate in the absence of any word from NASA's mostly secret investigation.
A rupture in the right-side booster at or near the joint between the lower two of its four fuel segments is thought to have triggered the explosion of Challenger's external fuel tank.
The panel met yesterday in Washington in open session to discuss internal NASA documents that chart a history of concern about joints between the fuel segments of the solid-fuel rocket boosters.
The presidential panel indicated particular interest in the effect of cold temperatures on seals in the booster joints, and weather is expected to be a key topic of discussion at the Florida meetings.
spokesman said the divers were trained to handle explosives.
Freezing temperatures before launch time could have interfered with the operation of crucial rubber seals, called O-rings, which prevent
Divers sift for shuttle booster
United Press International
burning propellant from leaking through the side of the rockets.
The center of the solid-fuel rocket is hollow and propellant burns from that surface outward toward the skin of the booster. It is unclearly how the fuel in a booster could have burned so close to the outer wall near the joint so early in the flight.
Thomas Utsman, deputy director of the Kennedy Space Center, said nothing was done differently when Challenger's boosters were assembled on than on past flights and he strongly defended NASA's shuttle processing techniques.
"I don't know of any specific changes we've made in the handling of those seals," he said. "We've always treated those seals with tender loving care."
But NASA officials said no conclusions had been drawn about the shuttle failure. All that is officially known is that Challenger exploded 73 seconds after blastoff.
Two weeks of searching has netted more than 12 tons of twisted wreckage.
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ATTENTION ALL STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE POLICY HOLDERS AND OTHER INTERESTED PERSONS
There will be an open forum concerning student health insurance for the policy year 1986-1987 for your comments and questions.
TIME: 7-9 p.m. DATE: Tues., Feb. 18th
PLACE: REGIONALIST ROOM STUDENT UNION
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PLEASE ATTEND!
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The MAD HATTER
6
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
Brier says delegation to election left early
United Press International
TOPEKA — Secretary of State Jack Brier said yesterday that the U.S. delegation that observed the Philippines' presidential election left too soon, missing the procedures in which the potential for wholesale election fraud would be the highest
"It's a very crucial time there right now," said Brier, a member of the U.S. delegation that observed voting last week.
Brier, who observed voting in the capital of Manila said that despite charges of fraud, balloting was more fair than fraudulent. However, he said a larger part of the electoral process in the Philippines involved transporting the ballot boxes from remote areas of the 7,000-island nation and tallying the votes.
"I think it would not have harmed the delegation to stay a couple more days," Brier said. "If I have a criticism, it's that the Philippine people were not reminded that we were there at the invitation of the government, and that we left too soon."
As if bearing out Brier's words, the Philippines parliament, which must decide who won the election between President Ferdinand Marcos and challenger Corazon Aquino, adjourned in a furry of bickering for a second day yesterday without counting any ballots. Both Marcos and Aquino claimed victory, with conflicting unofficial tallies backing both claims.
The National Assembly, dominated by Marcos, met in its second trv to
determine the winner of Friday's election. It *spent most of its six-hour session ceremoniously removing the locks from 13 boxes containing provincial returns.
Members had inspected the contents of only one box before Aquino supporters noted the absence of a quorum and demanded adjournment.
Most of the assembly's 57 opposition members had walked out earlier, and only 78 of the 179 lawmakers remained. Before suspending the session until Wednesday, the legislators relocked the 13 boxes.
Although Brier said the news media distorted and sensationalized some election incidents, he said the media focused world attention on the election, helping keep it free. The intensive news coverage made stealing an election very difficult.
Brier, a Republican election official, said there absolutely was some election fraud, but the question was whether it was enough to thwart the will of the people.
He said he saw no violence. He did see hundreds of Filipinos who were willing to stand in line for hours and be thumped printable and marked with ink to prevent voting twice, just so they could vote and he saw some instances of people trying to buy other people's ballots.
"I come back with more questions than answers," he said.
Brier, who helped observe elections in El Salvador and Guatemala in 1844, said the El Salvador election was more clear cut.
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Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
University Daily Kansan
7
HUMP RUSTY'SIGA FOOD CENTERS LAWRENCE
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8
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
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7 p.m., Saturday
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The University of Kansas
Lawrence Campus
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Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
9
Citizens shouldn't pay rent for press, bill says
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Taxpayers should not subsidize profits of news organizations by paying their rent. Statehouse, Sen. Ben E. Vickerson R-Salina, told the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee yesterday
Vidricksen is the sponsor of a bill that would require all profit-making groups occupying space in the Capitol, including news organizations, to pay rent for that space. Lobbyists, who have a room on the third floor of the Statehouse, also would be affected.
But non-profit news organizations, such as public radio stations, would
not be affected. No one spoke against the bill.
"I don't think it's a function of the taxpayers to have free rent for the press, which is there to make a profit," Vidrickens told the committee.
News organizations occupy 1,863 square feet of space at the Capitol building, according to figures released at the hearing. Vidkirsen said the state gives away about $20,000 in free rent to about 15 news media organizations.
Vidricksen noted that many state agencies must rent space outside the Statehouse while the news organizations don't.
On Campus
Robert Miller, professor of sociology at Baker University, will speak about "A Firsthand Report on Contra Activity in Northern Nicaragua" at 11:40 a.m. today in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries
Building,1204 Oread Ave.
The University Placement Center will sponsor a workshop, "Writing Effective Resumes and Letters," at 2:30 p.m. today in Room 3 of Lippincott Hall.
SUA FILMS
THE FIRST WORLD WAR
IN 1939, THE NATIONAL GOVT. OF THE UNION STATES DEFINED THAT A REPUBLIC CANNOT BE ESTABLISHED ONLY IN A DEMOCRATIC MANDATE. THIS CONSEQUENCE CASED THE BROTHERS OF LUCAS AND ROSS FLEETMAN INTO EMPLOYMENT AT THE MILITARY DEPT. OF THE UNION STATE. THEIR FATHER LUCAS, AUGUSTUS C. FLETMAN, MADE IT SURE OF THEM THEIR LEGACY WOULD BE RESOLVED IN THE FUTURE. THEIR MOTHER, ANNA J. FLETMAN, PRESENTING HER FATHER'S WORK, TURNED TO HER LOVE FOR THEIR DAUGHTER, ROSS FLEETMAN, WHO SUCCEEDED TO BE MADE FAMILY CLUBHOUSE. THEIR DAD, RICHARD FLETMAN, WAS PRESTONBURG MARRIAGE CUSTOMER.
They Drive By Night Humphrey Bogart Ann Sheridan Ida Lupino George Raft
TONIGHT!
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SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
NEEDS YOU!!!
Student Union Activities is planning an exciting year full of concerts, speakers, movies, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more.
We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas...
President
Vice-President
Treasurer
Special Events
SUA Travel
Outdoor Recreation Indoor Recreation Public Relations Film Forums The Fine Arts
Secretary
We need your help in these programs, experience is NOT a necessity, however interest is required. For information stop by the SUA office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477. Student Union Activities.
Please contact by:
Monday, Feb 17
at 5 p.m.
TUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Benjamin Franklin, Bankruptcy Court, District of Kansas. Attorney, Alaska, Kansas City, Missouri. Oliver Lee, J., attorney, Wichita, Ks
4:00-4:50 Taxation Seminar
5:00-5:50 Nontraditional Careers in the law
7:00 Keynote Address Hoch Auditorium
MINORITIES IN THE LAW A bridge between community and chaos Sat., Feb. 15 Kansas Union, Big Eight Rm.
Julian Bond, State Senator, Georgia
Sponsored by Black American Student Assoc.
Valentine's Day is Friday, February 14
Remember your Valentine with a Hallmark card and a gift of Russell Stover Candies.
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Friday...Top Sirlin
Saturday...Chicken Fried Steak
Monday...Fresh Pork Tenderloin
Tuesday...Baked Chicken with Gravy
Wednesday...Chopped Steak
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Thursday...Baked Ham
Includes salad, mash potatoes & gravy,
vegetable and Texas toast.
EXDAY VALENTINE'S DAY
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A fish in a gloves.
ATTENTION JUNIORS (and first semester seniors)
Questionnaires for membership in Mortar Board, a highly respected senior honor society, are available in 214 Strong and Nunemaker Center. A 3.0 cumulative GPA is required. Deadline for completed questionnaires is Thurs., Feb. 20 at 5 p.m.
FREE FRIDAY DANCE CONCERTS AT THE BURGE UNION - 9 P.M.
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In Conjunction With
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All proceeds donated by participating bands
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Absolute Ceiling
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Altered Media
Pariah
KU’s own Dan Aykroyd is an M.S. Buster!
Vote for your favorite look-a-like and help bust M.S.
Fri., Feb. 14 8:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Tickets $3 may be purchased at SUA or from any KU look-a-like
The Hawklet will be open for your drinking pleasure!
MTV
swatch
Buy MTV t shirts, buttons and hats to help bust M.S.
The Hawklet will be open for your drinking pleasure!
STUDENTS AGAINST MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
M.S.
We're Out To Tie Up & Bust M.S.
10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
NOW THROUGH FEB. 18...
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Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
Nation/World
University Daily Kansan
11
Luncheon prompts farmer protests
United Press International
ST. LOUIS — While President Reagan attends a $500-a-plate luncheon today at the posh Union Station, renovated by tax credits the administration wants to eliminate, farmers and the poor plan to protest outside.
Members of the American Agriculture Movement, Christians United for Compassionate Government, Pax Christi and the St. Louis April Mobilization Coalition all planned demonstrations outside the newly renovated showplace.
The presidential stop is a fund-raiser for former Gov. Christopher Bond's Senate race.
"There's a disparity when the president can attend a $500-aplate dinner for Bond and look the
"We had a chance to get a farm bill in Washington; it was one of the most cost-effective bills introduced, but everytime the family farm policy act came up, Mr. Reagan hollered veto," Zeeb said.
other way as farmers lose their farms," said Jim Zeeb of the American Agriculture Movement of Illinois.
Zeeb said he expected farmers from Missouri, Illinois, Iowa and Nebraska to attend the protest. They will carry handmade white crosses to symbolize the demise of the family farm.
have remained a vacant hulk without the investment tax credit the administration wants to end. Once the nation's busiest rail terminal, it slipped into gradual decline in the 1950s and closed in the late 1970s.
The renovated Union Station. 91 years old, would
Oppenheimer Properties of New York transformed it into a glittering showplace of nearly 100 shops and restaurants.
The Rev. Larry Rice of the Christians United for Compassionate Government said hundreds of poor and homeless people would be outside the station as Reagan "entertains the rich and powerful."
And at the same time the Republican fund-raiser begins, a $1-a-plate protest lunch to benefit the needy will get under way at a Roman Catholic Church on the city's south side.
Give Your Valentine something they can share with you from... Barrand Liquor
2004 W.23rd
Man fights mob power in Palermo
The Associated Press
PALERMO. Sicily — "If you let fear stop you, nothing will change," says Mayor Lecluca Orlando, who is trying to rid Palermo of Mafia influence that has been woven into the city's fabric over centuries.
Orlando has much to fear and much to change as mayor of a city whose streets have been stained by the blood of like-minded men in the struggle against the Mafia.
The mayor says he thinks success will come only through the people's will and the state's unwavering commitment.
When the trial of 474 alleged Mafia members began Monday, Orlando was in the courtroom, sitting in a show of solidarity with the widows and children of men who were killed fighting the pervasive criminal society.
He says the trial is a sign that the state is serious, but that it and other trials to follow are not enough.
"You fight the Mafia with repression but also with economic development." he savs.
Italy's poor south is ripe prey for organized crime, he says. Unemployment in the south is twice the national rate of about 11 percent.
Unemployment in Palermo's construction trades is roughly 40 percent and the city's shipyards suffer the general malaise afflicting that industry. he saws.
Since taking office in July, the 38-year-old Christian Democrat has earned a reputation for boldness, honesty and courage.
The mayor has badgered Italy's central government for funds to provide work for the jobless, recently winning 25 billion lire (about $14.5 million) that will put 1,000 men to work repairing and maintaining roads, monuments and parks.
An example of Orlando's approach to the job is his decision that contracts for city services and construction be granted by competitive bidding. The previous system, considered ideal for the Mafia, was to give the jobs to those who had previous contracts with the city, regardless of cost or qualifications.
The Maffa's strength has been attributed in part to a Sicilian distrust of outsiders inspired by centuries of foreign exploitation that led peasants to turn to bandits for protection — for a price.
In Palermo, good relations with the Mafia could mean a job for a son or nephew, or permission to open a certain business in the turf of a crime boss.
The young are his favorite allies. High school students, often rallied by the Roman Catholic Church, have marched in the streets to protest Mafia influence.
Orlando says that arrangement is weakening and the wave of killings of police officials, government leaders, journalists and judges investigating the Mafia has convinced many of Palermo's people that their world must change.
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12
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
Plane collision averted by alarm
United Press International
ATLANTA — An air traffic control error put two airliners carrying a total of 210 people on a collision course at 31,000 feet until a computer sounded an alarm, a Federal Aviation Administration official said yesterday.
A disaster over north Georgia mountains was averted Monday night when a controller, alerted by the alarm, ordered one of the Boeing 727s to descend to 29,000 feet, said FAA spokesman Jack Barker.
The near-collision involved Delta Air Lines Flight 602 from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to Chicago with 156 people and Eastern Air Lines Flight 687 from Philadelphia to Atlanta with 54 people.
planes were in a holding pattern awaiting permission to land at Hartsfield International Airport in Atlanta, Barker said, and the Delta jet was flying on a northwestier route after takeoff. Both the Eastern and Delta planes were at 31,000 feet, he said.
"There was an error committed in the air traffic control operation," Barker said. "The conflict alert did go off and a controller ordered the Delta flight to descend to 29,000 feet. The Delta pilot reported a near midair collision."
The Eastern airliner and two other
He said officials were uncertain whether air traffic controllers realized the danger before the alarm went off but evasive action was not ordered until after the alarm sounded.
Eastern plane as he descended. Barker said the two airliners were 1,000 feet apart horizontally and 150-200 feet apart vertically at their closest point.
William Berry, a spokesman for Delta, said the Delta pilot saw the
said. "He saw the Eastern plane in its continuing bank after he took the evasive action."
"He basically was doing what the controller told him to do, which was to get down to 29,000 feet," Berry
Berry said the pilot, whom Delta officials declined to identify, was just doing his job in avoiding the Eastern jet.
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Group says CIA helped abuse right
United Press International
4 Ways to Charge at Weaver's:
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LONDON — Amnesty International yesterday accused the CIA of encouraging contra guerrillas to torture and execute prisoners in Nicaragua and blamed both government and anti-government forces for human rights abuses.
The report did not contain any details of torture with explicit CIA connections, however.
VISA MasterCard
The report of Amnesty International, a worldwide human rights organization, said Nicaragua's Sandinista government had eased some of its restrictions on personal freedoms, including censorship and restriction of rights to strike and hold public meetings.
But Amnesty International said many reported killings and disappearances were still unsolved.
A sleeping bag, duffel bag and miscellaneous clothing, valued together at $519, were stolen from an apartment in the 1100 block of Louisiana Street sometime Feb. 4, police said.
On the Record
Findings in the "Report on the Situation of Human Rights in Nicaragua" were based on four Amnesty International missions to Nicaragua since the 1979 overthrow of Anastasio Somoza's government by the Sandinistas.
Three oil paintings, valued together at $550, and $150 cash were stolen from a restaurant in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street, police said. Thieves gained entry by breaking in a window.
Amnesty International criticized the CIA's role in training the Honduran-based, anti-Sandinista Nicaraguan Democratic Force, called FDN, for the "selective assassination of civilian local government officials, police and military personnel."
A stereo valued at $210 was stolen from a Haskell Indian Junior College student's dormitory room between 11 p.m. Saturday and 1 a.m. Sunday. Lawrence police said.
It said the number of captives tortured and put to death since 1961 by members of one contra group, the Nicaragua Democratic Force, “is impossible to determine but it is believed to total several hundred.”
Weaver's Charge Account
Despite disclosure of the manual and "continued cases of tortures and murders" attributed to the FDN and the Miskito Indian force MISURA last year, Amnesty said, there has been "little apparent change in the operational tactics applied by these forces."
It said that in the past five years "reports have been regularly received of detentions, torture and summary execution by armed forces" along Nicaragua's border with Honduras. Other prisoners reportedly were taken to bases in Honduras and Costa Rica.
State Department spokesman Bernard Kalb said the Reagan administration had denied previous similar allegations and declined further comment.
Amnesty International, criticizing the Sandinista government, cited "allegations of extrajudicial executions by Nicaraguan troops" at the Coco River settlement of Leimus in December 1981 and the forcible disappearance of Miskito Indian prisoners in 1982.
Also criticized was Nicaragua's treatment of prisoners at its Chipote detention center and two prisons, Jorge Navarro and Zona Franca, in the Managua area.
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Lawrence's Department Store For 128 Years 9th and Massachusetts
1
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
13
Kansas lives up to ranking, drubs Missouri 100-66
Quick beginning lifts Jayhawks to easy victory
KANSAS
22
By Matt Tidwell
Sports writer
By dominating Missouri 100-66 last night in Allen Field House, the Kansas Jayhawks left their head coach speechless.
Kansas guard Cedric Hunter drives past Missouri forward Derrick Chieveus tor a lay up. Hunter made seven of eight shots from the field and finished last night's game with 16 points.
"I really don't know what to say." Kansas coach Larry Brown said. "I haven't been in this situation too many times before. I don't think we would have lost to many teams tonight."
Kansas center Greg Dreiling put it another way — the Jayhawks' new number three ranking is deserved
"Tonight," Dreiling said, "we sure looked like number three."
The Jayhawks turned in what Brown and many others said was perhaps their best performance of the season.
Kansas started the game by outscoring Missouri 11-2 in the first three and a half minutes. By the finish, the Jayhawks outbounded the Tigers, placed four players in double figures and shot 71 percent as a team.
"I thought everybody played great," Brown said. "Ronnie (Kellogg) did things we've talked about other than scoring, Calvin (Thompson) was phenomenal and
Kansas 100
Missouri 66
Missouri
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Church | 20 | 2-4 | 4-5 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 8 |
| Bengnharu | 34 | 4-8 | 3-4 | 5 | 3 | 3 | 11 |
| Leonard | 22 | 0-4 | 0-1 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Strong | 34 | 8-22 | 0-0 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 16 |
| Musser | 14 | 2-3 | 0-1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 4 |
| Chievous | 29 | 5-8 | 7-7 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 17 |
| Hardy | 29 | 5-8 | 7-7 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 17 |
| Sandbottle | 12 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Roundtree | 10 | 1-2 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Brockman | 3 | 1-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Pothoff | 2 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| | 26-58 | 14-18 | 14-17 | 11 | 14 | 16 | 9 |
Percentages: FG. 448, FT. 778. Blocked Shots: 3 (Bingehneler, Leonard, Musser 1). Turnovers: 2 (Bingehneler, Leonard 5). Steals: 6 (Church 2). Technicals: None.
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Manning | 31 | 12-17 | 3T | 3 | 4 | 27 | 19 |
| Kellogg | 27 | 3-7 | 2-2 | 2 | 7 | 4 | 8 |
| Dreiling | 21 | 6-9 | 0-1 | 9 | 1 | 12 | 12 |
| Hunter | 27 | 7-8 | 2-3 | 3 | 5 | 16 | 16 |
| Thompson | 23 | 4-7 | 0-4 | 5 | 1 | 29 | 8 |
| Marshall | 25 | 5-8 | 0-2 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 4 |
| Turgent | 13 | 2-2 | 0-0 | 0 | 6 | 2 | 4 |
| Piper | 22 | 3-3 | 0-2 | 2 | 2 | 8 | 4 |
| Barry | 4 | 2-3 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 4 |
| Hull | 7 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 |
| Henzilk | 2 | 0-0 | 0-2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Johnson | 2 | 0-0 | 0-2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 40 | 12 | 10 | 12 | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Percentages: FG, 71; FT, 800. Blocked Shots: 6 (Manning 5), Turnovers: 15 (Jeff Johnson 3), Steals: 9 (Manning 4). Technique: None.
Hall: Kansas 49-32. Officials: Spitier,
Mayfield, O'Neill
Greg (Dreiling) was great on the boards. I couldn't be prouder. That's as fine a game as we've played."
The Tigers, who were playing their fourth game in ten days, were dazed early and never got closer than seven points. Kansas outscored Missouri 23-10 in the last seven minutes, including one stretch in which the Tigers were held scoreless for over five minutes.
With four minutes left in the game, Brown pulled the last of his starters and let his reserves finish.
Tiger coach Norm Stewart, who enjoyed a near-upset of the Jayhawks in Columbia last month, couldn't find much to stand up and shout about.
"Kansas is a really, really good ballclub and they were excellent tonight," Stewart said. "They got ahead early and they made it hard to play."
Brown said that he was more nervous than usual before the game and that the Tigers' recent schedule — which has included losses against Oklahoma, Nebraska and Virginia — could have played a factor.
"They're a good team," Brown said. "You don't beat a team like that without everybody playing well. Missouri had a tough weekend."
For the fifth straight game, Kansas received balanced scoring. Four Jayhawks scored more than 10 points. Danny Manning led all scorers with 27 points, a season high.
"I like to think that we played like the third-ranked team tonight," Manning said. "We had them on the ropes and we kept them there."
Although there were times when the two teams traded baskets, Kansas dominated the first few minutes of each half. In addition to their 11-2 first half spurt, the Jayhawks outscored Missouri 10-2 in the first three minutes of the second half.
Chris Magerl/KANSAN
"We thought it was real important to get off the mark early," Brown said. "But I didn't anticipate 11-2. I think that was a real key."
The win improved the Jayhawks' record to 23-3 overall and 8-1 in the Big Eight while Missouri dropped to 17-11 and 4-5.
KANSAS
30
KANSAS
22
KANSAS
21
Kansas guard Cedric Hawke passes to teammate Archie Marshall after stealing the ball from Missouri forward Dan Bingenheimer. The steal came in the first half of the Jayhawks' victory last night over the Tigers.
'Hawks kept Stewart quiet
Bv Frank Hansel
Associate sports editor
While Kansas did post a 100-66 win over Missouri last night, there was something missing from the game.
The Missouri head coach was there in person but not in spirit.
Stewart usually has the Jayhawk fans in a frenzy every time he walks into Allen Field House, but that didn't happen last night.
There were a few 'sit down Norm' chants during the pre-game warm up, but after the opening tip off, the traditional chant from the bi-partisan fans disappeared.
Kansas fanatics had to cheer for the Jayhawks instead of against Stewart, who sat calmly in his folding
"There wasn't really much to stand up about," Stewart said after the game."
The fans seemed so stunned by Stewart's inactivity that they begged him to stand up and make one of his traditional appearances in the second half.
Chants of 'stand up Norm, stand up Norm' echoed through the field house after the Jayhawks had built a 19-point lead.
Missouri guard Steve Musser said that since the Tigers got behind so early, they trailed 9-0 after the opening three minutes, there wasn't much Stewart could do.
"It was tough for him," Musser said. "We didn't have much of a chance to win here."
Even though there were no theatrical antics, Stewart did receive a chorus of 'sit down Norm, sit down Norm' from the crowd with 4:10 left in the game and Kansas leading 89-56.
The fans seemed pleased with the Jayhawks 23rd win of the season, but their expectations of a hard fought Kansas-Missouri basketball game went unfulfilled.
Stewart stood up when Tiger center Gary Leonard was fouled by Rodney Hull.
JV holds on to win
"It just wasn't the same without him," one fan said as he filed out of the field house.
Bv a Kansan sports writer
Kansas used a delay game to preserve its twelfth win of the 1968 World Series.
The victory avenged a 93-69 loss to Johnson County Monday night in Overland Park.
The Jayhawks had led by as many as 12 points before Johnson County tied the game 64-64 with three minutes and 55 seconds remaining.
Kansas junior varsity coach R.C. Buford said, "We bounced back well from last night."
Kansas led by one point at half time, 34-33. Scooter Barry had 11 first half points for the Jayhawks. Barry was Kansas' high scorer with 15 points.
Kansas 71,
Johnson County 68
The Kansas junior varsity survived a second half charge by Johnson County Community College and held on to win 71-68 last night in Allen Field House.
Johnson County (ny)
White 4-3 14, Stapleton 5-7 9-17, Bunt 1-0 2-
Thomas 9-3 21, Richardson 0-1 0-1, Suber 4-0 8-
Rivals 1-2 9 12, Tracts 21 7-14 28.1
Jef Johnson 1-1-3, Barry 1-1-15, Hull 4-6, 19-4,
Henkill 6-0, 12-1 Wintz 1-0, Wintz 12-1, Balker 4-1, 14-
11-11, Stallings 0-2.2, Hamnett 0-0, 0-Hymn 3-
2.2, Staugh 0-0, 0-Hymn 24-3 23-10)
Jef Johnson 1-1-3, Barry 1-1-15, Hull 4-6, 19-4,
Henkill 6-0, 12-1 Wintz 1-0, Wintz 12-1, Balker 4-1, 14-
11-11, Stallings 0-2.2, Hamnett 0-0, 0-Hymn 3-
2.2, Staugh 0-0, 0-Hymn 24-3 23-10)
*Kamala Kaaas 34-33 Total foul—Kansas County 25, Kansas 22 Fouled out. White Blunt Rebounds. Kansas County 20 (Blunk 5), Kansas 19 (White 7), Kansas 13 (Barry 8). Technique—None. 13, Kamala 16 (Barry 9). Technique—None.
Coach stresses complete game to 'Hawks
Sports writer
By Dawn O'Malley
"Missouri has a good inside game with Renee Kelly," Washington said.
The starting time is 7:30 p.m. at Allen Field House.
If the Kansas women's basketball team plays well in both halves of tonight's game against Missouri, they should win, Kansas women's head basketball coach Marian Washington said.
Missouri
Adkins, who is averaging 22.2 points and 9.2 rebounds a game.
BEST BUILT IN THE WEST
Women's Basketball
12-9, (Big B: 8-4)
7:30 tonight
at Lawrence
Kelly is averaging 22.5 points and 12.3 rebounds per game to lead the Tigers.
"We need to pound the boards, play great defense and run the floor to win."
Kansas is in a four-way tie for first place with Iowa State, Oklahoma and Colorado. All four have 5-3 records. Missouri is in fifth place with a 4-4 record.
Missouri has beaten Kansas both times the teams have played this season. In the first game, Missouri won 74-19 in Lawrence. In the second game, at Columbia, the Tigers won 77-68.
"The rivalry is enough to ignite any fuel tank," Washington said. "We want to keep in first place.
Kansas is led by forward Vickie
"A lot of teams didn't expect Kansas to be contenders. That's surprising because I can't imagine anyone underestimating us."
She said some people might have thought Kansas wouldn't be good this season because it lost three players to graduation.
"We are now convinced we are able to win," she said. "We are
tough. We beat the top contenders by a good margin.
washington said the team that wins the Big Eight would have to perform consistently. She said her team knows it is in control of its own destiny as long as it keeps winning.
At half time of tonight's game, Adkins will be awarded a plaque from the American Women Sports Federation as player of the Week for her performance against Oklahoma earlier this month. She scored 35 points and had seven rebounds as she led the Jayhawks to an 85-67 upset over then-No.14 Oklahoma.
Also at half time, the Kansas Union Bookstores will be sponsoring a shoot out from half court. Five fans whose program numbers are drawn will have an opportunity to shoot for a 20-inch color television. Everyone who tries to make a half court shot will be given an AM-FM clock-radio.
Also, a task force organized to promote women's and non-revenue
sports will give away gifts. The winners will be determined by a drawing.
They will be giving away two tickets to Florida, a T-shirt, pizza and coke certificates from Pizza Shuttle and a semester of free cable vision from Sunflower CableVision.
Probable Starters
Missouri
F 14 Tracy Ellis (6-1)
F 22 Kelly DeLong (6-0)
C 42 Renee Kelly (6-1)
G 21 Lisa Ellis (5-10)
G 20 Maggie LeValley (5-8)
F 33 Lisa Dougherty (5-8)
F 25 Vickie Adkins (6-1)
C 40 Kelly Jennings (6-5)
G 24 Evelute Ott (5-7)
G 30 Toni Webb (5-8)
Kansas
Sports Briefs
The tournament is scheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m. Sunday on the Robinson racquetball courts.
Entries for the doubles and mixed racquetball tournament are due at 5 p.m. tomorrow in 208 Robinson.
Racquet tournament will begin Sunday
All entries must be accompanied with a $1 fee.
Stadium is renamed
OTTAWA — The football stadium at Ottawa High School has been named for quarterback Steve Grogan, the Ottawa native now with the National Football League's New England Patriots.
The school's Cyclone Booster Club proposed two years ago that the stadium be named after
Grogan's performance last year when he replaced starting quarterback Tony Eason in six regular season games and then took over when Eason faltered in the Super Bowl loss to the Chicago Bears spurred renewed efforts to honor him.
Grogan, but a majority of the school board at that time preferred to wait.
500 tickets to be sold
Athletic department officials announced yesterday that 500 tickets will go on sale for Saturday's men's basketball game against Nebraska at Allen Field House.
The tickets will go on sale at the ticket office in the main lobby of the field house half an hour before the 1:10 p.m. start of the game.
Oklahoma tops K-State
From staff and wire reports.
From Kansan wires
alesente hopes to fill offensive, defensive holes
NORMAN, Okla. — Darryl Kennedy scored 32 points and Tim McCalister added 25 last night to lead No. 10 Oklahoma to an 87-77 Bight victory over Kansas State.
Norris Coleman, a 6-foot-8 freshman, led the Wildcat with 31 points and 16 rebounds. Senior Joe Wright chipped in another 19 points and three assists for Kansas State.
The Sooners were in control throughout the game and led 42-27 at halftime.
The Sooners remain one game behind Kansas in the Big Eight conference race. The Jayhawks beat Missouri last night 100-68.
Kansas State dropped to 15-9 overall and 3-6 in the conference Oklahoma improved to 22-2 and 7-2.
By Jim Suhr
High school football players across the nation will ready their pens today to sim colleague letters of intent.
Sports writer
Jayhawk head football coach Bob Valese said Monday that he hoped his 1986 recruiting class would fill offensive and defensive voids left by 14 graduating seniors.
That group will include several high school and junior college players who will sign to play with Kansas.
Valesente said that although Kansas had recruited to restock its cupboard at all positions, Kansas had placed particular emphasis on filling holes in the running and receiving games and the defensive line and secondary.
On the offensive side, All-Big Eight split end Richard Estell heads a list of four seniors and a junior that will leave the Kansas receiving corps. The other players are seniors Sandy McGee and Skip Petee, both of whom
Some football recruits may sign today
oany is the first day high school seniors and junior college transfers can sign with an NCAA Division I team. The Kansas football team has 30 scholarship available. Some of the players who have orally committed to Kansas are:
■ Mike Fisher, comback, 5-10, 187, Mount Sen Antonio Junior College, Calif.
Darryl Golden, defensive lineman, 8-5, 255, Junction City.
**Mike Dinnel, offensive finman, 6-3, 215, Adams Clty, Colo.**
Kelly Donohoe, quarterback, 0-1, 160, Harrisonville,
Mo.
Chip Budde, center, 6-foot-2, 235 pounds,
Lawrence.
David Gordon, tight end-defensive end, 6-4, 214, Independence, Kan.
Brad Hinkle, defensive back, 6-1, 180, Olette South.
Tim Ledford, fullback, 6-2, 215, Mount San Antonio Junior College, Calif.
George McCray, defensive back, 6-0, 185, Fort Scott College College.
Peda Samuel, wide receiver, 5-8, 185, Independence (Kan.) Community College.
**Scott Schriner, fullback, 5-10, 195, Butter County Community College, Idaho.**
Guintin Smith, wide receiver, 5-11, 175, Houston Vates
Arnold Snell, tailback, 8-1, 195, Independence (Kan.)
Community College.
Craig Stoppel, offensive tackle, 0-5, 230, Lawrence.
Bill Sutter, running back-defensive back, 5-11, 180,
Lawrence.
David White, defensive tackle, 6-4, 255, Hutchinson Junior College.
were wide receivers, and tight end Sylvester Byrd. Junior wide receiver Johnnie Holloway has decided to forfeit his remaining year of college eligibility and apply for the 1986 National Football League draft.
Kansas also must replace starting quarterback Mike Norseth and leading rushers Lynn Williams and Arnold Fields.
Norseth threw for 2,995 yards and
Fallstell kick Kansas receivers last season with a school record of 70 catches for 1,109 yards and four touchdowns.
15 touchdowns last season as Kansas led the Big Eight in passing offense. He also threw 175 passes without an interception.
Williams led the Jayhawks in rushing with 373 yards despite playing in only seven of 12 games. Fields gained 336 yards.
Defensively, Kansas will be without the services of defensive cornerstone Willie Pless, an All-Big Eight selection at linebacker. Pless led the Jayhawks with 191 tackles, 110 of which were unassisted.
Valesente declined to comment on how successful this season's recruiting was until after today's signings. He said the recruiting season had gone smoothly considering the shake-up when former head coach Mike Gottfried left to become head coach at the University of Pittsburgh in December.
"From the time when the transition occurred, we had to concentrate on hiring a new staff while keeping the ball moving with recruiting," Valesente said.
()
14
University Daily Kansan
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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 Kansen business office at 804-4339.
Hillel כפלט presents the retreat "Being Jewish on a College Campus" Feb. 28 - Mar. 2 for more info, call Hillel office
- Checks must accompany all Admissions ads admitted to The University Dalton Kavanan. These ads can be in advance.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
A Lesbian/Gay Dance at the Jazzzazz-February
19 from 6 p.m. all ages, but I aged. Required. Sponge-
head.
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement.
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
- No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertiser
ATTENTION JUNIORS and 1st semester
ATTENTION SENIOR JUNIORS and 2nd semester
MORTAR BOARD Senior Honor Society are due
Thurs. Feb 20 by p.m. in强. Available in
Strong and Nomakeer. Available in 214 Strong
and Nomakeer.
THE HEAT IS ON!
The S.A.M.S. Heart of Rock 'n' Roll Valentine Day Battle of the Bands!
all proceeds go to M.S. Students Against Multiple Sclerosis
The Fanatix
Sons of Liberty
All of the Above
Absolute Ceiling
The Breakers
Pariah
Altered Media
Kansas Union BallroomTickets $3on sale atSUA Box Office
Friday, Feb. 14
on
SPRING BREAK #6 Do it right in Daytona with ECHO TRAVEL. The best trip for the best price.
For more info, call Bill at 841-3856 or Jim at 842-8731.
Romance on the IIIH. Take a romantic ride with your sweetheart by your side. Carriage rides through campus Friday 6-9 p.m.; $1, $2 reserved. Tickets available-SUA Office.
WILD WEDNESDAY
Get a 12" custom made pizza with 1 Coke for only $4.99
FABULOUS FRIDAY
832 Iowa 1445 W.23rd.
841-8002 841-7900
This is an open offer No coupon required
30 min. FREE delivery or $3.00 off
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Open for lunch
Want to coordinate entertainment and activities for the University of Kansas? Pick up your SUA application today! SUA Office, Level 1, Kansas union.
A HOME DATE? Is your car clean? AT
AWRENCE AUTO CLEANING making your car
pol years newer is our specialty. 6th and Maine.
98-5671
**Rest'14:** Color T.V. $29.80 a.m. Smithy's TV,
14 W. 72nd, 94-537. Satur., Sat. 9:30 a.m.
14 W. 72nd, 94-537. Satur., Sat. 9:30 a.m.
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $9.00.
Smith's TV 1447 W. 147, 842-8453. Mon., Sat.
Saturday.
SUA Board Member applications due by Thurs.
October 21, Questions? 984-3477.
sIA applications for President, Vice-President,
Treasuryary due by Mon., Feb. 17th
for the year shown.
Romance on the HILI, fresh flowers for your
luxury home. LAWRENCE FLOAT CENTER - Winter Special.
LAWRENCE FLOAT CENTER
REASEACH PAPER WRITING STUDY
SKILLS WORKSHOP. Learn about: defining a topic; using the library; taking notes, and organizing/writing the paper. Monday, February 17, 7-9 p.m. 300 Hall FREE! Presented by Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 804-4044
ENTERTAINMENT
Dig out your Halloween contime; show it off in the Brazilian Carnival party. Feb. 22, Elks Club, Brazilian Carnival party, Elks Club, Feb.22: Where the boys are.
Having a party? Need a DJ? Call Music Mix. The Best mix of music in Town. 942-890-7230. $7.00 you gourls 5 of great dance music. Music from Doug E. Fresh to Modern English.
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE DJ DANCE MUSIC, A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 749-4713.
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to pre-register a room to listen to sound system that can fill a large room and can accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in Lawrence, Manhattan and Salina. Call 814-934-8543.
FOR RENT
2 bedroom apt $350/mo plus utilities. Big living room w/sky light on second and third floor 5/12 month lease w/one month deposit. 3 blocks from the Union, 841-4931.
3 BR house, East Lawrence, bus route, 1894
building, insulated two double lot, gardenizes
320 square feet.
3 bdm. Newer 1/2 dupla. Super Nice. $40/oim
Northwood I. 1-453-788. Ever. 1-831-696
You are tired of living in a dorm! Come and live at Berkeley Flats. Vacancies available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 843-2116
Available March 1: beautiful 2 BR apt. On bus route: 5 minute walk to campus, downtown. New carpet, clean, spacious. $330/mo. plus low utilities. 84-5797, 84-5566, 84-3449.
First come, first served, only a few twins at. 210 W. 26th W. on KU bus route, between Gibson's and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We pay hot and cold water, you choose options. Call 843-4644 for appointment.
For rent, 2.bdm, brand new apt. 1.1/2 blks from Kansas University $300/mo plus utilities. Sublease a possibility. Call Chuck Lodom 843-328 am 8 a.m. p and pam. FARM 843-328 after 5 p. Keep trying. Furnished one bedroom apartment near University Park. No parking. pels please. 843-5600
LEASE NO FOR FALL and/or SUPLEASE for spring and summer. Available possibly as early as April 1. Roomy and comfortable 2 BR duplex in good location w/nice yard. No pets. No lawn mowers. No pet. Lease and Refs. req. Couple or small family pref. $365/mo; fall; spring and summer negotiable.
Quiet, one bedroom apt., big lawn, $165/mo 5/12 month lease/wдep. 331 Indiana. 841-6913.
SUBLEASE NOW. 1 BDRM Hanover Place apt. One month free rent. 841-1212.
Spring break-Delklet 2-bedroom condo, pool, hot tub, sauna. Located in Silverthorne, close to Brecknidge, Copper, and Keystone. $100/night. (303) 436-1713.
Sublease now: 2-Bdm apt. Very nice and close to campus. 842 9738.
MASTERCRAFT offers completely furnished 1.
master bedroom apartments all near campus. (Call
086-725-9933)
TOWNHOUSE should be immediately CornishRhb
substitute from Meadowbrook Apk at 842-300-2911
or contact TOWNHOUSE.
CRAZY MIKE AND ROB announce their awe-
inspiring sale. Guitar amp, technics turntable with
cartridge. No reasonable offer refused, cash real-
ly talk. What a harbain! 749-2065.
Top of the line Kenevo turtail with moving cartridge. Perfect condition, full warranty.
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
2-track tape recorder, 40-inch tape deck, boom box and car stereo, all completely reconditioned and Lawrence Custom Radio, 94 W. 32rd St.
Comic Books, Playbooks, Penthouses, et al.
COMIC BOOKS 1 to 13 True. Tue. & Sat. 10-8.
New Haven Public Library
FOR SALE
Baseball cards and sports montage. Buy. Sell.
Basketball cards. Baseball cards. Open 10 M.S. M.
W. 32rd Street.
19 inch color film, excellent picture, solid-state for $120. Evenings 841-8864
DRUMS: Ludwig 7p se w/cymbals, hardware,
$500; £540; Pearl 5 pc se w/Ziljkion cymbals
$120; £130.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U) repair
Phone: Call 808-677-6000
Phone for information: 808-677-6000
Double-sized waterbed, hand-made frame. B75.
Stereo speakers, big loud, bacel and. 749-0124.
For Sale. Brother automatic 12 correction
For Sale. Brother automatic 12 correction
For Sale. Foewer 360 waist bass wmw EV 12-15
For Sale. Foewer 360 waist bass wmw EV 12-15
21" x 42" stereo cabinet.
Hinge glass top & door. 4 shelves,
solid, excellent condition.
For Sale: 102 BW Sysreco. Excellent condition.
Pricel: $92.49 P-44, 100 miles, highways, miles.
5 yrs. Warranty.
Hafler 500 watt power amplifier. Brand new with
factory warranty. $600. Tom 842-1510.
$130 or best offer.
Call 842-3626 evenings.
Mobile Home For Sale. 12 x 20 feet. Partly furnished. Will take- paid-m payments.
$200-down $150-mo. $2500. Buyer-pay-all-bill.
843-6330.
cabinet. $900 also. Also (2). Pensalt cab. $1,500. Movewis
cabinet. $800 also. Pensalt cab. $1,500. Armed head
cabinet. $300 additional. much more. $300.
Western Civilization Notes - Now on Sale! Make sense to use them in 1. An study guide? 2. For class use in the classroom. 3. Analysis of Western Civilization - available now at Town Criet, The Jayhawk Bookstores, and online.
One All Sports ticket for sale. Call 642-082 before 11 a.m. or after 7 p.m. Keepying.
SPHING BREAK-Round Trip Airline Tickets to
Mittal $189.00. Best Price Call Cam at
lmb.com
1947 Pontiac GT0, new paint, overbuil, and much more. Bare. a must see. Call 842-293-2002
MGB convertible. 1977 Only $50,000 miles. Great inside and out. Be ready for spring. 841-6233.
AUTO SALES
RABBIT-83 new radicals, air, cassette, low mile, yellow metallic paint, Movie motion. Moving must be done with gloves.
Need Money for School! 1980 Audit 5000, loaded,
51.000, $500, serious injuries 749-1782.
Regal 1878. Good body, sound mechanics,
cross stab. Awake in 6000. Call Larry after 6
minutes. Asleep
Regal-1978. Good body, sound mechanics.
Regal-1978. Asking A50 Carriage after 42
hours.
T3 Dataun 8120, GSA savet, new tree, reliable in
weather, asking $50, Call 843-2944.
PERSONAL
For shame! Michelle and Sherri still don't have dates. We here at Hayes or Mia Makematschner were supposed to visit her for a response. Worse yet, several other girls have approached us and asked us to find their dates. We are not available. So, call 841-7409 (ask for Keith) or 842-9609 (ask for Michal) in front of the door of your dreams. If you are unable to visit them,
So, call 841-7480 (ask for Keith) or 8491-6306 (ask for Mick) to meet the girl of your dreams. If you're looking for a date and you re (M or F), call us. Darn it. We're serious!
Interested in meeting a business major (male), between the ages of 27 and 35, who enjoys classical music? Please reply to Box 322, provided you are Signed, a male enthusiast involved in finance.
Girl just wanna have fun. at the Brazilian Caravalnova party, Feb. 22, Elks Club.
"CAMP COUNSELORS - M/F - Outstanding Slim and Trim Down Camps. Tennis, Slime, Diving, and Basketball camps plus. Separate girls' and boys camps. 7 weeks. Separate colleges' Compasses at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in California. Contact: Michele Friedman, Director, 942 Wheeler Dr., No. Woodmire, N.Y. 12581.
BUS. PERSONAL
rabbit eyeland
LONDON OR KINGSFORD
841-6100
8th and Laurentius
Street, No. 12, KL 841
fax No. 12, KL 841
"the best value on sight"
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care; confidentially assured. Greater
area call Area for appointment.
913-345-1400
VALENTINES!
jewelry posters THE MUSEUM SHOP rocks books
V-Postcards 15¢
Blue Heron Futons
V-Postcards 15¢
V-Cards 50¢
V-Notes 25¢
Instant Valentines
Class Ring Day-Why wait for the ring man when its ring day every at Balfour House. 935 Mass.
Fort Walton Beach $109
Daytona Beach $127
Padre Island $149
Fort Lauderdale $159
Museum
10-5 Mon.-Sat
1-5 Sundays
864-4450
Enjoy the tropical climate of the Brazilian Caravan
Carnival. Feb. 23. Elks Club.
of Natural History
SPRING BREAK SPECIALS!
BREAK FOR THE BEACH
Hurry, these packages are selling out fast!
Silver Cube
- Roundtrip air from K.C.
* 6 nights hotel accommodations
* Roundtrip transfer from hotel
* Hawaiian flower lil greeting
* Welcome champagne
* First party
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattress
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.-Sat. 12:50 p.m.
841-9443
- 4 nights at Silver Creek Inn
- 7 night hotel accommodations
- Roundtrip shuttle from airport to resort
Creative, thinking singles find kindred spirits through the directory for educated singles. LOVELINE, P.O. BOX 36026L, Lawrence, Ks. 60496. One-issue membership $4.00.
TRAVEL CENTER
Jayhawker Towers
- Roundtrip air from K.C.
- March 10-14
HAWAII
Only $519 per person
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts.
for KL students
Roadside shuttle from airport to resort
- Individual Contract Option
1601 W.23rd
M-F 9:5:30
Sat. 9:30-2 p.m. 841-7117
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
Southern Hills Center
Only $360 per person!
2-Br. Apts.
for KU students
- Limited Access Doors
- Academic Resource Center
- 9½-Month Leases
- All Utilities Paid
breakfast party
* March 8-14
- Air Conditioned
- Swimming Pool *
- Free Cable TV
- Free Cable TV
- Laundry Facilities
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Apply Now for Fall/Spring
1603 W.15th
843-4993
GAY/LEISHAN? Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stumped, self-addressed envelope to: TRIANGLE TIMES, P.0 Box 26492, KC04196, MK4196
a different deli special every day
DELI SPECIALS
Today's Special:
B. B.Q. Beef
B. B.Q. Beef French Fries 16 oz. Drink $2.25
THE KANSAS UNION DELI
E enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841-7749.
WOMEN'S CAREER FAIR
Wednesday
Feb. 19, 1986
7-9 p.m.
This Fair is a chance for women to meet other women to discuss career choices, paths and options. If you want to know how to pursue your career in a male carer shopping, transferring careers or wondering if it's time to work for you, you'll be will no formal presentations, just a chance for you to talk to professional women. Some of the fields to represent are:
Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
Advertising
Police Work
Hurting
Health Education
Psychology
Accounting
Financial Planning
Management Consulting
Radio TV
Print Media
Athletic Coaching
Art Administration
Visual Arts
Art Language Pathology
Gales
Dometica
Clinical Care
Armed Services
Sponsored by
Women's Resource Center
Float Connection
Floating
is believing
Special $10
14 E. 8th St.
749-0771
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed ShirtTart, 749-1611.
Weekly Beer Special
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY
808 W.23rd
Sweets For Your Sweetie. Color Pretrait. A Valentine's Day gift. Special Sweel 760-8131.
Thousands of R & B albums $3 or less. Also
items toiars. Sat and Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quintaults B11 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or
Trade all music style
Feb.12-18
Wedemann 12 pk $3.52
Busch 12 pk $4.17
Black Label 12 pk $3.52
Coors Light 12 pk $5.28
Miller 12 pk $5.28
Miller Lite 12 pk $5.28
Truckload Bedding Sale! Our warehouses have received several truckloads of name brand bedding. These are factory fresh with no damage; however, they are discontinued, close out covers. Your choice will either or full set sizes $99. Inspect your order for quality and pick up the product (pickup label) 728 New Hampshire, open everyday!
1
KANSAN
Rent^19' Color TV. $28.88 a month. Sniffy's TV. 1-
Mint. Rent^23' 842 w/ TV. $731.88 a month. Sniffy's TV. 1-
Mint.
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
The Union's recording
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang岛/Port Aranas from only 862, and skiing at Steamboat or Vail from only 930. See the bags, more. Hurry, call Sunchease Tours for more information and reservations to toll free 1-800-321-5911 or contact a local Sunchease Tours operator to get your Spring break counts. count on Sunchease.
FAX 01234567890
Want a new fun way to say I love you on Valentine Day. Try a VIDEO TARGET $14.85. Available from 12 to 4 or by appointment. Now available at Valentine.com/LandLiv Video Hillcrest Shopping Center #84-6298
Classified Heading:
the Sistine's recording of the day's entrees & soups
CLASSIFIEDS
Rent' 19.0 $ T $2,986 a month Curtis
W w Striol W w Striol 824-8758 Sat - Mon 9:30
9:00; Sun
Write ad here
Hand-crafted wires, winkeculpures and fantasies.
Order now for spring. SKWVKORS 1/2 l/ass.
no. 208 uplasts. 842-573-9276 for appointment.
Hers and His Hair Designs. Quality hair care at reasonable prices. We use the finished hair products available and you give the personal attention you deserve. We礼金 $7, per shirt $25 and up with haircut included. Linda and Barbara B415-894-1238 Connecticut
impatient passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course, fine art.
Modeling and theater portfolio - shooting new beginner to professionals, call for information.
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 our personalized delivery. You design it or let our talented artists. 220. W. 219. (bench gelson's) 841-4396.
Name:
Address
BLOOM COUNTY
Dates to run:___ to
Phone:
Net a Winner...
THE CLASSIFIEDS
| | 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 5 words added | $30* | $50* | $75* | $1.05 |
Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Haff
Classified Display
1 col. x 1 inch = $4.40
I'VE BEEN DOING A RATHER LARGE AMOUNT OF DREAMING LATELY, MILO...
THE FAR SIDE
I
By GARY LARSON
Shoulder Chops throw away spare file
Farmer Brown froze in his tracks; the cows stared wide-eyed back at him. Somewhere, off in the distance, a dog barked.
CLOSEST FULL OF
NANIETIES..VENGEFUL
GRANT SPOTTED
SMOKYWARNKERS...
CALL OF WHICH CONNIVES
WE THAT THE PISTINCTION
OF THE WORLD
OUR PREMORIAL WISDOM
OUR PROBLEMATIC THIN.
WAB!
WOOSH!
by Berke Breathed
1
WHADDYA
THINK?
I DON'T
BUY IT.
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
15
Attractive male age 24 years dating/relationship with black female. Interests in health, exercise, career. No job. Serious replies to Kevin, Bun 3002 *wrences, Ks.*
LOST/FOUND
**Help!** Reward for return of large tan parse and contents taken from large 2/7/18. Very important.
HELP WANTED
BabySister for 5 month old infant, general housekeeping and ironing in our home. Tues & Fridays. Must have reliable transportation. References: $3.50 per person. Call 842-7377 for application
CRUISSEHSHIP HIRING! $16-$2,000 Carribean,
World, Wall; Call for Guide, Cassette,
Newservice! (916) 944-4344 X UKANASRUCLEASE
Continued student hourly position: book
wpm and has previous office experience
in various office duties. Must be able to
work 20 hrs, wpm $.75/hr Start immediately.
Complete application by 02/14/16.
to complete application by 02/14/16.
SUMMER WORK/JOHNSON COUNTY. ST
Fourty-hour week, 8/4½ hour. Tues thru Sat, May thru August. Work commits to door-to-door data collection and computer terminal positions available. Send resume or letter of intent to: Sharon Rhoades, RJN Environmental
Squibb, Squbb Rd., 21, Ste. 112, Mission KA 68029 912-4380
ENTERTEL
offers YOU
- Paid training
- Advanced opportunities
- Hourly wage with incentives
- Pleasant working cond
- Pleasant working cond.
- Flexible hours
AND
- $5-$6 per hour
Call 841-1200
Student Staff Positions summer orientation program 1986. Required qualifications: minimum 2.0 ga, returning to KU for Fall 1986 term. Reqs. Master's degree or equivalent may apply. Desired qualifications: leadership abilities; knowledge of university programs and disciplines; experience in enthusiasm about university. Job descriptions and applications available in the office of the Head Office at the University. Dated by Feb. Friday, 14, 1986. A E.O. E
Summer Jobs. National Park Co.'s 21 Parks, 5000
Openings. Complete Information $5.00. Park
Resort. Mission Mtn Co., 651 2nd Ave. W.N.
KAL, MT 99001. MT 99001.
AIRLINE HIRED BOOM: $144-$199,000.
www.airlineboom.org/observations.htm
Airline Boom
Classified Ads
GOVERNMENT JOBS *JOB 6* $10.49; $10.25 yr. New
Hospital, Call 187 693 4007 or 187 R-798 for
cash.
Help Wanted: housekeeping Monday & Wednesday afternoons. 843-3386
Hospitalized and inpatient care
OVERSENA JOBS, Summer, yr. round, Europe.
S.Am. America, Asia, All fields. $2000 3000 m
sightseeing. Free info. Write LIC, PO Rx 52-KS-I
Corona Del Mar, CA 92825.
PROGRAM ASSISTANT/RESEARCH Aid for Midwest Council on Aging, 40%/$100, $400/month. Mail resume to the University of Kansas, 804-111 for complete job description and deadline. Deadline Feb. 15.
Putt-Putt Golf course now taking applications Monday through Friday 5pm/1pm until Feb 12.
SERVICES OFFERED
IRONING: in my home, Shirts, pants, 75 Skirts
1. Next day service 841-9299 after 12:30
LOSE WEIGHT NOW. 10-29 lbs. per hour on Herbal products. As seen on T. V. Call 842-7006
Locksmith Fax Call Service Re-
Keying Auto Service. Call
Reasonable Price. Call 749-3023
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841.5716
BRIGHTHIGH- Free Frequency Testing, Confidential Counseling, 843-941-0
MATH TUTOR. Bob McArs holds an M.A in math from K.U. where I, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professors at Boston College, then teaching at Baylor, 86 per 40 minute session. Call 843-902-8327.
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Assistance and affordable training. JBH.824/743.
1-2-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional WORD
1-2-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional papers,
paperbacks, Data Word 841 9770
24 Hour Typing, 10th semester in Lawrence
Humes, dissertations, papers. Clone to campus
with an instructor.
A 3-professionally typing. Term papers, Theses,
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. using IBM ISEM
tools.
A. L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers. phone 843-6875 after 5:30.
assistently Your Type! Word processing, typing
and editing software 941-6318, 941-6319,
service available. 844, Illinois, 941-6318.
phone: (844) 941-6318.
Ace Word processing. Accurate, affordable,
friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes.
All materials must be received by
voice available. One block from campus: 842-2576.
AlbaOmega Computer Services - Word Process
Microsoft Computer Services - WordPress
Microsoft Document upgrading. Free estimates
Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates
1-3-1 TROW ROOT PROCESSING experienced, concientious, reliable. Rust job accepted. Call 911 for details.
Complimentary hair conditioner with all of our hair cues with Paul Mitchell products. Tina, Donna, and Cathy. Ultimate, 14 E, Bth. 79-6797.
DEPENDABLE, professional; experienced.
JEANETTE SHAFFER — Typing Service.
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape.
DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE
available on latex paper students (up to 30
weeks) Mummy's Tymmy 8, 942-8738
before 9 m. Please.
English B.A. Typing and tutoring. Spelling correction, overnight service available. Great rates. 843-8643
Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs.
experience. Phone: 842-2319; 5:30; BAR.
Letter perfect papers and resumes. WRITING
LIFELINE, 841-3690
GODD IMPRESSIONS Typing: Spelling/punctuation error corrected, reasonable rates. Cassette tape
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations resume, applications. Spelling corrected
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
THE WORDOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147
EXPERIENCED TYPIRT, Term papers, theses,
thesis previews, and correct spellings.
Figure 83-954. M. Wright.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processor, manuscripts, resumees, theses, letter formatting
Players say Orr will stay at ISU
AMES, Iowa — Iowa State University basketball players said yesterday that they were convinced coach Johnny Orr would finish his coaching career at ISU, despite reports that Orr is being courted for a number of other coaching jobs.
United Press International
"Coach Orr's not going anywhere," Junior center Sarn Hill said. "He's going to stay here and retire. We won't let him leave anyway."
Orr, who is in his 21st season as a collegiate head coach, has compiled a 331-282 record. He's 82-43 at Iowa State and his 82 victories rank him third on ISU's career coaching ledger.
His record includes 12 years in the Big Ten as the head coach at Michigan, where he guided the Wolverines to two conference championships, before coming to ISU six years ago.
Orr, one of the most colorful coaches in the Big Eight, has been mentioned as a candidate for a number of coaching jobs, including the top job at Ohio State where Eldon
WANTED
Orr also has been mentioned among a list of candidates to take over the scandal-ridden Minnesota basketball program, but has told his players he was not interested.
Miller will step down at the end of the season.
"He told us he turned down the Minnesota job. I don't think he is going anywhere," said sophomore guard Gary Thompkins.
Orr was lured to Iowa State in 1980, taking over a program that had recorded losing records in five of its previous six seasons and didn't appear in the NCAA tournament in over 35 years. He wasn't an immediate success, as Iowa State finished 9-18 in his first year, but the Cyclones played before an average crowd of 9,170 fans, an increase of nearly 3,000 fans over the last year's attendance.
Things have changed dramatically since then. In Orr's fourth season, the Cyclones put together their first winning campaign, going 16-13 and finishing fourth in the Big Eight. Iowa State earned a bid to the National Invitational Tournament, marking the first time in 40 years
that a Cyclone team had been invited to participate in a postseason tournament.
Thanks got even better in 1984-85 as Orr led Iowa State to a school-record 21 victories and a third-place finish in the Big Eight, the Cyclones' highest league finish in seven years. Iowa State also advanced to the championship round of the Big Eight postseason tournament where the Cyclones dropped a two-point decision to Oklahoma. The Cyclones were rewarded with their first NCAA tournament bid in 40 years but were eliminated by Ohio State in the first round.
Attendance also picked up last season as the Cyclones played before an average of 13,295 fans in Hilton Coliseum.
Before the start of the 1983-86 season Orr said this could be his best team ever at Iowa State, and he might be right.
Though the Cyclones still have six regular-season games remaining plus the Big Eight postseason tournament and possible NCAA or NIT competition, Iowa State stands 14-7 overall and 5-3 in Big Eight play.
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share great brand-new apartment very close' to campus. Microwave, W&D, dishwasher, $130/mo. Call 841-5515 anytime.
Female roommate for queit 2 B/R trailer. Pur-
nature 3 month plus 1/2 utilities. Call 748-448.
Keep Room!
Female female wanted to want ap. above
Jabook Bookstore $12.50 per month. 847-676
for 3.99.
Ex-Ohio St. player donates scholarship
WANTED: COMPUTER for wordprocessing work or not. Need IBM compatible, dual disk drive, monitor. Will consider printer or other than IBM formats. Call 749-2196.
Female roommate to share three bdrm. house.
Very nice & quiet neighborhood. Bdrm 482-9738.
Female to take over contract at Naismith Hall.
Feb. rent and meal - FREEL. Call Bdrm 102-1034
WANTED male roommate to share deluxe apartment very close to campground *150.00/m²* No pets allowed
Wanted: Basketball tickets for the K-State game on Feb. 22. Please call 841-6363.
Wanted. Clean, responsible roommate. 1 bedroom in a 3BRatr Traitman $145/mo plus 1/3 utilities. Available immediately. Dishwasher, balcony, pool & teens & basketball courts. Call (866) 270-9922.
amount of the donation, other than to say it was "substantial."
Lachey, a first-round selection of the Chargers in last year's National Football League draft, was named to UPI's All-American Football Conference second team.
United Press International
"I want to express my thanks and appreciation to Ohio State University and to its fine football program for the opportunities it gave me," said Lachey, a native of St. Henry, Ohio.
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Jim Lachey, former All-America guard from Ohio State and rookie starter last season for the San Diego Chargers, has financed a perpetual athletic scholarship with a large contribution, OSU announced yesterday.
"This is a way of repaying the university as well as helping future Ohio State football players earn an education and play big-time college football."
was moved by Lachey's generosity and sincerity.
"With this gift, Jim Lachey has set a unique standard for all former Ohio State athletes and especially those who have the good fortune to pursue careers in professional sports," Bay said.
"This gift is in keeping with Jim's attributes as a leader and I can only hope that other Ohio State student-athletes will follow his example. We are very proud of Jim Lachey and it is gratifying to know that he is equally proud of his alma mater."
OSU Athletic Director Rick Bav
The school did not reveal the
Romance on the Hill Watch for details... Feb 14
---
TRANSPORTATION AND HOTEL INCLUDED OR YOU CAN DRIVE FOR ONLY $119 - WE'LL STILL PROVIDE THE HOTEL.
GAMMONS SNOW G
Campus Marketing invites you to
All you need is $50 down and your space is reserved! Sign up TONIGHT at
PARTY IN DAYTONA BEACH FOR ONLY $184 HASSLE-FREE
"SURF'S UP" PARTY
Wear beachwear
and be eligible to win a FREE TRIP! For more information call Tim and Tony at 841-0409
University Senate Human Relations Committee
Feb. 12 & 13 Jayhawk Rm, KS Union
7:30 - 10:30 pm
The committee seeks information on activities relating to South Africa on campus, opinions on divestment, and advice and recommendations on the positive educational role university governance can play in the issue of South Africa.
Any organization or individual may schedule hearing time by calling Janet Jackson, 864-4225.
University Senate Human Relations Committee
David M. Katzman, Chair
Martie Aaron
Cynthia Baldwin
Donald Brownstein
Robbi Perron
Lisa Hunt
Dana Manweiler
Caryl Smith
Vernell Spearman
Stanley Sterling
Elen Seward
Michael Wyly.
PUBLIC HEARINGS SOUTH AFRICA
11
zipatone®
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Half Sheet 50¢ OFF
2-Half Sheet Pkg. $1.00 OFF
one sheet per coupon expires Feb. 28,1986
RU
KU Bookstores
Kansas Union Burge Union
1988 Olympians may not be billed for living expense
United Press International
LAUSANNE, Switzerland — The International Olympic Committee has asked the organizers of the 1988 Calgary Winter Games to provide free accommodation in the Olympic village for all athletes, coaches and officials.
Frank King, chairman of the Calgary Board, said that the proposal was raised informally Sunday and would be discussed in detail yesterday when Calgary presents its progress report to the IOC Executive Board.
The accommodation bill could cost
Calaryau about $2.5 million.
The Organizing Committee had budgeted to house 2,600 competitors and ancillaries in the village at a daily rate of $45 per person for 21 days.
"The real cost to us is 90 dollars a day, so we are already offering a 50 percent subsidy." King said as he prepared for yesterday's meeting. "Now the IOC is asking for the other 50 percent. We are prepared to discuss it."
King said he would also be meeting later with IOC President Juan Antonio Sanarranch and Canadian IOC Executive Board member Dick Pound
The IOC may offer to make up the difference if Calgary was prepared to meet part of the extra costs.
"The money could come out of the Olympic Solidarity Fund," an IOC official said.
The IOC is also quite likely to provide more funds for travel. It paid the travel expenses for four athletes and two officials from each of the national Olympic committees at the 1984 Summer and Winter Games and has budgeted to increase the figures considerably for 1988.
President Samarack wants record participation both at Calgary, Alberta, and Seoul, South Korea, venue of the 1988 Summer Olympics.
A record 7,055 athletes from 140 countries competed at the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Olympics, despite the East Bloc boycott, and the Winter Games in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, attracted a record 1,490 competitors from 49 countries. The IOC realizes there are extra costs to be met by countries now that the Winter Games have increased from 12 to 16 days.
But the IOC and Olympic organizing committees have grown wealthy on the back of U.S. television money, and Samaranch said he thought they should lighten the load for national Olympic committees.
Calgary presented its progress report to the Winter Sports Federations on Monday and received a favorable response.
"There has been a *lot* of progress regarding facilities and other matters and the Federations were very satisfied," an IOC official said.
The first draft of a revised Olympic Charter has been completed and the second draft is being prepared for final approval at the IOC session in Lausanne in October together with the new Athletes Code of eligibility.
The eligibility code will be discussed by the General Assembly of the Association of National Olympic Committees in Seoul in April and the Summer Olympic Federations will deliver their views also in Seoul during the Asian Games in September.
17
16
University Daily Kansan
ADVERTISING PROTECT Each of these advertised items are required to be readily available for sale in each kroger store except as specifically noted in this list. If we do run out of advertised items, we will offer you your choice of a compatible brand refracting the same savings or a markdown which will entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the advertised price within 30 days. Only one adverted voucher will be accepted per item.
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS
COPYRIGHT 1986
THE KROGER CO.
Kroger
YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO SHOP WHERE ELS
Ad effective thru Tuesday February 18, 1986
ANYWHERE ELSE!
REGULAR OR LIGHT
SCHAEFER
BEER
$599
24-12-OZ.
CANS
COST CUTTER PICKS
2 LITER BOTTLE
COCA-COLA
99¢
2-LITER
BTL.
BEST CHOICE PRICE
FROZEN
TOTINO'S
PARTY PIZZA
88¢
10-OZ.
PKG.
FRESH 100% PURE EXTRA LEAN
MORE BEEF
GROUND BEEF
98¢
LB.
IN 5-LB. FLAVORSEAL PKG.
SUN GOLD
WHITE
BREAD
19¢
16-OZ.
LOAF
CUST CUTTING PRICES
TYSON GRADE A
FRESH
WHOLE FRYERS
49¢
LB.
CASH CUTTER PRICE
GOLDEN BROWN
FRIED
CHICKEN
$399
8
PCS.
FOR
INCLUDES 4 GOLDEN ROLLS
SINGLE INGREDIENT
THIN CRUST
FRESH PIZZAS
2 $5
FOR
CINEMAS
TV
ICEBERG
HEAD
LETTUCE
48¢
EACH
HEAD
FAST OUT OF PRICE
GOLDEN RIPE
DOLE
BANANAS
29¢
LB.
VIDEO MOVIE RENTALS
24 HR. RENTAL
MON.-THURS.
$199
DON'T FORGET VALENTINE'S DAY... FEBRUARY 14th
24 HR. RENTAL
FRI., SAT., SUN.
$299
D
DON'T FORGET VALENT
GIFT BOXED
RED ROSES
$29.95
DOZEN
"I LOVE YOU" $399 BOUQUET ...
DOUBLE STEM ARRANGEMENT
ROSE $399 BUD VASE ...
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERY DAY!
Legal tender Embarrassment of riches awaits Washington law interns. See page 3.
SINCE 1839
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
吹树
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
Public airs views on S. African rule
See related story p.12.
Chris Bunker, Shawnee third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
Double t
and Lori Poison Staff writers
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association
By Tim Hrenchir
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you've ever seen."
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do."
Eram Martinez dr Both are employee
The group has be positioned to the pro which $4 million in bonds were issued The petition's at Route 2, said Richa Monday evening a petition be revoked wouldn't be dere students.
Daryl Richarda Douglas County Citable Development of the petition distr from its main purp oppose the propose Lawrence.
Richardson said, was a total misunder- whole thing. We woke the constitutional be taken away from Akin said, "Mayb singled out student voters."
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
A section of a citition that proposes students from votitis was deleted by of the group, the said yesterday.
Arn
The petition site
students who are
residents vote "the
problems by upside
balance between
and voters who hare
interest in the w
community."
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imba called temporary rent residents. John Reinhart, s Kansas secretary said last week the poses, state st
By Lynn Maree R Staff writer
Congress allocant
as part of dec
of Defense budget.
through the Arn
The University receive $2 million my to study the eius, chemicals con with chemical w and animal nerve researcher said ye
Ban o delete
By Juli Warren Staff writer
The money from i-plement neurotoxin already in progress, said Elias Mich of the neurotoxin re biocorie of biochick.
Michaelis said the focus on the human defend against the than on the mili chemicals.
David Katzman, chairman of
Senate Human Relations Committee.
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
High scores fill for
KANSAN
MAGAZINE
Spannocchia
KU's Italian Campus
KU’s Italian Campus
za
VOL. 2, NO. 1 (USPS 650-640)
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 12, 1986
arketing ersity of
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Legal tender Embarrassment of riches awaits Washington law interns. See page 3.
SINCE 1899
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
I
Windy Details page 3.
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
A FORMING OF A WINDOW FRAME.
Public airs views on S. African rule
and Lori Polson Staff writers
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
By Tim Hrenchir
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
Double 1
See related story p.12.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation
Chris Bunker, Shawne third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested,
we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do.
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you've ever seen."
Richardson saic was a total misuse whole thing. We we the constitutional r be taken away from Akin said, "Mayl singled out studer voters."
Eram Martinez dr Both are employe
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
David Katman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
Arn
The group has bposition to the prowhich $4 million inbonds were issued The petition's aRoute 2, said Rich Monday eveninga petition be rewoldn't be derstudents.
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
Congress allocate December as part of Defense budget. through the Ard
By Lynn Maree R Staff writer
Daryl Richards Douglas County Cisible Development of the petition distr from its main purp oppose the propose Lawrence.
The University receive $2 million my to study the eius, chemicals con with chemical wau and animal nerve researcher said ye
The petition st students who are residents vote "h problems by ups balance between and voters who ha terest in the community."
He said he mean
Akin said he was
the potential imba
called temporary
residents.
John Reinhart,
Kansas secretary
said last week the
poses, state st
The money from ilientment neurotoxin already in progress, said Elias Mich of the neurotoxin re professor of biocose
Michaelis said th focus on the human defend against the than on the milk chemicals.
Ban o
delete
A section of a citition that propose students from votions was deleted is of the group, the said yesterday
By Juli Warren Staff writer
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a;
arketing ersity of
izza Hut aid. This food was
onates a
y to KU
is con-
Leiweke
KUAC.
been a like said
sity enthe encreated, associa
our fans
Hunter,
uid. "It's
man."
expected many another against
*propos.* Hunter and anir since. a wasn't but, already
Hunter.
"it's
eople"
estimate
zza Hut
on was a
porters,
with the
iversity
d. They
er and
i be fun
ly in the
n games
a of the
as just a
ise of the
came to
S
re series
Ion Lee-
State
ttracted Libera- Yasser George
2
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
a big
ly at KU
e," Eps-
us up.
to be
Kansan Magazine
n of the future.
s could bring to
p a stu-
bly in-
presen-
family.
Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awaits
Washington law interns.
See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Hurricane
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
AIR CONDITIONING
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
See related story p. 12.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
Public airs views on S. African rule
By Tim Hrenchir
By Tim Hickman and Lori Poison
Staff writers
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawne third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested,
we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do.
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you've ever seen."
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
Double 1
David Katzman, chairman of
Senate Human Relations Committee.
Eram Martinez dr Both are employe
Arn
By Lynn Maree R Staff writer
The money from (i) plient neurotoxin already in progress, said Ellas Mich of the neurotoxin professor of bioc
The University receive $2 million my to study the eius, chemicals con with chemical wa and animal nerve researcher said ye
Michaelis said the focus on the humar defend against the than on the milte chemicals.
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
Congress allocates as part of a budget of Defense budget. Through the Arn
Ban delete
By Juli Warren Staff writer
The petition state students who are residents fight "ha problems by upside balance between in and voters who have terest in the w community."
Daryl Richardse Douglas County Cisible Development, of the petition distr from its main purge oppose the proposes Lawrence.
A section of a citation that proposes students from votin was deleted by of the group, the said yesterday.
The group has been position to the pro-
position which $4 million in bondes were issued h.
the petition's an
Route 2, said Richard
Monday evening an
petition be rewor
wouldn't be dere
students.
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We woke the constitutional rig be taken away from Akin said, "Maybe singled out student voters." He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imba called temporary resident residents. John Reinhart, sp Kansas secretary of said last week that poses, state sta
High scores fill fans
Table of Contents
SANT'ANDREA
Cover story:
6 An Italian Fairy tale
THE FAMILY OF TOMMY MURRAY
KU students travel to an italian villa for study and culture.
University Life: 15 Dating Games
101
ALSO INSIDE . . .
The bikes that go anywhere are going up in sales.
Personal ads and video dating services offer help to those in search of dates.
Timeout: 19 Mountain Bikes
Don't End Up In The Park Next Fall
Watch for your housing guide in the March issue of The Kansan Magazine
KANSAN Magazine
Housing Guide 1987
Upfront:
5 Soccer Fever
U. S. soccer tags behind international teams in skill and popularity.
Timeout:
9 Spring Break Options
Spring break doesn't have to be spent on beaches or ski slopes.
Holiday:
10 Valentine's Day
Americans celebrate Feb. 14 with cards, cards and more cards.
11 Valentines Past
Students make their mark in business before graduation.
Careers:
12 Student Businesses
Christmas and spring break internships give students an edge in the job market
13 Short-term Internships
The Oriental wav of beauty rest comes to Lawrence.
EDITOR: SHARON ROSSE
Business:
17 Futons
KANSAN MAGAZINE
The Kaman Magazine appears monthly as a supplement to the University Daily Kaman. An
adventure and photographs be considered for publication should be sent to 111 Stuffer-Final Hall,
Lawrenceville, VA 22970.
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1420 Crescent Rd • Lawrence, Ks. 66044
za
arketing
ersity of
izza Hutaid. This food was
onates a y to KU l is con-Leiweke
sity enthe encreated. associa-
Kansan Magazine
been a
ke said.
"
KUAC.
our fans Hunter. id. "It's people."
estimate
Hza tuck
on was a
porters
with the
iniversity
d They
er and
1 be fun
ly in the
propos-
Hunter and an-
r since.
n wasn't
ame, but
already
in games
e of the
as just a
use of the
expected o many lanother against
S
came to
re series
lon Lee-
State
attracted
Libera-
Yasser
George
a big
by at KU
us" Epsu-
up to be
n of the
future,
s could
bring to
p a stubly
in-press-
family.
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
3
Legal tender Embarrassment of riches awaits Washington law interns. See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
100
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
BARRANGED TUNNELS ARE BUILT TO FIT THE BACK OF A CAR. THE FURNITURE IS DESIGNED FOR WINDOWS AND DOORS. THE FINISHING IS MADE FROM PRE-Cast Molded Concrete, and the Door Frame is Made From Steel.
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
See related story p.12.
Public airs views on S. African rule
and Loh Poison Staff writers
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
By Tim Hrenchir
Chris Bunker, Shawne third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do."
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
“This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you’ve ever seen.”
Double Eram Martinez o Both are emplo
Arr
By Lynn Maree Staff writer
Hail
Stan Winer
The Universit receive $2 million my to study the in, chemicals co with chemical w and animal nery researcher said
The money from
element neurotoxi
already in progres
y, said Elias Mih
of the neurotoxin m
professor of bioch
Michaelis said t
focus on the hum
defend against the
than on the mi
chemicals.
Congress alliance December as part of Defense budget through the Ar
A section of a citation that propose students from vitiations was deleted it of the group, the said yesterday.
The petition is students who are residents vote "no" problems by upse balance between and voters who hareest in the community."
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbal called temporary repent residents. Jo Reinhart, s Kansas secretary said last week that poses, state str
Ban o delete
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We woke the constitutional ri be taken away from Akin said, "Mayb singled out student voters."
By Juli Warren Staff writer
Daryl Richards Douglas County Cleisible Development of the petition district from its main purport oppose the propose Lawrence.
The group has been position to the pro which $4 million in bonds were issued The petition's an Route 2, said Richi Monday evening a petition be rewoid wouldn't be dew students.
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CH 6
Soccer still not a thrill for Yankees
While most U.S. residents will be spending their summer watching either the basketball world championship games or professional baseball, outside of the United States, soccer fever will rise again, when Mexico hosts the 1986 Soccer World Cup.
In June and July more than one-half of the world's population will be either watching or listening to the top 24 countries compete in the games.
Costa Rica ended U.S. hopes to participate in this world event by defeating them in the second qualifying round last summer.
But for the ninth consecutive time, the United States will not be present at the most popular world cup, which is held every four years.
Soccer is considered the king of sports in the world because it is simple and inexpensive, allowing third world nations the chance to compete. The only important equipment needed for a street game is a ball, enough space and players.
Carlos
Chuquin
Soccer was rapidly accepted when it was introduced in European and Latin American countries in the early 20th century. But because the sport was not widely known in the United States until the 1950s, U.S. teams have lagged behind the rest of the world.
Years have gone by, and U.S. soccer has achieved limited success. The last time a U.S. team played in a World Cup was in 1950. But that year teams were invited to the tournament and did not have to compete in qualifying rounds.
Pele, the most talented athlete to ever play this sport, tried to popularize soccer in America in the mid-70s.
Despite the enormous help from this Brazilian player, the United States still has not reached the level of even an average team internationally.
Kansan Magazine
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
a
keting city of
izza Hut
1. This
od was
ates a
to KU
s con-
ziweke
ty enie ene eated,ssocia-
een a e said.
ur fans
Hunter,
d. "It's
ople."
stimate
z Hur
n was a sorters.
with the
iversity
l. They
r and
be fun
ly in the
KUAC.
n games of the as just a se of the
propos-
Hunter
and an-
r since.
I wasn't
me, but
already
expected many another against
S
came to
re series
don Lec-
State
attracted
Libera-
Yasser
George
a big
at KU
e"Eps-
up to.
a of the
future.
s could
bring to
a stu-
bility in-
presen-
family.
Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awaits
Washington law interns.
See page 3.
SINCE 1839
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
吹树干
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
Public airs views on S. African rule
and Lori Polson
Staff writers
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
By Tim Hrenchir
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
See related story p. 12.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawnee third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do."
“This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the worstest thing you’ve ever seen.”
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
Double
Eram Martinez Both are emplo
Arr
By Lynn Maree Staff writer
The Universi
receive $2 million
my to study the
ins, chemicals or
with chemical y
and animal nerv
researcher said
The money from plient neurotoxin already in progress, said Elias Mias of the neurotoxin professor of bioch
Michaelis said I focus on the humd defend against the than on the mi chemicals.
Congress alloca December as part of Defense budget through the Ar
High
Ban delete
By Juli Warren Staff writer
A section of a citi-
tion that propose
students from vetti-
vations was deleted i
of the group, the
said yesterday.
The petition st students who are residents vote "in problems by up balance between and voters who herest in the community."
Daryl Richards
Douglas County Ci
sible Development
of the petition distr
from its main purp
pose the proposal
Lawrence.
The group has his position *to* the which $4 million in bonds were issued.
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We wore the constitutional be taken away from Akin said, "Mayb singled out student voters."
The petition's at Route 2, said Richi Monday evening a petition be rewon wouldn't be der students.
John Reinhart, shap
Kansas secretary said last week that
poses, state sts
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbal called temporary resident.
Many reasons are given for the failure of soccer in the United States. Three professional sports — basketball, American football and baseball — have heavily overpowered soccer in popularity.
Also, the lack of outdoor soccer players is extremely evident. For the qualifying games, the United States used 24 players — 18 of them played for an indoor soccer team.
CU C
Up Front
U. S. teams have not competed successfully in international games because of the North American Soccer League's refusal to adopt international rules. Instead, the league has created rules that have made the games more interesting for spectators.
For instance, NASL rules provide for overtime in the case of a tie whereas international games may end in a tie if they are not for championship titles.
Twenty-two of the teams competing in this year's World Cup earned their spots by playing a series of qualifying games. The organizer, Mexico, and the 1982 World Champion, Italy, were granted spots in the tournament without playing qualifying games.
These and other rule changes mean that U.S. teams must adjust their strategies every time they play outside of North America.
Because of these reasons, the U.S. team will miss the chance to play against 24 of the top soccer teams in the world.
The outcome of the 1986 World Cup may be a surprise. Because of the improvement of many countries, it is expected to be more competitive than in past years.
It has practically been a tradition that if a European country hosted the cup, a European country would win. This phenomenon also occurred in Latin American countries.
Brazil broke that spell in 1958 when 17-year-old Pele led his team to its first world title by defeating Sweden in Stockholm.
Soccer fans will be watching some excellent teams such as the always-powerful Brazil, the champions from Italy and the new powerhouse France.
Brazil has always had a skillful team, but it hasn't won a world title since their third title in the 1970 World Cup.
French national team has midfielder Michel Platini as its key player. Last year, Platini was voted the 1965 European Player of the Year for the third time. Platini is considered the closest player to Pele in skills and is now probably the most talented player in the world.
Italy is given little chance to win because most of the players who led them to the 1982 world title in Spain have retired.
A country that will attract more soccer fans than usual to the World Cup is France. The
The newcomers to the World Cup — Canada, Paraguay, South Korea and Morocco — will be tested by these more experienced teams.
The most popular sport in the world will be at its best in June and July. The U.S. soccer team could learn from the ultimate strategies and skills that will be performed by the teams at the World Cup. But the improvement of U.S. soccer depends on whether the North American Soccer League will change its policies and accept international rules.
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E
za
arketingersity of
izza Hut aid. This food was
onates a y to KU l is con- Leiweke
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Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
a big ly at KU e," Eps us up. I to be
Kansan Magazine
n of the future. s could bring to
up a stubily inepresen- family.
5
SINCE 1889
Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awaits
Washington law interns.
See page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Hurricane
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy
Details page 3.
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Public airs views on S. African rule
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
By Tim Hrenchir and Lori Poisson
and Lori Poison Staff writers
See related story p. 12.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawnee third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
Double
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the worstest thing you've ever seen."
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do.
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students
Eram Martinez c Both are emplo.
Richardson $ was a total mis- whole thing. We the constitution be taken away ) Akin said, "M singled out stu voters."
Arr
He said he m
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called temporary
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John Reinhar
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poses, state
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
By Lynn Maree Staff writer
Congress allo December as pa of Defense budf through the
The Universi receive $2 million my to study the ins, chemicals c with chemical and animal ner researcher said
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Ban dele
By Juli Warren Staff writer
By Jull Warrel
Staff writer
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tion that prop
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said yesterday.
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See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
High scores fill for
Cover Story
The castigione che Dio sol sa (the caste that only God knows) in Spannocchia, Italy, serves as a cultural and educational center for students.
Photo courtesy of Dana Torchia
Villa is fairy-tale classroom
By Abbie Jones
Kansan Magazine writer
Call it a fairy tale. Students live in an Italian villa, relax in red poppy fields and revel in artistic projects — all because the daughter of an Italian count fell in love with a KU graduate.
The story grows. The Etruscan Foundation, which began with this international romance, promotes architecture, dance and literature in its most practical form — being there. Today young architects can reconstruct an Italian farmhouse while dancers perform in the streets of Tuscany.
The Italian Count Cinelli founded the Etruscan Foundation in the late 1950s to promote archeological studies, said Harris Stone, associate professor of architecture and local sponsor of the program. The organization now has expanded to include a variety of cultural ventures.
Cinelli's home, a 2,000 acre family estate in Tuscany, Italy, and field headquarters for the foundation, houses participating students who receive real life experience in their fields of study, Stone said.
As a result of changing agriculture in the region, the aristocracy in Tuscany have turned many of the estates into condominiums, he said. But Cinelli, a respected archologist, wanted to make his villa a center of archeological study.
Stratton wanted to expand the program, and in 1982, he and his wife and Stone developed the first architectural program. The couple needed a place to live, so the Count gave them an abandoned farmstead to restore and live in.
The University's link to the program formed when a KU graduate named Randall Stratton met the Count's daughter, Francesca, while studying in Spannocchia. The couple later married.
The architecture students now work on the Tuscan farmhouse preparing it for Stratton and his wife.
Stone said Cinelli once said, "I don't want to be a hotel keeper."
"We are really in historic
The purpose of the program, he said, was to get students to do work that wasn't possible in the classroom. Actual "hands on" experience is the key, he said.
"It breaks down the barrier between the design process and the construction process," he said.
Steve Kratchman, St. Louis senior, said the practical skills he gained from the program filled holes in the University system.
"There isn't so much information that travels from the teacher to the student," Kratchman said. "You have to do it yourself. It requires time and making mistakes."
preservation," Stone said. "We want the building to be true to itself."
K ratchman won an
'We are really in historic preservation. We want the building to be true to itself. It breaks down the barrier between the design process and the construction process.'-Harris Stone.
Kansan Magazine
associate professor of architecture
and urban design
For six weeks, students do rough construction work such as knocking holes in walls, building archways and finishing the interior of the farmhouse. Students make in-studio design proposals for other farmhouses and tour Italian cities to study the architecture.
undergraduate research grant to study courtyards in Tuscany. For five weeks he waited on tables, cooked and gardened at the villa to earn money while doing research before the architectural program began.
"The students do the whole range of historical preservation
Stone said 11 architecture students were chosen from 24 applicants for last summer's program. The first year the program attracted only seven students.
activities," Stone said. "We use only traditional Etruscan building techniques and material. We build them the way those farmhouses have always been built."
"it's catching on because it's catching on nationally," he said.
s catching on because it's catching on nationally," he said. The first summer all seven students were from the University of Kansas. Last summer 11 of the 16 students were from KU and the rest were from other universities.
6
Spannocchia has military roots dating back at least to the 12th century, he said. The villa's main tower was used to defend the feudal estate during the 12th century and was a German headquarters during World War II.
Stone said a German and an American helmet with bullet holes in them were mounted on the walls of the castle's dining room.
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
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been a
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our fans
Hunter,
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J to be
n of the future. s could bring to
up a stu-
bily in-
spresen-
family.
Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awaits
Washington law interns.
See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TORRINGER
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy
Details page 3.
...
Public airs views on S. African rule
By Tim Hrenchir and Lori Polson
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
See related story p.12.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawne third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
Double t
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested,
we've educated, we've worked
politically," Bunker said. "At this
point, I don't know what else we can
“This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you've ever seen.”
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
Eram Martinez dnl Both are employee
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
Arn
High scores fill fens
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
Cover Story
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbalance called temporary resident residents.
John Reinhart, sh
Kansas secretary
last week that
poses, state sta
By Lynn Maree R Staff writer
The University receive $2 million my to study the efins, chemicals com with chemical waw and animal nerve researcher said ye
The money from plement toxinoxin already in progress, said Elias Mich of the toxinoxin reprofessor of biochem
Richardson said, was a total misunder-
whole thing. We wore the constitutional rig
be taken away from Akin said, "Maybe
singled out student voters."
Michaelis said the focus on the human defend against the than on the mill chemicals.
10
Congress allocate
Counsel as part of
of Defense budget.
through the Arm
The petition's an Route 2, said Richa Monday evening at a petition be rewoid wouldn't be derd students.
The group has be pro to the position in the which 4 million in crops were issued I
Ban delete
Daryl Richardse
Douglas County Cis-
sible Development,
of the petition distr
from its main purp
oppose the propose
Lawrence.
By Juli Warren Staff writer
Brvan Graves/KANSAN
Harris Stone, associate professor of architecture, shows architecture students his clay model of the castle at Spannocchia, Italy. Stone and several groups of architecture students have spent the past four summers reconstructing the castle and other buildings at Spannocchia.
The petition stai
students who are
residents vote "ha
problems by upsel
balance between
and voters who ha
terest in the w
community."
A section of a citation that proposed students from votin was deleted by of the group, the said yesterday.
The Cinelli family bought the estate at the beginning of the 20th century from the Spannnochi family who owned it from the 12th to the 19th century. The Spannnochia aristocracy abandoned the villa at the time Italy became a republic.
Architects aren't the only students who have used the villa to put their talents to practical use. Students of dance and literature have joined the ranks of traveling artisans.
A Lawrence dance group, made up of University Dance Company members and other KU students, performed modern dance routines in Spannocchia and its neighboring towns in the summer of 1984 through the dance program sponsored by Joan Stone, wife of Harris Stone.
Cindy Stone, Dodge City senior and one of the dancers who traveled to the villa, said she and the other dancers often performed on hills or by statues in the center of town while the townspeople looked on.
"Half the town would watch us," she said. "People would peer at us. People always wanted to know more."
The 12 dancers, called 4-5-6 Speed-up and Friends, visited such towns as Soviicille, Rapolano Serre, Chiusdino, San Galgano Siena and Rome.
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
Although the Italian citizens spoke no English, the communication was spurred by the dance, she said.
"The communication gap was lost because we were expressing ourselves through movement," she said. "For those people to see a dance in the middle of their town is like a communication line between us and dance and America."
Joan Stone, adjunct assistant professor of dance, said the dancers rehearsed in a medieval building next to the villa while swallows flew in the windows.
"I think it was a maturing experience to bring the most contemporary modern dance to these medieval and Renaissance settings," she said. "Performance experience for dancers is hard to be by."
Susan Noakes, associate professor of French and Italian, said the literature program she coordinated in Spannocchia was designed to teach the history of two classic novels.
Noakes said the week-long program, which took place two years ago, focused on Dante's "Divine Comedy" and Boccaccio's "Decameron."
The villa also served as a liieray playground.
"We try to understand how in the same period, two such different works can be produced," she said. "This is an introduction to give people background so when they open these books they don't feel disoriented."
Participants visit places mentioned in the books and discuss the region's history. Noakes said the program was made for adults and students who love literature.
"You have to go into training," she said. "Reading the 'Divine Comedy', can be like running a marathon."
This summer Noakes plans to return to Spannocchia to study and tour Tuscan streets and a medieval abbey. But this summer she can offer students one credit hour for staying 10 days and up to three credit hours for staying longer.
Noakes said she hoped to tighten the link between the architecture, dance and literature programs at the villa.
She had provided Harris Stone with history on neighboring cities, as well as collaborated with Joan Stone on an Italian dance performance and an interpretation of one of Dante's poems.
"The most exciting thing about Spannocchia is the chance for interdisciplinary study," she said.
Inglis petrol station
Wilson Street
Phone 0137 6582 9456
Email inglispetrolstation@inglis.com
www.inglispetrolstation.co.uk
0137 6582 9456
BASILICA
Photo courtesy of Joan Stone
Michelle Hyde, Kansas Qily, Kan., graduate student; Elizabeth Majors, 1984 KU graduate; and Brenda Bauer, Quarter senior, perform in Rolando Sansei Italy. The dancers and other members of the Lawrence dance group, 4-5-6 Speed-up and Friends, performed in the summer of 1984.
Cover art by Steve Blackburn, St. Louis senior.
Kansan Magazine
za
arketing ersity of
'izza Hut aid. This food was
donates a
y to KU
l is con-
Leiweke
been a
eke said.
"
KUAC,
sity enthe encreated, associa-
our fans
Hunter,
"it's
people."
estimate
zza Hut
on was a porters.
with the
diversity
d. They
er and
b be fun
ly in the
proposes,
Hunter and an-
ser since,
n wasn't
me, but
already
in games
e of the
as just a
use of the
expected no many
i another against
S
came to us
two series
Jon Lee
State
attracted
Libern-
Yasser
George
to a big
by at KU
e," Epss
us up
to be
in of the
future.
could
bring to
up a stu-
bility
inpres-
family
7
Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awaits
Washington law interns.
See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A man is hurting.
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
SCHNEIDER
Public airs views on S. African rule
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
Their styles were different but their messages were the same; KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
and Lori Poison Staff writers
By Tim Hrenchir and Lori Poleon
See related story p. 12.
Double ta
Chris Bunker, Shawnee third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do."
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you've ever seen."
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
Eram Martinez drill Both are employee
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We woe the constitutional rip be taken away from Akin said, "Maybe singled out student voters."
Arm
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
He said he meant I Akin said he was the potential imbalance called temporary resident residents. John Reinhart, spi Kansas secretary of said last week that poses, state sta
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
By Lynn Maree Ro Staff writer
The group has best position to the prop which $4 million in bonds were issued la. The petition's aut Route 2, said Richmond Monday evening an petition be rewouldn't be dero students.
The University receive $2 million f my to study the eff ins, chemicals com with chemical war and animal nervous researcher said yes
Daryl Richardson Douglas County Citislable Development, of the petition distraught from its main purpo oppose the proposed Lawrence.
The petition state students who are residents vote "has problems by upset balance between t and voters who have interest in the w community."
The money from it plement neurotoxin already in progress, said Elias Micha of the neurotoxin res professor of biocen
Congress allocate December as part of of Defense budget. through the Arm
Michaelis said the focus on the human defend against the on the militi chemicals.
Ban o delete
High see
A section of a citation that proposed students from votin was deleted by of the group, the g said yesterday
By Jull Warren Staff writer
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a
rketing rsity of
zza Hut id. This god was
nates a to KU is coneiweke
seen a te said.
KUAC,
ity enhe enreated, ssocia-
ar fans Hunter,
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ne toeries Lec-tate erected ser-asser orge big (KU bps-up. be theure, could go to stu-insan-ally.
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
Kansan Magazine
Legal tender
.
Embarrassment of riches awaits Washington law interns. See page 3.
SINCE 1839
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A man falls from a tree.
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
...
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Public airs views on S. African rule
Double t
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
The petition state students who are residents vote "has problems by upset balance between two and voters who have interest in the we community."
and Lori Polson Staff writers
See related story p. 12.
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
A section of a citation that proposed students from votin tions was deleted by of the group, the is said yesterday.
The group has best position to the prop which $4 million in bonds were issued in. The petition's aut Route 2, said Richter Monday evening an petition be rewarn wouldn't be dero students.
By Juli Warren Staff writer
Daryl Richardson Douglas County Citicible Development, of the petition distribt from its main purge oppose the proposes Lawrence.
By Tim Hrenchir
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbala called temporary resident residents.
John Reinhart, sp
Kansas secretary
o said last week that
poses, state sta
Chris Bunker, Shawnee third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Eram Martinez drill Both are employee
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We woul the constitutional rig be taken away from Akin said, "Maybe singled out students voters."
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
Congress allocate December as part of oil of Defense budget. through the Arm
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do."
Ban o delete
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the worstest thing you've ever seen."
Arm
Michaelis said the focus on the human defend against the than on the militi chemicals.
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
The money from it
plient neurotoxin
already in progress,
yilas said Elias Micha
of the neurotoxin
professor of biochem
By Lynn Maree Ro Staff writer
The University receive $2 million if my to study the eff ins, chemicals com with chemical war and animal nervous researcher said yes
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
High scores fill fans
Timeout
Trips offer ideas for break
By Dawn O'Malley
Kansan Magazine writer
For some students, spring break means basking in the sun on a white beach.
And package deals for trips to Daytona Beach, Fla., South Padre Island, Texas, and other balmy places are available in abundance.
But alternatives do exist for those students who want to bypass these spring-break hot spots.
Baer said he considered himself an amateur astronomer and wanted to get others interested in astronomy. The comet will be over the Southern Hemisphere during spring break, and Baer said New
Students hoping to catch a glimpse of Halley's comet might consider a trip to New Zealand, organized by Phillip Baer, 435 Illinois St.
Zealand would be the best place to view it.
Sunflower Travel Service. 704 Massachusetts St., is making the flight arrangements for Baer.
The weeklong trip for $2,599 includes accommodations on a sheep ranch in Omarama and breakfasts, and is designed specifically to view Halley's comet.
"This is organized essentially to see the comet," Baer said. "I have been advertising nationally for about a year. Spring break is almost like an afterthought. There has been casual interest shown from the students."
Students who would rather see stars of the theatre might want to take advantage of TransWorld Airlines' London Theatre Week package.
Anne Walters, travel agent for Holiday Travel Service, 2112 W. 25th St., said TransWorld Airlines was offering the
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The tour package, which does not include air fare, is about $195. It covers accommodations, transportation from the airport, baggage handling, half a day of touring London and two plays.
Walters said a round-trip ticket to London was $326 but prices changed frequently.
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Kansan Magazine
za
arketing ersity of
'izza Hut aid. This food was
onates a
ay to KU
l is con-
Leiweke
sity en the encreated, associa-
been a
eke said.
""
KUAC,
our fans Hunter, aid. "It's people."
estimate Hatz Hut on was a porter with the diversity d. They er and be fun in the
1. propos-
Hunter and an-
since.
2. wasn't
name, but
already
in games
e of the
as just a
use of the
expected o many I another against
S
came to
c series
don Lec-
State
tracted Libera-Yasser George
a big
at KU
e," Epss
us up.
I to be
n of the future. s could bring to
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
up a stuibly inpresen family.
9
Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awalts
Washington law interns.
See page 3.
---
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
雪天刮风,风力大,树干易折裂。
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
1960
Public airs views on S. African rule
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
By Tim Hrenchir
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
and Lori Poisson Staff writers
See related story p. 12.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawnee third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do.
Double
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the worstest thing you've ever seen."
bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
Eram Martinez c Both are employ
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
Arr
By Lynn Maree Staff writer
The University receive $2 million my to study the rins, chemicals co with chemical w and animal nerve researcher said y
The money from plement neurotoxia already in progresy, said Elias Miel of the neurotoxin r professor of bioch
He said he meant that Akin said he was the potential imbalance called temporary residents. John Reibart, spm Kansas secretary ofraid last week that poses, state sta
Michaelis said it focus on the human defend against the than on the mill chemicals.
Congress allocates December as part of Defense budget, through the Arm
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We wore the constitutional rig be taken away from Akin said, "Maybe singled out student voters."
Ban delete
By Juli Warren Staff writer
A section of a citation that proposed students from votin wities was deleted by of the group, the g said yesterday.
The petition star students who are residents vote "hate problems by upset balance between t and voters who have interest in the w community."
Daryl Richardson Douglas County Citicable Development of the petition distra from its main purpo oppose the proposed Lawrence.
The group has bee position to the prop which $4 million in gi bonds were issued la. The petition's au Route 2, said Richard Monday evening an petition be rewouldn't be dero students.
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Gifts may vary,but for most Valentine's Day means cards
By Heather Fritz
Kansan Magazine writer
On February 14th we should pause and consider what Valentine's Day truly means:
$1.7 billion to the mailing card
$2.7 billion to the greeting card industry.
From a Boynton card, Recycled Paper Products, Inc.
To Charlie Brown it means an eternity of empty mailboxes.
Valentine's Day can mean many things to many people. To children it is scissors and glue and "Mommy" crawled lovingly in crayon across construction paper. To young women it means flowers and chocolate. For many young men, it means racing to the store on Feb. 13.
eternity of empty hearts.
But for most people, Valentine's Day means cards. Lots of them. 850 million, to be exact.
That is the number of cards the greeting card industry expects to sell for this year's Valentine's Day, said Rachel Bolton, product information coordinator for Hallmark Cards, Inc. in Kansas City, Mo.
Valentine's Day is second only to Christmas in card sales, Bolton said, and Hallmark alone has more than 1,700 different valentine designs. No wonder it's so hard to pick the perfect card.
Lawrence store owners say that cards are by far the hottest gift item for Valentine's Day, but they stock everything from heart-shaped ashtrays to heart-shaped cookie cutters. Give something a heart motif, add a dash of red, pink or white, and you have a Valentine's Day gift item.
There are heart pencils, puzzles, mugs, suckers, pins, stuffed animals, balloons, shirts, baskets, glass boxes, ice molds, candies, picture frames, and of course, flowers and candy. As Snoopy says in one card, "It was hard choosing the right valentine for you. I never realized there
were so many ways to say 'I love you.'
In contrast to valentine cards in the 1800s, which were left blank inside for senders to create their own poems, modern valentines hold verses that run the gamut from sentimental to hilarious.
mirabilous.
Humor is the fastest-growing category of greeting cards, Bolton said, and it shows in the types of cards available on store racks.
Sandy Arbuthot, manager of Arbuthot hallmark Card and Gift Shop, 2012 W. 23rd, said she stocked from 8,000 to 10,000 valentine cards and expected to have only 15 percent left over. She said the cards she stocked were picked by Hallmark based on the previous year's sales. She said she expected the biggest day for card sales to be Feb. 13.
Chris Todd, Garden City junior, said he usually decided the day before the holiday whether to give valentine cards.
Bolton said males bought more cards for Valentine's Day than for any other holiday, but she said more women than men seemed to think Valentine's Day was important.
"If I'm dating someone, then you always think of them," he said. "If she's someone who's nice and cute I might (give her a card), but if she's just a friend I don't."
Gwen McKillip, Lake Forest, Ill., sophomore, agreed but said the reaction depended on the man.
"Guys have more of a tendency to forget about it, or else it's a spur of the moment thing," said Jill Moeder, Newton sophomore. "Girls are more romantic."
"If they think they're real macho, they're not going to care," she said. "But I think all
girls get a kick out of Valentine's Day.
There also is the problem of what kind of card to buy. Lisa Cook, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, said she solved the problem by buying her husband both a funny card and a serious one.
"Most sound real fake, real sing-song," Cook said. "I usually try to find one with something I would really say to him."
"I try to pick one for them that they would give to me," she said.
Cheryl Allmon, Coffeyville junior, said she bought a lot of cards and picked them depending on her mood.
Bolton said, "The whole trend is toward being more individualistic, so people buy whatever strikes them at the time. The 1986 look is more stylized, with bolder, brighter colors and satin, glitter, punch-outs and laser-cut lace."
Since Valentine's Day is traditionally thought of as a holiday for lovers, it is surprising that the majority of cards are not bought for boyfriends or girlfriends, but for family. Bolton said that 75 percent of the individual cards bought are for relatives and that teachers receive the most valentines.
Many cards illustrate single life. And some of the funniest cards, such as this one, deal with characters who can't get a valentine.
To Mom
Happy Valentine's Day to a thoughtful mom.
bought me a new car.
Like I know if I ever asked some boy to be my valentine, and he'd said, "No way, Wormhead." you would have given me a big long hug and asked me to be your valentine even though we're both girls.
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Legal tender Embarrassment of riches awaits Washington law interns. See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
图示
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
Public airs views on S. African rule
Staff writers
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
By Tim Hrenchir
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
See related story p. 12.
Chris Bunker, Shawne third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do."
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the worstest thing you've ever seen."
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
Double ta
High scores fill for
Eram Martinez drink Both are employee
Arm
By Lynn Maree Ro Staff writer
The University receive $2 million fa mmy to study the effi ens, chemicals comm with chemical war and animal nervous researcher said yesi
The money from it plement neurotoxin already in progress ty, said Elias Micha of the neurotoxin res professor of biochem
Michaelis said the focus on the human defend against the than on the militi chemicals.
Congress allocate December as part of of Defense budget. through the Arm
Ban o delete
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By Juli Warren Staff writer
Daryl Richardsoh Douglas County Citicable Development, of the petition distra from its main purp opose the proposed Lawrence.
A section of a citiz tion that proposed students from voti stions was deleted by of the group, the g said yesterday.
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He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbalance called temporary resident residents. John Reinhart, sp Kansas secretary of said last week that poses, state sta
Holiday
Craig Sands/KANSAN
LAUREN ROBINSON
Janet Riley, assistant to the vice chancellor, searches through a large selection of Valentine's Day cards at Raney Hillcrest Pharmacy, 925 Iowa St. She said she was looking for valentines for friends, relatives and her husband.
First cards let sender pen verses
By Heather Fritz
By Heather Pintz
Kansan Magazine writer
The first commercial valentines were made in the early 1800s and were blank so the sender could create his own message. Most were hand-painted and special-ordered with decorations of satin, lace, ribbons, dried flowers, feathers, imitation jewels or sea shells. There were also kits on how to make valentines at home and books of verses to write inside.
British artist Kate Greenaway became famous for her valentines with country scenes in the late 1800's, and Esther A. Howland of Worcester, Mass., in 1847 became one of the first U.S. manufacturers of valentines.
The holiday officially began in A.D. 496 when February 14 was named St. Valentine's Day by Pope Gelasius in honor of two Christian martyrts beheaded in about A.D. 269, but there are different stories about the man behind the holiday.
One story says the priest Valentine was beheaded for marrying couples after Roman emperor Claudius II forbade young men from marrying. Another story says Valentine was jailed for refusing to worship Roman gods. The children of his village threw notes, the earliest valentines, through his cell window.
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Kansan Magazine
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Legal tender Embarrassment of riches awaits Washington law interns. See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A man clinging to a tree as it blows.
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy
Details page 3.
TALK TO THE FACILITY SUPPLIER. THE COMPANY HAS NOT RECEIVED A PAYMENT FOR THE WORK OR PRODUCTS PROVIDED. THE COMPANY MAY BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY WHATSOEVER ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF THE PRODUCTS.
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
Public airs views on S. African rule
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
By Tim Hrenchir and Lori Poison
See related story p. 12.
Chris Bunker, Shawne third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
and Lon Poison Staff writers
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do."
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the worstest thing you've ever seen."
Double t
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and student*
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
Eram Martinez dr Both are employe
Arn
Congress allocat
December as part
of Defense budget.
the Arr
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbal called temporary reent residents.
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We wot the constitutional ri be taken away from Akin said, "Mayb singled out studen voters."
By Lynn Maree R Staff writer
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
A section of a citi-
tion that propose
students from voti-
was deleted by
of the group, the
said yesterday.
Michaelis said tl focus on the huma defend against the than on the mili chemicals.
The University receive $2 million my to study the eins, chemicals con with chemical wa and animal nerve researcher said ye
John Reinhart, sr
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said last week the
poses, state st
The money from plient neurotoxin already in progress, said Elias Mich of the neurotoxin re professor of bioche
The group has be position to the pro which $4 million in bonds were issued.
Ban delete
The petition is students who are residents vote "the problems byups balance between and voters who hareest in the community."
Daryl Richardso Douglas County Cisible Development of the petition distr from its main purp oppose the propose Lawrence.
By Juli Warren Staff writer
The petition's at Route 2, said Richa Monday evening a petition be rewouldn't be dera students.
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George Laham, Wichita senior and owner of Laham Properties, a Lawrence real estate business, stands in front of some condominiums of which he owns several. His Audi 5000 is proof of his success as a student entrepreneur.
Students turn a profit in business
By Frank Ybarra
Kansan Magazine writer
For some students, frying hamburgers or working the late shift at Watson library isn't enough.
George Laham, Wichita senior, is one of those students. Soft spoken, yet confident, Laham is the owner of Laham Properties, a Lawrence real estate business.
Laham said he had taken a different approach to college from most students.
"Basically my attitude was in four years I wanted more than my degree," he said.
Laham's proofs of success are his middle-class looking condo and his upper-class looking Audi 5000 car.
Laham, who is 22 years-old, said he wasn't only interested in making money. Through his involvement in partnerships he has found another way to motivate himself.
"I enjoy making other people money," he said. "I just love to put deals together."
In 1985, Laham said, he sold about $850,000 worth of real estate through his partnerships.
"I had a good year," Laham
said with slight laugh in his voice.
Laham got his start in 1982 during Christmas break his freshman year when he decided he wanted to earn more money than the average college student.
Laham passed the state licensing test to sell real estate. That summer, despite high interest rates and a weak market, he sold $400,000 worth of property while working for his parents' real estate firm in Wichita.
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The next fall, Laham started working as a real estate broker in Lawrence while attending classes at KU.
Among the deals Laham is involved in now is a company called American Vidtronics. The company owns video games in grocery stores in Lawrence and two KU fraternities.
Laham and Scott Flanders, Lawrence junior, are partners in the company. Laham handles all the marketing and business aspects while Flanders does the repair and maintenance.
"If I can do it with a little time and a little money," Laham said, "I'll do it."
See Business, p. 14, col. 1
Besides working with business partners, Laham employs an accountant and a lawyer.
He said he spent 70 hours a week during the summer running his businesses and 30 hours a week during the school year.
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
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Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awaits
Washington law interns.
See page 3.
SINCE 1839
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A man trying to break a tree.
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
THE LADY OF THE WORKSHOP
Public airs views on S. African rule
By Tim Hrenchir
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Staff writers
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
See related story p.12.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawne third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
Double t
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do.
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you've ever seen."
Eram Martinez drills Both are employee
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
By Lynn Maree Ro Staff writer
Arm
The University receive $2 million f my to study the eff ins, chemicals comt with chemical war and animal nervous researcher said yei
The money from it plement neurotoxin already in progress, said Elias Micha of the neurotoxin resp professor of biocene
Michaelis said the focus on the human defend against the than on the milk chemicals.
Congress allocate December as part of defense budget. through the Arm
Ban o delete
A section of a citation that proposed students from votin woes was deleted by of the group, the g said yesterday.
By Juli Warren Staff writer
The petition stai students who are residents vote "hair problems by upset balance between t and voters who have terest in the w community."
Daryl Richardson Douglas County Citible Development, of the petition distra from its main purpo oppose the proposed Lawrence.
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We wore the constitutional rig be taken away from Akin said, "Maybe singled out students voters."
The group has bee position to the prop which $4 million in g bonds were issued lau The petition's仕 Route 2, said Ritchi Monday evening an petition be rewouldn't be dero students.
He said he meant,
Akin said he was
the potential imbali
called temporary re-
sent residents.
John Reinhart, sp
Kansas secretary of
said last week that
poses, state sta
High scores fill fans
Careers
Interns give up school vacations to gain experience for future jobs
By Lori Polson
Kansan Magazine writer
In today's highly competitive world, college students need more than high GPAs to get ahead.
of placement-office officials;
the more experience, the better.
Employers want people with experience. That's the consensus
For several years, students have been foregoing vacations and jobs that pay well during the summer to take lower-paying internship jobs in their career fields. But only recently have students considered giving up their Christmas and spring vacations to work.
Students can try to find internships on their own or they can go through the placement offices. The University Placement Office works with students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Education and graduate students.
The other schools have their own placement offices.
"Internships are important," said Ralph Crowder, graduate assistant in the University Placement Center. "They help students clarify expectations and gain invaluable experience."
Dana Leibengood, associate dean of the School of Journalism, said the school had offered an internship program during Christmas break for about 15 years. Last Christmas, about 180 students were placed. he said.
Most of the other placement offices on campus do not have special programs for internships between semesters, but it is possible for interested students to find work. Crowder said.
employers to take someone on such a short-term period," he said. "but it can be done.
"It is a little unusual for
"If we can open some doors, offer some resources and get people started in the right direction, that's great. But it's really up to the students."
Marsha Mitchell, college relations representative for Hallmark Corp., Kansas City, Mo., said her company did not have a policy for hiring students during Christmas and spring breaks.
"In the past, several students have asked to work during Christmas or spring break, but so far we have no policy for these types of internships," she said. "But just because we haven't done it in the past, doesn't mean that we won't in the future."
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"Often students don't see the long-term advantage of working during a break."
Leibengood said students with journalism internships during Christmas break earned academic credit, not a salary.
One of the best aspects of the Christmas break internship program is the opportunity for employers to see students working, he said, and not just in an interview.
"Often a student will be offered a paid summer internship at the same place he or she works during semester break," Leibengood said. "We've even had some people who took a full-time job."
Employers look for people who are aggressive, assertive and ready to barter salary for exposure, Crowder said.
"They have to make the employers want to hire them for such a short period of time," he said.
See Interna, p. 18, col. 1
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za
marketing versity of
Pizza Hut said. This food was
donates a
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been a eke said.
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13
Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awaits
Washington law interns.
See page 3.
SINCE 1839
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
.
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
Public airs views on S. African rule
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
By Tim Hrenchir
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
and Lori Polson Staff writers
■ See related story p. 12.
Double t
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawnee third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do.
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you've ever seen."
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
Eram Martinez drill. Both are employee
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We wow the constitutional rig be taken away from Akin said, "Maybe singled out student voters."
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbal called temporary resent residents.
Arm
John Reinhart, shp
Kansas secretary, ys
last inst week that
poses, state sta
By Lynn Maree Ro Staff writer
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
The University receive $2 million f my to study the eff ins, chemicals com mit and chemical war and animal nervous researcher said yes
The money from the plient neurotoxin already in progress, said Elias Micha of the neurotoxin res professor of biochem
A section of a citation that proposed students from votin wions was deleted by of the group, the g said yesterday
Congress allocate December as part of of Defense budget. through the Arm
The petition sta students who are residents vote "has problems by upset balance between b and voters who have interest in the w community."
Michaelis said the focus on the human defend against the than on the millet chemicals.
Daryl Richardso
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Ban o delete
See HEARING. p. 5. col. 5
High scores fill fans
Business
Continued from p. 12
He said the amount of time spent with his business had hurt his education. He would have rather earned a degree in accounting than in his major, economics.
"By working I sacrificed my business degree," he said. "They don't really teach real estate."
"Why not do it now," he said, talking in his cubicle at the car dealership. "I would not call it impatient. I would call it optimistic."
"I figure I can burn the candle at two or three different ends," Holmes said.
Holmes said he didn't think it was greed that motivated him.
"It does sacrifice a lot of time," he said. "This is not the life for everybody. I've had my share of fun, though."
What Laham also has found out about the world of business is that it takes away some of his social life.
Holmes spends 20 hours a week at his business and 50 hours a week selling cars.
Laham said, despite his early success, there still were times when he was short on cash because most of his money was invested in different deals.
Holmes, who has a black belt, shakes hands and talks with the confidence and congeniality of a car salesman. That's because when he's not running his club, Holmes is working at Steve Noller Motors selling cars
Laham said that although he might seem money hungry to some people, he worked more because of the challenge than the money.
Holmes, who is working on his master's degree in business, owns the University of Kansas Taekwondo Club, which offers classes in the Korean martial art.
"I've taken my losses," he said. "My parents have been there when I've needed them."
Laham also dedicates some of his available time to an organization called the Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs. He is one of three co-founders of ACE which provides students who want to run their own businessses with ideas and advice.
Laham, who will graduate in May, wants to continue in partnerships after he leaves KU, working mostly in commercial real estate.
Another co-founder is Bobby Holmes, Salina graduate student.
"I'm not a greedy person," he said. "In all my financial dealings I'm not after what is best for me. I go for what is fairest."
Holmes does the marketing, advertising and also teaches class along with two employees.
Holmes, who will graduate in December, got started in the Taekwondo club as a freshman. His need to be involved in something led to his taking over the club from one of his fraternity brothers in the fall of 1982.
Holmes said he probably would work for a corporation once he received his degree because he wanted experience in business.
"I want to be totally self-supporting and totally self-sufficient by 40 years of age," he said.
He wants eventually to help
other people with his money, in much the way he is helping people by being involved in ACE.
James Hicks, Topeka graduate student, is the third co-founder of ACE. Hicks operates the Like New Construction company with his brother, Patrick, who is also a student.
Hicks is working on his master's degree in business, but said he learned as much from owning his own company as he did in school.
"Business school teaches you how to work for someone else."
said. "I never felt a strong ad to be like everyone else."
Hicks company remodels houses in the Lawrence area. Hicks, who looks much like a businessman, said his company hired contractors to do the actual work on the houses.
Hicks likes the challenge of owning his own business.
"If you do it yourself," he said,
"you're absolutely responsible."
While Hicks is just starting out in his business ventures, two KU students are putting their plans on hold for awhile.
Beth Kasher, Omaha, Neb., junior, is co-owner of P.K. Popper, which sells flavored popcorn and frozen yogurt. Kasher and her partner Kelly Parks, Omaha, Neb., junior, announced just before their one year anniversary on Feb. 5, that they were going to sell their business.
Kasher said they had to sell the store, 6 E. Ninth St., because Parks was an occupational therapy major and hoped to work as an intern on the East or West coast this year.
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za
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
marketing versity of
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Kansan Magazine
Legal tender Embarrassment of riches awaits Washington law interns. See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HITCHING
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
The worker is using a welding tool to connect the two panels of the frame. The focus is on the connection point, which requires precision and care.
Public airs views on S. African rule
By Tim Hrenchir and Lori Polson
and Lori Poison Staff writers
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
See related story p. 12.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawne third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association
Double ta
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically." Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do.
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you've ever seen."
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
Eram Martinez drills Both are employees
High scores fill fens
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
Arm
University Life
CBS
The University receive $2 million in my to study the effe ins, chemicals comi with chemical war and animal nervous researcher said yes!
By Lynn Maree Ro Staff writer
The money from the plient neurotoxin already in progress et al. Said Elias Micha of the neurotoxin res professor of biochem
Michaelis said the focus on the human defend against the than on the milit chemicals.
Congress allocate December as part of of Defense budget. through the Arm
Ban o delete
By Juli Warren Staff writer
A section of a citation that proposes students from votin diswashed by of the group, the g said yesterday.
The petition states students who are residents vote "that problems by upset balance between the and voters who have terest in the w community."
Personal ads, videos help dateless
Daryl] Richardso
Douglas County Citi
sible Development,
of the petition distra
from its main purge
oppose the proposed
Lawrence.
John Reinhart, spn
Kansas secretary of
said last week that
poses, state sta
Dean McCall and his fiance Jan Mokeburst, who met through a video dating service, have opened their own service called New Connections at 2201 W. 25th St.
The group has bee position to the prop which $4 million in g bonds were issued i
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We wow the constitutional rig be taken away from Akin said, "Maybe singled out students voters."
Bryan GravesKANSAN
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbals called temporary rent residents.
The petition's auil Route 2, said Richard Monday evening and petition be rewrote wouldn't be deror students.
By Juli Warren
Kansan Magazine writer
Colleges are sometimes looked upon as marriage mills, with a seemingly endless number of people to meet, things to do and places to go.
That special someone — or someone just to spend an evening with — may be out there, but can they really be found on the traditional campus or bar scene?
Some students don't think so and are trying alternative ways to meet potential dates.
"Bored guy sees bored girl to compare boredom. Call Steve
Steve Jackman, Manhattan freshman, was one of these. He may be recognized by the personal ad he placed in the Kansan;
Jackman said, "People say they meet people in classes, but everybody's still got this wall up in the classroom.
"They're kind of aloof. You've got to be cool."
Jackman said that when he sometimes walked into a classroom and greeted everyone, he was met with strange looks.
Because he lives in an apartment and has never lived in a residence hall where there are more people, he said, it is harder to meet people.
"Lonely male, 23, non-student,
non-Christian, looking for female
for caring relationship, friends
or more. You should read a lot,
like to talk and wear little or
makeup. Call John . . ."
But an impulse, not despair, prompted him to place his ad when he accompanied a friend who was placing an ad. he said.
John, who did not want his last name used, had a different reason for placing his ad:
When he was a student, he said, most of his classes were in the same building and he had a girlfriend so he didn't meet many new people.
John said a recent break-up prompted him to place the ad.
John, a former KU student, works in a Lawrence fast-food restaurant.
When that relationship ended, he said, he didn't have many people to fall back on.
"Partly, it was a psychological break," he said. "I wanted someone else to be calling me."
"I don't smoke or drink, so I don't enjoy bars. I don't like rock 'n' roll and I'm not religious, so that cut out about 99.9 percent of my places to meet people."
"I'm not a very social person," he said. "Generally, I didn't go out very much.
John said that he enjoyed science fiction and role-playing games, such as Dungeons and
"I also had the experience of talking to people I would have nothing in common with," he said.
Dragons, but that the people he met playing those games were "extremely limited" in their interests.
The 40 calls in response to his ad, John said, included one 15-year-old girl and three crank calls.
Three dates resulted from the ad, John said, but all was not moonlight and roses.
"I'm from New York, so I expected a lot more crank calls," John said.
Jackman said he got 21 phone calls, some of them more interesting than others.
Some people, he said, called him several nights in a row to ask him whether he was still bored.
Jackman said he did go to the sorority and was introduced to the whole house. He said he was glad he went because he learned that sorority women were "real people."
Members of one sorority house invited him over, he said, and he got calls from people in bars.
And then there were the calls from amused females.
"Once in a while, I'd get a call that was all giggles," Jackman said. "They just couldn't stop."
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
He said the wording of his ad was not especially serious.
"I wanted to put something fun in," he said. "It's inoffensive and it gets a response.
U
"I wasn't going to put "Horny dude sees blonde bombshell."
John said his advice to people considering placing a personal ad would be: "Don't expect to have somebody fitting your requirements call and go out that Saturday night."
John said the wording of his ad seemed rather brusque when he saw it in print, but reflected his criteria.
He said he preferred a girl with no makeup because he thought he wouldn't get along well with a "sorority type."
He wrote the part about the respondent wanting to be friends, he said, because "I always look for friends first."
"If I can think of another one with good wording, I might put it in," he said.
The recent ad was Jackman's first, he said, but it may not be his last.
John said he met one of his dates through a mutual friend, and went to dinner and a movie with her. He went to lunch at the Union with the other two because it was neutral ground, he said.
It was helpful, John said, to be able to talk to the girl before going out with her.
One of the lunches was "pleasant," he said, and the other was "excruciatingly boring."
"Blind dates are uncomfortable no matter how you set them up," he said. "It was no more and no less uncomfortable than any other blind date."
Jan Moklebust, who opened New Connections, 2201 W. 25th St., with her fiance, Dean McCall, said that viewing a video about a potential date helped answer some of the preliminary questions that were answered on a first date.
In hopes of taking the blindness out of blind dating, students may also trv video dating services.
As a result, she said, the first date seems like the third or fourth.
"You have a feeling like you've met the person already," Moklebust said.
Questions asked include problems with mental health, narcotics or drinking and whether the applicant has been convicted of a felony.
Potential customers fill out a personality inventory that is a screening device, Moklebust said.
Moklebust and McCall met through a video dating service.
The potential customer also fills out a questionnaire about his interests.
An eight-to-10 minute video is then made of the person being interviewed, with questions ranging from what he is looking for in a relationship to his favorite season.
Books brimming with photographs and profiles of the participants line bookshelves in the office waiting room.
The video service has 700 members in the Topeka, Lawrence and Kansas City area. And members can choose from photographs of members that belong to both the Lawrence and Kansas City, Mo., offices.
The photos are grouped by age — 19-25, 26-34, 35-42, 43-50 and 51 and over.
More men than women are members, Moklebust said.
If the customer finds someone he or she wants to meet, the customer tells one of the employees, who then contacts the other person by phone.
The person chosen comes in and watches the video of the person who picked him and decides whether to meet the person.
Moklebust said she and Dean McCall, owner of the Lawrence office, had helped one man in his early 20s that had little dating experience choose and plan dates.
"It was so neat to see that kid grow in self-confidence and get out into the dating world," she said.
"Others are dating quite actively, but not the people they want to meet." she said.
"It's still an ego trip for a guy
Moklebust predicted that within 10 years, video dating services would take the place of singles bars.
However, Moklebust said, introverts aren't the only members.
But, she said, people sometimes tire of the bar scene.
to go into a bar, find a good-looking girl and take her home," Mokleburst said.
One New Connections member said he joined because he wanted to meet people other than students.
Mike, a KU student who did not want his real name used, said,
"Being a graduate student, you're mostly with people from your own department."
Undergraduates, he said, can meet new people every semester.
Joining a video dating service, Mike said, "saves a lot of the initial hassle."
"By joining, they've identified themselves as someone who wants to meet someone," he said.
Mike, who has a one-year membership, said he had dated six different members.
"Everyone I've asked to meet has wanted to meet me," he said.
Most of the women he's dated have lived in the Kansas City area.
McCall said, "What really makes us happy is to have someone come in and show us their ring.
The videos, he said, usually give a fairly valid impression of what the person is like.
"At least they're identifying themselves, giving their name and phone number." Mike said.
And he said the service eliminated the anonymity of meeting someone in class.
"We go to a lot of weddings."
Kansan Magazine
za
Pizza Hut said. This food was
a marketingiversity of
donates a key to KU is con, Leiweke
ersity en the end created associa
been a veke said.
"
KUAC,
our fans
Y Hunter,
aid "It's people."
estimate
Izza Hut
was apporters
with the
University
aid. They
beer and
be id funly in the
of proposis,
Hunter and an-
er since.
on wasn't
tame, but
e already
in games of the vas just a ose of the
expected so many d another y against
S
came to
re series London Lecs State
attracted
Libera-
Yasser
George
e a big dy at KU re," Eps us up. U to be
on of the future.
ts could bring to
up a stusbly inepresen family.
15
Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awaits Washington law interns. See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
touching the ground
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy
Details page 3.
F. M. M. N.
Double ta
The petition sta students who are residents vote "has problems by upset balance between t and voters who have interest in the w community."
The group has bee position to the prop which $4 million in g bonds were issued ira. The petition's au Route 2, said Richard Monday evening an petition be reword wouldn't be dero students.
A section of a citi-
tion that propose-
students from votin-
ties was deleted by
of the group, the g
said yesterday.
By Juli Warren Staff writer
Daryl Richardso
Douglas County Ci
sible Development,
of the petition distr
from its main purge
oppose the proposed
Lawrence.
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbale called temporary rent residents.
Public airs views on S. African rule
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
John Keinshar, p
John Kansas secretary
and last week that
poses, state star
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We woe the constitutional rig be taken away from Akin said, "Maybe singled out student voters."
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
Eram Martinez drill Both are employee
Congress allocate December as part of of Defense budget. through the Arm
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
By Tim Hrenchir
Michaelis said the focus on the human defend against the than on the milft chemicals.
Staff writers
Ban o delete
See related story
Arm
The money from the plient neurotoxin already in progress, said Elias Micha of the neurotoxin res professor of biochem
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
p. 12
Chris Bunker, Shawnee third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
The University receive $2 million f my to study the eff ins, chemicals com m with chemical war and animal nervou researcher said yes!
By Lynn Maree Ro Staff writer
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do.
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you've ever seen."
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
High scores fill for
Mountain bikes challenge tough trails
By Grant W. Butler
Weather that would keep most bicycles off the road provides a test of strength and endurance for mountain bikes.
They know no bounds.
Rocky paths and steep hills are no longer fearsome sights that spell havoc for a common road bike. They are an inviting challenge for mountain bikers.
Timeout
Mountain bikes are shorter than road bikes, so the rider has a lower center of gravity and better balance for maneuvering the twists and turns of a hilly path.
The tires are up to two inches wider than a road bike. They provide the necessary traction for plowing through snow and mud, instead of the speed and lightness offered by on-road bicycle tires.
The heavier frames of mountain bikes make them better suited than road bikes to take the abuse of off-the-road jumps, spills and collisions.
In the past two years, the popularity of biking has grown. On warm days the roads seem cluttered with riders dressed in
their Lycra stretch outfits hunched over the handlebars of speeding bikes.
Road biking may be the most visible sign of the recent growth in biking. But mountain biking, which was first developed 15 years ago in Marin County, Calif., is claiming a large share of the American cycling market.
"I would say it's gotten to the point where they're 55 percent of our total bike sales," said Chuck Adams, assistant manager of Sunflower, 804 Massachusetts St. "That's a tremendous increase from five to ten percent in 1983."
Rick Stein, manager of Rick's Bike Shop, 1033 Vermont St., agreed that sales were increasing.
"It's a growing part of the bicycle market," he said. "We've had a doubling of sales. That's probably the highest growth area we have."
Stein said there was a mountain bike for every pocketbook.
A quality mountain bike costs about $270, he said. More expensive versions can cost thousands of dollars.
JIM CLARK MOTORS
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA
Lawrence, Ks.
843-3055
CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH - DODGE SALES PROFFESSIONALS
C H E C K E R S
See Bikes, p. 19, col. 1
WACKY WEDNESDAY SPECIAL
16" Pizza w/2 Toppings & 4 Soft Drinks
"It's a whole new aspect to bike riding. You can get off the
"You can go off the roads into the woods and it's wonderful," he said. "I've always enjoyed bikes and this is just another facet that I can enjoy.
7. 99
Mount Oread Bicycle Club.
2214 Yale Rd. 841-8010
In addition to Rick's and Sunflower, three other Lawrence shops sell the mountain bikes: Lawrence Schwinn Cyclery, 1601 W. 23rd St.; Uptown Bicycles, 1337 Massachusetts St. and Gran Sport, 1226 W. 7th St.
CHECKERS
Mountain bikes are many things to their riders, such as overgrown toys, means of escaping problems, a good form of exercise, a practical and efficient form of transportation and a test of racing skills and overall character of the rider.
"You can do a lot more than on other bikes because they're not so fragile," said Doug Bradley, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, graduate student and a member of the
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marketing versity of
Pizza Hut said. This food was
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
donates a ey to KU is con , Leiweke
16
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---
Legal tender Embarrassment of riches awaits Washington law interns. See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
吹树干
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
JANUARY 2014
Public airs views on S. African rule
and Lori Polson Staff writers
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
By Tim Hrenchir
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
See related story p. 12.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawne third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested,
we've educated, we've worked
politically," Bunker said. "At this
point, I don't know what else we can
do.
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the worstest thing you've ever seen."
Double ta
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students
Eram Martinez drills Both are employee
David Katzman, chairman of
Senate Human Relations Committee.
Congress allocate December as part of of Defense budget. through the Arm
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
Arm
Michaelis said the focus on the human defend against the than on the milit chemicals.
By Lynn Maree Ro Staff writer
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbal called temporary residentents.
The money from it plient neurotoxin already in progress ty, said Elias Micha of the neurotoxin res professor of biocen
The University receive $2 million f my to study the eff i ns, chemicals com m with chemical war and animal nervous researcher said yes!
John Reinhart, spi
Kansas secretary (
said last week that
poses, state sta
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We woe the constitutional rig be taken away from Akin said, "Maybe singled out student voters."
The group has been position to the prop which $4 million in g bonds were issued lt The petition's au Route 2, said Richard Monday evening an petition be rewound wouldn't be dero students.
Daryl Richardso
Douglas County Citi-
sible Development,
of the petition distra-
from its main purge
oppose the proposed
Lawrence.
High scores fill for
Business
PETER HAYES
Susie Stoner, co-owner of Blue Heron Futons, 547 Locust St., lays down the final cotton layer of a futon. Futons are traditional Japanese-style mattresses.
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A section of a citation that proposes students from votitions was Celed by of the group, the g said yesterday.
Ban o delete
By Juli Warren Staff writer
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U
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Futons bring Kansas oriental beauty rest
Bv Peqqy Kramer
Kansan Magazine writer
Futon mattresses have brought the orient's method of beauty rest to the Midwest.
Futons, traditional Japanese mattresses, were brought to the United States in the mid-70s by people who studied bioplastics, or the science of living longer by means of proper diet and health.
The futons' popularity blossomed on the east and west coasts in the 70s, but the flexible, cotton mattresses were not introduced in the Midwest until about 1980.
Susie Stoner, co-owner of Blue Heron Futons, 474 Locust St.,
said she thought Blue Heron was the only business that made and sold the mattresses in Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Missouri.
Futons, the Japanese word for bedding, have been a popular item in Japan for centuries, she said. Futons are similar to the tatomi mats of Japan, which are made of rice straw and are not as flexible.
"The futons are not faddish, they are the bedding of this generation." Stoner said.
The mattresses are easy to fold in half and carry, Galen Tarman, Stoner's partner, said.
See Futons, p. 18, col. 1
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Kansan Magazine
za
marketingiversity of
Pizza Huts said. This food was
donates aey to KU id is con- Leiweke
been a veke said.
"
rssity en
the enl
created,
associa
our fans
v Hunter,
"it's people."
estimate
izza Hatz
Dion was a poorters.
with the
University
aid. They
ber and
de be fun
in the
in games se of the was just a lose of the
expected so many d another y against
of proposi-
hunter
and an-
der since,
on wasn't
name, but
already
S
came to
re series
andon Lecs State
17
attracted Libera-
Yasser George
e a big dy at KU re," Epss us up. U to be
on of the
future.
its could
b bring to
up a stursibly inepresen-t family.
Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awaits
Washington law interns.
See page 3.
SINCE 1899
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A man claws down a tree.
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy
Details page 3.
**DIESEL WELDERS**
By Juli Warren Staff writer
Ban delet
A section of a citation that proposes students from voxions was deleted of the group, the said yesterday.
Congress alloc December as part of Defense budg through the A
The petition *students who aresidents vote* "pmbalance between and voters who interest in the community."
Double
Michaelis said focus on the hurd defend against t than on the m chemicals.
Public airs views on S. African rule
and Lori Poison Staff writers
By Tim Hrenchir
The money fropment neurotoxia already in prograst, said Elias Mi of the neurotoxin professor of bioe
Daryl Richard Douglas County Cible Development of the petition dis from its main pur oppose the propos Lawrence.
Eram Martinez Both are emplc
The group has b position to the p which $million in bonds were issued The petition's a Route 2, said RICH Monday evening a petition be rewouldn't be de students.
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbs called temporary residents.
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The Universi receive $2 millik my to study the in, chemicals c with chemical and animal neral researcher said
John Reinhart, a
Kansas secretary,
said last week the
poses, state st
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
Chris Bunker, Shawnee third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
See related story p. 12.
By Lynn Mares Staff writer
Arr
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Richardson said was a total misuse whole thing. We wre the constitutional be taken away from Akin said, "May singl out studie voters."
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you've ever seen."
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do."
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
Sanker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students.
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
Interns
Continued from p. 13
Julie Webster, placement director for the School of Engineering, said the companies she dealt with did not usually hire students during short break periods.
"Generally if they (students) go somewhere during Christmas or spring break, it's because they have already had a summer job with that firm," she said. "But it's just like any other type of job-seeking. The people who get the jobs are the ones who get out there and work for them."
But a short-term internship is not always a feasible option for some students.
For example, the amount of technical training necessary for engineering majors does not allow for a short-term internship.
"Most of our jobs are too technical," Webster said. "Two weeks just isn't enough time."
But whether it be for two weeks or two months, the benefits of an internship can make the difference in the search for jobs.
"Experience is becoming increasingly important," Webster said. "Companies are becoming more selective."
Mark Kossler, Topeka senior and political science major, worked as an intern for Amnesty International in Washington, D.C., during the spring semester last year.
"I was able to see some of the principles that I had studied in class in action," he said.
quirement for graduation. In the fifth year of school, pharmacy students must work for 13 weeks in a professional setting.
High scores 511 fans
Tom Hitchcock, assistant to the dean of pharmacy administration, said the time was divided into working in a hospital setting, a community setting and at the University.
The School of Pharmacy makes intern experience a re-
"We have quite a demand from students and requests from companies," he said. "Part time, full time, sometime, anytime, we'll try to place them."
Fred Madaus, placement director in the School of Business, said the business placement office would help any student interested in internships or summer jobs.
Futons
Continued from p. 17
"It's possible that the all-cotton mattresses if placed directly on the floor could provide a lot of support for the spine," he said. "But different spinal conditions require different types of support."
A full size mattress weighs about 55 pounds and has no box springs, metal or plastic in it.
Both the all-cotton and the foam core futons are six inches thick and versatile so they may be folded into a couch, laid flat on the floor or used in a frame.
Futons are made either of seven layers of 100 percent cotton or cotton and $ 1 \frac{1}{2} $ inches of high-density foam.
Tarman said frames were not needed but were recommended because the natural fibers of the mattresses needed air circulation.
Prices for futons begin at $50 for a crib size mattress, $120 for a full size, $130 for queen size and $165 for a king size.
In addition to selling a variety of frames for futons, Blue Heron Futons sells the mattresses in different sizes, ranging from crib to king size. Futons can also be custom made for activities such as camping.
Stoner said it took about half a day to make a mattress. The cotton comes in big bundles. Layers are placed in bleached white canvas and stitched with durable cotton thread.
Blue Heron Futons sells futon covers in ash, dusty blue and hvacinth.
But John Hill of Hill Chiropractic Clinic, 944 Kentucky St., said the firm surface was not necessarily good for the spine.
The average prices for regular mattress sets are about $55 for crib size, $200 for full size, $450 for queen size and $600 for king size, according to area mattress dealers.
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
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Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
marketing versity of
za
Pizza Hut said. This food was
donates a key to KU id is con- Leiweke
rssity enthe enl created, associa-
been a reke said.
"
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our fans
Y Hunter,
"It's people."
estimate
izza Hut
Tion was a poporters.
o with the
University said. They
ber and
add be early in the
of propos-
hunter,
and an-
since.
on wasn't
game, but
already
ing games of the was just a pose of the
expected so many id another ay against
S
y came to
nature series
ndon Lects
State
attracted
e Libera-
t Yasser
e George
be a big body at KU院," us up. KU to be "
dion of the
he future.
ents could
to bring to
up a stussily impreseing family.
Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awaits Washington law interns.
See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
a person falling down from a tree
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
MAYBURY
Public airs views on S. African rule
and Lori Polson Staff writers
By Tim Hrenchlr
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
See related story p. 12.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawne third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do."
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the wrongest thing you've ever seen."
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment should be abolished by the wishes of faculty and staff.
Double ta
High scores fill fans
David Katzman, chairman of the Senate Human Relations Committee.
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
Eram Martinez drills Both are employees
Arm
By Lynn Maree Ro Staff writer
The University receive $2 million fr my to study the effs ins, chemicals comn with chemical war and animal nervous researcher said vest
The money from the plient neurotoxin already in progress, said Elias Micha of the neurotoxin res professor of bioclean
Michaelis said the focus on the human defense against the threat on the militant chemicals.
Congress allocate December as part of defense budget. through the Arm
Ban o delete
By Juli Warren Staff writer
A section of a citation that proposes students from votifessions was deleted by of the group, the p said yesterday.
The petition sta students who are residents vote "ha problems by upset balance between t and voters who haverest in the w community."
Daryl Richardse Douglas County Citible Development of the petition distr from its main purp oppose the proposal Lawrence.
Richardson said, was a total misuse whole thing. We wot the constitutional ri be taken away from Akin said, "Maybs singled out student voters."
The group has best position to the prop which $4 million in bonds were issued 1 The petition's au Route 2, said Richa Monday evening an petition be rewot wouldn't be dere students.
He said he meant Akin said he was the potential imbal called temporary resident residents. John Reinhart, sp Kansas secretary said last week that poses, state st
Greg Farnen, Lawrence graduate student, rides his mountain bike through a large paddle on West Campus.
Bikes
Continued from p. 16
road where the cars are and see a lot of beautiful country."
Greg Farnen, Lawrence graduate student and president of the bike club, said the big difference between mountain bikes and road bikes was the versatility that a mountain bike offered riders.
"I've ridden under all conditions including rain and a foot of snow on the ground," he said. "That's part of the enjoyment — that you can go out in the snow and play around. You aren't limited by the weather. The only thing that makes it really difficult is ice storms."
The great thing about mountain bikes, Farnen said, is the opportunity to experiment without hurting the bikes.
"You can bounce off curbs and over holes with no problems," he said.
Bradley said riding a mountain bike reminded him of downhill skiing.
"It's a challenge to get down hills without wiping out. You have to avoid rocks and stumps," he said. "It's kind of like hiking, but it's a lot faster so you can go more places."
U
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Farnen said that many mountain bike owners used their bikes simply to get out in the wilderness and ride without the troubles of traffic or automobile fumes. But he said there were exceptions.
"There are the gonzo riders who go down hills with their brakes locked, hell-bent for leather," he said.
The macho image of the bikes can't be denied.
Brand names range from Rockhopper and Stumpjumper, which reveal the basic nature of the type of riding involved, to more outlandish names such as Renegade, Crotch Rocket and Commando.
No doubt, if Rambo needed a bicycle to help him complete his
"You can do anything on them, pretty much," he said. "Jumps, wheelies, cruising in the snow. You can go on trails and you can even ride down stairs. You wouldn't dare do that on a road bike."
escapades in Vietnam, a mountain bike would fit his needs.
One maneuver Shepard said he had mastered was the "bunny hop." From standing still, the rider can make the bike come off the ground by several feet.
Kyle Shepard, Overland Park sophomore, is a self-proclaimed mountain bike daredevil.
"I've ridden it from KC to here," he said. "It's pretty much my livelihood since I don't have a car. I use it to go shopping, to class and out to Clinton Lake."
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Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1986
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A walking shoe a bicycle a rocket an telescope a boat
Ski Gear
Cross Country Ski Packages ___ $100 now $189
Ski Bibs ___ $2995
Thule Ski Racks (holds 6 pair) ___ $6995
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Ski Goggles ___ $2495 to $2995
Goretex and Leather ___ 20% off
Ski Gloves And Mitts ___ 20% off
Patagonia Alpine Jackets ___ $16500 now $10000
North Face Down Jackets ___ $16000 now $10000
All Northface and Patagonia Jackets ___ 10% off
Sierra West Thinsulate Bomber $_105^{00}$ now $75^{00}$
Sweaters ___ 30% off
Flannel, Wool and Cotton Shirts ___ 25% off
Duofold Polypro Longies ___ $14^{85}$
Winter Wear
Backpacking
Vasque Highlander Boots ___ $95⁰⁰ now $80⁰⁰
Vasque Walking Shoes ___ $50⁰⁰ now $39⁹⁵
Danner Goretex Walking Shoes ___ $75⁰⁰ now $50⁰⁰
Optimus Camping Stoves ___ 40% off
MSR Firefly Stoves ___ 40% off
Freeze Dried Food ___ 30% to 50% off
Trailwise Frame Packs ___ $69⁸⁵
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All Bianchi, All Terrain, Racing. Touring Models Drastically Reduced
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Cannondale Bike Bags 40% off
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Sunflower牧804MASS.
za
marketing versity of n. Pizza Hut said. This food was
Kansan Magazine
donates a
ey to KU
d is con
, Leiweke
been a eke said.
rservity enthe end created, associa-
our fans
y Hunter,
said. "It's
people."
estimate
izza Hut
tion was a
porters.
with the
University
aid. They
ber and
bid be fun
arly in the
lin games se of the was just a pose of the
expected so many and anotheraly against
es
of proposes,
Hunter,
and an
since
on wasn't
game, but
@ already
y came to
ure series ndon Lec ts State
attracted
the Liberat
Yasser
it George
be a big body at KU cure," Epss us up. UU to be .
ion of the he future. ents could to bring to
up a stussibly impreresen g family.
19
Legal tender
Embarrassment of riches awaits
Washington law interns.
See page 3.
SINCE 1839
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A man is trying to climb a tree.
Windy Details page 3.
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Doubl
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
See related story p.12.
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawne third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
Public airs views on S. African rule
Eram Martin Both are em
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association
Staff writers
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
Ar
By Tim Hrenchir
By Juli Watt
Staff writer
A section on
that that students from
was deli of the group
said yesterda
the petitia
students who
residents vo problems by
balance bette and voters
werest in community'
Daryl Rial
Douglas Couisel
Developer of the petition
from its mair
oppose the pr
Lawrence.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do."
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid is the worstest thing you've ever seen."
Congress a December as of Defense b through the
The group I position to which $m4$ bills bonds were the petition Route 2, said Monday even petition be wouldn't be students.
By Lynn Ma
Staff writer
The Univ
receive $2 mmy
to my study
ins, chemica
with chemic and
animal i
researcher st
Bandele
The money
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High scores fill fans
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A man is pulling a tree down.
THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 96 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
Bryan Graves/KANSAN
Double take
Eram Martinez drills a hole in the frame while Darin Sewell holds it in place. Both are employees of Continental Door Co. 2317 Ponderosa Drive. They
were installing the window yesterday in the new addition of the Housing Warehouse on West Campus.
Army finances KU toxin study
Staff writer
By Lynn Maree Ross
The University of Kansas will receive $2 million from the U.S. Army to study the effects of neurotoxins, chemicals commonly associated with chemical warfare, on human and animal nervous systems, a KU researcher said yesterday.
The money from the Army will supplement neurotoxin research that is already in progress at the University, said Elias Michaels, coordinator of the neurotoxin research center and professor of biochemistry.
Michaelis said the research would focus on the human body's ability to defend against the chemicals rather than on the military use of the chemicals.
Congress allocated the money in December as part of the Department of Defense budget. It will be routed through the Army, which will
distribute the money and supervise the research
Michaelis said representatives of the Army's medical defense research and development command branch would visit the University next week to determine which projects would be financed and to what extent.
Groups at the Lawrence campus and the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas Kan., are participating in the continuing research, he said. The group in Lawrence studies natural toxins, while the group at the Med Center studies man-made toxins.
The researchers' goals are to learn to detect toxins after they have been released in the environment, to determine the parts of the body affected by the toxins and to design chemical agents to protect the body against the toxins. Michaelis said.
By studying the effects of toxins in animals, the researchers can learn
more about how toxins affect humans and whether those effects can be reversed.
Richard L. Schowen, professor of chemistry, and Idiko Kovach, associate scientist in chemistry, are conducting research in Lawrence, Michaelis said. Schowen and Kovach are studying enzyme proteins in brain tissues and nerves that are attacked by the toxins.
They study neurotoxins produced by animals, Michaelis said. For example, snails and fish produce neurotoxins for the purpose of defense and food gathering — a type of natural biological warfare. The neurotoxins paralyze a predator, allowing the fish or snail to feed or flee. Man-made toxins used in warfare are similar to these natural chemicals.
Once Schowen and Kovach determine how those toxins act, they will try to develop chemicals to
counteract their effect.
Michaelis said the researchers studying man-made toxins hoped to determine whether humans manufacture any natural proteins that can deactivate neurotoxins, and if they do, how to enhance the deactivation process.
Another aspect of the Med Center studies is to determine why people suffer seizures after exposure to neurotoxins.
Michaelis said the neurotoxins used in Lawrence research didn't pose any threat to the public because they were used in small quantities and weren't highly toxic. The neurotoxins used at the Med Center are used in larger quantities and are more toxic; but they are strictly monitored and only used in specially constructed areas.
Researchers at the Med Center declined to comment on their research.
Ban on student voting deleted from petition
Staff writer
Bv Juli Warren
A section of a citizens' group's petition that proposed banning many students from voting in county elections was deleted by a subcommittee of the group, the group's president said yesterday.
The petition stated that letting students who are not permanent residents vote "has created untold problems by upsetting the normal balance between taxpaying voters and voters who have no financial interest in the welfare of the community."
Daryl Richardson, president of Douglas County Citizens for Responsible Development, said that section of the petition distracted the petition from its main purpose, which was to oppose the proposed bypass south of Lawrence.
The petition's author, Tom Akin, Route 2, said Richardson called him Monday evening and suggested the petition be reworded so that it wouldn't be derogatory toward students.
The group has been vocal in its opposition to the proposed bypass for which $4 million in general obligation bonds were issued last summer.
Richardson said, "I think there was a total misunderstanding on the whole thing. We would never say that the constitutional right to vote should be taken away from them."
He said he meant transient voters.
Akin said, "Maybe I shouldn't have singled out students as temporary voters."
Alkin said he was concerned about the potential imbalance of what he called temporary residents to permanent residents.
John Reinhart, spokesman for the Kansas secretary of state's office, said last week that for voting purposes, state statutes defined
residence as "the place adopted by a person as such person's place of habitation."
"There is nothing in the law that says you're either permanent or temporary." Reinhart said.
Employees of the county clerk's office estimated that of the 35,000 registered voters in Douglas County, 4,500 were KU students.
The second section of the petition read at the meeting opposes the law that allowed Bob Stephan, attorney general, to decide last summer that a public vote was not required to issue the bonds.
Akin said he thought students should vote, but unless they planned to establish permanent residence in the county, they should vote in their home towns.
The form of the petition that included the wording about students voting was read about two weeks ago at the last meeting of the groum.
Richardson said the group's initial plan was to distribute the petitions this week for members to circulate. Members were busy monitoring progress on legislation on issues such as annexation.
However, he said, "If they vote with the issues in mind, I have no quarrel with the imbalance."
The petition will not be distributed, he said, until it is approved by members of the group. Copies of the final form will be sent to state legislators.
Richardson said he had heard no reaction from members of the group on the section regarding student voting.
He said a proposed petition would be read at the group's Feb. 19 meeting. However, he said, that still may not be the final form.
Richardson said the group hoped to circulate the petitions in time for consideration by the Legislature.
Rock Chalk participants work overtime for show
By Grant W. Butler Staff writer
“五ive, six, seven, go. Hop, hop, walk, walk, turn front,” a voice bellows at about 5 dancers dressed in sweats, T-shirts and tennis shoes. “Come on Let's get it together.”
The grips of strained muscles and demands for more energy will continue until the audience lights dim and the curtain is drawn on opening night.
With only two weeks left until opening night, performers in this years' Rock Chalk Revue are working overtime to polish dance steps and learn music.
ween now and the show," said Martha Eddy, Lake Quivira junior and revue co-director for Kappa Sigma fraternity and Gamma Phi Beta sorority.
We're working every night bet-
Joan Rhodes, Shawnee senior, agreed that the dancing was the hardest part of getting the show ready. Rhodes is the director of the act by the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and the Alpha Chi Omega sorority.
"I feel like we're ahead of schedule," she said last night. "It's going really well. The biggest problem is our dances are kind of complicated."
Public airs views on S. African rule
See CHALK, p. 5, col. 1
and Lori Poison Staff writers
By Tim Hrenchir
Their styles were different but their messages were the same: KU students and faculty are concerned about the situation in South Africa.
The University Senate Human Relations Committee conducted the first round of public hearings on South Africa last night in the Javhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The committee heard statements from eight groups and individuals. The hearings continue tonight with nine speakers scheduled to present their views.
See related story p. 12.
The South African government follows a policy of apartheid, which is legalized racial segregation.
Chris Bunker, Shawnee third-year law student and president of the KU Committee on South Africa, told the human relations committee that his committee was frustrated with the
lack of communication with the Kansas University Endowment Association.
In the past year, some students and faculty members have protested the Endowment Association's ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
"We've sat in, we've protested, we've educated, we've worked politically," Bunker said. "At this point, I don't know what else we can do.
Bunker suggested the University take legal action to prove that the Endowment Association is not a separate entity from the University. Therefore, he said, the Endowment Association would be forced to abide by the wishes of faculty and students
"This is the kind of issue that really sets people on fire. There is nothing more obvious than apartheid to the worstest thing you've ever seen."
Daniel Katzman, chairman of
Senate Human Relations Committee.
High scores fill fans with visions of pizza
Staff writer
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 5
By Russell Gray
The chants usually start late in the fourth quarter of a KU home game, thundering off the walls of Allen Field House.
The chants grow louder after the first two milestones are passed. As the team nears the ultimate mark, the noise reaches its deafening peak.
KU students are cheering for the Jayhawks to score 70, 80 or 100 points so they can receive three- four- or five-dollar discounts on large pizzas at local Pizza Huts.
Pizza Hut began a corporate sponsorship of KU athletics this year and the discount coupons are a part of the sponsorship. The coupons are valid from the end of one home game until tin-off of the next home game.
The third-ranked Jayhawks have been keeping the fans stuffed and the Pizza Hut stores busy with back-toback 100-point home-court victories against Colorado and Missouri.
The employees begin pounding the dough long before the Jayhawks pound the court or the fans pound the stands.
The number of customers has almost doubled, said Sandy Maples, shift supervisor for the Pizza Hut at 1606 W. 23rd St. All of the store's employees are working full schedules.
Maples said that Friday her store sold almost 300 large pizzas and only two were not bought with coupons from the Feb. 5 Colorado game.
"That's about all we do all day anymore, is prepare for it," she said.
Preparation begins at 7:30 every morning, and Maples said employees were preparing constantly for the post-name rushes.
anmore, is prepare for it," she said.
The extra business has not made the employees crusty. Maples said, and the increase is good for morale.
Despite the increase in customers, Pizza Hut is not rolling in the dough because of the sponsorship, said Todd Leiweke, vice president of Leiweke and Co., Kansas City, Mo.
"We're all having a pretty good time with it," she said. "We just have to get ready for it."
His company handles marketing and promotion for the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation.
More than anything else, Pizza Hut is a Jayhawk fan, Leiweke said. This unique recipe of sports and food was Leiweke's creation.
Wichita-based Pizza Hut donates a significant amount of money to KU football and basketball and is considering the Kansas Relays, Leiweke said.
Leiweke said the University enjoyed the donations and the enthusiasm the promotion had created, and Pizza Hut enjoyed the association and exposure.
"This promotion has been a tremendous success." Leiweke said. "It's a wonderful marriage."
Pizza Hut's spouse, the KUAC,
seems to agree.
"We hope that it makes our fans happy and have fun," Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, said. "It's a way that we can pay our people."
Hunter said he would not estimate the amount of money Pizza Hut donated. He said the promotion was a way to thank the team's supporters.
Leiwike's firm came up with the idea and contacted the University and Pizza Hut, Hunter said. They discussed it in October and November, thought it would be fun and began the promotion early in the season.
It simply was a matter of proposing it and Pizza Hut liking it, Hunter said. And the pepperoni and anchovies have been飞盈 ever since.
Hunter said the promotion wasn't started to lure fans to the game, but rather to take care of those already there.
Keeping the fans involved in games that are blowouts, because of the chance for pizza discounts, was just a by-product and not the purpose of the promotion, he said.
Leiweke said he hadn't expected the Jayhawks to score so many points so often, but predicted another 100-point game on Saturday against Nebraska.
Warm up the ovens.
Lack of sponsor blocks lecture series
Bv Piper Scholfield
The University of Kansas may be home to a new lecture series if Student Senate and the administration can find a sponsor.
Although Epstein would not release names, he said several alumni in Kansas City may be asked to support the lecture series.
Staff writer
"The only problem is going to be money," David Epstein, student body president, said yesterday.
Epstein said Chancellor Gene A. Budig would help search for potential sponsors.
"He said he would try to talk to what he referred to as deep-pocket men."
The lecture series would need an initial grant of $500,000. The interest earned from the grant would finance the cost of the speakers, he said.
and sometimes requires his students to attend lectures outside of the classroom. But Ketzel said he
KU already has several lecture series. The problem is that the series are too small to attract prominent
speakers to the University, Epstein said.
Also, the small series only sponsor
"Every time they have a big speaker at K-State, everybody at KU packs up and goes over there. It kind of shows us up. There's no reason for KU to be behind K-State in this issue."
David Epstein student body president
17
"We want an all-encompassing lecture series," he said.
speakers on certain subjects. J.A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture Series sponsors only political speakers. The Hallmark Symposium Lecture Series sponsors only the arts, he said.
thought students would benefit from another lecture series.
Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science, often encourages
Ketzel said he could remember when Harry Truman, Robert Kennedy and Hubert Humphrey came to the KU campus.
"You wouldn't need to bring 10 speakers," he said. "If you would bring one or two a semester, it would be enough."
The Landon series has attracted such speakers as Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat and Vice President George Bush.
Epstein said the new lecture series would be similar to the Landon Lecture Series at Kansas State University.
"Every time they have a big speaker at K-State, everybody at KU packs up and goes over there," Epstein said. "It kind of shows us up. There's no reason for KU to be behind K-State in this issue."
Epstein said the realization of the lecture series was far in the future. He said he hoped students could determine which speakers to bring to the University.
1
Student Senate would set up a student advisory board, possibly including professors and a representative from the sponsoring family.
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
News Briefs
Beirut bomb kills 2,
injures at least 19
BEIRUT, Lebanon — A bomb exploded yesterday in a crowded east Beirut shopping district, killing two women and injuring at least 19 other people, after rival militias battled near President Amin Gemayel's mountain stronghold.
No one claimed responsibility for the bomb. It was the first in Christian east Beirut in 11 days.
MADISON, Wis. — Frank Herbert, 65, one of the nation's premier science fiction writers and author of the novel "Dune," died Tuesday of cancer.
'Dune' author dies
Police said hundreds of shopper were present when the bomb, which damaged cars and windows and knocked down walls, blew up in the entrance of a building where the offices of the pro-Gemayel Christian Phalange Party are located.
Herbert, a long-time resident of Port Townsend, Wash., died at the University of Wisconsin's University Hospital where he had received treatment since late last year.
Herbert was working on another "Dune" novel with his son at the time of his death.
Rail to cross channel
CANTERBURY, England — British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and French President François Mitterrand signed a milestone treaty yesterday for construction of a rail tunnel under the English Channel that would link their countries by 1993.
The estimated cost of the project is $3.3 billion in 1985 dollars. The actual cost is expected to double because of interest and inflation.
Napoleon dreamed of a similar tunnel project nearly two centuries ago.
The channel is 21 miles wide at its narrowest point.
From Kansan wires.
Reagan stumps in St. Louis
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — President Reagan said he recognized many farmers were suffering economically and declared yesterday that barriers against foreign trade were "the No.1 threat faced by American agriculture."
Opening an election-year crusade to keep the Senate under Republican control, Reagan, in a speech for delivery in this Midwest agricultural center, also railed against "big spenders and big taxes" and "our liberal friends."
"Instead of bigger government and higher taxes, we're looking for higher growth and more take-home pay," Reagan said, defending his
economic program. "Instead of welfare and handouts, we'd rather people have jobs and opportunity."
An audience of about 800 people responded warmly to Reagan but muffed the standard audience response to his frequently used lines: "Are you undertaxed?" and "Do you want your taxes raised?"
There was barely a ripple of response. Undaunted, Reagan said, "I hope they can hear you in Washington."
In a nearby park, several hundred farmers from four states protested administration farm policies.
"Their policies are killing us," said Tom Curl, president of the Illinois chapter of the American Agriculture Movement, as the crowd chanted a
Carlos Welty, another AAM farm activist, said Missouri was losing family farms at an alarming rate.
slogan comparing Reagan to a butcher who wanted only to "cut, cut, cut" spending for the needy.
"We're being driven out." Welty said. "We have to let the president know that all is not rosy here in the nation's heartland."
During his appearance, Reagan also denied anew what the Pentagon has paid exorbitant prices for items such as coffee pots and hammers.
He said U.S. citizens, in recent years, have heard "a drumbeat of propaganda that would picture the Defense Department as a four-star general sitting on a bag of money."
said the Pentagon "has instituted initiatives and improvements in management to the point that most of our weapon systems now are coming in ahead of schedule and under the original asking price."
Rejecting that portrayal, Reagan
En route to California for a $3 \frac{1}{2} $ -day vacation at his mountaintop ranch, Reagan stopped here less than two hours to campaign for former Missouri Gov. Christopher Bond.
Bond, a popular two-term governor whose candidacy was promoted by the Republican Senatorial Committee, is seeking the GOP nomination for the Senate seat held by Thomas Eagleton, who is retiring after three terms.
Rescue of 2 men in tangled plane takes four hours
United Press International
ONTARIO, Calif. — Two men were rescued after four hours when their Cessna 172 plane became tangled in 220,000-volt power lines 90 feet above the ground early yesterday.
She said they told her that after the plane stopped rocking, the confused Plath crawled out on the wing.
Dean Plath, 58, of Tustin, and Clarence "Ed" Washburn, 66, of Whittier, were released from Ontario Community Hospital 35 miles from Los Angeles.
The two men refused to talk to reporters but gave hospital spokesman Diana Hanyak a statement.
Power company crews untangled the plane from the wires and lowered it to the ground yesterday morning.
Firefighter Ed Kramer of Chino said Washburn told him that he and Plath, both licensed pilots, were on an instrument rating flight late Tuesday night, unaware that something apparently was wrong with the glideslope indicator in their plane.
They were on an instrument approach to Ontario International Airport when the plane hit the power lines, skidding about 500 feet along their length before finally becoming ensnared. The plane jeerked to a halt a hundred feet short of a steel transmission tower and tipped over, dangling by one wheel and the propeller from two 220,000-volt power lines. A blue flash erupted and the power to the lines was cut.
NASA unsure whether seal on rocket caused explosion
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — NASA insisted yesterday that it is not yet convinced that a booster rocket caused the explosion of space shuttle Challenger.
The National Space and Aeronautics Administration said both the rocket's manufacturer and its own experts agreed to the launch in unusual subfreezing weather.
At the same time, NASA released internal documents that showed a history of concern with the "O-ring" seals where the four segments of the solid rocket booster are joined. In report after report, the huge rubber-like rings' elasticity and ability to contain gases were mentioned as critical items to be checked
Attention has been focused on the seals because films of Challenger's Jan. 28 liftoff show a plume of flame appearing to spurt from the right rocket booster toward the shuttle's main fuel tank. The ability of the seals to contain gas and flame is under close scrutiny.
"The cause is still an open issue." William R. Lucas, director of the NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, said in a news briefing. "We are investigating every part of the shuttle and not attempting to focus in too early."
NASA engineers discussed the weather by telephone with space shuttle contractors, including some at Morton Thiolok Inc., which manufactures the booster rockets in Utah.
The overnight low temperature was expected to be 24 degrees, said Lawrence B. Mulloy, director of the booster rocket program at Marshall, in Huntsville, Ala.
He said the discussion turned on whether the shuttle was ready for launch again in a short 24-hour turn around period.
After scrubbing a launch on Jan. 27 for other causes,
Later that evening there was another telephone conference, Mulloy said. Thiokol engineers had looked at NASA data on the possible effect low temperatures might have on O-ring performance.
Witnesses testifying Tuesday to the presidential commission investigating the accident said that despite the bitter freezing weather on the launch pad, they thought the internal temperature of the boosters' fuel was in the 50s.
Mulloy said NASA decided that if the gases made it past the primary seal, a secondary O-ring would contain them as it had done in the past, even under such temperature conditions.
Iacocca fired as head of statue renovation
United Press International
Although Hodel said there was absolutely no suspicion of any wrongdoing, he said he acted to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest in having Iacocca lead both bodies.
Iacocca, who successfully brought the No. 3 automaker back from the edge of bankruptcy, will remain as
WASHINGTON — Donald Hodel, interior secretary, fired Lee Iacocca yesterday as head of the commission to renovate the Statue of Liberty, saying the Chrysler Corp. chairman should not run both that panel and its fund-raising arm.
chairman of the fund-raising foundation.
In laocca's place as chairman of the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Centennial Commission, Hodel appointed Armen Avedislan, a Chicago banker who has been a member of the commission since it was created in 1982.
U.S. jets fly close to Libya
United Press International
WASHINGTON— Planes from two U.S. aircraft carriers encountered more than 18 Libyan jets yesterday on the first day of flight operations showing U.S. determination to conduct exercises near Libya, officials said.
Libyan pilots displayed no hostile intent and no shots were fired, they said.
Most of the encounters were within visual range in which U.S. F-1 fighters came within 200 yards of Libya's Soviet-built fighters and jockeyed alongside before the Libyan jets peeled off and headed home, the U.S. officials said.
Libya's Soviet-built MIG-23 and MIG-25 fighters, IL-76 Candid transports and French-made Mirage F-1 fighters flew to within 100 miles of the U.S. battle force in the Mediterranean in some of the heaviest Libyan air activity confronting U.S. forces, the officials said.
They declined to pinpoint the precise number of Libyan aircraft but said there were more than 18.
The carriers Saratoga and Coral Sea, among about 20 U.S. ships, launched the second round of operations in 12 days in the Tripoli Flight Information Region on Tuesday night Eastern time, the officials said.
The operations were to run until tomorrow night, according to a Notice of Intent filed Sunday by the Sixth Fleet.
The U.S. flight maneuvers are intended to maintain U.S. pressure on the North African country and to demonstrate determination to operate in international waters and airspace.
Most of the U.S.Libyan aircraft encounters occurred near the northern boundary of the Flight Information Region, which is 310 miles north of where the Gulf of Sidra laps against the Libyan beach and southeast of Sicily, the officials said.
A Soviet Kresta-class cruiser and two Kashin-class destroyers from the Soviet's Northern Fleet in the Baltic entered the Mediterranean on Suns day and moved within the FIR north of the Gulf of Sidra, the officials said.
Four Soviet warships were in the FIR and the officials said they suspected the Soviets were relaying intelligence information about the U.S. naval operations to Libya.
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University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
Student foils theft, suffers cuts, bruises
An apparent prank went awry early yesterday morning when the attempted theft of a statue resulted in a KU student being pulled into the would-be thieves' car and thrown out a block away, Lawrence police said.
At about 1: 10 a.m., several people tried to steal a lion statue at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house, 1301 W Campus Road, police said. The student, a resident of the house, confronted the pranksters. The suspects then dropped the statue and tried to flee in their car, police said.
The student reached into the car and tried to grab one of the suspects. He was pulled into the car, which then drove south on West Campus Road, police said. The suspects, whom the student could not identify, threw him out of the car in front of the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road, police said. The student suffered minor cuts and bruises. Dolly Lee is a nurse.
Fire report is false
The Lawrence Fire Department yesterday responded to a report of a natural-gas leak on campus, but discovered it was just a lab experiment.
Two fire engines and a ladder company responded to the 11:15 a.m. call. Firefighters found that a student experiment in a fifth-floor laboratory in Malot Hall had produced hydrogen sulfide, which smells like rotten eggs. The odor was mistaken for natural gas, said Maj. Dan Marrow of the fire department.
$ ^{21} $ Firefighters searched for a gas leak before finding the source of the odor. Marrow said.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police, said the odor was reported at Stauffer-Flint Hall and at the facilities operations building.
Students go to D.C.
David Epstein, student body president, and Amy Brown, vice president, will travel to Washington, D.C., during spring break to lobby against educational budget cuts.
Epstein said Tuesday that he and Brown would meet with Bob Dole, Senate majority leader, and Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum, E-Kansas, across three days to discuss why student representatives were against all educational cuts.
All seven Regents schools in Kansas will be represented at the conference.
Epstein and Brown will be accompanied on the trip by Chris Graves and John Allen, Associated Students of Kansas lobbyists. The University of Kansas Alumni Association will finance the trip.
The Regents schools are the six state schools and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
KU receives fossils
The University of Kansas Museum of Invertebrate Paleontology recently received a microfossil collection from a retired Houston scientist.
Frank Van Morkhoven, a research geologist with Shell Oil Co. for 30 years, donated his complete library of fossils and slides to the museum.
The museum is for research and is open to KU faculty and students and others who study invertebrate osteontology.
temperature of 15 to 20. Tomorrow should be partly cloudy with a high temperature in the lower 30s.
From staff and wire reports.
Fuel transfer from reactor was success
Though there was no immediate danger to the public when fuel was transferred from the KU nuclear reactor two weeks ago, KU officials demanded tight security.
By Grant W. Butler
Staff writer
Federal regulations required secrecy about the process for 10 days.
"This material is radioactive, and it's not something you'd want some crazy to get a hold of," said Harold Rosson, director of the reactor's dismantling process. "So for public security we sealed off the area."
Sixteen units of used uranium-235 were transferred from the reactor in two separate shipments on Jan. 28 and Feb. 2. The units were removed from the reactor by a crane and transported in fire-shelled shipping casks by flattened truck to a reprocessing plant in Savannah River, S.C.
During the fuel transfers, KU police surrounded the building and would not allow anyone to enter the building.
Other than an electrical malfunction in a crane that slowed down the transfer on Jan. 28, the operations were completed without problems, said Rosson, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering. The crane breakdown occurred during a practice transfer and not with an actual fuel unit.
There was no significant danger to the public at any point in either of the fuel transfers, he said.
"I've never seen anything go so smooth in my life," he said.
Bob Bearse, associate vice chancellor for reasearch, graduate studies and public service, agreed that the fuel transfer was successful.
"It went superbly," Bearse said. "Everybody did a fantastic job. Actually, it went better than planned."
"The only thing we regret is that we couldn't talk freely about the transfer because it was of community interest. But federal regulations prohibit the disclosure of information for ten days."
Bearse agreed that there was little danger to the public in the transfer.
"There was about as much danger as being struck by a meteor during the process," he said. "There's always some danger, but it was about that small."
Rosson said the shipping casks used in the transfer were strong and capable of handling nuclear materials.
"This thing is like a tank," he said. "It's been dropped from 30 feet onto a concrete test pad with absolutely no damage, so it's a real moose."
The shipping casks, however, only have a capacity of ten units. Rosson said, so two separate but identical operations were needed in the transfer.
Two units of unused uranium were removed from the reactor in early January, Rosson said. These units were not dangerous, so no security was necessary.
"They were shipped out by Yellow Freight," he said. "Federal regulations allow us to do that."
The unused fuel was shipped to Oak Ridge, Tenn., in two 55-gallon drums welded at the ends.
"I've called to initiate some action to have our license changed from an operating license to a possession license," he said. "This will allow us to possess the facility, but not operate it.
The next step in the decommissioning process for the reactor center is a change in the center's license.
"Obviously, since we don't have any fuel we can't operate it. It's kind of silly terminology. I think," he said.
Some minor radiation in the reactor still remains in the concrete shield and in the aluminum structure that held the fuel units. This radiation might be removed, Rosson said, or entombed by filling the reactor with concrete.
ESPRIT
Mary Burger/KANSAN
It's a Jungle
Musa Olsen, Wilton, Conn., sophomore, rehearses for Rock Chalk Revue. Gamma Phi Beta sorority and Kappa Sigma fraternity practiced their act, "Bungle in the Jungle," last night in Hoch Auditorium. Rock Chalk Revue will be Feb. 27, 28 and March 1.
Big firms lure law students with profitable internships
Hv Sandra Crider
Staff writer
Dan Cunningham laughed and rolled his eyes as he described his summer internship at a top Washington, D.C., law firm.
It has been said that there is no such thing as a free lunch, but some of the top students at the KU School of Law may have found an exception.
"It's basically like going through rush," he said yesterday.
The firm took interns, or clerks, to Orioles baseball games, Boston Pops concerts, the National Theatre, lunch with Ted Kennedy, Shenandoah National Park and Chesapeake Bay for an outing on a large schooner.
In addition to the enticing benefits, he said, law firms have clerks participate in what Cunningham called an obscene, embarrassing practice.
Most clerks in Washington get $650 to $1,000 a week for their summer job, Cunningham said.
"There's no way we can be worth that," he said. "Those salaries are given to get the best law students in the country.
"I'm embarrassed to say how well we get paid."
In fact, he was too ashamed to say exactly how obscene it was when he interned at Arent, Fox, Kintney, Plokin, & Kahn. The embarrassment doesn't quit when the law student graduates. A first-year employee in a large Washington law firm makes $42,000-$46,000 a year.
The big dollars may be enticing more and more people to law school. According to James Lichtenberg, director of the University Counseling Center, 65 students will take the Law School Admission Test this Saturday.
A high score will help get them into law school and give them a chance to get a high-paying internship.
Cunningham agrees, but not wholeheartedly.
But if they are paid so well, there must be hard work and high pressure involved.
He admitted employers had high expectations, but said, "Too many people have the impression that life and work in a large law firm, particularly in Washington, is cold and impersonal.
That's why Cunningham plans to go back to Washington after graduation. Large firms offer great learning opportunities, he said.
"But, both in D.C. and when I worked in Kansas City, I found the firms warm, personal and filled with intelligent, kind people."
"At this point, I'm ready to give that firm my complete commitment, he said."
According to Maggie Cartar, director of the KU placement office for the law school, dedication is expected and given between employer and clerk in the large firms.
"It it is unusual for it to be understood that the firm is saying to the clerk, 'You will have a job here for as long as you live.' And for the clerk, 'I'll work for you for as long as I live,' Cartart said.
Only about the top 10 percent of KU law students are recruited for the big practices, she said, and there are
drawbacks to even the sweetest deals.
The hours are long, and total dedication is required, Carttar said. Also there is no assurance that the clerk will move up in the hierarchy.
Perhaps even the most silver of clouds have their gray linings.
Shaking his head, he added quietly,
"It doesn't matter, the project has to
be done."
Cunningham acknowledged,
"When a job needs to be done,
everything else stops."
Robin Miles, Lawrence third-year law student, also said he knew the big-time law scene had its black marks. But he was encouraged by the fairly normal hours he observed associates working at one in the largest practices in Houston.
"Some lawyers work 70 or 80 hours a week," he said, "but I'll work my 50 and quit.
Miles said he earned $650 a week plus housing and travel subsidies for Bracewell & Patterson in Houston, where clerks for large firms can get up to $800 dollars a week. He agreed with Cunningham that clerks were "horribly overpaid."
Dara Trum, Leavenworth second-year law student, also pleaded guilty to being paid more than the duties were worth. Trum worked last summer at a Kansas City law firm and will work this summer at the nation's fourth largest practice in Houston.
Trum said, however, that there was a method to the seeming madness of the firms.
She said, "To get me down there, they've got to make it sweet."
Psych chairman resigns post
By a Kansan reporter
Baumgartel, professor of psychology, informed the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences office of his decision several weeks ago. He had originally agreed to serve a three-year term.
"I'm stepping down for my general health," Baumgartel, 65, said. "I'm also still interested in teaching and research."
After two years as chairman of the psychology department, Howard Baumgarel will step down at the end of this academic year.
"I think he's done a fine job," Lineberry said. "His colleagues and I both appreciate the effort he's put into his work."
decision
Robert Lineberry, dean of the College, said he respected Bumartel's
The standard term for a chairmanship is three to five years, but Baumgartel had originally requested a two-year term because of the demands of the office.
A search committee has been formed to find a replacement, but will not meet until next week, when a committee head will be chosen.
Lineberry said the committee would decide whether a replacement would be chosen among the present faculty or through an external
search.
The search committee will then make $ \varepsilon $ recommendation of two or three candidates to the department, which will review the recommendation and send a report to Lineberry.
Lineberry will interview the candidates and discuss his findings with the vice chancellor for academic affairs and the vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service. He then will make a final decision.
"We will be looking for a person who has good scholarly attributes as a psychologist and can understand a complex department," Lineberry said. "He must be fair."
Haskell bill would drop BIA control
By Brian Kaberline
Staff writer
A bill attempting to gain autonomy for Haskell Indian Junior College is meeting resistance from Haskell students and others in the Indian community.
The disagreement is over a bill that would remove Haskell from the control of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, a branch of the Department of the Interior, and permit the college to seek financing directly from Congress.
The current National Haskell Board of Regents is approved by the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
The bill would establish for Haskell a new board of regents nominated by tribal leaders and appointed by the president, speaker of the house and the Senate majority leader. It was introduced into the U.S. Congress by Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kansas.
Opponents of the bill say the sponsors should have asked for more input from the Indian people. Also, some are saying the bill is too vague.
The bill was drafted after groups, including the National Haskell Board of Regents and the Haskell Foundation, informed Slattery that the school needed a change, said Renee Wessels, Slattery's press secretary. She said Slattery agreed and worked with the groups to draft the bill.
Wessels said Slattery was in the process of sending letters to tribal leaders to get more information. The bill is still in its infancy and may be changed before it is voted on in Congress.
Camilla Wishenko, Topeka graduate student and Haskell graduate, said the promoters of the bill should have talked to Haskell students and Indian leaders before taking legislative action.
Wishenko said the bill was vague, and she feared what was not in it as much as what was. She said the bill did not say that Haskell would remain a school for only American Indians. The bill also does not guarantee that the majority of the new board of regents would be Indian.
Gerald E. Gipp, Haskell president, will discuss the bill tonight in his state of the college address.
Manny King, sponsor of the school's student senate, said students were waiting to see whether the speech would clarify the proposal. If the students still think there is a need for further discussion, they will hold an open forum on the topic.
In the meantime, a group of stones is circulating a petition to stop the
City Commissioner Sandra Praeger, president of the Haskell Foundation, said that if the bill was passed, the tribes would have more control because Haskell no longer would be one of the many concerns of the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Praeger said that because the bureau might get out of education and because budget restraints prevented any long-range planning by the school, something had to be done.
"Haskell cannot continue to function the way it has for the last 100 years," she said.
Charles Gebo, dean of instruction at Haskell, said he understood the disagreement over the bill. The students and staff of Haskell are concerned about the school and any changes affecting it.
Geboe said he was on a committee of students, faculty members and school staff working to draw up a fact sheet on the bill. The sheet will outline the measure so that people can make an informed decision.
The school administration has been willing to discuss the bill, he said, and is glad to see concern about the school.
Venida Chenault, president of the Inter-tribal Alliance, a group of KU American Indian students, said the bill was important.
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University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Keeping promises
We may never see the light.
For more than a decade, improved campus lighting has been brandished by student politicians as a campaign promise during Student Senate elections.
Study after study has shown that more illumination on our sidewalks, parking lots and throughways would decrease campus crime and make the Hill a safer place to be after dark.
The promises, statistics and needs are always there. Unfortunately, the money never is
The most recent developments show that Chancellor Gene A. Budig now supports the project. Of course he does. How does one come out against safe lighting?
more important, the Chancellor's support should help pull strings with the the Board of Regents and the Kansas Legislature. And their support needs to have dollar signs in front of it, not "Gee, this is a good idea. Why don't we study it?"
Best of luck
It shouldn't be that hard to convince the people in Topeka that more lights would stop many incidents of theft, vandalism and assault.
But it must be, because the lighting issue has been pondered and promised far too long. What we really need is some tangible sign of action.
So far, the issue has been placed on the Regents wish list and $25,000 has been allocated for campus lighting. Much more is needed and our current Student Senate administration has begun the arduous task of getting more funds from an already requestladen Legislature.
And more lights.
A suitable punishment
Retaliation — a primitive form of punishment, the eye for eye, tooth for tooth and disgusting apartment for disgusting apartment.
That form of punishment was used in a Kansas City landlord-tenant dispute last week when Allen Shaw, a landlord, was ordered by a Municipal Court judge to live for 30 days in his apartment building that was cited for extreme code violations.
The violations included: not providing a suitable bathtub or shower, bad plumbing, leaky ceilings and exposed sewage pipes.
Before sentencing, the judge said he asked Shaw whether he thought the apartment was a
safe and sanitary place to live.
Shaw answered yes and the judge ordered him to live up to his words.
Retaliation, although an ancient form of punishment, sometimes fits in modern-day cases.
It could be used to make perpetrators think twice before they commit offenses.
A rapist might think twice if he thought he might be raped, an embezzler might halt his embezzling if he thought that his pockets were being drained by someone else and a landlord might consider making his apartments livable if he thought he might be made to live there.
Ma Bell's latest offer
Southwestern Bell's own version of reversing the charges failed miserably last week.
Earlier this month, Bell "offered" customers a new phone repair service on little yellow cards sent out with the latest phone bills. In true Book-of-the-Month-Club form, customers would get the service at 90 cents a month unless they sent in a little yellow card saving they didn't want it.
Bell expected to automatically gain about 760,000 subscribers at $10.80 a year — an extra $2.2 million in the bank annually.
The name of the service — Optional Home Maintenance Service/Optional Maintenance Service — even helped it to sound more voluntary.
Those figures alone probably would have been enough to gain Southwestern Bell a flow of voluntary subscribers. Ninety cents a month is a mere pittance when compared with an $80-an-hour phone repair bill.
Unfortunately, Bell didn't give customers the opportunity as much as it tried to give them the service. Many people
The repair service idea is a good one. It saves the cost of visits from Bell repairmen, which Bell reminded customers costs $32 for the first 15 minutes of repair work, then $16 for each additional 15 minutes.
apparently felt they were being bullied, and voiced complaints with the Kansas Corporation Commission.
Others who didn't notice the yellow card jammed in with the rest of the pages of the phone bill would have been in for an unpleasant surprise when their next bill came and they discovered the new service to which they had unknowingly subscribed.
In fact, the move was so controversial that it spurred an investigation by the U.S. Postal Service examining whether Bell had violated domestic mail regulations on solicitations.
The company was right to revoke its generous offer last week. The program will now be offered only to customers who request it.
Company-officials now plan to promote the value of the service in hopes of gaining subscribers, opting for the old-fashioned positive response concept instead.
Bell officials insist the profit motive was not behind the move, pointing to their quick reversal as a sign of concern for customer reaction.
It's more likely that Bell realized customers can't be given a new program and told to pay, anymore than they can be given life insurance or a magazine subscription.
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Lauretta McMillen ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry ... Campus editor
Daryl Giles ... Sports editor
Brice Waddill ... Photo editor
Susanne Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nixon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Lori Eckart ... Classified manager
Carolina Innside ... Production Manager
Pallen Lee ... National manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
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White House would bring a fair price
President Reagan's proposal to sell government-run railroads and other "outmoded" federal assets indicates that he is out of stap with most Americans on this issue.
I don't mean people object to lowering the deficit and getting the government out of competition with private industry. I'm only saying the property the president wants to put on the block isn't exactly what we had in mind.
His new budget calls for the government to continue such programs as defense, AIDS research.
Dick West United Press International
If, for instance, we turned drug enforcement over to Rambo, that would clear up the problem in no time.
ant-terrorism campaigns and drug law enforcement. It is easy to see how private enterprise might do a better job in these fields.
One difficulty may be determining what would be a fair price. In addition to the headquarters building the State Department occupies in Foggy Bottom, there are all those embassies abroad. They should bring a pretty penny if sold.
And who among us does't have a foreign policy? Yet, the State Department isn't among the possessions Reagan recommends selling.
Or maybe Reagan would consider renting out the department for specified periods. How I would love to get my hands on the diplomatic establishment for a year. Or even for a month. Or a week. Or a day. Or an hour.
That brings up the question of how long renters should be in control.
Should there be an overnight rate or should State Department occupants be required to sign yearly leases?
At any rate, I hope there are no plans to divide the department into condominiums.
Even more complications could arise with respect to selling - or renting - Congress.
Constitutional arguments also could be raised against selling Congress or the Supreme Court.
However well the judiciary system might function in private hands, it must be remembered that the Founding Fathers created the courts as a separate branch of government, independent of the executive arm.
Sure the sale of federal courthouses could go a long way toward balancing the budget. But any such proposition probably would wind up in the laps of the justices. Thus, in effect, we would be back where we started.
If Reagan really wants to sell something without creating a controversy, perhaps he should put the White House on the market.
The executive department indisputably is owned by the government and I've heard there's a fortune to be made in real estate.
Go ahead. Make his day by making an offer he can't refuse.
GEE, I WONDER WHERE THIS RIVET GOES!
--part of a sandwich — the middle part.
Solutions depend on caring
National borders, color, race and culture differences were forgotten recently as people of the United States and the world joined in a celebration of the anniversary of the birth of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
In these days when such fundamental rights as equality, justice, freedom, peace and respect for human dignity are challenged, we remember King's wise advice, "If we don't learn to live together as brothers, we will perish together as tools."
At the same time we praise his support of such values, it is appropriate to make an account of the progress toward the fulfillment of his dream.
The advances made by blacks in the United States in 40 years are undeniable and are a motive of admiration for those in the world who are afflicted by injustices.
The civil rights movement of the 1960s brought on desegregation to public places and, at least apparently, it began demolishing racism from the social, political and economic life of the United States. Blacks, who were once considered an inferior race, now know that all humans were created equal, and complain if treated otherwise.
However, there is still much to be done. Blacks still ride greyhound and city buses because many cannot afford their own cars.
According to a Jan. 19 article in the Washington Post, black adult unemployment is twice that of whites. The annual median income of blacks is still about half what whites earn — 56 percent to be exact.
These percentages do not differ much from those of the 1960s. Forty percent of the U.S. prison population is black. Less than 14 percent of college-age blacks attend school. And obviously, there are more blacks (33.8 percent) living below the federally established poverty guidelines than whites (11.5 percent), a fact easily observable in relief centers and soup kitchens.
This was the unequal state of affairs when the first legal Martin
PETER C.
Constancio Garay
Guest columnist
Luther King Day remembered
King's birthday.
Many opposed the holiday — there were even a few white supremacists who marched against it.
How honored was the slain activist feel? Many think the essence of King's ideal was never well understood and all that he stood for was hindered by his death and the earlier death of John F. Kennedy, the president who coined the term "affirmative action" and submitted to Congress the Civil Rights Act that eventually passed in 1964.
Many agree that if King were alive, he would be staging sit-ins in support of the struggle of South African blacks or would be in jail for protesting Washington's double-standard policies in South Africa and Nicaragua.
The paramount significance of King's dream is that it transcends national boundaries and differences of races, languages and creeds. He is an inspiration and an example of heroism for those who share a common cause and struggle against oppression and injustice.
But for those who promote systems of covetous exploitation of nature and oppression of people of a certain color, culture, race, gender and class, Martin Luther King Jr. was a "communist agitator."
This type of dishonest and defamatory label also has been given to other activists fighting against intervention and discrimination, such as Father Luis Espinal in Bolivia, Maurice Bishop in Grenada, Salvador Allende in Chile, Augusto Cesar Sandino in Nicaragua, Archbishop Romero in El Salvador, Benigno Aquino in the Philippines and thousands of other heroes whose "crime" was to voice their opinion.
They spoke out in favor of the "silent cultures," as Brazilian exile
Paulo Freire calls the people of urban slums, ghettoes, rural communities and villages where media, schools, hospitals and technology hardly reach.
They protested against the discrimination and injustice in a "civilized" world still ruled by the laws of the jungle — where the gap between the three-fourths (with 77 percent GNP) of the poor and one-third of the rich (with 83 percent GNP) is ever widening.
Honoring a moral and pacifist leader such as Martin Luther King Jr. offers us all the opportunity to reconsider our social responsibilities as members of a nation and a world
Most of our contemporary social evils, from discrimination to poverty, from broken homes to drug abuse, from arms buildup to terrorism, have the same root. That common root is too much emphasis on individualism, the separation between the individual and the society from which he is undeniably a part.
Any solutions greatly depend on teaching ourselves and the new generations to respect and care for others. Individualism can become as oppressive and self-destructive as Nazism ever was.
Bishop Desmond Tutu has said, "We are really made for interdependence, because the absolutely self-sufficient human being is as intolerable as a so-called self-made man who worships his make-up."
It is a basic moral responsibility for us, the ordinary people, to be aware of the issues that concern our own neighborhoods and the world. We must get involved in activities that encourage sharing and caring for other people.
One admires the philosophy of life of Mahatma Gandhi, who taught us that "there is no limit to extending our service to our neighbors across state-made borders. God never made these borders."
However, we often forget to practice this. It is a lesson and a conviction Martin Luther King Jr. believed was worthy dying for.
Truckers unforgiving of minor goofs
Because I don't fly, I do a lot of cross-country driving. So I've developed a number of rules for getting there in one piece.
And if I have a cardinal rule, it's this: If a truck comes roaring up behind me, I get out of his way as quickly as I can. When I say *quickly* that's what I mean. I slam the gas pedal down and flee to the next lane.
While many truck drivers are courteous and professional, a certain percentage are psychotics who hate any and all cars and their occupants. They view us as a nuisance, a hindrance to their getting their load through in the fastest time possible.
For all I know, they might hate certain makes of cars more than others. Or colors, or license plates.
And I have no interest in antagonizing somebody who is revving up a machine that's 20 times as big as mine, at 70 or 75 miles an hour, only a few feet behind my hip pocket.
But no matter how careful you are,
if you're on the road long enough,
eventually you're going to make a mistake.
Traffic was light, the highway was smooth and I was doing about 60 or 65. Ahead of me was a truck that was kind of dawdling.
A week or so ago, while crossing central Florida, I made one. And the memory of it still makes me reach for the Manlox.
I pulled in' to the left lane to pass him. But as I drew even, I saw a car several hundred feet ahead parked on the shoulder.
Instinctively, I took my foot off the gas. I didn't put on the brakes, but I slowed enough so that in a few seconds ! dropped to the speed of the truck on my right, and stayed there.
A mental alarm went off: Cop. Radar.
Mike Royko Chicago Tribune
Then I heard the blast of an air horn. For a moment I wasn't sure where it came from. I was still looking ahead to what I thought was a police car.
Then it blasted again. I looked in my rear-view mirror, and there it was, so close to my bumper that I couldn't see anything more than his huge grill.
Apparently, the truck had been coming up fast, but at a distance, when I pulled out to pass. If I had kept going, there would have been no problem.
But because I thought I saw a cop and slowed down, I managed to get in his way.
I surged forward — cop or no cop — and swung into the right lane. As it turned out, it wasn't a cop.
The fast truck now had an open road, and he moved forward. But when he got next to me, he slowed. Then he began drifting to the right, as if to force me off the road.
I hit my brakes and he went by me,
but he swung into my land and dropped
For a few seconds I wasn't sure what he was trying to do. Then I glanced in my rear-view mirror and I understood.
That other truck was now coming up behind me fast. And I could see that it was the same kind of truck — same model, same pain job.
They were obviously traveling together and were probably on the CB talking about teaching the jerk in the Chevy a lesson. I was going to be
I decided not to join in their game. I swung to my left, intending to pass the truck and get as far ahead of him as possible, even if it meant doing 0.
He wouldn't allow it. He swerved and blocked the left lane. And his partner came out to keep me from dropping back.
By then, there couldn't have been more than 5 or 10 feet between my
While many truck drivers are courteous and professional, a certain percentage are psychotics who hate any and all cars.
I went back to the right lane. So did they
My wife said, "My God, what's going on?"
front bumper and a truck and my back bumper and another truck.
I said, "I think they're trying to kill us."
Now, if that sounds overly dramatic, it isn't. If a stranger came up to you on the street and held a knife to your throat, you could reasonably assume that he was threatening your life.
reacted quickly enough to keep me between them. Each time, the margin for error was only a few feet.
Two more times, I tried to get out and around. And both times they
So, here were two men, using giant machines as deadly weapons and threatening us with them. All I had to do was make a mistake — panic and hit my brakes — and one truck would have pleased me into the other.
I considered making for this
skidder. I'd be in a ditch on my side
skipped. I'd be in a ditch on my side
I'm not sure how scared I was. Ora
fright scale of one to 10, the night a
couple of street punks stuck a gun to
my nose I was about a nine. So P
Guess the trucks had me up to or
eight.
Then I got a break. The trucks were playing their sadistic game at about 45. This permitted a few cars to overtake us. I saw them in my side mirror. And as they went by, I snapped the wheel left, hit the gas and go on their tail.
I figured that if the maniac in the front truck wanted to swing out and get me, he'd have to take a piece of the guy in front of me, too.
It worked. And in a few seconds,
was speeding well ahead of them and
reached the finish line.
Now, I don't know if the drivers those trucks see any of the papers which my columns appear. Or they're capable of reading.
But on the outside chance that you do read this, I'd like you to consider what you almost did to a couple of strangers. You could have killed or maimed us. And that's seven punishment for the crime of having unintentionally delayed you by a few seconds.
I'm not going to preach to you about the way you should treat your fellow man — even those fellow men who don't get out of your way far enough.
I'd just like to say that I sincerely hope that both of you and your master practice birth control. Honest, we already have more than enough morons in this world.
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Chalk
Continued from p. 1
"I'm excited about the way the guys are dancing, but it's hard to teach them something and then have it look the way you want it." she said.
John Allison, Prairie Village senior and executive director for the production, said Tuesday that the Rock Chalk rehearsals had gracefully so far.
"Rehearsals are going very well," he said. "The groups are staying right on schedule. They're maintaining a lot of enthusiasm, which is tough to do when you've been working 15 to 16 hours a day on something since Christmas."
Nicholas T. Snyder and Ronald A. Grosso.
The largest problem facing tne show, he said, was that there would only be two rehearsals with the KU Jazz Ensemble II, the pit band for Rock Chalk.
Tammy Stude/KANSAN
Vernell Spearman, left, director of minority affairs, David Katzman, chairman of University Senate Human Relations Committee, and Donald Brownstein, associate professor of philosophy. listen to comments made by people who attended the South Africa hearing. The hearing will continue tonight in the Kansas Union.
said the purpose of the hearings was to listen to opinions from the University community on South Africa.
Hearing
Continued from p. 1
"We are seeking advice on what role the University should play in this issue," he said.
After the hearings have been completed, the committee will deliberate and prepare recommendations to sentent to the University Council, he said.
Richard MacDonald, a Leawood graduate student who lived in South Africa until he was 14, told the committee he thought South African blacks were against divestment because it would hurt an already crippled economy.
"I hate the South African system, probably with far more reason than anyone else in this room," he said. "But there are two sides to every problem.
"I have no alternative to divestment, but no one else does either and that's the problem."
James Seaver, professor of history and representative of the American Association of University Professors, said his organization unanimously passed a resolution Tuesday urging the Endowment Association to divest.
Unplanned pregnancy? Decisions to make?
"No firm has ever withdrawn from South Africa because of divestment," he said.
Understanding all your alternatives makes you really free to choose. Replace pressure and panic with thoughtful, rational reflection.
"It doesn't seem the Endowment Association has understood the moral issues involved," he said.
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Phil Kline, Shawnee second-year law student and chairman of the KU College Republicans, said his organization was against divestment.
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1. 什么是生态农业?
生态农业是指在合理利用自然资源和先进科学技术的前提下,依靠自然条件对农作物进行可持续的种植、养殖、管理,从而达到提高农产品的质量和经济效益的目的。生态农业强调的是人与自然的和谐共生,与环境的关系紧密联系,通过科学的管理和管理,实现生物多样性保护和生态环境修复的目标。
生态农业具有以下几个特点:
1. **精准定位**:根据当地的自然条件和资源状况,制定适宜的种植、养殖、管理策略。
2. **优化配置**:充分利用土地、水源、空气等自然资源,进行科学的规划和配置。
3. **绿色循环**:采用有机肥、微生物肥等多种环保材料,提高资源利用率。
4. **智能管理**:运用现代信息技术,如传感器、数据处理、自动控制系统,实现全程监控和管理。
5. **可持续发展**:坚持生态优先,协调发展,以实现长远的可持续发展。
生态农业的意义包括:
1. **改善生活质量**:提供优质的食物和良好的居住环境,提高居民的生活质量。
2. **保护生态环境**:减少农药、化肥的使用,降低环境污染,保护自然资源。
3. **促进经济发展**:增加农民收入,促进乡村经济的发展。
4. **提升农产品价值**:提高农产品的附加值,增加农民的收益。
生态农业的发展趋势包括:
1. **技术创新**:引进新的技术和方法,推动农业技术的进步。
2. **合作共建**:加强企业、农户、科研院所之间的合作,共同开发新技术、新产品。
3. **共享资源**:建立共享机制,共享自然资源和科技成果。
4. **开放合作**:与国际组织、科研机构等开展合作,共同探索生态农业的新途径。
生态农业是一个长期的过程,需要不断探索和完善,不断适应新的环境和形势。只有这样,才能更好地发挥生态农业的优势,为人类谋福祉。
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After this date, please contact your placement office or:
Karen Winter
Interns demonstrating strong management potential will be considered for full time Analyst positions upon graduation.
The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City is seeking qualified candidates for Management Development Internship positions.
Thursday, February 13, 1986
University Senate Human Relations Committee
We will be available for on campus interviews:
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City 925 Grand Ave
INTERNSHIPS
PUBLIC HEARINGS SOUTH AFRICA
Kansas City, MO 64198
Feb. 12 & 13 Jayhawk Rm, KS Union
7:30 - 10:30 pm
mates seeks information on activities
writing letters on campus, opinions
on divestment, and advice on
the positive educational role university
governance can play in the issue of South Africa
Any organization or individual may schedule
mailing time by calling Janet Jackson. 864-825-825
University Senate Human Relations Committee.
David M. Katzman, Chair
Cynthia Baldwin
Donald Brownstein
Robb Ferron
Lisa Hund
Dana Weisselweiler
Caryl Smith
Vernell Spearman
Stanley Stanler
Ellen Seward
Michael Wyly.
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6
University Daily Kansan
Arts/Entertainment
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Dancers seek creative unity
By Grant W. Butler
Staff writer
Alvin Alley American Dance Theater, 8 o'clock p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday in Hoe Auditorium as part of the KU Concert Series and the University Arts Festival. Tickets, available at the Murphy Hall Box Office, are $6.50 and $7.50 for KU馆 tickets, for senior citizens and other students, and $13 and $15 for the general public.
There is a vision of brotherhood and unity in a dance company made up of people from all over the world.
Although the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater is mostly composed of black Americans, it is made up of people from all over the world.
"He's trying to show that people are people and they want the same things," said Renee Robinson, a veteran dancer with the dance theater. "We all have hardships. We all have happiness. We're all trying to create something better for ourselves."
Alley's dance company was one of the first in the country to be interracial.
Janet Hamburg, director of KU's department of dance, said she hoped the舞 theater's performances at KU would show students the level of performance they could aspire to achieve.
"They're the top modern dance company in the world," she said. "They tour internationally, they have outstanding dancers and they have top choreographers. They're what the dance profession is all about."
Robinson said many types of dancing were represented in every performance by the dance theater. Most of the dances are modern, but classical and jazz choreography are incorporated into each performance.
Many of the popular works performed by the company were choreographed by Ailey, but Robinson said many other choreographer's works also were performed in its concert.
The company adds more variety to each concert by using different types of music as well.
"We do all types of music from Pat Metheny to Duke Ellington." Robinson said. "There is some original music, and a lot of jazz music, but not your funky jazz. There's also spirituals and blues."
Ailey, who was artistic director of the company when it was founded in 1958, has continued his vision of creating a repertory dance company that exposes the public to dance. The pursuit of this vision has taken the dance theater to 48 states, 44 countries and six continents, including tours of China and the Soviet Union. The dance theater was the first modern American dance company to tour the USSR.
"Mr. Alley is many things," Robinson said. "He's a man of his childhood which is reflected in his work. He's a man who's traveled. He's easy going."
"He loves to experiment and loves you to experiment. He wants you to be a strong dancer, but he
wants to see your personality. He always says 'no personality is a bad personality.' "
An ideal dancer in Alley's eyes, Robinson said, would be one who is proficient in all styles of dance, who can portray many characters and who can address all levels of a performance with a desire for perfection.
She said other cultures are also of interest to Ailey. He wants to explore other languages and the art and music of other people.
"He's a very people person. Mr. Ailey is a wonderful man to work for," she said.
"I need to dig in and use my body more to convey feelings. That's probably come from Mr. Allley because I know what he wants. He's given me such an insight into myself."
"Blues Suite," a work choreographed by Ailey which has become popular, will be presented in the Wednesday night performance.
"You want to be able to execute your steps, but also touch someone and convey what you're given to say," she said. "That fits in with being both an artist and a dancer."
The work is a reflection of the life Alley led in the deep South when he was growing up. The work displays anger and frustration about the battle by blacks to overcome discrimination.
"There's a section of the work called 'Back Water Blues' where there's a couple that fights. They
love each other very much, but they fight," Robinson said. "There's a lot of sorrow and fear. It's a collection of what gives people the blues."
While "Revelations" uses black spiritual music, Robinson said, the piece reflects something about all people.
Another hallmark piece of the company that was choreographed by Aley is "Revelations."
"‘Revelations’ is a book in the Bible, but it says something about all religions. We go through struggles in our lives, but there are happy moments, and there is hope and faith that things will get better."
The last section of "Revelations" has dancers, wearing yellow and holding fans, performing to the negro spiritual "Rock of my Soul."
Expert advice always inspires great action on programs. Robinson said, it was common for audiences to be on their feet singing and clapping, by the end of the last section. Often the audience response is so great that the last section will be repeated as an encore.
"In the course of an evening you've been taken to many different levels, so by the time you get to 'Revelations,' with the fans and the chairs, you just automatically pick up," she said.
"Something in it sweeps them up and they want to see it again and again," she said.
Snapshots
Director to visit KU
J. Carter Brown, director of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, will speak on "Treasure Houses of Britain: Art and Diplomacy" at 8 p.m. Monday in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Brown will discuss the arrangements for the exhibition and show slides of some of the great works of art borrowed for the exhibition, "The Treasure Houses of Britain: Five Hundred Years of Private Patronage and Art Collection." Paintings, sculpture, furniture, tapestries, and porcelains are among the 700 objects in the show.
Play will be fun, free
The Seem To Be Players will present "Americartoon, a Comedy Breakout," at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, at 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Saturday and at 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. Sunday at the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets.
"Americartoon" is a combination of original scripts, fun songs and comedy bits. The scripts, "The Orge and Grinder" and "The Great Alphabet Robbery," were written by Ric Averill, the Company's co-founder and artistic director.
Talesnik to perform
Ricardo Talesnik, the Argentine actor and playwright, will bring his one-man show, "En Camista," to the University of Kansas for one performance at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
Using comedy and irony throughout, the performer presents a critical view of people's behavior concerning sex, access to power, marriage.
Store offers atypical videos
By Monique O'Donnell
Staff writer
If you're a basket case, bananas over polyester and duck soup, but generally en la dole vita then you might like Lawrence's new, unconventional video store.
Liberty Hall Video, 646 Massachusetts St., opened less than three weeks ago and its selection includes more than 500 unusual films. Gary Mackender, manager of the store, said he bought films that could not be found in most other video stores in town.
Directors of the films included in the store's unusual selection range from Fellini, Bergman and Warhol to Alfred Hitchcock and the Marx Brothers. The store will order films that customers put on a request list.
"We're trying to specialize in more off-the-wall films," Mackender said. "Generally our films are for movie lovers and people who have more knowledge of films."
"Since we opened we've been getting about 100 new films a week," Mackender said. "We'll probably go down to 30 new films a week after a while."
One of Liberty Hall's latest acquisitions is a series of films by Les Blank. One of the Blank films, "Garlic is as Good as 10 Mothers," is about bavon cooking.
Kerr Holbrook, a KU graduate, said he was impressed
Mackender, who is also SUA's film chairman, said it was not difficult to get foreign films or cult movies. But he said most video stores do not get films like "Eraser Head," because they were not the typical commercial movies that everyone knew about.
"They have Japanese movies and a lot of good foreign stuff," Holbrook said. "I think they did a remarkable job in finding those films."
The store has a unique renting procedure, Holbrook said. Instead of requiring a deposit or a membership before renting video cassette recorders, the store simply takes a Polaroid picture of its customers. Each customer also must pay a $1 fee to be added to the store's list of renters.
In the meantime, puppets Earl and Babs guard the store and get to watch all the bizarre videos such as "Atomic Cafe," "Santa Claus Conquers the Martians" and "Poor White Trash."
Sensitivity leads to insight
with Liberty Hall's video selection. He said the store catered to a more intellectual market, not the average household.
Choose Me, directed by Alan Rudolph. 3:30-
p.m. 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday
in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Rated R. 108 min./color.
"I think it a good selling point, it shows that they trust their customers." Holbrook said.
By Monique O'Donnell
Staff writer
Yep, another flick about sex in the '90s. But "Choose Me" makes it possible to present sex with subtlety.
In his film, director Allen Rudolph explores the sexuality of an abstinent man, a极私 prudish middle-aged woman, a Love, played by Genevieve Bujold.
Love hosts a radio talk show, The Love Line, geared toward unfortunate members of misguided relationships. In her love/sex telephone therapy, she advocates the importance of emotional, intellectual relationships as opposed to sexual relationships.
tity from others and leads a rather ascetic life.
Privately, Love conceals her iden-
Things become a bit messy when Love moves in with the frustrated and confused Eve, played by Lesley Ann Warren, Eve. a former pro
Review
situte, often takes advice from the Love Line under a pseudonym. The two don't realize that they've talked over the phone.
Both women in this film are drastic examples of women in the '80s. Eve has had too many bad relationships and is a cynic and a pessimist about men. Ann has listened to many people's amorous problems and shuns romantic involvements.
When Mickey meets Eve he is sure she's destined to be his. However, he is rather fickle. He kisses and immediately proposes marriage to several women he has just met.
walked out of a veteran's mental hospital.
Then Mickey, played by Keith Carradine, comes along. He has just
Mickey even sleeps with Eve's roommate, Love, who then puzzles her co-workers and the audience of her radio show by taking a new, enthusiastic approach to sex.
Mickey, Eve and all have changed their lives aptly by the time the movie ends. But even though all seem to have given what they wanted, the question of their happiness remains open.
This movie may be strange and confusing at times, but it deserves appreciation for offering unusual insights and off-beat sensitivity.
Band's music mixes punk and rockabilly
By Monique O'Donnell
Despite the satanic appearance of its latest album cover, Legal Weapon isn't a head banging, heavy metal band.
Staff writer
Many people consider the band to have a smooth, polished sound, said Bill Rich, promoter for Redline productions.
The most significant aspect of this group is its female vocalist, Kat Arthur, whom critics have compared to Debra Harry, lead vocalist of the group Blondie. However, people who have heard the band and like its sound object to this comparison
Legal Weapon, a four piece band from Los Angeles, will perform at 9 p.m. tomorrow at the Outhouse, four miles east of Massachusetts Street on 15th Street.
Leslie Dunham, Simi Valley, Calif., sophomore, said she had heard the band perform in Los Angeles on New Years Eve.
Rich said he heard the band perform in Kansas City, Mo., a few years ago and did not think Arthur sounded anything like Debra Harry.
Whether Arthur sounds like someone else or not, critics say her rough, blues-inspired singing is the band's best feature.
Tomorrow's concert will be Legal Weapon's first performance in Lawrence. Rich rented the Outhouse for the concert and said that he expected a high turnout because of the band's notoriety.
"They're not loud and obnoxious, and their female vocalist is really good." Dunham said.
Legal Weapon's latest album "Interior Hearts," features a mix of punk and rockabilly, a combination of rock and hillbilly (folk) music. The songs on the band's latest album range from rhythmic love songs to more aggressive songs about personal confusion.
The cover illustration could be mistaken to indicate a hard-core, slam-dancing type of music to some people, Dunham said. However, it is no indication of the bands musical style.
Arthur generally belts out her songs in a throaty, rough voice. Rough-sounding guitars and repetitive drums echo in the background, but they are sometimes overpowered by intense vocals.
Dunham said the group played in Los Angeles constantly and she thought it would be good to hear them in Lawrence. She said many people who liked bands such as the Wall of Vodoo, the Violent Femmes or X would enjoy listening to Legal Weapon.
The album cover illustrates a madonna, robed in green, standing in front of a red flaming heart. Two rough looking maidens clad in skimpy black leather outfits are chained to the heart.
"I'm going to go see them," Dunham said. "They're a lot of fun, and the lead singer has a really good stage presence."
Moses symbolizes instruction at KU
This image is an appropriate symbol of the University of Kansas, and the image is depicted as a bronze statue in front of Smith Hall.
By Grant W. Butler
Staff writer
When Moses stood before the burning bush, he received instructions from God.
"That's what we're all about," Elden Tefft, professor of art and the sculptor of the statue said Sunday.
"Students come here to receive instructions."
Robert Rose, cinematographer of the film, said the statue also should have symbolic meaning to students.
The film shows the development of the statue over a 15 year period, from its conception to its installation. Many students worked on it.
The development and creation of the statue is the subject of the film "A Motion Picture of Moses: A Heroic Sculpture." A free showing of the film will start at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Dyche Auditorium.
"It it shows it from the start to the finish," he said. "It was to be somewhat of a step-by-step film without hitting you over the head and boring you."
"It was an unusual project to begin with because of the size and because it was all going to be done on the Hill," he said. "The molding, the welding, the casting — it was all done on the Hill."
The documentary about the film's development is meant to be a profile of the statue and its sculptor, as well as a "how-to film" about bronze sculpting. Rose said.
Teft said it was fitting that Moses, in a sense, could continue to serve as a teacher through the film. The film served a dual purpose. Teft shares
his knowledge of bronze sculpturing with students, and the film shows the development of a large, hollow sculpture for people who were un familiar with the art.
"This film gives some idea about the process a founder uses, but it's a little less detailed for the casual person who just wants to learn about founded sculpture," he said.
Rose said any time there had been progress in the statue's development he had documented it with photographs.
"The film shows essentially that there was just a square frame and eventually it became a statue," he said.
There are only three copies of the film, and two of those are on videotape. But he said someone might be interested in distributing the film to other schools. Rose said he and Tefft would consider distributing the film themselves if no distributing company was interested in the film.
Teftt said the term "heroic" was a sculptural reference to the size of the work, and not a statement about the works character.
A heroic statue is larger than life, he said, so it's not as elegant as it sounds. It refers only to its size.
The conceptual development of the statue was not too difficult, Tefft said, because he already had designed the University's seal, an image of Moses knealing before the burning bush.
Most of the problems that might have arisen from sculpturing of the statue for Smith Hall were already solved because Teff originally had developed the seal as a three-dimensional image.
PETER DAVID BURTON
Elden Tefft, the sculptor of the Moses statue, and Robert Rose, a local cinematographer, stand in front of the statue outside Smith Hall. The statue is the topic of the new film "A Motion Picture of Moses: A Heroic Sculpture."
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
7
On Campus
■ Tony Arnold, KUHSA Truman Scholar, will speak on "Public Service and an Honors Education" at 11:45 a.m. today for the Brown Bag Lunch in 108 Nunemaker Center.
Elizabeth Sherbon, former member of the Martha Graham Dance Company, will speak at Dance Club meeting at 4 p.m. today in 252 Robinson Center.
The KU Ki-Aikido Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center.
The Latin American Solidarity will meet for rice and beans at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. $1.50 donation accepted.
*Widows and Widowes of Lawrence will meet at 7 p.m. today in the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Robert Oyler, an attorney, will speak about legal matters for widows and widowes.
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will present "The ABCs of Personal Financial Planning" at 7 p.m. today in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union.
Abortion law proposed
By Abbie Jones
Staff writer
Girls under the age of 18 who want abortions may be required to get permission from their parents under a bill now being considered by the Kansas Senate.
Opponents of the bill say pregnant girls are old enough to make the decision alone, but proponents disagree.
"You can't get your ears pierced without written permission, but you can have major surgery and get an abortion without mom and dad ever knowing about it," said Bill Gillifon, vice president of Kansas For Life.
The bill says an aggravated criminal abortion is one performed by anyone other than a doctor or without first obtaining the written consent of the parents in custody. The bill also prohibits performing an abortion after the first trimester of pregnancy or in anywhere other than a hospital or licensed surgical center.
Lee Ketzel, treasurer for the Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights in Kansas, said girls who were facing adult responsibilities should be able to make the decisions of an adult.
"If a girl is old enough to consider
become a mother, she is old enough
to decide if she wants to carry a pregnancy to full term or not," Ketzel said.
The bill, proponents say, will protect girls who may be too young to make such important decisions.
"The whole concept of the bill is to be sure that the child knows what she's doing," said Mike Cavell, a member of Kansas For Life, and a lobbyist. "We asked that the parent be allowed to counsel and give consent to the abortion."
Cavell said any minor who wanted an abortion had the alternative of going to a district court judge, who may waive the consent requirement.
But appearing before a judge could slow the process when time was too important, Ketzel said.
Ketzel said, "I think that'a a way to slow it down and possibly force it into the third trimester. Why should a judge be involved in that?"
Cavell said the judge may grant the abortion if he thinks the girl is capable of going through the procedure, or he may decide to tell the parents.
Darlene Stears, state coordinator for the Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights in Kansas, said girls who lived in small Kansas towns usually didn't have the money or transportation to get to a district court judge.
The penalty of conducting an ag-gravated abortion is made a class B felony by the proposed bill. Present law says it is a class D felony.
Class D felonies are punishable by a minimum sentence of no less than one year. Class B felons receive a minimum sentence of no less than 5 years.
Stearns said such a law might encourage a girl to perform the abortion herself or go through with a pregnancy' that isn't wanted.
"If the girl can't tell her parents ahead, then a law won't make it any easier," she said. "What it's going to do is stop girls under 18 from getting abortions?"
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University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
Law may force buckling up
By Mark Siebert Staff writer
Wearing a seat belt while driving on a Kansas road or highway may soon be more than just an extra safety precaution.
A mandatory seat-belt law now being discussed in the Kansas Legislature would impose a $25 fine on people not wearing a safety belt while in the front seat of a moving vehicle.
The Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee heard from supporters of the bill yesterday and is scheduled to listen to opponents today. State Sen. Bill Morris, R-Wichita, committee chairman, said he thought the bill would be passed by the committee when final action was taken, possibly next week.
"I don't know what anybody else can do up here that can save as many lives," Morris said.
Although law enforcement officials said the proposal would be difficult to enforce, they said a seatbelt law would start good habits.
The bill then would go before the full Senate for debate.
Col. Robert Cantwell of the Kansas Highway Patrol said people who had been stopped by police might quickly put their seat belt on or argue that they unfastened it to get their driver's license.
Morris said no citation could be issued for a seatbelt violation unless a person had been stopped for another reason. The violation would not appear on a driver's record.
The proposed law would require front-seat passengers in a car to have a seat belt fastened around their body while the car is in motion. The law excludes motorcycles, cars designed for more than 10 passengers, trailers or vehicles constructed on a truck chassis.
Pickup trucks are covered by the law, but most vans are excluded because they are built on a truck chassis.
"We hope to bring that up much, much higher," Kemp said.
Morris said several amendments were made to the original bill, including exemptions for passengers in the back seats of taxis, rural mail carriers and people who deliver newspapers from their vehicles.
John Kemp, Kansas secretary of transportation, said only 10-15 percent of the people in Kansas wore their seat belts.
The Kansas Department of Transportation predicted that if 30 percent of Kansans would wear their seat belts, the number of fatalities would decrease annually by 40.
Senate approves seizing property of drug dealers
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The Kansas Senate yesterday passed and sent the House a bill authorizing the state to take possession of homes used by convicted drug dealers in their trafficking.
The bill, which passed 40-0, is num ed at those involved in the sale and trafficking of drugs and not innocent spouses, parents or landlords.
The state could not confiscate rental property if the drug dealer's landlord was unaware of the illegal activity.
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Romance on the Hill Feb 14
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THURSDAY
KU
50C Pitchers
11 a.m.-3 a.m.
$1 cover
KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
Also try our Prime Rib Special for $6.95
the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan 843-9
Romance on the Hill Feb 14
>
February 10-14
Thursday, February 13
- Register for Maupintour's Weekend-for-Two Giveaway in the Kansas Union lobby.
- Tickets for Friday's Carriage Rides on Campus on sale at the SUA Box Office in the Kansas Union.
- Playboy Magazine's Playboy Advisor will speak on love and sex at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Friday,
February 14
DAY
- Romance Novels on sale in the Oread book Shop in the Kansas Union.
- Two-for-One Sale on selected items and discounts on red merchandise in the KU Bookstores.
- Two-for-One Bowling in the Kansas Union Jaybowl.
- Candy Kiss Giveaway at all Union banking windows.
- Fresh Flower Sale in the lobbies of both Unions.
- "Create Your Own Candy Valentine" at the Information Counters of both Unions.
- 15¢ Sweetheart Cookies in Food Service areas of both Unions.
- "For the Love of Hitchcock," four classic movies beginning at 6 p.m. in the Tradition's Room of the Kansas Union.
- SUA Movie, "Choose Me" at 3:30, 7, and 9:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
Friday,
February 14
EVENING
- Two-for-One Bowling in the Kansas Union Jaybowl continues until 11 p.m.
- Carriage rides on Campus 6-9 p.m. (Advance tickets should be purchased at the SUA Box Office.)
- SUA Movie, "Choose Me" at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
- Free Valentine's Day Dance/Concert at 9 p.m. in the Burge Union.
- Drawing for Maupintour's Weekend-for-Two Giveaway at the Dance in the Burge Union. (Not necessary to be present to win.)
- Midnight Movie, "The Man Who Fell to Earth," in the Kansas Union.
The Kansas and Burge Unions Valentine's Day Celebration
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
9
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Lower gasoline prices are a welcome sight for Lawrence residents. Neva Eisenhut, manager of Wood Oil Co., 920 N 2nd St. said yesterday that customers appreciated lower gas prices but hoped prices would decrease still further. She said many stations in the Kansas City area charged 75 cents for regular and Lawrence may soon follow suit.
Fill 'er Up
Residence hall may open its doors during break if 50 students apply
Bv Peaav Kramer
If a trip back home or to Padre Island isn't on the spring break agenda, students living in residence halls may have an alternative.
Staff writer
The office of residential programs is accepting applications until Feb. 28 from students who decide to stay on the Hill during spring break, Fred McElhene, director of residential programs, said yesterday.
"We need a minimum of 50 students to apply for recess housing before we can guarantee a hall will remain open," he said.
(Students must pay $40, or $5 a night, in advance to stay in the designated hall, McElheneh said. No meals will be served. A front desk
assistant and security monitors will be on duty.
Residence halls close for spring break at 2 p.m. March 8 and reopen
McEhlene said that three students had signed up already and that he expected more students to apply by the deadline.
"It is more predictable than snow that the students will turn in applications at the last minute," he said. "I will know one minute after the 5 p.m. deadline on Feb. 26 whether a hall will be open." he said.
The students probably will stay in McColum Hall, he said. This is not the first time the option has been available.
and on for the last 20 years, but the decision is based on students' requests," McElhienie said.
"We have provided this service off
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said that before this year, the cost of staying at a hall during breaks was $10 a night. The $$ decrease was enacted over Thanksgiving break.
Stoner said it was cost efficient to have 200 students at $5 a night than 50 students at $10 a night.
Stoner said many of the McColum residents were foreign students who didn't go home for spring break and needed a place to stay.
Stefan Fechtel, West Germany graduate student and McCollum resident, said that he paid $40 and signed up yesterday.
Senate OKs new petition on apartheid
By Piper Scholfield
Staff writer
Student Senate approved a request last night to petition the Kansas Legislature to take further definitive action in opposition to South African apartheid.
On Jan. 22, the Kansas Senate passed a resolution calling for the immediate release of Nelson Mandela and all South African political prisoners.
The Student Senate made the decision based on the evidence that KU students have shown repeatedly their opposition to apartheid and have called for efforts to end the practice.
In the meeting, Senate also passed a petition requesting stricter requirements for graduate teaching assistants and non-tenured faculty. The Senate considered the petition after students had voiced their concern about the communication skills of KU teaching assistants.
Senators discussed the current spoken English proficiency test and whether it was discriminatory against non-native teaching assistants.
The petition asks that teaching assistants and non-tenured faculty appear before a board of faculty and students to determine whether the applicant's communications skills are sufficient for them to teach classes.
The Senate approved a resolution that the establishment of a new lecture series be a top legislative priority for the 1986 Student Senate term.
In other senate business, a bill was passed to allocate $750 to the Speakers Guild to help finance a speech in March by Joan Peters. Peters is author of "From Time Immemorial" and a former ABC Middle East correspondent.
The month of February was pro-
claimed Bust M.S. Month, in support
of the attempts to find a cure for
multiple sclerosis.
A student publication, The KU Travesty, was allotted $293 by the Senate. The KU Travesty is a publication of The Rocky and Bullwink Fan Club, and will consider articles from all students for publication.
A petition requesting that visitor parking policies at Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall be altered was tabled.
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This Spring Break, if you and your friends are thinking about heading to the slopes, the beach or just home for a visit, Greyhound* can take you there. For only $86 or less, round trip.
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Must present a valid college student 1.2 D card upon purchase. No other discounts apply. Tickets are nonrefundable and good for travel on Greenway Lines, U.S. and other participating carriers. Certain restrictions apply. Offer effective 2/27 through 4/8/16. Offer limited. Not allowed in Canada.
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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.
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"THE PERFORMANCES ARE SUPERIOR.
'KAMILLA' is full of vignettes that identify Miss Løkkeberg as a filmmaker of feeling and imagination..." —Vincent Canby. NEW YORK TIMES
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the dreamlike symbols of a forgotten
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J. Hoberman, VILLAGE VOICE
'KAMILLA' plays like 'KRAMER VS KRAMER'...the best dramatization of young children's secret play since 'FORBIDDEN GAMES.' —FILM JOURNAL
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PERFORMANCE IS SUPERB." J.A. TIMES
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10
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
Aquino says a neutral U.S. helps Marcos steal election
United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — Presidential challenger Corazon Aquino sharply rebuked President Reagan yesterday for his neutral stance on the Philippine elections. Aquino said Washington's attitude would help Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos steal the disputed vote.
The Philippine National Assembly convened for a third day in hopes of finally beginning an official vote tally but adjourned again without having counted a single return.
Two unofficial vote counts showed Aquino and Marcos neck-and-neck in Friday's chaotic election, but the final decision is up to the assembly — where Marcos' ruling KBL Party holds a two-thirds majority.
Aquino blasted Reagan for his statement that the United States would remain neutral and support whatever government is declared the winner — a remark widely interpreted in the Philippines as support for Marcos.
Aquino said, "I would wonder at the motives of a friend of democracy who chose to conspire with Mr. Marcos to cheat the Filipino people of their liberation." Aquino insisted she won a landslide victory.
"I think not only Filipinos, but the vast majority of the American
people and their Congress, would conderm any such action which so flagrantly assists in returning a people to their captivity," she said.
The United States has vital interests in the Philippines, where it maintains its two largest overseas military installations.
Reagan made clear Tuesday that preserving the installations was the highest U.S. priority in the Philippines.
Marcos supporters said they were delighted by Reagan's statement the United States would remain neutral in the election dispute.
Arturo Pacificador, a member of Marcos' party, said, "President Reagan's statement gave us reassurance that unlike Vietnam, America will never drop us. America still recognizes our sovereignty."
Aquino also criticized Reagan for sidestepping reports of election fraud and violence and for stating that the election proved the strength of the Philippines' two-party system.
She said, "I suggest to him that before making further comments on the election itself, he make additional inquiries from his own embassy, the observers and the media.
"It would be a delusion of policy to believe that an opposition, whose leaders and followers have
been and are being killed, can suddenly settle down to a Western-style opposition role in a healthy two-party system.
"Too many will be dead the moment the world's head is turned."
Aquino is the widow of opposition leader Benigno Aquino, who was assassinated in 1983.
At least 129 people have been killed in election-related violence since December.
Reagan said Philip Habib, a former special envoy to the Middle East, is being sent to Manila to assess the political situation there.
The opposition has been challenging the seals and signatures on tally sheets, saying the challenges are aimed at underliner cheating.
Aquino said Habib would be welcome but sarcastically admitted she had "some alarm that his last task for the president was trying to negotiate an end to Lebanon's civil war."
She said she hoped Reagan was not expecting the Philippines to go the same way as Lebanon.
The 179-member National Assembly devoted its third election-tally session to opening and inspecting boxes of returns.
An independent citizen group, the National Citizens Movement for Free Elections, or Namrel, conducted an unofficial election count yesterday and put Aquino ahead by 628,300 votes.
---
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He read a statement to reporters' deploring the murders of a provincial Filipino opposition leader, Evilo-Javier, and an opposition campaign worker, Arsenio Torebic, who was well-known to the U.S. Embassy.
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He said he did not know if Habib would meet directly with Marcos or his challenger Corazon Aquino.
In announcing the mission, Reagan said Habib would "adverse me on how the United States can best pursue that task and to assess the desires and needs of the Filipino people."
At the State Department spokesman Bernard Kalb declined to be any more specific about Habib's mission.
The administration appeared to be waiting until the results of the election were determined before saying more.
As Reagan traveled to St. Louis aboard Air Force One, White House spokesman Larry Speakes told reporters Habib "will meet with representatives of all spectrums of Philippine society — the government, the opposition, the church and others."
---
Speakes said the mission was an opportunity to assess the situation.
Djerejian added that Habib said he would obtain a first-hand assessment.
Ambassador Habib is dispatched to assess Philippine vote counts
Philippine Ambassador Benjamin Romualdez, who is the brother-in-law of Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos, also was at the White House yesterday, apparently to meet with Habib and other officials. However, there was no indication that he saw Reagan.
United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan gave Ambassador Philip Habib instructions yesterday before Habib departed for the Philippines to get a "first-hand assessment" of the disputed election results.
Habib, whom Reagan named Tuesday as his special emissary to the Philippines, told reporters after a White House meeting that he would be leaving soon for Manile, but he was not more specific.
Deputy White House press secretary Edward Dijerjean said Reagan met with Habib and other advisers for about 10 minutes before the president left for a political stop in St. Louis on his way to a brief vacation in California.
viser John Poindexter, Sigur Gaston,
assistant secretary of state-
designate for East Asian affairs,
Paul Wolfowitz, ambassador-
designate to Indonesia, and Nancy
Reagan.
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GENERAL MEETING FOR ALL THOSE INTERSTED IN:
KU RUGBY
Kansas University Rugby Football Club
The KU Rugby Club is holding a general meeting on Thursday, February 13 9 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union, level 4
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Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
11
Shanty smashers to appeal
United Press International
HANOVER, N.H. — Twelve Dartmouth College students who were suspended for destroying anti-apartheid shawnes vowed yesterday to appeal their suspension. They charged that a college disciplinary panel had bowed to "hysteria and political hot air."
Robert Flanigan, one of the suspended undergraduates and business manager for a conservative campus newspaper, said the 12 students would appeal the disciplinary ruling to Dartmouth President David McLaughlin and would take it to court after that.
The college's Committee on Standards suspended the students Tuesday, hours after 18 other students were arrested for forming a human chain to block workmen from removing one of the shanties.
Flanigan said nine of the 12 students suspended were affiliated with the Dartmouth Review newspaper, an independent publication. He said the suspensions were "an attempt to shut down the Review."
"The punishment outspaced the charges," said Flanigan, a junior from White Plains, N.Y. "They succeeded to a lot of the hysteria and political hot air that has been going around campus."
Four shanties were erected on the college green in November to protest
Dartmouth's $63 million investment in companies doing business with South Africa.
Three of the four shanties were destroyed by conservative students wielding sledgehammers in the pre-dawn hours of Jan. 21. The incident sparked a 30-hour sit-in at McLaughlin's office by student and faculty protesters charging campus racism.
College administrators suspended classes at the Ivy League college Jan. 24 to discuss the allegations and ease tensions.
Dartmouth spokeswoman Laura Dicovitxol said the college decided to remove the last shanty Tuesday after town officials gave Dartmouth seven
days to either move the shanty or get a building permit.
The 18 students who tried to stop the shanty removal were arrested for criminal trespass. They were released on $500 personal recognition until their arraignments Feb. 25.
The students who claimed responsibility for the sledgehammer attack on the shanties were charged by the disciplinary panel with malicious destruction, disorderly conduct, harassment and other counts.
Deborah Stone, managing editor of the Dartmouth Review, said she and three other students were suspended indefinitely. Seven students were suspended for two terms and one for one term, she said.
3 Vermont students charge 'educational malpractice'
United Press International
RUTLAND, Vt. — Three students charging "educational malpractice" against a state college filed a $24,000 suit claiming they were denied a decent education and were encouraged by a professor to use drugs.
The lawsuit was filed Tuesday in Rutland Superior Court against Castleton State College. The suit follows repeated charges that the school granted credits to people who never took classes.
The students claim the college broke its educational contract with them by failing to provide proper instruction.
The Vermont attorney general's office and lawyers for the college said they would ask the judge to throw the suit out of court. They said no legal foundation existed for claiming educational malpractice.
The students charged that professor David Jung, who teaches a theatre course, had "created a harmful environment for the studies of the plantifys by encouraging drug abuse and allowing unsafe conditions to exist."
In August 1984, the college suspended Jung for one month after four students swore in depositions they either had smoked marijuana with Jung or had seen him smoking with students on campus.
Stephanie Keating of Littlefield, N.H., Jill Anderson of Granville, N.Y., and Todd Sherman of Montpellier charge that their current employers told them "they lack the skills they need."
Breathed treated for clot in lung
vesterdav.
United Press International
Doctors found a small blood clot last week in his lung and have been treating him with anti-coagulants. He remained in fair condition yesterday.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Cartoonist Guy Breathed, creator of the "Bloom County" comic strip, is responding to treatment for a blood clot in his lung but probably will remain in the hospital through the weekend, a spokesman said
Breathed has been in St. Joseph Hospital recovering from a back fracture he suffered in the crash of
his ultralight aircraft north of Albuquerque on Jan. 22.
U. of Toledovotes policy of divesting
breathed signs his comic strip, which is distributed to about 850 newspapers nationwide, "Berke Breathed."
TOLEDO, Ohio — The University of Toledo's board of trustees yesterday adopted a policy of gradual divestiture from companies doing business in South Africa.
He has been unable to work on the comic strip since the accident.
United Press International
University officials said the policy would help promote an end to apartheid in that country.
The board of trustees voted 8-1 to require its financial officers to invest the university's endowment funds, which currently total $9.9 million, only in businesses which follow the Sullivan Principles, a voluntary code of conduct which promotes racial equality in employment and living conditions in South Africa.
By the end of this year, however, the university must sell its investments in companies which have not accepted certain sections of the Sullivan Principles.
Black leaders who pushed for the policy said a potential problem existed in a section which required the trustees to demand complete divestiture by Dec. 31, 1987.
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AN EVENING WITH MAYNARD FERGUSON
Short, 67 and happily married for many years, has put together a litmus test on how to tell the difference between infatuation and true love.
"Let an infatuation roll over you like a warm wave at the ocean," Short says. "Just don't get immersed in it."
Infatuation is not a sign of true love,scholar says
But, he warns, "romantic love or more truly romantic infatuation will hold a couple together no longer than three to five years,
His test consists of 14 key clues to tell the difference between real love and infatuation. He cautions three of them could indicate either romantic love or the real thing. One is the funny feeling you get when you are around or thinking of the other person.
"The feeling is wonderful and no person should go through life without having at least one good infatuation." he says.
even if you throw in a good, red-hot sex relationship."
PLATTEVILLE, Wis. — A college professor who has kept tabs on Cupid for more than three decades says all people should have at least one "good infatuation" in their lives.
United Press International!
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But Ray Short says to be careful — an infatuation could be fatal to a long-term relationship.
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"There's nothing wrong with having a good, juicy, romantic infatuation," says Short, the author of two books on marriage and family. "It's fun to go around with a glaze in your eyes, a silly grin on your face, forgetting things and making stink mistakes.
"Your heart speeds up, maybe double time, everytime she sees him." Short says. "He gets weak in the knees and can't say anything intelligent when he's around her."
A second is a "gnawing need for nearness, you just want to be together all the time," he says.
Sigma Psi
Personnel Administration Organization presents
Romance on the Hill
Donna Bonfield, Director of Personnel for Hyatt Regency Hotel Thursday, Feb. 13, 7:00 p.m.
Kansas Union Pine Room
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University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
4 more die in S. Africa
United Press International
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — A soldier and a suspected black nationalist guerrilla died yesterday in a gun battle on the Botswana border and police fatally shot two blacks in new racial unrest. authorities said.
In Durban, two bombs exploded in a suburban electricity station, but there were no injuries. A police officer died last month of injuries sustained in a similar explosion at another Durban station, and the outlawed African National Congress rebel group admitted responsibility for that attack.
A defense force spokesman said a soldier was shot and killed yesterday while his unit chased two suspected ANC rebels thought to be responsible for a land mine attack that had injured a white motorist hours earlier.
"An ANC terrorist armed with a AK-47 rifle was shot dead in this contact," the spokesman said. The AK-47 is a Soviet weapon.
The government has warned Botswana repeatedly to prevent guerrilla infiltration across its border into South Africa. The defense force spokesman said Botswana had been informed about yesterday's shoot-out.
The land mine exploded near the northern Zimbabwe border town of Messina, rupturing the eardrum of the motorist.
Nine people have died in similar attacks in the area since Nov. 26, and police and defense officers blamed the exiled ANC guerilla group, which is dedicated to the overthrow of South Africa's white minority government.
The suspected guerrilla activity came as the government moved to quell speculation that jailed ANC leader Nelson Mandela's release from prison was imminent and as police reported two blacks were shot and killed during renewed anti-government rioting.
One man hurling stones was killed by police fire at Clermont, near Durban, police said. Another black man was shot and killed when he resisted arrest and stabbed an officer with a broken bottle at Westonarla, about 30 miles southwest of Johannesburg.
The deaths brought to 18 the number of blacks who have died since Saturday in a resurgence of violence linked to protests against the government's apartheid policies of racial discrimination and segregation.
More than 1,220 people have died in almost two years of militant opposition to white rule.
Mandela has become the symbol of the black resistance in South Africa and his wife, Winnie, canceled a planned visit yesterday to see her husband in a Cape Town prison.
Sources close to the Mandela family said she had no definite information on prospects for the release of her husband, who has been in jail since 1962 and is serving a life sentence for sabotage and treason.
"His release is not imminent," Information Minister Louis Nel said.
He declined to comment on reports that Pretoria is negotiating with Western governments about linking Mandela's freedom to the release of a soldier captured in Angola last May.
The government suggested in recent weeks that Mandela might be released as a humanitarian gesture if Angola freed the soldier and the Soviet Union released Soviet dissidents Anatoly Shcharansky and Andrei Sakharov. Shcharansky was released Tuesday as part of a big East-West prison swap in Berlin.
Nel declined to comment on reports that Foreign Minister Roelf Botha was engaged in negotiations about Mandela's freedom in talks in Geneva yesterday with U.S. envoy Chester Crocker.
Shcharansky ridicules the KGB, describes Soviet prison horrors
United Press International
JERUSALEM — Freed Soviet dissident Anatoly Shcharansky, in his first interview since arriving in Israel, thumbed his nose at the KGB yesterday and painted a bleak picture of his eight years in a Soviet prison on sov charges.
Shcharansky vowed to use his experience to help others like him who have been prevented from leaving the Soviet Union.
Shcharansky, 38, and his wife, Avital, 35, spent their first full day of married life together yesterday in Israel, a day after his release in an East-West prisoner exchange in Berlin. They last saw each other the day after their wedding in 1974.
"Of course I knew next to nothing," Shcharansky said in an Israeli radio interview when asked if he was aware of efforts to free him from Soviet prisons, "because in my mother's letters there was no word on such activity. Otherwise, they would have been confiscated."
For most of the day, according to friends, they remained in seclusion at a government-supplied
apartment in Jerusalem, but Shcharsansky, a Soviet Jewish dissident jailed for nine years by the Soviet Union, agreed to give the brief radio interview.
Shcharansky painted a bleak picture of his years in Soviet prisons on charges of spying for the CIA — allegations both he and the United States denied.
He said he spent long periods in solitary confinement - 92 days on one occasion and 110 on another. Contact with the outside world was infrequent.
"Avital wrote me twice a week," he said, "but I received two letters a year and that was a good year. There have been bad years when I did not receive even one letter."
Asked the KGB, the Soviet state security agency, had warned him to stay silent upon his release. Shcharansky replied, "For all those years I had been so hostile to the KGB that they would have been afraid even to mention this to me. They knew that I either would refuse to talk to them or would listen to what they say and do the exact opposite."
suspicious about the Soviets' motives even after he was placed on a special flight.
"In the plane in East Berlin, they did not want to take me off by force," Shcharansky recalled. "They told me. You will have to leave on your own and make a straight line to the car. Agree? Do we have a deal?"
Shcharansky said he was
Shcharansky said he told the Soviets, "You know full well I make no deals with the KGB. If you tell me to walk in a straight line, I'll walk in a zig-zag."
"I did not walk in a straight line," said Shcharansky, a mathematician and computer expert. "It may be funny, but I had my principles never to agree to anything the KGB said."
Shcharansky said he formally had asked Soviet authorities to permit his mother, Ida Milgrom, and his brother, Leonid, to leave the country and join him in Israel.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Bernard Kalb said the Soviets had indicated that permission to emigrate will be granted to Shcharansky's mother and other relatives.
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KANSAS CITY
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
13
Missouri roars by Jayhawks 87-77
MARINO
14
Kansas guard Evelite Oddt dribbles around Missouri guard Tonya Jorgenson in the first half of the Kansas-Missouri women's basketball game. The Jayhawks lost to Missouri 87-77 last night at Allen Field House.
By Dawn O'Malley Sports writer
Although the Kansas women's basketball team played strong defense, the Jayhawks didn't show patience on offense, Marian Washington, women's head basketball coach, said after the Jayhawks' 87-77 loss to Missouri last night at Allen Field House.
"Our offense wasn't as patient as it should have been," Washington said. "We did put up some good shots as well as bad shots. We just couldn't put them down."
The Jayhawks were never able to get within six points of the Tigers late in the second half. Kansas center Kelly Jennings made a short jump shot to make the score 64-58 with 7:23 left in the game.
The Tigers, the defending Big Eight champions, outscored Kansas 10-2 during a stretch in the second half to make the score 76-65.
"Missouri overplayed us," Kansas forward Vickie Adkins said. "At times we felt rushed on offense to catch up, but that shouldn't have affected our game."
Adkins led all scorers with 32 points. Jayhawk forward Sandy Shaw came off the bench to add 13 points. For the Tigers, center Renee Kelly scored 26 points.
Kelly has been averaging 22.5 points a game. Adkins averages 22.2 points.
"Our first half shooting helped us," said Joann Rutherford, Tiger head coach. "I thought we would have been ahead more, but our 18 turnovers hurt us. We shot the ball exceptionally well. You just cannot say enough about Vickie Adkins."
Kelly was taken out of the game in the first half because she was
Women's basketball
called for three quick personal fouls.
"It hurts us when she's not in there," Rutherford said. "But we matched up because Jennings got into foul trouble too."
Jennings was sent to the bench with 9:56 remaining in the first half because she got into foul trouble with two fouls. Washington played her only a few minutes at a time during the rest of the half.
"When Kelly got two quick fouls, we had to make a decision," Washington said. "We decided to take her out of the game to save her for the second half."
The Tigers, shooting 59 percent from the field, were more consistent than the Jayhawks. Kansas shot 47 percent.
Kansas dropped to second place in the Big Eight conference. Its record is 5-4 in the conference and 14-8 overall. Missouri is tied with the Jayhawks at 5-4. The Tiger's overall record is 13-9.
The Jayhawks play Nebraska Saturday 30 minutes after the men's game in the field house.
Missouri 87, Kansas 77
Dellong L 6.7-16, E 17.1, T 8.2-15, K10.9-16, H
LaValele L 1.1-12, E 3.1, L7.6-80, Jorgensen 1.1
2, Lucas 2.2-6, Gengebok 0.0-0, Totals 32
23.9-87
Adman 10, 13/14, 32. Dourphine 4, 2-4; Jennings 10,
Odif, 10; Off 15, 91. Webb 1, 12; Martin 1, 14.
Strouther 7, 86. Shaw 4, 5-13, Miller 1, 0-2.
Totals 29 / 19, 27.
Halfmile Mission 38-37. Total fruits - Misuison 24.
Kansas 26. Fouled out - Delong, Adkins 19.
Missouri 24. Fouled out - Delong, Adkins 19.
Adkins 8). Assists - Misuison 21 (LeVille 8). Kauai
(Shaw 1) (Schene 6). non-attendance
10 (Shaw 1) (Schene 6). non-attendance
Fans respond to promotional gimmicks
By Matt Tidwell
Sports writer
stands
The pain of losing was a little easier to bear last night for the Kansas women's basketball team because of a factor other teams take for granted — a good-sized crowd.
The largest non-doubleheader crowd in more than two seasons, 1,550 fans, came to Allen Field House to watch the Jayhawks.
The Kansas women's task force, formed last month by the Athletic Department, prepared a slate of promotions to get people in the
The team had been averaging only a few hundred people a game.
"I know it helps us when people come out and support us," Kansas head coach Marian Washington said. "I think what happened was that the administration got behind it."
For last night's game, the women's task force came up with a variety of promotions including free admission and numerous giveaways. At the end of the game, airline tickets for two to Florida were given to a ticketholder.
Even though the task force wants fans to show up for the genuine excitement and appreciation of the game, Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, said he hoped this would be just the lure to keep fans coming back.
"What we want to do is try and create awareness and appreciation of women's sports," Hunter said. "We're hoping that once people get here and see how exciting the girls are that they'll keep coming back."
Kansas guard Eveette Ott said a large crowd not only helped the
Jayhawks play well, it also helped the team's self-image.
"I think it fires us up more and I know it makes us feel more like we're a part of the University," Ott said.
Kapaun receives year suspension
After the game, Washington picked the trip winner and then gave a personal thank-you to the crowd.
"Since we had lost, at first I wanted to just pick the ticket and then get out of there," Washington said. "But then I realized that people need to know that we really appreciate their support."
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - Wichita's Kapau-Mt. Carmel High School yesterday was barred from participating in any post-season athletic competition or academic activities for one year after it was determined that three non-Catholic students received improper tuition payments.
Nelson Hartman, executive secretary of the Kansas State High School Activities Association, announced the penalties following a six-hour hearing between school officials and the association's nine-member executive board.
Hartman said the penalties, which include a two-year probation for the school and forfeiture of all games in which the three students played the past three years, are the most severe ever administered to a Kansas high school.
"It's the first time we've had sanctions of the ennominy because we've never had such blatant violations of rules and regulations regarding payment of tuition for non-Catholic students before," Hartman said.
The decision means Kapaun-M Carmel will relinquish its trophies for second-place finishes in the state Class 5A football competition the past two seasons and sub-state honors in basketball last season.
Steve Buek, the head basketball coach, was also suspended for the remainder of the 1985-86 season. He has been suspended since Dec. 13, when the tuition payment violations were first reported to the KSHSAA.
Also affected are track and field awards, music honors and awards earned in any other activities in which Rod Redo, Chris Fox or Drew Bessey participated.
The three boys, all seniors at the school, were declared ineligible by the executive board after it was discovered they had received tuition assistance from outside sources including a school-operated trust fund.
Hartman said the penalties were so severe because the school's former principal, Sister Kathleen Gilbert, said in a letter she unwittingly signed checks last summer which were tuition payments for the three boys.
Georgia instructor awarded settlement
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — A U.S. District Court jury decided yesterday that two Georgia officials violated the free speech rights of English instructor Jan Kemp when they fired her in 1983 after she spoke out against preferential treatment for student athletes in the school's remedial Developmental Studies program.
The jury said Kemp was entitled to $79,680 in back pay, $200,000 for mental stress, $1 for damage to her reputation, $1.5 million in punitive damages from Virginia Trotter, vice president for academic affairs, and $800,000 in punitive damages from Leroy Ervin, director of the developmental studies program.
The five-woman, one-man jury found Kemp's constitutional rights were violated in both her demotion from the position of English coordinator in the developmental studies program and her firing as an assistant professor in 1983.
Kemp sued after she was fired and charged that she was demoted and
then fired from the university because she spoke out against preferential treatment for student athletes in Georgia's remedial developmental studies program.
According to trial testimony, admission standards at the university were relaxed for some athletes. Some were promoted from the remedial program despite failing to meet academic requirements and others were provided individual instruction.
Defense witnesses testified such treatment also was available to non-athletic students but the athletes needed more help because they did not receive an adequate education in high school.
University officials have maintained that Kemp lost her job because she could not get along with colleagues and refused to conduct required scholarly research.
Defense attorney Hale Almand told the jury in closing arguments Monday that Kemp's real interest in the case was to get revenge on the university rather than to improve the school.
Kansas prepares for its future by signing 24 football players
By Jim Suhr Sports writer
The roster of the KU football team grew by 24 players yesterday, the first day recruits could sign their letters-of-entreat and commit to play for National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I schools.
Jim Cochran, Kansas' recruiting career, said yesterday that time would be the test of how successful the recruiting season was. The high school signees, he said, were recruited to be developed over time.
"We can't be sure we've met goals until they suit up," he said.
Kansas' signes include three junior college running backs, a position Cochran said was important for Kansas in order to supplement its pass-oriented offense.
The running backs are:
*Tim Ledford; the 6-foot, 235-pounder rushed 160 times for 460 yards and three touchdowns last season at Mt. San Antonio Community College in Walnut, Calif. Ledford, who led the team in receiving with 31 catches for 203 yards, was named the team's most valuable player last season.
■ Scott Schriner: a 5-10, 195-pounder from Butler County Community College, Schriner rushed for 1,420 yards and nine touchdowns last season. He was named as a NJCAA All-American last season and his team's most valuable player.
Arnold Snell: a 6-0, 200-pounder and considered to be a top big-copleague running back prospect from a junior college. Snell was named honorable mention All-America as a kicker and punt returner.
Ledford, Schriner and Snell are three of eight junior college transfers in sign with the Jayhawks.
Kansas signed two others, Mark Brown and Teddy Newman, from Dixie Junior College in St. George, Utah. Brown, a 6-2, 10-5 pound-defensive back, was a first team All-Western State Football League and all-region pick. He had 42 tackles and four interceptions last season.
Newman, a 6-4, 240-pound defensive end, was a first-tier all-league, all-conference, and NJCAA All-American defensive selection. He had 111 tackles, 28 of which were quarterback sacks.
Football
Other junior college players who signed with Kansas yesterday are:
Mike Fisher, a 5-10, 180-pound cornerback from Mt. San Antonio Community College. He was his team's captain and a first team Pac-9 all-conference pick last season.
Peda Samuel, a 5-9, 160-pound wide receiver from Independence Community College in Independence, Kan. He played for Cochran at ICC in 1984, but was redshirted last season.
David White, a 6-5, 250-pound defensive end from Hutchinson Community College. White, also recruited by Oklahoma State, Iowa State and Pittsburgh, was named Jayhawk Conference Defensive Player of the Year and was a two-time all-conference pick.
Hinkle, 6-3 and 175 pounds, was listed as one of the top 11 high school quarterbacks last season. An all-league and all-state on the field as a junior and senior at South, Hinkle was also a scholastic All-American with a 4.0 grade point average.
The Jayhawks also received letters from 14 high school players, 10 of whom are from the state of Kansas. Cochran said two of those players, Olathe South defensive back Brad Hinkle and Lawrence offensive lineman Craig Stopel, were two of the best prospects Kansas had to offer.
Stopple, 6-5, 225 pounds, was an all-stater as a senior. He also plans to play baseball at Kansas under head coach Marty Pattin.
*Kelly Donboe, 6-1, 180, quarterback, all-conference and all-state selection last season. He threw 321 complements for 4,524 yards and 35 touchdowns during career at Harrisonville (Mo.) High School. He was recruited by Missouri, Iowa State, Air Force and Colorado.
**Quintin Smith, 5-11, 175, wide receiver. One of top 100 Texas high school prospects. He caught 59 passes for 958 yards and 12 touchdowns last season. His high school, Yates High School in Houston, was the second-ranked foot
Other high school recruits who signed yesterday were:
ball team in the country last season.
**Dru Davidson, 6-2, 225, linebacker. He had 295 career tackles at Johnson-Stanton County High School in Johnson, Kan.**
John Davis, 6-2, 23, running back, all-state selection in football and basketball at Laurinburg Institute in Laurinburg, N.C.
Darryl Golden, 6, 25, 65, defensive lineman. He ran the 40-yard dash in 5.2 seconds at Junction City High School. He was AAU district champ in the shot-put and discus and regional champ in shot-put.
*Bryan Cohane, 6-4, 24, offensive guard. First team all-county and South Florida selection as a lineman at Boca Raton High School. He was recruited by Syracuse and Miami (Fla.)
■ Mike Dinnel, 6-4, 230, linebacker. He was first team all-state as a defensive end and second team as a junior offensive tackle at Adams City High School in Commerce City, Colo.
Bill Sutter, 5-10, 185, defensive back. He was all-league and second-team all-state last season at Lawrence High School. He led the Lions with 823 yards rushing and 11 touchdowns.
Chip Budde, 6-2, 235, offensive lineman. He also was a wrestler at Lawrence High School. He was recruited by Air Force, Harvard and Colorado.
Tracy Jordan, 6-4, 215, tight end. First team all-state and Denver pre player of the year last season at George Washington High School.
Mark Mohler/KANSAN
David Gordon, 6-4, 220
linebacker. He was all-conference
and first-team all-state pick last
season at Independence High School.
Kansas also signed two college transfers. They were:
Rodney Harris, 5-11, 180, wide receiver. He is transferring from Drake. He had five catches for 56 yards last season and was Drake's top punt returner with 144 yards on 18 attempts.
Steve Bishop, 5-11, 180, wide receiver. He is transferring from Illinois.
KU
University of Kansas football recruits from left, Chip Budde, Bill Sutter and Craig Stoppel, all of Lawrence High School, congratulate each other after signing national letters of intent to play football at Kansas. They signed at Parrott Athletic Center yesterday morning, which was the first day for high school seniors to sign letters.
Second-half surge lifts Nebraska
From Kansan wires
Terry Faggins led Oklahoma Stab with 13 points while Melvin Gilliam had 10 for the Cowboys, who fell to 12-10 overall and 3-6 in the conference.
LINCOLN, Neb. — Brian Carr and Harvey Marshall each scored 16 points to lead Nebraska to a 85-29 victory over Oklahoma State in Big Eight Conference basketball last night.
The game was tied at halftime, but Nebraska outscored the Cowboys 13-4 in the first six minutes of the second half to take a 43-34 lead. Oklahoma State cut the lead to three, but Nebraska then moved out to a 60-45 lead.
Bernard Day and Chris Logan each added 10 points for the Cornhuskers, who raised their record to 15-7 overall and 5-4 in the conference.
CLEMSON, S.C. — Brad Daugherty scored a game-high 23 points and grabbed 10 rebounds last night to lead top-ranked North Carolina to a 79-64 Atlantic Coast Conference victory over Clemson.
The victory improved the Tar Heels' record to 25-1 overall, 9-1 in the ACC. Clemson, which suffered its ninth loss in 10 games and its second loss to UNC, fell to 14-10 and 2-8.
North Carolina 79, Clemson 64
Warren Martin added 13 points and eight rebounds for the Tar Heels. Kenny Smith had 16. Michael Best paced Clemson with 20 points before fouling out. Horace Grant added 18 and had 12 rebounds.
Clemson took a 17-11 lead at the 7:54 mark on baskets from Grant, but the Tar Heels came back to tie it 17-17. Kevin Madden's seven-footer from the baseline broke another tie, 21-21, at the 4:09 putt, putting North Carolina ahead for good. The Tar Heels led 29-26 at halftime.
Clemson experienced one of its worst shooting nights of the year, hitting 37.7 percent from the floor to the Tar Heels' 56 percent.
Surprise 77, Vilage 72.
Washington scored 22 points in the second half, including 12 free throws.
The Tigers edged to within one point on three occasions in the second half, but seven straight points — four by Joe Wolf — put North Carolina ahead 40-32. Clemson never closed the gap.
Kenny Smith scored Carolina's last field goal, a layup with 4:18 to play, but the Tar Heels picked up 14 more points on free throws.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Dwayne Washington scored a career-high 33 points last night to power No. 13 Syracuse to a 77-27 Big East victory over Villanova at the Carrier Dome.
to help the Orangemen hold their first-place lead in the Big East with a 10-1 conference record and 19-3 overall. Villanova fell to 7-5 and 17-11.
In the first half, Syracuse jumped to a 10-4 lead, but the Wildcats moved in front 12-11 on a shot by Harold Jensen with 13:08 left. A driving layup by Washington 16 seconds later allowed the Orangemen to regain the lead and launch a six-point run. Syracuse led 36-31 at halftime.
Villanova was led by Mark Plansky with 21 points.
GREENSBORO, N.C. — Andrew Kennedy and Olden Polynice each scored 16 points last night to lead Virginia to a 69-53 victory over Wake Forest, keeping the Demon Deacons winnin in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Kennedy scored 14 points and Polynice added 12 during the second half to help Virginia outscore Wake 21-10 in the final seven minutes. Mel Kennedy had 10 points for the Cavaliers, 16-6 overall and 5-4 in the ACC.
Mark Cline led the Deacons with a game-high 19 points. Charlie Thomas and Rod Watson both added 10. Wake Forest, which fell to 7-17 overall, is 0-12 in the ACC, a record losing streak for the Deacons in the conference.
14
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
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THE HEAT IS ON!
Friday, Feb. 14
Kansas Union Ballroom
Tickets $3
on sale at
SUA Box Office
all proceeds go to M.S.
Students Against Multiple Sclerosis
The S.A.M.S. Heart of Rock 'n' Roll
battle of the Balk
The Fanatix
Sons of Liberty
All of the Above
Absolute Ceiling
The Breakers
Pariah
Altered Media
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $9.06.
Rent-VCR with 3 movies, bwd 843; 824d/715m; Mon-Sat,
Sun, 5:15.
SUA Board Member applications due by Thurs.
Feb. 20th. Questions? 964-3477
SUA applications for President, Vice-President,
and Secretary by月 den. Feb. 17th
Quemingua, 864-327-7700
www.suas.edu
Want to coordinate entertainment and activities for the University of Kansas? Pick up your SUA application today! SUA Office, Level 1, Kansas Union.
GOT A HOT DATE? Is your car clean? At LAWRENCE AUTO CLEANING making your car look newer is our speciality 6th and Mainne. 749-5871
Romance on the Hill. Fresh flowers for your sweetheart for sale Friday at the Kannau Island Museum. Free admission to your sweetheart by your side. Carriage ride through campus Friday $0 p.m. $1 $2 reserved.
FOR RENT
2 bed/car. apt. $350, plus utilities. Big living room w/sky light on second and third floor. 5/12 month lease w/one month deposit. 3 blocks from the Union. 841-6911.
3 BR house, East Lawrence, bus route, 1884
reh. installed. Double lot, gardens 6752
2 BR house, East Lawrence, bus route, 1884
reh. installed. Double lot, gardens 6752
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at the Flats Vacancies available now and for the summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall.
841-9160
Available March 1; beautiful 2 BH apt. On bus route 5 minute walk to campus, downtown. New carpet, clean, spacious. $390/mo. plus low rent. 81-4327-814-5566. 824-3449.
first served, only a few two left. At 2166 Width, on KU bus route, between Gibson's and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We pay hot and cold water, you choose options, footwear, carpet, extra bath or balcony. Call
443-270-1950 or 443-270-8620
Sussex area. Bldm apt. Ve. price and close to
886-835-5560
Sublube-one bedroom apartment. Very clean and
clean. Free internet. WiFi. Air conditioning.
after 8:30 p.m. i.e. p.m. keep trying.
TOWNHOUSE available immediately Cornish C4-
C-1, SubLEASE from Meadowbrook Apk at 442-3090
NW 16th St. NW, RI 02879.
MASTER CRAFT offers completely furnished 1. Call
813-242-1955 or call all near campus. Call
813-242-1955 or call all near campus. Call
813-242-1955 or call all near campus. Call
For rent: 2 bdm; brand new apt. 1.1/2 bks from
Union Kison $300/m plus utilities. Sublease a
possibility. Call Chuck Ledom 432-328 8 a.m.
p. and pam. B432-038 after 5 p. Keep弄. Furnished
one bedroom apartment near University
& downtown. Most utilities paid with off street
water.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL and/or SURELEAVE for spring and summer. Available possibly as early as April 1. Room 702 and comfortable 8 BR quips (with optional closet, desk, MBR, garage, laundry/warehouse. No pets. Lease 459 sq ft. Couple or smaller. Price $86/mo; fall $133/mo; 7437-733 after 5 or leave message on machine.
Quiet, one bedroom apt., big lawn, $165/mo 5/12 month lease w/deposit. 331 Indiana. 841-4931.
SUBLEASE NOW. 1 BDRM Hanover Place place. One month free rent. 841-1212.
*dactus* 1 bdmr, billions of bills W/D, w/KD, clean and clean, subsidy $250/mo. Jeff 842-0146
Spring break Delkellade 2-bedroom pool, cocko, tub, sauna. Located in Silverthorne, close to Brecknidge, Copper, and Keystone $100/night.
(303) 428-1713
ENTERTAINMENT
Dig your out Halloween costume: show it off the Brazilian Carnival party. Feb. 25, Elks Club.
FREE DANCE CONCERT!
This Friday
with the
HOMESTEAD
GRAYS
Burge Union
Fri., Feb. 14
9:00 P.M.
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE J DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system and video. PHASE FOUR D-J. SERVICE would like to provide the music for your next party. Use a 1200 watt sound system that can fill, any size room and accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in (913) 827-8940 and Salina. Call 814-9834 or (913) 827-8940.
--ale: Greets wooden saarre drum. $50.00 or best
bent offer. 843-1801.
$50 OFF
- Over 100 hrs. of the best dance MUSIC
FOR ANY 4 HOUR PARTY IN LAWRENCE
Cimic Books, Open 11-30 Tue, Sat. & Sun 10-5-18
Comics, Open 11-30 Fri, Sat. & Sun 10-5-18
- Now only $100
- Clean Mixing and Computerized Lighting
Due to space limitations, limited number of tickets this year. You get yours! Brazilian Carnival, Feb.22. Tickets sold at S.U.A. and Spanish/Port. Department (in Weseo).
- 3 yrs. professional D.J. Experience
AUDIOPHILES
842-8687
Professional DJs
Serving You
expires 3/31/86
Having a party? Need a DJ! Call Music Mix! The Best Mix of music in Town. 942-2900. $7.50 you 5 hours of great dance music. Music from Doug E. Fresh to Modern English.
Brasilian Carnival party, Elsa Club, Feb. 22
Where the boys are.
FOR SALE
The
1978 FREEDRID Locks good, runs great AC/VC
€2500 negotiation AC/VC 841-638-6638
Baseball cards and sports nostalgia. Buy, Sell
and Trade JD's Baseball card. Open 10 A.M. M-S.
Saturday. $25.00. (877) 356-2924.
DOWNLOAD SKILL15 K2-30es, 200 cm, Bosein binder,
excel, cond, $40, 841-845 evenings.
19 inch电视 television, excellent picture, solid-state for $120. Evenings 841-884
DRUMS: DRUM 1 pc; set w/cymbal, hardware,
sent $500; Pearl 1 pice w/ set Ziljian cymbal,
sent $500; Pearl 1 pice w/ set Ziljian cymbal,
Double-sized drum, hand-made frame, $75.
Stone smokeblower, bait load &hellip. 740-814-014.
Epson Qx-10/FX80 Printer software $195.00 or best offer typewriter with 3 ink cartridges
For Sale. 1822 MV Scirocco, Excellent condition.
Heated Pirelli P4 - 44 tires, highways miles
up to 90 mph.
For Sale: Brother automatic 12 correction
typewriter with case. $90. Or Best Offer. 841-5043.
For sale: Wenbo 200 watt bass amp, with EV 12 V
and Avil cases. Yamaha x 12 a cab. Ampeg head
and Avil cases. Yamaha x 12 a cab. Ampeg head
GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM 81 (U; repair)
GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM 681 (Call 81-658-607-2000
for information)
Hafen 500 wall power amplifier. Brand new with
factory warranty. $800. Tom 842-1510.
21" x 42" stereo cabinet.
Hinge glass top & door. 4 shelves,
solid, excellent condition.
$130 or best offer.
Call 842-3626 evenings.
Mobile Home For Sale. 12 x 26 feet. Partly furnished.
Will take. pay payments.
$200 down-$150-mo. $2000. Buy付all bill.
asst. cost.
All Sports ticket for sale Call 842-0582 before 11 a.m. or after 7 p.m. Keepying.
on the line Kenwood turntable with moving head, Perfect condition, full warranty, ball of life.
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Receivers from $10, turntables for $11, speakers
from $30, amplifiers from $25, stereo,
stereo, all completely reconditioned and
lawrence Custom Radio, 914 W. 23rd St.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Makes a great book for your students' preparation, 2. For exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Town Crier, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and online.
Wouldn't a little SAX space up your life? I'm paring with my beloved Bunny also saxophone (it's in great condition) and its new mouthpiece for only $300. Call 864-2134.
SPRING BREAK-Round Trip Airbuses Tickets to
841-9039. Best Price Around Call Jim at
841-9039
Tired ofumpy mattresses? Waterbed for sale.
Commercial or apartment,
Call Plaza 2931-8433-6453
www.palace.com
1947 Fordson GT0, new paint, and much more. Rare, a must see. Call 842-2032 evenings
AUTOSALES
MGB convertible. 1977. Only 50,500 miles. Great inside and out. Be ready for spring. 841-6632.
Must sell 79 Mazda KX-7, rurest great. AM/FM.
AC, $275 or less. 749-8486 ask
AAC.
Need Money for Schoel 1980 Aud 5000, loaded,
51.000, $5.000, serious injuries 749-782.
Regal-1978. Good body, sound mechanics,
sound speaker. Asking 1600. Call Larry after 6
minutes.
LOST/FOUND
7 Daiaton E210, Gas saver, new rifle, reliable in all weather, asking $850, Call 943-2394.
FOUND short-hairred tan can-^t-engel Rd. parking lot is been injured, had had veterinary care and was in good health.
**Help:** Reward for return of large tan purge and
contained taken from Large tan 3.7/7.8, Very im-
perfect tan 4.0/5.2, Very imperfect tan 4.1/5.2, Very im-perfect tan 4.2/5.2
LOST: White fluffy Samoid, has a heart color,
around 10th and Masc. Lost Sond afternoon
saturday
HELP WANTED
Pair of glasses, found in room 4064 Wescoe. Claim at 3116 Wescoe.
Are you interested in earning $35 to $80 a week working 10 to 25 hours a week at McDonald's and $10 per hour for 10, 15, 10 and p. 8 and p. 8 to p. 10 and one weekday day. Apply in person at McDonald's, 901 West 23rd. No phone calls.
COULD YOU BE
BOSTON NANNY?
You are a loving, nurturing person who enjoys spending time with children! Join us today to learn how you come to Boston to case for children through our agency. Live in lovely suburban neighborhoods, enjoy excellent salaries, benefits, your own living space, and get the Round-trip transportation is provided. One year commitment or write Mrs. Fisch, Childcare Placement Service, inc. (CIPS), 149 Bunkinger Dr. R
SUMMER WORK/JOHNSON COUNTY. KS forty-hour work, 74.5/hour, Tues. to Sat, May 13. Job duties include student collection, Car and driver's license required, 30 positions available. Sand resume or letter of intent to: Sharon Rhodes, RJN Environmental Inc., Sharon Road, St. II, Step 12, Keisner, Ks 6892 913-4247 1472.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10.400 $52.390-$78.
Hiring Call 61-87-495-8000 Est. R7.987 for current
ENTERTEL
Continuing student hourly position: book publisher seeks student who can student (60 plus) work in various offices. Must be able to work in various office duties. Must be able to work mornings. 20/hr wk, $7.50/hr Start immediately. Came to University Press of K. 329 Carruth, to complete application by 02/14/86.
CHRUSHISSE: HIHRUNG $16-$200 Carramben,
CHRUSHISSE: HIHRUNG $16-$200 Carramben,
Newservice@ 91-944-4444 X UKANASCHURSE
Newservice@ 91-944-4444 X UKANASCHURSE
- Hourly wage with incentive.
- Pleasant working cond.
- Advanced opportunities
- Useful resources
- $5-$6 per hour
- Flexible hours
- Paid training
Student Staff Positions--summer orientation program 1986. Required qualifications: minimum 2.0 University degree or equivalent. Undergraduate and first year graduate students may apply. Desired qualifications: leadership abilities; knowledge of university programs and courses; interest in the business environment about university. Job descriptions and applications available in the office at 453-798-4444. Due by Friday, Feb. 14, 1986. A.E.O.E.
AND
offers YOU
PROGRAM ASSISTANT/RESEARCH AID for Midwest Council on Aging; 40%/year, $400/mo.
Institute of Applied Mathematics; University of Kansas, 604-411 for complete job
application and application. Deadline Feb. 13.
EOA/MAP.
Call 841-1200
OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, yr. round. Europe,
S.A. Amherst, Australia. All fields. 900-3000 mo.
sightseeing. Free info. Write LIC, PO Bx 52-K1-
Corona Del Mar, CA 90225.
PERSONAL
Summer Jobs. National Park Co.'s 21 Parks, 5000
Openings. Complete Information $0.00. Park
Resort. Mission Mtn Co., 631 2nd Ave. W.N.
Kailan, MT 98001. MPT 98001.
Attractive male age 24 seeks dating/relationship with black female. Interests in health, exercise, career. No job. Serious replies to Kevin, Box 3892 Lawrence, Ks.
ALAN R.: You've stood me up twice, now our friendship on ice, resumption depends on your make of amends, just dial up my number to stop my hunger. Mo.
AIRLINE HIRING BOOM! $141-$239,000
newcarsboro Reservations for 4 Gulf
countries!
BEER MAIDEN? May your days of sobriety be far and far between. We are ready to battle with you against the great 12-pack Gods once again. Be prepared-BEER WARRIORS
Girl just wanna have fun - at the Brazilian Caranvall festival. Feb. 22. Elks Club
Best
David
Happy Valentine's Day!
Interested in meeting a business major (male), between the ages of 27 and 35, who enjoys classical music? Please reply to Box 922, Collegeville, Signed, muscial enthusiast involved in finance.
Kap-Up until now the plate game has been great. Just wait until when you have a dinnertime date with your husband.
Kile M. I knew you were familiar. If by some chance you don't have a girlfriend and would like to talk I'd love to get to know you. From the girl in your last year's com. class, 494-619.
Woebe. Wm-waer talk but can't get through. I can tell you're nice; see ya real soon. P.S. Jr.
BUS.PERSONAL
POINSETTA BEACH INN in the heart of the Fort
Laundardale strip. STUDENT discount:
$400
$10-$349 Weekly/Up Mailing Circulars! #qaust0 'Surveyingly interest risk self-addressed envelope: Success, P.O. Box 470CEG, Woodstock, IL 60086.
MENU HOT LINE
The Union's recording of the day's entrees & soups
Enjoy the tropical climate of the Brazilian Caravelary, Feb. 12. Elk Club.
Copying
- Thesis Binding
- Word Processing
- Typesetting
- Design & Layout
- Resumes & Flyers
- Transparencies
- Laminating
25TH & IOWA
HOLIDAY PLAZA
Phone 749-5192
University
Materials
Center
Bent'19* 'Color T.V. $28.00 a month, Curtis
Masters $36.00, 842-743-878, Mon., Sat., 5:30-
1:00, Sun. 1:50.
Protect Your Skin! Start Your Tan Now!
Tan Here In Lawrence
Complimentary
One Day Membership*
Check Us Out
Members and Non-members
Welcome
Members and Non-member Welcome We Guarantee lowest price best service best tan Expanded Hours 8 Beds No Waiting
* $2 per tanning session
New customers only
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
25th & Iowa 841-6232
$2 per tanning session
New customers only
Enrol now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive driver's license in four weeks without parcel testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841-7749.
A A
SKT CULTUR RISINGI Skateboards & Accessories QUALITY STUFF ONLY
△
UPTOWN BICYCLES
1337 Mass.
749-0836
GAY!LEBSIAN: Need local information or to meet others?. Send a long, stamped, self- addressed envelope to: TRIANGLE TIMES, P. 0 Box 2692, KCMO 64196
Hand-crafted kites, windcultures and fantasies.
Order now for spring. SKYWORKS 729/128 Mass.
no. 308 upiatras. 942-8273 eve. for appointment.
His and Hirs Herb Design. Quality hair care at reasonable prices. We use the finest hair products available and give you the personal attention you need. Prices $7, perm $25 and up with haircut included. Linda and Bierce 844-9288, 1218 Connecticut.
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY
808·W.23rd
Weekly Beer
Special
Feb.12-18
Wiedemann 12 pk $3.52
Busch 12 pk $4.17
Black Label 12 pk $3.52
Coors Light 12pk $5.28
Miller 12 pk $5.28
Miller Lite 12 pk $5.28
Sweets For Your Sweetie, Color Portrait. A
Victoria's Valentine's Day *Special* Swellies
780-4111
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Patch Island, Daytona Beach. Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas from only 80%. Deluxe lining, parties, poodle bags, more. Hurry, call Suncheese Tours for more information and reservations toll free 1-800-521-9911 or contact a local Suncheese Tours company your Spring break counts. count on Sunchease
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization
card, driver's license, 1st and of course, fine
northeast. Swab health card.
*Honorary Passport to the U.S.*
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS
DELI SPECIALS
Classified Heading:
Modelling and theater portfolios -- shooting new
theater pieces, cafs for information
Swell Studio, 749-1611
BLOOM COUNTY
Write ad here
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 your design. You design it or it be our talented artists. 280 W, 920 N. Gibson College) 814-4349
a different deli special every day
Name: ___
Address: ___
Dates to run
Phone
Sandwich
THE KANSAS UNION
DELI
level 3
Reuben Sandwich
Today's
16 oz. Drink
Special:
$2.25
HEY...ARE YOU
INHARD..THANK DOG*
EMRULEY. CHILD
EMPLOYEE NUMBER
6447-13-7098 D?
Thousands of R & R albums—$2 or less. Also collectors items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quanttrils 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or trade all styles music.
"CAMP COUNSELORS - M-F" Outstanding Slim and Up Drop Trumps; D伞 Tennis, Dance, Skimachics, WSI, Athletics, Nutrition/Dietetics 20 plus. Separate girls' and boys' camps. 7 weeks: Camp Camelot on College Campuses at Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, no. Carolina, Maryland, Michigan, Michael Woodward, Director. 947 Wlevet 81, Woodcrest, N.Y. 1181, 909-421-4321.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
maternity care; confidentially assured. Greater
maternity area (all or) appointment.
913-345-1000
Creative, thinking singles find kindred spirits through the directory for educated singles. LOVELINE, P.O. Box 3026K, Lawrence, KS 60461. OneNote-membership $4.00.
| | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1-15 words | $2.60 | $3.75 | $6.25 | $22.25 |
| For every 8 words added | $20.0 | $50.0 | $75.0 | $1.05 |
Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Net a
Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Classified Display
1 col. x 1 inch = $4.40
By GARY LARSON
THE FAR SIDE
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
2:13
"Mam! Theron's dried his bed again."
YOUR POSITION HAS
BEEN TERMINATED.
I DUNNO...
I GUESS SO...
WAY?
YOU'VE BELOW
OBJOULETE.
NO! WANT! ILL
STUDY HARPER!
I'll GOOF OFF MORE
EFFICIENTLY!!
TIME SHORTER
FOTTY BREAKS!
by Berke Breathed
MEDICAL SURGERY
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
15
VALENTINES!
jewelry
posters
THE
MUSEUM
SHOP
rocks
books
V-Postcards 15¢
V-Cards 50¢
V-Notes 25¢
Instant Valentines
Museum
of Natural History
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sundays
864-4450
VALENTINES!
jewelry posters
THE
MUSEUM
SHOP
rocks books
18" White. Color T. $25.88 m. Monthly. Smarty's TU.
44W 2 rent. 824-727-371. Mon: 9:00-12:00, Sun: 1-3
The ABCs of Personal Financial Planning
This program will explore ways to build a sound financial base. Topics to be discussed include:
* Goal Setting
* Credit Development
* Budgeting
* Limited investments
Classified Ads
Thursday, Feb.13,1986 7-9 p.m.
Regionalist Room, Kansas Union
Sponsored by
Sponsored by
The Emily Taylor Women's
Resource Center
Call 864-3552
Warn sweat shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed Shirttart 748-1611.
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattress
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.Sat. 12:50 p.m.
841-9443
Blue Heron Futons
Want a new fun way to say I love you on Valentine Day. Try a VIDEO VALENTINE, $14.95. Take the day off your appointment. Now through Valentine Day at Adventure Land Lifted Hill Restore Park, 824-6328.
Barb's Vintage Rose New Spring Merchandise
50% off Winter Merchandise 8412451
Class Ring Day - Why wait for the man when its ring day every day at Bafour house. 635 Mass.
SERVICES OFFERED
IRONING: in my home, Shirts, pants, 75. Skirts
1. Next day service 941-8292 after 12:30
HARPER
LAWYER
1101 Mass.
Suite 201 749-0117
LOSE WEIGHT NOW. 10-29 lbs. per month on Herbal Products. As seen on T.V. Call 842-7600. Mobile Locksmith, Fast Locksmith Service. Auto Toilet Service. Reasonable Prices. Call 749-3032.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
BIRTHRIGHT= Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-8421.
MATH TUTOR - Bob Moors holds an M.A. in math from KU. Where u0026 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professionals at the University of Florida.学费 $6 per 40 minute session. Call 843-9023.
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large.
Affordable and affordable tutoring. Judy. 824-7945.
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing: Spelling/punctuation
calls in a document. Cases used in
transcription also. 841-4207.
Letter perfect papers and resumes, WRITING
LIPELINE. 841-340-360
QUALITY TYPING, Letters, theses, disserts,
application, applications. Spelling corrected.
Call 842-7241
1-1-1 TROW ROOM PROCESSING experienced,
conclusive, reliable. Send job absents. Call
+44 (23) 8905 6234.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
The WORD DOCTORS • Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147
EXPERIENCED TYPHP. Term paper; thene.
Experienced schelectric. I will correct spelling.
Correcting scheplocal.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional work pro-
gramming, design and testing, letters, theme
quality printing, #43-800-292.
3-D Dependable, Accurate, Professional WORD
Software for the Office and Information,
papers, books, etc. Data Word 8470
Access
24-Hour Typing, 1001 semester in Lawrence.
Rumes, dissertations, paper. Close to campus.
Lecture notes.
A3) professionally typing. Term papers, Theses,
e-book, and lecture notes. Used by IBM UMIB
4852-9246
A.L. SMITH TYPEING/Dissertations, theses, term papers.
phone: 842-8678 5:30 to 5:30
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing
and document creation one day service;
available 844 illinois, 943-6018
Ace Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable,
friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes.
term papers, theses, dissertations. 24-hour acu-
sity support. Microsoft Office AlphaMega Computer Services. Word Processing/Typing. Corrections. Proofreading, Graphics.
Wordstar Document upload. Free estimates.
Complimentary hair conditioner with all of our hair cuts with Paul Mitchell products. Tina, Denis, and Cathy. Ultimate, 14 E, 8th R, 749-6771. DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced. JANETTE SHAFFER — Typing Service SCRIPTION also, standard cassette tape J48-8877
DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/ Tying, Editing and Graphics, ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter student papers up to 30 pages. Mommy's "Mommie" paper, 482-3871 before 9 p.m. Please call
Dissentations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yr.
experience. Phone 842-2310 after 5:30; B.A.,
B.A. ENGLISH, TYPING-TUTORING. Spelling
correction, overnight service available. Great
flexibility.
WANTED
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share great brand-new apartment very close to campus Microwave, W&D, dishwasher, $120/mo. Call 841-5515 anytime.
Female roommate for quite B/2 R/bar. Furnished 77ft² a month plus 1/2 utilities. Call 749-8482
Female roommate wants to share apt. above,
roombooking book $125.00 per month. 843-876
after 9%
Female roommate to share three bdm. house.
Very nice & quiet neighborhood. Bldg. 923-9783.
Female to take over contract at Naimshi Hall.
**wait** & meal • FREEL. Call Bldg. 1024-1034
LOOKING TO GET OUT OF YOUR PRESENT
SHAMIS SUNDAY! KU student sees ne-
smokingmate to move in as soon as possible. Can
muh out a deal $15 plus electric. Call Paul,
804-726-9638.
ROOMMATE to share 2 BR. Apartment. $12.50
plus 1.7 units. Fully furnished on bus route
Roommate needed! Dux, Rent $125, 1/3
unities. W/D, cable. A/C, with large bedrooms.
WANTED: COMPUTER for wordprocessing worked or not. Need IBM compatible, dual drive, monitor. Will consider printer or other than IBM formats. Call 749-2196.
WANTED male roommate to share deluxe apartment very close to campus. $160.00/mo. No phone calls.
Wanted: Basketball tickets for the K-State game on Feb. 22. Please call 814-6826.
*wanted: Clean, responsible roommate. 1 bedroom in a 3 BR atr Hallway $145/mo. plus 1/2 utilities. Available immediately. Dishwasher. Basketball court.篮球 court. Call 841-767. Keep ready!
Five hundred tickets for the Kansas-Nebraska men's basketball game will go on sale Saturday in the Allen Field House ticket office 30 minutes before the 1:10 p.m. start, Athletic Department officials said yesterday.
500 tickets available for Nebraska game
Sports Briefs
The ticket office is in the main lobby of the field house.
Free posters for fans
The first 10,000 fans in attendance at Saturday's men's varsity game against Nebraska will receive a Kansas basketball commemorative poster, Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, said yesterday.
Depicted on the poster are former Kansas basketball greats James Naismith, F.C. "Phog" Allen and Wilt Chamberlain as well as present Kansas head coach Larry Brown.
"Coca-Cola is the corporate sponsor for Saturday's game and they have come up with what we think is a very attractive poster to be given to the fans Saturday," Hunter said.
Lifting event Sunday
The 1986 Missouri Valley College and Open Weight Lifting Championships will begin at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the north gym of Robinson Center.
Ed Biilik, head speed and strength coach, said people who wanted to enter must have prior competition in an Olympic lifting contest, which includes clean and jerk and snatch lifting.
There is a $10 entry fee for people able to prove they have prior experience. It is $1 extra to compete on the collegiate level.
Practice is scheduled to resume this afternoon in Allen Field House to prepare for Saturday's game against Nebraska.
Hawks get day off
director.
Gold medalist to talk
Former Olympic swimmer and three-time gold medalist Rowdy Gaines will speak at 3 p.m. today in the film room of the Parrott Athletic Center to promote the First Annual AAU/USA Junior Olympics National Indoor Championship.
The meet, sponsored by the Lawrence Track Club, will be held 9 a.m. Sunday at Anschutz Sports Pavilion and is open to boys and girls 15-18. All competing athletes, however, must have a 1986 AAU Junior Olympic membership card.
Kansas men's basketball coach Larry Brown rewarded the Jayhawks with a day off from practice yesterday after Tuesday's 100-66 drubbing of the Missouri Tigers, said Doug Vance, Kansas sports information
Interested parties can call Jim Pilch, the meet director, at 842-9797 or 842-1944 for information.
Gaines, a five-time NCAA All-American at Auburn, was selected over former Georgia running back Herschel Walker as the 1981 Southeastern Conference Athlete of the Year. He was also the 1984 World Swimmer of the Year.
The trio will compete at the Rosemont Horizon two days after meeting in the Milrose Games in New York tomorrow night.
Top vaulters in meet
Bubka is the world record holder for outdoor meets with a vault of $19-8\frac{1}{4}$. Olson set the indoor record of $19-5\frac{1}{2}$ at the Olympic Invitational in New York last week hours after Bubka had reached 19-5 in the Soviet Indoor Championships.
ROSEMONT, Ill. — Sergei Bubka of the Soviet Union and U.S. vaulters Billy Olson and Joe Dial — all who have owned the world record in the pole vault in the last year — will compete Sunday in the Bally Invitational track meet.
On Feb. 1, Dial had a vault of $19-4\frac{1}{4}$, which was the record for one week.
Boosters paid Vols
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Several former Tennessee Volunteer football and basketball players said
they received money from boosters during college or knew of other players who did, it was reported yesterday.
Knoxville newspapers reported they were told by former Vols that many players made extra money by selling complimentary game tickets for up to $200 a ticket.
The Knoxville Journal, in a copyright story, said it surveyed 20 former Tennessee football and basketball players and 15 said they received gifts or money or knew of teammates who had
The newspaper quoted former football player Reggie White and former basketball player Willie Burton as saying they received money while playing at Tennessee.
White, now with the Philadelphia Eagles, said there were boosters who athlete knew they could ask a few bucks from.
Burton, a former Vols center now playing professional basketball in New Zealand, said he asked for "spending change" when he needed it.
"I didn't ask for $100," Burton said. "I just asked them for some spending change for the weekend
— $25, $30. I didn't see much wrong with it."
Net guard passes test
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — New Jersey Nets guard Micheal Ray Richardson escaped a two-year ban from the National Basketball Association today when results of his latest drug test were negative.
"The test was negative, so now it's between Richardson and the team," said Alex Sachare, an NBA spokesman. "Our involvement is in overseeing the drug program. That takes us out of it."
Richardson will be in uniform for Thursday night's game in Cleveland against the Cavaliers, a Nets spokesman said.
The 30-year-old guard Tuesday underwent urinalysis at the New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry in Newark. If he had tested positively, Richardson would have been banned from the NBA for two years under the league's drug abuse program.
From staff and wire reports
Help Dan Aykroyd Bust M.S.!
CONTESTANTS
M.S.
M.S.
S. A.M.S. Heart of Rock n' Roll Valentine's Day Battle of the Bands!
The Fanatix
Sons of Liberty
All of the Above
Absolute Ceiling
The Breakers
No Breakers
Pariah
Altered Media
The Hawklet wil be open for your drinking pleasure!
MTV
AMERICAN TV SHOWCASE
Tickets $3
Feb. 14 8:30 p.m.
purchase at SUA or from booksellers
MKS
swatch
from look-a-likes Kansas Union Ballroom
We're Out To Tie Up & Bust M.S.
7 p.m., Saturday February 15,1986 Hoch Auditorium The University of Kansas Lawrence Campus
Part of Ministry in the Law day, appointed by the Black American Law Students Association. For information about seminars and other Ministers in the Law activities, call 913-854-4850
Minorities and the Law:
A BRIDGE
BETWEEN
COMMUNITY
AND CHAOS
Indian
BOND
Paid for by student activity fee
---
SUA
Student Union Activities is planning an exciting year full of concerts, speakers, movies, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas...
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
---
wants your help!
President (the following 4 applications due Feb.17) Vice-President Secretary
Treasurer (the following 8 applications due Feb.20)
Special Events
SUA Travel
Outdoor Recreation Indoor Recreation Public Relations Film
We need your help in these programs. Experience is NOT a necessity, however interest is required. For more information stop by the SUA Office, Level 1, Kansas Union, or call 864-3477.
Forums
Fine Arts
STUDENT GROUPS GET DISCOUNTS AT THE KANSAN!!
---
Spend Valentine's Day with your SWEETHEART! Come in and eat, or we'll deliver to your door!
Get a large (1 topping) Thin Crust Pizza for $5.99 OR a large (1 topping) Original Crust Pizza for $6.99
KING COUNTY MILITARY
(You can always order extra toppings for a small add Dine-in, Carryout or Delivery)
Limit one pizza per coupon. Please present coupon before ordering or upon delivery *Not valid on Sundays* or with any other offer. Only of participation Godfathers will receive a coupon.
Expires Feb.28
Offer expires
No cash value
Godfather's Pizza.
Additional charge for delivery
16
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1986
Mays rejoins Giants
Willie Mays is back where mebelongs — with the San Francisco Giants.
Mays, who played for the Giants in New York and San Francisco for 20 years before being traded to the New York Mets in 1972, said yesterday that he would rejoin the Giants as a full-time special assistant to Al Rosen, general manager.
Mays said his first chore with the Giants would be to work with the team's young outfield.
A Hall of Famer, Mays was ordered by former Commissioner Bowie Kuhn to sever all connections with baseball in 1979 because of his job with an Atlantic City, N.J., hotel casino. Mays and former New York Yankees great Mickey Mantle, who also worked in a public relations job for another casino, were reinstated to baseball's good graces a year ago by Commissioner Peter Ueberroth.
The KU Athletic Department is considering a request for changes in the emergency service at sporting events next year.
Emergency service changes sought
Staff writer
By Frank Ybarra
Jim Strobi, director of student health services, said yesterday that he had written a letter to Monte Johnson, athletic director, which asked for a study of the emergency services that student health services were providing now.
Srobi said he thought the situation needed to be reviewed because
Student health services has been providing emergency health service at basketball and football games and other events on campus.
Watkins Hospital was understaffed when the emergency service was on duty.
He said an event, such as a basketball game, would require doctors and nurses from Watkins Hospital to help with any problems.
He also said that the people from the hospital were not specifically trained to handle sporting events and that he thought a trained trauma unit
would be better prepared to handle the job.
Strobi said he would assist the Athletic Department in developing a plan for next year's events, but he said he had no idea what the plan would be.
Health services workers may still be involved in any solution the Athletic Department finds, Strobl said.
Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director, said Johnson had asked him, Susan Wachter and Gary Hunter, also assistant athletic directors, to work with health services to develop a plan.
"We're just exploring all avenues available." Temple said.
He said it was too early to tell what the decision would be. He also said the decision wouldn't be made for some time.
Johnson said the Athletic Department was very happy with the job student health services was doing and there had been no problems with its service over the years.
WRITING A TERM PAPER? Attend The RESEARCH PAPER WORKSHOP
Monday, February 17
7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
A
7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
300 Strong Hall
presented by the Student Assistance Center
THE ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER
performing two different programs at the University of Kansas
For reservations, call 913/864-3982 VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations
Presented by the KU School of Fine Arts Concert Series
The Alvin Alley American Dance Theater is sponsored by Philip Morris Companies Inc.
Public: $15 & $13; KU and K-12 Students: $7.50 & $6.50;
Senior Citizens and Other Students: $14 & $12
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved
8:00 p.m. nightly
Tuesday & Wednesday, February 18-19, 1986
Hoch Auditorium
Partially funded by the Mid-America Arts Alliance, Kansas Arts Commission and National Endowment for the Arts; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and KU Endowment Association; a University Arts Festival event.
MINORITIES IN THE LAW
"... the world has never seen a more powerful expression of sheer joy!"
Clive Barnes,
The New York Post
3:00-3:50
A bridge between community and chaos Sat., Feb. 15 Kansas Union, Big Eight Rm.
4:00-4:50
K FESTIVAL MMMM
Taxation Seminar
Benjamin Franklin, Bankruptcy Court, District of Kansas. Auburn, Arkansas. Kansas City, Missouri. Olive Lee, Jr., Attorney, Wichita, Ka
Julian Bond, State Senator, Georgia
5:00:5:50 Nontraditional Careers in the law
7:00 Keynote Address Hoch Auditorium
Sponsored by Black American Law Student Assoc
DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
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QUALITY
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1008 E. 12TH
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❤
Drop in today for
Valentine's Day cards and gifts
ZERCHER
PHOTO
1107 Mass
843-4435
919 Iowa
841-8668
Suzy's Zoo
Valentine's Day is Friday, February 14
Remember your Valentine with a Hallmark card and a gift of Russell Stover Candies.
ARBUTHNOT'S
allmark
Crown
Hours:
Southwest Plaza 23RD& Iowa 841-2160
Mon.-Fri. 10-8 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 1-5
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ON LP's—PRERECORDED CASSETTES & CD's
FRIDAY— VALENTINE'S DAY ONLY DON'T MISS IT!!
PENNYLANE
RECORDS—TAPES—COMPACT DISCS 844 Mass. Downtown · 749-4211 · Open 7 days.
---
Sale excludes items already on sale.
❤
Romance on the Hill Watch for details... Feb 14
V
Thompson-Crawley
FURNITURE RENTAL
520 E. 22nd Terrace
841-5212
For Men & Women
The Sanctuary Presents The Real McCoy ARM WRESTLING TOURNAMENT
Sub8Stuff
Sandwich Shop
Drive-thru until 2 a.m.
1618 W. 23rd St.
For Men
Weigh In Time 7:00:9:00 p.m.
Single Entry $5/Double Entry $8
PRIZES WILL BE AWARDED
Featuring the Real McCoy Arm Wrestling Machine
- No hand to hand contact between opponents
* Only strength is used not special techniques
* Players may use either hand to compete against their opponents
Must be over 21
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 19th, 9:00 p.m.
PIZZA DELIVERED
CHEAP & FAST
842-0600
MINGLE ELIMINATION TOURNAMENT
ALL WAY CLASSIFIED OBJECT TO A BINOMINAL
OBJECT OF RETURN, BEING BENEFICIAL
ALL INFOUR WILL BE HELD ON THE REASON
AND INFORMATION HOLDERS
Arm Wrestling Machine Demonstration
MENH SINGLE CLASSES
1. Menh Singles
30 Minutes
8.5 Pts
9.7 Pts
10.4 Pts
12.0 Pts
13.6 Pts
15.3 Pts
17.0 Pts
18.7 Pts
20.4 Pts
22.1 Pts
24.8 Pts
27.5 Pts
30.2 Pts
**MENH DOUBLELS CLASSES (Combined Team Weight)**
1. Menh Doublels
30 Minutes
8.5 Pts
9.7 Pts
10.4 Pts
12.0 Pts
13.6 Pts
15.3 Pts
17.0 Pts
18.7 Pts
20.4 Pts
22.1 Pts
**WOMENH SINGLES-CLASSES**
1. Womenh Singles
30 Minutes
8.5 Pts
9.7 Pts
10.4 Pts
12.0 Pts
13.6 Pts
15.3 Pts
17.0 Pts
18.7 Pts
**WOMENH DOUBLELS CLASSES (Combined Team Weight)**
1. Womenh Doublels
30 Minutes
8.5 Pts
9.7 Pts
10.4 Pts
12.0 Pts
13.6 Pts
15.3 Pts
17.0 Pts
18.7 Pts
---
**NOTES GIVEN BELOW ARE A MINIMUM**
**FOR THESE CATEGORIES ONLY**
Sat., Feb.15
SANCTUARY
Free of Charge
LARGE TUNNY
Contestants $1.00
$2.00 Cover
11 a.m.-3 a.m.
THE SANCTUARY
Contestants $1.00
$1 Well Drinks
7th & Michigan
843.0540
THE
Reciprocal With Over 300 Clubs
PLAYB
BOY
ADVISOR
James Peterson
Discussion on Love and Sex
Thursday, February 13th 8:00
Kansas Union Ballroom
Admission Free
Sponsored by Student Union Activities
Romance on the Hill
1
Chilly reception
---
SINCE 1889
Mid-winter improvements turn off heat in Fraser. See page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY, FEB. 14, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 97 (USPS 650-640)
Brrrr
Details page 3.
Research plan wins approval in faculty vote
By Leslie Hirschbach Staff writer
KU faculty members yesterday narrowly passed a proposal to extend classified research, although some professors wanted the document revised because it was unclear.
The proposal, which passed by a vote of 219-194, would extend classified research at the University of Kansas from one to three years if final approval is given by Chancellor Gene A. Budig.
Some KU professors who supported the extension didn't vote for the change because they thought the proposal was poorly organized.
Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, said the old policy was more reasonable than the new one.
"The proposal seems poorly constructed and serves little to guide and develop research." he said.
Armstrong, who is doing unclassified research for the Office of Naval Research on the Strategic Defense Initiative, said the 10-page ballot was much too long to give just a ves or no answer.
"It was approached in a manner to try to appease diverse interests and actions by including a paragraph for each point-of-view," he said. "The result is a document with no clarity or cohesiveness."
"It would be much better to vote this proposal down and devise something intelligible that can be
Armstrong said he thought the proposal lacked guidelines for researchers that indicated what kinds of research they could or couldn't do.
understood without a lot of debate."
Sandra Wick, recording secretary for the University Senate Executive Committee, said the ballot that was sent to the faculty was written by members of SenEx, who had consulted with a member of the Faculty Senate Research Committee. The document took about a week to write.
Two pages of the document explained the opposing views of the extension.
Proponents saw the current one-year classification policy as a limit to their academic freedom because it prevented them from pursuing research goals. Some industries, they argued, would not agree to do research with an institution that only could classify information for one year.
Opponents argued against any form of classified research. Classifying research, they said, restricted some professors from sharing all of their knowledge with their students.
Jan Roskam, professor of aerospace engineering who has done classified research for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, said he voted against the proposal because it was too lengthy and cumbersome.
See RESEARCH. p. 5. col. 1
THE BUILDING IS BREAKING. A HOSE IS OPENING UP THE WINDOW, WITH MIST OF FIRES AND HORSESHOE DURING A FIRE.
A Lawrence firefighter prepares to go back into a burning house at 1217 Kentucky St. No one was injured in the fire, which broke out shortly before 9 a.m.
yesterday. Damages were estimated at $50,000, and the tenants of the first floor apartment were left homeless. See story page 3.
By Debra West Staff writer
Reading a newspaper, magazine or current novel often is taken for granted. But for some, it's an impossible feat.
The Audio-Reader Radio Service broadcasts current printed material to people with visual or physical handicaps that make it impossible for them to read, said Rosie Hurwitz, the director.
The service, broadcast over a sub-carrier of KANU-FM, has more than 10,000 listeners across the state. It can be received only on special radios, which Audio-Reader lends to eligible listeners.
Volunteers read the wide variety of broadcast material and keep the service working around the clock, Hurwitz said. They read national and local newspapers, popular magazines, the Bible and popular novels.
Bob Skupny, 200 W. 15th St., has been a volunteer reader for almost five years. Skupny retired from Ford Motor Company in Detroit in 1981 and moved to Lawrence. He heard Hurwitz being interviewed about Audio-Reader on the radio and decided to volunteer.
"It itemed natural." Skupny said. "I was newly retired and needed something to do. It's been the joy of my stay here in Lawrence."
Volunteers are required to pass an audition that includes pronouncing a list of 100 words and reading excerpts from books and newspapers.
The service has personal significance for some of its volunteers.
Jan Shumway began reading for the service six years ago after her mother began to lose her sight. Shumway gave her mother an Audio-Reader radio for Christmas and later decided to volunteer.
Hurwitz said, "Our volunteers are all very talented, very special people. They are excited about what they are doing."
Audio-Reader first went on the air in October 1971 and covered a 65-mile radius around Lawrence. It was the second radio station in the country devoted to reading and the first on a university campus.
Over the years, Audio-Reader has expanded its signal until now most of the state receives the program. In some areas it is available on cable television systems.
Listeners help decide the programming, Hurwitz said. They can volunteer to serve for one year on a committee comprised of 50 listeners.
Once a month, the Audio-Reader staff calls the committee members to ask whether they are pleased with the programs, she said. The listeners can request programs that aren't being offered at that time.
The listeners appreciate the service, Hurwitz said.
Vivian Wrightsman,1421 Kasold Drive,said she probably was the most ardent admirer of the service.
"It means so very much to me," she said. "I love to read, and I can no longer see to read. It means my existence."
Audio-Reader receives financing from the Kansas Legislature, but it's never enough. Hurwitz said.
The state budget pays the salary of the staff, the recording tape, equipment repairs and the microwave and cable systems, she said. But it doesn't pay for the radios lent to the listeners, new equipment or the program guide Audio-Service sends to its listeners.
Many organizations, businesses and individuals donate money that helps make ends meet. Hurwitz said. The Kansas Lions Sight Foundation pays for the braille program guides, and the Delta Gamma sorority, 1015 Emery Road, sponsors an annual fund-raiser for the program.
Despite this help, Hurwitz said, the program now has no money to buy new radios, and the waiting list of listeners is growing.
Hurwitz said she thought the Audio-Reader offered a valuable service to both the people it served and to the volunteers who worked there. The service is very important to its listeners, and the readers know that what they are doing is important to these people.
"There's no more significant gift than giving yourself," she said. "In the end you get back more than you give."
Bv Abbie Jones
Med students must go to towns to get grants
Staff writer
KU medical students may not be granted scholarships under a Kansas Senate bill unless they agree to begin their practices in small towns.
State Sen. Jack Walker, R-Overland Park, is the sponsor of a bill that would cut the number of scholarships granted to medical students from 50 to 25 for the 1986 and 1987 academic school years. The bill would eliminate all scholarships after Dec. 31. 1987.
"The process is not to help medical students." Walker said yesterday. "It's to help the Kansas medical supply."
Walker said that under the bill, medical students who were awarded scholarships after Dec. 31, 1985 must agree to set up a medical practice for at least a year in a Kansas city of 7,500 people or less. They would not be allowed to practice in cities of Wyandotte, Johnson, Sedgwick and Shawnee counties.
The purpose, Walker said, is to get
physicians into smaller towns where they are needed and out of the larger cities where it's tough to find a place to practice.
Interest rates would be set at 10 percent for students in the 1986 and 1987 classes who choose to pay the money back because they do not want to practice in small towns.
"Doctors would rather buy out than go to some of those places," he said.
Scholarship recipients after Dec. 31, 1985 would be required to first enter the three-year primary care residency training program, he said. Primary care comprises pediatrics, internal medicine and family practice.
The smaller towns don't need highly specialized medicine that is available in bigger cities, he said.
"We still need primary care physicians, and we need them in smaller towns," Walker said.
The scholarships would be made for one year at a time and would be renewed annually.
It's unbelievable
Senior's kin wins $2 million
Bv Lori Polson
Staff writer
When Chris Magerl, Overland Park senior, heard yesterday that his grandfather had just won over $2 million his first response was, "No way!"
“It’s unbelievable,” Mageri said. Mageri's grandfather, Johnnie J. Mageri, is a 9-year butcher from Kansas City, Kan.
THE SUNDAY NEWS
See related story p. 10.
Yesterday morning, he became the first million-dollar jackpot winner in the recently established Missouri State Lottery.
he said he probably would donate a considerable sum of money to St. Agnes Parish in Kansas City, Kan., in memory of his wife, Grace.
The jokepope:
"the idea what I'm going to do with the money," Johnnie Mager) said. "But I'm planning on giving some to the church."
The jackpot was worth $2,116,504.
Chris Mageri said he had no idea what his grandfather would do with the money.
"I have no plans to quit work," he said. "But I'll probably just work half-time now."
Johnnie Magerl works at Johnnie's Market, a Kansas City, Mo., grocery store owned by his son. Bill.
Johnnie J. Magerl smiles after winning $2,116,504 in the Missouri State Lottery. Magerl, Kansas City, Kan. received his first installment yesterday a check for $84,660
the money.
"All he does is work," he said. "He
Members of the family probably will not profit from his grandfather's good luck, Chris Magerl said.
never travels. I don't know what he is going to do."
"He has a huge family." he said.
"It's not like anyone is going to get loaded or anything."
A spokesman for the Missouri lottery said that should Johnnie Magerl die before collecting the entire amount, the remainder of the money would be given to his estate.
Lottery officials hold 20 percent of all prizes worth $10,000 or more for income tax purposes, the spokesman said.
Johnnie Mmira1 received a check for $84,660 yesterday. A $105,825 check will be mailed to him every year for the next 20 years.
Mageri was one of 30 finalists who spun the wheel. He won a chance to participate with a ticket that he bought at his son's store.
It was the only ticket that won him a chance, even though he had spent about $60 on lottery tickets, which cost $1 each, he said.
The finalists were picked from among instant lottery game players whose tickets made them eligible for a drawing.
Each finalist who spins the wheel wins money. The wheel has one jackpot slot, eight slots worth $23,000, 15 slots worth $10,000, 20 slots paying $2,000, 23 worth $1,500 and 33 paying $1,000.
No one won the jackpot last week,
so the amount of money had doubled.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
Open-container fine may rise
The bill was sponsored by a bipartisan group of representatives, including State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence.
TOPEKA — People who are convicted of illegally transporting open containers of alcohol won't be able to plea-bargain for a lighter sentence if a proposed law change passes the Kansas Legislature.
Bv Mark Siebert
A bill introduced in the House on Wednesday could raise the fine for open container convictions to encourage violators to participate in alcohol and drug safety programs.
"We've got to be within reason and give these people a fair shake," Johnson said. "We want to keep them from getting a DUI later on down the line."
The proposed law would require a first-time offender to be put on probation and enroll in a alcohol education program that costs no more than $100.
Staff writer.
refused the education program, they would be fined between $100 and $500, imprisoned for up to six months or both. The law also prohibits plea bargaining to the avoid penalties.
Under present law, illegally transporting open containers is punishable by a fine of up to $200, not more than six months in jail or both.
Gene Johnson, project coordinator of the Kansas Community Alcohol Safety Action Project, said the organization was supporting the bill because officers were catching violators but the violators were not being convicted.
In 1984, the Kansas Highway Patrol recorded about 2,000 violations for open containers but only 335 convictions showed up at the state Traffic Control Bureau, Johnson said. Some violators received lighter sentences by plea-bargaining.
The law is designed to get the violators to take the education course and not the fine or jail, he said. Educated people are less likely to commit serious crimes later.
By Barbara Shear
When spoken, this simple three-letter word can make ears perk up, quiet noisy classrooms or captivate an audience as it did last night in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Sex
James Peterson, author of an adviser column in Playboy magazine, spoke to about 200 people on love and sex.
responding to a question about numerous lovers.
"Sex should be like ethnic food — enjoy the flavor, don't ask what went into it," Peterson told the audience.
Although the speech was entertaining, some people on campus didn't find the subject amusing.
Mike Lauer, Seneca junior, and a member of the Student Union Activities forums committee, said many of the posters advertising the speech were torn down or marked up.
"People were writing 'sexist' on the posters," he said. "One poster said 'The campus is sponsoring Playboy, and Playboy sponsors rape.'"
Lauer said he didn't know who had vandalized the posters.
Despite some obvious opposition to the lecture, most students attending the lecture didn't find it offensive.
"I thought it was really funny, and he had good things to say," Susan Simmons, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, said. "He could have made it serious, but it was funny without being flippant. I was impressed."
Jim Oliverius, Timken junior, said
北
See PLAYBOY, p. 5, col. 4
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
News Briefs
Paris officials order 13 suspects to leave
PARIS — The Interior Ministry yesterday ordered the expulsion of 13 of 64 people of mainly Middle Eastern origin taken into custody for questioning in a series of bomb attacks in Paris.
The ministry said the 13 soon would leave for the country of their choice for posing trouble to the public. No evidence linking them to the three bomb blasts last week was produced.
JERUSALEM - Anatoly Shcharansky, the Jewish dissident released from a Soviet prison, said yesterday that he never was beaten during his nine years behind bars. He said he was tortured by hunger, cold, isolation and "the idea I might die."
Police had mounted a massive operation to track down terrorists who bombed a crowded bookstore and shopping center. Twenty people were wounded by the blasts.
Earlier, Shcharansky, who suffers from a heart ailment, was pronounced in good health after a medical examination.
Iacocca opposed plans
Dissident not beaten
DETROIT — Chrysler Corp.
Chairman Lee A. Iacocca said
yesterday that he was fired as
head of a commission to renovate
the Statue of Liberty because he
heposed plans to build a hotel and
conference center on part of Ellis Island.
Interior Secretary Donald Hodel fired Iacocca on Wednesday. Hodel said he wanted to avoid any possible conflict of interest stemming from Iacocca running both the commission and a companion fund-raising foundation.
Airline investigated
WASHINGTON - Justice Department officials were shocked yesterday by Drug Enforcement Administration statements which led to the exposure of an investigation into alleged cocaine smuggling by Eastern Airline baggage handlers in Miami, sources said.
A federal grand jury in Miami is receiving evidence, and the investigation is continuing, law enforcement sources said.
From Kansan wires.
FDA issues Tylenol warning
United Press International
YONKERS, N.Y. - The Food and Drug Administration yesterday warned consumers to stop using Extra-Strength and Regular-Strength Tylenol. Five more cyanidacapsules were discovered in the second tainted bottle of the painkiller within a week.
The poisoned capsules were found five days after Diane Elroth, 23, of Peekskill, N.Y., died of cyanide poisoning after taking two Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules bought from an A&P store in Bronxville, a northern New York suburb.
FDA Commissioner Frank Young said the five new cyanide-laced capsules were in a bottle from a Woolworth's department store less than a mile from the A&P store.
He said the FDA also was testing a
A preliminary analysis indicated that the five contaminated capsules contained 50-percent cyanide and 50-percent potassium cyanide, a lethal dose. Young said. The outside seal on the bottle was not broken, he said, and the aluminum foil over the top of the container was intact.
bottle of Regular-Strength Tylenol for noxible contamination.
Johnson & Johnson Co., the Brunswick, N.J.-based makers of Tyleneol, joined the FDA in warning consumers to stop using Extra-Strength and Regular-Strength Tyleneol.
"While the area of immediate concern is New York, we are issuing a nationwide warning in the interests of giving the public the widest possible protection," said James Burke, chairman of Johnson & Johnson.
Elsroth's death prompted stores in
34 states to pull *Tylenol* from their shelves. The toxicity of the cyanide that killed Elsroth was determined to be 40-percent sodium cyanide and 60-percent potassium cyanide.
The lot number on the contaminated bottle discovered yesterday was AHA090 with an expiration date of March 1887. It was manufactured in Puerto Rico, said Mary Russell, spokeswoman for Westchester County Police.
The capsules that were blamed in Elsroth's death were made in Pennsylvania.
Young said the FDA was testing for a very small trace of something that reacted like cyanide in a bottle of Regular-Strength Tylenol. Analysis had not yet shown whether the capsules contained cyanide.
That bottle was found in an A&P store in Yorktown, N.Y. and
manufactured in Round Rock, Texas. It carried the lot number of AJR358 with an expiration date of March 1987, Young said.
In 1982, seven people died after taking cyanide-laced capsules of Extra-Strength Tylonel that were purchased in Chicago-area markets. The deaths, which began Sept. 29, 1982, led Johnson & Johnson to pull Extra-Strength Tylonel capsules from stores countridaily and begin a testing program in which more than 1 million bottles were examined.
In the end, only eight tainted bottles were discovered, five taken from the victims, one from a store shelf and two turned in during the recall. A 130-member task force of federal, state and local authorities investigated the deaths. They found no suspects or motives.
McAuliffe's backup may get flight
WASHINGTON — NASA announced yesterday that backup space teacher Barbara Morgan would be offered a chance to fly aboard a shuttle.
The date of the next flight with a teacher onboard depends on the outcome of the investigation into the Jan. 28 Challenger disaster, which killed McAulife and her six crewmates, said William Graham, acting director of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Morgan, of McCall, Idaho, did not attend the news conference at which Graham and two space teacher finalists appeared. She said she still wanted to fly in space.
"I've lost a lot of good friends, and I feel sad
about that. But we've got to push on," she said.
"There are always tragedies in life."
Graham said Morgan told him that her acceptance of a seat aboard a shuttle would depend on her circumstances when NASA decides it is ready to fly shuttles again. Graham met with Morgan earlier this week
Graham said the other eight finalists agreed that Morgan should get the first chance to fly. He said NASA had not yet decided whether another backup would be picked.
Graham also announced that the space agency's program to select a journalist to fly in space would be resumed soon. He said a journalist would fly aboard a shuttle after a teacher flew.
Mary Futrell, president of the National Education Association, said it was important that the
teacher-in-space program continue, particularly after the loss of the Challenger and its crew.
"We must kindle and rekindle the spirit of inquiry that Christa brought alive," Futrell said. "We must preserve her legacy — the legacy of inspiration.
"If, together, we honor our pledges, then we will be able to say that on January 28, 1986, tragedy and triumph were fused. We will truly be able to say that although Christa McAulife never reached her destination, her mission was accomplished."
Two space teacher finalists appeared with Graham and Futrell at the news conference. They said they still would fly aboard a shuttle once NASA corrected the problems.
France tells Duvalier he cannot stay
United Press International
PARIS — Former Haitian President-for-Life Jean-Claude Duvalier said yesterday that he had asked the French government for permission to remain in the country permanently as a refugee. But French officials said he was not welcome.
"I am asking fondly that the French Office for the Protection of Refugees recognize the refugee status of myself as well as all the members of my family," the telegram said.
Duvalier's request came in a telegram to French officials. It was read to reporters by the proprietor of the Hotel de L'Abbaye in the resort town of Talloires where Duvalier has been at since fleeing his country Feb. 7.
Earlier in the day, the Foreign Ministry said Duvalier would not be allowed to remain permanently.
"France is doing the maximum to have Duvallier leave as soon as possible." said a Foreign Ministry spokesman. "There is no question that Duvallier will have to leave France. It is not Duvallier who will make the decision."
Duvalier owns a chateau and two apartments in France. News reports earlier said that he was not considering a permanent asylum in an African country. The French government originally said it would allow him to remain only eight days.
Marcos leading in vote tally
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — After seven hours of vote tabulation, President Ferdinand E. Marcos was well ahead yesterday in the official vote count by the National Assembly, which his party controls. Corazon Aquino, who says she won the presidential election, said Marcos must resign to prevent violence.
Aquino's aides reported that another of her campaign workers was killed yesterday, bringing the total since the Feb. 7 election to more than 20.
The assembly had Marcos ahead with 6,408,785 votes to 5,584,581 for Aquino. This is an edge of about 53
percent to 46 percent. About 46 percent of the votes are tallied.
She said the resignation would defuse some of the anger of Filipinos who think they have been cheated and allow the question of who won the election to be settled in a manner acceptable to all. She did not say how that could be done.
Aquino maintains that the elections were fraudulent and that the Nation is not responsible.
The tally sheet delivered to the National Assembly from the president's home province of Iloocs Norte said the votes came from 761 precincts. The province has 624 registered precincts.
According to the tally sheet, the vote in Ilocos Norte was 189,897 for Marcos and 718 for Aquino.
The president deplored the violence and said he also had lost supporters, including a town mayor who, Marcos said, was killed by communist rebels encouraged by the opposition.
Aquino said Marcos should resign because "the failure of the electoral process to move swiftly to a fair conclusion has dangerously heightened tensions."
Marcos, who has governed the Philippines for 20 years, appeared on government television and pledged to "honor, without reservations, the people's verdict at the polls."
Dole wants U.S. bases out of the Philippines
United Press International
LOS ANGELES — Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole said yesterday that he would propose legislation requiring the Defense Department to study the possibility of moving two U.S. military bases out of the Philippines.
Dole said there were obvious irregularities in the Philippine election, which showed President Ferdinand Marcos ahead of opposition leader Corazon Aquino by nearly 1
million votes with about a third of the ballots counted.
"I assume that Marcos will be the winner," Dole said at a Los Angeles news conference.
"We need to know the extent of the fraud. If Marcos or his agents were directly involved, then I think we'd better take a look."
He said he would introduce legislation next week requiring the Pentagon to study the possibility of moving the two U.S. installations, Clark Air Base and Subic Bay Naval Station.
I've got a CRUSH on you!!! PARTY
THE ELKS CLUB
February 15, 1986
8:00 pm.
IT'S VALENTINE'S DAY AT HOUSE OF HUPEI!
DINNER FOR 2
15.95
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- Mandarin Combination
- Pork Hupei Stule
- Sweet Paper Sage
- Sweet and Sour Triple Delight
- Seafood Combination
- Chicken Velvet and Crab Meat We'll be open 4:30-10:30 on Valentine's Daul!
- FREE PUNCH
- FREE FLOWERS
Open daily:
Lunch
11:30-2:30p.m.
Dinner
4:30-9:30p.m.
Frl. & Sat.
'til 10:30p.m.
Sunday Buffet 12-3 p.m.
Serving lunch daily
Carryout ready in 15 minutes or less
House of HuPEI
2907 W. 6th next to Econo Lodge 843-8070
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
Student enrollment up 380, official says
About 380 more students are enrolled on the Lawrence campus at the University of Kansas now than were enrolled one year ago, David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday.
The full-time equivalency enrollment at the University also increased by about 380 on the Lawrence campus from last spring.
The FTE is calculated by dividing the total number of credit hours by the average full-time credit course load.
The average course load for undergraduates is 15 hours. The average for law students is 12 hours. The average for graduate students is nine hours.
Official enrollment figures will be released today by the office of University Relations, Ambler said.
Petition backs series
The Student Senate Cultural Affairs Committee met last night and unanimously approved a petition in support of a new campus lecture series.
The petition specifically called for officials of the University of Kansas Alumni Association and the Kansas University Endowment Association to cooperate with the Student Senate in finding support for the lecture series.
The new series would require a private grant of about $500,000 so that enough interest could be generated for its support.
Roadblocks to be set
The Lawrence Police Department will set up roadblocks for the next three or four evenings to check for suspended driver's licenses and other violations, Sgt. Don Dahlauer said yesterday.
- Roadblocks will be set up at either 23rd and Massachusetts streets; the 700, 800 or 900 block of New Hampshire Street; or the Kansas River bridge, Dahlquest said.
He said officers would be checking for suspended licenses, drivers without their licenses, drivers operating under the influence, open containers and safety violations.
The locations were chosen because of the high probability of offenses. he said.
Dahlquest said the police department had used roadblocks in the past to check for violations.
Bartender arrested
WICHTTA — A tavern operator has become the first person charged under a new city law that prohibits bar employees from allowing customers to take part in drinking games.
Bob Wright, operator of Party Train tavern, allegedly allowed six customers to play a game Tuesday night that involved chugging beer, police said.
The city law, aimed at discouraging heavy drinking, took effect Jan. 17 and carries a maximum penalty of one year in jail and a $600 fine.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy and cold with a high from 25 to 30 degrees and northeast winds from 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear with a low from 15 to 20. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and warmer with a high in the low to mid-40s.
From staff and wire reports.
Divestment urged at meeting
All speakers at a KU Senate Human Relations Committee meeting last night said they favored Kansas University Endowment Association divestment from South Africa.
By Tim Hrenchir Staff writer
In a meeting dominated by complaints and criticism of the Endowment Association and KU administration, 13 speakers urged divestment to help fight apartheid, a form of racial segregation practiced in South Africa.
Speakers represented such interests as the Student Senate, KU Honors Students Association, Black Student Union and residents of Hashinger Hall.
The committee conducted its second and final round of hearings on South Africa last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
David Katzman, committee chairman, said he thought the committee would meet again in about 10 days.
Laird Okie, 1982 KU graduate, and Dwayne Fuhhue. Tonanxonie special student and student
senator, said that during the past five years, several Endowment Association trustees also had been executives for corporations that invest in South Africa. This, they said, was a conflict of interest.
Jane Ungerman, Lawrence senior and a member of KU Committee on South Africa, was one of several students who criticized administration actions. Ungerman said student protesters had been treated shabbi by the administration.
Okie said members of the KU Committee on South Africa had made this discovery through reference books such as Standard and Poor's Almanac.
She said some students had been threatened with expulsion from the University for their activism, while others had seen their scholarships and loans threatened.
Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare, said, "The University is outstanding in its supression of student dissent."
Kirsten Myers, Shawnee junior, said that when she had walked into the office of student financial
aid with a KU Committee on South Africa button on her purse, a secretary had told her that if she wanted a loan she shouldn't bring the button in.
Myers said she didn't like what she perceived to be the attitude of KU administrators.
"If they pat our heads long enough and say they appreciate our interest, they think we'll go away," she said.
Speakers were quick to criticize Chancellor Gene A. Budig.
Heather Cusick, Salina junior, said, "Students and faculty who have demonstrated a sincere concern for the people of South Africa had been subject to acts of intimidation, violations of First Amendment rights . . . and little or no representation from Chancellor Budig."
Ungerman said the chancellor should use his office as an ex-officio member of Endowment Association to call for and mediate discussions between opponents and proponents of divestment.
Four students from Hashinger said many students in their hall had no opinion or didn't care about divestment.
Craig Sanda/KANSAN
A
Cartoonist describes Mad work
By Peggy Kramer Staff writer
Staff writer
For over a quarter of a century, a Lawrence native has put his pencil to paper to humor a national audience.
Paul Coker Jr., 2120 Terrace Road,
has entertained readers of Mad, Esquire and Playboy magazines with his cartoons.
Paul Coker Jr., 2120 Terrace Rd., watches as about 25 people look at his sketches from "The Mad Pet Book." Coker, a cartoonist and illustrator for Mad, Esquire, and Playboy magazines, discussed his work yesterday at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Coker shared his experiences as a cartoonist and illustrator with about 25 people yesterday at the Spencer Museum of Art. He was the guest speaker for the Brown Bag Talk, a series of monthly presentations sponsored by The Friends of the Art Museum.
Sally Hoffman, public service coordinator at the museum, said the Brown Bag Talks were informal and usually were held every second Thursday.
"I liked controlling the project from start to finish." Coker said. "I
Coker displayed about 50 sketches from his book, "The Mad Pet Book," and explained the stages a sketch traveled through before it was considered finished.
"The Mad Pet Book" was copyrighted in 1983. It features 192 pages of some of Coker's favorite Mad cartoons. Everything from choosing a pet to housing it and determining its diet is illustrated in the book.
The book was dedicated to Coker's Dalmatian dog, Pup, which died in 1980. A lot of the ideas for the pet sketches in the book originated from Pun. Coker said.
laid out the pages, wrote the script and illustrated the pictures."
Coker worked for publications in New York for 12 years before he moved back to Lawrence 13 years ago.
He began sketching in junior high school and was encouraged to continue.
Coker is a graduate of Lawrence High School. He graduated from the University of Kansas in 1951 with a bachelor of arts degree in art and design.
"I majored in drawing and painting, but when I got a job as a cartoonist everything fell into place from there," he said. "Drawing and painting provided an excellent background and discipline for what I'm doing now."
"Animals have some of the same expressions as humans, and it is interesting to portray those similarities." he said.
Some people associate Mad magazine with Alfred E. Neuman, the little Mad character with the oversized head. But Coker said that Alfred E. Neuman was not a product of his work with Mad and that no one really knew where the character originated.
Writers make part of Coker's work easier. The writers submit the cartoon script, on which he bases his ideas and drawings.
In addition to being a cartoonist for Mad magazine, Coker also has illustrated greeting cards for
Hallmark Cards for almost 30 years. He said he still free-lanced for Hallmark.
The Lawrence High School Chesty Lion mascot is an example of Coker's early work. The lion began as a promotional decal and was introduced to the Lawrence community in 1946. Coker said he didn't take credit for the idea, just the drawing.
Coker said he considered two highlights of his career to be "The Mad Pet Book" and the annual trips Mad magazine sponsors for its regular contributors.
Cold spell ails work in Fraser
By Monique O'Donnell
Staff writer
Faculty, staff and students in Fraser Hall are shuddering by the sudden chill that has crept up on them without warning.
Joane Nagel, associate professor of anthropology, said yesterday that she was unable to work in her office because it was too cold.
"It's always a mystery to facility operations when you complain to them about how cold it is in here," Nagel said.
Sharon Cox, administrative assistant for the department of sociology, said the staff had been informed by facility operations before semester break that a contracting agency was updating the heating and air conditioning system to make it more energy efficient.
Cox, who was wearing a wool hat,
several sweaters and a shawl, said
the heaters were shut off at intervals
in the last two weeks. The problem,
she said, was that no one was ever
given an advanced warning.
"I don't understand why they can't tell us ahead of time when they'll shut the heaters off," Cox said. "All they ever tell us is that the contractors will be finished in March."
Cox said she had complained to facilities operations. The main issue, she said, is that the work is scheduled on weekdays when it's cold out instead of on warmer days or on weekends when it wouldn't bother anybody.
Joseph Waters, assistant director of facilities planning, said he was not aware of any complaints. The contracting agency should be completed within a week, he said.
Waters said all departments in Fraser where notified about the scheduled work dates when the contracting agency received the commission.
Joni Randel, secretary for the anthropology department, said her office had been cold all week.
"We knew they were installing a new system, but we didn't know they would turn off the heat," Randel said. "Nobody ever seems to know what's going on."
Raises help revitalize police
Mark Griffin, Kansas City, Mo., senior, said that students might not be subjected to the chill as long as office workers and faculty but that they have resorted to wearing their coats in classes.
Cox said she was sure students were freezing in their classrooms too. But she said she thought it was worse for people who had to sit in their offices all day.
Staff writer
By Brian Whepley
Morale and the quality of service have improved at the KU police department with the reclassification of officers and the consolidation of the department into one building, the director said yesterday.
Before February 1984, KU police officers were classified under the civil service system at the same level as security guards or state hospital orderlies, James Denney, director of the police department, said. Reclassification increased the officers' pay about 50 percent and practically eliminated turnover.
In 1883, the department lost 13 officers out of a force of about 30 because of low pay, Denney said. The department has lost only two officers in the last two years.
The department served as a training ground for other police departments for too long, he said. Now, the pay is good enough that officers want to stay.
At one time officers were paid so poorly that some had to resort to food stamps to feed their families.
"We couldn't hire anyone for the dollars we were paying," Denney said.
Morale has further improved since the consolidation of the department on the third-floor north of Carruth'O'Leary Hall in July, Denney said. When the department occupied four different locations on campus, communication suffered and factions of "us and them" existed, he said.
"I hadn't seen certain patrolmen for a month," he said. "Now some of them even recognize me."
The move and reclassification completed the transformation of a department that students and faculty
A $58,000 renovation is underway at the offices. A lobby is being created, and the center of the north wing is being isolated as a security area, said Srt. John Brothers.
Renovations had not yet been completed when the department moved into Carruth-O'Leary, Denney said.
"It was so important to get everyone together that we decided to move."
once looked down upon, Denney said. A bad image problem existed because many people did not consider the department a full-fledged police department — and often times it wasn't. Denney said.
The high turnover rate resulted in many inexperienced officers who often made mistakes, he said. Too much time was spent correcting mistakes.
Because of the changes, officers are now willing to think of the department as a career. Denney said.
For example, the renovation has not cost taxpayers any additional money because the department cut its existing budget in other areas.
In 1983, the most experienced patrol officers had been on the street for $2 \frac{1}{2}$ years, Denney said. Now the highest level of experience is six years.
"It's no longer a part-time or retired persons' job," he said.
The KU administration supported the department's transition, Denney said. Many of the changes have been paid from the existing budget.
Morning blaze leaves family without home
Staff writer
Alan and Rosemary Beers and their children, Chad and Kevin, weren't home when the fire broke out shortly before 9 a.m. at the house, which is owned by Raymond and Betty Baumgart of Osakalao.
A fire destroyed a two-story wooden house at 1217 Kentucky St. yesterday morning, leaving the tenants of a first-floor apartment homeless.
By Brian Whepley
Maj. Paul Findley of the Lawrence Fire Department said the damage was estimated at $50,000. The cause of the fire was thought to be an improperly installed ventilation pipe for a gas heater.
Firefighters arrived on the scene shortly after 9 a.m. and found the first floor in flames. Firefighters stayed on the scene for three hours as the flames continued to work their way into the walls and attic of the house.
Steve Tomac, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore and resident of a neighboring house, said he smelled smoke and called the fire department.
By the time firefighters appeared, Tomac said, the flames on the first floor were intense. Tomac said he was worried the flames might spread to his house, which is about 15 feet away.
The Beers usually leave their house before 8 a.m., Tomac said.
Police blocked off the street and redirected traffic east and west on 12th Street. As students walked between classes at St. John's School, they watched the firefighters battle the blaze across the street.
Firefighters used axes to chop at the house's eaves, roof and interior and exterior walls so that water could be sprayed on the flames.
Romance on the Hill Feb 14
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4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The problems with parking in the Daisy Field area need to be brought to light.
Parking in the dark
Since Jan. 1, there have been at least 15 burglaries in the Daisy Field parking lots, which cover McCollum, Ellsworth, Hashinger, Lewis and Templin halls. Eleven of these happened in one night, Jan. 30.
To reduce burglaries and vandalism, Sgt. John Brothers of KU police has said students should park in well-lit areas, keep their automobiles locked and lock valuables either in the trunk or not in the car at all.
Four students have organized a petition requesting improved security and lighting to help in reducing vandalism in the parking lots.
For years, parking has been at a premium in the Daisy Field area. There are not enough spaces adjacent to the halls to accommodate the demand. The Daisy Field extension lot across Iowa Street opposite Hashinger, also known as "East Topeka," handles the overflow.
The only suggestion of any worth is the last one. Locked doors usually don't stop someone who wants into a car. Ask any student with a
smashed-in car window.
But more important, it is often impossible for a student to park in a well-lit area. Although the extension lot does provide the necessary spaces, it is not well-lit, and it involves a long, dark walk back to the halls. Many of the spaces in the lots near the halls are not well-lit either.
Brothers said KU police "don't have the money or the people to put an officer there full-time." But when incidents of vandalism start hitting the level they did in January, it's time to take serious action.
Even the most conscientious student often has only one choice: to park in a poorly-lit area.
Brothers also said the residence halls and Jayhawker Towers had the largest concentration of parked vehicles and there was crime potential wherever the population is concentrated. Isn't this the logical place to concentrate security, and to beef it up if it's inadequate?
But that much money, which would have enabled the Lawrence Bus Co. to purchase four new buses, came with some unacceptable strings attached.
Inadequate it is. KU police may not have the money to put an officer there full-time. But students don't have the money to keep replacing broken windows and stolen belongings.
Normally, sound business decisions don't involve turning down half a million dollars in federal funds.
Good business
The funds would have come from the federal Urban Mass Transportation Act. The act requires that the money go to the city of Lawrence instead of the bus company or KU on Wheels, which pays the bus company to carry students from their residences to the campus.
Fine, said KU on Wheels. But the Student Senate Transportation Board would
But the city would not be just a conduit for the money. The grant also would have required the city to have control of the buses and their routes.
not, and could not because of state laws, pay for routes that did not serve students.
So the bus company turned its back on the deal. It feared the city could order it to run bus service to parts of the city the transportation board would not pay for.
Although the city assured all the parties that it had no intention to change any routes, the bus company remained wisely skeptical. City commissions, and its policies, can change with every election.
KU on Wheels could have used efficient and less-polluting buses to replace the vintage ones that now choke the campus. And the transportation board and the city ought to have been able to work out a deal to serve students and the community as a whole.
But given the legal rigidity it faced, the bus company made a prudent business decision.
Why bother?
A little preposterous.
Imagine the scene at a rock concert: People are passing around marijuana. "Are you over 18? Can I see some I.D.?" little preposterous
Or how about this one: A shady character lurks near the chain-link fence surrounding an elementary school. "Come here, little boy. Try this. It'll make you feel good. Now tomorrow, give me all your milk money and you can have some more."
This may be fodder for many imaginations, but it just doesn't work that way.
Drugs are expensive and not given away regularly. However, that is precisely the action the Kansas Legislature is trying to crack down on. A bill waiting to be approved by the Senate would make giving drugs to minors a felony instead of a misdemeanor.
Right now, the exchange of money must be proven before the first offense is a felony.
It's good to know the Legislature is trying to combat drug distribution, but this bill is a waste of its time.
Police admit that the number of drug-related arrests probably wouldn't increase under the new legislation.
At concerts — almost the only place drug freebies are found — police try to stop drugs at the door. But they simply don't have the manpower to keep watch over everyone inside.
Kansas legislators should not waste their time drafting, hearing and voting on bills that are useless on the books.
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Lauretta McMillen ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry ... Campus editor
David Giles ... Sports editor
Brie Waddell ... Photo editor
annie Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nixon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Lori Eckart ... Chessfield
Cortina Innes ... Production manager
Pallen Lee ... National manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
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writer. Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-First Floor, Hawley, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and on Wednesday, Monday, Thursday and Friday from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., except for Kansas State University Kansan 66044. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
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Strauder-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Reagan objects to 22nd Amendment
President Reagan has complained on several occasions since he was reelected that he thinks the 22nd Amendment limiting presidents to two terms is unfair.
He hastens on those occasions to say that he is not thinking of his own waning presidency with three more years to go, but believes the constitutional bar interferes with the democratic right of, the people to choose their own leaders.
Clearly, to Reagan the presidency is not the "splendid misery" that Thomas Jefferson bemoaned or the "loneliest job in the world" as described by many of Reagan's predecessors.
Nancy Reagan agrees with her husband that the amendment restricting a president to two terms is wrong.
One wonders whether the president is chafing at having to leave the White House that he obviously enjoys. His popularity is phenomenally high for a second-term lame duck president. He has a set agenda for the future and he told a gathering of high school students last week while celebrating his 75th birthday that he is so optimistic about the future that
Helen Thomas United Press International White House correspondent
"I'm going to stick around for a good part of" the 21st century.
Reagan also is miffed, to say the least, that the U.S. public is already in a guessing game and speculating on who will win the next presidential election.
He does not think of himself as a lame duck and is keeping a high profile to defy that label. He feels he has miles to go before he sleeps.
His latest comments on the subject were made in an interview with the Washington Post, specifically when he was asked about Vice President George Bush and Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., already going to it "hammer and tong" for the Republican presidential nomination in 1988.
"See," he replied, "that's what's wrong with having a 22nd amendment. Everybody automatically, the minute the '84 election is over, everybody starts saying, What are we going to do in '88?" And focusing
the spotlight on it. I think that it's almost forced on anyone if they are interested in that direction. But I don't know what we can do to change it."
At the same time, Reagan told the interviews that "no president can
'But I do think this that we ought to take a serious look and see if we haven't interfered with the democratic rights of the people.'
President Reagan
ever come out for it with himself in mind. I think it's got to be held for whoever's going to be the next president. But I do this think, that we ought to take a serious look and see if we haven't interfered with the democratic rights of the people."
Part of the reason that the Constitution was amended was the feel
ing that Reagan's hero, Franklin D. Roosevelt, had amassed too much power in serving four terms. Republicans of the era were very much in favor of the limitation at the time.
If anything, there is a lot of political philosophizing in terms of more limitation rather than less since the subject of limiting a president to one six-year term is often debated.
Eighteen states limit the terms of their governors, but not among them California, where Reagan served two terms.
Roosevelt was the exception, and he did not want to turn over the reigns of government during World War II even though he was a sick man. And it appeared that members of his family and some administration officials wondered whether he would live through his fourth term. He lasted only a little over a month after his last inauguration.
George Washington said two terms was enough, and his successors agreed, and were only too happy to become private citizens again.
NOW THAT HAITI BELONGS TO THE PEOPLE,
WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO WITH IT?
Speech offers hope for welfare class
Bipartisan battles neglect key point
One of the great problems in our way of governance is that big debates tend to obscure other important issues the way big trees block the sunlight.
A case in point is the familiar pattern that followed President Reagan's State of the Union address. The speech and the subsequent release of the administration's budget proposals for 1987 fired up the well-rehearsed debate: guns vs. butter.
That this administration wants to increase military spending, cut social programs and avoid raising taxes should come as a surprise to no one. Ronald Reagan would not be Ronald Reagan if the budget had said much else.
Sadly, little of the debate so far has explored a short passage in the president's speech. It concerned welfare and the passage presents a potentially enormous opportunity for this nation. The possibility is that the issue of welfare and poverty might be substantially depoliticized.
Nor could anyone claim surprise when some Democrats declared the president's budget "dead before arrival" on Capitol Hill. All are standard set pieces in the bipartisan booie.
After repeating his well-known frustration over the billions wasted
Robert C.
Maynard
Oakland Tribune
A
so far on welfare, the president said,
"We can ignore this terrible truth no longer.
As Franklin Roosevelt warned 51 years ago. . . Welfare is 'a narcotic, a subtle destroyer of the human spirit.' And we must now escape the spider's web of dependency."
The president then announced he was charging his domestic council to present a strategy for a new approach by Dec. 1 of this year.
Reagan said, "I am talking about real and lasting emancipation, because the success of welfare should be judged by how many of its recipients become independent of welfare."
He asked for a strategy for immediate action to meet the financial, educational, social and safety concerns of poor families.
Unfortunately, as the president and the nation know, welfare recipients are becoming anything but independent. The permanent underclass, which Reagan called "the welfare culture," is growing.
This underclass is a silent virus lodged in the spine of our nation. It has devastating, crippling potential.
It is too bad the rush to another round of debate about the cost of Star Wars obscured any substantive discussion of what the president meant by real and lasting emancipation.
'Unfortunately, as the president and the nation know, welfare recipients are becoming anything but independent. The permanent underclass, which Reagan called "'the welfare culture," is growing.'
If the White House is prepared to conduct a full study and present policy options, this might be a good time to stop the bipartisan wrangling and work toward national objectives.
Stopping the growth of the
underclass should be a non-partisan goal. It is a subject to which both parties should bring their best ideas.
As matters now stand, the Democrats have claimed an obligation to our society's unfortunate. Yet it must be clear that the party of Roosevelt has no program to speak of that addresses the spreading underclass.
The Republicans have no program either, except to blame the Democrats for the waste of welfare dollars which change nothing.
Because neither party has a plan and because the president is sending his staff back to the drawing board, perhaps now is the time for both parties to act as if they belonged to the same republic.
Fundamental changes in our approach must be made. The cycle of dependency can be broken only by a coordinated approach with a clearly established strategic plan.
Whether the White House staff fulfills the wishes of the president only time will tell. But it would be a breakthrough if both parties demonstrated a genuine commitment to the president's goal of real and lasting emancipation for the nation's poor.
Mailbox
Lack of dedication
I am very disappointed in the actions of those "fighting" for the divestment of Kansas University Endowment Association funds from companies doing business in South Africa (Kansan, Feb. 7).
So they believe apartheid is wrong and the KUEA should stop condoning discrimination through its investments? Great!
So they think students should speak out about this injustice unceasingly until KUEA funds are divested? Great!
So they think one way to achieve their goal is through protest rallies staged at Youngberg and Strong
halls, which resulted in several arrests for trespassing? Great!
I also believe apartheid is wrong, and I also believe in civil disobedience. However, the actions of these "protesters" subsequent to the rallies prove them to be nothing more than immature, irresponsible children unwilling to face the consequences of their actions.
By continuing to appeal court decisions until their convictions on charges of criminal trespassing were overturned, the "protesters" have violated one of the most important aspects of civil disobedience — that the civil disobedient breaks the law with complete knowledge of the punishment he faces, and in so breaking the law, shows that his commitment to his cause is so deep that he will knowingly and willingly accept the punishment.
I have much more respect for blacks and whites protest apartheid in South Africa, where the punishment for such protest is often imprisonment, torture, or death, than I do for KU students who yell a little, stand around a lot, and then whine when they must do 10 hours of community service and pay court costs.
Chris Shannon
I wonder how many of these students would be willing to go to South Africa to protest apartheid?
Golden, Colo., sophomore
Correction
Because of an editor's error, two paragraphs in a letter to the editor from Ray Velasquez, 1983 journalism graduate, were inaccurate (Kansan, Feb. 11). One paragraph should have read, "So who can blame KLZR, ZZ9, Q104 and all the other contemporary hit radio stations for providing the kind of radio entertainment the general public is able to enjoy?"
The other should have read,
"Those individuals who are interested in music will just have to stay close to their turntables until the mediocrity and impotence of pop music radio is removed."
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Research
Continued from p. 1
"The new policy is unenforcable," he said. "It contains too many words."
David Downing, professor of aerospace engineering, agreed with Roskam that the proposal was cumbersome, but said he voted for the extension because it was better
the extension because it was better than nothing.
tran holing.
"The new rule is less restrictive"
than the present rule, which is very clear, but very restrictive," he said.
Earl Huyser, professor of chemistry, said he had difficulty understanding the document in the time he had to study it.
Huyser, who doesn't support the extension, said he questioned whether many faculty members were truly interested in it.
On the Record
Professors, he said, who had papers to grade and classes to teach didn't have extra time to read the document, regardless of its importance.
He said the issue probably had not been resolved.
Sidney Shapiro, chairman of SenEx, announced the results of the faculty vote at the meeting.
he also enjoyed the speech.
bedroom window.
Three pairs of earrings, a wedding ring, stereo equipment, camera, chainsaw, necklace and gloves, valued together at $3,565, were stolen from a home in rural Lawrence between 11:30 a.m. and 8 p.m.
Playboy
A television, amplifier, cassette deck and speakers of undetermined value were stolen from a KU student's apartment in the 1000 block of Emery Road between 4 p.m. Tuesday and 1:50 p.m. Wednesday, police said. Thieves entered by breaking a
"He was a good speaker," he said. "I thought it was interesting and fun to listen to. He made some good points."
Continued from p.1
particularly Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
Peterson spent the first half of his speech talking about sex, some of the stereotypes and some of the changes our society has experienced since he began writing for Playboy about 13 years ago.
"We are a more conservative society now than in the late '70s," he said. "There is still the passion, but it is going on in private as opposed to the '70s when we were a very promiscuous society."
'Sex should be like ethnic food — enjoy the flavor, don't ask what went into it.'
He also discussed several of the letters and discussed he had dealt with in his column. One of the most common concerns he has dealt with in his column recently was social diseases,
Two speakers and a mixing board, valued together at $2,000, were stolen from a music shop in the 900 block of Massachusetts street.
Lawrence police said. The equipment was rented in July and never returned.
James Peterson
Playboy magazine writer
"It is not one of those diseases like-ly to affect you," he said. "AIDS is probably the hardest disease to catch in recent history."
One listener asked why there were so few black women as centerfolds. He answered that Hugh Hefner chose the centerfoldes, and Hefner's taste was deciding the tastes of six million men.
In the second part of the speech, he answered written questions. Most of the questions concerned relationships, sex, and the magazine.
Responding to a question about dealing with broken relationships, he suggested that people who want to meet partners shouldn't look for them in bars.
"Do something that you're interested in," he said. "If you like music, go to a music store or concert. Start a conversation with someone you are interested in."
Peterson previously worked for Psychology Today magazine. He said he thought that was part of the reason he got the job at Playboy.
"They probably thought I knew something about behavioral sciences," he said.
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6
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
Former KU gymnast active, spontaneous
By a Kansan reporter
Ron Dahl was an active and spontaneous man, one of his friends said yesterday.
Mr. Dahl, a member of the KU gymnastics team in the early 1960s, died Tuesday in a fire at his home near Topeka. He was 46.
"To me it's the loss of a great friend," Bob Lockwood, instructor of health and physical education, said yesterday.
Lockwood said Mr. Dahl was a walk-on with the KU track team before he discovered gymnastics. The trampoline performance was his specialty.
After graduating from the University of Kansas in 1984, Mr. Dahl
taught physical education in Linwood and Atchison and at Highland Park High School in Topeka, Lockwood said. Mr. Dahl coached an Atchison High School student who later went on to win the Big Eight championship on the rings.
Mr. Dahl was born in Great Bend He grew up in the Kansas City, Mo area. He graduated from Central High School in Kansas City, Mo. in 1958. He had lived in rural Tecumseh.
In the late 1960s, Mr. Dahl left teaching and began a very successful tree service firm. Lockwood said.
He is survived by his son, Russell, in Shawnee; daughter, Kimberly, in Brandonton, Fla.; and his parents, Raymond and Helen Dahl, in Independence, Mo.
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PAGE 10
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Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
7
Editor says advances for blacks will come
By Grant W. Butler
Staff writer
A war is fought against black America, Susan Taylor, editor-in-chief of Essence magazine, said last night.
Blacks will win if they get a firm grasp of economic matters and stress loving relationships, she said.
Taylor spoke to about 90 people in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
The use of communication skills and knowledge of information separate people economically, she said.
"Before you begin to chart your professional course you have to know how the economy is going to affect your business," she said.
'It's hard to be loving when you
don't have any money. it's hard to be sweet and caring when you don't have any food on the table."
Without money, blacks are left without choices of where and how they will live, Taylor said.
But to succeed, individuals need to search themselves for ideas and opportunities and ask themselves questions about where their lives are going, she said.
"If you don't ask yourse these questions, before you know it you'll be in some career and you won't know what's happened to the last 10 to 15 years of your life," Taylor said.
Relationships based on love rather than unrealistic expectations also will strengthen the power of the black community, she said.
TOPEKA — The Kansas Supreme Court announced yesterday that it was continuing its experiment to allow television and still cameras in state courtrooms. It also will be expanding it to all 31 judicial districts of the state effective March 1.
Court gives cameras another OK in trials
The Associated Press
The announcement by Chief Justice Alfred G. Schroeder at a news conference in the Kansas Judicial Center was a step forward for the news media in their long effort to win pictorial access to Kansas courts.
The Kansas Bar Association has urged the court to make the experiment more restrictive, particularly asking that any party to a court proceeding be given veto power over whether cameras would be allowed
Schroeder said the court wanted to
study the expansion of cameras into all Kansas trial courts for two more years, to see whether any problems arose in the smaller judicial districts, before making a permanent decision.
The court made only two changes in its rules governing cameras in the courtroom. Those changes forbade tape recording the private conversations of attorneys and their clients in the courtroom, and prohibited the focusing of television cameras or photographing any materials on attorneys' tables.
Schroeder said the biggest complaint from attorneys during the past year's experiment concerned incidences of television cameras focusing on counsel tables. The court said the prohibition was designed to safeguard attorneys' confidential work.
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Romance on the Hill Feb 14
Feb 14
February 10-14
Thursday,
February 13
- Tickets for Friday's Carriage Rides on Campus on sale at the SUA Box Office in the Kansas Union.
- Register for Maupintour's Weekend-for-Two Giveaway in the Kansas Union lobby.
- Playboy Magazine's Playboy Advisor will speak on love and sex at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Friday, February 14 DAY
- Romance Novels on sale in the Oread book Shop in the Kansas Union.
- Two-for-One Sale on selected items and discounts on red merchandise in the KU Bookstores.
- Two-for-One Bowling in the Kansas Union Jaybowl.
- Candy Kiss Giveaway at all Union banking windows.
- Fresh Flower Sale in the lobbies of both Unions.
- "Create Your Own Candy Valentine" at the Information Counters of both Unions.
- 15g Sweetheart Cookies in Food Service areas of both Unions.
Friday, February 14 EVENING
- SUA Movie, "Choose Me" at 3:30, 7, and 9:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
- Two-for-One Bowling in the Kansas Union Jaybowl continues until 11 p.m.
- "For the Love of Hitchcock," four classic movies beginning at 6 p.m. in the Tradition's Room of the Kansas Union.
- Carriage rides on Campus 6-9 p.m. (Advance tickets should be purchased at the SUA Box Office.)
- SUA Movie, "Choose Me" at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
- Free Valentine's Day Dance/Concert at 9 p.m. in the Burge Union.
- Drawing for Maupintour's Weekend-for-Two Giveaway at the Dance in the Burge Union. (Not necessary to be present to win.)
- Midnight Movie, "The Man Who Fell to Earth," in the Kansas Union.
The Kansas and Burge Unions Valentine's Day Celebration
8
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
Civil rights speaker to talk
By Brian Kaberline Staff writer
A day of activities on campus marking Minority In Law Day will be capped off tomorrow with a speech by political and civil rights leader Julian Bond.
Bond, a state senator from Georgia and a nationally syndicated columnist, will speak in Hoch Auditorium at 7 p.m.
The speech, co-sponsored by the Student Senate and the University Lectures Series, was organized by the Black American Law Student Association.
Martin Spencer, BALSA president,
said yesterday that the speech topic
would tie in with the day's theme.
"Minorities In Law: A Bridge Between Community and Chaos."
"'I feel that he can articulate the issues in society facing minorities today,'" he said.
Spencer said he also thought it would be good to see someone who wasn't afraid to take a stand for what he thought was right.
Spencer said there also would be three workshops for the day. The workshops will run consecutively at 3 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. They will cover different topics in law.
A session on bankruptcy will be led by Benjamin E. Franklin, chief judge of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Kansas, James Tippin, a
Kansas City, Mo., tax attorney, will lead a workshop on tax law. A session on non-traditional careers in law will be conducted by J. Oliver Lee Jr., a Wichita attorney, Spencer said.
Bond was elected to the Georgia State Legislature, only to find his seat denied because of his position against the Vietnam War. In 1966, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Georgia had violated Bond's freedom of speech and the legislature must seat him.
In 1968, Bond was nominated for vice president at the Democratic National Convention, the first black to be nominated. He was forced to withdraw because, at the age of 28, he was too young to qualify.
Seat-belt requirement attacked
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Requiring the use of seat belts in Kansas would be an unnecessary infringement on people's rights and could be a death sentence for an unlucky few, the State Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee was told today.
"This isn't Russia. This isn't China. This isn't Cuba, and I think we should refrain from dictating to people." Rep. Jeff Freeman, R-
Burlington, told the panel.
Freeman and eight others testify against a bill that would require the use of seat belts in Kansas said they thought seat belt use should be an individual choice.
the vehicle where he had been riding was crushed by the impact.
Ronald Ford, a Manhattan resident, said he was alive only because he wasn't wearing a seat belt when he was in a one-car accident in December 1984. He said he was thrown from the car. The section of
"I don't think this committee has the right to play God with people's lives," Ford said. "If this bill does become law, it would be like passing a death sentence for many people."
'White Train makes U-turn in Kansas city
Instead of forcing people to use seat belts, Freeman said, the state should require insurance companies to provide lower premiums for drivers who use seat belts.
United Press International
AMARILLO, Texas — A "White Train" thought to be carrying nuclear warheads to a South Carolina submarine base was routed back to the Pantex bomb assembly plant Wednesday. The train apparently turned around in the southeast Kansas town of Fredonia.
The Department of Energy had the train turn back because rain along its planned route in Georgia made railroad tracks there unsafe.
The train also missed a possible confrontation with a small earthquake that rocked the area along the Georgia-South Carolina border yesterday morning.
There was no accident or danger to the public, said James Bickel, director of the DOE's Transportation Safeguards Division in Albuquerque, N.M.
Bicket said the decision to bring the train back to Pantex was prompted by trouble with tracks in Georgia.
"We had questions as to the condition of the track further down the way in Georgia, where there was a bad storm, and the decision was made to turn back," Bickel said.
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SATURDAY FEB. 22ND
8 pm - 2 am
ELK'S CLUB - 3705 W. 23rd
(CLINTON PARKWAY)
$3.50 IN ADVANCE
$4.00 AT THE DOOR
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT:
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11 a.m.-3 a.m.
$1 cover
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the Sanctuary
Fri. & Sat. ONLY 10 p.m.-3 a.m. 2 16" One Topping Pizza & a six pack of pop
the 7th & Michigan
7th & Michigan received with over 275 clips ... 843-0540
ONLY $12.00 (tax incl.) no coupon necessary
CHECKERS
2214 Yale 841-8010
CHECKERS SATURDAY KU BASKETBALL
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16" Pizza w/2 toppings
16" Pizza w/2 toppings $5.99 & $1.50 Pitchers 11 a.m.- midnight dine-in only no coupon necessary
2214 Yale 841-8010
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BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
HOG HEAVEN RIB SPECIAL
FULL SLAB HALF SLAB HALF SLAB
$7.95 Small End Big End
$5.50 $3.50
Served with tater curl fries, fritter, bread,
pickles and choice of small side dish
THE TASTE THAT WON THE WEST
719 MASSACHUSETTS
OFFER GOOD TIME, FEB. 28
Formerly Old Carpenter Hall Smokebase — same nice people — same management
MEXICO
SUNDAY SPECIAL
BORDER BANDIDO
1 TEXAS BURRITO ONLY $1.79
1528 W. 23rd 842-8861 Across from Post Office.
hafler
hafler SPECIAL PURCHASE
UNIVERSITY AUDIO has made a special factory purchase of equipment from David Hafler. We're passing on these special prices to you for three days only—Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, so don't delay!
---
cost $225.00. The David Haffer company has a tradition of maintaining a very high level of quality while achieving substantial cost reductions in its products. In the DH-100 which is most versatile in performance in a handheld unit which is very modest in cost.
THE HAFLER 100
PREAMLIFIER
NOW
$16995
List: 8440.100. This preamplifier has earned worldwids recognition for pace setting audio performance. It operates all discrete devices in the signal path. All capacitors are internally grounded. Unused inputs are internally grounded for lower crosetts.
VOLTA
THE HAFLER 110
PREAMPLIFIER
NOW
$34995
List: $735.00. We believe that if you will take the opportunity to Hair the 180 In your own music system, you will find that it can do more to make your music REAL, and with less effort, than you imagined.
THE HALER 160
GRAPHIC
EQUALIZER
NOW
$26995
THAT'S RIGHT! STATE-OF-THE-ART HAFLER AT BARGAIN PRICES—BUT FOR THREE DAILY ONLY!
CHECK THE SPECS, LISTEN, AND COMPARE!
STUDIO REPRESENTATIVES
- HDMI Inputs
- SD Card Inputs
- USB Inputs
- AUX Inputs
- Analog Inputs
- Digital Inputs
- Audio Inputs
- Power Inputs
- Ethernet Port
- Serial Port
- SD Card Slot
- USB Port
- AUX Input
- Analog Input
- Digital Input
- Audio Input
- Power Input
- Ethernet Port
- Serial Port
Later, $460.00 The long awaited Hafler FM Tuner 1 is fitting complement to the Haffler amplifiers, and their reputation for value. Matching the DHS-115 preamplifier, the new user provides easy, exert station capability, and the audio sensitivity and the audio experience to extract the sonic potential of every
GROUNDLE
Lt. $200.00 - "Ether-laner" caffer that the amplifier's circuit design容 relatively resistant; clip-capping clipping power receives a lower amount of heat than other operating components because the boltout amount are true. One thing is certain, the DH-120 can play both of any 60 watt amplifier we have heard!" IJuice Hancock, Hunter
NOW
$22995
THE HAFLER 330
TUNER
IBM ThinkPad
Last $2,500.00. The DH-2250 offers a unique circuit configuration using all diac透射传感器, operating at very low output voltage of Class I DC transistors and allowing the maximum output power of Class A output devices are obtained—such as high speed most creative microcomputers. This device is used to detect disadvantages of high case, high heat, low efficiency and thermal degradation
HE NAFLER 120
AMPLIFIER
NOW
$22995
THE HAFLER 220
AMPLIFIER
NOW
$36995
List. $600.00 This power amplifier is conveniently rated at 250 watts per chemical at least than the amplifier. It applies diverse power requirements. You can use it as a power amplifier for extremely powerful power requirements, this amplifier can be brought to music. flow you would have in excess of 180 watts of power per chemical.
THE NAFLER 500
AMPLIFIER
NOW
$59995
University
Audio
University Audio/video
2319 Louisiana Lawrence
841-3775
MasterCard
1
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
9
Part of AIDS trigger is found by scientists
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Scientists discovered an important part of the mechanism that triggers the AIDS virus to multiply in the body after lying dormant, a British magazine reported this week.
The finding could open research on new drugs to fight the disease, said William Hasitelie, co-author of the report.
Researchers at Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston and the National Cancer Institute said in the British journal Nature that they discovered a mechanism that makes the virus' genes produce a protein that causes the virus to multiply rapidly.
The mechanism can tell the viral genes to make as many as 1,000
copies of the protein at a time. These bits of viral protein are the basis for new viruses that then spread throughout the body.
The Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome virus usually remains dormant for years after invading the body. Researchers said they didn't know what started the viral genes but thought the trigger might be an unrelated illness.
The gene responsible for turning the virus on is called TAT, which stands for transactivation and transcription activation. The Dana Farber-NCI team discovered that gene last year.
Haseltine, an AIDS researcher at Dana Farber, said the discovery gave scientists some helpful direction for the development of new anti-AIDS drugs.
Student dies of influenza; doctors say death unusual
United Press International
May was admitted to the Tech infirmary Feb. 7 with flu symptoms and was transferred to Montgomery County Hospital. He was moved to Roanoke Memorial Hospital on Sunday.
BLACKSBURG, Va. — The death of a Virginia Tech freshman from influenza complications is unusual. However, it shows how the everyday affliction can weaken the body's defense systems, doctors said yesterday.
The flu weakened May's resistance to staphylococcus, a bacteria that causes toxic shock, said C.W. Schifert, Tech's student health services director.
David May, 18, a general engineering major from Caldwell, N.J., died Tuesday in Roanoke Memorial Hospital, Tech officials said.
The type of toxic shock May developed was a rarity.
"It doesn't occur often, thank goodness," said Schiffert.
Doctors said University records showed that May did not have a history of serious illness before the episode.
Many more older people die from flu-related illnesses than people May's age, said Bullock.
"This just doesn't happen very often," said Richard Bullock, a staff physician at Tech. "Apparently he developed a staphylococcia infection that was secondary to the influenza virus that he had."
Lawrence High School Bands Present An Evening With Maynard Ferguson LIMITED SEATING
COUNTRY
COUNTRY inn
- CHICKEN * STEAKS
* RIBS * SHRIMP
BUY ONE DINNER GET ONE 1/2 PRICE
- PRIME RIB
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(Good Thurs,Fri,Sat,Sun) 1350 N. 3rd
(Not good w/any other coupon) Expires:2/28/86 843-1431
good w/coupon
UNIVERSITY
PHOTOGRAPHY
Tuesday, February 18th 7:30 p.m.
Lawrence High School Auditorium
KU
All Tickets $7.50 For Reservations Call 842-6222 (ext. 208)
1626 W. 23rd - 1101 W. 6th
1006 Mass.
$5 OFF
reg. $17.95 now. $12.95
A POSTER PRINT
(16''x24'')
of your favorite
University Photography Party Pic
expires 05-3-86 2340 Iowa 843-5279
2 for 99¢ offer good thru Feb.28th at all three locations!
AN EVENING WITH MAYNARD FERGUSON
TACO JOHN'S February Taco Sale!
2
99c
It's Tacouriffic!
TREO JOHN'S
G
SPECTRUM OPTICAL'S
REMODELING SPECIAL
REMODELING SPECIAL
Single Vision Lenses
— clear glass or plastic —
for only $15
with any frame purchase*
One day service. HURRY, this
special will end February 28th.
A Full spectrum of optical services
Mon.-Fri. 10-6
Sat. 10-2
SPECTRUM
D
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
*Special not good in construction whether discounts.
4 E.7th Downtown
THE GUM STREET
BAR-B-Q
3 Things To Make Any Valentine Crazy About You
1) Bring your valentine to BUM STEER Blue Ribbon Barbecue.
2) Tantalize her tastebuds with award winning hickory smoked meats
3) Gaze lovingly into her eyes and smell her complimentary rose after dinner.
BUM STEER
2554 Iowa
841-SMOKE
"Trying to spice up your life"
good 5-9 p.m. Feb. 14, 1986. First 50 couples, not good with $1 Sandwiches or Deliver
VERY & DRIVE-THRU OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT.
WEEKEND SPECIAL
$10 SLABS FOR TWO ALL WEEKEND
(not good on delivery or with any other offer.)
❤️ ❤️
NOW-WE'LL PAY YOU TO ATTEND MEDICAL SCHOOL
it's all part of the Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program. And here is how it works!
In fact, well even pay you more than $600 a month while you attend. That's in addition to paying for your tuition, required books and fees. See the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs Program.
If you're selected for a Physician's Scholarship—from the Army, Navy, or Air Force—you're commissioned as an officer in the Reserves.
While you're in school, you'll serve 45 days a year on active duty, gaining valuable medical experience. After graduation, you will serve three or more years, the length depending on the requirements of the Service selected and years of scholarship assistance received.
As an Armed Forces physician you'll receive officer's pay and benefits, and enjoy the advantages of working regular hours. You'll also see a diversity of patients and have opportunities to use sophisticated medical technology
---
YES! Tell me how the Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program allows you to be a member. There is no obligation Mail the coupon to Armed Forces Scholarships, Box 2685
But most important, while you're in medical school well help pay the bills. For more information, send in this coupon. There is no obligation.
Check up to three □ ARMY □ NAVY □ AIR FORCE
Areas of interest and resources are marked.
Name: First Middle Initial Last □ Male □ Female
The information you voluntary provide will be used for recruiting purposes only. The more complete it is the better.
Year
the matter
Field of Study.
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
FABULOUS FRIDAY
It's Domino's Pizza Fabulous Friday feast ... and it's yours for under five dollars: a delectable 12" custom-made pizza with one topping, and a can of ice-cold Coke®—all for just $4.99!
With our Perfect Pizza Policy, you're assured of a great-tasting, piping hot pizza delivered to your door in 30 minutes or less. If you're not 100% satisfied, we will refund your money or deliver another pizza, free of charge.
It's fantastic! It's fun! It's just $4.99! It's the Fabulous Friday feast, now at Domino's Pizza!
OPEN FOR LUNCH! Hours:
11 am - 1 am Sun.-Thurs.
11 am - 2 am Fri. & Sat.
Lawrence
841-7900
1445 W. 23rd St.
841-8002
832 Iowa St.
One call does it all!
Enjoy
Coke
100%
SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED
Limited delivery area.
Good at listed locations
Our drivers carry less than $10.00.
DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERS® FREE.
1986 DOUGLAS PLAZA INC.
Fabulous Friday!
Get a 12" custom-made pizza with one topping and one can of Coke for only $4.99)
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Limited delivery area.
Offer valid only on Friday.
Good only at listed locations.
Expires: April 1, 1986
Name
16005/DPE-014
FREE 6-Pack and Cooler!
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Get a FREE 6-Pack of Coke® and a Cooler with custom-made pizza with two or more toppings!
Limited delivery area.
Good only at listed locations.
Offer valid white coolers last.
Expires: April 1, 1986
Name
Address
16005/DPE-014
10
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
Jackpot millions won twice by N.J. woman
Nation/World
United Press International
TRENTON, N.J. — A convenience store manager yesterday took her second million-dollar state lottery prize. She said she would stop playing New Jersey's Pick-6 Lotto to give others a chance to win.
Evelyn Marie Adams, who won $1.5 million in the Pick-6 last fall, became the game's first two-time winner, splitting a $1.5 million prize from Monday's drawing. The lottery is six years old.
Lottery officials said the odds of winning two jackpots in New Jersey's most lucrative lottery game were about one in 15 trillion.
"I never expected to win twice," Adams said as she redeemed her latest winning ticket. "It comes as a complete shock."
Adams purchased both winning tickets at the 7-Eleven store in Point Pleasant Beach.
"It was such a shock," she said.
"For 20 years to think I've got so much money and now to know I've got more."
Adams' total $5.4 million in prize money will be paid in installments of more than $250,000 a year for 20 years.
After winning her first big prize, Adams said, she never considered not playing the lottery again.
On Campus
The Kansas and Burge unions will sponsor a Valentine's Day celebration, "Romance on the Hill," from 8 a.m. to midnight today at both unions.
The Emily Taylor Women's
Resource Center is scheduled to conduct an open house in honor of Susan B. Anthony from 2 to 4 p.m. today in 218 Strong Hall. Call 864-3552 for more information.
CITY OF LAWRENCE EQUAL OPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F/H
POLICE OFFICER
$17,992 - $23,026 Annually
Qualifications: Graduation from High School or GED and some experience in meeting and dealing with the public. Must be 21 years of age.
Applicants required to pass a written exam, physical performance test & psychological test.
Application accepted through 2/21/86 at: Personnel, City Hall, 6th & Massachusetts, 3rd floor, Lawrence, KS 66044.
KU Basketball KU vs. NEBRASKA Live Broadcast
HZR106
12:35 p.m. Saturday
Sponsored By
Mrs. Winners Jayhawk Bookstore
Owens Flowers Gammons
Ellena Ford Moto-Photo
Douglas County Bank
CHECKERS
CHECKERS
SPECIAL
CHECKERS SPECIAL
16” Pizza with 2 toppings & 4 soft drinks ONLY $6.99
good w/coupon only EXPIRES 2-26-86
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 4 p.m.-2 a.m.
Fri. 4 p.m.-3 a.m.; Sat. 11 a.m.-3 a.m.
Sun. 11 a.m.-2 a.m.
2214 Yale
841-8010
CHECKERS
Video Tape Rental
Romance on the Hill Feb 14
2 Rentals for the price of one! Daily rental $2.50 for 2 tapes. Weekend rental $3.00 for two tapes. Not valid with free rental coupons, Kansas Union store only.
Video Club Membership
Membership ½ off Only $5.00 will give you 4 free tape rentals, 10% off new and used movie purchases, and 10% off blank video tape purchases. Kansas Union store only.
Photo Processing
20% off Red Items
2 rolls processed for the price of one! C-41 color print processing on 110,
126, 135 or disk film.
Twenty percent off all red caps, sweatshirts, t-shirts, spiral notebooks, 3 ring binders and red pens.
KU
KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
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.
Contact Captain Kennard, Room 206 Military Science Building 864-3311/3312
ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS
SUA FILMS
Before there was Star Wars ...
Before there was Close Encounters ...
There was
THE MAN
WHO FELL TO EARTH
Now there is the complete,
uncut version never before
seen in the United States.
Experience a sci-fi original
as it was originally intended.
"A FIRST RATE ACHIEVEMENT.. BEAUTIFUL SCIENCE FICTION!" New York Times
THE MAD SCREEN
David Bowie in Nicolas Roeg's film The man who fell to Earth Also starring Rip Tone + Candy Clark + Buck Henry - from Cinema 5
Fri. & Sat. Feb. 14 & 15 MIDNIGHT $2.00 Woodruff Aud.
THE LIFE
AND TIMES OF
ROSIE
THE
RIVETER
THE
AWARD
WINNING
FILM
BY
CONNIE FIELD
"MARVELOUS—the sanest, most forceful feminist documentary I've seen in recent years."—David Denby. M.Y. Magazine "THE BEST FILM on women and work that I have seen." — Molly Haskell. Ms. Magazine "EXTRAORDINARY, enlightening and engrossing!" —Janet Maslin. New York Times
Sun., Feb. 16
2:00
$1.50
Woodruff Aud.
SUA FILMS
"Hip, outrageous, beautiful a generous, funny romance with music at its heart and farce around its edges."
1/2
"Altogether original the year's weirdest and most wonderful adult comedy."
"Marvelous entertainment. Amazing!"
L A _ HERALD EXAMINER , David Chute
"The sexiest movie of the year and also one of the funniest."
In the middle of the night,
when there's no one else...
Choose Me
a serious comedy
Genevieve Keith Lesley Ann
Bujold Carradine Warren
AN ISAND ALIVE PRODUCTION OF A FILM BY ALAN BUDDY CHRISSEY ME
GENEVIEVE BUJOLD - KEITH CARADINE - LESLEY ANN WARHIN - RAE DOWN CHONG - PATRICK GAUMNI
SONGS PHOTOGRAPHY BY TEDY PENDERGRASS EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS SHRP GORDON AND CHRIS BLACKWELL
DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY JAN MIESSE PRODUCES BY CAROLYN PETTIFER AND DAVID BLUCKER
WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY ALAN BUDDY AN ISAND ALIVE RELEASE
R
MUSIC FROM TEDDY PENDERGRASS 'LOVE LANGUAGE' ON ASYLUM RECORDS AND TAPES
In the middle of the night,
when there's no one else...
Choose Me
a serious comedy
Genevieve Keith Lesley Ann
Bujold Carradine Warren
AN ISLAND ALIVE PRODUCTION OF A FILM BY ALAN RUDGHEY CROSS ME
GENEVIEVE DULLO KEITH CARRADINE TELEVISION PRODUCERS SHIP GORDON AND CHRIST BLACKWELL
SONOS PERFORMED BY TEDDY PENDGRASS TELEVISION PRODUCERS SHIP GORDON AND CHRIST BLACKWELL
DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY JAN NISSER PRODUCED BY CARLIN PEFFER AND GAID BOOCHER
WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY RAHU RUDGHEY AN ISLAND ALIVE RELEASE IN SUMMER 2015
ISLAND ALIVE
MUSIC FROM TEDDY PENDGRASS 'LOVE LANGUAGE ON ASYLUM RECORDS AND APPS'
Fri. & Sat. Feb. 14 & 15 3:30,7:00,9:30
$1.50 Woodruff Aud.
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
11
Mary Burger/KANSAN
KANSAS
44
'Hawks weary of NU even without Hoppen
Ron Kellogg and the Kansas Jayhawks will attempt to extend their home winning streak to 31 games when they take on the Nebraska Cornhuskers at 1:10 p.m. tomorrow at Allen Field House.
Sports writer
Rv Matt Tidwall
Nebraska's opponents have learned something since the Cornhuskers' Dave Hoppen went out for the season with a knee injury -- don't count the Cornhuskers out
"They're 3-1 without Hoppen," Jayhawk head coach Larry Brown said yesterday, "and that surprises me in some respects. But I think it's a testament to Miba (Ia).
Nebraska
Nebraska
Men's Basketball
15-7. (Bid 8-5: 7)
11-pm. to.morrow
(channels 9 and 27)
at Lawrence
the nebraska coach) and his kids. I have great respect for Moe. It was a big blow for them to lose Hoppen. And they've bounced back well."
Kansas will get its first look at the Hoppen-less Cornhuskers at 1:10 p.m. tomorrow in Allen Field House. The doors will open at 11:40 a.m. Hoppen is the conference's leading scorer, averaging 22.1 points a game.
Take away Hoppen's 25 points in the first Kansas-Nebraska meeting on Jan. 15 and the game might have been a blowout for the Jayhawks. Kansas survived some tense moments with Hoppen in the first half before pulling away with an 81-70 win in Lincoln.
Kansas forward Ron Kellogg, who had 14 points in the first game, said the Cornhuskers had a new look without Hoppen.
"I think they have their running game going without him," Kellogg said. "Now they have an opportunity to run because they don't set up in their half-court game and look specifically for Hoppen. Their transition game is better."
Since losing Hoppen on Feb. 1, Nebraska has defeated Missouri, Colorado and Oklahoma State. The Cornhuskers lost to Kansas State on Saturday in Lincoln 64-54. They are 15-7 overall and 5-4 in the Big Eight Conference.
Kansas, ranked third in the country by both Associated Press and United Press International, is 23-3 and 8-1 after beating Missouri
100-66 on Tuesday.
Many called the win against Missouri Kansas' best game of the year. The win marked the Jayhawks' 30th straight victory in the field house.
Kansas, which leads the Big Eight in team field goal percentage with 60 percent, continued its hot shooting by making 71 percent of its shots against the Tigers.
"I think that the Missouri game proved that if we play together we can beat just about anybody," Kellogg said.
For Nebraska, junior forward Bernard Day has been the Cornhuskers' main offensive threat since Hoppen's departure. In Nebraska's two games last week, Day scored 35 points and grabbed 19 rebounds while making 70 percent of his shots.
"They've had to adjust without Hoppen," Brown said, "but I think it's given their other great athletes a chance to perform well. They're running more and they have some great outside shooters. I think they're a lot like Iowa State now."
Jayhawk Notes — Danny Manning was Kansas 'leader scoreer against Nebraska in the last game with 21 points. Manning scored a season-high 27 on Tuesday...500 extra tickets will go on sale 30 minutes before the 1:10 tip-off tomorrow in the Allen Field House ticket office..The first 10,000 Kansas fans will receive Kansas basketball commative posters..Kansas had four players score in double figures in the last game against Nebraska.
Probable Starters
F 25 Danny Manning (6-11)
F 44 Ron Kellogg (6-5)
C 30 Greg Drilling (7-1)
G 53 Calvin Thompson (6-6)
G 22 Cedric Hunter (6-2)
Kansas
Nebraska
Nebraska
F 30 Bernard Day (6-5)
F 50 John Matkze (6-7)
C 32 Chris Logan (6-5)
G 13 Harvey Marshall (6-3)
G 20 Brian Carroll (6-1)
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Jeff Strong took Missouri to an early lead, and the Tigers held on for a 101-88 victory over eight-ranked Oklahoma last night in a game that included 61 personal fouls.
From Kansan wires
Missouri
Seven players fouled out of the ragged Big Eight game. The three officials called 23 personal fouls in the first half and technical fouls on both head coaches.
surprises Oklahoma 101-88
Missouri, snapping a four-game losing streak, bolted to an 18-1 lead as the Sooners went the first 5-10 without a field goal. The loss dropped Oklahoma to 7-3 in the Big Eight, putting third-ranked Kansas, in the
Oklahoma, 22-3 overall, closed to within nine points at halftime, 50-41, behind the shooting of Darryl Kennedy and Anthony Bowie. But Missouri, despite having three starters in deep foul trouble, never let the visitors closer than eight points after intermission.
Gary Leonard, Missouri's starting center, fouled out less than two minutes into the second half, and Dan Bingenheimer, a starting forward who had 10 points in the first half, collected his fourth foul and went to the bench a few seconds later.
Strong finished with 29 points for Missouri, who is 18-11 overall and 5-5
Big Eight, in a commanding position for the regular-season title.
Maryland 67. North Carolina State 66
RALEIGH, N.C. - Len Bias scored
21 points, including a pair of winning
free throws with 1:26 to play last
night, lifting Maryland to a 67-66
upset of N. 18 North Carolina State.
in the conference. Chievous also had 29 points, all but two in the second half.
The Terrapins, 13-10 overall and 3-6 in the Atlantic Coast Conference, trailed by 62-59 with 5:46 left. But Blas scored 7 of Maryland's final 8 points to help secure the win.
Michigan 92. Minnesota 58
Chris Washburn finished with 24 points for N.C. State, whose record is 17-7 and 6-4, while Ernie Myers added 14 and Bennie Bolton 11.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Roy Tarpley scored 21 points last night, including 9 of Michigan's first 11 points, carrying the No. 9 Wolverines to a 92-56 Big Ten rout of Minnesota
The Gophers, playing under their third coach this season, were guided by assistant coach Phil Saunders — his first college game as a head coach. Jimmy Williams, the interim coach after the resignation of Jim Dutcher, missed the game because of a family death.
Minnesota, is 2-2 under Williams and Saunders, is 15-9 this season and 5-6 in the Big Ten. Michigan avenged one of its three losses in improving to 21-3 and 9-3.
KU to stage exhibition in KC
By Matt Tidwell Sports writer
The Kansas Jayhawks will continue their close relationship with the Special Olympics when the basketball team travels to Kansas City, Mo., for a benefit on March 4, Tod Leiwke, the Kansas basketball promoter, announced yesterday.
Proceeds from the $1 admission charge to the event, "Miller Lite Beer Presents — The Kansas Jayhawks Open House," in Municipal Auditorium will go to the Kansas Special Olympics.
Leiweke, vice president of Leiweke and Company, the Kansas City firm promoting Kansas athletics, said the event would last about an hour and a half and would include player introductions, a team scrimmage and
autograph sessions The starting time for the benefit has not been set.
"We're very excited about bringing the 'Hawks to Kansas City'," Lauren Johnson said. "We're excited about the Kansas City's big chance to cheer the Javahaws on to the Final Four."
"We always jump at any chance we have to help Special Olympics," Brown said. "That's a great organization and I think our kids always benefit from the experience as well. We're looking forward to it."
For Kansas head coach Larry Brown, who has been an active supporter of Special Olympics throughout his coaching career, the event represents a great chance to help his team's favorite charity.
group of Special Olympians. The team also invited the Olympians to practice last season.
In order to transfer the excitement of Jayhawk basketball to Kansas City, Leiweke said he hoped KU students would make the trip to help fill the 9,000 seat auditorium.
On Feb. 2, the Jayhawks held a work-out in Allen Field House with a
"We're encouraging the students to come. We feel like they're a big part of Kansas basketball and we want them to be there." Leiweke said.
The Kansas athletic department was receptive when the benefit was proposed.
"They love it," Liweike said. "It's really the first time they've been able to get KU to Kansas City for this kind of thing. I'm confident the alumni here and whole town will really turn out."
'Hawks still in Big Eight race
Sports writer
Bv Dawn O'Mallev
The Kansas women's basketball team will jump back into the heat of the Big Eight race when it plays the Nebraska Cornhuskers tomorrow in Allen Field House after the men's game.
Kansas is 5-4 in the Big Eight conference and 14-8 overall. The Jayhawks' 87-77 loss to Missouri on Wednesday night in the field house dropped them into a second-place tie with Missouri. Nebraska is 4-5 and 11-11.
"It is never easy to get up after a loss," Marian Washington, women's head basketball coach, said yesterday. "But we had a good practice. We just try to take every game and figure out what happened."
Kansas and Nebraska last met in Lincoln. The Jayhawks won 84-64 and Kansas guard Lisa Dougherty led the
Nebraska
Beehive
Women's Basketball
11-11, (Big 8; 4-5)
30 minutes after men's game
at Lawrence
Jayhawks with 24 points.
"We're going to demonstrate the character that makes for great winners." Washington said. "We still need to work on being consistent but the women are the only ones that can make it happen."
Dougherty said yesterday that the team had practiced on its offensive shooting. Kansas made only 42 percent of its shots against Missouri.
"Our strongest game is the inside," Dougherty said, "but they will probably crowd in on Vickie. We'll just need to keep Nebraska guessing."
have to work on its perimeter game against the Cornhuskers to compensate for Adkins being closely guarded.
Adkins has averaged 22.2 points a game.
Dougherty said the team would
Probable Starters
Kansas
F 25 Vickie Adkins (6-1)
F 15 Jackie Martin (5-10)
C 40 Kelly Jennings (6-5)
G 33 Lisa Dougherty (5-8)
G 24 Evelette Oft (5-7)
Nebraska
F 34 Stephanie Boll (5-10)
F 20 Shelly Block (5-10)
C 10 Angie Miller (6-0)
G 30 Maurice Ivy (5-9)
G 35 Amy Stephens (5-8)
OSU decides not to re-sign head coach
United Press International
STILLWATER, Okla. — Paul Hansen, Oklahoma State ball coach, would not yesterday that his contract would not be renewed after the 1985-86 season, athletic director Mvron Roderick said.
"I have advised Paul his contract will not be renewed when it expires on April 9." Roderick said. "This is one of the toughest things I've ever had to do because Paul Hansen is a friend of mine. We jus'
PETER WATKINS
Paul Hansen
feel the best thing for the basketball program at Oklahoma State is to make a change.
"Part of the job of running an athletic department is having to make tough decisions, and this was one of them."
Hansen was offered an opportunity to stay in the program as an assistant athletic director. He declined the offer.
Hansen said he wanted to coach for five or six more years, Roderick said.
A countrywide search for Hansen's successor will begin immediately, Roderick said. A new head coach should be named by March 15.
Hansen is in his seventh season as head coach at Oklahoma State. He has a 104-86 record going into tomorrow's game against Missouri.
Olympic swimmer supports track meet
Sports writer
By Jim Suhr
It's not often that a former world-class swimmer vocally supports track and field, but Rowdy Gaines, an Olympic gold medalist, did so yesterday at Allen Field House.
Gaines, who won gold medals in the 100-meter freestyle and the 4x100-meter freestyle and medley relays, was in Lawrence to promote Sunday's Track and Field Junior Olympics National Indoor Championships at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
The AAUUSA Junior Olympics, which was designed in 1948 to interest the nation's youth in Olympic sports. It is a nationwide developmental program for amateur athletes offering 21 sports to youth age eight to 18, the largest multi-sport program in the United States.
Gaines knows how positive the experiences and the exposure gained through the Junior Olympics can be. While participating in a Junior Olympic swimming competition between his junior and senior years in high school, Gaines was seen and later recruited by an Auburn coach.
Gaines is only one of several Olympians who has competed in the Junior Olympics. Some of them include Carl Lewis, Alberto Salazar, Mary Decker Slaney and Evelyn Ashford.
Tracy Caulkins, he recently signed a contract to promote MacGregor swimwear.
"He was the first college coach to come down and watch me swim." Gaines said. "I remember meeting him afterwards, and I've realized that I never would have gone to Auburn if I hadn't been there."
Gaines was a five-time NCAA All-American during his career at Auburn. As a senior, he was selected over former Georgia running back Hershel Walker as the Southeastern Conference Athlete of the year.
Six months after his three goldmedal performance in the Olympics, Gaines decided to retire from swimming. He has since devoted his time to traveling across the country to convey his experiences to youth.
Gaines spoke of his experiences and gave advice yesterday to South Junior High School students. He said the junior Olympics was a positive experience for any youth, regardless of the sport.
"Of course the pinnacle of anyone's athletic success is a gold medal," he said. "But the object of sports, especially for kids, is to have fun."
"Kids shouldn't pressure themselves too much, especially today when the athletic burn out issue is such a problem."
Aside from his athletic promotions, Gaines coaches a Las Vegas youth swim team of 200 kids. Along with swimmers Steve Luquist and
Stein Winn.
For building addition which would connect Allen Field House and Anschutz Sports Pavilion may begin construction in about a year, Monte Johnson, athletic director, said yesterday.
Connection probable for Allen, Anschutz
Bv Frank Ybarra
Staff writer
The addition will connect the field house to the sports pavilion at the Parrott Athletic Center. The building will be for sports medicine and training, he said. It also will have offices for the academic support service for athletes.
It may look something like Pearrot once it is completed. Johnson said.
Johnson said fund raising for the $2 million-$3 million building would not begin until the sports pavilion was paid for. The sports pavilion opened in the fall 1884.
Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director, said the addition would have offices and a locker room for the football team. It also will have larger meeting rooms for the athletic teams to use, he said, and will have space to store equipment.
He said the bill on the sports
pavilion and the weight training center inside of it probably would be paid for within the year. Temple said the total cost of the pavilion was about $4 million.
"I'm hopeful that it would be a reasonable time period," Johnson said.
The addition is part of a long-range development plan started by the athletic department in the fall of 1982. Temple said.
Temple said the addition would free up offices in the field house and would allow all teams to have more office space.
The first phase of the plan was the construction of the sports pavilion.
Discussion on phase two, the addition, began about eight months ag.
Lynn Bott, head athletic trainer, said he was looking forward to working in the new training area. Bott said it would help him because he would be able to serve teams in a central location. He also will have more control over his supplies, he said.
Bernardine Koch
Head stand Male Muhur/KANBAN
KU diver Lori Spurney will compete tomorrow for the Jayhawks when the team concludes its home swim schedule with a dual meet against Arkansas. The meet starts at 3:30 p.m. in the Robinson Natatorium.
12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
The University Daily
Classified Ads
| 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: | 30¢ | 50¢ | 75¢ | 1.05 |
CLASSIFIED RATES
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.*
*Classified Display advertisements can be classified display advertisements except for logos.*
No overtails allowed in classified display ads.
POLICIES
- Words set in BOLDY ACC count as 3 words.
* Death in a Dollmary 2 — work days prior to
injury.
* Above rates based on consecutive day insertions
only.
* Pro Responsibility is assumed for more than one in
correct insertion of any advertisement.
* Classified advertising must be classified ad-
vertising.
* Custody should please add $5 service charge.
* Cheat must accompany all classified ads mitted
to the University Dalkan Kaman
Tearsheet are not provided for classified or
classified ads until credit has been established.
* Tearsheet are not provided for classified or
classified ads until credit has been established.
* Classified display ads do not count towards mon-
nily earned rate discount.
* Photos and videos must be submitted
- Words set in ML CAPS count as 2 words.
* Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words.
* Deadline is 4 m. t - 2 working days prior to
ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
A Lesbian/Gay Dance at the Jarosz-Hebrew
10 from 8 p.m. all ages, but I aged 24. Requires
Sportswear.
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 Kansan business office at 894-4358.
--month lease w/deposit. 331 Indiana. 410-6031
SUBLEASE NOW. 1 BDRM Hanover Place apt.
One month free rent! 841-1212
...
Hillel presents the Retreat
HAPPY BIRHTDAY STEPHANIE!
--month lease w/deposit. 331 Indiana. 410-6031
SUBLEASE NOW. 1 BDRM Hanover Place apt.
One month free rent! 841-1212
ATTENTION JUNIORS and 1st semester
seniors. Informal meeting on Friday at
4:00 p.m. Senior Hour Society is an-
tracted.霜 Feb.20 by 5:00 p.m. in. Strong, Available in
Thrush, Nunepen and Nunepen. Available in 214 Strong
"Being Jewish on a College Campus"
Feb. 28 - Mar. 2
for more information,
call the Hiliel office
864-3948
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS. Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop, covering time management, reading, listening, notetaking, Wednesday, February 19, 6:30-8:00 p.m., 4007 Lexington Avenue, Presented for the last time by the instructor with the Student Assistance Center 121 Strong, 864-464.
GUARANTEED LOAN APPLICATIONS 1986-1987
---File the ACT-FFS at once!-month lease w/deposit. 331 Indiana. 410-6031
SUBLEASE NOW. 1 BDRM Hanover Place apt.
One month free rent! 841-1212
Lose Weight for Spring Break Guaranteed! Call Lorie 841-7699.
Important Notice
All Students must be considered for an GSL for, 86/87 MUST first file the ACT Family Financial Statement. This is a new requirement beginning with 86/87. The ACT-Fees is available today from Student Financial Aid, 26 Strong Hall.
REASEACH PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP. Learn about: defining a topic; using the library; taking notes; and organizing/writing the paper. Monday, February 17, 7 p.m. 300 Strong Hall, ICI, Presented by Bainbridge Assistance Center, ICI, 281 Strong Hall 94-4064
IT'S TONIGHT!
The S.A.M.S. Heart of Rock 'n' Roll
Valentine Day Battle of the Bands!
The Fanatix
Sons of Liberty
All of the Above
Absolute Ceiling
The Breakers
Pariah
Altered Media
Friday, Feb. 14
Kansas Union Bellroo
Friday, Feb. 14
Kansas Union Ballroom
Tickets $3
on sale at
SUA Box Office
all proceeds go to M.S.
Students Against Multiple Sclerosis
Rent*19' Color T. V. $28.98 am. Smity's TV. 14'
W. trd. 32-424. Ward. Mon.-Sat. 5:30-7:30.
T.V. $45.99 am. Smity's TV. 14'
Rent-VCR with 3 movies, overnight $9.66
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, w/24hr $47.51; Mon-Sat
b. Sun-5 s. T.
SUA Board Member applications due by Thur.
Feb. 20, Questions? 984-3477.
SIAP applications for President, Vice-President,
Tissue & Secretary due by Mon, Feb. 17th
Want to coordinate emt orientation and activities for the University of Kansas? Pick up your SUA application today! SUA Office, Level 1, Kansas
ONLINE
GOT A HOT MOF DATE? Is your clean car alert?
IN LANCE OR CLEANING make your car look newer is our speciality, 6th andaine. 768-749-1087.
ENTERTAINMENT
Due to space limitations, limited number of tickets this year get you now! Browns Carnival, Feb. 22. Tickets sold at S.U.A. and Spanish/Port. Department (in Wesco).
Romance on the Hill. Fresh flowers for your sweetheart for sale Friday at the Kansas Union. Romance on the Hill. Take a romantic ride with your sweetheart by your side. Carriage rides through campus Friday 6-9 p.m.; $1; $2 reserved. Tickets available-SUA Office.
Having a party? Need a DJ! Call Music Mix, The Best Mix of music in Town. 824-790-5200 you get 8 hours of great dance music from Dance on the Road. NIGHT LIFE MOBILE J DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system.
--month lease w/deposit. 331 Indiana. 410-6031
SUBLEASE NOW. 1 BDRM Hanover Place apt.
One month free rent! 841-1212
$50 OFF
FOR ANY 4 HOUR PARTY IN LAWRENCE
- Now only $100
- Over 100 hrs. of the best dance MUSIC
- Clean Mixing and Computerized Lighting
- 3 yrs. professional D.J. Experience
The
AUDIOPHILES
842-8687
Profesional DJs
Serving You
expires 3/31/86
1
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to provide the music for your next party to have in hand and accommodate your room and accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in Lawrence, Manhattan and Salina. Call 814-943 or www.phasefourd.jo
FOR RENT
2 bedroom apartment. $350/mo. plus utilities. Big living room w/sky light on second and third floor. 5.1/2 month lease w/one month deposit. 3 blocks from the Union. B41-6981.
3 BH house, East Lawrence, bus route, 1804
rehab. insulated. Double lot, gardens: $725
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkley Flats, Vacancies available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 843-216-
Available March 1: beautiful 2 BR apt. On bus route, 5 minute walk to campus, downtown. New carpet, clean, spacious $330/mo. plus low utilities. 81-5797, 81-5566, 82-3449.
First come, first served, only a few tows. At 216 W.238th on KU bus, between Gibson and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We deliver to your location or on business square foot, carport, extra bath or balcony. Call 855-6446 for appointment.
For rent: 2ent, brand new apt. 1/1 tbs from Kansas University $350/mo plus utilities. Sublease n possibility. Call Chuck Leduc 843-3228 am 8 a.m. and pam. Parm 843-0338 after 5 p.m. Keep trying. Furnished one bedroom apartment near University & Downtown. Most utilities paid with off street credit.
Spacious, bright and sunny. $200/mo. Jeff #82-4964.
Spring break早餐 3-D bedroom pool, pool hot, tub, sauna. Located in Silverhorne, close to Brierbridge, Copper, and Kisenga. $160/mo.
Sublease now. 3-bd apt. Very nice and close to campus. 842-9738
LEASE NOW FOR FALL and/or SUBLEASE for spring and summer. Available possibly as early as April 1. Roomy and comfortable at BR duplex or apartment. MBR, garage, laundry/storage. No pets. Lease only.
Baseball cards and sports nostalgia Buy, Sale
and Trade J D'BAY Baseball cards. Open 10-8 M-S.
Sports Network
Wanted: Female, non-smoking roommate to share a 3 bedroom apt for remainder of semester. $195.00/month, plus 1/3 utilities. Call 749-8422. Keep crying.
CINHOUSE available immediately Cornish Sq.
from Meadowbrook Apt. at 844-480-
or Towne Apt. at 844-520.
Comic Books, Playbys, Penthouses, etc. Male.
Sixth-Floor, Tue. Fri. Sat. and Sun 10-5-11
New Hampshire
MASTERCAFTAFT offers completely furnished 1 and 2 bedroom apartments all non dorm. Call 603-754-8960.
$365/mo fall; spring and summer negotiable.
$475/736 after 5 or leave message on machine.
Quiet, one bedroom apt. big, lawn. $165/mo 5-1/2
month lease w/dipl. 2113 bellgorge 84141
FOR SALE
Sublease-a one bedroom apartment. Very clean and
well maintained. 843-762-0510; 843-762-0513 for 30 p.m. in keep trying.
19 inch color television, excellent picture, solid-state for $120. Evenings 841-8684
DOWNHILL SKILLS k2 threees, 200 cm., Deser bin器
expend. cerd. occd. $80, 911,053 evenings.
For sale: Pearl 200 watt bass amp, with EV 12 calibre.付金 800. Also (2) Fender Twin Reverses w/Anvil cases, Yamaha 4 x 12 cab. Ampge head & Cabinets, much more. 841-1360
21" x 42" stereo cabinet.
Hinge glass top a door. 4 shelves,
solid, excellent condition.
DRUMS: Ladigv 19e pc with w/cymbals, hardware,
hardware, hardware, hardware, cymbal, hardware,
hardware, hardware, $50. Overland Park, WI.
Epson Qx-10/XP-30 Printer software $195.00 or
3 letters of typewriter with 3
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U. repair).
Call 81-679-600-6000.
GFR info for 819-679-6000.
$130 or best offer.
Call 842-3626 evenings
Haffer. 500 watt power amplifier. Brand new with factory warranty. $600. Tom 842-1510
For Sale: 1022 MW S科醛c Excellent condition
Prelim P14 4x4, piles 60, highways miles 85
4x4
Kewedow KR-7A2 receiver, 60 watts, 18 station memory, sean, 7 band equipment. New microfiber
Kennwood casanete deck. Perfect condition, first 851 takes her home. Call 841-6777.
Sale: Gretach wooden snare drum. $50.00 or best offer
849-1801.
Line of the line Kenwood innertable with moving
wheel, Call 841-1309, full warranty,
bail of half. Call 841-1309 after a
call.
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Receivers from $20, turbines from 11s, speakers
from 15s, amplifiers from 20s, stereo
stereo all completely reconditioned and warranted.
Lawrence Custom Radio, 914 W. 2nd St.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class discussion. 3) Analysis of Western Civilization' available now it Town, Criei. The Jaywack Bookstore, and more.
Trees of lumpy mattresses? Waterbed for sale
Complete and set up. Perfect for dorm apart-
ments. Refurbished. $1,200-$2,500.
SPRING BREAK-Round Trip Airline Tickets to
Miriam $180. Best Price Call Jim at
jimam@sunmusic.com
AUTOSALES
Wouldn't the little SAX space up your life? I'm parting with my beloved Bundy also taxophone in its great condition and its new mouthpiece for only $300. Call 864-2134.
1914 Pontiac GT0, new paint, overbraid, and much more. Rare. A note to see. Call 842-253-1033
DRIVE A REAL. SPACES CAR 78 2802 - 2. Real
attention getter, Alpine white. 4500. 814-6471.
MGB convertible. 1977. Only 50,000 miles. Great
ride. Garage room. Gwb. 814-6471.
Well test w/ 71 Manda X7, runs 7.1m, AM/FM,
Dur AC, £750 or best offer, 748-466 ask for
McCurtis.
Moving Must Sell. 1980 Olds Mobil Cutless station wagon V silver. Fully Option. Full Just $790. Call Us
Need Money for School! 1800 Aud! 5000, loaded.
51,000 $,500 serious inquiries 749-7123.
Regal 1789. Good body, sound mechanics,
casette stereo. Asking 600ml Call Larry after.
Wait, the text is actually:
Regal 1789. Good body, sound mechanics,
casette stereo. Asking 600ml Call Larry after.
75 Datan R210, Gas saver, new tires, reliable in
weather, asking $550. Call 843-2994.
MUSTANG Body and deluxe interior fully restored. Cash needed. Sacrifice for 1996 firm repair.
LOST/FOUND
Found: Golden Lab/German Sheepd mix. Brown w/black nack. Approx. one to one and one half years old. No tags. Found in Meadowbrook Apt. complex.
Found: Keys on red clip on 4th floor Wencoe. Call 81-964.04
Help! Reward for return of large tan purse and contents taken from Sanctuary 7/28/78. Very important to me! Please leave message. 749-2682. Pair of glasses, found in room 400 Woske. Claim
Pairs of glasses, found in room 4004 Wescoe. Claim at 3116 Wescoe.
You are interested in earning $35 to $80 a week working 10 to 25 hours. McDonald's has its employees earn $15 an hour p.m. to close and one weekend day. Apply in person at McDonald's, West 91st. No phone calls at McDonald's, West 91st.
SUMMER WORK/JOHNSON COUNTY. ST
fort-hour week, 4/75 hours. Tues., thru Sat,
May thru August. Work consist of door-to-door
search and delivery. Resume all positions
available. Send resume or letter of intent
to: Sharon Rhoes, RJN Environmental
Assistance, 6700 Squub Rd, II, Ste 213, Mission, KS 65029
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer, yr. round, Europe.
S.A. America, Aurora, Asia. All fields: $2000 - 3000
mightseeing, Free info, Write LJC, PO Bx 5-K1-
Corona Del Mar, CA 92205.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $14.90 - $23.90 .yr. New-
Call: 1-871-685-8670 Kotr. R97 for current
employees.
CRUISSEHSHIP HIRING! $18.00-$30.00 Carribean, Hawaii, World! Call for Guide. Cassette. Instructor. Contact us! Continuing student hourly position: book publisher seeks student who can type 60 (plus) wpm and has previous office experience to assist with sales of your products (w/ wk, $7.5/hr. Start immediately.)
Summer Jobs, National Park Co.'s 21, Parks, 5000
Openings. Complete Information $5.00. Park
Rest Resort. Mission Mtn Co., 651 2nd Ave. W.N.
Kalispell, MT 99001.
wpm and has previous office experience to assist in various office duties. Must be able to work mornings. 30 hrs/day P/T/hr. Start: immediate call 123/456/7890, 323 Carrath, to complete application by 02/14/16.
Jeff the Brazen Carnival will be on bep. 32. Are you coming as a sailor or as Tartan? See you next week.
Student Staff Position-summer orientation program 1986. Required qualifications: minimum 2.0 undergraduate degree and first year graduate students may apply. Desired qualifications: leadership abilities; knowledge of university programs and interpersonal skills; ambition to work in college job description.
Monkey: Happy Valentines Day! Phi Gamma
Jamma will be great! See you tonight, love.
employees about university job descriptions and requirements. Provide educational service in Strong Hall due by Fri-Feb 13th.
ENTERTEL offers YOU
Reg. Raven enfant. Can you solve the credit card
kittening paper? Happy Birthday, Jean
Wild and Crazy nerds let the Samba,让 Congress at the Carrawal Part. Get your tickets, see ys on Facebook or www.carrawalpart.com.
BUS. PERSONAL
- Hourly wage with incentives
- Pleasant working conditions
Attractive male age 34 weeks dating/relationship with black female. Interests in health, exercise, career. No joke. Serious replies to Kevin, Box 3927 Lawrence, Ks.
- Paid training
- Advanced opportunities
Interested in meeting a business major (male), between the ages of 27 and 35, who enjoys classical music? Please reply to Box 924, "Classical," signed, a music enthusiast involved in finance.
ALKLINE HIRNG BOOM! $149-$349
Stewardessware, Reservationshare. Call for taule.
Phone: 212-578-6350. www.alkline.com
- Pleasant working cond.
- Flexible hours
$10-$380 Weekly/Up Mailing Circulators! #1
quietly! Sinceverly intrush self-addressed envelope! Success, P.O. Box 470CEG, Woodstock, IL 60068
PERSONAL
Kile M. I know you were familiar. If by some chance you don't have a girlfriend and would like to talk-I'd love to get to know you. From the girl in your last year's class. code: 749-814.
POINSETTA BEACH INN in the heart of the Fort
102-977-2501 *STUDENT DISCOUNT*
102-977-2501
Barb's Vintage Rose New Spring Merchandise
Mr. Weber-wanna talk but can't get through. I can tell you’re nice, see ya real soon. P.S. Jr.
Call 841-1200
*CAMP COUNSELORS M/F - Outstanding Slim and Trim Down Camps. M/F, Nutrition/Diet/Children 20 plus. Separate girls' and boys camps 7 weeks. Separate girls' and boys camps 7 weeks. Manhattan, Pennsylvania, No. Carolina, California. Contact: Michael Friedman, Director. #97 Hewlett Dr. No. Woodrow Wilson, N.Y. 11811.
50% off Winter Merchandise
- $5-$6 per hour
Blue Heron Futons
841-2451 M-S 10-5 p.m.
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattress
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.-Sat. 12:5:30 p.m.
841-13
Creative, thinking singles find kindred spirits through the directory for educated singles. LOVELINE, P.O. Box 3020K, Lawrence, KS 60461. One-hour membership $4.00.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater area. Call for appointment 913-858-1400
MENU HOT LINE
364-4567
The Union's recording
of the dav's entrees & soups
Jayhawker Towers
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts. for KU students
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors
- Academic Resource Center
- Air Conditioned
- Swimming Pool
- On Bus Line
- Furnished or Unfurnished
- Laundry Facilities
Apply Now for Fall/Spring
843-4993
GAYLIEBSIAN? Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stamped, self-address envelope to TRIANGLE TIMES, P.0 Box 56421, KCMO 64196.
lnow now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841-7749.
50 positions available in summer sales program.
Average earnings $4000.00. For interview call
number 1-800-327-6921.
DELI SPECIALS
a different deli special every day
Burrito with Chili
Today's Nachos
Special: 16 oz. Drink
$2.50
Hand-crafted wires, windculptures and faintières.
Order now for spring, SKYWREES 7/9/2012 / 1/2/2013
www.stevewrees.com
His and Hera Hair Design. Quality hair care at reasonable prices. We use the finest hair products available. Specially designed for deserves. Haircuts $7, perm $25 and up with hair dryer and Lice and Merion $649, 1281 Connecticut Street, New York, NY 10013.
Rent-18" Color T V $2.98 a month Curtis
Saunders Bldg. 232-87574, Sat. M, 9:30
Sat. M, 10:50, Sun. I, 5
Imprint passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
instant passport, 1.19, 1.20 course, line
portraits, Swabia study, visa application
Modeling and the theater portfolio - shooting new-
beginner to professionals, call for information.
THE KANSAS UNION
DELI
level 3
OPEN HOUSE
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event? 8 & M Favors offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specials plus speedy and reliable delivery. You design it or let it be printed. 220 W. 120 H. (Delbens Gibson) 811-4394.
in honor of
1876
SUAN B. ANTHONY
BORN FEB. 15, 1820
Friday
Feb. 14, 1986
2-4 p.m.
sponsored by
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 218 Strong Hall
SANDWICH
Rent' 19.0% T.V. $2,826.8 a month *Smarty's TV* 147 W. 347 925-3751; Mon.-Sat. 9:30-11:00; Sun. 1-5
SPRING BREAK 01 the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aranas from only 881 Deluxe lodging, parties, foodie bags, more. Hurry, call Suncheese Tours for more information and reservations toll free 1-800-321-5911 or contact a local Suncheese Tours company to book a tour Spring break counts, count on Sunchease.
Sweeta For Your Sweetie Color Portrait, A
Valentine's Valentine* Special Swellie
7841-1811
Thousands of R & R albums—$2 or less. Also less items, stores. I am Satur day only 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quintilurs B11 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all styles music.
Want a new fun way to say I love you on Valentines Day. Try a VIDEO TARGET $14.95. Available from 12 to 4 or by appointment. Now available at LANDLAND. Land Video Hillerest Shopping Center. #824-6336
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve T'. Custom printed Shirtray. 749-1811.
Class Ring Day - Why wait for the ring man when its ring day every at Balfour House. 835 Mass
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4388
THE FAR SIDE
VALENTINE GREETINGS
Alenandae - Happy! Will you have heart! mine!
You are No 1 and always will be with you. Love me!
Hopefully you'll be happy!
Antonia,贝贝,Bam,Diana,Jiana,and Kevin,
thought I'd reminded you that I love you all very
well.
❤️
B.C.-Happy Valentine's Day! Thanks for the past
half and a love. I have L, W
❤️
B.C. thanks for doing what you do and for being
you need, you see much, br. Lisa K. (How
What's up? How can I help you?)
To Alpha Chi Omega pledges:
Sisters are loved for many things
but friendship most of all.
---
Beth, welcome back. It's great seeing you again.
Let's referee our first party again! Your Buddah
Bart, Steve & Robert, Thanks for listening! You guys are very special valentine! Lots of love to you.
Buns, Valentine's Day without you is like. Well it sticks! Remember, too much of a good thing is gone. Get the girls. Gee, I can't. Crazy. Won't you play me my crazy Valentine? I Love You! Love. Crazy Jane
❤️
❤️
Brian. These past 3 years have been great (except for the time you got it in my car). Happy Annapolis! You are just as good. 2017 will be just as perfect. And to think Brad and we'd never make it most 4 months! Happy Valentine's day, too! And have a great 21st birthday party. I wish your rooms corrupted you!) Love always. Julie.
BLOOM COUNTY
DOUG-You'd better read this because here's a tip. If you're a girl who knows you, you're a super guy and you kiss her too. Thanks for a special school year! I love hanging out with her and Valentine Day! Hang around, in CIRL 1814
SMEDLEY SAYS:
May A
Cupid Kiss You!
Dear MeatBalls, Happy Valentine's Day. Love,
Dave. Happy V.Day! Let's share a bottle of champagne again. soon Jan M.
Dear Dim, "How will I know?" MINE!!! Have a Valentine's Day! Love! and lots of luck!
Nearest N, 241285-0901 was super. Hope to see
you again soon. Happy Valentine 4-EVER!!!
ERIC CHARLES, Out of all the guys on campus you're the ONLY one I want. Happy Valentine's Day, sweetheart? P.S.: I’d still love you even if you didn’t have such terrific legs! Love, Marcia
❤️
Happy Valentine's Day DJS! We're lucky to have you. Love, love, les, ces, les, ts, www.
Eric (Airewich) It has been a great years. Hope to have many more happy Valentine's Day. I love him.
By GARY LARSON
Tacoma Press Syndicate
ALL RIGHT!
WHAT'S ON MY SOCK,
YOU STURP CLOTHES
DRYER !?
"Listen. You want to be extinct? You want them to shoot and trap us into oblivion? ... We're supposed to be the animals, so let's get back out there and act like it!"
THAT'S THE LAST
SOCK YER GONNA
EVER EAT.. ARE YOU
LISTENING?!
ny Berke Breathed
VER GOING TO THE GOODWILL STORE.
PTEW!
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
13
Happy i3 valentine's Day! To our little valentine.
Love, Ariana & Mona. Dad
Gayle, Happy Valentine's Day! it's been a wonderful month! I love you, Andrew.
Thank You for still caring my Valentine. I need you and I'll never stop loving you, I promise.
HAPPY VALENTINES DAY! To all our friends and family at K.U. Love, Naiel and Neal.
❤️
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY, HANDSOME
love you in all ways, always! Mamouth.
❤️
HEY CUTIE! Have a great birthday! I miss you.
Hah! Marilyn, Happy Valentine! I love you more than ever. Is it met.
Kari,
with love from
Scotland! See
ya soon!
Brennan
**Happy Valentine's Day to the ones I love, Regina,**
Mark, Tim and Carl. Love, Marie.
Happy Valentine's Day Iranian, I love you more because they are hydrogen atoms in the oceanan Yours always.
∞ ∞
University Daily Kansan
Happy Valentine's Day, you bum! I LOVE YOU.
❤️ ❤️
Happy Valentine's Day to the "Scrump Gang" on
WLH, M.I.N. L.P.E.
BUY HADDY, Happy number 1 Valentine's day I love you Samantha.
Hent Speaking Harold Wanted To Be With The One Who Companionished Flat On Valentine's Day. He said,
❤️
❤️
H Blue eyes Hey me G 'LlM M Lvlental! How about a Joe's Run? You alpha Chl Red Hol Tol
Hey Chris Baxter, Happy Valentine's Day! An
Adventure!
KATH
EASY DON!
LOOK FEMLIARI?
I LOVE YOU
AGAIN
Hey Face Jack, Just wanted you to know gorgeous eyes, wet lips, and a long neck are three features I love. Hey Face Jack, Valentine's Day. Sweetie! With Love, Hey Face Jack. Hey Poosum, I love you. Come and hang from my shoulder.
Hold or Hold Out! Things will happen that you won't be ready to. I'm going one of them.
Happy Valentine's Day. *Hold Out*
I could write about; how happy I am to see your face.
I could tell you what made you come to comfort me when I was lonely and needed someone to talk to, or all the fun we had working and playing together. But no, all I really love, it is thankful and happy Valentine's Day. I thank Steve.
M. Seed,
Happy Valentines Day!
You are special to me too.
I love you all!
Enveray-D. Weed
you are the only one,
1. ee-icet pas? ME.
J. Anderson. To the best tight one & off the field. V-Day is every day with you! Your wife D.A. & son B.A.
Forever—D. Weed
JEN, You're a long way away, but I think of you daily. You'll always be my valentine!! D.C.
J. K. GET OFF RABE! I love you! Juliette
JPG-LE You-KAK
James, Jason, Chuck Daver, and Chris-Happy
James, Jason, Chuck Daver, and Chris-Happy
James, Jason, Chuck Daver, and Chris-Happy
James, Jason, Chuck Daver, and Chris-Happy
♥
"Jim McM." You're tough, but I like you very well.
Classified Ads
Jill, darting, you are marvelous and I am so happy. Mom makes friends together! *Together*
ARTHUR.
hiddy=1.
Letly, let's get together tonight. HVD. Pat.
ARTHUR.
Every day with you
Is Valentine's Day!
I'll Love You Always Elizabeth
So what is it that you do besides work at the library and be an attractive woman? To M. Grace. A Happy Valentine's Day. A L.P. Pizza. Marum and Jude, Where have you been? I miss you! Happy Valentine's Day to two real sweetheart. Love Ferg.
❤️
Michelle - I love you.
Mike the Pike: Roses are red, violets are blue, today and forever. I'll always love you! Happy Valentine's Day! Love, Misy
❤️
Mr. Churchill: Thanks for the best times of my life. To look forward to more of the same for many years to come. I love you! Your Pizza Lady. You, eps!浸教 eastern dig did Kansas guys! You're the best (and more then a c.s.)- HDI Love, one of your groupes.
Muffy, I love you. Please stay with me forever. You can be perfect. Let's go "fishing!" I love you, Buffy.
MAYBERRY. Thanks for Saturday night, 'bow
'but another dance? Vicky.
To: Glenn
I Love You
Happy Valentine's Day!
Love cherry
Nancy - Happy Valentines Day little sirt Love
Jane
❤️
❤️
Noelle A. I love you and I miss you. K-State Sigma
Nu Boozer. P S. thanks for 7 ong to 8 great
and happy months.
Nose-Krinkle, Every day I've spent with you has felt like Valentine's Day. Hope to spend many more together. Hope you get a tan while watching Knott's Landing. Love Matt
Paul, Kees are red, violates are blue; the car hood
warns him, and the red brake pedal nods. Mr.
LARA,
I LOVE YOU
MUCHO BABY!!
MATTMAN
Peekie week, OH BUT DUDE, Happy Valentine's day! Love, SIR.
Peggy K. we love You, Brad, Steve, Jeff, Matt, Tim, Kevin, John, Mike, Carl, Guy
RDU you're fun to "throw a" with and also a fun
Prival Trivial Pursuit Family. Look forward to
the challenge.
❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️
You can take it easy now Don! Happy Valentine's Day Sweets I Love You, Christi
Rob- What can I say? it be great! I love you! Love, Sue, Venie. & Robbie.
❤️
Rocky, I hope this makes up for LAST Valentines Day. I love You, Mattle
❤️
Snookenock, you wry berry, berry much Happy Valentines Day! Love Always, Poo-Fee-Poo
❤️
Shame I'm so glad we met. I really have a great
friend we're together. Happy Valentine's Day!
*Love Day!*
❤
HEY, BRETTHAUER!
Donnie, baby,
Can't you guess
Who has been
Your little "$*!? pest?
Squeaky-Pride: Meet me in the La La Brahy.
Happy Valentine's Day! Love and only indoor
party.
Sugar Bee/Honey Lipse Your check are red, my sugar are blue, bees color to honey like, that cup is warm, not just your stinger. You warm love, not just your stinger. Yey, I guess I love you baby. S.N.
Oh, my dear
We've had such joy,
Since you became
Our favorite toy!
—The Gang
Steven (lovehugs), Happy Valentine's Day and
everything in between. "You love! I love you!
Forever yours, Cherie/Buchmeyer."
❤️❤️
Strongbant-Thanx for 8 great years. Although you never grew up, you love you (infinity) 1860 padlock. I threw away the key. Love ya Hel-buns. He gives the guys their valentine hearts are in the mail.
Steve, think of me and smile. Caroline.
Teresa S. Have a happy birthday! You deserve the best. Karen L.
Tily, This is 2 Valentine's Days together & counting on more. I LOVE YOU! Happy Valentine's Day!
❤️
all per PERMILAS members, Happy Valentine and
always. KOMPAR SELALI! R.Z.A.
Theodore — myTicky tedy. What wonderful memories we'll have! I love you to! ISTWAMYW
❤️
♥♥
To a lovely, caring woman. The past 13 months have been the best of my life. Love Past
To someone who feels enough love someone in deep keep a feeling a '好 fun! Valentine's day, 14. WINNERS!'
To the best mom around. J. Murphy—your pledge loves you. Happy Valentines!
Trixie, I love the way you shift my gears. Racer
♡
Von-Fox, Be my valentine, you awesome dude! Do you wanna run? ARF! Love, Christie.
W.C.Y. are boyfriend and best friend. I LOVE YOU-J.L.
315
♡
AKE ONE HUNDRED EIGHTY-ONE DAYS
and still吃货. On And. And Happy Valentine
Day!
Wise, Champagne and a hot bath tonight? Mr. Richini
RABE day under the sun, days under the clouds — A true story of loving each other. Love
Benoa, your teyed bear hugs, my teyed bear eyes.
Your teddy bear belys, my teddy bear cries. Let's
bear with each other, owe're, just bear with我
bear with I love you! I Love you! My Kanaan
Cit-Abay Joy
See Bowl: For once, there are no words: Duh, Vee Bee.
To the red-haired trainer: Hands belong in other hands; mine needs. You can, it ever be, to reach for your hand.
Shimpkins—Roses are red, the ice will be blue,
I'm taking my lover to skate the night through,
the night will pass by and the next too, but my love is forever, forever with you—Mr. Bubble.
SERVICES OFFERED.
WEIGHT LOVE NOW. 10-29 lbs. per month on Herbal products. As seen on T.V. Call 842-7066.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-8621
TYPING
MATH TUTOR - Bob Meers holds an M, in math from K U. where U02, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professional students in mathematics, at 4 pm. statistics, 86 pm for 40 min session. Call 849-9032.
1-3,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accom-
sure and affordable typing, Judy, B42-7945.
1-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional, WOORD
2-1 Dependable, Accurate, Professional, papers,
books, etc. Data Word 847108
1-1-1 TRIO WORD PROCESSING experienced,
1-1-2 TRIO WORD PROCESSING experienced,
reliable, reliable, job name accepted.
Call back: [call back code]
24-Hour Typing, 10th semester in Lawrence
Humans: Investigator, paper; Go to campus.
Computer: Typing, paper.
A-2 professional typing. Tumor papers, Theses.
A-3 professional typing. Using Ibm Insectic
I3. Reasonable. 843-2348.
A.L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, thesis, term papers.
948 86257 05 after 3: 50.
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing
and editing of PDFs. Some same day service
available. 444 Illinois, 843-6811.
Ace Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable,
friendly, Proofreading, corrections. Resumes,
term paper files, dissertations, 42-hour per-
session training. AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Process-
ing/Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics,
Document uploading. Free estimates.
791-118
Complimentary hair conditioner with all of our hair cuts with Paul Mitchell products. Tina, Donis, and Cathy. Ultimate, 14.E.8th,79-64771.
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAFFER — Typing Service.
DESCRIPTION also: standard cassette tape) 843-8877
www.hairpro.com
DISTRIBUTATION/ THEISES / LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and GENERAL ONE-DAY Service
available on short student papers (up to 30
papers) from Mommy's. Typing, 482-387-
before 9 p.m. Please.
Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs.
experience. Phone 442-2310 after 5:30; Burk.
WWW.SUITECH.COM
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing: Spelling/punctuation errors corrected; reasonable rates. Cassette transcription also 841-407.
Letter perfect papers and resumes WRITING LIFELINE. 841-3409.
QUALITY TYPING. Letters, these, disser-
tationally, applications, Spelling corrected.
Call 843-7914.
TYPING PLUS assistance with competition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resume. HAVE M.S. Degree. 814-6254.
THE WORD DOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147
EXPERIENCED TYPBFT. Term papers, theses.
HIRC Correcting Slecture I, to correct spelling.
HIRC Correcting Slecture II, to correct spelling.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word pro-
gramming, mancripts, resumes, theses, letter
forms.
WANTED
Desperate! ! need 2 K-State B-ball tickets 2/22
Call 749-5817
Female rominatee to share three bdm. house.
Very nice & quiet neighborhood. B42-83738.
Female to take over contract at Naisimh Hall
Feb. rent and meal • FREEL. CARE 102-1034
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share great brand-new apartment very close to campus. Microwave, W&D, dishwasher, $120/mo. Call 841-5515 anytime.
LOOKING TO GET OUT OF YOUR PRESENT
TO BE IN THE STARET. STAY THIS
WISHY TAINLY KU! SUITED to
smoking mankole move in an son as possible.
wout out a debt $118 Call Paul,
Mr. Smith.
For summer and/or fall: five roommates(s) for
a bedroom, $840 plus 1/3 utility.
Lazer 744-901-2650
WANTED: COMPUTER for wordprocessing working or not. Need IBM compatible, dual disc drive, monitor. Will consider printer or other than IBM formats. Call 789-2196.
Roommate needed! Duplex, Rent $125 / 1/8
unitages W/D, Cable A/C, large with
mountain view.
ROOMMATE to 2 Br. Apartment: $125.00
1/2 units / 1/8 floors. Fully furnished. On bus route.
wanted: Basketball tickets for the K-State game on Feb. 22. Please call 841-6362.
WANTED male roommate to share deluxe apart-
ment with campus. $100/mo. No deposit re-
quirement.
Wanted: Clean, responsible roommate. 1 bedroom in a BR at Strytrat $145/mo. plus 1/2 bedroom in a BR immediately. Dishwashers, balcony, pool & tennis in basketball courts. Call 841-7497. Keep trying!
Get Something Going!
Present BURGE BANDSTAND
Make the cash flow.
Get business back in the black by increasing sales with a hard-work classified ad. Many people shop classified daily and associate it with quality, value, and the prestige among the prefibre in classified. Make the cash flow in today. Place a classified ad.
Kansas Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
FREE FRIDAY DANCE CONGERTS AT THE BURGE UNION • 9 P.M.
country-western-rock-n-roll-bop
HOMESTEAD GRAYS
HOMESTEAD GRAYS
FREE! This Friday
FEB. 14
DANCE!!
Thompson-Crawley
Sub & Stuff
comprehensive
520 E. 22nd Terrace 841-5212
SAVE AT IMPORTS + DOMESTICS EXOTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205
Overland Park, KS / 913-345-1400
KWALITY COMICS
SCIENCE FICTION
COMIC BOOKS • GAMES
1111 Massachusetts 843-7239
yello sub DELIVERS 841-3268
FURNITURE RENTAL
VCR w/2 movies-$9.66
(overnight Mon-Fri)
Store Hours:
Mon-Sat: 9:30-9 /Sun: 1-5
SMITTY'S TV
1447 W 23rd 842-5751
comprehensive health associates
• free pregnancy tests
• abortion services/counseling
• gynecology
• contraception
FIND IT-In the Kansan Classifieds
Drive-thru open until 2 a.m.
1618 W. 23rd St.
PIZZA Shoppe
pub
PIZZA BATEN WITH YE FRIEDERS!
842-0600
6th & Kasold
Westridne Shopping Center
A boy playing with a toy.
l love at first bite . . .
Meal for 2
single topping
PIZZA
2 SALADS
2 PEPSI'S
dine in only
$595
plus tax
❤
DELIVERED
2 Toppings $800
32 oz. Pepsi
additional toppings .90
❤
We still have space available...
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
SPRING BREAK '86
FIESTA ISLES
5701 PADRE BLVD. P.O. BOX 3079
CALL DIRECT FOR INFORMATION
(512) 761-4913
OLEANDER HOTEL
3913 PADRE BLVD.
CALL DIRECT FOR INFORMATION
(512) 761-7831
Romance on the Hill
Feb 14
Video Tape Rental
2 Rentals for the price of one! Daily rental $2.50 for 2 tapes. Weekend rental $3.00 for two tapes. Not valid with free rental coupons. Kansas Union store only.
Video Club Membership
Membership 1/2 off! Only $5.00 will give you 4 free tape rentals, 10% off new and used movie purchases,and 10% off blank video tape purchases. Kansas Union store only.
Photo Processing
2 rolls processed for the price of one! C-41 color print processing on 110,126,135 or disk film.
20% off Red Items
Twenty percent off all red caps, sweatshirts, t-shirts, spiral notebooks, 3 ring binders and red pens.
KU
KU Bookstores
Kansas Union Burge Union
12
14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 14, 1986
Sports Briefs
Track team to travel to Nebraska for meet
The KU men's and women's track teams will travel to Lincoln, Neb. tomorrow to compete against Nebraska and Colorado in the Nebraska Triangular.
Bob Timmons, KU head men's track coach, said yesterday that Nebraska and Iowa State were the favorites to win this season's Big Eight Conference meet Feb. 28-March 1. Nebraska won the championship last year. Kansas tied with Oklahoma to take sixth place.
Carla Coffey, KU head women's track coach, also said Nebraska was the team to beat in the Big Eight meet.
Coffey will send pentathletes Ann O'Connor, Jaci Tyma and Rosie Wadman to the United States-Canada TAC dual meet in Amarillo, Texas.
Plavoffs scheduled
Intramural basketball playoffs for Men's Independent Recreation A, Greek Rec A, Residential Rec A and Women's Rec A begin Feb. 17 at Robinson Center. Trophy League play for men and women is scheduled to begin Feb. 23. Teams should check the bulletin boards outside 208 Robinson to see when they play.
Balboni wins case
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Slugger Steve Balboni, who hit a club record 36 home runs for the Kansas City Royals last season, won his salary arbitration case, the American League baseball club announced today.
Jey Coff, assistant director of public relations for the team, said the Royals got word from Chicago, where the case was arbitrated, that Balboni had been awarded the $525,000 salary he requested.
From staff and wire reports.
Sports
MINORITIES IN THE LAW
Benjamin Franklin, Bankruptcy Court, District of Kansas. James Tippin, Attorney. City of Wichita. Oliver Lee Jr., Attorney. Wichita.
A bridge between community and chaos
Sat., Feb. 15 Kansas Union, Big Eight Rm.
5:00-5:50 Nontraditional Careers
4:00-4:50 Taxation Seminar
3:00-3:50 Bankruptcy Seminar
Sat., Feb. 15 Kansas Union, Big Eight Rm.
Julian Bond, State Senator, Georgia
7:00 Keynote Address
Hoch Auditorium
Sponsored by Black American Law Student Assoc.
International Performing Arts Committee presents
presents
in
Senor Ricardo Talesnik
EN CAMISETA, a one-man show (in Spanish)
Swarthout Recital Hall, 8 P.M, 19 Feb.
Tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office:
Students, $3.00 General Public, $4.00
SPECIAL PRICE SPECIAL PURCHASE
TWIN BAR
We have made a very special purchase of the TUNTURI rowing machine. For a limited time we can offer this excellent machine for only 189.95 fully assembled Delivery available Quantities limited.
TRINX
---
Tunturi Rowing
Machine from only
18995 Reg. 234.95
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 841 6642
LAWRENCE BATTERYCO.
903 N. 2nd 7 to 8 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. 350 AMP ... $ 36.95
4 YR. 410 AMP... $39.95
5 YR. SUPER 650 AMP . . . $ 56.95
5 YR. 500 AMP... $44.95
--interest is required. For more information
W/EX to Fit Most Cars and Lt. Trucks
Ten Minute Free Installations—Free System Check
SUA
--interest is required. For more information
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Student Union Activities is planning an exciting year full of concerts, speakers, movies, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas...
Valentine's Day
President (the following 4 applications due Feb.17) Vice-President Secretary
wants your help!
Treasurer (the following 8 applications due Feb.20) Special Events SUA Travel Outdoor Reception
We need your help in these programs.
Sweetheart Parfait
Outdoor Recreation Indoor Recreation
only $ .99
Experience is NOT a necessity, however,
choice of:
Public Relations Film
stop by the SUA Office, Level 1, Kansas
Union, or call 864-3477
The Student Assistance Center
475 SIRONS ROAD
STC
AT 123-456-7890
hot caramel nut
2120 West Ninth
IT'S IMPOLTE TO TELL A FRIEND HE'S DRINKING TOO MUCH.
Maybe if we weren't all so "polite", we wouldn't have so many friends with drinking problems.
peanut parfait
traditional strawberries
Forums Fine Arts
Drinking Myth of the Week
stop by the US Office.
Union, or call 864-3477.
CITY OF HAMBURG
Offer Good Through Sun. Feb. 16th
comes with 2 spoons
---
Bucky's
3120 8420 W.6th 1200 Whistlers Walk
3120 842-
W. 6th 1200
Whistlers
Walk
Restaurant
Steak Dinner For 2
only $10.99
includes: choice of
potato, salad & drink
Valentine's
Day
Special!
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Shopping Center
Any Triple Pizzas
PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
$200 Off
PIZZA SHUTTLE FART - FREE DELIVERY
NAME ___
ADDRESS : ___
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE $100 Off
FAST + FREE DELIVERY
Any Double Pizzas
EXPIRES 06-06-86
842-1212 Delivery During Lunch Also
842-1212
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
DATE ___
EXPIRES 08-06-86
PIZZA SHUTTLE $100 Off
FAST - FREE DELIVERY
Any Lunch
Pizza
11a.m.-4p.m.
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FABT • FREE
DELIVERY
NAME ___
842-1212
ADDRESS
EXPIRES 06-06-86
S.A.M.S.
PARTY #3
Battle
In Conjunction With
7th Heaven
TV-30
Swatch
MTV
KLZR-106
It's Tonight!
CONTRESTANT KU's own Dan Aykroyd
Buy MTV t-shirts, buttons and hats to help bush M.S.
MTV
KU's own Dan Aykroyd is an M.S. Buster!
Vote for your favorite look-a-like and help bust M.S.
Fri., Feb. 14 8:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Tickets $3 may be purchased at SUA or from any KU look-a-like
swatch
M.S.
It's Tonight!
The Hawklet will be open for your drinking pleasure!
STUDENTS AGAINST MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
All proceeds donated by participating bands
Bands
The Fanatix
The Breakers
Sons of Liberty
Absolute Ceiling
All of the Above
Altered Media
Pariah
MS
We're Out To Tie Up & Bust M.S.
Celebrity benefit Look-alikes compete to raise money for MS research. See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Mild Details page 3.
MONDAY, FEB. 17, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 98 (USPS 650-640)
Saturday evening, 12:30pm, in the elegant gardens of The Grand Hall. Enjoy a wonderful dinner and cocktail at the hotel's elegant dining hall, surrounded by beautiful floral arrangements and fine wines. Don't miss the chance to enjoy a fabulous evening with friends and family. Call 518-467-9900 for more information.
Wilfredo Lee/KANSAN
Mel Garrett Jr. tucks in the blankets around Tim Bowles, Fost Moorgan, Colo., senior, left Shelly Holst, Olathe junior, and Robin and Tom Harmon, 227 N. 4th and went to the Chi Omega fountain and back.
Riders revive old-fashioned romance
By Sandra Crider
Staff writer
Stepping into Mel Garrett Jr.'s old-fashioned carriage on a starry Valentine's Day evening was like stepping
Monday Morning
into a fairy tale, especially for two KU students.
Sheeren Khani, Lake Forest, IL
sohomore, said she thought she was
dreaming when Paul Barter,
Shawnee junior, handed her a velvet-covered box containing a diamond solitaire engagement ring while riding in the carriage down Jayhawk Boulevard.
"It was so romantic, it was like a dream come true," Khani said yesterday. "I'd always dreamed something like that would happen, and it did."
The Kansas Union sponsored Gar
rett's carriage as a part of its "Romance on the Hill" Valentine's Day festivities.
Barter said he had planned to propose to Khani on Valentine's Day. When he heard about the carriage rides, he knew that was the best place.
The horse-drawn carriage, a replica of an early 1800s model, seats four passengers.
He arranged with Gene Wee, Student Union Activities' program adviser, to have the carriage to themselves for their eventful ride.
The couple said they waited for an hour to ride in the carriage. Khani said, "I asked him, 'Do you really want to go on this ride? It really doesn't matter to me.'"
Barter said he replied, "No. we're going to go on this ride even if we
See CARRIAGE, p. 5, col. 1
Co-workers, Red Cross lend hand
Alumni Center worker faces crises
By Tim Hrenchir
Staff writer
Staff writer
Two weeks ago, Rosemary Beers was told she had cancer of the colon. Then, a fire Thursday left Beers and her family homeless.
But Beers once again has a positive outlook on life, thanks to her coworkers at Adams Alumni Center and the efforts of the American Red Cross.
Fire destroyed the house at 1217 Kentucky St., the first floor of which was rented to Beers, her husband
Atan and their children Chad, 16, and Kevin, 13. Beers said Friday that she thought only a small part of their possessions were insured.
"It's all kind of sickening," she said. "You never realize what you have until you don't have it anwher."
The Douglas County chapter of the American Red Cross spent about $1,500 to move the family to another house, Jo Byers, chapter director, said.
Bvers said the Red Cross paid for a
And Beers' co-workers at the Alumni Center collected money and donated clothes, furniture, utensils and other necessities to the family. Beers works as a custodian attendant at the Alumni Center.
Student employees of the Learned Club in the Alumni Center donated their tips to raise money for a fund for the family.
Debbie Drummet, receptionist at the Alumni Center, estimated that
$650 had been raised for the Beers family.
Beers has another obstacle to overcome. On Wednesday she will undergo surgery, but she says she's confident she'll beat the cancer.
"I'll be okay," she said. "The cancer part of it doesn't really bother me, but I am apprehensive about the surgery."
Donations may be made to the Rosemary Beers fund at Lawrence National Bank and sent in care of Lori Amble.
United Press International
Radio says orders for flight dropped
PARIS — Police were ordered to put deposed Haitian President Jean-Claude Duvalier on a plane to the United States yesterday but the plan was canceled at the last minute, government-owned Radio France International said.
Officials at Charles de Gaule Airport in Paris confirmed that Duvalier, his wife and two children were booked on Air France flight 077, which left France at midday yesterday and arrived in New York yesterday afternoon.
A report on French government-owned television said Duvalier — who had received a clear message from U.S. officials that he was unwanted as "an undesirable alien" — did not leave his temporary residence at a posh lakeside hotel in the village of Talliores in the French Alps.
The reports said Duvalier was unaware of the plan.
Radio France International, quoting police sources in Talloires, said police were instructed to wake Duvalier early yesterday and put him on a plane to Paris, but the orders were canceled at the last minute.
They said Duvalier, whose family had ruled Haiti for three decades,
was to take a government plane to Paris to catch the New York flight
The foreign ministry and the U.S. Embassy denied knowledge of the plan and said they were not aware Duvalier was booked on the flight.
Airport officials said the booking was canceled shortly before the plane took off on schedule for New York.
An Air France spokesman in New York also acknowledged that a reservation had been made in Duvalier's name.
France agreed to accept Duvalier for eight days when he filed Haiti Feb. 7 amid widespread anti-government protests. Efforts to find a home for him have centered on French-speaking countries. Gabon, Cameroon, Morocco and Portuguese-speaking Brazil have said they would not accept him.
English-speaking Liberia in West Africa said it would consider taking Duvalier if requested.
Prime Minister Laurent Fabius said Saturday that Duvalier was unwelcome in France and that Foreign Minister Roland Dumas told U.S. officials that France would accept him only temporarily and if no solution were found, he would return to the United States.
See HAITI, p. 5, col. 2
ASK takes no stand on Washburn issue
Staff writer
By Piper Scholfield
The Associated Students of Kansas decided last night not to take a stand on Washburn University's request for admittance into the Board of Regents system.
The University of Kansas was host to the ASK legislative assembly and was represented by a full delegation of 24 students.
ASK is a lobbying group that represents the students of the Regents schools and Washburn University.
Kris Kurtenbach, KU's ASK director, said it was the first time in many years KU had had that many representatives at a legislative assembly.
wasburn representatives Mark Groves and Dennis Rodenbaugh submitted a request to the ASK legislative assembly asking for Washburn's admittance into the Regents system.
Tim Henderson, ASK representative and Student Senate treasurer, opposed the admittance and compared Washburn to an abandoned baby.
He said the city of Topeka founded the university and was now asking the state to finance it.
"What we're being asked tonight is to accept a screw-up," Henderson said.
Kurtenbach said that because 70 percent of Washburn's students were from Shawnee county, the county, not the Regents system, should support the school.
Kurtenbach said the KU delegation thought that by not opposing the admittance of Washburn, the ASK assembly approved the proposal.
David Epstein, student body president, said the possibility of Washburn's entering the Regents system was dangerous to KU because financing was already inadequate for Regents schools.
The schools in the Regents system are KU, Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburgh State University, Wichita State University and Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
Blockades help cabs turn profit
Bv Leslie Hirschbach
Staff writer
The Lawrence Police Department did the City Cab Company a big favor Saturday night by setting up roadblocks to deter drunk drivers and to catch people with suspended driver's licenses.
Mark Warren, police department officer, said the roadblocks were set up mainly to check for expired, suspended, or revoked driver's licenses. Police were also looking for drunk drivers or automobiles with defects.
Many college students who had been at bars near the roadblocks decided to take the safe route home - in a cab, Buck Shadden, dispatcher for the cab company, said.
Roadblocks were set up at 23rd and Massachusetts streets, the 900 block of New Hampshire Street and on the Kansas River bridge.
Kohlman sudden said the roadblock moved periodically from location to location, and the cab company kept track of it.
City Cab, 538 W. 2 St., usually received little business from KU students, he said. Saturday night was an exception.
"Business increased about 40 percent." he said.
Most KU customers were going to or from Ichabod's tavern, N. Third St., is near the roadblock on
See TAXI, p. 5, col. 3
Georgia senator speaks his mind
By Brian Kaberline
Through the years, Julian Bond has had plenty of practice at speaking his mind.
By Bhan Kaberinti
That experience showed Saturday night when Bond told an audience at the University of Kansas that the civil rights movement was in trouble and called President Reagan an "amiable incompetent."
Bond, a civil rights and political leader, spoke to about 200 people in Hoch Auditorium as a part of Minorities in Law Day.
"Although black Americans have won some considerable accomplishments in the years since Dr. King died," Bond said, referring to the Rev. Martin Luther King, "the movement he led on yesterday now appears to be in some disarray, and the gains he can claim some credit for having helped achieve, now seem in imminent danger of being destroyed."
Bond, a Georgia senator, recalled the accomplishments of the early civil rights movement. He said the movement seemed to be in trouble recently.
The speech was sponsored by the Black American Law Students Association, the Student Senate and the University Lecture Series.
Bond said the United States had changed since the early days of the civil rights movement. Some changes have slowed or reversed
the progress of the movement.
Bond said the Reagan administration had hurt the movement by cutting funds to civil rights agencies and attempting to ease rules about affirmative action hiring.
He said the 1984 election "reinstalled the evil empire and re-elected an amiable incompetent."
"We've come from a president born in Texas who had the courage to stand up for civil rights," he said, "to a president born in the land of Lincoln who has opposed every piece of civil rights legislation put forward in the last half of the 20th century."
The administration seems to want to take the U.S. government out of the business of enforcing equal opportunity, he said.
People must begin to work together again to get the country back on the road to equality, he said. People must remember that they move forward fastest when they move together, he said.
The top priority for the next few years should be to rebuild the support for civil rights that existed in the past. Bond said.
Bond compared the Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in South Africa to buying Hitler bonds.
"Suppose I stood up here and
See BOND, p. 5, col. 3
Wilfredo Lee/KANSAN
103
Julian Bond, Georgia state senator, gestured during his speech to about 200 people Saturday night in Hoch Auditorium.
Car slides down hill into hall
Staff writer
Rv Tim Hrenchir
An automobile slid backward down a hill and smashed into the southwest corner of Sellars Scholarship Hall early Saturday.
The driver fled the scene of the 19-45 a.m. accident.
Tire marks indicated that the car had been driven along a sidewalk in front of Sellars. The car was then turned uphill off the sidewalk, but slid backward over some bushes and crashed into the hall.
The car got onto the sidewalk from a small parking lot between Sellards and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house. Power Place.
Brenda Gordon, Carbondale sophomore, said she asked the driver if he was OK.
She said he answered, "No. I'm stuck."
"Then he just got up and staggered away," said Carolyn Lee, Plano, Texas, junior.
Residents told the driver they were going to call KU police.
The car was later towed away.
Rhonda Keylon, Tonganoxie freshman, said she was talking to Gordon and Lee when one of them looked out the window and said,
"Hey, look, there's a guy driving around in the grass."
Keylon said, "He put it in reverse
See ACCIDENT, p. 5, col. 5
2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Feb. 17, 1986
Nation/World
News Briefs
Soviet ship sinks;
sailor thought dead
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A Soviet cruise ship carrying more than 700 passengers and crew struck rocks and sank in stormy seas yesterday. Officials reported that a Soviet sailor was presumed dead.
Chief Police Inspector Owen Dowse today said all others aboard the 20,000-ton Mikhail Lermontov were saved. The first reports had said 34 people were missing.
100 feared drowned
Ten people were hospitalized in Wellington with minor injuries, Dowse said.
DHAKA, Bangladesh — A crowded bus being transported across the Buringaga River on a ferry yesterday plunged through the ferry's railing. More than 100 people were believed drowned and 11 bodies were recovered, officials said.
The bus was on the way to the capital, Dhaka, from Maway, about 40 miles away. About 100 people were inside the bus and about 20 on the roof when it slipped through the railing, witnesses said.
University to divest
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Brown University officials voted Saturday for limited, phased divestment by next February of their stocks in U.S. companies that do business in South Africa.
The measure bases Brown's investment policy on the extent to which companies adhere to the Sullivan Principles, which mandate non-segregation and equal pay for South African employees of U.S. companies.
Plane called a waste
WASHINGTON — Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., awarded his golden fleece to the Air Force yesterday for what he calls a waste of taxpayers' money to specialize equip a Strategic Air Command plane for Air Force officials.
Proxmire said the SAC fleet in cluded a converted KC-135 tanker used to fly officials in high style. Last year the plane cost $600,536 to operate and two-thirds of that time was spent ferrying top Air Force officers, he said.
From Kansan wires.
The Associated Press
Nonviolent protests called for in Manila
MANILA, Philippines — Corazon Aquino yesterday called for nonviolent protests against newly reelected President Ferdinand E. Marcos, who declared he would not be driven out.
Marcos, president for 20 years, also announced yesterday the resignation of his most powerful military commander, Gen. Fabian C. Ver
A day after the National Assembly declared Marcos the winner of an election marked by charges of fraud and terrorism, more than half a million Filipinos joined Aquino in a downtown park rally. The crowd was much bigger than any that had gathered in the campaign leading to the Feb. 7 presidential election.
Aquino called for strikes and school shutdowns on the day after
Marcos' Feb. 26 inauguration for a new six-year term, and urged a boycott of banks and newspapers owned by Marcos' "cronies."
"Although unarmed, I feel like the young boy David prepared to face the giant Goliath," she said. "If Goliath refuses to yield, we shall escalate our nonviolent struggle."
Marcos again rejected charges that he won the election through fraud.
"I am the president. They are not going to drive me out. The people are behind me," he said.
Marcos also announced that he had accepted Ver's resignation, but he said Ver would remain available as a consultant.
Constabulatory Chief Lt. Gen. Fidel V. Ramos was appointed interim chief of staff, Marcos said.
Ver, 66, was charged in the August
1983 assassination of Aquino's hus-
tle.
band, opposition leader Benigno Aquino, court later acquitted him for embezzlement.
U. S. officials, concerned about a growing communist insurgency in the Phillipines, saw Ver as a hindrance to military reforms.
Ver's resignation was announced a day before Marcos, Aquino, and other Filipino leaders were to meet with Philibus Hipab, a special envoy sent by President Reagan to observe the aftermath of the divisive election.
"I am convinced that if there was any fraud, it may have been committed by the lower levels and was not authorized by the upper leadership," Marcos said. "Probably that might also be true about the opposition."
Asked to comment on Reagan's statement that his victory over Aquino was marked by fraud, Marcos said Reagan was misinformed.
Rebel leader warns U.S. against Philippines battle
United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — A communist rebel leader warned that the Philippines would become an American graveyard if U.S. military advisers helped to fight the growing communist insurgency.
Antonio Zumel, 53, a leader of the outlawed Communist Party of the Philippines, said direct aggression between rebels and U.S. military advisers was becoming increasingly possible.
"We have information that there are special operations forces in the
American bases even now," Zumel said.
He referred to a recent report that Washington planned to send advisers to train soldiers.
U. S. military intervention would mean the unjust shedding of Filipino blood," Zumel said. "For many well-meaning American boys, unfortunately, our country will be a graveyard for them as well."
Zumel said it was not the policy of the 16,000-strong communist New Peoples Army to attack the approximately 20,000 U.S. servicemen in the Philippines.
Tampering possible in Tvlenol poisoning
United Press International
NEW YORK — Investigators yesterday added the possibility of tampering in the distribution of Tylenol to theories of how two bottles of Tylenol were poisoned, killing one woman.
One official called for a ban on all drugs in capsule form to prevent similar incidents.
"It's happened twice. We don't learn from history only because people are dumb." Andrew O'Rourke, a Westchester County, N.Y., executive, said on ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley."
He called for a ban on all capsules nationwide.
Sales of Tylenol capsules have been banned in 18 states, Washington, D.C., and in Italy since Diane Elsroth, 23, of Westchester County, took two Extra-Strength capsules containing cyanide. She died Feb. 8 at her boyfriend's home in Yonkers, N.Y.
Another 15 states have advised against selling the product.
distribution, storage and employee records were being reviewed as part of the investigation.
Officials announced last Thursday that a second poisoned bottle was found in a store near the Bronxville A&P where the first was bought. The seals on both bottles were unbroken. Since then, tens of thousands of Tylenol capsules have been tested with no more poisonings discovered.
The Food and Drug Administration has said all tests and facts to date seemed to rule out factory tampering, but New York authorities said it was possible.
Johnson & Johnson, makers of Tylenol, and authorities said
The FDA also said the cyanide could have been put in the capsules several months ago.
Bruce Bendish, a Westchester County prosecutor, said that New York authorities this week would visit the Fort Washington, Pa., plant where the bottle that killed Elseth was produced. The other poisoned bottle came from a plant in Puerto Rico.
O'Rourke, appearing on the ABC show with Johnson & Johnson Chairman James Burke and FDA Commissioner Frank Young, called for a three-part plan to deal with the problem.
He said all capsules should be banned nationwide unless a medical reason could be shown to keep them.
Rail wrecks shake Canada
Falling that, O'Rourke said, pharmacists should sell them behind counters or the capsules be made tamper-resistant.
Burke said putting Tylenol behind counters would limit public access to it
Banning capsules is possible and efforts to make capsules tamperresistant are under way, he said.
United Press International
OTTWAA - The Canadian government stepped up safety inspections after the worst series of train wrecks in that country's history.
Transport Minister Donald Mazankowski had an emergency meeting with railway executives Saturday after a transcontinental train with about 250 passengers collided with a freight train in Quebec, injuring 42 people.
One of the cars was leaking the poisonous chemical, but the leak was under control and posed no threat, officials said.
In a second rail accident late Saturday, 17 cars of a freight train derailed at Fort Langely, 40 miles east of Vancouver. Officials said nine of the cars were carrying highly volatile ethylene dichloride.
The wrecks were Canada's third and fourth bad accidents in a week — the worst occurring Feb. 8 when a nine-car train slammed head-on into a 114-car train near Hinton, Alberta, killing 35 people.
Prime Minister Brian Muruloney ordered a rare judicial inquiry into that crash, which authorities blamed on human error.
Mazankowski told reporters that the railways would immediately launch a safety campaign among engineers, linemen, dispatchers and other operating personnel to ensure
safety procedures were understood and followed.
The Canadian Transport Commission said it would increase inspections of operating practices. Rail companies were ordered to closely monitor crew performance.
"We are looking at all aspects related to the operation of the railroad system. Human and mechanical elements will be closely monitored." Mazankowski said.
Armand Passaretti, head of a union representing 15,000 railway workers, said the campaign would accomplish little. The union demanded an inquiry two weeks ago into railroad safety but received no government response, he said.
NASA reorganizes investigation
United Press International
WASHINGTON — NASA has reorganized its upper tier of managers in the wake of the Challenger disaster and will comply with a directive to remove key project officials from its own investigation of the tragedy, a spokesman said yesterday.
Former secretary of state William Rogers, chairman of the presidential commission investigating the shuttle accident, asked acting NASA administrator William Graham to bar any officials involved in the decision to launch Challenger Jan. 28 from the NASA investigation.
The request was made Saturday, a commission spokesman said, because the commission's investigation suspects that the decision-making process may have been flawed.
A source close to the commission said Rogers made the request because the commissioners wanted NASA investigators to avoid any conflict of interest or the appearance of one.
NASA's internal investigation into the accident was led by Jesse Moore, the associate administrator in charge of the shuttle program and the person with ultimate responsibility for the decision to launch
Challenger. Other members of the NASA task force included managers involved in clearing the ship for flight.
"People shouldn't be put into the very difficult position of having to run an investigation which ultimately may challenge the decisions they made," said the source who asked not to be identified.
Vice chairman Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, Rogers and Moore are to testify tomorrow afternoon at a Senate subcommittee hearing that is expected to address some of the panel's concerns.
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Campus/Area
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3
News Briefs
Professors to receive awards for teaching
Five KU professors will receive the Outstanding Educators Award as part of this week's activities for National Mortar Board Week.
Maria Swall, Lawrence senior and president of the Torch chapter of the National Senior Honor Society, said the recipients were Corinne Anderson, professor of French and Italian; Zuohuang Chen, associate professor of orchestra and director of the KU orchestra; Ellen Gold, associate professor of communication studies; Del Shankel, professor of microbiology and acting vice chancellor for academic affairs; and Norman Yetman, professor of American studies and sociology.
! "Members nominate professors and then say why they nominated them." Swall said. "Members then vote by what is said about each professor."
Windows shot out
At least 15 reports of windows in cars and houses shot out by vanals came to Lawrence police Saturday night.
Most of the reports were of car windows on the drivers' sides shot with either BB or pellet guns, police said. Several house windows also were shot. The vandalism was not confined to any one neighborhood.
The vandalism apparently started sometime after 7:30 p.m., but most of the incidents occurred after 9 p.m., according to police reports.
Police said they had no suspects. Most victims did not hear the vandals, police said, but found the damage after going to their cars.
Police estimated the cost of the damage to the vehicles to be $70 to $150 each. Damage estimates for the house windows were $30 to $50 each.
Student hit by car
A KU freshman suffered a broken ankle Friday evening when he was struck by a car in Roeland Park, the student's brother said yesterday.
Mark Vusich, 21, of 3204 W. 22nd St., was walking with a friend when they were hit by the car at 10:25 p.m., said Joe Vusich. He said his brother's friend suffered a broken leg.
Joe Vusch said his brother had been visiting their father's Fairway home. He said Mark was to undergo surgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Weather
Morning cloudiness will give way to mostly sunny skies this afternoon with a high temperature of about 50. The winds will be southerly at 5 to 15 mph. Skies are expected to remain fair through tomorrow.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, the intent of a bill before the Kansas Senate was incorrectly reported in Friday's Kansan. The bill would fade out the number of Kansas Medical Scholarships, which require recipients to practice in Kansas towns that need medical personnel.
Start Write
Spring enrollment at the University of Kansas has hit an all-time high, according to 20th-day enrollment figures released Friday.
KU's spring enrollment reaches new peak
From staff and wire reports.
Staff writer
Bv Lori Poison
Spring enrollment for the Lawrence campus, the College of Health Sciences and off-campus classes is 25,932 students, an increase of 495 over last spring's enrollment.
Figures represent the number of students enrolled as of Tuesday.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said the enrollment figures signified a continued confidence in the University's faculty and resources.
"It's a reflection upon the quality of our academic programs," he said.
Enrollment in Health Sciences increased by 109 students from 2,260 last spring to 2,369 this year.
experiments by
Enrollment at the Lawrence campus is
23,563, an increase of 386 over last year's spring
enrollment of 23,177.
"There are many state universities which are experiencing major enrollment drops."
The full-time equivalent enrollment for the Lawrence campus and off-campus classes also increased by 385, from 20,568 last spring to 20,953 this year.
The FTE is calculated by dividing the total number of credit hours in which students are enrolled by the average full-time course load.
Aided by the average course load for undergraduates
Budig said the enrollment increase would cause some financial problems for the University.
is 15 hours. The average for law students is 12 hours and the average for graduate students is nine hours.
The Kansas Legislature approves the budgets for the state universities based on enrollment projections made the previous year.
The University has collected $804,722 in excess fees during the 1985-86 academic year because of enrollment increases. In order to spend that money, the University must have special approval from the Legislature.
"It is apparent that we must have early
release of surplus student fees by the Legislature to assure needed quality at the University," Budig said. "Our significant enrollment increase necessitates hikes in funding for basic areas."
The University is diverting funds from academic programs to help pay for the additional instructors and services needed to absorb the enrollment increase.
William Kelly, acting dean of educational services, said the administration had been expecting an enrollment increase, but there was no way of telling whether the trend would continue over the next few semesters.
"We have to look at enrollment one semester at a time," he said.
SAMS fires shot at MS at Battle of the Bands
By Monique O'Donnell
Staff writer
Since they kicked off their campaign in January, KU's Students Against Multiple Sclerosis have found a way to raise money and have fun at the same time.
Friday's Battle of the Bands was the second event in SAMS' campaign to raise money for MS research. Six bands from Lawrence and Topeka rocked the Kansas Union Ballroom for an audience of about 500.
During the intermissions, contestants impersonating celebrities went on stage to ask the audience to vote for them. Members of the audience received three vote cards when they paid the $3 cover charge.
The first event was the kick-off party on Feb. 6. At the final party on Feb. 22, the winner of the celebrity look-a-like competition will be determined. The prize is a paid vacation to the Bahamas during spring break.
The contestants recruited local sponsors to donate money to their campaigns. The money raised will go to the National Multiple Sclerosis Society for research.
Absolute Ceiling, one of the six bands that played at the event, won a recording session at the Ramona Recording Studio, 646 Locust St.
The bands were judged by a panel of SAMS members based on how original and danceable their music was. Other bands competing were Absolute Ceiling, Altere I Media, The Fanatix, Sons of Liberty, Pariah and All of the Above.
Steve Vogel, president of KU SAMS, said the fund-raising events were intended to be fun and not bring in the negative connotations associated with disease.
The KU SAMS has more contestants than any of the 149 other universities participating in the fund drive. Vogel said. The university that
raises the most money will get a free concert sponsored by MTV now call
Harlan Harper, Topeka freshman and member of SAMS, said his mother was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis two years ago.
Harper said he joined SAMS because he thought members were sincere in their efforts to help. SAMS, he said, was raising the public's awareness of the disease.
"It may be different than actually going out and working in a hospital and personally contributing through your physical work," Harper said. "But it's hard to survive when you're just working for a cause."
John Hochschieid, Topeka senior and a contestant in the look-alike contest, said he thought SAMS had used all resources needed to create incentive for the fund-raising events. Offering the trip to the contestants and the free recording session to the bands, he said, was a good way to achieve results.
"I am one of the peons in this whole thing, motivated primarily by 'Lets win a trip,'" Hochscheid said. "I'm socially conscious, but not necessarily socially active."
Lon Freeman, Tonganoxie junior and coordinator of the Battle of the Bands, said he didn't know whether most people in SAMS were altruistic in the beginning. But since the group started, people had put a lot of time and effort into scheduling and organizing the events.
Freeman said he thought there were a lot of people in SAMS who now were participating for the cause.
"Benefits are kind of trendy, but it's a good trend." Freeman said
Since November 1984, when Britain's Band Aid released a single to aid Africa's starving, many musicians and interest groups have engaged in fund-raising benefits.
BEST OF
Dressed as the Go-Go's, Carrie Purcell, Overland Park sophomore, left, and Jessica Potueck, Wellington sophomore, dance to the music of the Sons of Liberty. They were at the Kansas Union Friday night for the Battle of the Bands, sponsored by Students Against Multiple Sclerosis.
M'Liss Bullock/KANSAN
Phase-out may begin
Bill would cut scholarships to future med students
By Mark Siebert
Staff writer
A scholarship program aimed at increasing the number of doctors practicing in small Kansas towns may be phased out, to the dismay of some students in the program.
Greg Horton, Arlington first-year medical student, said he thought the elimination of the program was a travesty.
A bill introduced into the Kansas Legislature last week would reduce the number of scholarships in the Kansas Medical Scholarship Program from 50 to 25 for the next two academic years. The scholarships would be eliminated after the 1987-88 school year.
No current medical students would lose their scholarships, but later classes would not have the scholarship program as an option.
Overland Park, who introduced the bill, said the scholarship program was set up in 1979 to help fill a shortage of physicians in Kansas.
"There's a lot of evidence that we have plenty of doctors in Kansas."
"If they are trying to do this to remedy a glut." Horton said. "I think
State Sen. Jack Walker, R-
'There's a lot of evidence that we have plenty of doctors in Kansas. It's getting a little difficult to find a place to practice.'
Jack Walker
R-Overland Park
Walker said. "It's getting a little difficult to find a place to practice."
Walker said the program was not designed to be a loan program for medical students.
they're going about it wrong.
Horton said he had a Kansas Medical scholarship and probably wouldn't have been able to attend school without it.
Kathy Tawadros, president of the KU Pre-Med Club, said the end of the scholarship program would hurt a few students.
"They should cut the number of people coming in and get the smartest people instead of the richest ones."
But the University of Kansas Medical Center has a good financial aid program and there are other financial options to take.
Walker said the state began to feel the effects of the program in 1983, when the first class that was offered the scholarships graduated. The state will benefit from the program until 1992, he said, when the last class that receives the scholarships graduates.
The proposed bill would require students who accept the scholarship next year to practice in a Kansas city with a population less than 7,500. Cities in Johnson, Sedgwick, Shawnee and Wyandotte counties would not be eligible.
A student who accepted a scholarship before the 1985-86 academic year would be required to set up full-time practice in a part of the state that lacks the student's specialty.
If the student decided not to enter full-time practice in the designated area, he or she would have to pay back the scholarship.
The bill would set at 10 percent the interest rate on paying back the scholarships.
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4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
V1
Monday, Feb. 17, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wasted youth
"There's no place like home," unfortunately doesn't hold true for most of Kansas' brightest young men and women according to a newspaper study published last week.
The six-month study by the Wichita Eagle-Beacon indicated that more than half of the 1,359 Kansas high school students who were National Merit semifinalists in the 1970s have left the state.
Most of the students who left went elsewhere to pursue white-collar, high-technology jobs in big cities, the study said.
What a waste.
Not only is Kansas having trouble attracting talent and technology, we can't keep
what we have at home.
More than 25 percent of the finalists who left flocked to Texas and California.
Beaches and mountains would do a lot to keep our best and brightest here. But those options are not readily available to the Legislature.
Instead, the current push to catch Kansas up with the rest of the country in terms of moving from a primarily agricultural economy to a high-technology, postindustrial economy must continue.
Efforts to attract outsiders into the state are fine, but we need to focus on ways to keep our most intelligent natives on this side of the state line.
Professional problem
Obstetricians and orthopedic surgeons went on strike in Massachusetts recently protesting high medical malpractice insurance costs. The orthopedic surgeons have returned to work, but the obstetricians remain on strike.
This is not as bad as it sounds. With or without obstetricians, babies will be born. Birth is a natural process. For the majority of women the danger is overstated, especially by the medical community, which benefits by making the process seem a technological feat.
Once the province of general practitioners, obstetricians increasingly have been handling a large proportion of births that used to be considered low-risk. To put low-risk births back into the province of the general practitioner would actually be a step forward.
The medical community in Kansas is embroiled in the same debate and here too, obstetricians are vocal in their advocacy of a cap on medical malpractice suits.
Doctors have been arguing before the state Legislature
Partly as a result of this, the number of suits has climbed, as well as the amount of the judgments. Doctors blame the litigiousness of society or the greed of lawyers, both of which may well be factors.
But the overriding fact is that if some doctors did a better job of ensuring that mistakes did not happen and of taking appropriate action when they do, they probably wouldn't be in this boat today.
Presidential waffling
Losing touch with reality seems to be a regularity these days in the White House.
One U.S. legislator described President Reagan's waffled reaction to the Philippine election as an indication that someone was smoking drugs in the White House.
"They appear to have lost touch with reality."
that many of their colleagues are leaving the state rather than facing high insurance costs here. They also say that doctors are leaving fields like obstetrics, where the risk of law suits is higher than others. In other words, they're playing it safe.
Many went into fields like obstetrics because the financial rewards were great, but were burned when they made mistakes and were sued. Among obstetricians, as among other groups within the medical profession, there has been a strong tendency to protect each other and not to rid the profession of members whose methods were sloppy.
Before the Philippine election, which took place Feb. 7, Reagan had demanded that the election be free and fair or else.
"The suggestion that the opposition should accept with equanimity the fact that the election has been stolen constitutes prima facie evidence that they are smoking hashish in the White House," Rep. Stephen J. Solarz, R-N.Y., said recently.
The election took place. Filipinos voted. Some voted for President Ferdinand Marcos. Others voted for his opponent, Corazon Aquino. Violence, ballot-switching and widespread fraud plagued the election. No one has emerged
as a clear winner. But both have claimed victory.
The White House still is unsure of what happened, even after the U.S. envoy, who was sent to observe the election, reported that fraud was evident — maybe on both sides.
At Reagan's news conference Tuesday, he said the observers did not have hard evidence of fraud and the United States would take a "wait and see" approach.
"I said we're depending on the Filipino people to make this decision," Reagan said.
It seems Reagan is buying the argument that a tainted vote in the Philippines is better than no vote at all, a very weak attempt at proving Marcos' adherence to democracy.
The result of a corrupt Marcos winning a corrupt election and staying in power is bad enough.
But the outcome of the United States backing a dictator re-elected by fraud may be worse, in the form of a communist insurgency and a loss of vital U.S. strategic bases.
News staff
News staff
Michael Totty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Editor
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Brice Waddill . . . . . . . . . Photo editor
Susanne Shaw . . . General manager, news adviser
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Bush shows that 'lapdog' fits him well
George Bush thinks he's going to become the next republican candidate for president, but I'll be surprised if he gets the nomination. And amazed if he's selected.
There was a time when I thought Bush had a fair chance. Although he sounds a little squeaky when making a speech, he has been vice president for two terms. That ought to be worth something, although I'm not sure what
Most of all, he looks so republican. At least he looks like what I have always thought a prominent republican should look like: all preppy and Ivy League. I have the feeling that if Bush removed his clothes, instead of underwear he'd be wearing perfectly cresSED tennis whites.
But something happened recently that was the beginning of the end of Bush's presidential aspirations.
George Will, the widely syndicated
columnist and TV pontificator, became disgusted at the way Bush had been currying the favor of conservatives, who had always suspected Bush of having closet liberal tendencies.
Mike Royko Chicago Tribune
Now, you might ask. "Who cares what some columnist says about Bush?" And if you were talking about 99.9 percent of our capital's syndicated pundits, you'd be right.
So, Will wrote a column dripping with contempt for Bush. And he summed up his feelings when he described Bush as a "lap dog."
But George Will is more than a columnist. He is the chief egghead of conservatism. He not only writes and pontificates, he has helped craft some of President Reagan's speeches and helped coach him for debates. He doesn't stand on the sidelines and watch. He bulls right into the middle of the cricket game.
So, when George Will says that George Bush is nothing more than a lap dog, many of the nation's republicans listen.
The significance of Will calling Bush a lap dog can be measured by the fact that the lap dog accession still was front page news in the New York Times many days after Will wrote it.
And that means it isn't going to go away. It will become an issue that will dog Bush throughout the coming months and years.
When conservatives look at Bush, they'll be thinking, "Yes, he does have the look about him of someone who might sit up and yip for a Dog Yummie."
If and when he debates his challengers, some of them are bound to say, "What this party doesn't need as its standard-bearer is an accused lap dog."
At press conferences, he will be asked: "Sir, do you feel you have been able to shed your dog lap dog image? And if so, do you now consider yourself a pure-bred show dog or a mixed breed?"
And the most terrible part of Bush's problem is that he, in effect, admits that Will's description of him is accurate.
How embarrassing. There he is, being called a lap dog, and what does he say? He says he respects the person who calls him a lap dog.
When he was asked about being called a lap dog, he meekly said, "Nobody likes being attacked in a very personal way — especially by someone he respects."
And that will be the turning point of Bush's aspirations. He had his chance and he blew it.
He could have said, "Say, what do I care what some simp who looks like an old maid schoolteacher says about me?"
In other words, even while Will is calling him a lap dog. Bush is trying to crawl up on Will's lap.
Or even, "Tell Will to meet me out back in the junkyard, and I'll let him know what kind of ol' dog I am. There won't be nothin' left of him but a tuft of hair."
Or, "Let Georgie say that to my face, if he can do it without his lips trembling."
It reminds me of a story that I've told before, but is worth repeating.
A boxer got into the ring with Archo Moore, a great fighter of a few champions.
In the first round, Moore hit him so hard that the guy was carried so his dressing room and didn't regain consciousness for half an hour.
But no, he gives his tail a lap dog wag.
When he finally came to, he staggered to his feet, made his way to Moore's dressing room and asked for an autograph.
I think it would be nice if Will sent Bush an autographed copy of the lap dog column.
I'm sure Bush keeps a scrapbook.
Mr. President...
Mr. President...
We have to say Something about the Philippine election...
...Mr. Marcos and Mrs. Aquino should work together to make sure the government works.
...We can't just keep ducking it...
I should we could never something out.
Wilder
UNIVERSITY DAILY KAWAU
The extras are those programs which collectively aim at centralizing politically the economic procedures of the nation, an infringement on individual prosperity and choice.
Reagan, in his proposal, separated the necessary responsibilities of central government from the extras and decided where to cut spending based on that. Among the necessities are defense, space research, Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome research and Social Security.
Some also were disquised by Reagan's plan to increase defense spending. Whether pacifism or
Many people have, however, become quite dependent on these programs and seeing spending cuts has upset them.
Second, the government has been planning too much and making decisions belonging to the private sector.
Principles are key to budget cuts
The president made a bold feat two weeks ago. He delivered a State of the Union address and budget proposal doomed to trigger displeasure and disapproval in Congress. His principles, however, were dominant enough to claim victory.
Although President Reagan suffocated many listeners, particularly liberal ones, with his melodramatic "family" stress, two messages came clear:
One, the deficit exists not because people are undertaked — hence, no tax increase — but because the federal government overspend.
Evan Walter Staff columnist
MARTIN
Defense and research are common, generic virtues of national interest not aimed at providing for any one or group of individuals. The same doesn't hold for many of the programs Reagan proposed spending cuts for.
The United States is not a military state but rather a country of the free and the skeptical, who argue against the Reagan principle: Keep America strong but don't let the central government play the role of the "invisible hand." The government builds a strong defense to protect the people in their pursuit of happiness, granted by their freedom.
idealism, it illustrates the popularity of the belief that the responsibility of government is to direct society, not to militarize it.
As far as militarizing goes, a superpower's work to maintain its status hardly justifies being referred to as a military state. The latter occurs in countries that decide to sacrifice the people's freedom and right to prosper so the government can build an offense to spread its claws and human rights violations, the main policy of Russia.
The "Great Society" welfare programs haven't been too successful, and they often challenge priorities with state and local organizations as well as with private individuals.
As Reagan described his proposal to Congress, "those things best done by government will be done by government; those things best done by the private sector will be directed by the marketplace."
Less interest in big government social programs doesn't mean we should forget social problems exist, which would only escalate the problems.
Social problems should instead be treated on a local level, not centrally and generically.
Enough theory said! In practicality, everyone agrees the deficit must be sliced and eliminated by 1991. And if it isn't done by a plan approved now, the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act, or Gramm-Rudman-Hollings will make its automatic along-the-board cuts to reduce the deficit below $144 billion.
Unlike the Reagan proposal Gramm-Rudman-Hollings wouldn't value priorities.
A popular suggestion is a tax increase which the president doesn't want. A tax increase would mean a spending decrease — back to a 2.2 percent gross national product.
The best option is to limit big government spending in programs that are "extras." Give the freedom of choice concerning the "extras" to people, not the House and Senate.
Mailbox
Problem not doctors
As it appears, Chris Bunker has jumped right on the bandwagon along with the many others who fail to see why health care is so costly in today's society (Kansan, Feb. 12).
Unfortunately, over the past decade, America's legal profession has fallen from the once reputable pedal on which it, as a profession, comfortably rested when it was a moral society. Thanks to a small minority of individuals who like to call themselves politicians, Kansas, as well as the rest of the country, has been thrown into a legal society, most of us with little legal background.
Bunker immediately takes his stab and directs it at doctors, whom he affectionately calls the "wrongdoers," citing their greed and incompetence as the evil that inflates America's ballooning health care costs. Sorry to burst Bunker's balloon, but the problem of high cost lies not in the medical community, but within the legal profession.
That's the catch. What has this done? Now everyone, not just physicians, has been earmarked as possible prey for the numerous wolves disguised in pinstripe suits with law degress behind their big desks.
America now abounds with "ambulance chasers" and that is what is driving our health care costs through the ceiling. We must realize that, win or lose, someone has to pay the cost of going to court and defending
Richard Roderick
Salina junior
When we realize this, how is it possible that Chris Bunker has either the knowledge or audacity to call doctors greedy? I only hope Bunker doesn't need medical treatment soon.
Double standard
That is reflected in the doctors' high insurance premiums, and conversely, our increased cost for treatment. A large number of malpractice cases involve patients who, to put it simply, are not designed to live to be 75 or 80 years old. Most lawyers would not think twice about taking these cases, with but the tempting possibility of a 40-percent cut of a multi-million dollar settlement, attorneys are running to get a glance at the obituaries in hope that their one big case awaits them.
The United States has long been a
oneself. With millions of suit-happy lawyers around, no one will win.
It appears that we are once again witnessing the double standard in international relations. Despite numerous reports of fraud, intimidation, violence and murder in the Philippines presidential election, the Reagan administration remains neutral and claims there is no firm evidence.
If such reports came from elections held by the Sandinista regime in Nicaragua, the administration immediately would call for massive financial and military aid for the contra rebels.
model of democracy and justice. However, this hypocritical stand will greatly diminish our credibility in the eyes of the world. Are we to support the democracy of Thomas Jefferson or the machinations of William M. "Boss" Tweed?
It is unlikely that the administration's hope of a coalition government will come to pass, because Corazon Aquino blames President Marcos for the murder of her husband.
One of the principal objectives of the Reagan administration is to stop the spread of communism. By failing to denounce the corruption of the Marcos regime, the administration will drive Aquino and her followers into the waiting arms of the communists. If justice prevails and Aquino is elected, the administration will find itself facing a hostile government that almost certainly will demand the evacuation of the Subic Bay Naval Base and Clark Air Base.
Stephen Smith Lawrence graduate student
Offensive cartoon
I was appalled by the lack of taste expressed in the cartoon from the Miami News which was printed on page 4 of the Kansan on Feb. 13.
I was also appalled by the lack of editorial discretion which allowed the cartoon to be printed. Whoever it was on the Karans staff who decided to run it made a bad decision.
Lori MacCurdy
Lawrence graduate student
Monday, Feb. 17, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Carriage
Continued from p.
have to wait until 9 o'clock '.'
The two plan to get married in August 1987. Although they had discussed marriage, Khani said Barter's proposal came as a shock.
Barter smiled and said, "I'm glad she said yes."
"It it was the most exciting day of my life," Khani said.
About 75 people, mostly students and families, took advantage of the ride.
Wee said, "It was well received,
and I think we'll be trying it again."
SUA charged $2 a person for reserved rides and $1 for first-comer-first-serve riders. The Union lost money on the activity, but it was meant for promotional purposes. Wee said, and to add to the atmosphere of their "Romance on the Hill" theme.
Many riders noted the economical price compared to similar rides at the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Mo., which charges $25 per couple.
Monica Hubert, a Hays freshman who rode on the carriage, said, "This is a lot cheaper than the Plaza, which makes it even more near and dear to my heart."
Haiti
U. S. Embassy spokesman Phil Brown said Duvalier could not enter the United States because he did not have the required visa and would not be granted one.
Continued from p. 1
"The State Department has said he would be inadmissible to the United States as an undesirable alien," Brown said. "He has not applied for a visa, but the State Department has said they would not grant him one."
"They point out that his security could not be guaranteed and there is an extradition treaty between the United States and Haiti which he would be subject to."
A foreign ministry representative visited Duvalier Saturday in a bid to convince him to approach Liberia for political asylum, but Duvalier's lawyer told reporters the West African nation could not guarantee his security.
The United States still was working closely with the French government to find a country that would accept Duvalier, he said.
Duvalier has applied for political refugee status in France. Lawyer Sauveur Vaisse told reporters yesterday Duvalier hoped to stay in France to study at a university and return to a normal life.
Bond
said, "Friends, I'm selling these Hitler bonds. I know this guy is a little distasteful, but it's a good investment, 20 cents back on your dollar." You'd run me out of town. Well, these people in South Africa are Hitlers in descentence," he said.
Continued from p.1
Besides being the morally right thing to do, divestment is the financially smart thing to do. Bond said, because the economy in South Africa is worse than ever and probably will crash.
handling the investments for the University should be investigated because they were not exercising good financial judgment.
Bond said that whoever was
The speech highlighted a day of workshops on different areas of law. The three workshops began at 3 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Benjamin E. Franklin, chief judge of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Kansas, conducted a session on bankruptcy law. James Tippin, a Kansas City, Mo., tax attorney, led a session on
tax law, and a session on nontraditional careers in law was conducted by J. Oliver Lee, a Wichita attorney.
Bond, who recently announced his candidacy for the U.S. House, has served in the Georgia legislature for 20 years. When he was first elected to the state house of representatives, he was denied his seat by members who opposed his stand on the Vietnam War.
In 1966, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Bond must be seated because the Georgia house had
denied him his freedom of speech.
Bond was nominated to run for vice president at the 1968 Democratic National Convention, but was forced to withdraw because, at age 28, he was too young.
His civil rights accomplishments include founding the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, a group which held protests and sit-ins across the South, and helping to found the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Continued from p.1
Tim Hamilton, Deerfield, Ill., junior who attended the party, said many people took cabs and from the sorority.
Shadden said he did some additional business at the Mad Hatter, 700 New Hampshire St.
Some people who drove to the party avoided the bridge roadblock by taking 1-70 from the east to west Lawrence exits, he said.
Accident
the kansas River bridge, he said. The Delta Delta Delta sorority was having a party there.
The cab drivers were excited, he said, because drunken college students usually leave the best tips.
KU students usually tip well, a phenomenon Shaddad couldn't explain. College students' funds normally are limited, he said.
Continued from p. 1
and started coming down the hill faster and faster."
Damage to the hall was negligible. One resident said, "He hardly dented a brick."
The car hit outside a room shared by Jill MacDonald, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and Diane Senne, Burdick freshman. MacDonald was in her room with a friend at the time of the crash.
She said, "It sounded like they were rearranging the furniture upstairs. I said, 'What are they doing?' Then we just looked out the curtain and there was a car."
Todd Olson, Sellards resident director and Battle Lake, Minn., graduate student, arrived at the hall minutes after the accident.
"My God," he said. "I go away for an evening and look what happens."
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, Feb. 17, 1986
Cheaper gas drives students to the pump
By Debra West Staff writer
Students with cars may have a little extra spending money these days as local gas prices continue to drop.
Campus/Area
Several gas station managers agree that the low prices are caused by an oversupply of crude oil and the competition between Lawrence gas stations.
Dan Spellman, assistant manager of the Westside 66 and Carwash, 2815 W. Sixth St., said one gallon of regular gas was 89.9 cents at his station. Unleashed is 95.9 cents and diesel is $1.14.9.
The station will continue to lower its prices to remain competitive with the independent gas stations, Spellman said.
He said independent stations bought gas directly from distributors in Kansas City more cheaply than franchises that have to buy it from their company's local distributor.
Spellman said he expected prices to continue to decrease until summer. He said they would probably drop to about 75 cents a gallon for regular gasoline.
Lynn Potter, owner of Potter's Southside 66 Service, 23rd and Louisiana streets, said the price of crude oil was going down because of an oversupply. He said oil exporting
Potter said he expected gas prices to drop about 15 cents more.
countries were lowering their prices to compete in the oil market.
One gallon of regular gas at Potter's full service gas station is $11.9. Unleaded is $1.15.9 and premium is $1.19.9.
Jill Ellison, an employee at the Derby Station at 2330 Iowa St., said prices there were 87.9 cents for regular, 92.9 cents for unleaded plus and 95.9 cents for unleaded.
Sarah Blanz, Denver, Colo., senior bought gas yesterday at the Derby Station.
"It's great. I'm really happy with it," she said.
Ellison said she had heard the district manager say that prices were expected to drop to 70 cents a gallon for regular.
Keith Woodley, 2820 Massachusetts St., Topeka, who was buying gas at Gibson Discount Center-Service Station, said, "It's fantastic for as long as it lasts. I hope it goes lower."
Some managers didn't know whether to expect the low gas prices to last.
Bill Edmonds, manager of Bill's Conoco Service, 1026 W. 23rd St., said prices would rise again as soon as the crude oil supply decreased.
On Campus
The University Placement Center will present a workshop, "Beginning the Job Search: Getting Down to Basics." at 3:30 p.m. today in Room 3 Lippincott Hall.
The Student Assistance Center will present a free workshop, "Research Paper Writing," at 7 p.m. today in 300 Strong Hall. No registration is required.
On the Record
A radar detector and a cordless telephone, valued together at $225, were stolen between 10 and 10:35 p.m. Saturday from a residence in the 1200 block of West 20th Street, Lawrence police said.
Binoculars, a flash attachment, papers and books, valued together at $1,010, were stolen between 3 and 11 p.m. Saturday from a KU professor's house in the 3400 block of Lazybrook Lane, police said.
A KU student's 1976 Porsche, valued at $7,500, was stolen between 11 p.m. Friday and 11 a.m. Saturday from the 1500 block of Tennessee Street, police said. The vehicle was recovered later.
the 100 block of Pinecone Drive, police said. The motorcycle was pushed or ridden away.
A motorcycle, valued at $300,
was stolen between 11:45 a.m. Friday
and 4 p.m. Saturday from a home in
A 1974 Mercedes was stolen from a KU student in the 1300 room of *Tennessee Street shortly before 1 a.m. Saturday*, police said. The car was later recovered on campus.
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WILL BE STALLED WITHOUT CHARGE FOR THE SHORES or PADS OR the LABOR TO INSTALL THEM. YOU
WILL BE STALLED WITHOUT CHARGE FOR THE SHORES or PADS OR the LABOR TO INSTALL THEM. YOU
WILL BE STALLED WITHOUT CHARGE FOR THE SHORES or PADS OR the LABOR TO INSTALL THEM. YOU
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BEGINNING THE JOB SEARCH
"GETTING DOWN TO BASICS"
Monday, Feb. 17, 3:30 p.m.
Room 3 Lippincott Hall *
The Final Series Of Spring Semester Career Employment Workshops
INTERVIEWING I
"PREPARED FOR THE
INTERVIEW"
Tuesday, Feb. 18, 3:30 p.m.
Room 7 Lippincott Hall *
INTERVIEW 2
"HOW NOT TO INTERVIEW"
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 3:30 p.m.
Room 3 Lippincott Hall *
Tuesday, March 4, 2:30 p.m.
Room 7 Lippincott Hall *
INTERVIEWING 3
"SUCCESSFUL INTERVIEWING"
Thursday, Feb. 20, 3:30 p.m.
201 Carruth O'Leary
Wednesday, March 5, 2:30 p.m.
Room 3 Lippincott Hall *
WORKSHOP
ON TRAVEL & TOURISM
CAREERS
Tuesday, March 25, 3:30 p.m.
University Placement Center
WRITING EFFECTIVE RESUMES AND LETTERS
Thursday, Feb. 27, 3:30 p.m.
Room 4002 Wesco Hall *
Wednesday, March 26, 3:30 p.m.
Call for Location
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Monday, Feb. 17, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
7
Robbery suspect dies in jail
United Press International
WICHTA — A 41-year-old heart patient who was jailed for a robbery he could not have committed died in his cell less than 24 hours after being released from a hospital, his attorney said yesterday.
Max L. Potts of Wichita was accused of the Feb. 3 strong-armed robbery of a man who was assaulted in a dark hallway leading from an eastside lounge.
But officials at St. Joseph
Medical Center said Potts had been hospitalized for 12 days beginning Feb. 2, according to Charles O'Hara, his attorney.
He died early Saturday of a heart attack in his cell at the Sedgwick County Jail, O'Hara said.
appealing four felony convictions in 1884 involving the sale of heroin and amphetamines.
Potts' wife, Beverly, said her husband was suffering from congestive heart failure and a stroke.
"I think somebody over there conjured up a charge on him," he said. "All they had to do was call the hospital."
Potts was arrested Friday as he was discharged from the medical center. Keith Anderson, Sedgwick County judge, had revoked Potts' $25,000 appeal after being told he was suspected of the Feb. 3 robbery. Bail was set at $100,000.
Marvin Smith Jr., 55, said he was robbed of $20 in cash and cigarettes as he was leaving the eastside lounge Feb. 3.
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ed up to 28 years in prison. He was acquitted on four counts of falsifying federal income tax returns.
United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A federal court judge said he would increase the bond of a German native convicted on seven counts of international arms trafficking and high-technology espionage.
Werner Gregg, 43, of Raytown,
Mo., was convicted Saturday and fac-
Prosecutors attempted to revoke Gregg's bond to keep him from flee.
A sentencing date has not been set. U.S. District Judge Joseph Stevens Jr. said he would increase Gregg's bond from $650,000 at a hearing tomorrow.
Gregg, the German-born owner of Gregg International, and his wife, Roswitha, were indicted last February and charged with unlawfully exporting and attempting to sell millions of dollars worth of weapons, sophisticated electronic communications and guidance gear.
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performing two different programs at the University of Kansas
THE ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved
Presented by the KU School of Fine Arts Concert Series
Public: $15 & $13; KU and K-12 Students: $7.50 & $6.50;
Senior Citizens and Other Students: $14 & $12
8:00 p.m. nightly
Tuesday & Wednesday, February 18-19, 1986
Hoch Auditorium
The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater is sponsored by Philip Morris Companies Inc.
Partially funded by the Mid-America Arts Alliance, Kansas Arts Commission and National Endowment for the Arts; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and KU Endowment Association; a University Arts Festival event.
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---
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Student Union Activities is planning an exciting year full of concerts, speakers, movies, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas...
President (the following 4 applications due Feb.17)
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer (the following 8 applications due Feb. 20)
Special Events
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Outdoor Recreation
Indoor Recreation
Public Relations
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8
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Monday, Feb. 17, 1986
Forecasters see little relief for West
United Press International
A new Pacific storm dumped more rain and snow yesterday on the West, Coast. Californiaans recovered from flooding and mudslides, but forecasters see little relief until midweek.
The storm is latest in a series that have drenched coastal areas over the past several days. The storm moved north providing a break for rainsoaked Southern California, the National Weather Service said.
Forecasters said foul weather would plague the West with storms
coming in 48-hour intervals until midweek.
The storm kicked up 8- to 12-foot waves that pounded shorelines and killed a surfer off Hermosa Beach in Los Angeles.
At least three homes were damaged over the weekend by mudslides. One woman was reported missing Saturday when mud flattened her Boulder Creek, Calif., home.
Up to 3 feet of new snow covered the Sierra Nevada, several roads were impassable and ski resorts closed. The U.S. Forest Service Sunday posted avalanche warnings
Washington state's east-west highway, interstate 90, was closed twice yesterday at Snoqualime Pass because of snow slides.
throughout Northern California and Nevada.
eastern Colorado foothills and winds of 40 mph were common in southeast Wyoming.
A flood warning was posted in Portland, Ore. Johnson Creek was expected to crest a half-foot above its 11-foot flood stage. More than a six rivers throughout the state were expected to crest near flood stage.
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THE KANSAS UNION HAWK'S NEST
9-3:30 Level 2
PLACE: REGIONALIST ROOM STUDENT UNION
BY THE STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES ADVISORY BOARD
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
PLEASE ATTEND!
ATTENTION ALL STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE POLICY HOLDERS AND OTHER INTERESTED PERSONS
There will be an open forum concerning student health insurance for the policy year 1986-1987 for your comments and questions.
TIME: 7-9 p.m. DATE: Tues., Feb. 18th
Help "Bust M.S." at
PARTY No.3
S. A.M.S. presents
THE FINAL CELEBRITY/ROCK LIP-SYNC COMPETITION
The S.A.M.S. Jayhawk Shuffle! Feb.22 8:30 p.m.Kansas Union Ballroom
15 of the campus's top look-a-likes!
M.S.
CONTESTANT
MTV
MUSIC TELEVISION®
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KU'S Dan Aykroyd Wants You to help "bust" M.S.!
In Conjunction With:
KLZR
MTV
7th Heaven
Swatch
Ramona Studios
Stage Pro
Winner goes to Regionals & MTV (Who at KU are we gonna watch on MTV?)
M.S.
MS.
STUDENTS AGAINST MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS We're Out To Tie Up & Bust M.S.
Monday, Feb. 17, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
9
NEBRAKA
34
Craig Sands/KANSAN
Kansas guard Calvin Thompson put up a shot against Nebraska's Keith Neubert in Saturday's game at Allen Field House. Thompson scored 15 points and had 10 rebounds in the game.
In Larry Brown's book on basketball, the words "unselfish" and "team play" show up repeatedly.
KU continues unselfish play
By Frank Hansel
Associate sports editor
Balanced attack dominates in 79-61 win over Nebraska
Kansas added another chapter to his book Saturday by defeating the Nebraska Cornhuskers 79-61 at Allen Field House.
The Jayhawks translated the Kansas head coach's theories into their 24th win of the season against only three losses. And as in the previous 23 wins, the key for the Jayhawks was unselfish team play.
Kansas recorded 22 assists against the Cornhuskers, whose record fell to 15-8 overall and 5-5 in the conference. Forward Danny Manning led Kansas with six assists. Forward Ron Kellogg and guard Cedric Hunter had four assists apiece.
The win improved the Jayhawks conference record to 9-1 and protected their one-and-a-half game lead over Oklahoma, 8-3, in the Big Eight Conference race.
"I've never had high-scorers on my teams," Brown said after the game. "I'm not good for high scorers. I tell my recruits that we emphasize team play, and they are never going to lead the nation in scoring."
While Kansas has dominated the conference standings, the Jayhawks have not dominated the conference scoring charts. Of the top 10 scorers in the Big Eight, a Jayhawk doesn't appear until the ninth and tenths. Manning is ninth, averaging 16.6 points a game, and Kellogg is next with a 16.0 average.
Ahead of Manning and Kellog are two Sooners, two Wildcats, two Tigers, a Cyclone and a Cornhusker.
Another of Brown's tendencies is to get the ball in the hands of the hot shooter.
"My main concern is that we win," Brown said. "I think we are a very unselfish team, and the players know that if they are open they will get the ball."
Against Nebraska, the open man with the hot hand was Hunter. Hunter led the Javhawks with 17 points.
Men's Basketball
Guard Calvin Thompson said Hunter was shaking the reputation of being a non-scoring guard.
Hunter did. He hit six of eight shots from the floor and five of seven free throws.
"Their coach (Nebraska head coach Moe Iba) was telling them to lay off Ced and help out underneath." Thompson said. "I told him he's going to have to make them pay for it."
Nebraska guard Brian Carr said the Cornhuskers were sagging off of Hunter in the first half.
Hunter is making 74.7 percent of his floor shots during conference play, and for the third consecutive game he scored in double figures.
Kellogg said Hunter always had been a scorer. Hunter led all Nebraska high school players in scoring during his junior and senior seasons at Omaha South.
"We've been asking him to step in and take those shots," Kansas assistant coach Ed Manning said. "When he does, it opens up opportunities for the other players."
"Ced's been more assertive lately, and it makes us a better team because it opens up shots for the other players." Kellogg said.
The next team to try to stop the Jayhawks balanced attack will be the
Colorado Buffaloes Wednesday night in Boulder. Tinoff is 9:05 p.m.
in Boulder. Tipoff is 9:05 p.m.
Jayhawk notes — Kansas won the
31st consecutive game at Allen Field
House, and the Jayhawks are only
two victories away from the Kansas
record of 33 consecutive home victories. . The Jayhawks shot 66 percent from the field Saturday.
Kansas 79
Nebraska 61
Nebraska
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Day | 38 | 11-19 | 0-2 | R | 6 | 3 | 12 |
| Matzke | 21 | 0-2 | 0-0 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 0 |
| Logan | 29 | 1-3 | 1-2 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 0 |
| Marshall | 32 | 4-11 | 3-4 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 11 |
| Carr | 37 | 6-12 | 5-6 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 17 |
| Brown | 5 | 0-3 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Ballous | 23 | 3-5 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 6 |
| Sealer | 2 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Nuebert | 10 | 1-2 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Martz | 1 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Martz | 2 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Totals | | 28-59 | 9-14 | 25 | 12 | 25 | 61 |
Percentages: FG. 441, FT. 643. Blocked Shots: 0. Turnovers: 11 (Day, Ballou 3). Steals: 2 (Marshall, Ballou). Technicals: None.
Kansas
| | M | FG | FT | F | R | A | TP | B |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Manning | 33 | 4-10 | 0-1 | 7 | 4 | 6 | 19 | 8 |
| Kellogg | 24 | 7-9 | 1-2 | 3 | 3 | 4 | 15 | 12 |
| Drilling | 23 | 5-6 | 2-5 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 12 | 12 |
| Hunter | 36 | 6-8 | 5-7 | 2-4 | 2 | 4 | 17 | 15 |
| Thompson | 36 | 6-10 | 3-7 | 1-2 | 2 | 1 | 15 | 15 |
| Marshall | 16 | 5-7 | 0-1 | 0-1 | 6 | 0 | 21 | 10 |
| Turgeon | 16 | 0-1 | 1-2 | 1-2 | 0 | 3 | 10 | 1 |
| Piper | 10 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Hull | 2 | 0-0 | 1-2 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Johnson | 2 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Totals | 2 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 35 | 12 | 6 | 79 |
Preferential treatment not a problem at KU
Half: Kansas 35-27. Officals: Leimbach.
Turlington, Spitzer.
Percentages: FG, 680; FT, 542. Blocked Shots: 2 (Dreiling, Piper 1). Turnovers: 14 (Thompson, Turgoron 3), Steals: 4 (Marshall 2); Technicals: None.
Bv Matt Tidwell
Sports writer
Two University of Georgia officials were found guilty last week of violating the free speech rights of a professor who spoke out against preferential treatment of athletes.
The Georgia case has created concern about whether preferential treatment is widespread on other college campuses.
At Kansas, some professors and athletic department officials said preferential treatment was not a problem.
Katzman was involved in a dispute with Larry Brown, Kansas head basketball coach, over guard Cedric Hunter's academic eligibility in January 1984.
"I think athletes are special students," Katzman said. "But what
David Katzman, professor of history and director of KU Honors Program, said Friday that there was some pressure to compromise academic standards to give special catering to athletes.
we have to do is respond to their needs and still be fair and uphold our academic standards.
"I think on some campuses it is a problem. I think what happened in Georgia was that academic standards were not upheld.
"I think a lot of students were outraged by that." Katzman said. "Why weren't handcapped or other special students allowed to go first? The University essentially told them 'you take second place' and I think that was unfair, but I'm not sure that it lowered our academic standards."
"I don't think it's a problem at KU, but there are some pressures to compromise. The purpose of a university is not to promote revenue sports. I don't believe athletes should be given special treatment over handicapped or non-traditional students."
Katzman said that when Kansas athletes were allowed to enroll before other students last semester, fairness might have been compromised.
Richard Lee, the Kansas assistant
athletic director for academic support, said the controversy that arose after the enrollment issue had decreased.
Lee said problems like the ones at Georgia didn't occur at Kansas because the athletic department was separate from the academic arm of the University.
"I think it has died-down," Lee said. "I think most people understand that the demands of the athletes were such that they needed to enroll at that time.
"I really don't know all the particulars of that case." Lee said. "What I can say, however, is that at KU, the athletic department has nothing to do with the grades a student receives in a given course."
Lee said the athletic tutoring program was an example of fair treat ment to all students.
"We're only talking about 200 students at the most so it didn't close out any classes to other students. It was just a matter of scheduling."
"Athletes are tutored in the same way as any other student at the University," he said. "All the tutors come from the Supportive Educational Services and within that tutorial program, 85 percent of the students are non-athletes."
John Massad, Lawrence graduate student and a tutor for 10 years, said that in his experience with athletes the tutorial system was fair.
"SES, for example, provides tutorial services for both scholarship athletes and work-study financial aid students," Massaad said. "That's why I think it's fair."
Massad said that across the board — not just in the tutorial system — fairness was maintained.
"From my work with athletes, I know that at this University they don't get special treatment. In fact, if anything, they need more help.
"In classes, they don't get any special treatment at all. You can tell by their attitude that they don't expect favors."
Sports Briefs
Tennis teams win
The Kansas men's and women's tennis teams each won two matches on the road this weekend.
The Kansas men faced two big Ten Conference teams in Chicago. On Friday, they defeated Northwestern 8-1. Saturday, despite losing four of six singles matches, the men rebounded with a sweep of the three doubles matches to beat Wisconsin 5-4.
The women traveled to Springfield, Mo., for their two matches. The Jayhawks defeated Southwestern Missouri State 7-1 Friday and came back to beat Arkansas 5-4 the next day.
The wins extended the women's record to 4-0.
Weekly line-up Sporting events for Feb. 17-23
Junior varsity basketball vs.
Washburn, at Washburn. Men's tennis,
ITCA indoor championships at
Louisville, Ky., Feb. 20-23. Men's golf,
Pan American University Invitational,
a) Monterrey, Mexico, Feb. 20-22.
FRIDAY
Men's basketball vs. Colorado, 9:05
p.m., at Boulder. Women's basketball
vs. Colorado, 5:35 p.m. at Boulder.
THURSDAY
Women's tennis vs. Wichita State, at
Wichita. Men's and women's swimming,
Philip's 68 Meet of Champions, at
Bartlesville, Okla., Feb. 21-23.
SATURDAY
WEDNESDAY
Men's basketball vs. Kansas State,
3:05 p.m., at Allen Field House, Junior
varsity basketball vs. Kansas State, 5
p.m., at Allen Field House, Women's
basketball vs. Kansas State, 12:15
p.m., at Allen Field House, Women's
tennis vs. Minnesota, at Wichita
women's tennis vs. New Mexico, at Wichita.
Kansas uses height to beat NU
Wiltredo Lee/KANSAN
Rebounds are key in 83-76 victory over Cornhuskers
By Dawn O'Malley
Sports writer
Kansas, enjoying a height advantage, beat the Cornhuskers 83-76 and improved its Big Eight record to 6-4. The victory moved Kansas into a four-way tie for second place with Iowa State, Colorado and Missouri. Oklahoma leads the conference with a 7-3 record.
It might have been called a game between the Jolly Green Giant and the Little Sprout during Saturday's Kansas-Nebraska women's basketball game at Allen Field House.
37
85
The Cornhusker's tallest player is 6-foot-1 center Lisa Soulliere. Jayhawk center Kelly Jennings is 6-5.
Women's Basketball
"Nebraska may not be physically tall," said Kansas forward Lisa Dougherty "but they play tall."
Kansas outrebounded Nebraska 51-49.
"The game was a little rough for a team so small," said Kelly Hill, Nebraska's head coach.
Cornhusker guard Maurice Iv led all scorers with 27 points.
Kansas guard Evette Ott scored 18.
Jennings and guard Toni Webb added
17 points each.
Marian Washington, Kansas head coach, said the Jayhawks showed a lot of character by coming back from an 87-72 loss to Missouri last week.
Lisa Dougherty looked to pass the ball around the Cornhuskers players Saturday in Allen Field House. The Jayhawks beat the Cornhuskers 83-76 and improved their record in the Big Eight Conference to 6-4.
Saturday's game was close in the first half, but Kansas broke the game open when Mesho Strohter and Jackie Martin converted steals into fast-break layups to put Kansas ahead 38-31.
Kansas travels to Boulder to play the Colorado Buffaloes at 6:35 p.m. Wednesday. Colorado won the last meeting 56-49.
out with less than two minutes remaining in the game..
Although she scored only seven
points in the game, Kansas forward Vickie Adkins became the tenth-leading scorer in Big Eight history with 1.675 points.
Because of foul trouble, Adkins played only 21 minutes. She fooled
From Kansan wires
Duke wins twice; No. 6 UNLV upset
Yesterday, Dawkins blocked David Rivers' jump shot with one second left and Duke held on to beat No. 14 Notre Dame 75-74 at Durham, N.C.
Duke's Johnny Dawkins twice delivered in a clutch and in both times the second-ranked Blue Devils escaped with narrow victories.
Dawkins, who scored 24 in the victory over N.C. State, added 18 points against the Irish to cap an outstanding weekend.
Fewer than 24 hours earlier, on Saturday night, Dawkins hit two free throws with two seconds to play as Duke edged 17th-ranked North Carolina State 72-70.
After Duke's Billy King missed the front end of a one-and-one opportunity with 13 seconds left, Notre Dame called a timeout with six seconds remaining to set up the final play.
Notre Dame head coach Digger Phelps said he thought Duke played well considering they had played a tough game the night before.
"They are very, very talented," Phelps said. "I'm sure they'll e a lot of confidence when it counts in March.
In the other Top 20 game yesterday, No.16 Indiana beat Ohio State 84-75.
Other Top Ten results from Saturday: No. 4 Memphis State 92, Southern Mississippi 85; No. 5 Georgia Tech 62, Virginia 55; UC Irvine 99, No. 6 Nevada-Las Vegas 92; No. 7 St. John's 74, Connecticut 54; Villanova 90, No. 9 Georgetown 88 in two overtimes; and No. 10 Michigan 82, Iowa 66.
the Sooners improved to 23-3 and 8-3 in the Big Eight. Colorado fell back to the bottom of the conference at 8-15 and 0-10.
In other games Saturday,
Villanova topped No. 11
Georgetown 90-88 in double overtime,
No. 12 Bradley edged
Southern Illinois 61-60. No. 13
Syracuse nipped Providence 76-75,
Brigham Young beat No. 14 Texas-
El Paso 72-69, Auburn beat No. 17
Alabama 71-69, co-No. 19
Louisville beat DePaul 72-53 and
co-No. 19 Pepperdine beat Loyola of California 79-64.
in Big Eight action Saturday,
No. 8 Oklahoma whipped Colorado
117-73, Oklahoma State beat
Missouri 86-65 and Iowa State beat
Kansas State 84-74.
The Tigers fell to 18-12 and 5-6.
Oklahoma State improved its record to 13-10 and 4-6.
The Cyclones won their 15th consecutive game at the Hilton Coliseum and improved to 16-7 and 7-3. Kansas State fell to 15-10 and 3-7.
Women's swim team beats Arkansas 74-41
By Dawn O'Malley
Sports writer
Before the final dual swim meet of the season, the Kansas men's and women's swim teams made a video tape to send to their teammate Karen Dionne just to say hello.
Dionne missed the season because of serious injuries suffered from a car accident over Thanksgiving break.
The film crew, composed of Mark Giles and Steve Outlaw, captured the swim meet and interviews with the team to send to Dionne.
"We came up with the idea like a big TV production," Giles said. "It took about a half hour to come up with the introductions."
Giles and Outlaw introduced the swim team by their nicknames and hometown; for example, Dan "the man" Mendenhall; Chris "wrong" Wright; Patti "the Okie" Crane.
"Karen will love it," Becky Heil said. "She loves the swim team and she likes to have fun."
Dionne can watch the dual swim meet between the Jayhawks and the Razorbacks on the tape also.
The Kansas women's team dominated the Razorbacks to win 74-41.
"The (Arkansas) women's team is not large in numbers," said Kent Kirchner, Arkansas head swim coach.
Swimming
"We have pretty good quality and some depth, but not a lot."
In the meet, the 400-yard medley relay team of Jackie Pease, Erin Easton, Taryn Gaulien and Anne Bloomfield won with a time of four minutes 6.9 seconds.
Then, the 400 freestyle relay team of Renee Bunger, Susan Spry, Erin Easton and Liz Duncan won the race at 3:35.61, seven seconds ahead of Arkansas.
"The relays were not a deciding factor this time," Kansas tri-captain Cathy Coulter said, "because Kansas was so far ahead anyway."
Arkansas diver Diane Dudeck won both the one- and three-meter diving board competition. Kansas divers Lori Spurney and Muffy Lybarger came in second and third both times,
Arkansas men beat the Kansas men's team 71-44.
Kansas swept the 200 backstroke. Glenn Tramnel won at 1:54.63, and Karl Zueger finished in second with a time of 1:56.36.
in the 200 individual medley, Kansas tri-captains Chris McCool and Karl Stumpf came in first and second. McCool had a time of 1:57.23 to win. Stumpf finished at 1:59.78.
10
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Feb. 17, 1986
Men's track team wins
Sports
By a Kansan sports writer
The Kansas men's track team placed first and the women's team second in Saturday's Indoor Track and Field Husker Triangular at Lincoln, Neb.
Track
The men's team scored 76.5 points with six first-place and eight second-place plays. Nebraska finished second with 60.5 points and Colorado finished third with 27.
In the women's meet, Nebraska finished first with 70 points, followed
by Kansas with 40.5 and Colorado with 37.5.
Winners for the Jayhawk men were: Raymond Mitchell, long jump, 25 feet, 2 inches; Sharrieff Hazim, high jump, 6-11 $\frac{1}{2}$; Courtney Hawkins, 60-yard hurdles, 7.57 seconds; John Creighton, 500-meter dash, 1:03.70; and Scott Huffman, pole vault, 17.8%.
The Kansas women won four events. The individual winners were: Kim Jones, long jump, 18-10%; Denise Buchanan, shot put, 49-9; and Veronda O'Hara, 440 yard dash, 57.62. The Kansas 4 X 400-yard relay won with a time of 3:57.10.
MORTAR BOARD
THIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCE Juniors and 1st Semester Seniors!
Information sheets for membership in Mortar Board, the highly respected honor society, are available in 214 Strong. Turn them in by 5 p.m., Thursday, Feb. 20 THIS WEEK.
OFFICER OPPORTUNITES AVAILABLE NOW!
Call 913-841-1821
Marines
We're looking for a few good men.
Thompson-Crawley
FURNITURE RENTAL
520 E. 22nd Terrace 841-5212
SPORTS COUNCIL
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE 12 OPENINGS ON THE COMMITTEE.
THIS COMMITTEE WAS SET UP TO SERVE THE INTERESTS OF STUDENTS WITH ISSUES CONCERNING THE ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT.
GET INVOLVED!!!!
Applications available at the Student Senate Office, B 105 of the Kansas Union.
Applications due by Friday, Feb. 21 at 5 p.m. Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
---
Two delicious Sunrise Sandwiches...only
Coupon expires: 3/2/86
Lawrence----1527 W. 6th
$1.99 Save $1.11
Summer in England,1986 Informational Meeting
Choice of ham, sausage or bacon Sunrise, served with egg and cheese on grilled Roman Meat bread.
**Limit** 1 order per coupon, one coupon per customer. Not valid in combination with any other offer.
Breakfast Hours:
6-10:30 Mon. - Sat.
7-10:30 Sunday
COUPON SPECIAL
Monday, Feb.17 3:30 p.m.
PYRAMID PIZZA
PYRAMID PIZZA
PYRAMID PIZZA
Manhattan • Emporia • Lawrence
Vista RESTAURANTS
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
14th and Ohio
Under The Wheel
Pyramid Pizza
Meet Faculty scheduled to teach this summer Learn about requirements and program Refreshments afterwards
free delivery
Tonight when you buy any size pizza, you get one of equal or lesser value FREE!
842-3232
Drive-thru open until 2 a.m.
1618 W. 23rd St.
Sub&Stuff
Sandwich Shop
PYRAMID PIZZA'S
Buy one get one free!
PYRAMID
MONDAY PYRAMID PIZZA We Pile It On! GLADNESS
Believe it or not... TONIGHT
The Sanctuary Presents The Real McCoy ARM WRESTLING TOURNAMENT For Men WEDNESDAY FEB 19th 9:00 p.m
For Men & Women
Featuring the Real McCoy Arm Wrestling Machine
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 19th, 9:00 p.m.
- No hand to hand contact between opponents
* One or more hands not special techniques
* Players may use either arm against opponent
Weigh In Time 7:00:9:00 p.m.
Single Entry $5/Double Entry $8
PRIZES WILL BE AWARDED
SINGLE ELIMINATION TOURNAMENT
Must be over 21
MEN'S SINGLE CLASSES
Ice Basketball 100 lb. 100 lb.
Handball 100 lb. 100 lb.
Volleyball 100 lb. 100 lb.
Weightlifting 100 lb. 100 lb.
MEN'S DOUBLES CLASSES (Combined Team Weight)
Pistol Shooting 100 lb. 100 lb.
Rock Climbing 100 lb. 100 lb.
Weightlifting 100 lb. 100 lb.
WOMEN'S SINGLES CLASSES
Basketball 100 lb. 100 lb.
Softball 100 lb. 100 lb.
Weightlifting 100 lb. 100 lb.
WOMEN'S DOUBLES CLASSES (Combined Team Weight)
Basketball 100 lb. 100 lb.
Softball 100 lb.
Weightlifting 100 lb.
YOU WILL CLARIFY YOUR ENTRY IN THE WOMEN'S
DOUBLE CLASSES AND BE MORE COMFORTABLE.
YOU WILL BE WELCOME ON THE REAL BATH.
ALL WARRANTIES WILL BE EXCLUDED ON THE REAL BATH.
Arm Wrestling Machin
Demonstration
Sat., Feb. 15
Free of Charge
$2.00 Cover
Contestants $1.00
$1 Well Drinks
11 a.m - 3 a.m
SANCTUARY
11 a.m.-3 a.m.
THE SANCTUARY
SANC TUARY
7th & Michigan
843-0540
Recitalical With Over 300 Clubs
For a job that offers more than minimum wage
DO YOU HEAR A CALLING?...
EARN $5-$6 per hour
Entertel, one of the nation's fastest growing telemarketing firms, now has openings for 50 part-time phone agents for evenings and weekend shifts. Only enthusiastic and aggressive individuals need apply.
We offer:
- Paid Training
- Advancement Opportunities
- Guaranteed hourly wage plus incentives
- Pleasant working conditions
- Flexible Hours
ENTERTEL
For interview CALL
841-1200
M-F 8:30-5:30
电话
Monday, Feb. 17, 1986
11
University Dailv Kansan
The University Daily
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
Call 864-4358
Classified Ads
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 3.00 4.25 6.75 10.50
For every 5 words add: 30¹ ª 50² ª 75³ ª 1.05
AD DEADLINES
POLICIES
Monday Thursday 4 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 4 p.m.
Tuesday Wednesday 4 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 4 p.m.
par column inch
Classified advertisements can be only one column wide and not more than two. Minimum depth is one inch. No reverence allowed in classified display advertisements except for logos that are smaller than one inch.
- Teachnets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements
until credit has been established
* Tear-safe items are not provided for classified
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only.
- Words 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 deadline
classified display advertisements.
• Classified display ads do not count towards more
Hillel presents the retreat "Being Jewish on a College Campus" Feb. 28 - Mar. 2 for more info, call Hillel office 864.3948
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Three ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kaisan business office at 854-4358
thly earned rate discount.
- Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
ANNOUNCEMENTS
A Lesbian/Gay Dances at the Jazebas-February
18 from 6 p.m. All ages, but I dioned. Requip
SpongeBob.
- Blind box ads – please add a $4 service charge.
• Checks must accompany all classified ad written
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement.
- No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS. Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop, covering time management, listening, listening, notetaking. Wednesday, February 19, 6:30-8:00 p.m., 4007 Room 211. Presented for the last time this semester by the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064.
You're Welcome
Attention Sophomores: Owl Society is now accepting applications! Minimum overall GPA of 3.0 Applications in Rm. 400 Kansas Union, Applicant in Rm. 412 Kansas Union, on the March 7 p.m. in Rm. 404 Kansas Union
at the university
SCHOLARSHIP HALLS
Applications available
www.scholarship.hall.org
Deadly, March 1, 1986
Want to coordinate entertainment and activities for the University of Kansas? Pick up your SUA application today! SUA Office, Level I, Kansas Union.
LASERBEAM
Hillel
Rabbi Friedman
will speak on the subject of
"Mysticism"
Tonight!
7:30
Hillel House
940 Mississippi
Lose Weight for Spring Break Guaranteed! Call Lorie 841-7699.
BEASEARCH PAPER WRITING. STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP. Learn about: defining a topic; using the library; taking notes; and organizing/using the paper. Monday, February 7, 4 p.m., 300 Strong Hall. FRIEDI. Presented by Hearing Assistance Center. I21. Strong Hall. 843-4064
Rent'19: Color T. $238 a month, Smarty's TV
147 W. 32rd St. Mon., Sat. 9:30-10:00
W. 55th St. Sun., Mon., Sat. 10:00-11:00
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $9.60.
Smith's TV, 1447 W 8th St. 824-3751; Men's
Mall, 1447 W 8th St. 824-3751
SUA Board Member applications due by Thurs
Feb. 30th. Questions? 664-3477.
SUA applications for President, Vice-President
SUA applications for Secretary by Mon. Feb.
17th
Questions 842-3977
www.sua.edu
Pyramid Pizza salutes Chris Roesner and Mike Ross for their outstanding photography of the "1986 Pike Calendar Girls"
Wear beachwear to GammaM Wednesday night and wear an eligible for a FREE TRIE to Daytona Beach.
What's MORTAR BOARD, you ask? check the display case in the Union and find out!
ENTERTAINMENT
Due to space limitations, limited number of tickets this year. Get yours Now! Brazilian Carnival, Feb.22. Tickets sold at S.U.A. and Spanish/Port. Department (in Wesco).
Having a party? Need a DJ? Call Music Mi. Best Mix of Music in Baiton, 922-390. $75.00 you 5 hours of great dance music. Music from Dung E. Fresh to Modern English.
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE DJ DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 749-4713.
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to provide the music for your next party, or to provide you with a room and can accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in Lawrence, Manhattan and Salis. Call 814-9834 or www.phasefourd.jobsearch.com
FOR RENT
2 bedroom room, $350/month plus utilities. Big living room w/sky light on second and third floor. 3/1/7 month lease w/one month deposit, 3 blocks from the Union. B41-4691.
3 BR house, East Lawrence, bus route, 1984
5BR house, East Lawrence, gardenable,
and utilities. Phone 206-697-6191.
now you tired of living in a dorm "Come and live at Berkeley Park,Vacancies available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 843-211-6
Available March 1; beautiful 2 BR apt. On bus
carpet, carpeted floor, carpeted carpet,
carpet, clean spacious, $390/mo, plus low
rental.
Sullease now. 2-8km apt. Very nice and close to campus. 943-9738.
CLAS IFIEDS
Classified
Heading:
Write ad here:
Net a
Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIED
Sublease one-bedroom apartment. Very clean and very nice. Also available on bus if needed. 12:30 after 3:30 p.m. Keep in mind we have 6 beds.
--r sale! 162.9 VH SCireco, Excellent condition,
motorhome P-44, piles 10,000 highway miles,
845-916-0166
Phone: ___ ___
1 Day 3-5 Days 4-6 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
1-15 words $2.80 $3.75 $5.25 $8.25
For every 5 words added 30* 50* 75* $1.05
Classified Diagnoi
1 col x 1乒 $4.4
Dates to run: ___ to
Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
**FEMALES-NEED A ROOMMATE? Only**
$100/mo and 1/2 utilities w/ mo-ma. lease 1
box, off 2kf and 2 biks, off Mass. Call #832-2161
after 6 hrs. Keeping it.
First come, first served, only a few twent to. **126 W. Hall**, first on KU bus route, between Gibson's and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We pay hot and cold water, you choose options, square feet, carport, extra卫浴 or balcony. Call
Just finished remodeling. 1 & 2 BR apartments.
New carpets, excellent appliances. A/NEW do-
tors.
Fow rent. 2 bldm, brand new apt. 1/2 tlb from
Rent can: U3800, $450/mo. plus utilities. Sublease a
possibility. Call Chuck Ledom U432-328 am 8: p.m.
and Pam. U432-453 after 8: p.m. Keep trying.
Furnished one bedroom apartment near University
& Downtown. Most utilities paid with off street
water.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL and/or SUBLASE for spring and summer. Available possibly as early as April 1. Romy and Irene will be available on either floor or yard. Extra large MMR, garage, laundry/storage. No pear. Lease and Refs. req. couple or small family pref. $65/mo. fall; spring and summer negotiate.
Quiet, one bedroom apt, big lawn, 185/m², 1月 one month lease w/despell. 331 Indiana. 814-6081.
SUBLEASE NOW! 1 BDMH Hanover Place apct. One monthly fee住: 841-1212.
SUBLEASE now for summer. Studio. Good location. Rent negotiable. Call 842-3838 or 749-2415.
Spacious 1 bdmr,簿 of clothes, W/D, hard woods, clean and sunny. $20/mo. Jeff 842-0146.
Spring break-Believe 2-bedroom condo, pool, hot tub, sunna. Located in Silveryhorse, close to
FOR SALE
Spring break-Believe 2-bedroom condo, pool, hot
bath, suaña. Located in Silverhorne, close to
Brockleigh, Copper, and Keystone. $100/night.
(303) 820-1713
TOWHOUSE USEABLE immediately Cornstreet
Bell, 843-4900 Meadowbrook Apt. at 843-4900
Tom, 843-4900
MISTERYHAST offers completely furnished 1.2, and 3 bed apartment rooms all near campus.
Wanted: Female, non-smoking roommate to share a 3 bedroom apt for remainder of semester. $150.00/month, plus 1/3 utilities. Call 749-8423. Keep trying.
1975 IBM selectric, MCS 40 watt, receiver.
60'silvan lift top stereo cabinet 841-1056.
Baseball cards and sports nontown. Buy. Sell.
92nd Street. Open 10-6 M-S.
83rd W. 21st Street.
Auto sound equipment: Blaupunkt BPA-145 60
watt 4 channel power amplifier. Blaupunkt BE-35
5 band pre-ampl graphic equalizer. Best offer. Call
604-291-8.
Comic Book, Playbills, Penthouses, etc.
Comics. Open 1 o'clock. Tue, Sat. & Sun 10-5
Bullwolf.
1978 FIRSTHRED LOOKS good, runs great A/C
power, $2000 negligible. Exc. 88 MB RAM
hard drive.
DOWNDIALK SHELL K2 three, 300 cm. Beaker bin
dings, excel cond, $00, 841-9012 evenings.
DOWNDIALK SHELL K2 three, 300 cm. Beaker bin
dings, excel cond, $00, 841-9012 evenings.
DRUMS Laugie w/p 16 w/cymbals, hardware
DRUMS Laugie w/p 28 w/cymbals, hardware
hardware, saill $500 Overland Park (1) 648-7951
hardware, saill $500 Overland Park (1) 648-7951
Epson Qx-10/FX80 Printer software $195.00 or best 3 offer IBM selected typewriter with or without color
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U. repair);
also alienquest loan. Call 811-687-6000
or 811-687-5322 for assistance.
Kenwood KR-7A0 receiver, 60 watts, 18 station
memory, scan. 7 band equiv. New sasflex
card.
Kenwood cassette deck. Perfect condition, first 85 takes her home. Call 814-677-677.
Laving country, must sell 1098 to 2 dhatch hatchack
jacketa, alshira and shiura (M., L.) call 843-689-
8046; jacketa, alshira and shiura (M., L.) call 843-689-
8046
Phillus palpantle with little used audio technician skills to offer before I trade it in. Mark 249-251, evenings.
Sale: Greetsch wooden snare drum. $50.00 or best offer.
843-1801
Top of the line Kenwood turntable with moving
wheel, 8" turntable, full warranty,
bout call. Hct 841-1390 after a
sale.
DLED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Receivers from $24, turnaround time
up to 30 days, box and car stereo,
all completely reconditioned and warranted.
Lawrence Custom Radio, 914 W. 29rd St.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sense to use them to 1) As study guide; 2) For class analysis; 3) For a personal analysis. Analysis of Western Civilization *available now at Town Crie, The Jayhawk Bookstore*, and online.
LEICA CAMERA EQUIPMENT 50mm f1.4
CAMERA DIGITAL EQUIPMENT 50mm f1.4
device both devices in banyon mount for M-erision K3.
Also, Leica-MC light meter: 948-317, ask for Gary (leave message if Ym
doesn't want to answer).
SPRING BREAK_ROUND Trip Airline Tickets to
Maryland $189.00. Best Price Barefoot Call Jim at
Jimmy's Travel Group.
Wouldn't a little SAX space up your life? I'm parting with my beloved Bunyd also airplane (it's in great condition) and its new mouthpiece for only $300. Call 864-2134.
GVOWREASD DSUNN. Summit, yr round. Europe.
GVOWREASD DSUNN. Summit, yr round. Europe.
Engineering day JEC jpc 1C, PS BK-58 K3-
Engineering day JEC jpc 1C, PS BK-58 K3-
summer Jobs. National Park Co.'s 21 Parks, 5000
openings Complete Information $5.90. Park
resort Mission Mn. Co., 651 2nd Ave. W.N.
Kaiseltown MT 90001
Tried of tummy mattresses? Watered for sale.
Compete with us.
Form apart-
ment facilities:
Call 789-2631, 843-802, 843-804
Hafter, 500 watt power amplifier. Brand new with factory warranty. $500. T84-125-150.
AUTO SALES
Must sell 79 Madda RX-7, runs great. AM/FM,
NC, $250 or best offer. 480-386 ask
for phone number.
1978. Good body, sound mechanics,
cassette stereo. Asking 1600. Cell Larry after 4.
3-5.
Moving Mant Must, 1980s Old-Mobil-Cultle station wagon - silver Fault Option, Just $700, Call仓
Mant Must, 1980s Old-Mobil-Cultle station wagon - silver Fault Option, Just $700, Call仓
1947 Ponton G70, new paint, overbud, and much
more. A must see. Call 842-343-2093.
Keep Trembling.
DRIVE A SPORTS CARE 78 2906 2--2, Real
treatment Alpine. Albane yellow. 4500-814-6471
ATLINE HIRING BOOOM!: $14-$29,000
Stewardesses, Reservations: Call for Guide,
Cassette, Newseeville. (986) 944-9444 x UAW185
RESUMES.A professional resume can get you
more job interview. Let me write one for you!
794-7640
1970 Olds 98, 105,000 miles, $79, 749-4606
LOST/FOUND
1966 MUSTANG Body and deluxe interior fully restored. Cash needed. Sacrifice for 1966 firm.
LOST: 1 pair of Pole precription glasses. If found call 749-7859 (reward)
Found: Golden Lab/German Sheepmix. Brown w/black nose. Approx. one to one and one half years old. No tags. Found in Meadowbrook Apt. commlex.
Found. Keys on red clip on 4th floor Wescoe. Call
841-0644.
LOST! Cloture earring-red/gold, rectangular
earpierce ears 2.7, 3.8, Between Wescoe
and Barrie.
- Advanced opportunities
- Access to expertise with innovative
- Paid training
ENTERTEL
offers YOU
- Hourly wage with incentives
- Pleasant working cond.
HELP WANTED
CRUISSESS HIRING! $819-430.00 Carribean,
Hawaii, World! Call for Guide, Cassette,
Newswireice! 910-944-4444 XUKAASRCSURCE
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $819-430.00 yr. Now
Hiring! Call 1-855-667-6000 Ext. R-9758 for current
golf list.
AND
Are you interested in earning $35 to $80 a week working 10 to 25 hours. McDonald's has interest in you. Call me at 904-769-8500 p.m. to close and one weekend day. Apply in person at McDonald's, West 91st East 23rd. No phone calls.
PERSONAL
A KU student from far East Orient seeks a female girl for war relationship. Please reply to Nebil.
- $5-$6 per hour
Call 841-1200
White male age 24 seeks dating/relationship with black female. Interests in health, exercise, career. No joke. Serious replies to Kevin, Box 3802 Lawrence, Ks.
Pair of glasses, found in room 4064 Wescoe. Claim at 3118 Wescoe.
Interested in meeting a business major (male), between the ages of 27 and 35, who enjoys classical music? Please reply to box 392. Signed, a music enthusiast involved in finance.
Wild and Crazy nerds Let's Samba, Let's Conga
Wild and Crazy nerds Let's Samba, let's Conga,
see ya there Feb 21. The Massachusetts Kittens
1
To my guy in 30D, Thank 4 a fun 3 months! Love,
your girl in 108C.
**POINSETTA BEACH INN in the heart of the Port**
102-597-1257 | strip STUDENT discount.
102-597-1257
BUS PERSONAL
$10-$360 Weekly-Up Mailing Circulars! "Sincerely! Increase rich self-addressed envelope. Success. P.O. Box 470CEG, Woodstock,
IL 60068
50 positions available in summer sales program.
Average earnings $4000.00. For interview call
number 1-800-329-7661.
Blue Heron Futons
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattress
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.-Sat. 12:50 p.m.
841-9443
'CAMP COUNSELORS M-F/O - Outstanding Slim
Men, WHA, Athletics, Nutrition/Dietetics,
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Contact: Michie Fischedden, Director,
Dr. No. Woodmer, N.Y. N. 1188, 865-471-3900.
CALLTEXT
MENU HOT LINE
364-4567
The Union's recording
of the day's entrees & soups
COMPIREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater Kansas City area. Call for appointment.
DELI SPECIALS
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a different deli special every day
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16 oz. Drink
$2.25
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THE KANSAS UNION DELI
Modeling and professional profiles — shooting new
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Need custom imprinted sautearths, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event! M & J Favor offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specialties plus speedy and reliable delivery. You design it or it will be shipped. 220 W. (108) 763-5900 (Belgium) 841-4349
19th 'Color T. V $28.99 a month *Smith's YM* 1447 W. 3rd st. 423-578-371. Mon: 5-9 to Sun: 1-5 SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Patrella St. 3rd st. 423-578-371. Sat: 9-10 to Sun: 1-5 Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas from only 800, and skiing at Steamboat or Blackwater for more information. Burry, call Surprise Tourists for more information and reservations tull free representative 'TODAY!' When your Spring Vacation is complete.
level 3
Thousands of H & R albums—80 or less. Also collector items. Tabs and Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
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SERVICES OFFERED
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Earn now in Lawrence Driving School! Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided. 841-7749.
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MATH TUTOR - Bob Mesera holds an A. in math from M.I.U. where K02, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professors at IU, where he is now a faculty statistic statistics $_{5}$ per 40 minute session - Call 843-9032.
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books, i.e., Data Word 841-9770; papers,
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TV Tv $20.88 a month Curtis
TV Tv $32.48 wd Mon - Mar 11
Stoat 50:00 Stuat 5:00
24-Hour Typing, 108th semester in Lawrence;
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and office hours. No phone calls.
A. 2 professional typing. Term papers, Theses.
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A. L. SMITH TYPEING/Dissertations, theses, term papers. paper 842 9657 after 5:30.
A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc.
Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available, 843-1850.
Ace Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable, friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes. Mailings. Documents. Free access.价较 available. One block from campus. 482-2576. AlphaOmega Computer Services. Word Processing/Typing. Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics. Wordstar Document uploading. Free estimates.
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DISSERTATIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY Service
available to shorter student papers (up to 30
papers), Mommy's Mummy? 984, 827-384-
before 9 p.m. Please.
Games People Play
Rock Chalk Revue
Hoch Auditorium
Feb. 27, 28, and March 1
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BLOOM COUNTY
Dissertations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 18 yrs.
ex-science. Phone: 842-2391 after 3:30; e-mail:
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing Spelling/punctuation rates Cause transcription also: 841-4207
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IBC Correcting Selector I, will correct spelling
of the text.
WANTED
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional work pro-
gramming, software development, theses,
letter quality printing, etc. 843-7690.
Devereal#1 I need 2 K-State B-ball tickets/2/21
Call 749-5911
Female roommate to share three bdrm. house. Very nice & quiet neighborhood. Bdrm 927-938.
Female to take over contract at Naishtim Hall. Feb. rent & meal. FREE. CARE 102-1034
FEMALE ROOMMASTER WANTED to share great
Microwave, W&D dishwasher, W&D call
Microwave, W&D dishwasher, W&D call
Non-smoking, male to share nice condo, with fireplace, cable TV, dishwasher, washer/dryer, microwave, etc. Only $175.00 all utilities paid. Curt 841-4712
ROOMMATE to 2 Br. Apartment $112.50
apartments to 10 units. Fully furnished. On bus route.
924-368-7888
LOOKING TO GET OUT OF YOUR PRESENT
BOOK? NO, YOU CAN'T!
STAY THIS SUMMER! KU student seeks new-
smoking male to move in as soon as possible. Can
work out a deal. $15 plus electric. Call Paul.
916-278-2400. www.ku.edu.
Roommate needed! Duplex, Rent $125, 1/3
room, with large bedroom, with
large bathroom. Call Dave (855-717-3897)
WANTED male roommate to share deluxe apartment
verified. please call 917-325-6000. No more
phone calls. Free rent: 824-216-3891
Get Something Going!
Wanted: Clean, responsible roommate. 1 bedroom in a 3 BR at Bramble Hills $145/mo. plus 1/2 utilities. Available immediately. Dishwasher. Kitchen. Enclosed basketball court. Call 814-7487. Keep trying!
If you can't buy it . . . bargain.
Don't do without the items you really want simply because of lack. Many of the same items available in stores are listed at lower prices in classified. Sometimes you can even buy a special edition item, many many items in classified are sold by private parties. Don't do without - it with care.
Kansas Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
SALE!
SALE!
YAP! YAP!
YAP! YAP!
YAP! YAP!
YAP! YAP!
"Louiset C'mon over here. ... I think we got some bug spreadin' through the store."
bv Berke Breathed
VIPE!
WHAP!
IT WORKS WITH
SCANNERS, BUT
WOULD IT WORK ON
PHYLUS SCHEAFLY?
OH GOD,
I'M HIT.
AM I HIT!
MERIC!
12
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Monday, Feb. 17, 1986
Local care providers rid shelves of Tylenol
By Lynn Maree Ross Staff writer
Extra-Strength Tylenol has been advertised as the pain reliever hospitals recommend most, but some Lawrence residents and health-care professionals are not as confident about the product as they once were.
Diane Elsroth, Peekskill, N.Y. died last weekend after taking Tylenol capsules tainted with cyanide. Tests on the capsules remaining in the bottle found three other capsules also contained the poison.
A second bottle containing poisoned capsules, discovered in a Bronxville, N.Y., store, prompted a nationwide warning about the product. Even so, the Tylenol hot line said the company was not withdrawing the product from the market.
Ada Robson, charge nurse at *Civilian Manor of Lawrence*, a healthcare home at 3015 W. 21st St., said she had removed the Extra-Strength capsules from the shelves and was using the tablets instead.
"I myself don't use them anymore," she said.
Cheryl Tallent, staff pharmacist at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said yesterday that all Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules had been removed from the shelves. But discontinuing
the use of the capsules was not a permanent measure.
Tallent said her confidence in the makers of Tylenol was unchanged, even with the latest poison scare.
"I think their policies show that they put out a quality product," she said.
For now, she said, the hospital is using a generic brand of pain reliever, acetaminophen. Acetaminophen also is marketed under the brand name Tylenol. However, the brand the hospital uses is not made by McNeil Co., the Pennsylvania-based company that manufactures and markets Tylenol.
The Tylenol hot line said the McNeil Co. had manufactured and sold its pain reliever only under the Tylenol name.
John Baughman, director of the pharmacy at Watkins Memorial Hospital, said even though the manufacturers of Tylenol had had a second poisoning problem, the situation wouldn't change the hospital's use of the products. The hospital uses some Tylenol products, but not the Extra-Strength capsules.
Although some people still are confident about using Tylenol, the latest problem has caused some consumers to look differently at all types of pain relievers.
Miller
MADE THE
AMERICAN WAY
Don't Be Left Out in the Cold! Have Some Fun in the Sun with US! In Daytona!
7 Days for only $229 $215 at the Holiday Inn Surf Side
*For more info. Call Tom:
749-4957
Deadline extended to Feb. 21
*Space Limited
CHECKERS
MIDTERM MADNESS
We are offering ALL our daily specials EVERY DAY through Sunday, Febuary 23. So come in any day this week and order your favorite Checkers special for the special price!
Monday Madness
16" 2 topping pizza — $5.99
& .25 draws (dine in only)
Terrific Tuesday
2 10" 2 topping pizzas
& 4 soft drinks — $7.99
Wacky Wednesday 16"2 topping pizza &4 soft drinks — $7.99
Thrilling Thursday
10" 2 topping pizza
& 2 soft drinks — $4.99
Weekend Night Owl Special
2 16'' 2 topping pizzas
& a 6 pack of soft drinks
$12.00
KU Basketball Special
16" 2 topping pizzas — $5.99
& $1.50 Pitchers (dine in only)
Sunday Special 14" 2 topping pizza & 4 soft drinks $6.99
at 1/2 Price
Every Day Special Buy One Pizza Get the Second Pizza of Equal Value
841-8010
CHECKERS
The
2214 Yale
Owl Society with
in a minimum overall G.P.A. of 3.0
Now accepting applications from sophomores a minimum overall G.P.A.of 3.0
Applications and information in Rm.403 of Kansas Union
Applications and
current transcript
The Junior Class due March 7 at 5 p.m. Honor Society
of Kansas Union
Rm.403
PIZZA PIZZA 842-0600 PIZZA PIZZA DELIVERED
Is today Laundry Day?
FREE!
If so,
7:30-10 a.m.
come to Jesus Laundromat and dry your clothes
Feb.17-21
with wash
(offer not good with other offers)
Jesus Laundromat No. 777
19th & Louisiana
(across from the high school)
VOLKSWABE
Leon's BugBarn Offering
A COMPLETE LINE OF VW ACCESSORIES STOCK CUSTOM COMPETITION Parts Sales Service
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1226 E. 23rd
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BELL
Mix or Match any Two of the Items listed below for the price of One.
TACO BELL 2 for1 Tuesday
TURD GIRL
Burrito Tostada Pintos'n Cheese
All Day Tuesday 10:00 a.m.-1:00 a.m.
1220 W. 6th St.
1408 W.23rd St.
WRITING A TERM PAPER? Attend The
Offer Good Every Tuesday thru February.
FREE! Monday, February 17
RESEARCH PAPER WORKSHOP
SJTZ
The Newsroom
300 Strong Hall
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
International Performing Arts Committee presents
in
Senor Ricardo Talesnik
Swarthout Recital Hall, 8 P.M.19 Feb.
EN CAMISETA, a one-man show (in Spanish)
Tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office:
Students, $3.00 General Public, $4.00
SUA FILMS
GRADE "Z" NIGHT
THEM
THEM James Whitmore James Arness 50'S SCI-FI WITH GIANT MUTANTS!!
tonight 7:30
$1.50
Alderson Aud.
Presidents
Day Sale
50-70% OFF
Winter Merchandise
Mon.-Thurs. 10-8:30
Fri. & Sat. 10-6
Sun. 1-5
711 W. 23rd
The Malls
carousel
Presidents Day Sale
Mon-Thurs. 10-8-30
Fri. & Sat. 10-8
Sun. 1-5
carousel
711 W. 23rd
The Malls
carousel
Hot item Easy lifting makes detectors favorite among thieves. See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY, FEB. 18, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 99 (USPS 650-640)
Balmy Details page 3.
Fetch
Diane Dultmeier/KANSAN
Randy Gross, Shawnee freshman, and Patty Widener, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, play with a dog near Potter Lake. The three enjoyed the outdoors yesterday afternoon. See weather story page 3.
Some owners praise horse racing benefits
By Abbie Jones
Staff writer
Some local horse owners say it's the horses' nature to run — fast. Pari-mutuel wagering on the animal also would draw money, they say.
"They love to run," said Rick Schian, owner of Charocco Enterprises Inc., in Baldwin. "That's what they're bred for. Most of the time people are into it because they like it and they like the animal."
A resolution legalizing parimutuel waging on horse and dog races will be up for a full House debate on Thursday. The House committee of Federal and State Affairs approved the proposal Jan. 30, that would allow the state to permit, license, regulate and tax horse and dog races.
The state now prohibits parimutuel wagering on races. The proposal must pass both the Senate and the House by a two-thirds vote before it can be placed on the November ballot.
Schian, a supervisor for housing at the University of Kansas who trains and shoes horses, said horse racing brought excitement for spectators on the outside, but criticism from skeptics on its inner workings.
Opponents of pari-mutuel betting argue that there is a possibility for organized crime and mistreatment of the animals at the race track.
"If there is a lot of money anything is possible," Schian said. "The horse business is tricky stuff."
He said he would vote for the proposal although he wouldn't get into the business himself.
"I couldn't afford to lose one dime," he said, "I'm not in the racing game."
Shirley Funk, manager of Co-op Stable in rural Lawrence, said the money that racing would bring to the state outweighed the possibility of attracting crime.
"What's the difference between a race track and a bingo game," she said. "I'm not worried about elements it might bring in. It doesn't matter what we do in our society, we'll never exactly get rid of it."
One local horse owner says that pari-mutuel wagering may not be the answer to the state's problems, although it might create a heightened interest in horses.
Elizabeth Nice, owner of Rockafire Farms, rural Lawrence, said she hadn't made up her mind about the issue, but said that a chance for abuse was possible in racing.
See BETTING, p. 5, col. 1
SenEx to review faculty discipline
By Leslie Hirschbach
Staff writer
KU faculty members rarely are disciplined by the University. But the University hasn't been a consistent disciplinarian when necessary, because of unclear procedures, Sid Shapiro, chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, said yesterday.
Shapiro said SenEx now was discussing changes in KU's faculty disciplinary procedures that would give the University some guidelines when punishing a faculty member.
Sandra Wick, recording secretary for SenEx, said that in the past, disciplinary procedures often were changed by the Band-Aid principle — procedures were periodically patched-up when the need arose.
Now, she said, SenEx is trying to make some overall changes by evaluating the entire disciplinary code.
The University now divides faculty misconduct into two categories that have different disciplinary
procedures — academic misconduct and proscribed misconduct.
Shapiro said the categories were so broadly defined that both procedures applied to every case of misconduct. The University needs to decide when to use each set of prodecures.
"Our theory is there is no definition that will separate the two." he said.
There also is no clear definition of each type of misconduct.
Faculty members accused of academic misconduct are given a hearing before a department or school grievance committee.
Faculty who are accused of proscribed misconduct are given a hearing by the Faculty Tenure and Related Problems committee or before a judiciary committee.
Shapiro said the dean of the faculty member's school should decide what procedures applied and recommend those to SenEx. SenEx would make final procedural decisions.
written procedures was that some of them appeared in the Faculty Code of conduct and others appeared in the Senate Rules and Regulations.
Shapiro said one of the largest problems with the
Before the rules are compiled, he said, individual procedural changes need to be agreed upon by the committees making the amendments.
Shapiro said SenEx received approval to make changes from the Organization and Administration Committee, a faculty senate committee. Now, SenEx is discussing individual procedural changes.
Shapiro said all recommendations would be completed by Feb. 27, and SenEx would send them to the University Council on March 6 for final approval.
Arno Knapper, presiding officer of the University Council, said the council could vote the amendments down. In that case, the existing procedures would stand. The amendments also could be given complete or partial approval.
See SENEX. p. 5. col. 3
Bookstore receipts can be profitable
Staff writer
By Brian Kaberline
They lie around in the bottom of drawers and in old notebooks for months at a time. But what appear, at first glance, to be just old pieces of paper are valuable receipts — worth money in time.
Cashing in receipts from the KU Bookstores for dividends is as much of a campus tradition as complaining about the price of books. And the tradition is growing stronger, Steve Word, general manager of the KU Bookstores, said yesterday.
Word said the dividend program was meant to be a way to share any profits made by the stores with the students.
The program now pays enrolled students 6 percent of all receipts for cash and check purchases for a six-month period. The bookstores are supposed to pay only for receipts from the prior period, but Word said a six-month extension on the payments was usually granted.
In recent years, students have claimed anywhere from 70 percent to 96 percent of the money allocated for
the program, he said. The total dividends paid to students for period 76 receipts, given out in the latter half of 1984, were approximately $46,500. This translated to 93 percent of the $50,000 allocated.
The amount allocated is set by the Kansas Union Memorial Board of Directors. It is based on the sales figures for the main bookstore, the Oread Bookstore and the bookstore in the Burge Union, Word said.
If the amount set by the board is depleted, more money is allocated to cover all dividend requests, he said.
Kemper Straley, Winfield junior, said he took advantage of the program by picking receipts out of the trashcans near the exit of the bookstores. The best time for this, he said, is on days when there is a football game.
Straley said he would never get rich from the receipts, but "you make some money." He said he liked the dividend program, but would prefer the money be used to lower book prices.
Marcia Madaus, Lawrence senior.
See DIVIDEND, p. 5, col. 4
Enrollment continues upward trend
Rv Lori Poison
Staff writer
By the mid-1980s, enrollment at the University of Kansas should have leveled off to around 16,000 students.
That prediction was made in 1978 when total enrollment was 22,261 students. The number of high school seniors was declining and the economy was in a recession.
In the past five years, enrollment has dropped only twice — in the fall of 1983 and the spring of 1984.
But the University has defied the projections and continued to grow.
Del Shankel, acting vice chancellor for academic affairs, said yesterday that there were many reasons for the unexpected enrollment increase during the past few years.
Spring enrollment this year for the Lawrence campus, the College of Health Sciences and off-campus classes was 25,932 students, a record for spring enrollment.
"A higher percentage of high school graduates are realizing what a college education can mean," he said. "Also we have to look at the quality of education here. I guess we must be doing something right."
The number of high school students in Kansas has not dropped as much as expected, said Gary Watson, research analyst for the Kansas Department of Education.
"The trend is for high school enrollment to decrease," he said. "But the figures seem to be becoming a little more stable than a few years ago."
There were slightly more high school students in Kansas in 1965-86 than there were in 1984-85, he said.
Enrollment figures are directly
tied to the purse strings of the University. The more students attending the University, the more money the Kansas Legislature appropriates for KU's budget.
The University will use this spring's full-time equivalent enrollment figures to plan for the fiscal year 1988 budget. he said.
Keith Nitcher, director of business affairs, said the enrollment increases over the past few years reflected the type of education the University offered.
"As the job markets tighten, students want to be assured of going to a school where they will receive a quality education," he said.
Deborah Teater, director of the office of institutional research and planning, said many factors affected the projection of enrollment figures.
"We look at a number of things," she said. "We consider the number of high school seniors, economics and current and historical trends."
But Teeter said she could not predict what sort of changes in enrollment would occur over the next few years.
When the anticipated drop in enrollment was predicted during the 1970s, the University began to look at ways to attract more students.
Carla Rusch, assistant director of the office of admissions, said representatives from the admissions office visited high school campuses across the country to attract prospective students.
"We're expecting enrollment to stabilize, but you never can tell," she said.
"Each year we try to do different
sorts of things and expand our programs," she said. "We try to reach new people."
She said prospective students often recognized one of the biggest attractions of the University — the price.
"We've gotten a lot of publicity
recently about our reasonable rates and quality education," Rasch said. "It's really a good buy for the amount of money they put in."
Many out-of-state students choose to attend the University instead of a
But most KU students are Kansas residents.
higher-priced private college, she said.
Only 29 percent of the students attending the University are not Kansas residents, Rasch said.
27,141
KU enrollment in the 80s
Fall semester Spring semester All campuses All campuses
*Numbers represent 20th day count
26,367
25,294
25,420
25,195
25,437
25,932
81-82 82-83 83-84 84-85 85-86
Source: Department of Educational Services
Bill Skeet/KANSAN
Shuttle projects delayed
KU faculty members involved in the shuttle program are beginning to sort out the futures of their projects, they said yesterday.
By Sandra Crider
As the investigation into the cause of the Jan. 28 explosion of the space shuttle Challenger continues, the civilian-in-space program has been given partial go-ahead.
Staff writer
The journalist-in-space program will resume the first phase of its selection process, officials said.
Rick Musser, associate professor of journalism, is assisting Del Brinkman, dean of journalism, in coordinating the regional review committee. Musser said the program adviser in Houston told him yesterday that the administrative portion of the project could now continue.
Musser said the National Aeronautics and Space Administration was sending applications to the cooperating schools of journalism. The schools in this region then will send their top choices to the University of Kansas for review by the regional committee.
V
He said he expected the committee, not yet completely formed, to meet in early May to review the top 20 applicants from the region. The group was originally scheduled to meet March 3.
See SHUTTLE, p. 5, col. 5
1
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1986
News Briefs
Truck leaks toxins after fall off bridge
DAYTON, Ohio — A truck hauling 5,000 gallons of a toxic chemical plunged on a freeway bridge early yesterday. The accident forced the evacuation of about 100 people and threatened drinking water from wells as about 1,000 gallons leaked from the tank.
The truck was hauling methylene di-phenylene disocyanate from Geyser, La., to Livonia, Mich., when it ran on an Interstate 70 bridge into about three feet of water. The driver and a passenger received minor injuries.
The chemical could be fatal if swallowed, said officials of BASF-Wyandotte. But they also said it should pose no threat to the environment or people in the area.
S. Africa riots rage
JOHANNESBURG South Africa
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Daylong riots raged yesterday in a black township that lies in the middle of comfortable white suburbs north of Johannesburg. Residents said five people were killed, which would bring the three-day death toll to eight.
Witnesses said the rioting was the worst in the three days of bloodshed in Alexandra township that started Saturday after funerals for two anti-apartheid activists. Some whites watched it from their green lawns on surrounding hills.
Ship rejected help
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A sinking Soviet cruise liner refused help for two hours before New Zealand authorities ordered rescue vessels to save the 737 people aboard, officials said yesterday.
The luxury liner Mikhail Lermontov hit rocks and sank Sunday in a windy rain off New Zealand's South Island. The search for the one missing crewman was called off yesterday. Sixteen people were injured.
New Zealand Prime Minister David Lange ordered an investigation to determine why the liner strayed off course and was so badly damaged.
United Press International
Johnson & Johnson's decision to halt production of the capsule forms of its all-over-the-counter drugs will force other pharmaceutical drug companies into the same decision, pharmacists around the country said yesterday.
Scare may force capsule end
"It will knock everyone out of the box in capsules for a long time," said Fred Young, pharmacist at Prescription City South in Chicago, site of the first Tylterol poisoning scare in 1982.
Johnson & Johnson announced yesterday that it would replace consumers' bottles of over-the-counter medicines in capsule form and would also replace bottles thrown away since the Tylenol cyanide poisoning scare began.
shelves)," said Connie Upshaw at the Anthropology in Raleigh, N.C.
Pharmacists interviewed in random spot checks generally hailed Johnson & Johnson's decision to take Tylenol and other capsules of the market as the only possible response to the second cyanide poisoning crisis.
"I think this will give Johnson & Johnson some credibility again," said Victor Kintz at EJ's Rexall Drugs in St. Louis. "They'll probably win back their market share."
Johnson & Johnson said it is permanently shelving all capsule forms of its over-the-counter medicines, including Extra- and Regular-Strength Tylenol, Sine-Aid, Co-Tylenol, Maximum-Strength Tylenol Sinus Medicine and Dimensyn.
The discovery of two tainted bottles of Extra-Strength Tylenol in
The company said it believed most Tylenol capsule users would switch to tablets or the relatively new "caplet" form of Tylenol. Johnson & Johnson said both forms would be destroyed by most poisons and are virtually tamper-proof.
From Kansan wires.
Consumers can return what remains of their bottles of Tylenol capsules and receive in exchange a coupon for the same size bottle of caplets or tablets of the same product. The address is Tylenol Capsule Exchange, P.O. Box 2000, Maple Plain, Minnesota. 55348
Consumers who have thrown away their capsules recently can receive a coupon for a replacement bottle by calling 1-800-544-3113.
Bronxville, N.Y., had proved that even triple-sealed capsule packages were not sufficiently tamper-resistant, the company said.
"The name Tylenol has stuck with 99 percent of the people as well as their doctors," said a pharmacist on Chicago's north side.
But Don Gartland of Beaverton Pharmacy in Portland, Ore., said his customers would have problems without capsules.
"I think it's damned unfortunate that one lousey clown is screwing up the whole nation," he said. "It's probably a wise decision, but an unfortunate one. A lot of people can't swallow tablets."
"I'm absolutely against doing away with all caps," said Elmar Jacobson at Sir Francis Drake Pharmacy in San Francisco. "Capsules have a place. They dissolve faster than tablets."
New type of control to be tried
United Press International
GENEVA — The World Health Organization said yesterday it was beginning the first human trials of a synthetic birth-control vaccine.
The organization said 30 women volunteered for the trials starting this month at Flinders Medical Center in Adelaide, Australia.
"The vaccine may prove to be as important a development in birth-control technology as the contraceptive pill," WHO official David Griffith said.
The vaccine offers advantages over current methods, he said, citing simplicity of administering, one-two-year effectiveness and absence of side-effects.
The vaccine consists of part of a hormone known as human chorionic gonadotropin, or HCG, which is produced by fertilized eggs when a woman becomes pregnant.
HCG helps maintain a balance of other hormones during pregnancy and also is thought to prevent the mother's immune system from rejecting a fetus as a foreign substance. In animal tests, vaccination caused production of antibodies against HCG, causing the fertilized egg to be swept away.
WHO said the first trials, lasting nine months, are to determine the safety of the vaccine in already sterilized women.
U.S. envoy visits Filipinos
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — President Reagan's special envoy, Philip Habib, met separately yesterday with President Ferdinand E. Marcos and with Corazon Aquino, both unyielding in their claims to the Philippine presidency.
When Reagan sent Habib here, he said the veteran troubleshooter was on a fact-finding mission and would report back to him on the aftermath of the Feb. 7 presidential election.
presidently. Aquino was still ahead in an independent vote count although the National Assembly officially proclaimed Marcos the victor Saturday.
In a printed statement yesterday, Aquino said, "What is at stake here is more than the removal of an impostor president. It is the future of democracy itself."
Some U.S. officials hinted that Habib might try to act as a negotiator, but neither Habib nor the people he met gave any sign that that was so.
Despite world criticism of Marcos' victory claim, growing economic pressures and a unified and emboldened opposition, the president seemed confident he can rule
for another six years.
His only public comment after meeting two hours with Habib was that Habib guaranteed he was "not interested in any way in telling us how to run our affairs."
Marcos, who has been running the Philippines for 20 years with a mixture of authoritarian rule and democracy, said he gave Habib documents proving his opponents cheated and used violence in the election.
harassment or vote by the government.
Signs emerged that Aquino's call for restrained civil disobedience at a giant rally Sunday was having an effect.
Roman Catholic bishops, independent pollwatchers and international observers have cited fraud and violent harassment of voters by the government.
The price of stock in the huge San Miguel Corp. dropped about 20 percent from last week. Aquino asked Filipinos to boycott the company, whose chairman, Eduardo Coiuangco, she called a Marcos crony.
Several banks she listed for boycott reported heavy withdrawals.
Aquino has asked for strikes, school walkouts, boycotts and noise barrages the day after Marcos' inauguration, expected next week.
Engineers opposed shuttle launch
United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Rocket engineers strongly advised NASA against launching the space shuttle Challenger because of concern about the effects of cold weather on crucial seals in solid-fuel booster rockets, CBS News reported yesterday.
The network quoted anonymous sources as saying that the night before the Jan. 28 launching, engineers with Morton Thiolok, builder of the giant rocket boosters, were unanimous in their opposition to
approving the 25th shuttle launch that day.
Experts suspect two rubber O-ring seals in the joint may have failed for some reason, possibly cold weather, allowing flame and hot gas to escape.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration documents show a long history of concern about the seals, but they were judged safe to fly, even though Challenger's launching came in 38-degree weather — a record for the shuttle program. The seals are known to lose resiliency in cold weather.
search for shuttle debris in or near a 6-mile-wide restricted zone where debris from a satellite rocket was found last week.
Divers from the USS Preserver, a Navy salvage ship, continued the
Photographs released by NASA yesterday showed a large piece of twisted wreckage be hauled aboard Saturday or Sunday that appeared to be the blasted remnants of the rocket's second stage fuel casting.
The four-man Johnson Sea Link 2, a small research submersible equipped with television cameras and sonar, was able to photograph the suspected remains of the shuttle's right-hand booster rocket Sunday in water about 40 miles off shore.
Chad gets troop aid of France
The Associated Press
PARIS — France sent troops and planes to Chad yesterday to support President Hissene Habre's government against Libyan-backed rebels after an air strike on the airport at N'Djamena, capital of the African country.
Defense Minister Paul Quilies announced the deployment soon after he reported that one Soviet-built Libyan Tupolev-22 jet bombed the N'Djamaa airport runway about 7 a.m. yesterday. On Sunday, French planes bombed an airfield at a Libyan-built rebel base in the north of the former French colony.
The Libyan news agency JANA said in Tripoli that the N'Djamena raid was carried out by the air force of rebel forces in Chad trying to overthrow Habre and was in response to the French raid.
The rebels are not known to have their own air force, but the Libyans have Tupelov jets in their arsenal of 535 warplanes.
Quiles said damage at N'Djamena airport was minimal and no one was hurt. JANA claimed the strike rendered it unusable.
A dispatch from Paris by the Soviet news agency Tass said yesterday that "an explosive situation has developed in the center of Africa as a result of France's growing armed intervention in Chad."
Libya accused the United States yesterday of being behind French President Francis Mitterrand's decision to intervene in Chad.
A high-ranking Libyan official, who insisted on anonymity, told reporters in Tripoli that Mitterrand was President Reagan's pawn.
Quiles said three French warplanes, two Mirage F-1s and a Jaguar, landed at N'Djamena yesterday.
France has kept 1,500 troops in the Central African Republic, poised to return to Chad, since signing a mutual withdrawal agreement with Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy in the fall of 1984. France says Libya never honored the pact.
About 200 French troops were sent to Chad over the weekend, according to the Defense Ministry. They included air force commands to protect French transports flying supplies and equipment to the Habre government. Other French soldiers man anti-aircraft missile batteries.
France says the Libyans have 4,500 troops in northern Chad.
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3
News Briefs
Three Kansans die in New Mexico crash
DULCE, N.M. — Three members of a Kansas family returning home from a skiing trip were killed and two others were injured Monday when their single engine Cessna crashed on an Indian reservation in northwestern New Mexico.
Pilot Reginald Boothe of Wichita, one of the two survivors, told New Mexico state police that the plane's engine failed.
Killed in the crash were Reginald Boothe's wife, Judith, 43; Matthew Boothe, no age available; and Vance Boothe, 16, all of Wichita.
Reginald Boothe and the other survivor, Thad Clemens, 16, of Wichita, were airlifted early today to the University of New Mexico Medical Center in Albuquerque. Both were in undetermined condition.
Students honor prof
Takeru Higuchi, Regents distinguished professor of pharmacy and chemistry, was honored last night in Topeka for promoting higher education.
The Associated Students of Kansas honored Higuchi at the Capitol as a part of the association's Higher Education Week.
"I appreciate that," Higuchi said. "Especially from a student group."
Higuchi, chairman of the board of Oread Laboratories, said he worked with state legislators to show the value of higher education in Kansas. Despite proposed cuts in Board of Regents school budgets, Higuchi said, support for higher education should increase.
"The state fundamentally has taken a very positive stance towards the role of the University," he said. "I'm very optimistic as to the future."
Board sets deadline
The deadline to return Mortar Board information sheets is 5 p.m. Thursday, Linda Beville, senior adviser to Mortar Board, said yesterday.
Students who qualify for Mortar Board, a national senior honorary and service organization, may pick up and return the information sheets at Room 214 Strong Hall.
The information sheets are available for all undergraduate who have a minimum grade point average of 3.0 and are scheduled to graduate in December 1986, May 1987 or August 1987. Beville said
The Kansas University Endowment Association recently received an $8,500 bequest from the estate of a couple who never attended the University of Kansas, the association said yesterday.
KUEA receives funds
The association said the W.H. and Rosamond Alexander Student Loan Fund was established from the estate of Rosamond Alexander.
Todd Seymour, endowment association president, said, "It is very gratifying that a person who did not attend the University of Kansas chose to benefit KU through a bequest."
Weather
Today will be partly sunny with temperatures in the mid- to upper-60s. Variable winds will blow at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight should be fair with the low temperature in the mid-30s. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with temperatures in the mid- to upper-60s.
From staff and wire reports.
Insurance changes hurt, help
By Lynn Maree Ross Staff writer
A proposed $1 million cap on malpractice insurance suits could save doctors money on insurance premiums. But the loss of liability insurance may cause the state to lose money.
Thomas Sloan, an administrative assistant to State Sen. Robert Talkington, R-Iola, said malpractice insurance and liability insurance covered different types of suits.
Malpractice insurance covers suits in which someone is at fault, he said. Liability, on the other hand, covers suits where no one is at fault, but a claim of injury still is valid.
For example, if a doctor knowingly performs an operation that a patient does not need, the doctor is at fault. He then can be sued for medical malpractice.
If a patient trips and breaks his leg in the doctor's office, the doctor is not at fault. Therefore, he only can be sued for medical liability.
The proposed cap on malpractice awards would stabilize insurance premiums because companies no longer would have to charge high rates to cover exorbitant awards.
But although the cap would benefit physicians, said Steven Ruddick, legal counsel at the University of Kansas Medical Center, the loss of
Lliability insurance, until 18 months ago protected doctors in their roles as teachers or administrators. Before that time, doctors at the Med Center could get liability insurance from the Meade Co. Inc. in Topeka.
liability insurance leaves them vulnerable as teachers and administrators and makes the state liable for the damages.
Bill McBride, president of the company, said Midland, a company in New York, wrote the insurance policies and his company only acted as the agent. Last year Midland decided to discontinue the policy.
Margaret Walters, McBride's administrative assistant, said, "It
wasn't our choice.
She said that no company would write a liability policy like the one Midland had written for them. Most colleges in the country have the same problem.
Now the doctors' only protection as a teacher or administrator is the stare.
Ruddick said that under the Kansas tort claims act, doctors were protected, as teachers or administrators, when acting as within the scope of their job.
One backdraw is that the doctors can't choose their own lawyer. And if the case is lost, the state remains liable for the damages.
Planning of exhibit takes time
Bv Debra West
Staff writer
Before the new exhibit at the Museum of Anthropology opens March 2, employees of the museum will have spent many months in the planning and design of the project.
The exhibit is called "Santos: The Cult of the Saints in Hispanic Folk Culture."
INK
Ann Schlager, who designs the exhibits at the museum, said yesterday that each exhibit went through three stages before opening.
The first stage is research and planning. The second is consultation and design and the final stage is production and installation.
Robert Smith, curator of the museum, has spent five months researching and planning for the santos exhibit.
The exhibit is meant to illustrate the influence of the saints on the lives of Hispanic people, Smith said. It comprises santos collected from the Philippines, Paraguay, Peru, Ecuador and New Mexico.
A santo is a religious object in the image of a saint, Smith said. It is an object of power and the saint is believed to be present in the santo at times.
The traditions and beliefs surrounding the santos stem from a detailed process, Smith said.
Several different types of religious objects in the form of saints, called santos, will be displayed at the Museum of Anthropology. The exhibit, "Santos: The Cult of the Saints in Hispanic Folk Culture," will begin March 2.
First, a saint must be identified and aligned with a social value. For example, the Virgin Mary is identified with compassion, love and fortiveness.
The next step is the making of the
santo. Usually they are made by a santero, or folk sculptor, who is concerned with making the figures according to tradition. It is believed that the santos gain power from the santeros' knowledge of tradition and from the holy life of the santero.
People can pray to the santos in
times of need. For example, it might be worshiped in order to heal the sick or to prevent a flood.
After Smith researched the santo,
he consulted with the designer and
conservator. The conservator cares
for the artifacts and repairs them if
necessary.
After the design has been agreed upon, the designer takes command. Repair work is done and mounts are constructed for some artworks which are installed in display cases.
Schlager said she was both the designer and the conservator, so consultation was easier.
Sunshine brings out students
By Brian Whepley Staff writer
Friebles, shorts and untanned legs came out of hibernation yesterday when unseasonably, warm weather made an appearance in Lawrence.
The high today should be about 70 degrees with mostly clear skies, Smith said. Tomorrow should have a high of 72 degrees under mostly sunny skies.
KU weather observer Aaron Smith said the warm temperatures should continue until the end of the week. The unseasonable weather was caused by upper-level weather patterns bringing warm air from the west and southwest.
Students were soaking up the rays all around campus, and some were even trying to study while working on pre-soring break tans.
The temperature should drop by Thursday and Friday into the 60s, Smith said, although he didn't know what the long-ground forecast was.
Bill Hoag, Wichita graduate student, said he was glad to get out of his stuff apartment to study, but didn't think the sunshine was motivational.
"People get outside and hang around and just don't want to do their homework," he said.
Hog was sitting on the hill west of Potter Lake. He said he feared he would get wet sitting on the damp ground, but the sunshine and his jacket had taken care of the problem.
Others were undaunted by the remaining signs of winter.
"There's a lot of dogs around," he said. "They're running on the ice."
As he spoke, a brave Frisbee player crawled on his stomach onto the thin ice over Potter Lake to retrieve his Frisbee.
Carol Jones, Lenexa freshman, sat with two friends on the stone bridge near the pond. She said they had been looking forward to wearing shorts for the first time this year.
"We're preparing ourselves for Daytona," she said.
Denny Powers, assistant manager at Gibson's Discount Center, 2525 Iowa St., said the store also benefited from the weather.
Powers said, "We just got the Copperone display set up."
Sales of Frisbees, kites and spring clothes always picked up when there were several days of warm weather, he said.
Staff writer
Radar detectors a hot item
By Brian Whepley
The detectors are easy targets for thieves because they are kept on dashboards within easy sight, said Detective Lt. Wayne Schmille.
Radar detectors have become the trendy thing to steal the way citizen's band radios and 8-track players used to be, a Lawrence police detective said last week.
Schmille said Lawrence and other college towns were havens for thieves because many students had expensive cars with expensive stereos.
Lawrence police usually get reports of radar detector thefts about five times a week. Last summer was an especially popular time for detector and car stereo thefts.
Officer Gary Sampson, who investigated the thefts last summer, said that in one night there were about 50 reported thefts.
Sampson said about 30 people were involved in the thefts last summer and the thieves ranged in age from 14
Most of the detectors have not been found, Schmille said. The detectors are easily sold from hand to hand.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police, said radar detectors thefts first started about two years ago. The KU police didn't have as many reported thefts as the Lawrence police last summer because there weren't many students around.
to 27. The majority of the thieves were teenagers, he said.
Jim Denney, director of KU police, said last week that seven people had been sent to jail last fall in connection with the thefts but that it hadn't stopped the problem.
Since the beginning of the year, the department has been using uniform crime reports which provide information about specific items such as the detectors, said Lt. Mike Hall, crime analyst for the department. Information from the reports should be available to police departments in about four months, Hall said.
"It definitely was a growing problem so we decided to include them," she said.
The KBI recently listed radar detectors on the crime forms, said Mary Lou McPhail, research analyst for the KBI.
He said radar detectors and any other stolen items only would be listed on the uniform crime reports if there was an identifying number available.
It is hard to find the detectors. But if they are found the police rarely find the owners because they didn't record the serial number or etch an identification number into the detector, Schmille said.
Thieves also can be discouraged by taking the detector off the dashboard and putting it under the seat while not in use, Schmille said.
The police have thousands of stolen items that can't be returned because they don't know who they belong to, he said.
When someone can get a $250 radar detector for $75 to $100, there is a ready market for them and they rarely show up in pawnshops, he said.
"Every once in while you get lucky and return one," Schmille said.
People could help the recovery process by marking their detectors and other items, Schmille said. The department as well as the KU police have etching machines that can be used for identification purposes.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Students of business who want to expand their experience beyond the borders of the United States have a new option with Baker University's International Business Program, the only one of its type in the nation.
The international business emphasis will include four courses and an internship with a U.S. company that conducts business overseas or a foreign company doing business in this country.
Internships also will be sought for foreign students with U.S. businesses, said Thomas Boyd, executive vice president for University Relations of Baker in Baldwin City. Most of the foreign students at Baker seek degrees in mathematics or business management.
United Press International
Baker program aims at world experience
"It's going to be fascinating for American students, and equally fascinating for the foreign students," he said. The program
Boyd has spent the last four to five months meeting with alums in business who could offer internships, and met recently with consults in Kansas City, seeking additional international connections.
Boyd said he knew of no other such program by U.S. universities, and credits Baker's international ties with helping to launch the program.
The courses will be taught by adjunct professors from the business community.
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University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Another Haitian refugee
France doesn't want him.
Gabon, Cameroon, Morocco and Brazil have turned him away.
Clearly, U.S. officials have decided to cut their losses with Duvalier and cut him loose.
Jean-Claude Duvalier, the deposed president of Haiti, has had trouble finding a new home.
The United States, which was willing to shuttle Duvalier to France and has pressed other countries to open their doors, told Duvalier on Sunday that he would not be welcome here either.
The decision by the State Department apparently scuttled an attempt by French authorities to load him and his wife on a jetliner bound for New York.
his private Swiss bank accounts.
The Haitian economy suffered, U.S. credibility suffered and Duvalier grew fat at the foreign aid trough.
Among those who suffered under Duvalier were the thousands of Haitian refugees who have slipped into the United States illegally.
Like Duvalier, most of the refugees were not welcomed into the United States. They braved the Atlantic Ocean in small boats, escaping the turtures, beatings and killings by Duvalier's personal militia. Once here, many faced jail and deportation.
Baby Doc might consider following their lead.
He too could sail across the stormy Atlantic, risk capsizing and drowning and try to hide among the poorest of his immigrant countrymen.
Certainly they would be happy to see him.
Leaving time for change
But if a cooling-off period exists - and it should - the emotions of adoptive parents must also be considered.
People who sign a contract to buy goods from salesmen have 72 hours to change their minds.
A Wyandotte County district judge thinks the same cooling-off period should extend to parents who promise to give up their baby for adoption.
Although parents, giving up their child have many months to weigh the decision, feelings change dramatically once the baby is actually born.
In a recent case, the parents of a baby born last fall signed his adoption papers hours after his birth. The next day, his adoptive parents took him home.
His biological parents changed their minds about the adoption, and the Wyandotte County judge has ruled the baby must be returned to them.
In this case, the boy's adoptive parents have taken care of him for several months. They have considered him their child. They have spent money feeding, clothing and diapering him, as well as giving the biological parents $2,100 for living and medical costs.
Now they are told he's not really their son.
Some time to reconsider must be allowed for such heavy decisions as whether to raise a child. But don't give a baby to a family and then reserve the right to take him back.
Power where it belongs
The law provided for automatic budget cuts in the event that the country's elected representatives, including the president, could not agree on a budget that would hold the line on government spending.
If Congress and the president failed to meet annual budget targets, the comptroller general was to step in and execute across-the-board cuts. The federal court ruled that the procedure was unconstitutional because it depended on the comptroller general.
The founding fathers put the power to tax and spend in the hands of Congress and gave the president the right to veto. This deliberate separation of powers is to prevent the legislative branch from aggrandizing itself at the expense of the two other branches. The recent federal court
ruling upholds that principle.
Firing speeches is that principle. The problem is that neither Congress nor the president have been responsible in carrying out their duty and the deficit has grown out of hand in recent years.
Reagan's latest budget is a prime example of the irresponsibility. He meets the Gramm-Rudman targets in domestic expenditure, which bears the brunt of his machete hacking. But his proposal to increase defense expenditure flouts the spirit of the very law he engineered.
The federal court ruling does not reduce the commitment to make cuts in both domestic and defense budgets. What it does, is to take the ball out of the court of the Gramm-Rudman law, throwing it firmly back in the court of the legislature, where it always belonged.
In the impasses that have resulted, operations of the entire federal government have been threatened.
Now that it's back there, Congress should concentrate on reducing the deficit in line with humane priorities, not amoral automatic cuts.
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Lauretta McMillon ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry ... Campus editor
Tara Clinde ... Sports editor
Brisa Waddill ... Photo editor
Sucanne Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nixon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Lori Eckart ... Classified
Carolina Jones ... Production manager
Pellen Lee ... National manager
John Ohrzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
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Marcos tops Daley's election moves
Back in the '60s, I lost some of m) innocence about politics by covering some of the activities of the Richard J. Daley machine in Chicago. Many of the challengers of that regime thought they stood a chance until the graveyard votes came in. Dead people counted for a lot in those days in Chicago elections.
Tough as Daley and his minions were, they could have learned a thing or two from Ferdinand Marcos in the Philinines during the last few days.
For example, Daley lived in a Chicago neighborhood called Bridgeport. In any given election, Daley and his candidates could hope to come away from Bridgeport with 70 percent or 80 percent of the vote.
Marcos should have taken Dick Daley to school with him. When the votes were counted in Marcos' home province the other day, there was a result rare in the history of free elections. Out of 19,000 votes cast, Marcos received every single one of them. A 100 percent sweep.
It might have made a good entry for the Guinness Book of World Records, except for one nasty little wrinkle, a messy detail.
Hundreds of supporters of Corazon Aquino came forward to say they had voted for her. Therefore, the zero
---
Robert C.
Maynard
Oakland Tribune
score for Aquino meant just what you would have suspected if something of the sort had happened in Cook County.
That there was fraud in the most recent Philippine election should surprise no one. Similar charges have been made in the past; only the names were different. That is not what is significant about this election, nor why I think it will be remembered.
The enduring legacy of this election will be the momentum it is likely to provide for the radical enemies of Marcos and in the concept of democracy in the Philippines.
Guerrilla forces are positioning themselves throughout the islands. Some are Marxist-Leninist. Others belong to religious factions seeking autonomy from the Philippine government.
One of the pet arguments of the radicals, augmented when Marcos declared martial law in 1972, is that the notion of democracy in the Philippines is a fraud and a joke.
Because there is a national assembly, albeit staked heavily in his favor, Marcos has been able to counter with the claim that some semblance of democracy exists.
Not the first to blunder through arrogance, Marcos entered this campaign assuming he could easily beat
Leaving nothing to chance, they took a course of rampant and reckless fraud. In one precinct in Mindanao, where 90 percent of the residents are illiterate, 100 percent of the ballots were written in neat penmanship.
The enduring legacy of this election will be the momentum it is likely to provide for the radical enemies of Marcos and the concept of democracy in the Philippines.
the untested Aquino. Despite his seemingly poor health, he probably could have.
But near the end of the campaign, as the Aquino crowds in Manila and across the islands began to swell, Marcos and his men appeared to lose their poise.
Hooligans went on rampages that left 30 dead in three days. Some of those outbreaks can be traced to supporters of the Marcos empire. It was not just a fraudulent election. It was also a violent lesson to Marcos challengers.
For all the effort, he might be a victor with his own ballot boxes, but he is also an emperor with no clothes. He has set himself now in concrete as the living proof to the masses of his nation that his brand of democracy is a vicious fraud.
In Chicago, at least, reform movements were possible. In the Philippines, the recent elector serves to undermine the credibility of such democratic reformers as Cory Aquino. This event is likely to embolden the revolutionaries.
The longer Marcos remains in power with our support, the worse the case for democracy becomes in the Philippines. The more the pity because it was our idea in the first place.
FERDINAND
E. MARCOS.
ONE VOTE!
MARCOS
AQUINO
MARCOS
AQUINO
FERDINAND
E. MARCOS.
ONE VOTE!
Reagan is young by Celsius measure
Although I haven't checked this with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the severity of the weather apparently depends on such variables as age.
In these climes, the winter has been relatively mild. One reason may be that on his 75th birthday this month, Ronald Reagan, the oldest president we've ever had, quipped that he was "24 Celsius."
Applying a temperature calibration to age might have been good for a laugh but it failed to take into account the wind chill factor.
Some senior citizens may argue that the wind chill scale doesn't go as high as 75, but they would be wrong. I distinctly remember one summer when the thermometer hit 102 degrees, a colleague wrote that with the wind chill factor it seemed like 119.
Maybe that's why Reagan didn't
Dick West
United Press International
mention it. The wind chill factor, along with Moammar Khadafy, might have made him feel 93.
By my calculation, Reagan's Celsius age on his 75th Fahrenheit birthday would have been 23 years and some months.
To him, maybe, it seemed like 24,
but in reality he was a few days
younger than that. Or maybe he
figured 24 was close enough for
government work.
Either way, el presidente likewise failed to mention that the Celsius scale, invented in 1742 by Andres Celsius, a Swedish astronomer, is one of the metric measurements.
Nor did he impart the information
that the U.S. Metric Board went out of business at the end of 1982.
To refresh your memory, the board was created in 1975, when Reagan was a mere 65 Fahrenheit, or 18 Celsius, to coordinate voluntary switches to the metric system.
Again to refresh your memory, there weren't many voluntary switches, although weathermen continue to report metric thermometer readings, which are widely ignored.
Also to refresh your memory, you arrive at a Celsius reading by subtracting 32 from the Fahrenheit figure and multiplying by 5-9ths.
Thirty-two, incidentally, is the Fahrenheit temperature at which water freezes. The Celsius freezing point is zero. Add 100 degrees and you reach the Celsius boiling point, a gradient that got the scale included in the metric system.
Although scientists love scales with
100 gradients, why Swedish astronomers needed new temperature measurements is beyond me. For most of us American laymen, water continues to boil at 212 degrees.
As for astrology, I don't know how old Reagan is according to the Chinese calendar. However, a day or two after he turned 24 Celsius, the Chinese ushered in the Year of the Tiger. Let Khadafy make of what he will.
The wind chill factor did not come along until 1939. I don't know who invented it but reports that it was named for Sir Churchston Winchill, a British astronomer, appear to have been exaggerated.
Does Reagan give you advice like this? Not even on his birthday.
Mailbox
Pro-choice hypocrisy
I find it shameful that individuals who represent "higher" education are so often seemingly shallow in their intellectual and moral capacities.
A Kansan report of Feb.7 presented a representative of our own University as an opponent of the collection of state abortion statistics. The statement that she opposes such statistics because "It is simply another attempt to cause pain and suffering to the individuals and families who chose abortion" is a devaluation of all the individuals involved in abortion.
First, it devalues the woman seeking an abortion. For decades we have heard a call for the recognition and strength of women. Yet, today, when the practice of abortion is opposed, the abortion proponents cry out against the anti-abortionists saying that they are preying on the weakness of the woman. We need abortion, they say, to alleviate the
social, economical and emotional distress that women suffer as they look toward bearing a child.
The medical profession also suffers under the banner of "pro choice." The profile that they present when destroying the most innocent of life is belittling. When instruments of the healing arts are used to bring about the death of the defenseless, we suddenly find that those who were once protectors and defenders of life become its executioners.
The child, contrary to what some wish us to believe, suffers severely. Not simply because of the physical pain she suffers as her life is destroyed. But her life before her, her creativity, her growth intellectually and physically, are wrenched away from her. And she has no choice.
We are not people who are so intellectually naïve or ignorant that we should fail to see the gross contradiction and hypocrisy promoted by the pre-abortion position. Women in our society are not so "feeble minded"
Glenn Veach
Medicine and science are not at all lacking the capability to tell us that life has its beginning, ever so simply and purely, with the union of the sperm and ovum. Society is not so blind as to know that when we begin to debase and devalue the weak and innocent among us, we unleash a cancerous mentality that will spread far beyond its original intent.
that they cannot care for the function of their body and take preventative measures to insure that an unwanted pregnancy does not occur.
Home on the range
Glenn Veach Lawrence graduate student
History has shown us the foolishness of evaluating the worthiness of an individual on her color or race. Let us not be so foolish to now turn the same standards against the unborn, the handicapped or our elders.
Sitting around the shed last night after a hard day on the prairie, we
noticed this half-baked article on 3.2 beer by some city slicker from Madison, Wis. (Kansan, Feb. 12). He seems to have his wires a bit crossed.
We Kansans have been drinking "this charming cross between beer and water" for some time now. We don't need a "foreigner" from Wisconsin to tell us that 3.2 does not the champagne of cereal malt beverages make.
When the 21 drinking-age goes into effect, local "watering holes" such as Johnny's, the Wheel and the Hawk would not have to succumb to either the 3.2 or the club-serving format. There is a 21-bar format such as the Up and Under.
What will happen to the workhorse of cereal malt beverages? Well, we've got two years to go. Who knows, maybe a tornado will come along and put us all over the rainbow. Yes, Toto, we are in Kansas.
Kelly Jerrigan
Keny Korte
Kevin Tracy
Overland Park sophomores
Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Betting
Continued from p.
"I know that something needs to be done, but I don't know if racing is the answer. I personally don't agree with horse racing from a humanitarian standpoint."
Nice said she hadn't seen any of the possible abuses to horses, but had heard cases of race horses who were starved, drugged and stuck with objects.
Bud Newell, owner of Serenata Farms in LeCompton, said the policing organizations for tracks should set penalties for track abuses.
"Not every horse that is in racing is abused," she said. "But the propensity is there."
"Any place that money is involved you have to watch it," Newell said. "It's a sport like everything else and it's not totally clean."
Newell also said he thought it
was time for Kansas to share in the prosperity that other states were enjoying.
"I think the state needs to get out of the dark ages and become contemporary," Newell said. "There is a lot of labor and a lot of dollars created."
Newell said jobs would be created for trainers, stall cleaners and people from the transportation and feed industries.
But money generated for the state may not come quickly, Funk said.
The time needed to build larger tracks and cover the costs involved may take a few years, she said. Racing also takes time to draw the people with a lot of money.
"It's not something that's going to be an instant success," she said.
Senex Continued from p. 1
Frances Ingemann, chairman of the Committee of Tenure and Related Problems, a faculty disciplinary committee, said the procedures needed to be spelled out clearly, but the system didn't need to be revamped.
"I think some fine tuning needs to be done," she said.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, indicated in a recent letter to SenEx that changes needed to be made that were more extensive than the ones being discussed.
Cobb couldn't be reached for comment yesterday.
Wick said Cobb indicated that the study of existing procedures needed to be a bit more comprehensive and a separate handbook of faculty disciplinary procedures might solve the problem.
said she doesn't dig for receipts, but thought the program was a good idea.
Continued from p.1
Dividend
"I like it. If I get $15 next semester that's fine because it always seems to come when I need it," she said.
Word said KU students were lucky because the Union bookstores were one of only 10 out of the 100 largest bookstores in North America to have the program. Many of the other stores that once had the dividend program gave it up because of the difficult accounting procedures involved.
This should be avoided at the KU Bookstores with the arrival of a new computer system to handle the dividend program. Word said the computer system would replace all of the work on the program, which was presently done by hand. The system is due to arrive in about three months, but may not be fully operational for two years.
Shuttle
Continued from p. 1
Jack Bass, public affairs coordinator for the journalist-in-space program in Houston, said program coordinators had a joint review with NASA last week and decided to continue with their plans.
The national review panel is now scheduled to consider the applications of the 40 finalists in May, Bass said.
Marilyn Yarbrough, KU professor of law and associate vice chancellor of research, graduate studies and public service, is a member of the national panel.
Other aspects of the shuttle program are still on hold.
Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, said he expected the probes he was working on, originally scheduled to go up in May and June, to be launched in July 1987 at the earliest.
"We're doing what needs to be done to keep activity moving forward," Armstrong said.
Armstrong's office is working on the design and computer programming of the probes which are to test the radiation in the atmosphere of Jupiter and the sun. The Jupiter probe, Gallilee, was to be launched from the shuttle Atlantis in May while the probe of the sun, Ulysses, was scheduled for early June.
Since all shuttle flights have been postponed until the cause of the explosion is discovered, the probes will probably be unable to go up until next summer, he said. Earth and Jupiter must be in a certain position, attained only once every 13 months, for the probes to be effectively launched.
Armstrong said he would know more about the project's future after a meeting at Johnson Space Center next week. A professor from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, which is coordinating the design of the probes, will attend the meeting, he said.
TACO BELL 2 for1 Tuesday
Mix or Match any Two of the Items listed below for the price of One.
TACO RITA
Burrito
Tostada
Pintos'n
Cheese
All Day Tuesday 10:00 a.m.-1:00 a.m.
New Location
1220 W. 6th St. 1408 W. 23rd St.
Offer Good Every Tuesday thru February.
SUA FILMS
BARRIER
Directed by: Jerzy Skolimowski
TONIGHT
7:30
$1:50 Woodruff Aud.
8th ANNUAL - BRAZILIAN
CARNAVAL
SATURDAY FEB. 22ND
8 pm - 2 am
ELK'S CLUB - 3705 W. 23rd
(CLINTON PARKWAY)
$3.50 IN ADVANCE
$4.00 AT THE DOOR
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT:
S.U.A. & Span./Portuguese Dept
CASH PRIZES FOR BEST COSTUMES
8. 00 P.M.
Tues., Feb. 25
Kansas Union Ballroom Tickets now on sale at the SUA Office $ 7.00 with KUID $ 8.00 General Public
DENVER
SUA Special Events/Firm present
WALL of VOODOO
Standing Room Only Series
Get The Responsibility You've Earned
After you receive your degree, get management responsibility and immediate decisionmaking authority. In a civilian job, it could take years.As a Navy Officer, you are in charge with all the responsibility and respect you deserve after 4 months of technical and leadership training.
JAYMOND DUGGLE
Navy Officers Get Responsibility Fast
Lt. Tina Talley, your Navy Officer Programs Representative will be interviewing on campus
Sign up in the Placement Center Now!
6
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1986
Commission to decide on use of Bluffs Drive
By Jull Warren
Staff writer
City commissioners are scheduled to consider a request tomorrow for the use of Bluffs Drive during construction of the Sallie Mae office building at Sixth and Iowa streets.
The Student Loan Marketing Association, known as Sallie Mae, purchases federally insured student loans from institutions such as banks and credit unions, and collects and manages the loans.
The Lawrence office of Sallie Mae has been in operation since October 1984. Ground was broken on Feb. 4 for the site of the company's new office building, which is on the northeast corner of the intersection.
From its access at McDonald Drive to its access onto Sixth Street, Bluffs Drive serves only the Sallie Mae site, according to Commissioner David Longhurst.
Longhurst said he thought the request of the contractor, Vangard Corporation, in Lawrence, to place gates at the entrances to the property lines was not unreasonable because the street now served only that site.
"It's really no big deal," Longhurst said.
Gates are being requested for security reasons, he said.
Duane Schwada, president of the corporation, requested the use of the street during the construction period in a letter to the commission.
The street, Schwada said in the letter, would be used for the storage of materials.
Until then, the 103 employees of the Loan Servicing Center, the local branch of Sallie Mae, will continue to work at the two leased offices at 1919 Delaware St. and 3210 Mesa Way, Barry Brotman, Lawrence manager, said.
Washburn University School of Law Director of Admissions Dottie Harder will be on campus
Curious About Law School?
Wednesday, February 19 Regionalist Room Level 5 Kansas Union 12 noon to 5 p.m.
CHECKERS
MIDTERM MADNESS
We are offering ALL our daily specials EVERY DAY through Sunday, Febuary 23. So come in any day this week and order your favorite Checkers special for the special price!
Monday Madness
16" 2 topping pizza — $5.99
& .25 draws (dine in only)
Terrific Tuesday 2 10" 2 topping pizzas & 4 soft drinks — $7.99
Wacky Wednesday 16" 2 topping pizza &4 soft drinks $7.99
Thrilling Thursday 10"2 topping pizza & 2 soft drinks — $4.99
Weekend Night Owl
Special
2 16" 2 topping pizzas
& a 6 pack of soft drinks
$12.00
KU Basketball Special
16" 2 topping pizzas — $5.99
& $1.50 Pitchers (dine in only)
Sunday Special
14" 2 topping pizza
& 4 soft drinks — $6.99
Every Day Special Buy One Pizza Get the Second Pizza of Equal Value at 1/2 Price
at 1/2 Price
841-8010
OFFER EXPIRES 2-23-86
2214 Yale
CHECKERS
COOKIES & CHEESE
CAROL LEE DONUTS
For Anytime...
* Freshly made Donuts daily
* Soups, Salads,
Sandwiches
* Assortment of delicious cookies & rolls
Daily Special
4-6p.m.
½ price on dozens of all donuts and rolls
1730 W. 23rd
Across from J.C.Penney
842-3664
Call us about our large order specials/Open 5a.m.-6 p.m. Daily
"Atlasta Good" DONUT and PASTRY!
PIZZA PIZZA 842-0600 PIZZA PIZZA
PIZZA PIZZA 842-0600 PIZZA PIZZA DELIVERED
GOOD: Mon, Tues, Wed, & Thurs.
w/coupon
COUNTRY Inn
BUY ONE DINNER...
GET ONE FREE!
• CHICKEN • CHICKEN FRIED STEAK
(Not good w/any other coupon)
Expires:2/28/86 1350 N. 3rd
843-1431
Congratulations
KU sororities on
good grades!
Good luck this semester,
Delta Gamma
Anchorman
Congratulations KU sororities on good grades!
Good luck this semester.
Delta Gamma
Celebrate the arrival of two brand new SUN-TANA Tanning beds with a special ANNUAL TANNING MEMBERSHIP for only $10 (regularly $50). Membership includes tanning privileges at reduced club rates for an entire year. Introductory Tanning Session only $1 Offer good thru February 28, 1986.
TAN
Trailridge Athletic Club
2500 West Sixth Street
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
(913) 841-7230
Greyhound gives you a break on Spring Break.
$86
Round trip. Anywhere we go.
This Spring Break, if you and your friends are thinking about heading to the slopes, the beach or just home for a visit, Greyhound* can take you there. For only $86 or less, round trip.
From February 1 through April 30, all you do is show us your college student I.D. card when you purchase your ticket. Your ticket will
then be good for travel throughout your Spring Break.
So this Spring Break, get a real break. Go anywhere Greyhound goes for $86 or less.
For more information, call Greyhound.
Must present a valid college student ID. Card upon purchase. No other access points. Patent are nontransferable and for good use only. And, other participating carriers. Certain restrictions apply. Offer valid from 4/30 through 4/31. Offer limited. Not in Canada.
S
GO GREYHOUND And leave the driving to us. 1401 W. 6th St., 843-5622
$ \textcircled{c} $1986 Greyhound Lines, Inc.
ID 1.9595 ... 2XVVVVVVVVVV
Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1986
University Daily Kansan
7
Campus/Area
Ottawa radio station plans local expansion
By Barbara Shear
Staff writer
Radio station KHUM Ottawa-
Lawrence is planning to build a
$500,000 broadcast tower and studio
near Topeka to better serve the
Lawrence and Topeka communities
Scott Davis, vice president and general manager, said yesterday the process for approving the new tower would be completed in a few weeks. Construction of the tower would begin in the spring and continue through the summer.
The radio station now is licensed to Ottawa and broadcasts to Ottawa and Lawrence. The new tower, which will be located in Overbrook, is between Lawrence, Ottawa and Topeka, and would increase the listening area.
"The tower can expand the coverage area," he said. "It will also increase the strength of the station in Lawrence."
Along with the FM station, KHUM also has an AM station that broadcasts only to Ottawa, but Davis said they would only expand the FM station.
Davis said Marcom of Kansas Ltd., the company that owns the station, decided to expand when they changed the format of the previous station, KKK-KF-M, a hard rock station, to its
new format — light hits of the 1960s,
70s and 80s.
He said they changed the format of the radio station because they wanted to appeal to the 30-year-old and 40-year-old audience.
When the station changed format, they also wanted to reach other communities that did not have access to this type of format.
"We thought there was a need for a pleasant adult station in Lawrence," Davis said. "We have had a lot of positive feedback from students. They think its great to study with."
"We wanted to make the station in to a large facility to reach as many people as possible." Davis said. "We don't know of any station with this type of around. We think people need this kind of station."
Hank Booth, general manager of KLZR and KLWN, said expansion of radio stations was very common.
He also said that lately more stations were expanding because of a new rule passed at least a year ago by the Federal Communications Commission. The rule states that there will be new classifications for stations, and existing radio stations can no longer expand after 1987. At that time, all existing radio stations will be frozen at their tower height and location.
On Campus
BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320
Two free films, "Remember Me" and "Especially the Children," will be shown at the Jayhawks for UNICEF meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Union.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
1033 Mass. Downtown
ALL HAIRCUTS $6
Quality Haircuts at
Reasonable Prices
No appl. necessary - Closed on Mona.
WEF
THE GUYDEN MAN
come in & see us
704 Mass.
Downtown
we also deliver
843-7398
SAVE AT IMPORTS + HOMESTICS EXOTIC CARS Ralph's AUTO REPAIR 707 N. Second 841-1205
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
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee.
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WENDY'S CHILI FEED IS BACK!
ALL YOU CAN EAT
99¢
plus tax
Tuesday 4pm-closing
Every Tuesday through
February. Wendy's is
serving up bowl after bowl of our hot,
fresh chili for just 99¢ per person, plus
tax. Bring the whole family!
CHOOSE FRESH, CHOOSE WENDY'S
No coupon necessary. Offer only in dining room. Cheese extra.
Not valid with other coupons or special offers.
LAWRENCE
523 W. 11 Street
TOPEKA
2027 Fairlawn • 2025 N. Topeka • 3250 S. Topeka
Wendy's
OLD PARKHOLDER
HAMBURGERS
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
the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
PIZZA
SHUTTLE
FAST FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center
2—10" Pizzas with 2 Toppings & 2 Pepsis
TUESDAY TWO FERS
$9.50 Value for only $8.00
HOURS
Delivered Free No Coupon necessary
Mon.-Thurs. - 11a.m.-2a.m.
Fri.&Sat. - 11a.m.-3a.m.
Sunday - 11a.m.-1a.m.
K-ZR 106 DAY SPECIALS
We Deliver During Lunch
Lunch
Trailridge Athletic Club
2500 W. 6th St
841-7230 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Annual Tanning Membership—
normally $50.00, today $10.06
Membership includes: Full tanning
privileges at reduced rates for
an entire year.
First introductory tan is only $1.06
Mrs. Winner's 1819 W.23rd
Breakfast Special:
6:00 a.m.-10:30 a.m.
Any Breakfast platter $1.06
Lunch/Dinner Special: A one piece
chicken snack with your choice of
a leg, thigh or wing, a biscuit and a
side dish for $1.06
A free small drink with
your Lazergold card
Headmasters 809 Vermont
Listen to KLZR for more details
FREE COMEDY SHOP
BILLY JAYE
(ONE OF THE PREMIER TALENTS FROM SAN FRANCISCO. THIS GUY HAS BEEN SETTING RECORDS FOR CROWD ATTENDANCE AT EVERY MAJOR COMEDY CLUB HE HAS APPEARED IN. YOU CAN TELL ALL YOUR FRIENDS THAT YOU SAW HIM HERE AT GAMMONS.)
NO COVER
(SHOW STARTS AT 10:00)
1.25 DRINKS
THANKS FOR MAKING THE COMEDY SHOP A SMASHING SUCCESS. IF YOU HAVEN'T BEEN OUT YET, YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU'RE MISSING. OUR COMEDIANS ARE THE FINEST WORKING THE NATIONAL CIRCUIT, COAST TO COAST.
GAMMONS
STOOMBO
THE ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER
performing two different programs at the University of Kansas
Presented by the KU School of Fine Arts Concert Series
8:00 p.m. nightly
Tuesday & Wednesday, February 18-19, 1986
Hoch Auditorium
Public: $15 & $13; KU and K-12 Students: $7.50 & $6.50;
Senior Citizens and Other Students: $14 & $12
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved
For reservations, call 913/864-3982 VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations
The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater is sponsored by Philip Morris Companies, Inc.
Partially funded by the Mid-America Arts Alliance, Kansas Arts Commission and National Endowment for the Arts; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee; Swarthout Society and KU Endowment Association; a University Arts Festival event.
"A brilliant mixture of inspired dance and raw theatricality." The Star, Washington, D.C.
the world has never seen a more powerful expression of sheer joy!" Clive Barnes, The New York Post
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1986
Officials say education needs support of state
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Higher education is the key to economic development in Kansas and the state needs to support it despite financially hard times, educational officials said during a Statehouse news conference yesterday.
The officials, representatives from state Board of Regents institutions, community colleges, independent colleges and vocational schools, said higher education needed more resources to insure that Kansas developed economically in the future.
In addition, graduating students pump as much as $400 million into the state's economy during their working careers, the director of a student lobbying group said.
The news conference was sponsored by the Associated Students of
Kansas, a non-partisan lobbying group that represents students from six Regents institutions and Washburn University in Topeka. The news conference kicked off the group's Higher Education Week, designed to bring the subject to lawmakers' attention.
Robert Glennen, Emporia State University president, called for a level of support at least equal to Gov. John Carlin's so-called investment budget, which includes an additional $18 million for Regents institutions. The so called investment budget is established on an increase in the state's sales tax from 3 percent to 4 percent.
Glennen said colleges need additional resources to keep Kansas' higher education system competitive with those of other states and to attract new faculty members.
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99¢
1 Texas Burrito Reg. $2.39 February 18,1986
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comprehensive health
Overland Park, KS / 913-345-1400
Campus/Area
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
3107 Mass. phone: 843-1151
- gynecology
- contraception
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS
Attend the
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
Covering: Time Management
Textbook Reading
Listening and Motetaking
FREE!
Wednesday, February 19
6:30 to 9:00 p.m.
4007 Wescoe Hall
Presented for the last time this semester
by the Student Assistance Center.
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THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO
Frances Wenig Judy Bench
745 New Hampshire (In the Marketplace) 841-5796
Because enjoying the televised exploits of generously compensated amateur athletes is a recreational pursuit, many of us are unable to see why the national tax structure should so favor such a sterile practice. Yet this display of governmental favoritism certainly makes it easier to understand why most of our mollycoddled local merchants are dedicated supply-siders.
William Dann 2702 W. 24th Street Terrace PAID ADVERTISEMENT
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HOUSE OF USHER'S SPRING 1986
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1986
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国家税务总局监制
1
Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
9
N.C. is first in poll; Jayhawks stay third
The Associated Press
North Carolina, unanimous as No.1 for the second straight week and the fourth time this season, led The Associated Press Top Twenty yesterday.
The Tar Heels have been in the top spot for each of the 13 polls since the regular season began.
Duke, 25-2, survived a tough weekend to hold on to the No. 2 spot. The Blue Devils beat No. 20 North Carolina State 72-70 on the road Saturday night and bounced back Sunday afternoon for a 75-74 victory over No. 14 Notre Dame.
Kansas, 24-3, stayed in third,
followed by Memphis State, 23-2.
Georgia Tech, 19-4, rounded out
the Top Five.
The remainder of the Top Ten were St. John's, Michigan, Kentucky, Syracuse and Oklahoma.
St. John, 24-3, moved up one spot from last week's ranking as the Redmen beat No. 13 Georgetown 60-58 on the road and won their 21st straight home game 74-54 over Connecticut.
Michigan, Kentucky and Syracuse moved as a pack, as the three were 10th, 11th and 12th, respectively in last week's voting.
Michigan, 22-3, handled two Big Ten Conferences easily as they downed Minnesota 92-58 and Iowa 82-66, while Kentucky, 22-3, registered a big Southeastern Conference road victory, 73-71 at Alabama. Syracuse, 20-3, beat Villanova and Providence and moved up to No. 9. Oklahoma, 23-3, which fell to Missouri 101-88, dropped two spots to tenth.
Nevada-Las Vegas, sixth last week before losing to Cal-Irvine 99-92, leads the Second Ten followed by Bradley, Georgetown, Notre Dame, Indiana, Louisville, Navy, Virginia Tech, Michigan State and North Carolina State.
Michigan-State is making its first appearance in the Top Twenty this season, while Navy hasn't been among the ranked since a tie for 19th in the preseason poll.
Texas-El Paso, which had been ranked for seven straight weeks, fell from the Top Twenty as did Alabama.
Syracuse, Louisville win
From Kansan wires
PITTSBURGH—Dwayne " Pearl" Washington scored 23 points, including six key points down the stretch, as ninth-ranked Syracuse held off Pittsburgh 69-62 last night to remain atop the Big East Conference.
Washington, averaging 28 points over his last five games, scored 16 points in the second half as Syracuse improved its record to 21-3 overall and 12-1 in the Big East.
Howard Triche hit a 10-footer to give the Orange the lead for good at 56-55 and Washington followed with a layup on a give-and-go pass from Triche.
Pittsburgh, 14-9 overall and 5-7 in the conference, again pulled within one point at 62-61 on Demetreus Gore's running shot from the lane. But Washington dribbled into the lane for an eight-footer with 1:34 to play and followed with two foul shots
at the 52-second mark to make it 66-61.
Louisville 83, Southern Miss. 74
LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Billy Thompson scored 19 points and Pervis Ellison added 17 points and 13 rebounds last night to lead co-No. 19 Louisville to an 83-74 Metro Conference victory over Southern Mississippi
The Cardinals' fourth straight victory improved its record to 19-7 overall and 7-2 in the league. The Eagles fell to 14-10 and 4-6.
All five Louisville starters scored in double figures. Jeff Hall scored 15, Herbert Crook added 14 and Milt Wagner had 12 points and eight assists.
Derrick Hamilton, a 6-foot-6 sophomore forward, scored a game-high 27 points for Southern Mississippi.
Navy 66, William and Mary 51
Maryland 91, Md.-Eastern Shore 44
Hunter asserts himself as big scorer
Height makes no difference
Suzv Mast/KANSAN
KANSAS
Kansas guard Cedric Hunter has been on a scoring rampage of late. In each of his last three games he has scored at least 16 points.
After Cedric Hunter scored in double figures for the third straight game Saturday against Nebraska, Kansas head coach Larry Brown raised an interesting point.
"It's a shame we list him at 6-foot because he's probably the best player in America under 6-feet," Brown said.
By Matt Tidwell Sports writer
But Hunter said he couldn't be placed in that category.
"The last time we had our height and weight checked I was exactly 6-foot." Hunter said yesterday.
Hunter, whose role normally is to pass the ball to open teammates, has been eyeing the basket and taking the shots.
Whatever he height, Hunter might as well be the tallest player on the court with the scoring touch he's displayed recently.
He broke the Kansas season assist record earlier this season and is second in the Big Eight in assists, averaging 6.8 a game.
However, in the last three games,
Hunter has scored more often.
Starting with the Feb. 8 game against Oklahoma State, Hunter has scored 18, 16 against Missouri and 17 against Nebraska.
"He's really assuring himself laterly," said Jayhawk guard Calvin Thompson. "Cedric is surprising me more and more each game. He's giving 110 percent and he's doing
everything coach Brown asks of
bim."
And Hunter hasn't just been firing blindly. In the Nebraska game, he made six of his eight field-goal attempts. In the two previous games, Hunter went eight for 10 against Oklahoma State and seven for eight against Missouri.
Yet even as Hunter rolls up the points, he pointed out that it isn't noticeable in the Jayhawks' smooth and unselfish offense.
His major responsibility in the Kansas offense has been to key the fast break that the Jayhawks have perfected this season.
"I think it really shows our balance," Hunter said. "Everybody seems to be passing the ball around more and giving up the shot more often, and that makes it easier."
On Saturday, Nebraska was the most recent team to be victimized by the Javhawk fast break.
"They are a great team and they can run the half-court game, but the fast break is most important for them," Nebraska guard Brian Carr said after the game Saturday. "When that's going for them they are very, very hard to beat."
Hunter's name popped up often in the Nebraska locker room after Saturday's game. He is a native of Omaha.
"I'm not really surprised," Cornhusker coach Moe Iba said. "He's turned into a really nice guard for them."
Brown silences rumors,says he's staying
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Despite media speculation to the contrary, Kansas head basketball coach Larry Brown insists he is not going to become head coach of the New York Knicks of the National Basketball Association.
"I'm embarrassed that these rumors would be going around like this." Brown said yesterday.
He said such speculation was unfair to Hubie Brown, the Knicks coach who was no relation to him.
Brown is in his third year as Kansas coach and the Jayhawks, 24-3
"But I've been fairly treated here, and I really like what's been done at Kansas. I wish people would focus on what our team has done. We spend too much time talking to me."
"I don't want anything to take attention away from what our kids have done," said Brown. He has never coached a losing team, in a colorful career that included stops at UCLA, the NBA and the old American Basketball Association.
overall, lead the Big Eight by two games with four to play. They are considered by many to be a good bet to make the NCAA's Final Four.
"A lot of these rumors are based on the fact that I have moved before. I can understand that," he said. "But it seems to me that people talk about me moving, but they never question other people when they move."
Brown is a New York native whose wife, a recent graduate of Kansas, has taken a job with a New York advertising agency.
"It's a natural," he said of the Knicks speculation. "I'm a New York kid. I have NBA experience. I have a good relationship with Scotty Stirling, the Knicks' new general manager. My wife is working in New York. But I think anybody who knows me would attest to the fact that I'm
very happy here. I'll always be somebody rumored to be going after another job somewhere."
Brown said the rumors have been particularly disquieting to his mother, Ann Alpern, who lives in Florida.
"My mom has been worried about what she hears. She doesn't understand," he said. "She thinks people change jobs because they've got problems, because people aren't happy within the job you're doing. When people say they've got inside information, she believes them. She's a typical Jewish mom."
Recruit happy with 'Hawks
Sports writer
By John Sam Sports writer
Rv. Jim Suhr
Smith's signing ended months of recruiting pressure from a number of schools across the country, including national powers Texas, Iowa, Arizona State and Texas A&M.
After signing his letter of intent in Houston last week to play football for Kansas next fall, a relieved Quinton Smith smiled, set his pen down and sat back.
Their attempts failed, but Kansas' didn't.
Football
Cochran said Robert Ford, a former assistant coach with the Houston Gamblers of the United States Football League now with the Jayhawks, helped to recruit Smith.
About 750 miles away, a relaxed Jim Cochran, KU recruiting coordinator, reclined in his KU football office and contemplated what the speedy Houston prep wide receiver should do for a Jayhawk offense that will lose five receivers to graduation and the National Football League draft.
"Ford made some inquiries, and we focused on him once we determined he was undecided." Cochran said.
All the work paid off, allowing Kansas to sign Smith, one of Texas' top 100 high school prospects.
or so it seems. Smith, who runs the 40-yard dash in 4.4 seconds, caught 59 passes for 958 yards and 12 touchdowns last season and led Yates High School to a 16-0 record and a state championship.
"He's an intelligent player," Cochran said. "He runs very well and catches everything in sight."
Kimiko Murata
Smith said Friday that he felt comfortable with his decision.
"Everyone here keeps asking me what a Jayhawk is, and I just tell them that a Jayhawk is me now," Smith said.
Smash Terry Burkhar/KANBAH
Jay Kim, Leawood sophomore, takes advantage of the unassessionally warm weather to play tennis. He played yesterday on the courts near Robinson Center.
"The Texas schools don't throw the ball enough for me," Smith said. "Kansas does, and Coach Valesone said next season's offense would be like last year's except with more passing."
Smith, who plans to major in accounting, said football wasn't the only reason he chose Kansas. He said he looked forward to meeting new people and trading the tropic-like environment of Texas for the harsher conditions of Kansas.
"I like snow, but we don't have any down here," he said. "The last time it snowed I was 6-years-old."
Sports Briefs Coleman's grades create controversy
The newest controversy centers on Coleman's high school grade point average. KOMU-TV, Columbia, Mo., claims that a copy of Coleman's transcript indicates that Coleman graduated from Paxon High School, Jacksonville, Fla., with a 1.9 GPA.
MANHATTAN — Kansas State athletic director Larry Travis asked the Big Eight and National College Athletic Association for a clarification of the eligibility of basketball standout Norris Coleman.
"We have a certified transcript from Paxon High School that shows Coleman's GPA well over the 2.0 minimum," Travis said. "We've sent all the facts and information to the NCAA and asked them for a clarification. We hope that will finally clear it up."
The NCAA requires a 2.0 high school GPA for players to be eligible their freshman year in college.
However, Travis said yesterday that was not true.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Oklahoma's Darryl Kennedy yesterday was named the Big Eight's player of the week.
Sooner gets award
The 6-foot-5 Kennedy scored 79 points and had 15 rebounds as the Sooners won two of three games last week. He won in a split vote over Kansas guard Cedric Hunter.
Practice pays off for divers
From staff and wire reports.
Spurney, Prangle and Clark qualify for regional meet
By Dawn O'Malley
Three meters above the ground, Kansas swim team divers practice their twists and twirls, looking for the perfect dive.
Sports writer
For three divers the heavy workout schedule has paid off. Mike Prangle and Lori Spurry qualified for the Zone D National Diving Qualifying Meet March 14-15 in Carbondale, Ill., on the
Mike Prangle
one- and three-meter boards. Pat Clark qualified on the one-meter board.
If they should finish in the top four places at the qualifying meet, they will advance to the National Collegiate Athletic Association Championships. The men's competition will be held in Indianapolis and the women's will be held in Fayetteville, Ark.
Swimming
Before the qualifying meet, the divers and the swim team will compete in the Big Eight Championships March 6-8 in Lincoln, Neb.
Barry Susterka, Kansas' first year diving coach, said his goal of Pangler making it to the qualifying meet had been reached.
"This was a goal of mine and a goal of his to quality." Susterka said. "We're in a tough zone, but he has all the tools. He's been preparing. Now all he has to do is go in there and put it all together."
Prangle, a senior, said his routine had undergone some changes because Susterka had stressed the fundamentals of diving.
"Fundamentally I am a lot better." Prangle said. "By that I mean technique and take-off are improved."
Pangle is no stranger to the high quality competition he will compete against in the Zone D Meet.
Last year at the zone meet,
Pangle finished ninth on the one-
meter board and 11th on the three- meter board.
"Mike is very conscientious," Susterka said. "He is concentrating to be the best."
This season, Frangle qualified on the three-meter board in the dual meet against Wyoming in Robinson Natatorium. Then he qualified on the one-meter board against Nebraska.
"It was good to qualify against Nebraska," Prangle said. "I was struggling on the low board; this built up my confidence. There is more competition against yourself. It is more mental."
Spurney said Prangle had helped her build up her confidence. She said he had encouraged her to perform her best.
Spurney, a sophomore, said she was not pleased with her performance last year. To polish her skills, she practiced at the Justus Aquatics Center in Orlando, Fla., for one month last summer.
"I never expected to do this." Spurney said. "It didn't seem like I would ever do it.
"My change in attitude really helped me. I tend to underestimate myself, I have to be confident. This has always been a wish deep down."
Lifter isn't satisfied with win
Bv Robert Rebein
Sports writer
Al Jakubowski won his weight class in the 1986 Missouri Valley Masters, Open and Collegiate Weightlifting tournament at Robinson Center on Sunday, but he wasn't satisfied.
Jakubowski, KU assistant speed and strength coach, wasn't satisfied because he didn't lift as well as he had wanted to.
"I didn't accomplish what I wanted to in the clean-and-ierk." he said.
His best lift in the clean-and-jerk is 374 pounds, but Sunday, Jakubowski only lifted 363 pounds, almost 180 pounds more than he weighs. He competed in the 181 pound class.
Jakubowski had hoped to do better because he is training for an international meet in March.
He and fellow lifer Gary Savage, 26, of Kansas City, Mo., will travel to Hungary to compete in an international invitational weightlifting meet.
Jakubowski said that to do well in
international competition, he would have to do better in the clean-and-jerk.
Savage won both events in the 165 pound weight class.
"The snatch is my better event," he said. "I've been trying to work on my clean-and-jerk. Gary and I train together and he's been helping me with my technique."
pound weight class. In each event, he lifted a barbell that weighed at least 100 pounds more than he did.
Lifting that much weight required a lot of concentration, Savage said.
Jakubowski will be one of only three Americans competing in the Hungarian meet. He and Savage were invited to represent the United States because of their performances at national meets.
A snatch is completed by lifting the barbell from the floor to above the head in one motion. A clean-and-jerk is completed by lifting the barbell from the floor to his chest in one motion, then, in a second motion, lifting it above his head.
Sunday's meet, which was viewed by about 150 people, drew a number of world-class and nationally-ranked lifters.
Scott Lofquist of Overland Park set a new Kansas record in the clean-and-jerk with a lift of 462 pounds. Lofquist, who has been competing for only six months, was a three-time All-American in the shot put at the University of Arkansas.
The winners in each division were:
Masters Division — 40-44 age group, Ken McCain; 50-54 age group, Walter Zook; 65-68 age group, Henry Sexton.
Open Division — 132 pounds, Brian Wilson; 165 pounds, Gary Savage; 191 pounds, Al Jakubowski; 180 pounds, Kevin Viet; 220 pounds, John Anderson; 242 pounds, Bob Burtzoff; 242 and over, Scott Lofquist.
Collegiate Division — 132 pounds.
Brian Wilson; 165 pounds. Dirk
Yasko; 181 pounds. Al Jakubowski;
198 pounds, Book Meelier; 220
pounds, Craig Schinck.
1)
0
University Daily Kansan
17
Classified Ads
Tuesday. Feb. 18, 1986
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
A Lesbian / Gay Dance at the Jazhawr-February
19th, all ages, but I D. require
sponsorship at GLADWALL
110 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS. Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop, covering time management, reading, listening, notetaking. Wednesday, 19. 6:30-8:00 pm, 4:007 12:00-5:30 pm. Contact the last visit this semester by the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4044.
You're Welcome
at the University's SCHOLARSHIP HALLS Applications available at 123 Strong Hall
at 123 Strong Hall Deadline: March 1, 1986
Lose Weight for Spring Break Guaranteed! Call Lorrie 841-7689.
ONLY 2 MORE DAYS! Juniors and 1st semester
Seniors-Mortar Board information sheets must
be turned in to 214强 by 5:00 p.m., Thursday,
Feb. 29.
Jayhawks for UNICEF
Organized Meeting and film showing:
Remember Me
Especially The Children
UNICEF
U. S. Committee for UNICI
SOCIAL FEMALE EDUCATION
Tonight, 7:30 p.m.
Walnut Room,
Kansas Union
All Welcome
a future for every child
Rent-VCR, with 2 movies, oversee $90.
Rent-VCR, with 2 wnd. $24d, 642-531. Mon.-Sat.
5am; Sun. 1-5; Mon.
JUA Board Member application due by Thurs.
Feb. 28th, Questions? 843-3477.
18t’ Color T. V. $2.95 a month. Smarty’s TV.
147 W. 32d. #213. Bath. Mon. Sat. #8-18
147 W. 32d. #213. Bath. Mon. Sat. #8-18
TAN WITH
Trailridge
Athletic Club
Want to coordinate entertainment and activities for the University of Kansas? Pick up your SUA application today! SUA Office, Level 1, Kansas Union.
Wear beachwear to GammaMo Wednesday night and be eligible for a FREE TREE to Daytona
Attention Sophomore: Owl Society in now accepting application! Minimum overall GPA of 3.0. Applications in Rm. 400 Kansas Union, Application Deadline: March 17 at 9 p.m. in Rm. 400 Kansas Union.
LIFE. **pass** it on. You can do something simple to save a life. Fix the back of your driver's license.
ENTERTAINMENT
Due to space limitations, limited number of tickets this year. Get yours now! Brazilian Carvain, Feb.22. Tickets sold at S.U.A. and Spanish/Port Department (in Wesco).
Having a party? Need a DJ! Call Music Mix. We have a Music in Town. 923-290-750. $7.50 gets you 9 hours of great dance music. Music from Ibaum E. Fresh to Modern English.
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE J DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Documents for student organizations. 749-4713.
PHIAGE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to provide the museum with equipment that can fill, any size room and can accommodate, outdoor parties too. Units in Lawrence, Manhattan and San Francisco. Call 0493-8482.
FOR RENT
2 bedroom room, $pt60.00 plus utilities. Big living room w/sky light on second and third floor. 5.1/2 month lease w/o monthly deposit. 3 blocks from the Union, B4-9811
3 BH room East Lawrence, bus route 1964
Bathroom East Lawrence, gardenable 1964
attitudes Phone 209-647-6586
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live with Flats Vacancies available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 843-3116.
Available March 1: beautiful 2 BR apt. on bus route 5 minute walk to campus, downtown. New carpet, clean, spacious. $300/mo. low utilities. 841-7597. 841-5556. 843-3449.
**FEMALES-NEED A ROOMMATE?** Only
$190/mo. and 1/3 utilities w/o mo. mose.lease.
bk, off 23rd and 2 bks. off Mass. Call 842-2161
after 6:30 p.m. Keep trying!
First come, first served, only a few two left. At 2106 W. Bickhill on KU bus route, between Gibson's and Walmart. We find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We pay hot and cold water, you choose temperature. Call balcony. Cn 844-4444 for appointment.
For rent: 2km, brand new apt. 1.71/ft bike from Kansas City, $300/mo. plus utilities. Sublease
from KC. Min. 6m., 5-8m.
Furnished one bedroom apartment near University & Downtown. Most utilities paid with off-street credit. Call 800-762-3519.
Just finished remodeling, 1 & 2 BR apartments.
New carpets, efficient appliance, C new door.
Huge kitchen with stainless steel appliances.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL and/or SUBLEASE for spring and summer. Available possibly as early as April 1. Room and comfortable 2 BR duplex apt. in good location w/nice yard. Extra large kitchen.
MBR, garage, laundry/storage. No pets. Lease and Rts. req. Couple or small family pref. $365/mi fall; spring and summer negotiable. 843-7736 after 5 or leave message on machine.
Quel. one bedroom apt. bldg. tall fm. 3601 - 3870
month lease w/deposit. 313 Indiana. 841-6931.
SUBLEASE NOW! 1 BDRM Hanover Place apt.
One月免费 rent! 841-1212
SUBLEASE now for summer. Studio. Good location.
Rent negotiable. Call 842-3685 or 749-3415.
Spacious 1 bdm., billions of closets, W/D, hard
wood, clean and sunny; $250 mo. jet 84-w-62-
spring break bedroom-3 bedroom condo, pool,
ub tba, located in Silverhorn, close to
brackenridge, Copper, and Kingsburg; $100/mo.
Sublease now .28 dpm at. Very nice and close to campus. 842-9738.
Suburban one-room bedroom apartment. Very clean room with a double bed, TV and computer. Rent: 845-7635 after 3 p.m. Keep trying.
Sublease 3 furnished bedroom apt. 3 blocks from campus 465 plus utilities, can make a deal.
TNIOHOUSE in residence immediately Cornish C.
C-1, suburbate from Meadowbrook Apt. at 842-100
Broadway.
LEICA CAMERA EQUIPMENT 60mm f5.1 Nikon-SK, DSM 3.5 Summarizer with focusing device and for focusing devices). Also, Leica-MC light meter, 843-178, ask for Gary (leave a message if I'm busy)
Unfurnished studio apartment for rent at 1500
Tennessee, newly remodeled, #70/mo. plus slab
room.
Wanted: Female, non-smoking roommate to share a 3 bedroom apt for remainder of semester. $150.00/month, plus 1/3 utilities. Call 749-4823. Keep trying
MASTERCAFTA offers completely furnished 1,
2, or 3 bedrooms in campus all near campus. Calhoun
1811-624-8125. 812-624-8125.
Auto sound equipment: Blaupunkt BPA-145 60
watt 4 channel power amplifier. Blaupunkt BE-35
5 band pre-ampl graphic equalizer. Best offer. Call
844-291-818.
FOR SALE
DRUMS: HRM $27 pc set w/cymbals, hardware,
sett. $500; Pearl 3 pc set w/ Ziljian cymbals,
hardware, sett. $100; Hardware sett. $60;
CONTACT HOMES from $1 (U repair).
Also deloitte tax property. $198-607-4000
FIRMIED FIRM looks good, runs great. A/C/
caseus $250 negotiation. Eric B43-8386 B43
caseus $250 negotiation. Eric B43-8386
Baseball cards and sports nontaglain. Buy, Sell
and trade baseball cards. Open 10-8 M-Square,
45 West Street.
CComic Books Playbills, Penthouse, etc. Mac's
Comics On 11-31 Tue., Sat. & Sat. 10-5: 8I
Wednesday
SPRING BREAK Round Trip Airline Tickets to
Miami $180.00 Best Price Carim Call at
mcall.com
Car: 1998 Honda CVCC, fine condition $1500,
454-556, weekends.
Leaving country, must sell 1900 2 dr. hatchback Chevrolet Oitation. Also, good clothes, men's jackets, slacks and shirts (M.L), call 843-6000.
HAFLER 500 watt power amplifier. Brand new with warranty. Mint sell $200. Tom 82-1510.
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Receivers from $20, turntables from 11.5 speakers
from $45, amplifiers from 15 speakers,
stereo, all completely reconditioned and
lawrence Custom Radio, 914 W, 39rd St.
Tired of humpy mattresses? Watered for sale.
Two-piece perforated for dorm or apart
home. Call 212-637-9850. Cable Phone 212-637-9850.
Kenwood KR-7A0 receive. 60 watt. 18 station
memory, neon. 7 bangle equilibrium. New earphone.
Ski boots womens, 7-1/2, Nordica, men's,
8/10, 7/11, yedramsiin, $5 each.
Kennedy cassette deck: Perfect condition, first 80 minutes to her home. 841-767-4777
Western Civilization Notes: On sale Now! Make sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class. 3) In the book. 4) Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Town, Crier. The Jayhawk Booksellers, and www.crierbooks.com.
Sale>: Gretzel wooden saire drum. $50.00 or best offer.
843-1801.
Philip tulirp with little use audio Technica cartridge. Comes use, make off before i trade it.
AUTOSALES
Wouldn't a little SAX space up your life? I'm in partnership with my beloved Bunny also axiophone (in great condition) and its new mouthpiece for only $300. Call 664-2134.
1974 Pontiac GT0, new paint, overhaul, and more. Rare. a must see. Call 862-2023 evening.
Top of the line Kenwood turntable with moving knobs. Boxed for easy and warmer handling of list. Bolt 841-139-800 after p. 69.
keep up!
DRIVE A REAL SPORTS CAR 78 2900 2-2-A: Rei
Walt Disney World, Maui, Hawaii 814.431.6477
1970 Olds 98, 105,000 miles, $79, 749-4606
Moving Mant Sale. 1800 Old-Mobile Cable station
wrapped Vx Silver Fully Full. Option $1,500. Call now
to reserve.
Must sell 79 Mazda RX-7, runs great. AM/FM, CSA, $375 or less (400-846 amber) for sale.
**MU367 MURSTANT Body and deluxe interior fully restored. Cash needed. Sarrisice for 2004 IBM.**
Found: 1 pair of brown glasses & a light blue case
and 1 pair of brown eyewear. Pick them up HDP1.
office 180. office 181.
LOST/FOUND
Found. Golden Lab. German Shepherd mix. Brown w/ black nose, Approx. one to one and one half years old. No tags. Found in Meadowbrook Apt. connex.
Found: Keys on red clip on 4th floor Wescoe. Call
81-041-0644
GST: 1 pair of Polo prescription glasses. If found all 740-765 (reward)
Are you interested in earning $35 to $60 a week working 10 to 25 hours. Makup is required for $40, up to $80 per p.m. and $6 per h. p.m. to close on a weekday. Apply in person at McDonald's, 901 West 23rd. No phone calls.
HELP WANTED
CRUISESHIPS HIRING! $16-$40,000 Carribean,
Hawaii, World! Call for Guide, Cassette,
Newservice! 916-494-3444 XUKAASRUSCLE
GOVERNMENT JOBS. J.165 - $490 - $293,0yr. New
Hiring. I call 4-805-677-6000 Ext. R-9758 for current
federal list.
offers YOU
- Paid training
ENTERTEL offers YOU
- Paid training
- Advanced opportunities
- Hourly wage with incentives
$5-$6 per hour
- Pleasant working cond.
- Fivable house
AND
Call 841-1200
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer, yr, round. Europe,
S.A. Amereral Australia, All airs. Fields 900-2000 m.
Sightseeing. Free info. Write LJC, PO Bx 52-K1
Carmel Dm CA, 92023.
Summer Jobs, National Park Co. 21 Parks, 5000
Openings Complete Information 5.00 $* Park
Kilmeen Mtn Co., 651 2nd Ave. W.N.
Kilmeen MT, 90901
AIRLINE HRING BOOM! $149-$2,000
Stewardesses, Reservationists! Call for Guide,
Cassette, Newservice. (618) 954-4444 x UAW133.
RESUME-A professional resume can help you more job interview. Let me write one for you!
749-7946
PERSONAL
White male age 24 years dating/relationship with black female. Interests in health, exercise, career. No joke. Serious replys to Kevin, Box 3802 Lawrence, Ks.
A KU student from far East Orient seeks a job for warm relationship. Please reply to Neshai at neshai@ku.edu
M.
Interested in meeting a business major (male), between the ages of 27 and 35, who enjoys classical music? Please reply to box 825. Signed, a music enthusiast involved in finance.
To my girl in 30D, Thaxk 4 a fun 8 months! Love,
your girl in 165C.
Happy B-day Duds!
Love, B.H.
Creative, thinking singles find kindred spirits through the directory for educated singles. LOVELINE, P.O. Box 30021K, Lawrence, Ka. 69018. One-use membership $4.00.
1234567890
Wild and Crazy nerds like Samba, let the Conga and Crazy nerds like Samba, let the Conga on the Carnival Pack. Get your tickets, see ya on the cruise!
50 positions available in summer sales program.
earnings $1,600.00. For interview call
e-mail: careers@us.edu
810-4360 Weekly/Up Mailing Circular! Asc
q Surely! Sincerely interest rush self-addressed
envelope: Success, P.O. Box 470CEG, Woodstock,
II. 00098.
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
The Union's recording
BUS. PERSONAL
"CAMP COUNSELORS M-F" - Outstanding Slim-
培 Down Dim Tampes; Tennis, Dance, Slim-
matics, WS, Athletics, Boys camps, 7 weeks
Camp Camelot on College campuses at
California. Contact: Michelle Friedman, DN,
930. Hewlett Dr. No. Woodney, N.Y. 12801
Earn now in Lawrence Driving School! Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841-7749.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care, confidentiality assured. Greater area. Call for appointment.
913-345-1400
SKT CULTUR RISING!
Skateboards & Accessories
QUALITY STUFF ONLY
of the day's entrees & soups
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U repair);
other lien property tax. Call 800-687-6000.
Do not sell to private buyers.
GAVLESBIAN: Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stumped, self-address envelope to TRIANGLE TIMES, P.0 Box 86492, KCMO 84194
UPTOWN BICYCLES
1337 Mass.
749-0336
ON CAMPUS
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts.
for KU students
Jayhawker Towers
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- 91/2-Month Leases
- All Unities have
- Limited Access Doors
- Academic Resource Center
- Air Conditioned
- Swimming Pool
- On Bus Line
- Free Cable TV
- Laundry Facilities
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Apply Now for Fall/Spring
1603 W. 15th
His and Hera Hair Design. Quality hair care at reasonable prices. We use the finest hair products available and give you the $25 and up with hair-cut included. Linda and Bernice 841-505-1218
Rent-11° T V $2.08 a month Curtis
W 3rd W 1, 2nd B 424-8738 Mon M 5:19
0:00; Sun 1:30
DELI SPECIALS
a different deli special every day
Today's Special:
Grilled Ham
& Cheese
Chips
16 oz. Drink
$2.50
THE KANSAS UNION
DELI
level 3
SANDWICH
IMPORT passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration visa, ID, and course, fine dress code
LOSE WEIGHT NOW 10% guaranteed FDA approved on Herbal Products 842-7060.
WOMEN'S CAREER FAIR
Wednesday
Feb. 19, 1986
7-9 p.m.
Blg Eight Room,
Kansas Union
This Fair is a chance for women to meet other women to discuss career choices, paths and options. If you want to know what it is like to work in a career jobring, transferring careers or wondering what it's like to work in a male dominated field, this fair is for you. There will be no formal presentations, just a chance for you to talk about the profession. At the end of the presentation are included:
Modeling and theater profile - shooting now;
begins to professionals, call for information.
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 other items. For detailing your tailored artworks, 200, W. 251, Belinda Gibson's; 841-4340.
Tan Here In Lawrence!
Compliment
Spring Break?
Protect Your Skin!
Start Your Tan Now!
or
Complimentary
Check Us Out
Males and the number
Day Membership*
We Guarantee
Members and Non-members Welcome
rew customers only
- $2 per tanning session
Engineering Radio-TV News
Marketing Print Media
Advertising Marketing Arts Administration
Networking Nursing Visual Arts
Health Education Speech-Language Pathology
Accounting Dietetics
Financial Planning Child Care
Management Services and more...
Consulting
lowest price, best service
best tan
Expanded Hours
B 8eds No Waiting
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
MOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
25th & Iowa 841-6232
火
Students Save 10%
On Classifieds!
Women's Resource Center
CLASSIFIEDS
Classified Heading:
KANSAN ___
Blue Heron Futons
Class Ring Day - Why wait for the man when his ring day at night at Belfour House 935 Mage.
Thousands of & k R album* ~22 or less. Also lose
objects items. Sat 0 only. Sun at 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quantrillis 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or
Trade all styles music.
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattresses
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.-Sat. 12:5:30 p.m.
841-9443
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, For Walter Beach or Mustang岛/Port Aransas, for your spring break from only $80. Deluxe lodging, parties, goods bags, more. Hurry, call Sunshace Tours for more information and reservations to tiffy free. Save up to 35% on representative TODAY! When your Spring break counts, count on Sundance.
SERVICES OFFERED
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve "S." Custom printed Shirtkart. 749-1611.
Write ad here
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-6716.
Want a new fun way to say I love you on Valentine Day. Try a VIDEO VALENTINE, $14.99.
Available from 12 to 4 or by appointment. Now available at www.hotelsforfree.com/HotelsHillCrestRestoration Center. 842-0536.
1101 Mass.
Suite 201 749-0117
HARPER
LAWYER
MATH TUTOR - Bob Meers holds an A, in math K in U, where KU, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professional students in calculus. $8 per 40 min session. Call 945-923-8272.
Phone:
Net a
Winner.
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Dates to run:___ to
1 Day $2.60 2-3 Days $3.75 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks $6.25
For every 8 words added 30* $50* $75* $1.05
Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Classified Display
1 col. x 1 inch = $4.40
BLOOM COUNTY
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
2.18
In God's den.
WATCH IT.
ORUS IS
DREAMING
AGAIN.
bv Berke Breathed
EXCUSE ME, LADIES.
HAVE YOU SEEN PETTY
BOOP HANGGLIDING
HERE RECENTLY?
NOT FOR AT LEAST TWENTY MINUTES. THANK YOU.
WELL,
IT'S TRUE.
4
Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1986
University Daily Kansan
11
TYPING
U-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Aequire and affordable typing, Judy. 842,7945
T-1-1 THRO WORD PROCESSING experienced,
reliable, reliable. Rush job accepted. Call
842,3111
10.3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional, WORLD-
SERVICED NG TECH. papers, dissertations, papers,
books. Send resume to: M.J. Hickman, 214 S. Broadway,
New York, NY 10007.
24-Hour Typing, 10th semester in Lawrence
Research, dissertations, paper. Close to campus
and dorms. Tuition is $150 per month.
A 20 professional typing. Term papers, themes.
IH Reasonable use: 842-3298, Using IH Select
Reasonable use: 842-3298
NL SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers Phone 842-8657 after 5:30.
A-Z. Wardprocessing 'Typing' Service produces quality resumes, paper, dissertations, etc.
Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing and editing. IBM PC—M—M, M—F. Sarasai da serra. Writer of PDF files.
Ace Wordprocessing Accurate, affordable,
Friendly Proofreading, corrections Resumes,
term papers, theses, dissertations, 42-hour course
for Microsoft Office Word. Alpha Omega Computer Services. Word Processing/Typing Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics,
Wordstat Document upgrading. Free estimates.
DEFENDABLE, professional; experienced.
JEANETTE SHAFFER — Typing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape
463/8877.
DISSERTATIONS / THESES/ LESA/ PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE
available on short student papers up to 30
days. Tommy's summary 4.89. 843-788
n 9 p.m. for n. 1 p.m.
Dissertations, Theses, Tern Paperings. Over 15 years.
experience. Phone 842 2310 after 3:30. Bars.
SPRING SPITZE' SUDS SAIL SPAS SURF SLEEP SAND $37.50
Letter perfect papers and resume. WRITTING
UDFLINE. 841-3409
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing. Spelling/punctuation errors corrected, reasonable rates. Cassette CDs.
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations resources, applications. Spelling corrected
TYPING Plus assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
THE WORDDOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147
EXPERIENCED TYMPT. Term paper, thesis.
Experience correct spellning in all correct spelling.
8134 95244. Mrs. Wright
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional wordpress training courses, resumes, theses, letter quality printing services.
WANTED
**Escapeplan1** 1 need 2 K-State B-ball tickets 2/22
Call 749-5918
*Drummer and Rassius need a new formed, progressive rock band. We have no pretensions as such.*
employees to share three lbm. house,
venue & close q&邻居库. Call 843-9798.
Female to take over contract, at Naisimith Hall
Female to be fmd. Femail: CALL 843-1054
sensitive to take over contract at Naisthm Hall.
Feb. rent & meal: FBC Call 842-1044
For summer and/or fall; female roommate(s) for spacious bedroom app 810 plus 17 utilities
and a bathroom app 590.
LOOKING TO GET OUT OF YOUR PRESENT LIVING ARRANGEMENT NEED A PLACE TO MAKE IT HAPPY. An inviting room, amusing male to move in as soon as possible. Can work out a deal $135 plus electric Call Paul.
LOUISPEAKER SYSTEMS Allan Seawon $200
$150 pair $200 pair Cairn 484-3413
484-2700 evenings.
X
Loudspeaker Systems, Allison Sevens, 800 pair
pair, 900 pair, case 843-1453, or
842-2790 ouput.
Non-smoking, male to share nice condo with,
fireplace, cable TV, dishwasher, washer/dryer,
microwave, etc. Only $175.00 monthly all utilities
paid. Curt 841-4712
Roommate needed? Duplex, Rent $125 / 1.5
room, WiFi, large bedrooms for
Call Dave, Greg 943-717-1750
NURTURE Roommate to share condo. Two large bedrooms, fireplace, nice quiet room, dishwasher, plenty of space, and I'm easy to get along with: 841-4835.
WANTED male roommate to share delaware apartment, very close to campus $150.00/mo. No phone calls required.
Wanted: Male roommate for large 3 bedroom
townhouse (month plan plus 1) 842-646-961
Kodak MP film . Eastman Kodak's professional color motion picture (MP) film now adapted for still use in 35mm
camera by bench chair and micro-fine grain and rich color saturation meet the exacting standards of the movie industry. Shoot in low or bright light from 200 ASA up to 1200 ASA. Get prints or slides, or both,
Prints and Slides from the same roll
5247
Color
from the same roll. Enjoy the very latest in photographic technology with historical systems
35mm
SOUTH PADRE HILTON RESORT
Sand & Sun tans start At the Hilton.
INTRODUCTORY OFFER
■ Rush me two 20-exposure rolls of your leading KODAK MP film—Kodak S27*4 (200 ASA). Enclosed is $2.00. I'd like to be able to color print both from the same roll and experience the remarkable versatility of this professional quality film.
--seven of them, three swimming pools,
eight tennis courts for your pleasure
At the Hilton.
Castle building lessons by the Sons of the Beach Founder, the Amazing Walter At the Hilton.
photographic technology with substantial savings.
atter spring break is over. Sizzling night life at the Quarterdeck Lounge or Coconut's Night Club At the Hilton.
per night, per person, quad occupancy,
Cabana room
At the Hilton.
Pizza Parlor serving your favorite pizza, or Windjammer beach front cafe for other favorites At the Hilton.
a Hobbie Cat. They're available to rent right here At the Hilton.
by the case from our liquor store. And,
you don't have to be 21 in Texas or
At the Hilton.
Break Headquarters. You never have to leave. We have it all At the Hilton.
SOUTH PADRE HILTON RESORT
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TEXAS
1-800-292-7704
STATE ZIP
Limit of 2 rolls per customer. 2289
Mail to Seattle FilmWorks
P.O. Box C. 34056
Seattle, WA 98124
equalized in mailbox
Koakli 2147 is a registered trademark
of the Earlman Kool Company
NAME_
ADDRESS
south Padre Island Texas Tourist Bureau
PAINT your banners, GATHER up your friends, PACK your cut offs and swim suits, LEAD the caravan SOUTH FOR SPRING BREAK. CHILL OUT, and THAW OUT at South Padre Island.
PARTY
SOUTH PARK ISLAND
OR
BUST
SPRING BREAK'86
The Beach. The Border
Place.
Call Toll Free
1-800-292-7704 (Hilton)
1-800-531-7404 (Bahia Mar)
1-800-531-7405 (Hell)
Raisins
Raisins
swimwear and sportwear for women
One Dollar holds any swimsuit until
Spring Break !
Litwin's
MALEDEAL
MODULES
Card
MasterCard
VTS4
XAXE INFORM
CARD
MasterCard VISA
Mon-Sat 9-6
Thursday 9-9
Sunday 12-5
843-6155
830 Massachusetts
12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1986
OUPONS
C
O
S
HOLE
In The Wall
The HOLE
With the purchase of a large sandwich
get a large DRINK FREE
Expires 02/18/86
Located in the Jayhawk Food Mart.
9th & Illinois. 843-7685
coupon good thru the hours 4 p.m.
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
FREE MEDIUM SOFT DRINK with the purchase of any sub 1618 W.23rd St.
A KU TRADITION FOR OVER 16 YRS.
expires 2-28-86 with this coupon only void with other offers
FREE ICE CREAM!
FROM CONE-A-COPIA
Buy one Cone-A-Copia cone with any combination of your favorite flavor and get a second one
FREE! ICE CREAM OR YOGURT!
offer expires 2-28-86
FREE ICE CREAM!
FROM CONE-A-COPIA
NEXT TO COMMAND PERFORMANCE 1814 W.23rd
Mane Tamers
1/2 Price
on Permanent Wave
841-5499
Mane Tamers
$5 Off
- Shampoo, Haircut, Blowdry
- Highlighting
- Ear Piercing
- Set of Nails
841-5499
2338 Alabama
1/2 Price one month
the AUTO MEDIC inc.
Walk-ins only please
not good with any other offer
EXPIRES 03-18-86
10% off any $12 purchase or more
House of Hupei
湖北
Sunday Buffet
12-3
Lunch and Dinner
2907 West 8th Street
"WE BRING CAR CARE TO YOU."
Brakes • Tune Ups • Alternators • Starters • Etc.
HOUSE CALL 1/2 PRICE!
($10.00 REGULAR VALUE)
843-6050 Fxt: 6456
EYBIRES AUGUST 31, 1986
exp. 3/18/86
House of HuPEI
2907 West 86th Street
Lawrence Kansas 60044
CATHAY RESTAURANT 10% OFF ANY EVENING DINNER includes: main course, hot tea and ice cream with fortune cookie
SAVE $5.00 Hair安丽
Hair Jann
OFF REGULAR $15 CUT Includes Shampoo & Style 1031 Vermont Expires March 24, 1986 843-5088
PIZZA Shoppe
6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center
Holiday Plaza
25th & Iowa
842-4976
Weekdays* 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m. & 4:30 p.m.-10 p.m.
Sat. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun. 11 a.m.-9 p.m.
*closed Tues.
expires: 2/28/86
QUEEN-SIZE PIZZA Single topping
extra topping.70
$575 plus tax
$675 plus tax
842-0600 FREE DELIVERY
A "Cut" Above The Rest
KING-SIZE
PIZZA
Single topping
$675 plus tax
extra topping. 90
Prime Cut Hair Co.
A "Cut" Above The Rest
Prime Cut Hair Co.
Get a whole new look for Spring!
$30 PERMS (Includes cut & style)
or
20 TAN Sessions — $45 (30 min.) 841-4488
esdpirns 3/31/86
JUNKYARD'S
JYM
--also turkey and ham)
DELIVERY & DRIVE-THRU
NOW OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT
PIZZA
Shoppe
This coupon is good for 3 FREE suntan sessions with a semester or non-prime time membership
IS A MEMBER OF
JUNKYARD'S
JYM
6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center
535 Gateway Dr.
842-4966
Expires April 30,1986
--also turkey and ham)
DELIVERY & DRIVE-THRU
NOW OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT
KING-SIZE
PIZZA
Single topping
$675 plus tax
extra topping .90
Royal Peking Restaurant
2 free CRAB RANGOON appetizers with purchase of any dinner entree.
no expiration date!
Haircut-Shampoo-Style
$10 with this coupon at
A Cut Above
711 W. 23rd
Mall's shopping center
842-1144
Not valid with any other coupon or special
A Cut Above
711 W. 23rd
Mall's shopping center
842-1144
HARRY BEARS
108 N. Park
beaches & amusement facilities
740-5246
86 711 W.23rd St., Malls Shopping Center $1.10 value
HARRY BEAR'S
106 N. Park
phone (843) 524-467
HARRY BEAR
“BUCK”
$1
Good for $1 off
any sandwich
UDK
expires 3-1-86
HARRY BEAR
"BUCK"
$1
Good for $1 off
any sandwich
UDK
expires 1-3-86
--also turkey and ham)
DELIVERY & DRIVE-THRU
NOW OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT
FACTOR-E AEROBICS in the Malls Shopping Center
THE BUM STEER
BAR-B-O
2 months for $40 with this coupon Good through Feb. 28
=1
For class schedule call 842-1983
Bar-B-Q Hotline 841-SMOKE
Lawrence's Only
Blue Ribbon BBQ
Bum Special
Sandwich
for $1.00.
also turkey and ham)
DELIVERY & DRIVE-THR
NOW OPEN UNTIL MIDN
2554 Iowa EXPIRES 5-31-86
HARRY BEAR'S
106 N. Park
Beautifully Sculptured Salad Bar
7414-5244
HARRY BEAR
"BUCK"
$1
Good for $1 off
salad bar
UDK expires 3-4-85
---
Turkey $1.75 Clubs
Bucky's
COUPON COUPON Bocky's Buy One, Get One FREE! Pork Tenderloin
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF
Any Triple Pizza
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
---
Expires 04/31/86
Hairstyling that matches your style
Silver Clipper
Hairstyling & Tanning Center
for Men & Women
$3 OFF
Haircut/Blowdry
$7 OFF
Permanent Wave
or Highlighting
2201 P. W. 25
Business World
Call for App L
842-1822
Expires March 4, 1986
Computerark
SERVICE KNOWLEDGE EDUCATION
Free Flip-n-File 10
with purchase of any box of 5% inch discettes
841-0094 $9.95 value
New Location
2008 W. 23rd-Corner of 23rd & Iowa
expires 3-7-86
not good with any other coupon
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE
DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any Double Pizza
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Steve's Salon
$5 OFF a permanent wave
or highlighting.
exp: 3/20/86
1 coupon per customer, per daily visit
8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Mon. thru Sat. 1422 W. 23rd St. 842-1788
BASKIN-ROBBINS 31 ICE CREAM STORE
BASKIN-ROBBINS ICE CREAM STORE 31
Double Dip Hot Fudge Sundae
$1.30 plus tax
reg. $1.69 expires: 3/7/86
1524 W. 23rd Hours Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m.
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Winning season Jayhawks' on-court success means off-court dollars. See page 13.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 19, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 100 (USPS 650-640)
Mild Details page 3.
Extension granted in research policy
By Leslie Hirschbach Staff writer
The battle to prolong the period of time research can remain classified at the University of Kansas ended yesterday when Chancellor Gene A. Budig gave the extension final approval.
The new policy allows the results of some research to be classified for up to three years. The previous policy allowed research results to be kept classified for only one year.
Last week, faculty members were asked to vote on the proposal by mailing ballots to the University Senate Executive Committee. The faculty narrowly approved the proposal, and it was sent to Budig for final action.
Budig was not available for comment yesterday.
Frances Horowitz, dean of research and graduate studies, said Budig probably didn't have trouble making the final decision over the issue because he followed the faculty's decision.
The proposal to extend classified research has been a controversy for more than three years.
Proponents, including Horowitz, said the one-year limitation on classified research prevented them from doing research at the cutting edge of their fields. That is, they couldn't do the best research because companies didn't want to give research grants to a university that had such a short time for classification.
Many industries want results of their studies to be classified so they can patent the faculty member's findings.
Opponents argued against the principle of classifying research at all. Classifying any information, they said, would prevent professors who do research from sharing all of their knowledge with students.
Some supporters of extending classified research voted against the proposal because they said it was too lengthy and complicated.
Horewitz said the extension would be the most beneficial to faculty members who conducted research for industries.
Classified industry research, or proprietary research, has possible patent and other property rights at stake.
Industry research is considered important by proponents of the extension because the Reagan administration reduced military research grants to universities. The competition for research money is forcing universities such as KU to seek an alternative source of financing from industry.
Neighboring universities also conduct proprietary and classified research. Kansas State University classifies research results for up to two years. The University of Missouri classifies results for one year.
House has final vote on state lottery today
By Mark Siebert Staff writer
TOPEKA — Last-minute lobbying by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce brought out an increased number of local lottery supporters just as the Kansas House approved a final vote on the lottery issue.
but despite some local support for the lottery, two local representatives maintained stances against it.
The House tentatively approved a resolution yesterday that would allow the public to vote on whether they wanted a state lottery. Final action is scheduled for today.
The resolution needs a two-thirds majority, or 84 votes, to pass the 125-member House. It would then have to be approved by a two-thirds majority, or 27, in the Senate to be put on a ballot.
State Reps. Jessie Branson and Betty Jo Charlton, both D-Lawrence, said they probably wouldn't vote for the lottery.
the lottery. Branson said she had heard only from lottery opponents until about 10 days ago when she began receiving petitions and telephone calls in support of a lottery.
Gary Toebben, executive vice president of the Lawrence chamber, said the organization stepped up its lobbying efforts when Gov. John Carlin proposed that the revenues be used for economic development.
Toebben said the chamber contacted about 40 people and began encouraging those who supported the lottery to contact their legislators.
A petition with 1,200 signatures was delivered in Topeka on Monday, urging legislators to let the public vote on the issue, he said.
Another petition was circulated in Allen Field House during Saturday's basketball game. Toebben said the chamber had initiated the petition but did not request that it be circulated in the field house.
"The chamber has been on record in support of the lottery since December." Toebbent said. "The objective of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce is to encourage the Legislature to fund the recommendations in the Redwood study."
Part of the lottery's revenue — $30 million to $35 million — would be used to finance Redwood's recommendations to improve economic development. Toobben said.
"A number of the recommendations relate specifically to Lawrence and the University of Kansas," he said.
The Redwood study is an economic development study made by Tony Redwood, KU professor of business.
Toebben said the state needed revenue from either the lottery or
See LOTTERY, p. 5. col. 1
PIONEER
Mary Burger/KANSAN
Evidence is given in murder hearing
Maryann Jenkins, Fairway sophomore, balances on the shoulders of Preston Randall, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, as they play Frisbee with friends. Jenkins and Randall were playing yesterday afternoon in front of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, 1433 Tennessee St.
Two tall
By Brian Whepley
Staff writer
Evidence was submitted yesterday at a preliminary hearing for Eugene Avis Jr., who is charged with the Nov. 22 murder of former KU designator, George V. Hixson.
Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, presented the state's evidence at the hearing which will determine whether enough evidence exists to take Avis to trial. Milton Allen Jr., a court-appointed defense attorney, represented Avis.
Avis was charged Dec. 23 with first degree murder and felony theft. He was brought to Lawrence on Jan. 23 after deciding not to fight extradition from Kansas City, Mo., where he was being held on a misdemeanor charge.
Yesterday's hearing was recessed until 9 a.m. today. Flory said the preliminary hearing should be completed today.
Avis, 25. sat quietly as Judge James D. Paddock heard the sequence of events surrounding the discovery of Hixson's body.
Penny Smith, 1534 Wedgewood Ct., said she had met Hixson at an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting and had become worried on Dec. 2 because she and others had not seen Hixson for a while.
Smith said Hixson had planned a Thanksgiving dinner on Nov. 28 for friends from the group but no members heard from him about it.
On Dec. 2, Smith with two friends to Hixson's condominium, 1405 Westbrooke, about 4:30 p.m. she said they found the front door unlocked and noticed several newspapers in front of the condominium.
Inside, they found the condominium in disarray and smelled a strong odor. Smith said she attributed the mess to Hixson having been drinking, but when she and her friends noticed the television and stereo missing, she called the police.
Smith said she took her friends home because they didn't want to get involved, then returned to the con-
Bill proposes awards to be given for 5 years
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 1
Staff writer
By Mark Siebert
Staff writer
Stan Winner
Kansas State Scholars in five-year programs may be getting financial relief for their final year if the Kansas Legislature passes a bill waiting to be heard in a House committee.
The bill, introduced in the House on Monday, would allow state scholars to receive their scholarships for an additional two semesters if the educational program requires the extra year of study.
State Rep. Don Crumbaker, R-Brewster, chairman of the House Committee on Education, said he didn't expect much opposition to the bill. He said it probably would be discussed in the committee in about two weeks.
"Now, students have problems financially getting through that fifth year," Crumbaker said. "What this would do is allow them to extend scholarships in the Regents schools through the fifth year of a five-year program."
The Board of Regents schools are the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
Associated Students of Kansas requested the proposed law change because of problems confronting
students in education, engineering and architectural programs at the University of Kansas and Kansas State University, said John Allen. ASK director of legislative affairs
Allen said ASK thought that if the state required a student to attend a program for five years, the state should commit the scholarship for that period of time.
the percept of the prospect,
"The prospects are quite good," Allen said. "I see some definite sup port with this kind of bill."
He said the only opposition to the bill might be from the Regents, who have to decide which programs need the extra year.
ASK is not requesting any additional funds because the bill does not require any money to be added to the scholarship program, he said.
The state scholars are picked by the Regents based on their need and American College Test scores. The scholarship was raised last year to $1,000 annually. To renew a scholarship a student must maintain a 3.3 grade point average.
Allen said the bill would affect only about 10 or 20 state schools a year.
"There are only a small number of programs, and they're concentrated at the larger schools," he said.
Horses may be abused, bill's opponents say
Staff writer
By Abbie Jones Staff writer
Race horses may be harmed and abused if pari-mutuel wagering is allowed, say opponents of a resolution that would legalize such betting in Kansas.
"I feel the animals are exploited," Iudrey McCaig, executive director of the Helping Hands Humane Society in Topeka said yesterday. "I don't
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee approved the proposal Jan. 30.
A resolution legalizing pari-mutuel betting on horse and dog races will be up for debate in the Kansas House tomorrow. The proposal would allow the state to permit, license, regulate and tax horse and dog races.
The state now prohibits pari-
feel they are taken care of like they should be."
McCaig said race tracks would need trained people to protect against potential abuses to the horses that may be associated with betting.
Students boycott hall meal
Carol Brandert, president of the Kansas Federation of Humane Societies, a lobbying organization, said animals frequently were killed after their careers were over or if they were injured and unable to race.
mutuel betting on races. The proposal must pass both the Senate and the House by a two-thirds majority vote before it can be placed on the November ballot.
"If they use dope and run them when they're injured, then I think it's cruelty to animals," she said. "If
By Peggy Kramer
Start writer
The aroma of pepperoni pizza, submarine sandwiches and french fries floated into the cafeteria of Hashinger Hall during dinner last evening.
tney have qualified people to make sure that these animals are not exploited, that's fine."
Staff writer
They are being used primarily as
Haslinger Jill Anne Alpern, Groton, Conn,
sophomore and ticket checker at the
cafeteria, said that at 5:30 p.m.
yesterday 30 students had gone
through the line to get the cafeteria
meal. Usually there are about 200
served by that time.
eating.
Some residents were boycoting the quality of food served in the cafeteria by bringing their own. However, many of these residents still used the cafetera's silverware and trays and drank its beverages.
Dinners were a few of the students who appreciated eating Mexican food, a superior style
"There were about 60 students who took their own food through the line and got cafeteria drinks," she said. Norman Ayers, Winston-Salem N.C., sophomore and Hashinger resident, bought his dinner from McDonald's. He said the boycott is a non-violent way to let hall cafeteria employees know the residents were upset.
See BETTING, p. 5, col. 5
uppet
"The quality of the food could be
Greg Schlotthauer, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, she thought the food wasn't that bad. He also said people had the option of eating at the hall's salad bar if they didn't like what was being served.
better, and I am surprised something like this didn't happen last year," Ayers said.
The flyers alleged that the kitchen used grade D beef and that the supervisors received trips or bonuses for being under their proposed food budgets. The flyers started rumors that quickly spread through the hall.
However, Lenoir Ekdahl, director
The flyers began circulating in Hashinger on Friday. They asked students to consider participating in a non-violent boycott of the cafeteria meals.
Some students, however, said they couldn't afford to order out or bring their own food into the cafeteria.
Herb Vergara, Prairie Village junior, triggered the idea of the boycott with flyers he wrote. These flyers were posted throughout the hall.
Vergara said the flyers were based on rumors he had heard in the last few years about the quality of the beef and the kitchen's use of its budget.
Winston Harwood, owner of Harwood Wholesale Meats, 3103 Iowa St., said there was no such thing as grade D beef.
of food services, said the information on the飞ers was false.
"There are no state or government bonuses for the kitchen supervisors," Ekdahl said. "That would be a real fraud."
He said that he sometimes sold meat to the University. Cafeterias run by the state bought only inspected meat, he said. The specifications are checked by the state each month.
Ekdahl said, "The federal and state laws on food protect us. The meat is all plant inspected."
Ekhdahl met with about 10 residents in Hashinger on Monday to discuss the rumors and differences between the students and kitchen staff.
"The meeting was positive and we agreed to work on some of the problems," he said.
Vergara, who was one of the students meeting with Ekdahl, said he thought she was very cooperative.
Vergara said after the meeting that he decided to hold a neutral position. He said another meeting was planned with Ekdahl on Friday.
88
Mary Burger/KANSAN
Jody Edwards, Burnsville, Minn., freshman and Steve Bernard, Overland Park junior, eat pizza instead of Hashinger Hall's Mexican food. They participated last night in a boycott of the cafeteria's food.
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
Nation/World
2 University Daily Kansan
News Briefs
At least 69 killed in Chile train crash
LIMACHE, Chile — Two trains carrying hundreds of vacationers collided head-on, killing at least 69 people, authorities said yesterday. Officials blamed the disaster on human error.
More than 510 people were injured, as many as 150 critically. Witnesses said some were trapped alive for hours.
The accident occurred when the trains, each carrying about 300 passengers, were allowed to travel on the same stretch of track.
Civil rights foe ill
GREENWOOD, Miss. — Former Sen. James Eastland, a graff Southerner who fought communists, liberals and civil rights legislation during his 36 years in Congress, was in critical condition yesterday, suffering from multiple medical problems, a hospital spokesman said.
Eastland fought civil rights and prevented civil rights bills or resolutions from leaving his committee with a favorable vote. Mississippi civil rights leaders called Eastland's retirement the greatest thing to happen to the country.
AUSTIN, Texas — Singer Willie Nelson says he will combine his annual 4th of July picnic this year with a second Farm Aid concert to be held in Austin, Texas.
Farm Aid II to occur
After Nelson's concert last fall in Champaign, Ill., which generated from $8 million to $10 million in pledges, he wanted to organize Farm Aid II and hold it at Yankee Stadium in New York. But Nelson could not get the stadium because of the baseball season.
Tax evasion dropped
SAN DIEGO — A man was acquitted of tax evasion when he admitted in court that $400,000 in unreported income came from drug deals, the San Diego Union reported yesterday.
Philip Baiocchi, 36, said the money came from investments in marijuana shipments, not from legitimate real estate ventures as the prosecution alleged. The statute of limitations for the drug charges had expired.
From Kansan wires.
The Associated Press
Officials not told of icy recordings
WASHINGTON — NASA executives told Congress yesterday that senior officials responsible for the decision to launch Challenger on its ill-fated mission were never told that temperatures on the surface of the shuttle's right booster rocket had plunged to below 10 degrees.
At a hearing before the Senate science subcommittee, National Aeronautics and Space Administration officials also said the makers of the rocket booster approved a decision to launch after initially expressing concerns about the effect of low temperatures on flight safety.
Jesse Moore, NASA shuttle director, said technicians had found temperature readings in
When asked about reports that top launch officials were never told of the readings, Moore said that was a "correct assessment as we understand it now."
the range of 7 to 9 degrees Fahrenheit on the right hand rocket booster a few hours before launch.
When questioned by Sen. Donald Riegle, D-Mich., Moore said if he had 'known of the low readings, he would have asked for more information.
But Moore said the "ice team" that recorded the data did not relay the information to top launch officials.
Moore and William Graham, acting NASA administrator, said the readings were made with hand-held infrared devices that have large error bounds and are subject to doubt.
In his testimony, Graham at first sidesteped the question of whether Morton Thiokol, the solid rocket booster manufacturer, had opposed the decision to launch the shuttle.
Later, when pressed by Sen. Ernest Hollings D-S.C., and others, he said that after lengthy discussions, the company provided a written statement recommending the launch proceed.
Graham and Moore later said Morton Thiolok officials had initially expressed concern about launching in cold weather.
In contrast to the polite reception NASA officials usually receive from Congress, this first hearing into the space shuttle disaster took on a confrontational tone.
"At this particular juncture it looks like an avoidable accident rather than an unavoidable one," said Hollings, who pressed Graham to
provide information that the official said he* preferred not to discuss.
Panel members also expressed irritation at William Rogers, head of a presidential investigating commission, for refusing to let congressional aides attend the panel's sessions.
Rogers said the Challenger's right solid fuel rocket booster appeared to be the area where the trouble started. But he also told the panel it would be a mistake to focus all the attention on the rocket. He said the shuttle's external fuel tank might have been a contributor to the accident.
Rogers said the strut that attached the booster rocket to the larger fuel tank was broken some time during the flight, which ended with the loss of the shuttle and the deaths of its seven-member crew.
U.S. aiding Angolan rebels
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The United States is supplying covert aid to rebels fighting the Marxist government of Angola, an administration official said yesterday in the first public statement that the CIA assistance program has begun.
Chester Crocker, assistant secretary of state for Africa, refused to be explicit about the type of aid but he told Congress it was effective.
"Decisions are being made, and the process is in motion," Crocker told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. "I cannot go beyond that."
The White House notified Congress in December that it intended to start supplying covert aid to rebels lead by Jonas Savimbi, who has been battling the Cuban and Soviet-supported Angolan government for more than a decade.
The CIA has an initial $15 million for the covert operation, cleared after Congress last year repealed a 1976 law banning American involvement in the guerrilla war.
Intelligence sources declined to discuss the type of aid, although Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., told Crocker that Savimbi required anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons to withstand Soviet-built tanks and fighter planes piloted by Cubans.
The decision to supply aid to Savimbi's National Union for the Total Independence of Angola represents a significant change in U.S. policy
"We want to be effective." Crocker said. "I can't go beyond that. We are aware of what effective means."
Secretary of State George Shultz and Crocker had argued that any aid to Savimbi would wreck five years of negotiations for withdrawal of 30,000 Cuban troops and 1,500 Soviet and
Eastern bloc military advisers from Angola, and for South Africa to withdraw its forces from neighboring South West Africa.
But the negotiations are stalled. Crocker said the Marxist government had since sought to crush Savimbi's forces in southeastern Angola.
While still hoping for successful negotiations, Shultz supported covert aid for Savimbi but opposed open or congressionally mandated assistance. President Reagan said on Nov. 22 that he favored an aid program for Savimbi and welcomed the guerrilla leader to the White House on Jan. 30.
Crocker said the willingness of the United States to negotiate a peaceful end to the conflict "should not be used by others to pursue their own aggressive ends."
Bomb explodes outside embassy
LISBON, Portugal — A bomb planted in a car driven by an American security employee at the U.S. Embassy exploded yesterday outside the complex, destroying the vehicle but causing no injuries, police said.
The driver jumped clear of the car after a suspicious Portuguese security guard stopped the car outside the gates of the $15 million embassy known by Portugese as the "bunker compound," an embassy spokesman said.
United Press International
The explosion occurred about 60 yards from the 2-year-old complex and did not significantly damage to the embassy in northern Lisbon, which is surrounded by high walls, officials said.
The embassy spokesmen said the driver was an American. One official said the American was linked to embassy security and was beyond suspicion.
"He stopped at the first checkpoint at about 7 p.m. for a routine check," the official said. "A Portuguese guard noticed something strange in the baggage compartment."
Police sources quoted by the Noticias de Portugal news agency said a medium-power bomb appeared to have been placed in the car shortly before the vehicle headed to the embassy.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bombing, the third attempted strike in 16 months against the complex
But Portugues sources said that the ultra left-wing April 25 Peoples Forces claimed responsibility for two failed mortar strikes against the embassy in October and November 1984.
Philippine aid cuts backed by Congress
United Press International
WASHINGTON — A spokesman for President Reagan said yesterday that it was premature to consider halting aid to the Philippines, but Congress pressed ahead with bids to block or divert U.S. assistance to the Marcos government.
Sen. Richard Lugar, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and Rep. Dante Fascell, head of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, led the effort to suspend military and economic aid or shift its control away from President Ferdinand Marcos, who was charged with corruption, election fraud and murder.
Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd called for new, legitimate elections unless a coalition government was formed — an idea opposition leader Corazon Aquino rejected.
Reagan, trying to buy time to develop a new policy toward the country, was awaiting a report from envoy Philip Habib, who has been in Manila for talks with Marcos and Aquino.
There were indications the administration was seeking to solidify a two-party system in the Philippines — which the president has said showed new strength in the voting — and Habib was probing for flexibility on both sides.
It was understood that although there was circumstantial
evidence, the United States does not have actual proof the voting was rigged.
Nonetheless, Congress — sensitive to the military value of key U.S. bases in the Pacific archipelago — was moving ahead of Reagan. Senate Republican and Democratic leaders drafted a resolution saying the elections were so fraudulent they could not be considered a fair reflection of the will of the people and called on Reagan to convey this concern to Marcos. The Senate is to vote on the resolution today.
Lugar, R-Ind., usually a supporter of administration policy, called for changes in aid to the Philippines after accusing Marcos of manipulating the balloting.
Lugar and Rep. John Murtha, DPa, headed the U.S. team observing the election and were to appear before a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee today to discuss how to use aid to pressure Marcos into enacting reforms.
Fasell, D-Fla., appealed to Reagan last week to suspend all aid to the Philippines pending a review of U.S. policy.
JORDAN
Canada United States
Spring Has Sprung Italian Style!
The United Colors of Spring have arrived fresh from Italy
stop by and see a European color extravaganza direct from one of the major clothing markets of the world!
United Colors of benetton
P.S. Our blue rugby's are in!
Spring Has Sprung Italian Style!
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P.S. Our blue rugby's are in!
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
KNEA planner starts faculty organization
The higher education organizer for Kansas National Education Association rented an office at 2500 W. Sixth and began operations Feb. 7, Bruce Goeden, executive director of KNEA, said yesterday.
Tom Madden, the organizer,
said last month that the group
planned to organize the faculty of
the University of Kansas.
Goeden said Madden would continue to talk with faculty to find out their concerns and to ascertain their level of interest.
KNEA represents educators. It has about 20,000 members.
Madden said Lawrence was chosen over Manhattan in January partly on the basis of a faculty assessment survey.
If a student received a lower GPA in any one grading period, under the bill's terms, the student then would be suspended from any extracurricular activities.
The survey identified issues of concern to the 64 faculty members that responded.
Study more, bill says
TOPEKA — High school students should place more emphasis on their educations than they do on participation in extracurricular activities, State Rep. Mike O'Neal, R-Hutchinson, told the House Education Committee yesterday.
O'Neal asked the committee to approve a bill he introduced that would require all high school students to achieve a grade point average of 2.0 or higher on a 4.0 scale before they could participate in extracurricular activities.
A scholarship fund of $100,000 has been awarded to the University of Kansas for undergraduate and graduate students who demonstrate academic merit and financial need.
Scholars' fund given
Under current law, students must pass five courses with a grade no lower than a D-minus in order to participate in extracurricular activities.
John G. Luttrell, a KU graduate with a degree in engineering, has given the money to the University in honor of a family physician from Leon who helped him build a career. Luttrell is an executive with Mobil Oil Corp.
The Dr. Harry Last Memorial Scholarship Fund with the Kansas University Endowment Association will give preference to students of Bluestem High School in Leon, although graduates of other Butler County high schools are eligible.
Scholarship created
The Arthur S. Johnson Scholarship Fund has been established for KU students who have completed at least one year of study in the School of Engineering.
Recipients will be selected on the basis of financial need, with preference given to students who must work to pay for their educations.
At least $10,000 in contributions for the scholarship came from Helen-May Johnson of San Diego, Calif., and her daughter, Marcy J. Golde of Seattle, Wash.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with a high around 60 and winds southeast 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a low of 30 to 35. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy and cooler with a high around 40.
Stricter spoken English test for GTAs wanted by Senate
From staff and wire reports.
Staff writer
By Piper Scholfield
KU graduate students who speak English as a second language may face stricter language requirements to qualify for teaching assistant positions if the administration takes Student Senate's advice.
The Student Senate passed a petition last week asking the University of Kansas to increase spoken language testing for graduate teaching assistants who speak English as a second language.
Rachel Anderson, member of the University Affairs Committee and sponsor of the petition, said if the plan was approved by the University, GTAs would be required to present a lecture in their subject to a board of faculty and students.
The proposed testing plan probably would be started in the fall, Anderson said.
Graduate students who speak English as a second language and who apply for teaching assistant positions now must pass the Speaking Proficiency English Assessment Kit.
The SPEAK exam is a 20-minute exam of spoken English and is administered free to all KU applicants by the Applied English Center. The applicants are asked to speak into a tape recorder and respond to questions such as what they consider to be a perfect day, to describe a telephone, or to give their opinion on the problem of automobile pollution.
The graduate student has from 15
seconds to a minute to respond to each question. The tape then is reviewed and scored later.
Although the guidelines for the Board of Regents schools require a score of 220 on the test, the University requires a score of 240.
Elizabeth Soppela, director of the Applied English Center, said the center had administered about 100 tests since the fall 1984. More than half of the applicants passed the exam, although the exact number was unknown, she said.
GTAs who fail the exam may take a classroom communication course offered by the Applied English Center and then retest upon completion of the course, she said.
Soppelaa said she did not know whether there were any complaints from students unable to understand GTAs. The complaints usually would be voiced to the individual departments, not the center, she said.
Also, she said, some complaints may be cultural and not related to communication difficulties.
Yousef Alshaniali, a GTA from Saudia Arabia, said he thought the lecture test would better determine spoken English skills than the SPEAK test.
"It's a very complicated matter," Soppelma said.
"You take the test in a very short time," said Alshaniifi.
Alshaniafi, who has been a math GTA for two semesters, said he had never received any complaints from
Anderson said she decided to petition the University for more extensive testing after she talked with students who said they were having problems understanding their GTAs.
students who were unable to understand him.
Bryan Stubbs, Shawnee sophomore, said he had had one bad experience with a calculus GTA. He dropped the class in the middle of the semester because he was unable to understand the teacher.
"I could understand some words, but couldn't understand the concepts he was trying to explain," he said. "A lot of the other people in the class had the same problem."
But another student said the GTA he had for class who spoke English as a second language was doing a good job.
It was unfair for students to pay tuition to come to the University and then be unable to understand the instructor, Stubbs said.
Phil Case, Leawood sophomore, said he had difficulty understanding his statistics GTA on the first day of class. He said it was getting easier as the semester progressed.
"One thing he does is write everything down on the board," said Case. "In this case it's better that he's from a different country because statistics can be hard to understand and he goes slower. I think he does a good job."
Restaurant specials enjoyed by students
By Brian Kaberline
Staff writer
The phrase is "all-you-can-eat." It is spoken in many Lawrence restaurants.
There is a powerful phrase spreading through town. It can make students skip the cafeteria and frozen dinners, and sometimes, make restaurant managers cry.
Students love all-you-can-eat specials because they can fill their stomachs without emptying their wallets. And although thespecials are a bargain for students, they often are good money-makers for participating restaurants.
Mark Arndt, owner of Border Bandido, 1528 W. 23rd St., said his restaurant's two all-you-can-eat specials a week were a big hit with KU students.
"We fill up the place so much sometimes that we don't have a place for them to sit down," he said.
Arndt said business usually doubled on Wednesday nights because of a Mexican buffet, even though the buffet only lasted four hours. A Monday night taco bar usually brings in $1\frac{1}{2}$ times its normal weeknight business.
"I had no KU business before these things," he said. "Now, I have so much KU business I don't know what to do with it sometimes."
Another special recently mobbed by students is at Wendy's Old Fashioned Hamburgers, 523 W. 23rd St.
Wendy's is nearing the end of a two-month chili special, offering all the chili a person can eat for 99 cents on Tuesday nights.
Tod Roy, manager, said the store went through 20-24 batches of chili on a night when the special was on, as opposed to five or six batches on a normal cost. And since each bowl usually costs $1.24, it is not a profitable night for the restaurant.
He said customers were so desperate for seats during the special, that some arrived 30 minutes early just to stake out tables.
Craig Arnold, manager of Whistler's Walk Family Restaurant, 3120 W. Sixth St., said he had worked at many restaurants in college towns and all-you-can-eat specials were usually successes.
Whistler's Walk offers a special on barbeque ribs on Friday nights as well as a Sunday special on chicken. Arnold said the ribs were popular with students, but the chicken drew mostly an older crowd.
Arndt said there was a special recipe for a successful all-you-can-eat special. Besides having food that is popular with KU students, the food must be served easily in large amounts.
Library is a home for 300,000 plants
By Lynn Maree Ross
Staff writer
That library is a herbarium
A library without books is like a book without leaves. But one library at the University of Kansas has leaves and no books.
The herbarium is on West Campus. It is the home for over 300,000 plants. Ralph Brooks, assistant director and curator, said yesterday that many plants in one place might create visions of a jungle but many visitors go away disappointed.
The plants actually are dried specimens that are attached to 12-inch-by-14-inch cardboard sheets. But the sheets, unlike books in a library, are stored in tall, gray file cabinets.
However, like students who request books through interlibrary loan, researchers from this country and others such as Germany, Mexico and Switzerland can request specimens to study.
"There's so much we don't know about the plants around us," Brooks said.
By studying a specimen along with information about where it was collected, when it flowered and what
other plants were nearby, Brooks said, he and other researchers around the world can learn more about plants and where they grow.
Although Brooks is assistant director of the herbarium, half of his research is done for the state biological survey.
The herbarium has about 10,000 plants on loan, he said.
Ronald L. McGregor, director of the herbarium, said the plants stored at KU represented the largest plant collection in the Great Plains. As a result, the herbarium has been designated as a resource center for Great Plains plant taxonomy.
The Great Plains extend from the base of the Rocky Mountains east into Iowa, Missouri and Minnesota, and from the Canadian border down into Mexico.
McGregor said he liked studying plants because he never knew what he would discover.
"It's detective work," he said.
However, McGregor's detective work leaves him little time to do other things, like gardening.
"Your work is your hobby, and your hobby is your work," he said.
While McGregor and Brooks spend most of their time studying dried plants, Brooks said he also studied
1970
Diane Dultmeier/KANSAN
Ralph Brooks, assistant director and curator of the herbarium, sits with his research plants in the greenhouse on West Campus. He said yesterday, however, that he preferred to work outdoors.
live plants. A greenhouse located near the herbarium is one source of live plants, but it's not Brooks' favorite place to work.
"I'd rather work out in the field.
It's hot out there," he said, referring to the greenhouse.
part of his research.
Lester Mitcher, professor of medicinal chemistry, said Brooks and McGregor were an instrumental
Mitscher looks for natural antibiotics and anti-tumor compounds in plants. Brooks and McGregor have collected all the plants for Mitscher.
Group wants fallout shelter built at KU
Staff writer
By Tim Hrenchin
During the last two weeks posters have appeared throughout the campus. "The Jayhawk Defense Initiative," they said, "With Enough Shovels..."
On Tuesday, members of the Jayhawk Defense Initiative ended the suspense.
They said the new campus organization was starting a referendum drive to provide an underground nuclear fallout shelter for the University of Kansas.
"It if we our own research, based on looking at science books, etc., we wouldn't make this proposal," said Kirstin Myers, Shawnee junior and JDI president. "But based on the fact that there has been scads and scads of government information telling us we can survive a nuclear war, we feel we really don't have any choice."
studied more than 50 recent government documents and publications that indicated a nuclear war would be survivable.
JDI members said they had
Group members said they hoped the drive would educate students on the dangers of nuclear war and bring
them out of a "nuclear malaise."
Myers said the group originated a year ago, after students at Brown University in Providence, R.I., voted to stock suicide pills in case of nuclear war.
"We thought that was too defeatist of an attitude," she said.
Karen Matheis, JDI secretary and Overland Park sophomore, said inspiration for the shelter had come from the Reagan administration.
"For example, T.K. Jones, former undersecerist of defense, said that with enough shovels to dig a shelter and cover it with dirt, we could survive a nuclear war," she said. "So we started doing research."
Eric Matheis, JDI vice president and Overland Park junior, said, "Right now we're compiling a bibliography of all the research that we've been doing, and we'll make it available to all KU students."
The group will kick off the referendum drive March 17. It needs signatures of 10 percent of the student body to get the issue on a student ballot.
Myers said, "We think there will be no problem getting that number of signatures."
If the proposal passes, JDI members will ask the Kansas Legislature to appropriate money to build the shelter.
Myers said the group, which became a campus organization this semester, has about 30 members. F. Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology, is faculty adviser.
"We're very organized," said Karen Matheis. "We didn't want people to look at us as if we were off the wall, so we have been very careful about anticipating every problem along the way."
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4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
Too much legislation Leave beer prices alone
Hard as they may try, our representatives in Topeka will never be able to legislate responsibility.
This session brings several bills before the Legislature that seek to further stiffen Kansas drinking laws. One such bill would prohibit private clubs from selling drinks for less than they cost to provide them.
Granted, most of the cheap drinking promotions are rather scurrilous business practices that did, indeed, come about after last year's legislation. Now we have such specials all day long.
The bill's obvious aim is to eliminate penny pitchers and dime draws and other creative methods of ducking a law passed last year that prohibits happy hours.
The new bill would force club owners to set prices on a weekly basis. Maybe we would have dime draws all week.
But, we live in a free enterprise system, and the Legislature has no right to control the price of the goods and services offered by businesses.
Some opponents of the bill have said drinking specials have no effect on the number of drunk drivers on the road. That probably is taking things a bit far.
No matter what the price of the drink, irresponsible human beings with too much alcohol in their systems will continue to get behind the wheel of automobiles and endanger the lives of others.
Alcohol education and tougher drunken driving laws are measures where political pull can and should make a difference.
A bartender's job is getting more difficult by the day.
Tending bar,not babies
Not only must a bartender serve drinks and collect cash, he must make sure the bar's patrons are old enough to drink in the first place, make sure they don't get too drunk and drive home. And now, he must make sure they don't play drinking games.
The operator of a Wichita tavern recently was charged under a new law that makes it illegal for operators of clubs or taverns "to encourage or permit any game or contest which involves drinking alcoholic liquor or cereal malt beverage."
This elevates bartenders to the status of babysitters.
Police watched four men and two women at a Wichita tavern
play "Sink It," a game that involves floating a glass in a pitcher of beer and taking turns pouring beer into the glass. The person to sink it has to drink the glass full of beer.
The law says that if tavern patrons play this or any other drinking game, the bartender should be punished.
Drinking games do encourage excessive alcohol consumption, but the law is punishing the wrong person. If the Legislature wants to ban drinking games, that's fine.
However, a tavern operator should not be held liable for the irresponsible behavior of others.
Drinkers ought to have enough sense not to play stupid games. When they don't, they should be the ones to pay.
Heavy hand on hazing
Hazing has long been prohibited by most organizations at most schools across the country.
But the practice still goes on, and every year another tragic story of a reckless accident resulting in a student's injury or death because of hazing is reported.
A bill before the Kansas Legislature would make any act of initiation that had a substantial risk of causing mental or physical harm illegal. Period.
A hazing victim could take civil action against anyone who participated in the hazing, any local organization that authorized or tolerated the hazing or the director of the organization.
Fine.
The president of the KU Interfraternity Council has said the law is not needed. He said universities and national organizations control hazing and have disciplinary measures to handle infractions.
But the threat of court action and the weight of a state law banning hazing with a maximum fine of $2,500 and a jail sentence of one year surely would help to eliminate the degrading practice.
Last year, the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity was suspended by the University as an official registered campus organization for hazing violations. The fraternity's charter also was in jeopardy of being revoked. Instead, the national organization installed a supervisory alumni commission to monitor the house's activities.
Perhaps the victim or victims of the SAE hazing violations would have appreciated the option of civil court action to pursue their grievances.
But even more important, perhaps a state law banning the whole practice would have prevented any incidents from occurring in the first place.
Seat belt law takes away civil liberties
It has come to my attention that certain parties in the state government have decided that it would be in the people's best interest to implement a mandatory seat belt law.
Only a fool would argue with the fact that seat belts save lives. This is proven. But isn't it our choice to wear a seat belt? Doesn't that sound roughly like a civil liberty?
I don't wear my seat belt. Call me a fool, because I am. I should wear it, but I choose not to. It is my personal decision. Perhaps the government thinks it should save me from myself. Thanks guys, but no thanks. Enough people in this state need your help more than I do.
Go to the schools of Kansas City, Kan., and tell them that their books are falling apart and they don't have
Christopher Cunnygham
Council oversees
I am a very happy person. I enjoy life and make it a good one.
Guest columnist
money to buy new ones because their tax money is going to pay our legislators to make seat belt laws.
The argument for the law contains such rhetoric as "the people pay for the loss of work-time while these people recuperate from the accidents." Not only is this a fairly callous attitude, but I think these people are forgetting the Deal.
The Deal is what our founding fathers made. Freedom is not cheap. We have to work for it; we have to pay for it. Nobody said it would be easy. It would be so much simpler to allow others to make the decisions for us, but we chose the other way.
This sort of involvement by the government is a step in the wrong direction. I don't live in a democratic society to be told what to do by my government, but rather to tell my government what to do.
Many people are undecided on this issue — apathetic ones who never voice their discontent or disagreement until it is too late. Or they shrug silently and follow orders. Okay, why not. The eventuality of this trend frightens me.
Perhaps I'm being reactionary.
Perhaps I'm overstating. People said
the same thing about Ben Hecht.
Hecht was a columnist and screenwriter in the '30s and '40s. He was the guy who ran around protesting the treatment of German Jews and appealing to the U.S. government and American Jews to do something while Hitler was still a loudmouthed fool, before he was a household name.
Perhaps I'm being reactionary. I hope so.
There is no completely right or wrong side in this issue. To give up the liberty of choice is much more costly than the alternative. To pay for the right to make personal decisions is a small price no matter what the cost. That is the Deal. We made it.
Though not wearing a seat belt is bad for your health, so is not eating three balanced meals a day. I'm sure more people die as a result of an unbalanced diet, through clogged arteries, heart disease and high blood pressure than from not wearing a seat belt.
A recent Canadian study indicates that beer drinkers are, on the average, healthier than non-drinkers or people who drink liquor. I could get behind a law about that, but only like the people behind the seat belt law: I think it would be good for the people.
This would be a good law. "Sorry buddy, but you didn't have a dairy product represented in your lunch. We're taking you downtown."
My opinion. I'm not running off to the Senate with it. I wish others would have the same respect for my personal choices.
U.S. OF NORTH
OUT OF AMERICA
CW
WAS
HEAD
Chief of Bo
THIS STRUCTURE
CONDEMNED
for lack of
CONGRESSIONAL
SUPPORT
The rest of the story
Credibility results distorted
"Our job is to give people not what they want, but what we decide they ought to have."
Who said this? Adolf Hitler, Josef Stalin, Fidel Castro, Daniel Ortega or Mikhail Gorbachev?
While all five probably have said something similar to that, the quote is from former CBS News President Richard Salant.
Surprised? You should be if all your information comes from the large eastern media establishment.
The whole Times Mirror interpretation of the survey was wrong. Let's face it, they're not going to dish out a quarter of a million dollars to find out the media has a credibility problem.
The news you get is pre-digested in corporate newsrooms and then fed to you for consumption.
Last year, the press thought it was suffering from a credibility problem and it wanted to find out why.
The Times Mirror Co., which owns eight newspapers, five magazines, four television stations and 50 cable TV systems, spent $257,000 for Gallup Poll to conduct 3,000 interviews on the public opinion of the news media.
The result? According to Gallup, "There is no credibility crisis for the nation's news media."
But stand by, burning issue fans! If you, like most people, just glanced at the screaming headlines on page one, which seemed to vindicate the press, and then went on to the sports section, you missed the real truth which was buried in the survey.
Victor Goodpasture Staff columnist
So sit back, relax and read the rest of the story.
The whole Times Mirror interpretation of the survey was wrong. Let's face it, they're not going to dish out a quarter of a million dollars to find out the media has a credibility problem with the public.
They just interpreted the data wrong to fit the results they hoped to have.
Those polled were asked to rate prominent publications and journalists on a scale from 1 to 4, with 4 meaning "you can believe all or most of what they say" and 1 meaning "you can believe almost nothing of what they say."
It wasn't said what 2 and 3 meant.
But when the results were written up,
3 was labeled as "believable." So
when 3 and 4 were added together,
most of the results were 80 percent-plus ratings.
But if only the "highly believable" or 4 rating is used, the results are very different.
Only one-third believed all or most of what they saw on network news and in Time and Newsweek. Only 25 percent believed all or most of what they read in nationally influenced newspapers, except for the Wall Street Journal.
The Journal scored higher than any other news source with 45 percent saying they believed all or most of what was printed. The MacNeil/Leher NewsHour on PBS received a 43 percent approval rating.
Network news anchor Dan Rather received a 44 percent rating, Peter Jennings 40 percent and Tom Brokaw 37 percent.
What all of this means is that more
man two-thirds of the public do not agree that the news media are highly believable. This is a far cry from the results that the media reported about themselves.
However, this poll does have similar results to one done last year by the American Society of Newspaper Editors, which disclosed that fewer than one-third of those polled rated the media high in credibility. So it really wasn't surprising when the media ignored those results.
The Gallup Poll did reveal some in teresting results that couldn't be glossed over by the media. Among them:
Only 52 percent said the media stand up for America. Only 55 percent said the media get the facts straight.
45 percent said the media was politically biased. 53 percent said the media tended to favor one side on political and social issues.
- $3 percent said the media were often influenced by the powerful.
73 percent said the media invad other people's privacy.
Do these figures suggest that there is a growing credibility of the new media?
Finally, the Gallup survey concluded that the people who were the most critical of the media were the best formed and the heaviest consumers of news.
The Gallup survey said, "In the public at large, those who know more about the press like it least . . . The truth is, the best informed are the least impressed."
All of these results are exactly opposite of what the newspapers blazed in their headlines. No wonder only 13 percent believe all or most of what they read in the New York Times and Washington Post.
Benjamin Disraeli, the late British prime minister, was right. He said "There are three types of lies — lies
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Series important issue
The lack of a lecture series on this campus that would compete with the Landon lectures is a subject that deserves a much more thorough examination than the hurried story on the front page of the Kansan (Feb. 13).
It was suggested that the reporter talk to James Scaly, assistant to the chancellor, as perhaps the most knowledgeable person on campus concerning some of the problems connected with a "world class" series.
He could have provided information on the James Pearson series, its administration and limitations, as well as supplemented the brief references in the story to the Vickers, Hallmark and University Lecture Series.
It was also suggested that she contact Youssef El-Shoubary, president of International Club, who recently
showed how one person with drive and imagination could bring into being an effective sponsoring group and obtain funds to finance the visit of Jihan Sadat.
However, neither of these rich sources of information were contacted because a deadline would not permit it. Since this was neither hard news nor a fast-breaking story, it is hard to understand why a deadline prevented what could have been a story that might rekindle wide interest and support for improving the lecture presentations on our campus.
The scheduling of Julian Bond on a Saturday night in hoc Auditorium last week for an audience of about 200 people is a good example of why more thought, effort and organization need to be given to the subject. I look forward to such a story.
Clifford P. Ketzel
Cilford P. Kretz professor of political science
Band judging biased
The judging procedure was very unprofessional. The band that won was uncourteous of the 25-minute time limit, which was an important rule to follow.
I attended the Battle of the Bands on Feb. 14 at the Kansas Union in which six bands competed and the winner received free video and studio time at TV30.
In my mind, there was no question that two of the judges were acquaintances of the winners.
Even though the contest was a fund-raiser that was supposed to be an evening of entertainment, it was a competition and something was gained by winning.
Sherry Roth Shawnee sophomore
Children understand
In response to Susan Leininge (Kansan, Jan 28):
I would like to introduce myself to the little girl who asked you to sign my anti-abortion petition on Jan. 22.
I would like to express my testing about the babies who are being killed because they are suffering. The babies cannot fight for themselves so we get to fight for them.
in the letter you wrote, you said did not know what abortion is. Abortion is the killing of babies while the are still in their mothers' wombi (which used to be the safest place for them).
While viewing the movie "The Silent Scream," I learned what abortion is. It was a very strong movie.
Catharine Ryu
Cair Parzel, Topeka, fifth grade
daughter of Kansus For Life
president
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Hearing
Continued from p.1
dominium 20 minutes later, after
lawrence police had arrived.
Officer Ray Urbanek and Sgt. Miguel Garcia discovered Hixson's body in the bedroom closet.
Carol Moddrell, Douglas County deputy coroner, said an autopsy indicated that Hixon had died from strangulation on Nov. 22. The marks on Hixon's neck indicated that a cloth had been used to strangle him.
The autopsy also showed that Hixson had been struck in his chest and right eye prior to his death, Moddrell said.
Detective Jim Haller testified about evidence that had been found at the scene.
Also submitted were numerous strips of a white cotton towel found in various places around the apartment, a bed sheet, carpeting stained with a red substance, and a yellow note pad with an unfinished note dated Nov. 22.
Haller said that while searching the condominium, police found no televisions or stereos. Avis is charged with felony theft of those items.
A knife with red stains on the blade was found under a bed in the living room, Haller said. The knife and other evidence was sent to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation for laboratory tests, Haller said.
Beer bottles, an ashtray, cigarette butts, a fingerprint card and test tubes that contained cotton swabs with red stains were submitted as evidence.
The records were entered as evidence. No information about their contents was given because Allen objected. He told Judge Paddock that the supervisor at the mission should reveal the contents when he testified.
KBI Special Agent Stanley Pfefer testified that he had obtained records from the City Union Mission in Kansas City, Mo., concerning the arrival and departure of transients.
Jo King, staff assistant and custodian of records at Westwestern Bell, said a call was made from Hixson's phone at 6:31 a.m. on Nov. 22 to a Kansas City, Mo., number. The phone number corresponds to that of the city mission. At 6:39 a.m., a collect call was received from the mission.
Lottery
Betting
a money-making tool," Brandert said. "The animals are treated as a product. The methods of destruction are not humane."
Continued from p. 1
But proponents say abuses exist in every industry.
Jane Junge, 2502 University Dr. and a horse owner, said the money generated for the state through parimutuel would outweigh the abuses.
the state from advertising and promoting the lottery.
The House debated the issue for about two hours and voted down nine of 10 amendments proposed.
"It's kind of like saying let's get rid of dogs because people kick them," Junge said. "It's kind of a non-argument to me."
ed the state resorting to games like the lottery and pari-mutuel.
One KU associate professor said the Legislature should generate revenue through more visible methods such as raising sales or income taxes.
from a one-cent sales tax.
Continued from p. 1
Burdett Loomis, associate professor of political science, spoke of alternatives to pari-mutuel on a local radio show last month. Loomis said yesterday that he had no moral objections to the resolution, but oppos-
from the observatory six
representatives were not totally committed on the lottery issue when the resolution passed the House.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said paired-mutuel betting wouldn't meet the state's economic needs.
Charlton said, "I think it is a tax on the poor."
"Pari-mutuel is a very small revenue raiser," Winter said. "It's not a solution to money problems."
People would not buy tickets in relation to their income, Charlton said. Just because a person had a
Winter, who voted against the issue last year, said pari-mutu probably would generate only $3 million to $5 million. The state needs $150 million to $200 million, he said.
Opponents of the resolution also say betting on horses draws organized crime.
higher income does not mean they would buy more tickets.
The Rev. Richard Taylor, a lobbyist for Kansans For Life At Its Best!, said it would be impossible to keep organized crime out of the state.
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS
"There is no way you can keep organized crime from trying to fix a race," Taylor said.
Both Charlton and Branson supported the only successful amendment to the bill, one that prohibited
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6
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
Frat house may be hard to sell
By Peggy Kramer
Staff writer
The Evans Scholars' fraternity house, 1942 Stewart Ave., was placed on the real estate market two weeks ago, but it may be hard to sell, an attorney said yesterday.
"It's not so much placing the house on the market as trying to find a market for the house," said Milton Allen Sr., the attorney. "Purchasing it would be a large undertaking."
Allen's law firm, Allen, Cooley and Allen, First National Bank Towers, is handling the sale of the house. The Lawrence firm represents the Western Golf Association, of Golf, Ill., which owns the house. The National Evans Scholars Foundation also is based in Golf.
Joe Saliba, former president of the KU chapter, said the decision was made last month to close the chapter and sell the house.
Allen said there had been inquiries about the house and it might be sold before the end of the semester.
He would not release the selling price of the house. He said the price would be negotiated with potential buyers.
Philip Harrison, a real estate agent for The Gill Real Estate Agency, 901 Tennessee St., said the firm had appraised the house. He said he could not release the appraisal.
Jim Moore, assistant director of the Evans Scholars Foundation, is organizing the sale of the house for Western Golf. He was unavailable for comment yesterday.
Saliba said the closing of the chapter was a result of low membership.
"The low number of qualified applicants has threatened to close this chapter for the last couple of years," he said. "It only now has become a reality."
Jerry Rogers, Evans' faculty adviser, said, "There was strong funding at KU for Evans, but we ran out of qualified candidates."
This year there were three new freshman, and it looked as if the number of candidates would continue to be low, Rogers said.
Candidates must show financial need, rank
in the top 25 percent of their high school graduating class and have been a golf caddies for at least two years in a member club of the Western Golf Association, Rogers said.
There are 14 Evans Scholars chapters in the United States, including three in Illinois.
"There are hundreds of caddie candidates in the Chicago area and those who come to KU have to pay out-of-state tuition," Rogers said.
The house can accommodate about 50 students, he said, and he hoped a KU organization would purchase the house. However, Western Golf probably won't give up possession until after graduation this semester.
Saliba said four members of the KU chapter planned to transfer to the University of Illinois chapter and one intended to go to the University of Colorado chapter.
"The rest of the men would like to remain at KU, and I don't know of any that are transferring to the University of Missouri chapter," he said.
Commission axes request to issue bonds to buy,renovate Park 25
By Juli Warren
Staff writer
In a 4-1 vote, city commissioners turned down a proposal last night to issue $4.4 million in industrial revenue bonds to purchase and renovate Park 25 Apartments, 2401 W. 25th St.
Two Wichita men, Donald J. Walenta
K. Peden, made the proposal.
About $800,000 would have been used to restore the apartments. Peden said at the meeting. Seven of the apartments are now unrentable, according to Peden.
Commissioners and apartment owners expressed concern that issuing the bonds would condone letting property run down and then making a profit on its sale.
Commissioner Howard Hill said, "I'd sure hate to think we're subsidizing the seller who hasn't kept them up."
Commissioner Erinner Angino, who cast the vote in favor of issuing the bonds, said
that the issuing of the bonds would be a useful financial tool and that rehabilitation would improve the Lawrence housing stock.
Andy Galyard, a Lawrence real estate broker, said, "It looks like in some respects we're rewarding the owner's mismanagement."
In accordance with federal law, 20 percent, or 51, of the 254 units would be reserved for low- to moderate-income residents if the IRBs were granted.
Peden said the partners made the proposal because they had not been able to find conventional financing for the purchase.
In other action, the commission approved the request of Vangard Corporation, a Lawrence company, to use Blufs Drive during the construction period of the Sallie Mae building at the northeast corner of Sixth and Iowa streets.
KU Basketball KU vs. COLORADO Live Broadcast
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GAMMONS SNOW
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
7
Campus priest appears on television
By Barbara Shear Staff writer
Staff writer
Families and students gathered last night at a local restaurant to enjoy pizza and watch a campus priest discuss the KU campus ministry on television.
Father Vince Krische, a priest at the Saint Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd., appeared on the "Mother Angelica Live" show on EWTN, a national religion network that operates out of Irondale, Ala. Krische discussed the importance of religion and how it fits into the college campus.
"We are trying to bring Jesus to
the academic world," Krische said during the show. "Young people are making decisions away from home where they have many options. They need guidance to lead to a more full life, rather than just finding a job or their niche in life."
Krische said Monday that Mother Angelica had invited him to be on the show because she was interested in college students and the campus ministry program at KU.
Krische visited with Mother Angelica in mid-January and then was invited by her to be on the show, said Monica Neugebauer, Topeka
graduate student and chairperson of the Saint Lawrence Council.
"He was thrilled," she said. "He would be talking to possibly 10 million people."
The show is part of the largest growing cable television network in the country, Krische said. The network is seen in 39 states in almost 4 million homes for four hours each evening. However, Hays is the only city in Kansas that carries the network he said.
The restaurant owns a satellite dish and aired the program for the students last night.
Mother Angelica said the network
was interested in promoting spirituality.
"Where do students go after they begin their careers?" she said. "They train for college, but where do they go afterwards?"
She said that was part of what Krische would discuss on the show — how campus ministry fits into a student's life.
The 'Mother Angelica Live' show is broadcast Tuesday through Thursday each week. Mother Angelica gives a short monologue followed by a Bible study. The rest of the time is devoted to the guest speaker and a call-in period.
On Campus
Clyde Stoltenberg, assistant professor of business, is scheduled to speak about "Doing Business in the People's Republic of China," for the University Forum at 11:40 a.m. today at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building. 1204 Oread Ave.
The University Placement Center will present a workshop, "Interviewing II: How not to interview," at 3:30 p.m. today in Room 3 Lippincott Hall.
The German Club will meet for eine Kaffeestunde at 4 p.m. today in Room 4047 Wescre Hall.
The KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in the Multipurpose Room in Robinson Center.
Dungeons and Dragons will meet
at 6:30 p.m. today in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union.
The Student Assistance Center will present a free workshop on academic skills enhancement at 6:30 p.m. today in Room 4007 Wescoe Hall. Topics include time management, reading, listening and note taking.
Mexican-American students, will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union.
The MECHA club, a club for
The Dr. Who Fan Club, will meet at 7 p.m. today in Parlor C of the Kansas Union.
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor a Women's Career Fair from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today in the Big Eight Room.
EAT
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FRIDAY SPECIAL Steak Dinner
4-10 p.m. $5.75 T-Bone or Sirloin
OPEN Mon.-Sat. 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
723 North 2nd
Also: Spare Rib Special $^{525}$
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs
Weekend Night Owl
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2 16” 2 topping pizzas
& a 6 pack of soft drinks
$12.00
KU Basketball Special
16" 2 topping pizzas — $5.99
& $1.50 Pitchers (dine in only)
Sunday Special
14" 2 topping pizza
& 4 soft drinks — $6.99
Every Day Special
Buy One Pizza Get the
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Thrilling Thursday 10"2 topping pizza & 2 soft drinks — $4.99
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2214 Yale
Today...Chopped Steak
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Thursday...Baked Ham
Friday...Swiss Steak
Saturday...Chicken Fried Steak
Monday...Pork Chops
with mushroom gravy
Tuesday...Baked Chicken with Gravy
Wednesday...Spaghetti
Wacky Wednesday 16"2 topping pizza &4 soft drinks — $7.99
the Sanctuary
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We are offering ALL our daily specials EVERY DAY through Sunday, Febuary 23. So come in any day this week and order your favorite Checkers special for the special price!
Terrific Tuesday
2 10" 2 topping pizzas
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FUNNYLIT
Omicron Delta Kappa
Recognizes and Encourages achievement in:
★ Scholarship
★ Athletics
★ Publications
★ Speech, Music Drama
★ Student Government
National Senior Honor Society
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Speech Drama
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Applications are now in the office of the Vice Chancellor, Room 214, Strong Hall
Applications, Minimum G.P.A. of 3.0 and transcripts
Due Feb.28,5 P.M.
8
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
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Kalichstein, Laredo, Robinson Trio
Joseph KALICHSTEIN, Piano
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Sharon ROBINSON, Cello
Presented by The University of Kansas
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3:30 p.m.
Sunday, February 23, 1986
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Office
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved
For reservations, call 912/864-3982
VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations
A University Arts Festival event, partially funded by the KU Student Activity
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PAID ADVERTISEMENT
A TRIBUTE
TO HIDEBOUND LIBERTINES
The February 5th issue of the Journal-World contains a letter defending abortion-on-demand from a likeable local liberty by the name of George Kaull. Mr.Kaull claims that because "Pain is a part of life. The possible misery of the aborted fetus should be weighed against the certain misery of a child who is unwanted, seriously deformed, quite often malnourished, and born into a situation in which it will not receive proper love, care and education."
While pain is a phenomenon with which each of us must contend, the rest of Mr. Kaull's thesis is simply wrong. One of the properties of life is irritability which a dictionary defines as "the property . . . of living organisms that permits them to react to environmental changes." Many libertines have theorized about but none has discovered the phase of gestation in which an infant suddenly develops this capacity to respond to stimuli. This is so because the properties of life become manifest simultaneously.
In the February 6th University Daily Kansan (UDK), two "pro-choice" Kansas University students admit to the editor that "Abortion is not a method of birth control" presumably because every kind of birth control is supposed to prevent conception. As life begins at conception, every unconscious termination of the unborn's development obviously constitutes a homicide and every conscious termination, a murder. This being the case, Mr. Kaull (whose sincerity I don't question) should be weighing the certain misery and consequent death of an aborted fetus against the probable but fluctuating misery of an unwanted, deformed, malnourished, uneducated, and rejected but living child.
Thirteen years ago, Supreme Court Associate Justice Harry Blackmun incorrectly described the unborn child as a "theory of life" which in the final trimester became a "potential life"; but even the notorious American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which called for the legitimation of abortion five years before the fateful 1973 decision, conceded in a publication entitled Our Endangered Rights that the intrauterine occupant is alive when it (the ACLU) reflects on "the State's interest in protecting unborn life." Perhaps even hidebound libertines eventually will see that our Constitution, which prohibits both the infliction of "cruel and unusual punishments" via the Eighth Amendment and a state's depriving "any person of life . . . without due process of law" via the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, was designed to furnish lifelong protection from governmentally-sanctioned oppression to each of this country's unique inhabitants.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th Street Terrace
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Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
Nation/World
University Daily Kansan
9
Israelis, Muslims clash over search
United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Hundreds of Israeli troops pushed deep into southern Lebanon yesterday in a search for two captured comrades and clashed with Muslim militants who rallied to defend Shite villages, security sources said.
Muslim fundamentalists threatened to kill one of the captives unless Israel withdrew its troops by tonight. A statement signed by the Islamic Resistance and delivered to a Western news agency in Beirut identified the two prisoners as Yossef Bink and Rahim Levichek.
Three guerrillas were killed, and three more wounded in clashes with Israelis at Srifa, 10 miles north of the Israeli-declared security zone in southern Lebanon, sources said. Four other fighters were wounded in Kabrihka, four miles southwest, militia militias officials said.
Lebanese police reported fierce combat yesterday at Deir Kifa, 1½ miles south of Srifa, where helicopters were trying to land paratroopers. One helicopter was downed near Tyre, the sources said. Beirut radio said another was shot down Monday.
Israeli Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin traveled to the security zone to supervise the search by what foreign military sources estimate was an Israeli force of 600-1,000 troops.
I believe that the forces needed to carry out this mission are necessary to make sure the search will be done in the most effective way with the fewest casualties possible," Rabin said, adding that Israeli forces would remain in southern Lebanon for a relatively short time.
The Israeli push came after
ibaness guerrillas ambushed a
group of Israeli soldiers Monday in Israel's so-called security zone and captured two of the Israelis.
The Israeli military said its troops arrested two terrorists connected with the attack and reported seizing a cache of weapons.
The two Israelis were seized just north of the Beit Yahouh while crossing into the Israeli-controlled zone. The Islamic Resistance movement said the two were wounded but were receiving medical attention.
Israeli troops and pro-Iraeli South Lebanon Army militiamen — backed by tanks, jets and helicopter gunships — detained at least 270 people and dynamited a number of houses, U.N. and militia sources said.
As the Israelis pushed north of the zone, in what Lebanese radio stations called a second invasion, militiamen of the Hezbollah and the Islamic Resistance moved south from Beirut to defend Shiite Muslim villages.
The Lebanese National Resistance, a coalition of guerrilla groups, told Israel in a statement yesterday that unless its forces left within 24 hours, the coalition would launch a continuous artillery barrage on northern Israeli settlements.
Helicopters dropped leaflets signed by Gen. Uri Orr, the commander of forces in North Israel, which warned citizens he would take negative measures if the two men were not handed over.
Schools in Tyre were closed as the Israelis rounded up residents of nearby villages and singled out men between the ages of 16 and 40 for interrogation.
Israeli military sources in Jerusalem conceded there was little chance the two captured men were still in southern Lebanon.
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STUDIO GENERAL
Curious About Law School?
Washburn University School of Law Director of Admissions Dottie Harder will be on campus
Wednesday, February 19 Regionalist Room Level 5 Kansas Union 12 noon to 5 p.m.
OVER THE RIVER AND TO THE WOODS.
Winter Wishes
A cozy winter table with two silhouetted figures, one holding a cup of tea and the other reading a newspaper. In the background, a snowman is falling from a snowy window, surrounded by trees in winter attire.
THE DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS
WINTER WONDERLAND WEEKEND
$46 What a wonderful way to spend a winter weekend. Reserve a room any Friday, Saturday or Sunday night and for this delightfully low price, you'll get a deluxe double room. per room per night Then you can just sit back in the sauna, heated indoor pool or your spacious Doubletree guest room and enjoy being waited on for a change. For reservations, call (800) 528-0444 or dial direct, (913) 451-6100. Doubletree Hotel at Corporate Woods, 10100 College Boulevard, Overland Park (I-435 at U.S. 69).
DOUBLETREE HOTEL
KANSAS CITY
The Sanctuary Presents The Real McCoy ARM WRESTLING TOURNAMENT WEDNESDAY, FEB. 19th. 9:00 p.m.
For Men
& Women
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 19th, 9:00 p.m.
Weigh In Time 7:00-9:00 p.m.
Single Entry $5/Double Entry $8
PRIZES WILL BE AWARDED
**Featuring the Real McCoy**
Arm Wrestling Machine
* • No hand to contact
* • No reach is used
* • Only strength is used
* • not special techniques
* • unable to compete to complete against them oppose
Must be over 21
SINGLE ELIMINATION TOURNAMENT
MEN'S SINGLE CLASSES
Men's Weight
100 lb. 96 oz.
Bronze Men's Weight
125 lb. 103 oz.
Silver Men's Weight
140 lb. 114 oz.
Gold Men's Weight
160 lb. 127 oz.
MEN'S DOUBLECLASSES (Combined Team Weight)
Men's Weight
100 lb. 96 oz.
Bronze Men's Weight
125 lb. 103 oz.
Silver Men's Weight
140 lb. 114 oz.
Gold Men's Weight
160 lb. 127 oz.
WOMEN'S SINGLECLASSES
Women's Weight
100 lb. 96 oz.
Bronze Women's Weight
125 lb. 103 oz.
Silver Women's Weight
140 lb. 114 oz.
Gold Women's Weight
160 lb. 127 oz.
WOMEN'S DOUBLECLASSES (Combined Team Weight)
Women's Weight
100 lb. 96 oz.
Bronze Women's Weight
125 lb. 103 oz.
Silver Women's Weight
140 lb. 114 oz.
Gold Women's Weight
160 lb. 127 oz.
ALL MEN'S CLASSES WAREHOUSE AT A MINIMUM
All women's classes are held at the Minimum
All men's classes will be held on the Male Injury
Arm Wrestling Machine Demonstration
Sat.. Feb. 15
Free of Charge
$2.00 Cover
Contestants $1.00
$1 Well Drinks
11 a.m.-3 a.m.
SANCTUARY
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7th & Michigan
843-0540
Residential With Over 300 Clubs
Reciprocal With Over 300 Clubs
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Sports Coats $59-$89
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Dress Shirts $12.99
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Slacks ½ OFF
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Ties, Belts ½ OFF
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LADIES
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$19.99-$34.99
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Slacks
½ OFF
Reg. $45-$50
Sweaters
$14.99-$34.99
Reg. $47.50-$80
Sportshirts
½ OFF
Reg. $40-550
SAVE 50% to 60%
OPEN SUNDAY 12-5 p.m.
SAVE 50% to locations on sale merchandise regularly additional.
SAVE 50% Mon-Fri 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Thursday, 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Sat 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
MasterCard VISA American Express & Discovery accepted
SPORTS COUNCIL
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE 12 OPENINGS ON THE COMMITTEE. THIS COMMITTEE WAS SET UP TO SERVE THE INTERESTS OF STUDENTS WITH ISSUES CONCERNING THE ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT.
GET INVOLVED!!!!
Applications available at the Student Senate Office, B 105 of the Kansas Union.
Applications due by Friday, Feb. 21 at 5 p.m.
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
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$21.00
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Oil & Filter Change
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Minor Engine Tune-up $39.95 * *
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LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER
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10
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
Rains force West Coast evacuation
The Associated Press
Thousands of people were evacuated on the West Coast yesterday as the heaviest rain in 31 years forced rivers from their banks. Landslides blocked major highways, and railroads and heavy snow triggered killer avalanches.
At least seven people were killed and six were missing since the first in a series of storms struck the area a week ago. Since then, up to 19 inches of rain has fallen on parts of California. About 9 feet of snow has fallen in some mountains.
More than 3,000 residents of Northern California, their homes flooded or threatened by slides, were in evacuation centers. National Guardsmen were called out to help in California and northwestern Nevada, where more people were forced from their homes. Flooding also caused damage in parts of Utah.
California Gov. George Deukmejian declared states of emergency yesterday in Napa, Sonoma and Humboldt counties, the first step toward making the counties eligible for federal disaster assistance.
"We have evacuated everybody, so far, that needs to be evacuated," Napa County Red Cross disaster chairwoman, Doris Zylkins, said.
"Napa's really isolated. We have slides or torrents on all highways, in and out. I don't think anybody can get into Napa right now."
Twenty-four-hour rainfall in parts
of the Coast Range in Napa and Sonoma counties exceeded 8 inches, with 11.15 inches at Atlas-Dutra in Napa, the weather service said. Kenfeltt in Marin County had about 19 inches of rain since Feb. 12, the agency said, and the Heavenly Valley ski resort reported 9 feet of snow. In Utah, Wellsville had 10.56 inches of rain in five days, and Bald Mountain, Idaho, got nearly 50 inches of snow.
The 1,350 residents of Hamilton City, Calif., were advised to evacuate as the Sacramento River rose to within a foot of the top of eroding levees, said Dan Roach of the U.S. Forest Service.
Nevada Gov. Richard Bryan declared a state of emergency in
Washoe, Lyon and Douglas counties and in Carson City. One hundred Guardsmen were sent to help, mostly in Reno, Al Aicorn of the state Department of Emergency Management, said yesterday.
In Nevada, 400 to 500 people had been evacuated from the Dayton area southeast of Reno where water from the El Doro Dorado Reservoir threatened to isolate residents, according to Don Dehne, assistant director of the Emergency Management Division.
In Utah's Morgan County, Commissioner Ken Adams said water was receding but several hundred homes had water damage and estimated the flooding caused $250,000 in damage to roads.
Flooded town calls in National Guard
The Associated Press
NAPA, Calif. — This waterlogged town in the heart of California's lush wine country called in the National Guard yesterday after a week of fierce storms drove the normally tranquil Napa River over its banks.
"We have 400 to 500 people in shelters, but I understand people who have left on their own could number in the thousands," said sherrif's Capt. Ken Narlow. "We have no way of knowing.
"The National Guard has been called out. We're surrounded by about three feet of water at the sheriff's station."
States of emergency were declared in Napa, Sonoma and Humboldt counties by Gov. George Deukmejian, a preliminary step in making them eligible for federal disaster assistance.
In this community northeast of San Francisco, which is divided by the river, water peaked almost five feet above flood stage and flooded much of the downtown area.
to keep water out. The Sonoma Valley Airport outside town was under water, the few planes it handles huddled on a small, dry section of the field.
Store entrances were sandbagged
Napa Valley wineries reported little trouble, since grape vines were dormant during the winter and aging wine was safe indoors.
"We closed yesterday and we're closed again today," said Chip Bourlil, assistant director of operations at the Domaine Chandon winery in the little town of Yountville. "The winery hasn't had any serious
flooding. I haven't been out in the vineyards, but there has been some erosion. There's a possibility later in the spring there could be some root damage if the soil remains waterlogged."
At Napa High School, one of the town's three evacuation shelters, about 400 people sprawled on mattresses and watched tiny televisions
"The police came around and told us to get out," said Joe Horvath, 34, who lives with his wife and three children.
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A semi-trailer containing chemicals of an unknown value and type was stolen between Saturday and Monday from a parking lot at a business at Ninth and Maple streets. Lawrence police said. The trailer, valued at $20,000, had to have been hauled away with a semi-truck, police said.
A KU student's 1969 Oldsmobile Cutlass, valued at $1,500, was stolen between midnight Sunday and 8 a.m. Monday from the 800 block of New Hampshire Street, police said.
Five tires, five wheels, an AM-FM eight-track player, a battery and a case of motor oil, valued together at $430, were stolen Monday from a car in the 1800 block of Maple Street at an undetermined time, police said.
An AM-FM cassette player and two speakers, valued together at $550, were stolen between 1:30 a.m. and 8:30 a.m. Monday from a KU student's car in the 1000 block of Delaware Street, police said.
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Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
Nation/World
University Daily Kansan
11
Grenada prepares for visit from Reagan
United Press International
ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — Posters of a smiling President Reagan lined the streets of St. George's yesterday as Grenada prepared to welcome the American leader tomorrow on a visit to commemorate the 1983 U.S. invasion.
Reagan will start his first visit to the tiny Caribbean island, twice the size of Washington, D.C., by flying into Port Sallines Airport — which the United States spent $20 million to
help finish last year.
At the time of the invasion, the Reagan administration charged that the airport was built in the early 1980s by Cubans to help spread communism in the eastern Caribbean.
The Grenadian government of then Prime Minister Maurice Bishop, a close ally of Cuban President Fidel Castro, contended the airport was constructed to boost tourism.
In October 1983, after a radical faction assassinated the charismatic Bishop, several of his ministers and
scores of his followers. Reagan sent in more than 7,000 soldiers to overthrow the government.
The invasion cost the lives of 19 U.S. soldiers and 70 other people and ushered in a pro-American government. Many people in Grenada said they welcomed the move.
A national holiday was declared for Reagan's visit. Posters of the president were hung along many streets in the capital of St. George's, an old town of pastel green, pink and blue buildings that line the quiet sailboat-
filled harbor and climb into the hills surrounding the volcanic island.
"Come welcome President Reagan to Grenada," the posters say, inviting Grenadians to a rally Reagan will attend in Queen's Park to conclude his five-hour visit.
It was difficult to find anyone who opposed the trip, from Prime Minister Herbert Blaize to fish sellers along the harbor in the country that still suffers from serious economic problems, including an unemployment rate that runs between 25 and 33 percent.
"Grenadians just like to say thanks." Blazie told a news conference yesterday. "Our number one friend is now the United States."
Lossyn Joan, 51, enthusiastically talked of Reagan's visit as she cut slices from a 10-foot long tuna she was selling at the pier.
"We welcome him here," she said. "He saved me from losing my life by the crazy revolutionaries."
At Queens Park, intense preparations were underway to spruce up the
facility for Reagan's visit. A new coat of green paint has been applied to the 6-foot high metal fence that surrounds the park, about the size of two football fields.
White bunting was prepared to be hung around the stands, which were also getting a new coat of paint. On one platform, two dozen school children practiced a dance waving multi-colored wreaths.
Reagan will unveil a plaque at Port Salines Airport and visit St. George's University School of Medicine.
Religious riots in India leave over 100 injured
United Press International
JAMMU, India — Police battled stone-throwing Hindu mobs yesterday, leaving more than 100 people in injured in the second day of clashes sparked by a dispute with Muslims over a holy site, police said.
Nine people have been killed and hundreds wounded in several cities since Friday in violence related to a court decision allowing Hindus to worship at a site claimed by Muslims in the town of Faizabad in northern Uttar Pradesh state.
Militant Hindus marched through the northern city of Jammu, winter capital of the predominantly Muslim Kashmir state, to protest Monday's clashes between police and Hindus demonstrating in support of the
ruling.
The mob threw stones at police trying to stop them. The officers responded with tear gas and baton-charges. More than 100 people, including 53 officers, were wounded in the day-long battle, police said. Twelve of the injured are in serious condition.
At least 200 people were wounded in Monday's rioting.
In New Delhi, 300 miles south of Jammu, a 21-year-old man died from bullet wounds sustained Thursday when police fired on Muslims in the old city area demonstrating over the court ruling. One other person was killed in the shooting.
Police and paramilitary troops patrolled the city yesterday to enforce a curfew.
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Among states, California, New York and Texas led among new jobs created, with 17,420, 12,160 and 11,570 new jobs. Other big job gainings states included such "rust belt" states — where pollution control costs often are blamed for unemployment — as Ohio, 8,580; Illinois, 8,170; Pennsylvania, 8,010; and Michigan, 6,090.
While acknowledging that environmental standards occasionally penalize some states and regions at the expense of others and that they may adversely affect employment, the study argued that its analysis also indicated that pollution control efforts would provide substantial economic and employment benefits to various regions.
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"Most interesting, industries in the regions negatively impacted by environmental legislation will benefit substantially from the sales, profits and jobs created by pollution abatement and control investments," the study said.
Deadline extended to Feb. 21
WASHINGTON - Efforts to clean up the environment and control pollution have spawned a $70 billion-a-year industry that created 166,500 jobs in 1985, said a study released Monday by a private consulting firm.
United Press International
According to the study, investment in air pollution control generated $10 billion in industry sales, $1.3 billion in corporate profits and 85,000 jobs. Water pollution control investments created $7.1 billion in sales, $900 million in profits and $9,000 jobs, while waste disposal technologies generated $2.5 billion in sales, $300 million in profits and 22,500 jobs.
"If pollution abatement and control were a corporation, it would rank near the top of the Fortune 500," the study by Management Information Services said. "As a result, a significant sales-generating, profit-making, job-creating industry is now in place."
The study found that, in 1985, business invested $4.2 billion in air pollution control equipment, $3.2 billion in water pollution control equipment and $1.1 billion in equipment for disposal of solid waste.
The study specifically looked at private business efforts to control and abate air, water and solid-waste pollution. These efforts account for about 12 percent of the total $70 billion industry expenditures, according to government figures. The rest for regulation, research, operations and other expenditures.
The private consulting group specializes in looking at the significance of federal budget and tax policy on industry and labor. The study comes at a time when environmental protection regulations are under fire from some parts of the government and private industry for harming the economy, crippling industry and costing jobs.
THE 2ND ANNUAL "SURF'S UP"
"Many companies — whether they realize it or not — owe their profits, and in some cases their very existence, to pollution abatement and control investments," the study said. "Many workers — whether they realize it or not — would today be unemployed were it not for these investments."
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
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Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
Sports
]
13
University Daily Kansan
CU faces possibility of winless Big 8 season
By Matt Tidwell Sports writer
Losing is something the 24-3 Kansas Jayhawks haven't been accustomed to this season.
Sports writer
But Colorado Buffaloa 'coach Tom Apke, Kansas' next opponent tonight in Boulder, gets reminded every day of what it's like to be a loser. Colorado is just four losses away from being the first Big Eight team ever to lose all of its conference games.
Colorado
Men's Basketball
8-15, (Big 4) 0-10
9:05 tonight
(106FM)
at Boulder
CUJ
After Kansas, 9-1 in the Big Eight,
Colorado must play Oklahoma State,
Nebraska and Missouri. The Buffaloes are 0-10 in the conference,
including a 100-64 loss to the Jayhawks Jan. 29 and a 117-73 loss to Oklahoma at Norman on Saturday.
"It itens like we've been catching people at the wrong time." Apke said. "It's been 'Team X needs a win. Oh, here comes Colorado.' Then you want to break a long losing streak, and you have to face two of the top eight teams in the nation back-to-back."
In Kansas, ranked third in both national wire service polls, Apke is catching the Jahwahks at a time when they've been playing some of their best basketball of the season.
A Kansas win tonight, combined with an Oklahoma loss at Nebraska would give the Jayhawks at least a tie for the conference championship.
If Oklahoma wins tonight, Kansas
against Kansas State on Saturday.
"The schedule favors us, but only because we'-9 and they're 7.-3." Kansas coach Larry Brown said of Oklahoma. "But the way this season has gone I think the unexpected has been something you can expect, and I don't want to look past anybody."
Kansas has turned in five straight, solid offensive performances after its last loss, Jan. 28 at Iowa State. The Jayhawks have beaten their last five Big Eight opponents by at least 14 points including two blow-outs at home last week over Missouri and Nebraska.
in those last five games, Kansas has used good defense to create fast break opportunities — including numerous fast break baskets in the Colorado win Feb. 8 in Allen Field House.
"We've just got to play the way we've been playing." Brown said. "We like to run on everybody, and it's important we do that by defense.
if you don't play aggressive defense, then you don't create fast break opportunities for yourself."
Apke said the Buffaloa didn't execute well offensively in the last game, enabling Kansas to get numerous steals and unleash its fast break.
"The number one thing we'll have to excel at is our offensive poise to handle all of KU's traps and trick defenses," Apke said.
Kansas continues to lead the Big Eight in team field goal percentage hitting 61.7 percent of its attempts in conference games. For the last six Big Eight contests, the Jayhawks have had at least four players score in double figures.
Jayhawk Notes — All five Kansas starters are averaging in double figures in Big Eight play. Forward Danny Manny averages 19.6 points a game in the conference. Colorado's freshman Matt Bullard has been drawing praise from Big Eight coaches averaging 12.6 points and 6.5 rebounds a game. In the last game against Colorado, Manning had 20 points and guard Calvin Thompson chipped in 18. . The Jayhawks return home to play Kansas State in Allen Field House at 3:05 p.m. Saturday.
G 11 Michael Lee (6-4)
PANSA
Tonv Vourax/KANSAN
Ron Kellogg and Danny Manning will lead the third-ranked Jayhawks against the Colorado Buffaloes tonight in Boulder. The game starts at 9:05 p.m.
KU seeks to avenge early season defeat
Bv Dawn O'Mallev
Sports writer
The Kansas Jayhawks are hopeful that they will be able to improve their shooting percentage when they play the Colorado Buffaloes tonight in Boulder.
The last time the Jayhawks played the Buffaloees, they turned in their worst shooting night of the year. The basketball team made
Colorado
Women's Basketball
15-8. (Big 8: 5-5)
6:35 tonight
at Boulder
CJ
only 29.9 percent of its shots in a 56-49 loss to Colorado.
"We lost that game because we didn't play at all, and that fires me up." Martin said.
Jackie Martin, Kansas forward, said she hoped the team's performance would improve from the last Colorado game.
Martin said by losing games like the one to Colorado, the Jayhawks had helped other teams stay in the Big Eight race.
Evette Ott, Kansas point guard, said she had to play with more intensity in order to help prevent another performance like the one against Colorado.
Kansas is in second place in the Big Eight with a 6-4 conference record. Colorado is in fifth place with a 5-5 record. First-place Oklahoma is 7-3.
keeping their point guard from penetrating the middle," she said. "When they sag off me, I'll use my jump shot."
Colorado head coach Ceal Barry said she thought the two teams were evenly matched.
"We do not have an advantage in the game," Barry said. "Both teams know what the game means. Every game is important, especially these last four games."
Barry said Kansas was a balanced team because all the players were capable of scoring. She said the most important thing Colorado had to do was contain forward Vickie Adkins.
Ott is one assist away from reaching 100 assists in a season. Only three other Kansas players have accumulated more than 100 assists in a season - Lynette Woodard, Cheryl Burnett and Mary Myers.
Probable Starters
Kansas
F 33 Lisa Dougherty (5-8)
F 25 Vickie Akins (6-1)
C 40 Kelly Jennings (6-5)
G 24 Evelette Oit (5-7)
G 30 Toni Webb (5-8)
"I'm going to concentrate on
Colorado
Colorado
F 42 Tracy Tripp (5-9)
F 43 Crystal Ford (6-2)
C 11 LeaAm Banks (6-0)
G 24 Bridget Turner (5-8)
G 24 Kris Holwerd (5-10)
KU may be host next year
Anschutz a success as meet site
By Jim Subr
Sports writer
Sponsor representatives of Sunday's AAU/USA Junior Olympics National Indoor track and field meet said yesterday that they were impressed with the management of the inaugural meet at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
The sponsor, Sears Roebuck and Co., was so impressed with the sports pavilion that the University of Kansas may host next year's meet as well. said Jim Pilch, meet director.
"We got our chance to show off the Anschutz facility to the country," Pilch said. "And those people who attended the meet from all over the country generally felt it was the
Pilch said that although Sears hadn't made a decision on the location of next year's meet, the organization of the meet as well as the sports pavilion itself impressed the company. The meet began on time and progressed ahead of schedule, he said.
finest indoor track facility they had ever seen."
Richard Harkins, president of the Amateur Athletic Union, said Lawrence was selected as the site of this year's national meet because of its reputation for hosting quality meets in the past.
He said the prospects were excellent that Sears and the National Track Association would acknowledge the requests of the AAU and Lawrence Track Club to have the meet return to Lawrence next year.
Bob Timmons, Kansas head track coach, complimented Pilch and the Lawrence Track Club for the meet's organization. Timmons said he thought the organization of the meet caught the attention of the Sears representatives.
"I didn't hear anything negative about the meet at all," Timmons said. "We're hopeful they'll decide to have the meet here again next year."
competed in the meet. The competition was broken up into two age divisions — 15-16 and 17-18.
Pilch said the meet gave the competitors a chance to demonstrate their abilities for several college scouts in attendance.
"We got calls from all over the country from coaches who wanted to see these kids compete," Pilch said. "Those coaches came to see what these kids had, and with any luck, we got some of these kids a scholarship."
Timmons said scouts from Big Eight schools, including Kansas State, Nebraska, Oklahoma State and Iowa State were at the meet. Track scouts from national powers Wisconsin and Texas also attended.
The AAU/USA Junior Olympics began in 1948. It is a countrywide developmental program for amateur athletes offering 21 sports to youths age eight to 18 and is the largest multi-sport program in the United States.
Sanctions are halted at Kapaun
United Press International
TOPEKA — A judge yesterday issued a temporary restraining order preventing the Kansas State High School Activities Association from imposing sanctions against Wichita's Kapau-Mount Carmel High School.
The order, issued by Shawnee County District Judge Fred Jackson, said that the activities association's sanctions were applied to innocent students indiscriminately and that they were "vindictive as well as unreasonable, arbitrary, capricious and tantamount to a constructive fraud on the rights of the plaintiff-students."
Jackson's order states that on at least three occasions the executive board adjourned its public meeting to hold secret deliberations concerning the sanctions it would impose on Kapau. According to the order, the subject matter of those secret deliberations does not fall within any of the categories which may be discussed in secret.
Jackson based his order in part on arguments by Attorney General Robert Stephan, who contended that the activities association may have violated the state's open meetings law. Stephan said it conducted several closed sessions in last Wednesday's meeting to discuss the imposition of stringent penalties against the parochial school.
Jackson set another hearing for March 3 to decide whether to grant a temporary injunction that would lift the sanctions permanently.
In its meeting last week, the activities associated placed Kapaun on probation for two years and issued an order prohibiting the school from participating in post-season activities for one year.
The suspension included both athletic and non-athletic activities.
Nelson Hartman, executive secretary of the activities association, declined comment on the order until he could review it with legal counsel.
The sanctions came after the school's own admission that the tuition of three non-Catholic students was paid for by a school booster club. The payment violates a rule requiring parents or guardians of non-Catholics to pay all tuition costs at Catholic schools.
Sports Briefs
Manning is named one of 11 finalists
Kansas forward Danny Manning has been named one of 11 finalists for the John Wooden Award, presented each year to the nation's top collegiate basketball player.
The winner of the award, named after the former UCLA coaching team in 1976,
Among other finalists are North
Carolina's Brad Dougherty and Kentucky's Kenny Walker.
Mizzou upsets ISU
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Derrick Chievous scored 18 points and Jeff Strong added 16 points to lead Missouri to a 71-62 Big Eight victory over Iowa State in college basketball last night.
The Cyclones hit only 36 percent of their shots for the game.
Missouri, which made 45 percent of its attempts from the field in the contest, led 37-27 at intermission.
Lynn Hardy and center Dan Bingenheimer threw in 13 points each for Missouri, which raised its record to 19-12 overall and 6-6 in the Big Eight.
Grayer scored 19 points for Iowa State, now 16-8 overall and 7-4 in the conference.
Rovals start training
Pitchers and catchers for the 1985 World Champion Kansas City Royals are scheduled to report to spring training tomorrow. They will begin working out Friday.
The rest of the team is scheduled to report to camp Feb. 28.
The Royals will play a 29-game spring training schedule. Their first game will be on March 8.
From staff and wire reports.
Basketball success benefits athletics, academics
By Frank Ybarra
Staff writer
Even when the KU basketball team isn't playing, it's winning.
WILLIAMS STADIUM
Big time basketball has come to Kansas, and the Athletic Department and the University are finding out that a top ranking goes hand in hand with making marketing dollars and image promoting.
"There's no doubt that our great basketball success has piqued the interest of some corporate sponsors," Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, said last week.
The sponsors Hunter is referring to are among the top names in industry: Lite Beer, Pizza Hut and Wendy's. They all want to be part of a program that is one of the best. Each one has sponsored an event or paid for some materials related to KU basketball.
No one associated with KU basketball promotions would comment on the total amount of money the Athletic Department receives from a sponsor.
However, Hunter did say that in return for their publicity, corporations can give the University money, promise to buy a certain number of radio spots or purchase something for the University.
For example, Wendy's helped offset the costs of printing tickets in exchange for an advertisement on the back of the tickets.
According to Susan Wachter, assistant athletic director, Wendy's paid about $6,000 to Kansas to help print the football and basketball tickets.
Students screaming "we're number one" while waving foam-rubber fingers, with the Miller Lite logo proudly displayed. Or hundreds of hungry fans calling orders at local Pizza Huts have put smiles on the faces of these basketball capitalists.
dent of Leweike and Co., Kansas City, Mo., which works with Hunter and the Athletic Department to find promoters of KU sports.
"Without a doubt, the sponsors who have been involved are really enjoying it," said Tod Leiweke, vice presi-
Hunter said the promoters had plenty of incentives to spend money on the University.
"They know we're going to have a full house," he said, "and our national ranking has helped considerably."
Success generates ticket sales
Another place where the success of the basketball team and the success of the promotions can be measured is in the amount of money generated in ticket sales and concessions.
Wachter said that last season Kansas made $46,224 dollars in concession sales from 15 home basketball games.
This season, through seven home games, which was the latest game she had statistics for, she said Kansas had retted $23,023 dollars, over half of what was made last season.
And with a sold-out Allen Field House this year, Kansas has made $228,500 for ticket sales compared to $853,800 at this time last year.
Wachter said the money made off of tickets and concessions went into the general operating fund of the Athletic Department and helped other sports run their programs.
The success of the Kansas men's basketball team has attracted more fans to Allen Field House and more money to the University.
Tony Vourax/KANSAN
He said high school seniors often paid more attention to a university with a high ranking or a lot of exposure.
Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions, said the success of the basketball team could mean more than just money to the Athletic Department.
And if Kansas reaches the final four, he said, the admissions office could become very busy.
Exposure attracts new students
"We can count on the phone ringing
off the wall," he said. However, Lindvall added, "I don't think anyone is going to attend KU just because of the basketball team."
Head coach Larry Brown said he liked the idea of the basketball team helping the University recruit high school students.
"I think it's great," Brown said.
"It all works hand and hand."
Athletic Director Monte Johnson agreed with Brown's assessment.
"I'd like to think it's a recruiting tool for all parts of the University," he said.
The success of the basketball team also has the potential to help other athletic teams, Leiweke said. He said he hoped to have more promotional packages in the future that would tie basketball promotions to the indoor relays in the spring and football in the fall.
"It's our dream to have 70,000 people in Memorial Stadium," he said.
Others seem to snare his hopes for the football program.
Head football coach Bob Valesente said when recruits attended basketball games or visited with Brown for a few minutes, they came away impressed with the University.
"It has had a very positive influence on our recruiting program," he said. "I think it's great for a part of our program to be so outstanding."
Doug Vance, sports information director, said the publicity generated from stories in Sports Illustrated and in the local media always had a positive effect on other Kansas teams.
Vance is responsible for catering to national networks and local television and radio stations when the Jayhawks are on the air.
He said his job was easier when Kansas had a winning team because he didn't have to convince anyone
about how good the Jayhawks were. "They come here because we've got a great product," he said. "While they're here we make their jobs as easy as we can."
Treating the media well is an important job when one considers he's dealing with people who pump money into the Athletic Department through game rights.
Monte Johnson said Kansas received $55,000 a year for radio rights to basketball games. Learfield Communications, the Jefferson City, M. company which runs the radio network, also is involved in an equity sharing program with Kansas. It guarantees a share in the profits if
the network runs in the black this year.
The conference shares the revenues
Kevin Meyer, general manager of sports for Learfield, said the success of the team most likely would help the success of the network, thus increasing its profits.
The Big Eight Conference receives $3.2 million from its contract with Raycom Sports which owns the television rights to all conference games. Johnson said the revenue wasn't divided in exact even shares but about $400,000 of the television money was coming to Kansas.
Johnson said the visibility of the program, because people are watching an exciting team on television, helped the ability to market the team.
Brown said he didn't worry about the outside attention that KU basket-ball was getting. He said he was only interested in his team.
But others in the Athletic Department say they're always thinking about the promotions getting out of control.
"We're very careful about not becoming too commercialized," Hunter said. "We're very careful and cautious about doing our promotions in good taste."
)
14
University Daily Kansan
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classified display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than a minimum depth is one inch. No reverse allowed in classified display advertisements except for logos that are less than one inch.
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* Deadline 4 a.p.m.—2 working days prior to publication.
- and are required to pass examinations on our majors to the University Dalrymbe Kaupa.
* All advertisements will be paid in advance.
- classified display advertisements.
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- All advertisements will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
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* Blind hot ads - please add a $4 service charge.
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until credit has been established.
* Transactions are not provided for classified or
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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 Kansan business office at 864-4358.
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop, covering time management, reading, listening, notetaking. Wednesday, 19, 18: 6:30-9:00 p.m., 4007 218-5825 This semester is presented for the last semester this semester by the Student Assistance Center. U12 Strong. 884-4004.
Lose Weight for Spring Break Guaranteed! Call Lorrie 741-7689.
Lee Weight! Gain Weight! or Just Great!
HERBAL NUTRITIONAL PROGRAM given you好, basic sound nutrition that everyone is aware of.
works! Call 913-829-4761. DuPree-Gillen & Assoc
With a nice like that he must have...
interior motives
Rent' 19.4°C Till' 82.0°C m oom. Smiffy's TV.
147 W, 324h, 842-7531, Mon. S. 6-9/10
147 W, 324h, 842-7531, Mon. S. 6-9/10
SUA Board Member applications due by Thurs Feb. 20th. Questions? 864-3477.
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight 89.66
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, 82d. 485/795. Mon.
9:00-10:00, Sun. I-5.
Want to coordinate entertainment and activities for the University of Kansas? Pick up your SUA application today! SUA Office, Level 1, Kansas Union.
Hillel לבי
presents th
Retreat
Feb.28-Mar.2
for more information
call the Hillel office
864-3948
What's an ANATOMICAL GIFT? See the back of your driver's license to find out. Sign it.
Wear beachwear to Gammons Wednesday night and be eligible for a FREE TREEP to Dightonna
Attention Sophomores: Owl Society is now accepting applications! Minimum overall GPA of 3.0. Applications in Rm. 404 Kansas Union. Application in Rm. 405 due March 15 at 5 p.m. in Rm. 404 Kansas Union
1982 Toyota 4 x 4 SR-4, p/s/b, a/c, am/fm
caller. Callen Bj 891-4934.
ENTERTAINMENT
Due to space limitations, number of tickets this year. Get yours now! Brazilian Carnival, Feb.22. Tickets sold at S.U.A. and Sanamish/Port.Depart. (in Wesco).
LIVE MUSIC
ALL WEEK LONG
AT THE
ROCK
CHALK
BAR
Wed. 2/19
- JOE MOON
Acoustic Jazz
Fri. 2/20
-THE MIND
AT LARGE
A True Musical
Experience
Sat. 2/21
-JAYHAWK
JAZZ QUARTET
COME AND ENJOY THE
BEST MUSIC AROUND
Having a party? Well a DJ! Call Music Mix. The music mixes hours of great dance music. Music from you 24 hours a day, great dance music.
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE J DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 794-4713.
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to provide the music needed for a party, which can tilt can, a large room and can accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in Lavender, Manhattan and Salma. Call 619-8543 or visit www.phaseservice.com.
FORRENT
3 BR house, East Lawrence, bus route, 1884
kitchen, living room, garden, gardenable,
adult plumbing. Phone: 326-967-5797.
website: www.brshouse.com
Furnished one bedroom apartment near University
of Alabama at Birmingham with off street
patio. Big pet please. 841-5000.
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Vacation, located available now and this summer. Plan ahead, please for next fall. 843-211-6
FEMALEAS-NEED A ROOMMATE? Only $100/mo and 1/ utilities w/o m.o. lease. 1blk off 23rd and 2 binks on Mass. Call #84-2161 after 6 a.m.m. Keen teaching!
First come, first served, only a few twos left. At 210 W 29th on KU bar route, between Gibson and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, draps, and appliances. We can help you choose rooms. You square foot, carport, extra bathroom. Call 434-6464 for appointment.
For rest: 24bm, brand new apt. 1,1/2 bkpa from Kansas Union, $300 plus, utilities. Sublease a possibility. Chuck Clock Lodm 433-328 8 a.m. p. and Pam B443-0335 on 3pm. Keep trying. Just finished remodeling. 1 & 2 BR apartments. Newarp efficient appliances. A.C. new dou
mitted remodeling. 1 & 2 BR apartments.
new carpets, efficiencies appl. A, C+ new door
openers, new windows.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL and/or SUBEASE for spring and summer. Available possibly as early as April 1. Room and comfortable 2 BR duplex apt in good location w/nice yard. Extra large dining room, laundry room, Refs. rug, couple or small family pref. $65/mo. fall; spring and summer negotiable.
SUBLEASE NOW. 1.BDMH Hanover Place apt.
one月免费月 rent: 841-1321
Spring break Delketime 2-bedroom pool, hot pool, tuba, Located in Silverthorne, close to Brecknidge, and Keystone $100/night. (303) 429-1713.
SUBLEASE now for summer. Studio, Good location. Rent negotiable. Call 823-9830 or 749-2415.
Spacies 1 bdmr, billions of bills W/D, hard wood, clean and sand. $250/o. Jeff 824-0146
Sublease now 8-13pm. Dirt. Very nice and close to campus. 943-9738.
Sublease one bedroom apartment. Very clean and very neat. Wired and cable gas, paid on bus. Includes free wifi.
TOWNHOUSE should immediately Cornhill
TOWNhouse from Meadowbrook Apt. at 842-3000
Sublease from Meadowbrook Apt. at 842-3000
Sublime 3 furnished farmed apt. 3 chicks from campus $45 plus utilities, can make a deal.
Unfurnished studio theatre at 1530 Tennessee newly remodeled, $74/month platoe design.
Wanted: Female, non-smoking roommate to share a 3 bedroom apt for remainder of semester. $150.00/month, plus 1/3 utilities. Call 749-4833. Keep trying.
MASTERCARE offers completely furnished 1.2, and 3 bedroom apartments all near campus. Call (800) 675-9642.
LOST/FOUND
CRUISESHIPS HIRING! $18,000-$30,000 Carribean,
Hawaii, Worldwide Call for Guests. Cassette
& CD Collections. Fax & Email. GOVERNMENT JOBS. $18,000-$29,200. Yer-
hong. Hiring Call 1-877-600-8671. Bst. R7584 for current
Found! 1: pair of brown glasses & a light blue case
2: Found! Hairy hand. Pick them up HDPL
3: Found! Pink shirt. Pick them up HDPL
Found in Wesley Hall, a gray back pack with an English I and Radio & TV textbook (Cell 64-8259)
LOST: 1 pair of Polo prescription glasses. If found call 749-795 (reward)
5 Lost house/car keys on metal ring. Vicimity Blake Hall/Chancellor hall # 846-1323 or # 843-4834.
Lost Closure earring-red/gold, rectangular earrings (吧) # 846-1323 or # 843-4834
Hoch park chairs (吧) # 846-1323 or # 843-4834
Are you interested in earning $35 to $80 a week
from McDonald's? Please sign up to mediate
openings from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
and p.m. to close and one weekend day. Apply in person at McDonald's, 901 West 21st. No phone calls.
HELP WANTED
Hardee's
CALL 843-8203 TODAY!
Part Time Job. Flexible hours between 9 a.m. and
9 p.m. for inventory control. $8 an hour. Must have car. Call collect Dick Signorelli 212-680-9230.
Summer Jobs. National Park Co.'s 212,500.
Openings. Complete information & $0.00.
Job Description: C. 601, 283 Ave. W.N.
Kalpell, MT 99091.
Hardee's of Lawrence on the Kansas Turnpike is currently hiring for all shifts.
COULD YOU BE A BOSTON NANNY?
AIRLINE HIRING BOOM! $142-$199, Guide
Stewardesses, Reservations! Call for Guide,
Cassette, Newswire, $181-8444 or XUW313.
CHECKERS Pizza has immediate openings for ten delivery drivers. Must be 18 years old and have your own car and insurance. Our drivers apply on a quarter hour. Cash commissions daily. Apply in person or call Checkers Pizza, 212-741-8410.
all or part time
available
-Flexible hours
-Opportunity for
advancement
-Start at 3.50 per hour,
overnight shifts
start at 3.75.
-Hardee's is also hiring
an overnight supervisor
-Wages will be based
on food service
experience
Are you a loving, nurturing person who enjoys spending time with children? Join the network of over 300 people who have come to Bodmin to care for children in foster care, in urban neighborhoods, enjoy excellent salaries, benefits, your own living quarters and limited working hours. Your round-trip transportation program is free to apply or write Mrs. Fisch, Childcare Placement Service, inc. (CPC) 149 Buckminster Rd.,
-Full or part-time
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,940-$18,530/yr. New
Government CELL: $87,687-$89,000/yr. For current
employment in the state.
HIRING TERRITORIAL MARKETING PERSONNEL. Progression commission approximately $21,800 first year, $30,000 second年. Reuseened by March 15. TCD, 124, Highway 7, Wayne.
Need dependable student to work downtown. 20 hm, per week during spring and fall. 843-386-3081
need dependable student to work downtown. 20 hm, per week during spring and fall. 843-386-3081
OVERSEAS JOHS, Summer, yr. round, Europe,
S.A. Amherst, Australia. All fields. $900 2000 mo
sightseeing. Free info. Write LIC, PO Bx 52-K1-
Corona Del Mar, CA 92025.
ENTERTEL offers YOU
offers YOU
- Pair training
- Advanced opportunities
- Paid training
- Hourly wage with incentives
- Pleasant working cond.
- Flexible hours
- $5-$6 per hour
RESUMES-A professional resume can get you more job interviews. Let me write one for you!
AND
Call 841-1200
A KU student from far East Orient seeks girl for war relations. Please reply to Netsky on 010-645-2778.
PERSONAL
male age 24 seeks dating/relationship with black female. Interests in health, exercise, career. No joke. Serious replies to Kevin, Box 3802 Lawrence, Ks.
ERIC L. know what it's like to have a crush on a girl who, while he knows you exist, doesn't seem interested in you.
FO THE BRUTENET at the nebraska game, wearing a powder and denim stripper coat, with full-fit, lightweight coat. I was the guy two rows back and I want to be in a box to box SS at the UDK-10 Faint Flint Hall.
To my guy in M4D, Thank 4 a fun 3 months! Love,
your girl in 105C.
BUS. PERSONAL
POINSETT ABEACH INN In the heart of the Fort
Launderdale beach STUDENT DENT DISCOUNT
Enrol now in Lawrence Driving School Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841-7749.
$10-$360 Weekly/Up Mailing Circulars! You
sincerely! Increase mutual self-addressed envelopes. Success, P.O. Box 479CEG, Woodstock,
11.0500
Jayhawker Towers
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts. for KU students
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- Individual Contract Option
- 9½-Month Leases
- Academic Resource Center
- Air Conditioned
To get it all together - you need... interior motives
GAYLEBISIAN? Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stamped, self addressed envelope to TRIANGLE TIMES, P. 6 Box 26492, KCMO 64196.
- 91/2-Month Leases
- 9/2-Month Leases
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors
- All Utilities Paid
- On Bus Line
- Swimming Pool
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Blue Heron Futons
"CAMP CHEMSELORS - M/F - Outstanding Slim and Prim Dawn Camp; Tennis, Dance, Slim Dance; Gymnastics, Fitness plus. Separate girls' and boys camp; 7 weeks. Camp Canelo or Colby Camp at us." Contact: Michael Friedman, Director. #94 Hotel Dr., No. Woodmarsh N./N-1180.
- On Bus Line
- Free Cable TV
50 positions available in summer sales program.
Average earnings $4000.00. For interview call
numbers, please contact:
- Laundry Facilities
1603 W. 15th 843-499
Apply Now for Fall/Spring
a different deli special every day
DELI SPECIALS
Today's Special:
Chili Dog French Fries 16 oz. Drink $1.80
Creative, thinking singles find kindred spirits through the directory for educated singles. LOVELINE, P.O. BOX 302619, Lawrence, KS. 60466. One-class-membership $14.00.
SANDWICH
00% Cotton & Foam Core Mattress
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues., Sat. 12:50 p.m.
841-9443
THE KANSAS UNION
DELI
level 3
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater
health area. Call for appointment
913-345-1400
Herb doesn't have interior motives
(864) 279-5300
The Onion's recording of the day's entrees & soups
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U) repair
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U) repair
Call: 865-667-6000
EXF. gxt information for us
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
His and Hers Hair Design. Quality hair care at
their salon. You can reserve a space available
and give you the personal attention you deserve. Haircuts $7, permits $23 and up with hairdresser included. Linda and Bermice $94, 1218
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
Weekly Beer Special
Feb.19-25
Wiedemann 12 pk $3.52
Pabst 12 pk $4.63
Black Label 12 pk $3.52
Coors Light 12 pk $5.28
Miller 12pk $5.28
Miller Lite 12pk $5.28
Rent'19. $40 T V $22.80 a month C Matches, 14 W, 3rd W. 92-57.38, Mon - Sat. 9:30 - 10:30
Instant patient, perfiole, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course, finesship.
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 our reliable delivery. You design it or it be our talented artists. 220 W. 51th (Belmont Gibson) 813-449-4349
SUNFLOW3R5B04MASS
A
DOWNHILL SKI RENTALS
Spring Break Special
$50 plus deposit
HEAD • TYPOULA • RACHEL
Thousands of R & R H albums =2 or less. Also collectors items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 a.m. Quantrillts 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles.
Want a new fun way to say I love you on Valentine Day. Try a VIDEO TITLE $14.95. Available from 12 to 4 or by appointment. Now through Valentine Day and Live Video Titles $49.95. 480-630-4098
HEAD - TYROLIA - RAICHLE
843-5000
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed Shirtart. 749-1611.
SERVICES OFFERED
Class Ring Day — Why wait for the ring man when his ring day goes at belfour Bedroom 89 Mass Room 102.
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling, 943-8621.
Native German, French background, offers expert, informal tutoring both languages, 841-8400. Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-5716.
FOR SALE
SUNFLOW R BOOMASS.
MATH TUTOR - Bob Meers holds an M.A. in math from KU, where M02, 102, 11, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professors at Yale University, where he spent 6 minutes statistics, $6 per 40 minute session. Call 643-9632.
LOSE WEIGHT NOW. 100% guaranteed FDA approved on Herbal Products #842-7069.
proved on Herbal Products 843 7069
Modeling and theater portfolio--shooting new,
Beginners to Professionals, call for information,
Songl Studio, 740-611.
Auto sound equipment: Blaupunkt BPA-145 60 wat-
tch a channel power amplifier. Blaupunkt BE-55
5 hard p-a-m graphic equalizer. Best offer. Call
804-2918.
FITN FIREDH looks good, runs great. A/C/
caseass $250 economical. ETC $41-8396 USB
connector.
Baseball cards and sports nostalgia. Buy, Sell
Baseball cards. Baseball cards. Open 10-8 M-S.
W, 28 w, 2nd Bldg. Baseball cards. Open
10-8 M-S. W, 28 w, 2nd Bldg.
Comic Books, Op. 15-19; Foe, Sat. & Sat. 10-8; B1
Comics, Op. 11-24; Foe, Sat. & Sat. 10-8
Car; 1976 Honda CVCC, fine condition $1500,
$853-566, weekends.
Computer Zenith 10 (Hechtahl) and printer.
package package with Supercable, wordprocessor
and network.
Rent.* 19% T. C TV. $82.88 m. Smith's TV. *147 W. 147 D. 823-5713. Sat: M-9: 10am, Sun: 1-5
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas from only $80. Dehidge doing, parties, googie bags, more. Hurry, call Sunchease Tours for more information and reservations to toll free 1-800-923-5911 or contact a local Suncheese Tours company your Spring break breaks, count on Sunchease.
DRUMS. load 7p. set w/cymbals, hardware,
sess. $450. Pearl 3 p. set w/zilidian cymbals,
hardware. seat $500. Overland Park (1) 648-7691.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from I (U. repair).
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U. repair).
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U. repair).
Additionally tax request.
Call 816-877-6000
or call 816-877-6000
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Classified
Heading:
Write ad here:
Philp turntable with little used audio Technica cartridge. Come see, make off before I trade it. I am ready to make offers.
Wouldn't a little SAXe space up your life? I'm parting with my beloved Bunny also saxophone (it's in great condition) and its new mouthpiece for ony $300. Call 894-2134.
USED STEER EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Stereo 15 pair. Tape decks, boom boxes and car stairs, all completely reconditioned and Lawrence Custom Radio, 941 W. 23rd St
Leaving country, must sell 1980 l.m. hatchback Chevrolet Citation. Also, good clothes, mena jackets, shirts and skirts (M,L), call 845-2600. One point: MQED speakers; $85 or best offer.
HAFLER 500 wait power amplifier, Brand new with warranty. Must sell $900. Tom #491-1510
Kenwood KR-A70A receiver, 60 watts, 18 station memory, sean, 7 band equalizer. New saeifric
Treed of lumpy mattresses? Waterfaced on
or arm/ankle?
Call Bruce 789-749-364, 942-823-073
12i books women, 7-1/2-1, Nordica, men's,
5/11-1/2, vendramini, $8 each.
/
Technics 45-watt waft receiver, technics dual cannon
set with a 30-degree TORA V90 (90 taps), Call 718-1275
for 20 FIRE TECH TORA V90 (90 taps), Call 718-1275
I would like to buy your 1982-84 Scoter. 841-7614.
LICA CAMERA EQUIPMENT 50mm f/4. NIKKOR-SC. 35mm f/3.5 Summarron with optical focusing (device both in lenses) bayonet mount for M-series LCA). Also, Lica-MC light meter. 841-3178, ask for Gary (leave a message if I'm not sure).
Plane ticket to Phoenix, Arizona for Spring Break. Great price. Call 864-2192 or 740-0332.
Sale: Gretches wooden snake drum, $50.00 or best offer! 849-1801.
AUTO SALES
Western Civilization Notes: New on Sale! Make
preparation, 1. For exam preparation, 2. For exam preparation, 3. For exam preparation, "New"
Analysis of Western Civilization available now
at Town Crier, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and
www.jayhawkbooks.com
1970 Olds 98, 105,000 miles, $79, 749-4606
Name: ___
Address: ___
Phone
1985 Citation 2 DRHB, PS, PB, AC, cruce, AM-FM cassette 490 or best offer. 843-5832.
1947 Ponton GTO, 20 new paint, overhaul, and much more, a mare. We call it 842-2032 evening
Must sell 79 Maida IX-7, rums great. AM/FM,
C $275 or less. 740-486 ask 740-486
BLOOM COUNTY
Mall or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
| | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 11 words | $2.60 | $3.75 | $5.25 | $8.25 |
| For every word added | 30* | 50* | 75* | $1.05 |
Net a Winner...
THE CLASSIFIEDS
THE FAR SIDE
Classified Display
col. x 1 inch = $4.40
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
WELCOME BACK TO
SATURDAY NIGHT
WESTFIELD ... BAMBOO
THE MASKHOLDER MARSHER
HAVE JUST STARTED
ROUND ONE ...
Bv GARY LARSON
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
2-19
Lewon
"Looks like another one of those stupid 'incredible Journey' things."
DOWN GODS BAMBO WITH
A body SLAM !!! AND
LOOK ! THE MASHER GRIS
BROWN FROZEN FRONT ROW AND PANNELS
BAMBO ABOUT THE FROG
AND NEEK !!!
by Berke Breathed
OUT WAY! BIMBO
HAS HURLED UP A QNEW
TRACK ALEB FROM HI
NIGHT ON THE ROAD
MANORER WITH ONE BLOW TO THIS LOWER
SPINE!!
BUTTERFLY
ONCE AGAIN
THE REF
MUSES THE
WHOLE THING.
FOUL!
A penguin is reading a book.
4
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
University Daily Kansan
15
Sports
Classified Ads
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friendly, Proofreading, corrections, Resumes,
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Make the cash flow.
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interior motives
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, theses.
EXPERIENCE MISSING. Will correct spellings.
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TOP-ONTH SERVICES professional word pro-
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quality printing.
WANTED
desperate! 1 need 2 K-State B-ball tickets 2/72.
叫 749-5891
cummer and Bassist needed for a newly formed progressive rock band. We have no preformations as we are.
Female roommate needed for 2 HR duplex. Close to home, plus 1/2 meal/卫生. 842-3090 on weekdays & evenings.
For summer and/or full female roommate(s) for
spacious room room 410 $ plus 1/3 utilities
or bedroom room 410 $ plus 2/3 utilities.
LOOKING TO GET OUT OF YOUR PRESENT
STAY THIS SUMMER? KU student seeks non-
smoking male move in as soon as possible. Can
work out a deal. $150 plus electric. Call Paul,
Jane, or Chris.
LOUDEPLEASE SYSTEMS, Allen Sevenon, £200
MURDER SYSTEMS, Cash only, 843-1541 or
843-7260 e-vowels or 843-7260 e-vowels
Loudspeaker Systems. Allison Sevens, 800 pair,
Pearson, Pair. Cush only. 845-1415 or
825-2790 coupon.
Non-smoking, male to share nice condo, with
fireplace, cable TV, dishwasher, washer/dryer,
microwave, etc. Only $175.00 monthly all utilities
Curt. #84-4712
Roommate need! duplex, Rent $125, 1/3
utilities. We can catch, with large beds,
roommate for rent.
WANTED: Roommate to share coords. Two large bedrooms, fireplace, nice quiet study, dishwasher, plenty of space, and I'm easy to get along with. 814-4835.
WANTED male roommate to share deluxe apartment very close campus; can work no more than 8 hours a week.
Wanted: Male roommate for 3 bedroom townhouse. *T100month plus 1/2 utilities.* 842-681-681.
JOBS: Part time hours for full time pay $400-$1200 mo. Full time Pay $600-$600 mo. Work for the fastest growing co. in American history. We need a person to work with us. Call 913-276-4761 Duguen-Gille & Assoc.
SUA FILMS
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MODERN TIMES
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NEW YORK POST
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CAST Charles Chaplin, Paulette Goddard, Chester Conklin.
WRITTEN/PRODUCED/DIRECTED Charles Chaplin, PHOTOGRAPHY R.H. Totheroh and Ira Morgan. MUSIC Charles Chaplin.
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USFL may suspend this fall's season
NEW YORK - To play or not to play in 1968 will be the hot topic today at a gathering of the remaining United States Football League owners.
If the USFL decides to suspend play this fall, as proposed by Baltimore Stars owner Myles Tannenbaum, league stars such as Herschel Walker and Jim Kelly are expected to jump to the National Football League.
United Press International
USFL Commissioner Harry Usher's office lists the agenda for today's meeting: updates on the league's $1.32 billion antitrust suit against the NFL; its television strategies and the proposed merger
Usher, who underwent heart bypass surgery last month, and New Jersey owner Donald Trump have insisted the league will play in 1986. But Walker, whose NFL rights are owned by the Cowboys, has gone house shopping in Dallas and says he'll look toward the NFL if the USFL doesn't play this year.
between Walker's New Jersey Generals and Kelly's Houston Gamblers; rules changes including a new overtime procedure; and final arrangements for this season's championship game in Jacksonville, Fla.
"If they are going to try and wait around and let the fall pass by, that's when I may start talking with the Cowboys," Walker said. "I've got to
see what's best for Herschel, not financially, because I'm financially set. I play football because I love to play it. I love to compete, and you can't compete while you're sitting at home."
Walker's signing with New Jersey after his junior season at the University of Georgia gave the USFL its first superstar in its inaugural season of 1883. Walker was followed to the USFL by succeeding Heisman Trophy winners Mike Rozier and Doug Flutie.
Walker has a four-year, $6 million personal services contract with Trump but his agent Peter Johnson apparently thinks it can be broken if the USFL does not play in 1986.
Walker, quarterbacks Kelly and
Flutie, running back Kelvin Bryant and offensive tackle Eatman are the biggest names left in the USFL. Kelly's NFL rights belong to Buffalo, Flutie's to the Los Angeles Rams, Bryant's to Washington and Eatman's to Kansas City.
PIZZA SHUTTLE
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Southern Hills
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The most important factor for the USFL is its pending lawsuit against the NFL. The trial, tentatively scheduled to begin March 18, is expected to be pushed back at least a month.
Under agreement with the USFL Players Association, the clubs must pay their players 30 percent of their salaries by March 1. USFL Players Association executive director Doug Allen is confident the league will play a fall schedule.
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The heat is on.
This summer may be your last chance to graduate from college with a degree and an officer's commission. Sign up for ROTC's six-week Basic Camp now. See your Professor of Military Science for details But hurry. The time is short. The space is limited.The heat is on BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS 864-3311/3312
Contact Captain Kennard, Room 206 Military Science
WHO ARE THESE PEOPLE?
John Murphy as Cruise
John Murphy as Tom Cruise
Steve Pope as Billy Idol You've seen them on campus...
BEARS 9
Shawn Donahue
Jim
Shawn Donohoe as Jim McMahon
Lia Phillips as
Liz Phillips as Appalonia
Linda Prest
Linda Proctor as Madonna
MUSIC TELEVISION
swatch
swatch
they are the Celebrity/Rock Look-A-Like Contestants and they're S.A.M.S Busters - Vote for your favorite and help fight M.S.!
MS
STUDENTS AGAINST MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS We're Out To Tie Up & Bust M.S.
---
16
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 1986
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1
1
Track meet Museum class learns the ways of animal trails. See page 6.
1.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, FEB. 20, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 101 (USPS 650-640)
Cold
Details page 3.
SUNG HAOK CHANG
Zuohuang Chen, associate professor of music from China, conducted the University Symphony Orchestra yesterday through Mahler's "Symphony No. 1." He will receive the Outstanding Educators Award on Sunday from KU's Mottar Board.
Wilfredo Lee/KANSAN
Conductor tries to tie countries
Staff writer
By Grant W. Butler
Every weekday, Zuohuang Chen grabs his conductor's baton and does what he can to bring the world closer together.
"I would like to have myself be part of a bridge that can cross political differences between countries to build up a better world," Chen, conductor of the University Symphony Orchestra, said Tuesday.
"Each country has its own treasured cultural heritage, which includes music," he said. "Each nation contributes so much to the world."
"As a musician, I strongly believe in sharing. Americans don't know much about Chinese music, and Chinese people also don't know that much about Western music."
Sitting in his office, which is cluttered with scores of Mahler's "Symphony No. 1" and the musical "Sweeney Todd," Chen shrugged his shoulders and explained where he fit in.
The current period of social reform in China is making classical music available to more people, said Chen, associate professor of music.
"The arts are becoming more important in my country, and I'm happy to see that," he said. "It's a very good sign. People are lining up hours in advance to get tickets to classical concerts
change, but they haven't talked about the details yet."
"It's very rewarding because that's what I want to do when I return to China."
But when he will return to China is still uncertain.
When he returns to China, Chen said, he is assured of a position as conductor of China's best orchestra, the Central Philharmonic Orchestra in Peking.
Chen originally was going to be the conductor of the University Symphony Orchestra for one year, and then return to China. Now, he said, it is probable that he will remain at KU for another year as part of a proposed teacher exchange between the Beijing Central Conservatory and the KU School of Fine Arts.
This summer, Chen said, he will return to China to become the official conductor on the philharmonic, and then return to the University in the fall to act as the philharmonic's
"I havent signed a contract yet, but it's very possible that I'll be here," he said. "The Ministry of Culture has approved the ex-
spokesman in the United States.
"The KU position for me is not permanent," he said. "I don't have tenure. But I'll act as the orchestra's representative in this country and help their reputation.
"As another country's symphony conductor, it would be good for me to serve at KU. Of course, I'll be the same person that I am now, but the title might help for recruiting purposes."
See CHEN, p. 5, col. 1
Judge rules murder case will be tried
Senate examines involvement in ASK
Staff writer
By Brian Whepley
A two-day preliminary hearing that concluded yesterday found sufficient evidence to bring to trial the man accused of murdering former KU design professor George V. Hixson.
District Judge James Paddock said he had heard sufficient evidence to try Eugene Avis Jr. on the charges of first-degree murder and felony theft.
Hixson was found by police in his condominium Dec. 2 after friends became worried about his welfare. The date of his death was determined to be Nov. 22.
Patricia Turcotte, a newspaper carrier for the Kansas City Star, testified she was delivering newspapers at the condominiums on Nov. 22 when a man asked her time. She told him it was 4:07 p.m.
Milton Allen Jr., Avis' attorney, asked Tortoise how she had not picked Avis out of an earlier police lineup. Tortoise said she was too far away during the lineup and Avis had had a hat on at the time.
By Barbara Shear
Turcotte identified Avis as the man she saw at the complex.
Staff writer
A witness testified that Avis had stayed at a transient mission in Kansas City, Mo., at the time a phone call was made from Hixson's phone to the mission.
Felton Booker, building supervisor at the City Union Mission, testified that records indicated Avis had stayed from the night of Nov. 21 to the morning of Nov. 22.
KU was the leading opponent of the proposal. However, ASK lobbyists did not convey KU's opposition to the Legislature.
An ad hoc committee has been set up by the Student Senate to investigate the possibility of pulling out of the Associated Students of Kansas, David Epstein and Amy Brown, student body president and vice president, said yesterday.
A phone company employee testified Tuesday that a call had been placed from Hixson's phone to the number of the mission at 6:31 a.m. on Nov. 22. A collect call was received at Hixson's home from the mission at 6:39 a.m. he said.
The eight-member committee will examine KU's involvement in ASK and what alternatives the Senate could provide to the University if it votes to pull out of ASK, a statewide student lobby organization.
"We are investing almost $25,000 into this organization and we are not being represented," Brown said. "We could take that money and pay a
She said she later saw Avis' picture in a newspaper and recognized him as the man at the complex.
professional lobbyist to represent us directly to the Legislature."
University met Sunday at KU for a legislative assembly. Members of ASK discussed the possibility of Washburn University becoming a Board of Regents school.
"There are many things to take in account," Kurtenbach said. "I'm not against them pulling out as long as it's done fairly and seriously. My intention is to see a decision reached fairly, not emotionally."
"If Washburn becomes a Board of Regents school, we could possibly lose our law school," Epstein said. "It would be a very scary situation for KU."
The Senate decided to look into pulling out of ASK after representatives from six of the seven Board of Regents schools and Washburn
Epstein said committee members would meet Monday night to discuss what action they would take to decide whether to pull out of the organization.
Booker identified Hixson as a man he had seen at the mission several times a week for more than a year. He said that Hixson was usually with
KU has been a member of ASK, which represents the six state universities and Washburn University, since 1979.
Epstein said, "Our participation in ASK has done some good. But the disadvantages outweigh the advantages. If we do pull out, however, we wouldn't leave a void as far as representing the University to the Legislature. We would come up with alternatives and we're prepared to do it."
Kris Kurtenbach, campus director of ASK and a member of the committee, said she wasn't opposed necessarily to the University of Kansas pulling out of the organization but wanted to make sure the Senate was making a rational decision.
"We want the students' support if we pull out," he said. "We're
prepared to go through every correct channel."
Elections attacked in Senate
See TRIAL, p. 5, col. 1
WASHINGTON — The Senate voted overwhelmingly to condemn the Philippine elections as a fraud yesterday despite a warning by George Shultz, secretary of state, that the United States should not abandon its strategic ally.
While asking Congress to proceed with care, Shultz said the administration put its stake in democracy in the Philippines above two key military bases there.
United Press International
But State Department officials said Shultz was not hinting at pulling out the bases or linking the election to the bases.
The Senate voted 85-9 for the resolution, which expressed the Senate's sentiments and carried no sanctions.
Shultz was questioned by Sen. James Sasser, D-Tenn., who has introduced legislation to rescind all $226 million in U.S. economic and military aid to the Philippines for the current fiscal year. Sasser would also bring home 18,000 U.S. military dependents from Clark Air Base and Subic Bay Naval Base.
See related story p.2.
"I fear if we don't pull the plug on President Marcos that the Filipino people are going to pull the plug on the United States and on our bases in that region of the world," said Sasser.
Shultz called the controversial election fraudulent. But he said presidential envoy Philip Habib was still in Manila making an assessment of the election, in which Marcos has been declared the winner over challenger Corazon Anuino.
The resolution says President Ferdinand Marcos is holding office in defiance of his people and the Feb. 7 presidential elections were marked by such widespread fraud that they cannot be considered a fair reflection of the will of the Philippine people.
Shultz said Congress and the Reagan administration sent the Marcos government a strong signal of disapproval of fraud and violence in the election. He said Reagan's statement Saturday blaming the Marcos government for the fraud and violence reverberated strongly.
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole said, however, that President Reagan and Congress needed more concrete evidence of allegations of fraud in the Philippine elections before they would cut off aid to the Marcos regime.
Shultz concurred, saying Congress should not immediately abandon the Philippines.
House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, D-Mass, indicated he would support a similar resolution in the House and would send it promptly to the floor for a vote if reported out by the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Union plans new look to meet student needs
By Lori Polson
Staff writer
It's hard to preserve the character of a building while making drastic renovations.
Since 1929, the Union has been the center of student activity at the University of Kansas. Students go to movies, bowl, cash checks, hear lectures, attend meetings, go to concerts or simply relax in a quiet corner — all under the same roof.
But that's the goal of the people designing a new look for the Kansas
"We want to save the idea that the Union is the living room of the University," Jim Long, director of the Union, said recently.
Coordinators of a $7 million renovation hope that won't change.
Plans for the renovation will be presented to the Board of Regents for approval tomorrow, Long said.
Architects from the firm of Shaughnessy, Flickel and Scott Architects Inc., Overland Park, are creating the drawings, he said.
"We're striving for a feeling of openness," Long said. "At the same time, we're going to expand our services."
Construction on phase one of the renovation is tentatively scheduled to begin in December. Long said.
Mike Fickel, principal architect in charge of the project, said the firm would try to capture the original design of the building but still make some much-needed changes.
"It been our goal to develop a master plan that will increase student services while retaining a comfortable atmosphere," he said.
By 1898, students should be able to go to one level if they are hungry and
another to buy textbooks or posters. The lounge on Level Four will be completely refurnished and all the student offices will be on the same floor
Part of this atmosphere will be an expanded area for food services on Lakeside.
Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, said the new food service area would be arranged in a "merchandise mart" or a "scramble system."
There will be a large room with several stations, each offering a different food item, he said. For example, one station will have soft drinks, one will sell sandwiches and one will sell only salads.
C. D. MILLER
Plaza and main entry
"We're actually going to increase the number of items we sell," Ferguson said.
The architect's plans call for two scramble systems, he said. One would be a large main station open during the day and the other would be a smaller area the :t would stay open until 10 or 11 p.m.
Source: Shaugnessy, Fickel and Scott Architects Inc
"We're trying to extend our food service hours to the regular college student hours," he said. "I don't know of too many students who go to bed at eight o'clock."
After completion of the food service area, the next step will be combining the Oread Book Shop and the
textbook area on Level Two, Long said.
This will entail moving the Oread Book Shop down one level and the textbook area up from Level One.
"We think this will provide efficiency and better use of space," Long said.
There is still some concern that
joining the two bookstores will damage part of the Union's attraction.
James Seaver, professor of history, was part of a committee that helped plan improvements on Level Four of the Union.
See UNION. d. 5. col. 6
2
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
News Briefs
Nation/World
Glass found again in Gerber baby food
ATLANTA — More glass was found yesterday in Gerber baby food jars in Florida and Maryland, and the Food and Drug Administration was checking baby food from Georgia stores where glass contamination was confirmed.
Glass reportedly has been found this week in jars of Gerber strained peaches in Maryland, strained bananas and carrots in Swainsboro, Ga., strained plums in Winter Haven, Fla, and a bottle of cherry-apple juice in Miami.
Grocers in six northern states removed some or all Gerber products from their shelves after two New York state women reported glass in baby food jars last week.
Skier dies after slide
ALTA, Utah — A teen age skier, who was buried in the snow for 2½ hours when an avalanche roared onto a ski run at this resort yesterday, died after rescuers dug him out, authorities said.
The 100-foot-deep, 100-yard-wide avalanche struck about at 3:38 p.m. from Sugarloaf oil and crashed into the side of the Devil's Elbow ski run at the Alta resort about 30 miles southeast of Salt Lake City. It barely missed several other skiers, witnesses said.
The unidentified 16-year-old skier was found by rescuers and flown to LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City, where he died at 8:45 p.m. from hypothermia and cardiac arrest, said hospital spokesman Tim Madden.
Man frees hostages
NEW YORK — An ex-convict twice fired by H & B block went into the firm's midtown office with a gun yesterday, took two hostages and released them unharmed. He refused to surrender to police and threatened to kill himself.
The ex-convict, Edward Hernandez, 24, of Manhattan, fired a sawed-off shotgun when he entered the office, police said.
He released the hostages after he received a letter, signed by the state parole board, which said he would not be considered in violation of his parole.
From Kansan wires.
U.S. considers closing bases
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — Accusations of election fraud and veiled threats to close U.S. military bases descended on President Ferdinand E. Marcos from Washington yesterday. Corazon Aquino, who claims she won the presidency, spoke of mass revolt.
Marcos accused his Western allies of meddling and raised the possibility of declaring martial law, which he did once before during his 20 years in power. Yesterday he got the first and only congratulatory message for his disputed election victory. It came from the Soviet Union.
tory. It came it is on Sunday.
The National Assembly, whose canvass is final, declared Saturday that Marcos had won the Feb. 7 election, but an independent poll-watchers' group said its count showed Aquino as the victor. Marcos supporters hold two-thirds of the assembly seats.
supported Secretary of State George P. Shultz hinted that the Reagan administration would consider withdrawing Clark Air Base and Subie Bay Naval Base if it decides Marcos kept power by fraud and no longer has his people's support.
"Let's put our stake in democracy and freedom above the bases," Shultz told the Senate Budget Committee.
U. S. aid is a big factor in the Philippine economy, and U.S. officials have tied future support of the government to an election that is perceived by Filipinos to be free and honest.
Marcos, who is 68, said he would exercise the provisions of the law and the constitution to prevent turmoil.
He noted that the constitution, which he designed, gives him certain powers that can dismantle the machineries of civil disobedience, but he did not say which ones he would use. His special powers include ordering arrests, ruling by decree and declaring martial law.
Aquino, 53, went to Angeles City on the outskirts of the Clark base for her first post-election rally outside Manila and declared, "Let us not rest until we have brought down Marcos."
Aquino, whose husband, Benigno, was Marcos' chief political foe until his murder in 1983, told 20,000 people at the rally that she had been warned she might be killed. Benigno Aquino, known as Ninoy, was thought by many to have enough support to be elected over Marcos.
bably told themselves that it would be all right to kill him because after a month or two people would forget, but they were mistaken.
She said, "My answer is that when Marcos and his puppets planned the death of Ninoy, they pro-
"This is my message to Marcos and his puppets: Do not threaten Cory Aquino, because I am convinced that I am not alone, that many of my countrymen are ready to come to my help if Marcos and his puppets have any evil plans."
The military said Aquino was killed by a communist agent. Gen. Fabian C. Ver, the army commander, 24 other soldiers and a civilian were acquitted of murder and conspiracy charges in the assassination.
Philip Habib, President Reagan's special envoy, met with Vice President-elect Arturo Tolentino yesterday but continued a four-day silence about his talks in the Philippines. A U.S. Embassy spokesman said Habib would remain here at least until the weekend, meeting with government, opposition, business and church representatives.
Embassy officials said no decision had been made about who would represent the United States at Marcos' inauguration next week.
Delegation says MIAs still alive in Vietnam
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Members of a congressional delegation just back from Hanoi said yesterday that they were convinced some U.S. prisoners of war or missing servicemen were alive in Southeast Asia. They also said progress was being made to get them out.
The Pentagon lists 2,441 U.S. servicemen as missing and unaccounted for in the Vietnam War, but it is generally agreed the vast majority are dead and their bodies cannot be recovered.
The news conference came after Solomon had a classified briefing by the Defense Intelligence Agency.
"The question becomes," he said,
"who they are, where they are, how many and for God's sake, let's bring them home."
Of the rest, some — including deserters — stayed behind by choice, usually with their native wives, but others are believed to be held against their will in what one congressman called slave camp conditions in remote areas.
Rep. Gerald Solomon, R-N.Y., head of the nine-man congressional group, told a news conference yesterday, that he didn't want to raise any false hopes on the part of family members. However, he said, there is no longer any question about the existence of some U.S. servicemen left behind in Southeast Asia.
He quoted the former head of the DIA, Lt. Gen. Eugene Tighe, as saying that "50 to 60 Americans are being held against their will."
Rep. Ben Gilman, R-N.Y., said there had been a significant change in the Vietnamese government's position.
"It is apparent the Vietnamese are opening the door to a further accounting of live Americans in Southeast Asia," he said.
The Vietnamese also announced they would turn over to the United States another 14 bodies of servicemen who had died in the war, bringing to about 165 the number of MIA cases the Vietnamese have cooperated in closing.
Bill Bennett, of the National Vietnam Veterans Committee, said an equally significant breakthrough had come in the attitude of the U.S. government.
Solomon, asked if it was credible that a Westerner could go unnoticed in a tightly controlled Communist Vietnamese society, said he thought it was possible, since some areas were remote and under semi-autonomous rule of tribal leaders.
Autopsies reviewed for links to Tylenol
United Press International
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. — Medical authorities yesterday scoured reports of local deaths this year in search of any links to cyanide-laced Tynelon. Johnson & Johnson placed full-page newspaper ads in its campaign to regain consumer confidence.
Officials said there was a remote possibility of exhumation as the investigation of the death of Diane Elsroth on Feb. 8 from cyanide-laced Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules continued.
A preliminary review of autopsy reports on 14 people who died since Jan. 1 in the immediate area where Elsroth was poisoned showed no cynanide deaths, officials said. Elsroth, 23, of Peekskill, died at the Yonkers home of her boyfriend.
"Thus far we've recovered no cyanide," Millard Hyland, Westchester County medical examiner, said.
County spokesman Marc Moran said exhumaction of bodies was a remote possibility and would be ordered only if necessary after cyanide was found to have caused a death.
Hyland's office was reviewing an additional 16 deaths in the Bronxville-Yonkers area in which autopsies were not performed initially.
A second bottle of the painkiller Tylenol was found last week to contain cyanide. The case prompted Johnson & Johnson to stop production of non-prescription drug capsules. It also started a national scare reminiscent of the one after seven deaths from Tylenol poisoning in Chicago in 1982.
The contaminated bottles were from stores two blocks apart in Bronxville, a New York suburb.
Johnson & Johnson, the makers of Tylenol, took out advertisements in the nation's newspapers, saying, "If you have Tylenol capsules, we will replace them with Tylenol caplets. And we'll do it at our expense."
The ads said the decision to remove from the shelves all over-the-counter Johnson & Johnson capsules was because of "an outrageous act which damages all of us."
Wreckage of booster confirmed
United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Twisted pieces of wreckage strewed across the ocean floor 1,200 feet down were positively identified yesterday as from Challenger's right-hand booster rocket.
Officials said it could take up to six months to complete salvage operations.
"We've got a lot of small pieces on the ocean floor, meaning it's going to be a very lengthy process to recover all the components," said Air Force Col. Edward O'Connor, who is orchestrating salvage operations for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
He said five large debris fields had been identified roughly in a 330-square-mile rectangular area offshore where shattered shuttle wreckage is known or thought to be resting.
Videotabs and photographs taken by the crew of the Johnson-Sea-Link 2, a small four-man submersible, were released yesterday which showed pieces of the right-hand booster's steering system and a large section of a rocket nozzle.
But O'Connor said that although 14 large objects were tracked by radar immediately after Challenger exploded Jan. 28, there had not been any sign of the ship's crew compartment or other large shuttle structures.
A rupture in the rocket at or near a joint connecting the lower two of four fuel segments is thought to have triggered the explosion of Challenger's external fuel tank 73 seconds after blastoff, killing the seven crew members.
"We now have positive identification that this is indeed a portion of the right SRB," O'Connor said in reference to the solid rocket booster.
The identification was made from part numbers of photographed debris and a part of the steering system which was hauled to the surface.
The photographs indicate no large pieces of the 80-ton rocket survived the brutal impact of the ocean but Capt. Charles Bartholomew, U.S. Navy supervisor of salvage, stressed that only about 20 percent of the debris area had been searched.
The task of mapping wreckage falls to a growing fleet of recovery and salvage vessels.
Attention Student Organizations It's Budget Time
Budget request forms for FY 87 are now available in the Student Senate Office B105 Kansas Union. These forms must be completed and returned by 5 p.m. Friday, March 7.
Two workshops will be held to explain the forms and answer any questions. It is strongly recommended that all organizations attend a workshop. Incorrect Budget Requests can result in delayed or reduced funding.
Workshops will be held at 4 p.m. Thursday, February 20 and 4 p.m. Wednesday, February 26 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
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Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
College Bowl team to head to sectionals
The University of Kansas College Bowl team will compete in the Sectional Tournament scheduled for March 21-23.
The Sectional Tournament is the next step for the regional winners. The site may be Kansas City, Omaha, Dallas or Chicago.
This is the first time a KU college bowl team has advanced to the Sectional Tournament. If the team wins, it will participate in the national tournament in April.
The KU team, whose members are John Chappell, James Mamalis, Chris Parker, Eric Matheis and Richard Turk, will compete against three other teams from the Association of College Unions.
The College Bowl Tournament at KU was sponsored by Student Union Activities and Lambda Sigma, the sophomore honorary society.
New assistant hired
Deb Stafford became the new assistant director of residential programs last month. The position had been vacant since November, when Joyce Cliff resigned.
Stafford is the scholarship hall adviser and will do all the programming in the residence halls. She will also train the residence hall staff.
Stafford was a residence hall director at Kansas State University before making the move to the University of Kansas.
She earned a Bachelor of Science degree in elementary education from K-State in 1981. She also has a master's degree in student personnel in higher education from the University of Georgia.
Audubon camp aid
The Jayhawk Audubon Society has extended the deadline for scholarship applications to March 10. The society is sponsoring two $300 scholarships to attend this summer's National Audubon Society Ecology Camps. The original deadline was Feb. 10.
Applicants do not need to be members of the Audubon Society, but they must be at least 18 years old and in good health. They also must work with young people and live in the area served by the Jayhawk Chapter.
The service area includes Lawrence, Eudora, Baldwin City, Perry, Lecompton, McLouth and Valley Falls.
For further information,
students should contact Katherine
Matthews, Box 323, Jayhawk Station,
Lawrence, Kan. 66046.
Religion talk today
Rosemary Radford Rueether will speak about "Feminist Spirituality and Historical Religion: Renewal of New Creation" at 8 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium.
Ruether, professor of theology at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary, is highly regarded in her field for contributions to Jewish-Christian relations and liberation movements of racial and ethnic minorities in the United States and the Third World.
Weather
Today will be mostly cloudy and cool with a high temperature of 35 to 40. Winds will be northerly at 15 to 25 mph. Tonight and tomorrow will be partly cloudy. The high temperature tomorrow will be in the low to mid-30s.
TOPEKA - After suffering defeat in the Kansas House yesterday, lottery supporters said they're confident a measure still could be pushed through the 1986 Legislature that would allow voters to decide whether to establish a state-operated lottery.
The Associated Press
"That was round one," said Mike Swenson, press secretary for Gov. John Carlin. "Now we're ready to go on to round two."
The House rejected the Senatepassed lottery resolution on a vote of 79-46. The measure fell five votes short of the 84 needed for two-thirds approval in the 125-member chamber
Lottery supporters betting on success
It was the first time in Kansas' 125-year history the issue had reached the House floor for a vote. The resolution would have altered the Kansas Constitution by removing a prohibition against gambling on anything other than bingo games.
The final tally came after nearly an hour of pressure-filled waiting while supporters tried to persuade opponents to change. At one point, vote changes brought the total to 80 in favor and 45 against but supporters were unable to sway any others and one final vote change left the total at 79-46.
before a constitutional amendment can be submitted to voters.
yesterday, would vote to reconsider the action. He said all of those key legislators might later join the pro-lobby forces.
The program pays $99 tuition for the psychology course she is taking and $30 for books.
"What happened today was really very positive because it was the first vote ever on a lottery in the House." Swenson said. He added that the rollcall vote forced lawmakers to line up on one side or the other.
House Speaker Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, said a motion to reconsider the vote would be offered today and that he believed he had the 84 votes necessary to pass that motion and keep the resolution alive. Hayden said he did not know when the resolution might be put to a vote in the chamber again.
Lawrence Democratic Reps. Betty Charlton and Jessie Branson voted against the resolution and Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, voted in favor of it.
Carl, who is raising two children and also taking additional courses, said the program was very helpful to her pocketbook and to her ego.
Employees receive aid for tuition
The resolution cleared the 40-member Senate, 28-11, in April.
Lottery supporters were discussing new strategies yesterday afternoon but Swenson said he was unsure of what would be the next move.
Hayden said he believed at least three Johnson County lawmakers and two from other areas of the state, all of whom opposed the measure
"We have today significantly narrowed the focus on who we need to work with to get the necessary votes," Swenson said.
Although the Rev. Richard Taylor Jr., chief lobbyist for Kansas' anti-gambling forces, said he was pleased with the House action, he said he didn't know how long he could hold off Carlin, Hayden and other lottery supporters.
Staff writer
Jones said financing for the 11-year-old program increased this year during a time when the Gramm-Rudman bill was putting a squeeze on federal tuition assistance programs.
This year, 29 people applied for awards and 29 people received them, he said.
By Leslie Hirschbach Staff writer
At a time when tuition assistance at most universities is being reduced, the University of Kansas has a program which has helped some employees complete their education or take courses for enjoyment.
Employees take courses at the University, the Regents Center, vocational-technical schools and Lawrence High School.
Jones said many people didn't apply for assistance because they thought few people received the awards.
The KU Tuition Assistance Program uses state-alLOCated funds to provide assistance for about 30 KU employees each semester, said Martin Jones, chairman of the tuition assistance committee.
This year, he said, the University increased financing for the program to $10.000.
Applicants must have worked for the state for one year and be employed full time at the University to be eligible.
"Who knows," Taylor said, refusing to speculate whether lottery opposition would erode. He said that Kansas business leaders should note the House action and realize that lottery is bad for the state.
Kay Carl, clerk of student housing,
decided to go back to school and get
a business degree, so she applied for
the KU tuition assistance program.
Employee who have not received tuition assistance in the past are given top priority, Jones said, and those with the least formal education have priority over those with more education.
Financing hasn't decreased, he said, because the University, not the state, is responsible for allocations. Money is allocated to KU by the state, and the University has the option to set it aside for the program.
If assistance is granted, the employees can take one semester-long course that relates to their job or helps them assist the University better. Jones said.
Applicants also are given priority if they have worked for the state a long time or if the course they want to take relates to their job, he said.
If an applicant is accepted and takes a course that conflicts with working hours, the employee makes up for the absence by working extra hours.
A few employees receive assistance for courses required for their jobs, he said. These employees don't have to make up for absences.
90th birthday brings flowers, cards
SIMON & ELEANOR
Tammv Stude/KANSAN
Retired prof gains acclaim for work
Fritz and Grace Heider. professors emeriti of psycholoav.
These and many more were gifts to Fritz Heider, professor emeritus in psychology, on the celebration of his 90th birthday Tuesday.
By Tom Farmer Staff writer
There was a bouquet from the Chancellor and Mrs. Budig, a book signed by the faculty members of the KU department of psychology and so many cards from well-wishers that they were arranged alphabetically.
Staff writer
Heider said he was excited about his birthday and marveled at the gifts he had received.
Heider celebrated his birthday with his wife, Grace, professor emerita of psychology. Grace, he said, has been by his side 55 years and helps him tremendously since he has been slowed by age.
"She is a great help to me, always." Fritz Heider said.
Their social life is limited, Grace Heider said. But through the generosity of the University, the couple receives a free campus parking pass, tickets to concerts and plays, which she uses regularly, and tickets to sporting events.
In 1983, Fritz Heider's autobiography, "The Life of a Psychologist," was published and still is selling, Grace Heider said proudly.
About 15 notebooks of Fritz Heider's ideas on psychology, accumulated since his retirement in 1966, are being edited for publication and eventual use by other psychologists in their research.
Howard Baumgartel, chairman of the department of psychology, said
Fritz Heider was a remarkable man. He brought recognition to the University and is one of the best-known psychologists for his theories in the areas of attribution and balance.
Heider and his wife explained the theories which brought him accolades from his colleagues.
The theory of balance is a suggestion that your attitudes toward others
are in symmetry, or that if you like someone, then you like the things they do, they said.
On the other hand, an imbalance occurs if you like someone, but do not like the things they do.
His similar theory of attribution says that those people that you view as nice normally do what you think are nice things.
In 1958, Fritz Heider wrote a book on these theories, titled "The Psychology of Interpersonal Relations." Heider took about 20 years to write the book, which has been used as a guide by other researchers in the study of interpersonal relations.
What inspired his work in psychology and the writing of the book is indefable, almost inborn, he said.
"I don't think there was one specific thing," Heider said. "The idea grew in my head. It was an interesting field that stimulated me."
Beatrice Wright, professor of psychology and a friend of the Heiders for almost 50 years, said that after publication of the book, Heider gained recognition nationally and internationally.
"He was always so highly regarded," Wright said. "He stood out not only because of his stimulating ideas, but because he was so task-oriented and excited."
Heider used these qualities in Graz, Austria, where he earned a doctorate degree in psychology at the University of Graz in 1920.
After traveling in Europe for a few years, he sailed to America and worked at the Clarke School for the Deaf in Northampton, Mass., and as an instructor in psychological research at nearby Smith College.
In 1930 he married Grace, who also was interested in psychology. They combined their efforts to do research on the psychological aspects of the education of the deaf. They moved to Lawrence in 1947.
Group OKs petition opposing bond issue
By Juli Warren
Staff writer
Citizens concerned about $4.5 million in general obligation bonds designated for a proposed bypass south of Lawrence approved a petition last night opposing the issue.
Attorney General Bob Stephan decided last summer that a public vote was not required to issue the bonds. They then were issued.
The petition of the group, Douglas County Citizens for Responsible Development, expresses opposition to home rule, which Stephan referred to in his decision.
Home rule grants local governments the power to govern themselves.
Daryl Richardson, chairman of the group, said the group realized that local governments had to govern themselves.
However, he said, "We also recognize that there's got to be some guidelines to that."
Members of the group will
Because of this law, the petition states, officials "have been given the authority to do this without allowing or submitting such proposals to be voted on by the very people who will be required to finance such projects, namely the taxnavers."
In other action, Richardson issued a statement saying, in part, that the group "has never advocated that students of the University of Kansas or any other eligible voters in any other community in Kansas be denied the privilege of voting guaranteed by the Constitution."
gather signatures and signed petitions will be presented to the Douglas County delegation of the Legislature, Richardson said.
The group also decided to advertise its "fact sheet," which was developed to point out the problems it saw in the bypass proposal.
He said, "We're tired of paying for somebody else's development."
Hall residents eat out in quest for better fare
Hashinger Hall residents took another step toward delivering a message to cafeteria personnel last night by sampling food at other hall cafeterias.
By Peggy Kramer
Lenoir Ekdahl, director of food services, said she encouraged Hashinger residents to get meal transfer tickets in order to generate suggestions from the students. She said she hoped the students would comment about what they liked at the other hall cafeterias.
Leigh Caspari, St. Louis freshman and Hashinger resident, eat dinner at Oliver Hall last evening and thought the meal transfer was a good idea.
"The food wasn't that much different, but the attitude of the staff and students was more positive at Oliver." she said.
Tuesday, some residents participated in a peaceful demonstration by bringing their own food into the cafeteria or eating dinner somewhere else.
Some residents met yesterday with Ekdahl and Ken Stoner, director of student housing, about the
demonstration and some of their concerns.
Liz Walz, Topeka sophomore and Hashinger resident, said, "The students didn't feel their needs were being acknowledged and felt that their complaints are justifiable and reasonable."
Both Ekdahl and Stoner were very receptive to the students' comments, she said.
"Those of us who meet with Ekdah and Stoner felt somewhat optimistic
Stoner said six students met with him yesterday afternoon, and he thought the hall could meet some of their suggestions.
There were many messages the students were trying to get across, Stoner said, including the atmosphere in the dining hall and the perception of attitudes among students and staff.
Ekdahl plans to meet with students again tomorrow to discuss further problems and solutions.
Walz said only part of the students' concerns were the cafeteria food. Tension between the staff and students was another concern.
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University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
That's what Lady Macbeth cried when her hands were tainted with murderous blood.
The only question left is how far the United States should go in helping remove Marcos.
"Out, damned spot! Out, I say!"
Desert Humpty Dumpty
The United States should shout those same words at President Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines.
After a tainted Philippine election, full of bloodshed and fraud — mostly by Marcos supporters — U.S. officials have agreed that it would be in the best interest of the United States if Marcos stepped down from his dictatorial post.
The United States should go as far as cutting off all economic aid to the country that was once considered its blessed stepchild.
The longer Marcos stays in his illegitimate role as president, the more imminent is the danger to U.S. bases and the greater the chance of a rising Communist insurgency taking over.
The United States now pays $900 million in military and economic aid to the Philippines under a five-year agreement to maintain its two bases — Clark Air Base and Subic Bay Naval Base.
A plan to extend classified research from one to three years squeaked through a faculty vote recently, although the controversy probably is not over vet.
Despite Marcos's threat, bully that he is, the United States cannot afford to continue to hold Marcos' hand, for it is tainted with a 20-year-old dictatorial rule.
and government agencies often want to guard trade secrets or national security.
To allow a hope for democracy in the Philippines, the United States should call openly for Marcos to step down and push for a peaceful transition of office to his opponent, Corazon Aquino.
Industry secrets may pass Go and collect 200 researchers. University principles lose a turn.
The agreement expires in 1991. Marcos threatened Sunday that if the United States cut off aid, he would annul the treaty.
As Sen, David Boren, D-Okla., said, "There is no way we can put Humpty Dumpty back together again. This government is going to fall, so let's not tie ourselves to a sinking ship."
Score one for secrecy
The proposal, which even proponents of the extension called confusing and unclear, allows faculty to keep the results of some research secret for three years. It was argued that the previous limit of one year was too restrictive.
Proponents content that free and open exchange of information limits their academic freedom by preventing them from pursuing research with some industries. Corporations
With less government money available for research, alternate financing sources, especially private industry.
But any secrecy within the University must have a substantial cause.
are becoming more important.
It seems that too few industries want to finance research that would be made public in a year.
Classification of research results hampers the University's duty to its students by limiting what professors can teach. And the primary mission of the University should be to encourage open discussion and exchange of knowledge.
A compromise between the demands of industry and the principles of the University was possible under the one-year limit. The new plan leans too far in the direction of secrecy with a proposal that is too little understood.
Let's hope Sidney Shapiro, chairman of University Senate Executive Committee, was correct when he said the issue probably had not been resolved.
Separation of powers
The legislative and judicial branches of government are, by design, separate.
A bill now before the Kansas House committee on federal and state affairs is a prime example of the legislative branch attempting to mess with a vital aspect of the judicial branch: plea bargaining.
Our federal and state constitutions have set the two branches apart to check and balance each other. But each branch must be guarded against tampering with the basic components of the other branch.
The main emphasis of the bill is to toughen penalties for transporting open containers of alcohol.
To that extent, the bill falls well within the realm ofs
legislative prerogative. Stiffer open-container laws are fine and the bill's provision for alcohol and drug education is even better.
Plea bargaining is crucial to the judicial system. Throughout the country, a lot of time and money is saved by people being able to plead guilty to a lesser charge. It reduces the glut in the courts and, in the end, provides for a large number of convictions.
But the bill also says pleabargaining agreements cannot be approved by a judge. That is going too far.
News staff
Tougher laws are an area well within the reach of the legislature, but plea bargaining is a vital component of the judicial system that should be left alone.
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Lauretta McMillen ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry ... Campus editor
David Giles ... Sports editor
Brice Waddill ... Photo editor
Susanne Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nikon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Lori Eckart ... Classified manager
Caroline Innes ... Production manager
Pallen Lee ... National manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
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I KNEW THERE'D BE REPERCUSSIONS IF THEY CANNED IACOCCA!
Too soon to plan for citizen in space
The announcement last week by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to continue the Teacher-In-Space program is premature and evidence that the agency uses the program to play upon the emotions of the people of the nation.
The current state of NASA's affairs indicates the agency is in no position to send astronauts or civilians into space.
After the Challenger explosion that killed six astronauts and schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe, the agency is grounded in the middle of a presidential commission investigating the cause of the disaster.
As of late, the commission has determined possible flaws in NASA's Jan. 28 decision to launch Challenger. It even has requested that individuals involved in the decision-making process be removed from NASA's internal investigation.
Also, recent reports that NASA knew there was a potentially tragic problem with its solid rocket boosters as long ago as 1983 make one question the agency's ability to execute its objectives without substantial risk to its participants.
For the past three months, NASA has been operating under the guidance of an acting administrator.
P. SUNYAN
Jennifer Roblez
Staff columnist
This is another indication of instability within the governing ranks.
In the days to come, it is quite likely that the presidential commission will focus more completely on the individuals in charge and the decisions they made as the final responsibility for the disaster becomes clearer.
Last week's announcement can best be seen as an advertising ploy, and a weak one at that. NASA is simply in no position to regain the public's trust without first giving the reason for the explosion and the blans to correct it.
For a nation still reeling from the shock of the death of the first "ordinary citizen" in space as well as the loss of six dedicated space professionals, solid answers offer more comfort than quick media schemes to continue a program that may be months if not years away from resumption.
There also is enough cause to
reconsider the decision and
civilians allowed, so go ahead.
The thinking behind this is more
practical than emotional. The shuttle program for 1986 is shattered, and the delay could turn out to be of significant duration.
After the 1867 fire that destroyed an Apollo spacecraft and killed three astronauts, NASA did not resume manned flights for 21 months.
NASA officials and scientists in the space community have suggested that the delay caused by Challenger may last as long as six years before returning to the kind of scheduling originally planned for 1986. At the very least, experts agree the shuttle program has suffered a two-year setback.
The repercussions of this delay are just beginning to be debated. It could be especially damaging to President Reagan's Star Wars program and a hurdle to his dreams of a manned space station.
Fewer satellites and space probes will be launched, including the possible scrubbing of four shuttle flights that were to be devoted to the military. Medical and other scientific experiments designed for use in the shuttle also will suffer.
Obviously NASA needs to devise a new agenda for the future. Compared to these needs, the Teacher-In-Space program seems like a low priority.
Certainly "ordinary citizens" do
have a place in space, but Challenger has forever changed the future. As a public relations tactic, it backfired, I'll be a long time before anyone takes a shuttle launch for granted.
In the meantime, NASA should straighten out its internal organization, learn the true cause of the blowup, correct the problems discovered and set revised goals for the future.
For now, the space program should be dedicated to those individuals who have devoted their lives, especially their schooling and prior work, to the space industry. They are the ones who have built the space program They are the ones who will rebuild it now.
It's not necessary for NASA to continue playing upon the sympathies of a nation by promising to put teachers in space. We need astronauts there first.
Our reach for the stars may have been overextended. If it's back to the drawing board for NASA, one of the first stops should be at its public relations office.
Ahead is a long and probably slow recovery. Life will never be the same for NASA or the United States. There's a new space to pioneer — but it isn't as friendly to teachers as it once was.
Resentment of U.S. is multifaceted
The American is going to hang.
Held hostage in a totalitarian Arab country, the downed air force pilot watches his gallows being built. Back in Washington, the military's hands are tied.
"Kill the American pig," grows the Khadafy-ish Arab ruler in his desert fort.
The solution is simple in the comicbook world of B-movies. The pilot's son borrows an F-16 fighter, shoots up the country and rescues his daddy.
Now that's the way to go, the audience of "Iron Eagle" cheers. Uncle Sam isn't going to take it anymore, and this resourceful high school kid finally is doing what should have been done a long time ago. No pussyfooting around.
Everywhere in the world, tiny countries are stumping all over the United States. Palestinians hijack American planes, U.S. military bases are bombed in West Germany and effigies of Uncle Sam are burned in the Philippines. What the heck is going on?
It's not easy to understand why some countries resent the United States. And besides, Americans don't want to hear about it anyway, I've been told. It's easier to get into the psychological F-16 and watch 100 minutes of red-blooded revenge.
especially in these days of Rambomania.
After talking to more than a dozen foreign students and political science professors, the love-hate relationship other countries have with the United States becomes clear.
Resentment of the United States is worldwide, although it seldom deepens to hate. Admiration also is widespread but doesn't make the news as often. And understanding the admiration is easier.
The United States exports a way of life — a whole package of a consumer society. When American hamburgers, shopping malls and "Dallas" invade countries, they do so because the people there want them. They like them.
But natives also may resent that their own culture is pushed aside. A French woman told me with sadness how traditions such as French cuisine were changing. Now Frenchmen eat in a hurry, too.
Maybe it's not just the American society France is compelled to follow, but modernization itself, she said.
In many other parts of the world, modernization often means Westernization. When cultures clash, the United States catches most of the blame because it is the biggest Western country...
Bengt Ljung
Guest columnist
P
Accordingly, Muslim fundamentalists identify the United States with decadence and sparsely clad people and alcohol consumption.
But the worldwide resentment isn't generated by communists. Seen from other countries' perspectives, the U.S. world role sometimes is threatening.
Many countries think the United States pressures them culturally, politically and economically. For them, the United States also is an easy scapegoat for economic problems, just as Americans blame outside forces, such as Japan.
U. S. relations with its allies are tense at times because the United States tells them how to conduct their business — when and what to trade with the Soviet Union, for example, and being forced to conform to someone else's wishes isn't conducive to cordial relations.
The United States is bound to step on many toes when it plays power politics. Military interventions, CIA actions and support of controversial states and leaders, such as Israel, President Marcos and the Shah of
Iran, don't score high points in many quarters. The effect multiplies as dislike of American policies releases latent, pent-up resentment of the cultural invasion.
The United States can't disconnect itself from the political actors it supports. Even allied countries criticize U.S. support of South Africa and of Nicaraguan contras. Palestinians teach their children to fear Israeli raids with American-made Israeli iets.
In Europe and Asia, America's popularity is fading because the younger generations don't remember the American help after World War II. They only remember protesting nuclear weapons and the Vietnam War.
But where Soviet influence is the strongest — in Eastern Europe — American regard is the highest. Maybe this indicates that some resentment goes with being a dominant power.
Maybe the resentment is a price
the United States has to pay.
But anti-American sentiments are undoubtedly tied to American actions also. Understanding foreigners' uncomfortable views creates more hope for constructive action than loading the old machine gun and taking a defensive position.
And maybe Americans can learn bit about themselves.
Mailbox
3.2 beer not 'bogus'
I certainly agree with Jason Elder when he calls Kansas liquor laws "archaie" (Kansan, Feb. 12) and urges students to vote for liquor-by-the-drink. However, I must take exception to his description of 3.2 percent beer as "bogus." "weak" and "tasteless."
At the risk of exploding a popular myth, I must explain that 3.2 percent beer is measured as a percentage of alcohol by weight. So-called "strong" beer measured by the same standards weighs in at just 3.8 percent.
However, "strong" beer is usually measured in percentage of alcohol by volume (about 5 percent). 3.2 percent beer measured by this method has 4-percent alcohol.
Any difference perceived by the consumer in his rate of intoxication is largely psychological. As far as flavor is concerned, not even the brewmasters can taste the difference.
And anyone who thinks he can't get drunk on 3.2 percent beer may be surprised when he finds out that most private clubs serve only 3.2 percent beer. There goes another myth.
Liquor-by-the-drink, if approved by the voters, will be a step in the
So the penny, dime or quarter draws that many students enjoy at local clubs are filled with the same beer that fills the draws, schooners and pitchers at The Hawk, The Wheel and Louise's.
The reason clubs sell 3.2 percent beer is another "archaic" law. Clubs that want to sell "strong" beer must buy it from a liquor store and pick it up themselves, as they do with wines and spirits. However, clubs may buy 3.2 percent beer at wholesale cost and have it delivered to them.
right direction. But to get it on the ballot, our lawmakers sacrificed 18-year-old drinkers, happy hours, all-you-can-drink, two-for-ones, birthday beers, ladies' nights, progressive pitchers and most other promotions.
3. 2 percent beer is not "bogus," but the laws that regulate it and the lawmakers who voted for them have earned the title many times over.
"Count" Ken Wallace
Owner, Jayhawk Cafe
Chairman of the Board,
Kansas Club and Taverna Assn. Inc.
Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Chen
Continued from p. 1
Stanley Shumway, chairman of the department of music, said the department was counting on having Chen as a faculty member for another year.
"It's certainly OK with us," he said. "He's doing such outstanding work that we'd like to keep him here as long as possible."
By staying at the University for another year, Shumway said. Chen will be able to help set up the exchange program, and he will have an opportunity to conduct orchestras throughout the country.
Chen said the idea of staying in Kansas for another year, occurred to him in October. Since that time, James Moeser, dean of fine arts; Deanall Tacha, former vice chancellor for academic affairs; and Shumway have written letters to Chinese officials encouraging an exchange program.
Since he's been at KU, Chen's philosophy
— that music is a language for all people that needs no translation — has won him the admiration of his students and fellow faculty members in the department of music.
"Beyond that it's his personal warmth and his dedication to the students and to the profession," Shumway said. "He's very considerate and supportive of the students. He's dedicated to the success of the orchestra. He's a master teacher."
Shumway said Chen's musicianship had been the key to his success at KU.
Agnes Toth, Omaha, Neb., senior, said Chen's organization and devotion of time to the orchestra was what had garnered most of the compliments.
“Dr. Chen has a lot of potential,” Toth said. “I think we'll be hearing a lot about him on down the road.”
Kristina Jacobson, Omaha, Neb., senior,
"He's very professional and he really cares about what he's doing," she said. "He makes you want to do well."
agreed Chen's career would be one to watch.
Chen also has done well, and has amassed many firsts in his career. He was the first conductor sent by China to study abroad.
"I'm also the only person to have a doctorate in conducting in China."
"I was the first person to be awarded the degree of Doctor in Musical Arts in conducting from the University of Michigan," he said. "They set up the program 10 years ago, and chose the candidates, and I was the first. I must say, the requirements were not easy.
Chen will be recognized for his achievements Sunday when he receives the Outstanding Educators Award, along with four other KU professors, from KU's Mortar Board.
The other professors to receive the award are Corinne Anderson, professor of French and Italian; Ellen Gold, associate professor of communication studies; Del Shankel, professor of microbiology and acting vice chancellor for academic affairs; and Norman Yetman, professor of American studies and sociology.
When Chen steps onto the podium in rehearsals, the symphony members are silenced. For 50 minutes, Chen sweats and strains as he tries to draw the group into a cohesive unit through the music.
"We are making music all the time, but it really requires more elements than just the music," he said. "We're not just dealing with notes, we're dealing with each other. If we feel friendly with each other, then we sound better."
Trial
A liquor store manager and a gas station manager testified that they saw Hixson with a man on the day of his death but that they could not identify Avis as the man.
A neighbor of Hixson's Vernon Geissler, 1432 Westbrook st., said a
man offered to pay him $10 on Nov. 22 for a ride from the complex. He later saw the man load packages into a taxi.
Two taxi drivers also testified. Wayne Cheek, a driver for City Cab at the time, said he drove a man from the complex to the bus station after loading two televisions, two radios, a
Continued from p. 1
speaker, hiking boots and a blue duffel has into the taxi.
another man but that he had never seen Avis with Hisxon.
Wanda House, a driver for Yellow Cab, said she picked up a man at the bus station and drove him to Kansas City. Mo., where he directed her around in circles, then dropped off the stereo equipment and took him to an apartment complex where he got
out to get money to pay her. He never came back, she said.
Neither could identify Avis.
outstanding misdemeanor warrants. Avis was later taken to the Kansas City (Mo.) Correctional Institute.
Military Donna 'Jammy'
William Wittman, Crescent City, Mo.
police officer, testified he was called to the apartment complex to help House find the man.
Lamb said that later in the evening of Nov. 21, Avis was arrested on two
Several Kansas Bureau of Investigation employees testified about fingerprints and other evidence found in Hixson's condominium.
Kansas reporter Russell Gray cor-
tributed information to this story.
Union Continued from p
Seaver said he did not like the idea of combining the Oread Book Shop with the textbook portion of the Kansas Union Bookstore.
After the work on the bookstore has been completed, efforts will begin to move the student offices located on Level Three to Level Four. The Student Organizations and Activities Center on Level Four will also be renovated, Long said.
The second phase of the renovation will not begin until after construction in the first phase is completed, he said.
"It's nice to go into the (Oread) bookstore and just browse," he said. "I'm kind of worried that the bookstore part will be lost among the textbooks."
The greeting cards and poster area of the bookstore will be revamped during phase two.
Work in the second phase also will expand and open as well as returnish the lounge area on Level Four, Long said.
Seaver said the planning committee had striven to maintain a relaxed air for the lounge area.
University of Wisconsin-Madison
speaking on
"You walk into a comfortable atmosphere," he said. "I don't want to see that changed."
THE DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY AND THE VISITING PROFESSORSHIP PROGRAM
JAMES C. KNOX
PRESENT
3:30 refreshments Lindley Hall, Room 317
12:10 (Noon hour)
brown bag
Lindley Hall, Room 418
FRIDAY, Feb. 21
"Holocene and Historical Floodplain Evolution in the Upper Mississippi Valley"
"Long-term Variation of Floods in the Upper Mississippi Valley"
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Lawrence Book
HOUSE OF USHER'S SPRING 1986
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A NEW WINDOWS REFERENCE
Welcome to Lawrence
1986
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SUA
YOU can make the difference in deciding what kind of student activities will be coming to KU.
There 's still time
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Experience is not a necessity, however, interest is required.
Special Events
SUA Travel
Outdoor Recreation
Indoor Recreation
Public Relations
Film
Applications available at the SUA Office, Level 1, Kansas Union.864-3477
Forums Fine Arts
But hurry—applications are due by 5 p.m. TODAY!
---
6
University Daily Kansan
Arts/Entertainment
Thursday. Feb. 20, 1986
Kids learn easy way to trail animal tracks
N.Y. STATE
PUBLIC
SCHOOL
FOR
BEGINNING
SCHOOL
Above, Tom Swaringen, director of exhibits for the Museum of Natural History, explains that the way an animal walks, whether it has a tail and whether it has claws can all help in identifying an animal's track.
Near right, Paul Allen, 9, son of Lewis and JoBeth Allen, 1901 New Hampshire, to make to a few tracks of his own in the snow. Allen attended an annual "Animal Tracks" outing Saturday.
Far right, Swearingen points out coyote tracks to Courtney Maurin, 7, daughter of Dalton Maurin, Easton. Swearingen lead the tracking field trip to teach how to detect and interpret the signs animals leave in the winter.
It's not every day that a person can go out into the wilderness and play Daniel Boone. But Saturday morning, 12 kids and nine adults did just that.
By Diane Dultmeier Special to the Kansan
"Many animals track by smell," said Tom Swearingen, director of exhibits for the Dyche Museum of Natural History who led the group. "But today we're going to learn the art of following animal tracks by sight."
river banks, and, after a tough morning of tracking animals, drank hot cocoa and ate roasted marshmallows.
For three hours the group identified paw prints, made their way down rocky inclines, followed paths, crossed streams, stood on sandy
Luke Allen, son of Lewis and Jobeth Allen, 1901 New Hampshire St., has been on the outing for the last several years.
"We found lots of tracks this time," he said. "Most of the time we find this many kinds of tracks, but not this many of them."
The annual Animal Tracks and Trails outing is part of the increasingly popular public education program sponsored by the Museum of Natural History. In fact, so many people signed up for Saturday's expedition that Swearingen is going to do it again this Saturday. Five other Winter Weekend Workshops are planned for this semester.
1978 5040
The goal of the Tracks and Trails outing is to teach the participants, ages eight to adult, how to detect and interpret the signs animals leave in winter.
Tammy Stude/KANSAN
During the three-hour hike sudden yells from the group could be heard.
"Wow! Look at the eagles."
What's this:
"Is that a racoon track?"
The group learned about many signs that animals leave. Some of them are paw prints, chewed off trees and animal feces. By looking at these signs, Swearingen and the group could tell what animals had been in that particular area recently. The group saw three eagles and some beaver during the trip.
"There's a lot of variation to the wildlife down there," Swearingen said. "There's a lot of fox, coyotes, beaver, muskrats, minks, eagles, hawks, rabbits, mice and birds."
Swearingen said this was the first year he had taken the Tracks and Trail groups to the north side of the Kansas River. In other years, the group has gone to the Baldwin timber, the Sante Fe Trail, Backpack Park, Hole-in-the-Wall and Stranger Creek.
Paul Allen, 9, Luke's brother, said,
"It was fun, except I got cold at the
very beginning because the wind was
blowing at us."
But a borrowed stocking hat and the shelter of the nearby trees kept him warm after those first cold moments.
"My favorite parts were the racoon tracks, crossing a stream and roasting marshmallows," he said.
A few spaces are still available for this Saturday's trip. The cost is $4.00 for Museums Associates members and $5.00 for non-members. Anyone who is interested should contact the public education office, 602J Dyche Hall, 864-1737.
Swearingen said he didn't know where he would take the group this weekend. He said he usually decided at the last moment.
Trio's talent enhanced by solo work
"It just depends on driving conditions, walking conditions and the whole bit," he said.
By Grant W. Butler
The Kalischtein-Laredo-Broinson Trio is scheduled to perform at 3:30 p.m. in the Crafton-Preyer Theater in Murphy Hall as part of the 1986 University Arts Festival and the KU Chamber Music Series. Tickets may be purchased at the MU Hall Bldg. They cost $4.50 and $5.50 for KU students, $10 for ICE students and other students, and $9 and $11 for the general public.
Opportunities for solo work as well as for ensemble performances give the Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson trio a fresh approach to chamber music, a member of the trio said last week.
"I think that since we're not a group that plays together 12 months out of the year, it makes our concerts a little different," said Jaime Laredo, a violinist. "It's fresher."
"It's something we enjoy so much that if it meant taking time away from our solo careers and canceling some solo performances we wouldn't care.
"We all feel that our work together helps us as a trio and also in our solo work. We all feel we learn a lot from each other."
The trio members are Joseph Kalichstein, pianist; Sharon Robinson, cellist; and Laredo.
Laredo said one of the reasons the ensemble work helped each member of the trio was because it expanded the amount of material each could perform.
For a cello, violin and piano trio, there is a lot of music written by Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms and Mendelssohn, he said.
"It's a vast repertoire," he said. "If we played for the next 30 years straight, we couldn't get through it all."
For its performance at the University of Kansas, the trio will play Mozart's "Trio in B-flat Major." Schumann's "Trio in F Major, Opus 80" and Brahms' "Trio in C Major, Opus 87."
The trio was formed in 1976 and made its debut during one of the inauguration week parties for Jimmy Carter in Washington in 1977.
President Carter had a great love for chamber music, Laredo said, and it was exciting to be asked to play for him.
"It was so wonderful that here was this man who was interested in having world class chamber music at the White House instead of rock or country," he said. "Apparently he really loved classical music, and when he'd work, he'd always have music on."
Laredo said that when the group re-formed after having played solo concerts, it didn't take much time to recapture the enthusiasm for music that they hoped to convey to the audience.
Performances at summer music festivals, on university campuses and in cities around the United States and Europe have kept the trio occupied since that time.
"When we get back together there's never any time for stalemates or routines," he said.
The audience is one reason why the trio travels often, Laredo said. People can find chamber music rewarding, but only if they have the opportunity to hear it.
David Gottlieb, professor of law and a member of the Lawrence Symphony Orchestra, said he had heard the triple years ago in New York City and had been impressed with its musicianship.
"They're all superb musicians in their own right," he said. "They've all done solo work in addition to their chamber performances."
Each member of the trio is a sensitive and mature chamber player. Gottlieb said.
"I think they're terrific, and I know it will be a good concert" he said.
Dance improvisation adds new twists in play
By Monique O'Donnell
The Picnic Project: A Deconstructive Performance in honor of William Iwgle, will be presented at 8 a.m. Friday and Saturday and Feb. 27, 28 and March 1 in the Crain-Pryer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets are $1.50, $2 and $250 for KU students, $4 and $4 for senior citizens and other students and $3, $4 and $5 for the general public.
Staff writer
They stretch, they crawl, they chant and dance. But not a word is spoken for the first 15 minutes.
Dim lighting, eight actors and two carts are on stage. The actors' improvised movements become a rhythmic dance that slowly ebs off and freezes in a silent pose.
THE BAND
What the audience will see for the first 15 minutes of "The Picnic Project" is the actors' warm-up.
Findlay said he had never included the warm-up in the performance before. If the play was not taking place in the academic setting he wouldn't have included it.
"We're taking a big chance," director Robert Findley said about including the exercise in the performance. "Because it's absolute improvisation and we don't talk about what we're doing."
After a few minutes to change clothes the actors flock on stage and begin the play. The story is based on a play, "Picnic," written by William Inge in 1853.
Cast member of "The Picnic Project" are from left and clockwise, Duane Sharp, Westwood junior, as Howard; Dehbi Shannon, Lawrence senior, as Mrs. Helen Potts; Diego Taborda, Colombia junior, as Alan; Leslie Ann Spires, Lawrence freshman, as Millie; Roddy C. Robody Jr., Overland Park sophomore, as Hal, and Jennifer Glimpse, Wichita junior, as Rosemary. Robert Findlay, professor of theatre and media arts will be directing "The Picnic Project," an adaptation of William Inge's original play "The Picnic."
Mark Mohler/KANSAN
The setting is a small Kansas community that is preparing for a Labor Day picnic. A young man who has drifted into town adds an unsettling element to the daily routine of the town's people. The drifter's uninhibited behavior disturbs the community and leads to conflict.
Findlay said he applied this paraphratical method to the play. In this approach the actors improvise on a given theme without discussing or interpreting what they are doing.
"I haven't taken Inge's text and done something traditional with it," he said. "We're trying to create a play that can be applied in 1986, not a fictitious world. We're trying to hit people where they are now."
The story is indigenously Kansan,
but not in a cornbail sort of way.
Findlay said. It has the sensibility
particular to this part of the country.
Diego Taborda, Buenaventura, Columbia, junior and an actor in the play, called the cast would try something out in the rehearsals and the director either accepted or rejected the innovation. Eventually, certain gestures become constant in each performance of the play.
But a certain amount of improvisation remains, Findlay said, and no performance is ever the same.
Taborda said the improvisational method brought out the creativity in the actors and made working on this project fun. He said he was a little confused during the first week of rehearsals because he had never dealt with the para-theatrical method before.
Conductor's style inspires enthusiasm in KU orchestra
Chen has proved himself a master of inspiration, transmitting his qualities to the people who work with him.
Humor flavors his style; talent directs his wand; but it is his enthusiasm which strikes the most distinctive chord in Zuohuang Chen's conducting.
Attendance at concerts and special events that feature the orchestra has soared, partly because of Chen's reputation. Yet he's been at the University of Kansas for less than one year.
Chen is the first Chinese conductor to pursue a doctoral degree in conducting at an American university. He finished his courses at the University of Michigan and agreed to conduct KU's orchestra for a year. He completed his oral dissertation in December and will return to the People's Republic of China in May to conduct the Central Philharmonic Orchestra in Beijing.
Students call him tough and demanding. What good conductor isn't? But Chen is more — he stimulates progress and growth.
The qualitative differences in the
The slightest discordant note does not go unnoticed, and he's quick to point out improvement. He's a perfectionist and demands the same of the University Symphony Orchestra.
Arts/Entertainment Editor
And Chen's innovation finds creative outlets. On Oct. 31, he convinced orchestra members to disguise themselves in costumes and perform a Halloween concert. Chen, in his gorilla costume, and the orchestra were a whopping success.
Jill White
Certainly the Outstanding Educator Award that Chen will receive this Sunday is a wellserved recognition of his contributions.
Students attribute their renewed interest and pride in the orchestra and concerts to Chen. Quality improvement has been bolstered by an 11.5-percent increase in the size of the orchestra.
Snapshots
Faculty members in the music department spare no praise when referring to Chen. They even want to keep Chen at KU for another year. Besides continuing a steady progression of growth in the orchestra, he would be helpful in establishing a new cultural exchange program between his alma mater, the Beijing Central Conservatory, and KU's department of music.
Band to play at KU
The Wall of Voodoo will perform at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The concert is sponsored by Student Union Activities as part of its Standing Room Only Series. Tickets are on sale at the SUA box office and cost $7 for students with KUIDs and $8.50 for the general public.
The five-member rock band from California has released two albums. The group's music is known for its polished and somewhat commercial sound.
orchestra have not gone undetected by either faculty members or students.
The "Models of Leonardo da Vinci" will be on display Feb. 25 through April 6 at Kansas Union Gallery.
New exhibit to open
International Business Machines Corp. has compiled the exhibition of models built according to Leonardo's scientific and
IBM selected the models from its larger collection to give the audience an indication of Leonardo's diverse interests and investigations.
Weekend Outlook
technical drawings. The show tours museums, universities and public libraries throughout the United States.
"The Dogs?", at 9 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday at Cogburns, 737 New Hampshire St.
■ Bon Ton, at 9 p.m. today tomorrow and Saturday at the Jazzaus 92% - Massachusetts St.
Psychic Archie at 9 p.m.
Saturday at the Outhouse, four
miles east of Massachusetts Street
on 15th Street. The Descendents at
10 p.m. Sunday at the Outhouse.
Rope Burn at 9 p.m. tonight at Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St.
Beth Scafett at 10 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday at the Up and Under, 403 N. Second St.
Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
---
7
Slapstick humor makes 'Gods' successful
By Grant W. Butler Staff writer
The Gods Must Be Crazy, directed by janie Miles: 3.30 p.m., 7 p.m., and 9 p.m.; Friday and Saturday in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Rated PG, 100 min./color.
In a time when most comedy movies rely on exploitation of the female body and off-color jokes about human biological functions, "The Gods Must Be Crazy" is a refreshing departure from comic norms of the 1980s, because it restores wholesome 'slapstick' comedy to the theater.
An empty bottle of Coke is thrown
from an airplane onto the plains of
the Kalahari desert.
Puzzled bushmen find the bottle, which they believe is a gift from the gods.
In the remote desert, the bottle has many uses. It can be used to grind food, prepare animal skins and to make music. It also becomes the object of greed to a people who have always had everything they've needed.
With his tribe in turmoll, Xi decides the object given to them from the heavens is intrinsically evil and
the gods must have been crazy to have put it on the earth. Xi, played by Nixau, an actual Kalahari bushman, leaves with the bottle to find the edge of the world, where he can throw the bottle back to the gods. The ! stands for the clicking noise used in the pronunciation.
The approach of "The Gods Must Be Crazy" at first is a spoof on the documentary. The examination of good and evil, however, turns quickly to comedy as Xi comes into contact with people from the so-called civilized world. He meets a microbiologist
who studies animal dung, a school teacher who has left the city only to find that life in the wild is just as complicated, and bumbling African guerrillas who find playing cards just as important as escaping after failed coup attempts.
The film, directed by Jamie Uys, has made more money than any other foreign film to play in the United States. The film's success can be attributed to the simple nature of comedy employed.
There is nothing that offends in this movie, but the humor is hard-hitting.
from the start. A jeep with no brakes that must maneuver hilly roads provides some of the best automobile schickts since the Keystone Cops were on the theater marquees. The clumsy microbiologist performs acrobatic idiocy in a manner reminiscent of Buster Keaton.
The comic timing in the film is masterful and each character is the manifestation of certain laughable human elements.
There are moments with technical gaffes, such as the phony looking gunfire and neon-red blood. But this
is no time of space avengers, who blast and explode their way through the galaxy, where million-dollar special effects are necessary for progression of the plot.
There film is predictable. It's evident from the start that the bottle eventually will be thrown away, the hero will end up with the heroine and Xi will return to his people in the bush. It doesn't really matter, however, because the rehashing of slapstick comedy techniques seems brand new.
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Crafton-Preyer Theatre
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University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Thursday. Feb. 20, 1986
Organ gift requests debated
By Lynn Maree Ross Staff writer
Human organs and tissues needed for transplants are in short supply. But a Kansas Senate bill requiring hospitals to request anatomical gifts could make people more aware of the shortage, a physician at the University of Kansas Medical Center said last week.
After another hearing today, however, the life of the bill itself might be in question.
The physician, Barbara Gill,
defended the bill yesterday at a hearing
of the Senate Public Health and
Welfare Committee. Gill is also
the coordinator of the heart transplant
team at the Med Center.
Gill said organ transplant technology expanded the range of medical treatment, making organ availability important.
"It is state-of-the-art care," she said.
The proposed requirement, Gill said, would make people more aware of the problem and ease the shortage of organs.
But passage of the bill is no guarantee. Although the bill would
require hospitals to seek organ donors, a patient's family still could refuse the request.
Jane Warmbrodt, from the Midwest Organ Bank in Kansas City, Mo., said supporters of the bill agreed with its intent but not its wording. Even she has reservations.
"I don't like required request," Warmbrodt said.
Making the request a requirement, she said, can create an automatic aversion to the task. By creating guidelines and by helping hospital personnel deal with the situation, that aversion can be avoided.
Terri Rosselso, executive director for the Kansas State Nurses' Association, is the only person scheduled to speak against the bill. She said she didn't like the way the bill was worded
"This bill doesn't say anything," she said.
One section, she said, leaves hospitals with an escape. It says a hospital is not required to request organ donations if it does not have the room or personnel to maintain the donor.
Another section says the request and the family's response should be recorded in the patient's medical record. She said recording that information already was standard procedure.
Robert Ohlen, executive director of Lawrence Memorial Hospital, will not speak at the hearing but said yesterday that he was opposed to the bill.
But while the bill is debated, one feature of the organ donation issue remains in place. That feature is the organ donor card on the back of a driver's license.
Ohlens said the bill would require the hospital to spend time and money that it might never recover.
"It's an inappropriate request to place on community physicians and a community hospital," he said.
Roselot said the license donor card was an opportunity for people to participate voluntarily.
However, the request can be ignored. If the family of the patient refuses to meet the request, she said, the hospital has no legal right to take the organs.
The University Placement Center will present a workshop, "Successful Interviewing." at 3:30 p.m. today in 201 Carruth-O'Leary Hall.
On Campus
dance history film series.
Two films, "Modern Ballet," and Anna Sokolow's "Rrooms," will be shown at 4 p.m. today in 252 Robinson Center. The films are part of the
The KU Ki-Alido Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center.
**Bob Miller, Witness For Peace volunteer in Nicaragua, will speak at 8:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., after the Latin American Solidarity
rice and beans dinner, which starts at 6 p.m. $1.50 donation accepted. At 7 p.m., Charles Stansifer, professor of history, and Robert Tomasek, professor of political science, will serve on a panel for a discussion on U. S. involvement in Nicaragua.
The Mt. Oread Bike Club racing team will meet at 7 p.m. today.
Bill to nab book thieves may affect state schools
If the state librarian gets his way, libraries at Board of Regents schools will be included in a Senate bill designed to nab book thieves
Duane Johnson, the state librarian in Topeka, said a bill introduced this year would make the theft of library materials worth more than $150 a class E felony, and theft of materials worth less than $150 a class A misdemeanor.
By a Kansan reporter
Under current wording of the bill, libraries at Regents schools are not included, Johnson said. But he said he planned to ask the Senate Judiciary Committee to change the language to include Regents' libraries during upcoming hearings.
Under the bill, the theft includes removing any material without checking it out, concealing books with the intent to take them beyond boundaries and failure to return the books within 30 days of receiving a written notice.
"We hope we will be able to recognize the importance of care," Johnson said. "It's a severe problem for libraries."
The bill now covers city, county township, district and regional libraries, he said.
Library officials at the University of Kansas say that they haven't had time to study the bill but that it probably would affect the University's library system.
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Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
9
Committee debates retirement plan
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Public employees would be better served if they did not have to contribute to the state retirement plan, witnesses told a House committee yesterday.
Those witnesses, including Alden Shields, state secretary of administration, urged support for Gov. John Carlin's plan for the state to allocate about $51 million to pick up the costs of the employees' contributions.
This allocation would represent a 4 percent take-home pay increase for
state employees and increases of about 4 to 5 percent for state public school teachers.
Opponents of the plan said the employees would lose control over the retirement benefit system, and the state would be tempted to tamper with the money in it. Also, some lawmakers questioned whether the system would be fair to those who had already spent years contributing to state retirement systems.
The proposal, outlined in a bill being considered by the House Pensions, Investments, and Benefits Committee, is part of Carlin's so-
called investment budget, which is predicated upon an increase of from 3 to 4 percent in the state's sales tax.
Committee debate and action have not been scheduled, but the panel will pursue the matter, said Rep. David Louis, R-Shawnee, the committee chairman.
Shields told the committee the plan would save the state money and provide employees with the same benefits. If the state picks up the cost of employee contributions, it would not have to return the contributions
of those who pull out of the system.
Twelve states have such plans in operation, Shields said.
Under Carlin's proposal, the state would provide $24.7 million for the contributions of school district employees, who now pay 4 percent of their salaries into the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System.
The state also would pay $17.2 million to pick up the contributions of non-school employees, law enforcement and fire officials and judges to various retirement funds.
CORRECTION
Due to an error by the Kansan, the menu in the Kansas Union Deli advertisement appeared incorrectly both Tues., Feb. 18 and Wed., Feb. 19.
We are sorry for any inconvenience this error may have caused.
THE KANSAS UNION DELI level 3
THE KANSAS UNION
MORTAR BOARD
WARNING!
Today is your last chance to turn in Mortar Board information sheets. Due: 5 p.m.TODAY (Thursday, Feb.20) in 214 Strong.
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University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
Bills in House would alter liquor penalties
By Mark Siebert
Staff writer
Two bills that would change the penalties for alcohol-related offenses were discussed yesterday in the Kansas House Committee on Federal and State Affairs.
State Rep, Robert Miller, R-Wellington, the committee chairman, said no opposition was voiced on either issue and the committee probably would vote in favor of the bills Tuesday or Wednesday.
One bill would require consideration of alcohol-related convictions in other states during prosecution of first offenses in Kansas.
The other bill, a proposed change in the open-container law, would raise the fine for convictions to encourage violators to participate in an optional alcohol and drug safety program.
Offenders who refused to participate in the safety program would pay a fine between $100 and $500.
Under the proposed open-container law, first-time offenders would be put on probation and required to enroll in an alcohol and drug safety program that costs up to $100.
The bill also says plea-bargaining agreements cannot be approved by a judge.
At present, no education program
is required. People convicted of transporting an open container are fined up to $200, imprisoned for up to six months or both.
Gene Johnson, project coordinator of the Kansas Community Alcohol Safety Project, said the bill would help educate people and keep them from facing more serious convictions later on.
Arrests for open containers are being made, Johnson said, but sometimes the offender is not convicted because the court allows plea-bargaining agreements.
The other bill discussed by the committee would not allow diversion agreements for anyone convicted of an alcohol-related offense in another state within the last five years.
The law now does not take into account convictions made in other states when penalizing alcohol-related offenses.
At present, first-time offenders convicted of an alcohol-related offense can enter into a diversion agreement.
The agreement says offenders can be fined, sent to an alcohol education program and have license restrictions imposed. However, they cannot be jailed and the conviction does not go on their records if they do not get another conviction within five years.
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"...by the way, next time we play RAGE."
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SAY WOW!
True repentance spends less time looking at the past and saying "I'm sorry",
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--Frederick Buechner in WISHFUL THINKING
Lutheran Campus Ministry
1204 Oread 843-4948
Sunday Worship:10:30a.m.
04 Oread
Sunday Worship:10:30a.m.
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86Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
Nation/World
University Daily Kansan
11
Genocide treaty ratified by Senate
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Senate ratified a U.N. treaty condemning genocide yesterday on an 83-11 vote after 36 years of conservative opposition to the pact. President Reagan supported the treaty as well as 96 other nations.
It was a personal victory for Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., who was lauded by his colleagues for championing the measure since 1967.
The ratification resolution was adopted after the Senate rejected by a 62-31 vote an amendment by Sen. Steven Symms, R-Idaho, that opponents said would have blocked ratification of the treaty, which grew from the Nazi extermination of Jews in World War II.
Symms wanted to make genocide an international crime for those killing for political reasons, arguing his amendment would put pressure on the Soviet Union for its aggression in Afghanistan and would address such issues as mass murder in Cambodia.
But opponents maintained that the
Reagan wrote Symms that if the treaty was ratified, the United States would pursue amending the treaty in the United Nations to include outlawing genocide for political reasons. After the ratification vote, the Senate adopted, 83-1, a resolution calling for that action. Only Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., voted against the resolution.
addition of that language would kill the ratification process because it would require Reagan to secure agreement from all of the other 96 signatories before he could sign the treaty.
Elie Wiesel, chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council and survivor of a Nazi death camp, said the action signals the commitment of the United States to human rights.
"I know that a law on genocide will not stop future attempts to commit genocide," Wiesel said. "But at least we as a moral nation, whose memories are alive, have made this statement: We are against genocide."
Ratification marked the end of an
almost 20-year crusade by Proxmire, who has advocated the treaty on the Senate floor at every regular session since Jan. 11, 1967 — more than 3,000 times.
Both Republican and Democratic senators praised him for his dogged determination on the issue.
Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia said it was probable that the United States might have never gotten around to ratifying the pact had it not been for Proxmire.
Sen. Rudy Boschwitz, R-Minn., said, "He conducted an heroic fight, often a very lonely fight."
At a news conference after the vote, Proxmire said, "I'm absolutely elated."
Asked what made the difference, Proxmire, who often opposes Reagan's policies, said, "The president's support."
Republican leader Bob Dole of Kansas said the treaty had enormous symbolic value as a worldwide statement of outrage and condemnation over very real horrors — as real as
the Armenian genocide and Hitler's death camps.
All 11 no-votes were cast by Republicans, including Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., who successfully led a move to restrict U.S. adherence to the international convention.
Helms was instrumental in getting the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to approve a package of measures that he said seeks to cure a problem with the World Court. It is designed to protect the sovereignty of the United States.
The measures provide that submission of any treaty dispute involving the United States to the World Court requires the prior corset of the U.S. government.
They also stipulate that nothing in the treaty can supersede the Constitution.
One measure states that a pledge to extradite people charged with violating the treaty is applicable only if the act is a criminal offense under the laws of both the United States and the nation requesting extradition.
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University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
Israelis captured
Troops clash in Lebanon
United Press International
KFAR DOUNINE, Lebanon Israeli troops sweeping through southern Lebanon in search of two captured comrades clashed yesterday with Lebanese guerrillas in the bloodiest fighting of the Israeli incursion, and radical Muslims holding the soldiers claimed to have killed one of them.
The Islamic Resistance Front, the group that captured the Israelis in an ambush in southern Lebanon on Monday, had threatened to kill one of the young captives by 9 p.m. local time if the Israeli sweep was not ended.
Israeli officers ignored the threat, saying the extremists merely were trying to gain enough time to move their captives out of southern Lebanon, and the sweep continued.
An hour later, Beirut radio said an Arabic newspaper received a telephone call from the group saying it had executed one of the Israeli hostages at exactly 9 p.m. The caller, who identified himself as Abu
Mohammed, vowed to increase attacks on Israelis until they left all occupied Islamic lands.
There was no way to verify the authenticity of the call.
The Muslim group Tuesday identified the soldiers as Rahamim Shlomo Levy El Sheikh and Youssef Martin Punk, both 21.
Officials of the Shiite Muslim militia called Amal said four of their fighters were killed and eight were wounded when they ambushed an Israeli unit in the village of Haris, eight miles north of the Israeli border.
An Israel Defense Force spokesman said Israeli troops and Israeli-backed South Lebanon Army militiamen, who patrol an Israeli-created security zone on Israel's northern border, killed four terrorists who attacked the unit.
Israel said the terrorists were members of the radical Shiite Muslim group Hezbollah, or Party of God, which has ties to Iran.
The spokesman said the joint
Israeli-SLA patrol sustained no casualties in the fighting, the bloodiest since Israeli forces pushed into Lebanon on Monday night seeking the two soldiers.
U. N. peacekeeping force officials in Lebanon warned that Amal hardliners were demanding the militia go to war with Israel. But moderate Amal leaders, fearing a repeat of Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon — launched to oust Palestinian guerrillas — were urging restraint. Israeli troops occupied southern Lebanon for three years after the invasion.
The Amal-controlled National News Agency said fierce battles were raging in southern Lebanon yesterday as militants tried to stem the Israeli invasion.
"An Amal spokesman in the south stated that a number of Amal fighters were standing by to blow up themselves and Israeli tanks in case of further advances," the agency said. No suicide attacks were reported, and the agency report could not be confirmed.
How About Being The Engineer That You Have Studied To Be?
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Kidnappings shake Beirut
United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Muslim kidnappers released three Spanish Embassy officials yesterday, but a fundamentalist group claimed it killed a kidnapped Lebanese Jew to retaliate for an Israeli army sweep through southern Lebanon.
In mainly Muslim west Beirut, bank workers staged a one-day strike to protest the Aug. 19 abduction of 11 bank employees, including three officials of the Bank of Lebanon, the central bank.
Some 2,500 Lebanese have been abducted in the country's civil war, which is in its 11th year. Six U.S. residents, four Frenchmen, a South Korean, an Italian and a Briton are also missing in Lebanon.
An underground Muslim group, the Organization of the Oppressed on Earth, claimed yesterday it killed Elie Hallak, 52, in retaliation for the Israeli search for two captured soldiers.
Hallak, a doctor and vice president of the Supreme Jewish Community Council of Lebanon, was abducted Feb. 21, 1985.
The verdict of God has been carried out against this
spy and Mossad in retaliation for the Israeli terrorist actions in south Lebanon," his abductors said. Mossad is an Israeli intelligence agent.
A U.N. official said Israeli troops, who moved into southern Lebanon Tuesday, drove north to the Litani River yesterday in search of two captured comrades. At the same time, hundreds of Palestinian guerrillas moved south from Beirut to beep up Muslim forces harassing the Israeli task force.
A few Lebanese were killed in an encounter at the village of Haris, raising fears of large clashes between Israeli forces and the largest Shiite militia.
In its statement, the Organization of the Oppressed on Earth said Hallak's body would not be handed over to his family until Israel left southern Lebanon.
least four other seals are equipped in international. Also yesterday, Shiite Muslim Amal militiamen escorted Pedro Sanchez, a Spanish anti-terrorist police officer, Asaad Abd, ambassador, chancellery and Gaspar Abdo, vice chancellor, to the west Beirut home of Amal leader Nahib Berri.
Computerark
Hallak was the fourth member of Lebanon's Jewish community to be killed by the group in two months. At least four other Jews are believed kidnapped in Lebanon.
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Sports
Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
University Daily Kansan
13
Dreiling lives up to early expectations
Kansas center Greg Dreiling has shown so much improvement over the last two years that he is now considered a first-round draft choice in the upcoming National Basketball Association draft.
By Matt Tidwell
KANSAS
30
Sports writer
It would have been easy for Greg Dreiling to throw his hands in the air and give up two years ago, in the middle of his first season at Kansas.
Everyone expected Dreiling, KU's 7-foot-1 center, to come in and, as he puts it, "set this place on the map."
It didn't happen. Instead, what everyone saw was a mediocre athlete who couldn't run or move well. He seemed as lost out on the court as he was in his new coach Larry Brown's system.
"I started struggling," Deiling said. "There were lots of times when I was missing some shots and the fans were a little impatient. It bothered me a little."
Fans start to complain. Occasionally, boos would filter their way down to the court within range of Dreiling.
It hurt.
Greg Dreiling, the player compared to Patrick Ewing in high school, was getting booed.
"He heard that," Brown said, "and I'm sure it bothered him. He's a sensitive kid. But it never stopped him from trying and working hard."
Dreiling would go home and explain to his new wife, Kelly, that people should just wait, it was coming.
"Everyone doubted him for a long time and that really bothered Greg," Kelly said. "But he was just really, really patient and it's paying off now."
The people close to Dreling often use words like patience and hard work to describe his improvement.
"My problems were mostly little things that would be corrected once I became a better athlete," Deleling said. "That was the problem. I had the potential to be a great athlete but I wasn't yet."
"I was slower and I needed to improve and get myself into better condition. I needed to strengthen the weak areas of my body. I wasn't a finished product."
Brown, who inherited Dreiling, a Wichita native, from outgoing coach Ted Owens, said the biggest struggle for Dreiling was to live up to the high expectations of Kansas fans.
"The second problem was that I came in," Brown said, "and the style of play that I'm accustomed to was foreign to him and maybe not fair to him. But I noticed from
"He would get frustrated in some of the early games here but he's matured a lot since then. He's really helped in that respect."
the very beginning his willingness to work and his desire to improve.
Last season, Dreiling improved his performance by nearly four points and two rebounds a game. At the end of the season, he was named the Jayhawks' most valuable player by his teammates.
Since his improvement, Kelly said. Greg's outlook has changed.
"He talks about basketball in a much more positive way," she said.
Brown said he would miss Dreiling and called him a player who had done a lot for the program. He added that much of the success Kansas is enjoying now can be traced directly to the dramatic improvement in Dreiling's game.
Fellow senior Jayhawk Calvin Thompson said, "You can't win without a good big man."
Drelling is respectful much more these days by the fans, his coaches and players.
"The thing he has to be concerned with is not being satisfied." Thompson said. "He has to keep getting better and he's doing that every day — he's jumping a lot higher and he's running better."
Along the way, he's also gained new respect from a group who once thought he had peaked in high school — the pro scouts.
"He'll be a good pro," Brown said. "He'll be a first-round pick too, I think. I know he will. He wants it and he's not afraid to work hard. Everybody who's seen him play marvels at his progress."
Pete Newell, 1960 Olympic goldmedal basketball球 and now a Golden State Warriors' NBA scout, said he's impressed. Newell will travel to Norman, Okl., to see Dreiling for the second time this year Feb. 24.
"I came to Lawrence his first year and met Greg personally and got a chance to see his development at that time," Newell said. "To see where he is now, I'm amazed at his improvement."
"His coaches have done an excellent job bringing him along. I think he'll go in the first round because he does a number of things the NBA wants to see in its centers. His fundamentals are
good, he's developed the outlet pass very well and he does a good job holding the ball in traffic. His hands are as good as any center
I've seen this year."
Dreiling doesn't understate his desire to play in the NBA.
"It's definitely important to me," Dreiling said. "I feel confident that my best years are ahead of me and I think it will be a time when I can concentrate only on basketball."
A pro career also would please Dreiling's biggest fans - Kelly and 2-year-old daughter Jill. While many players may not always realize their off-the-court responsibilities, Dreiling is reminded of them every day.
"They stabilize me," he said.
"I'm not just playing out there for myself, I'm also playing for Jill and Kelly. They give me incentive
on those days when things are going rough."
One of Dreiling's roughest days was his first national television appearance his first year at Kansas against Houston and Akeem Olahwon.
And on national television next month, Dreiling would like to let the whole nation in on his success story with an appearance by Kansas at the Final Four.
"My goal would be to have 37 wins at the end of the year, which would put us on top of everything," Deplring said.
"And I want to be a leader on the team that gets that far. I want to have people recognize my contribution in getting us there."
NU upsets Sooners; 'Hawks clinch tie
The Associated Press
Nebraska a 66-44 upset victory over 10th-ranked Oklahoma in college
LINCOLN, Neb. — Brian Carr scored 18 points, including a 10-foot "tummer with four seconds left, to give
The Sooners loss combined with Kansas' 79-74 win over Colorado clinched a tie for the Big Eight Conference championship for the Jayhawks. Kansas is three games ahead in the loss column over Oklahoma and Iowa State with three games remaining.
Oklahoma had a chance to tie the game after Carr's final basket but couldn't get a shot off before the final buzzer.
Nebraska led 43-33 early in the second half, but the Sooners rallied after Cornhusker Bernard Day picked up his fourth foul and left the
game with 16:47 left.
A basket by Harvey Marshall gave Nebraska a 64-61 lead with 2:29 left, but three straight points by Oklahoma's Darryl Kennedy tied the game with 28 seconds left.
Oklahoma took its first lead of the game, 53-52, on a three-point play by David Johnson with 7:18 left.
The Cornhuskers then held the ball until Carr drove into the lane and hit
Kennedy led Oklahoma with 22 points. Tim McAlister added 17 and Johnson 15 for the Sooners, who fell to 23-4 overall and 8-4 in the conference.
Day and Anthony Bailous each added 12 points for the Cornhuskers, who raised their record to 16-8 overall and 6-5 in the Big Eight.
Kansas St. 78, Oklahoma St. 73
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Norris Joe-
man scored 30 points and Joe-
man scored 30 points.
Wright added 23 a Kansas State pulled away from pesky Oklahoma State to win 78-73 last night in a Big Eight basketball game.
Oklahoma State, 13-11 and 4-7, was led by Roshon Patton's 18 points and Terry Faggins' 17. Alan Bannister added 14 points and Jones had 13. Virginia 69. North Carolina State
ben Mitchell scored 10 points for Kansas State, which moved to 16-10 overall and 4-7 in the Big Eight.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va — Senior center older Polleny score a career-high 27 points last night to lead Virginia to a 69-60 victory over 17th-ranked North Carolina State in Atlantic Coast playoff game.
The Cavaliers, 17-7 overall, 6-5 in the ACC, also got 12 points from Andrew Kennedy.
DURHAM, N.C. — Mark Alarie scored 18 points last night to lead No. 2 Duke to its 10th straight victory, 104-82 over Miami of Florida.
Duke, 26-2, also got 16 points apiece from Johnny Dawkins and David Henderson.
The Wolfpack, 17-9 overall, 6-6 in the conference, was paced by Chris Washburn with 18 points and Nate
Miami, 12-12 in its first intercollegiate basketball season since 1971, was led by freshman forward Dennis Burns' game-high 29 points, the highest total by a Hurricane player this season. Georgia Tech 59. Wake Forest 49.
rgia Tech 59. Wake Forest 49
McMilan with 12. Ernie Myers and Bennie Bolton added 10 points each. Duke 104, Miami 82
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Duane Ferrell scored 14 points and Mark Price hit 12, including the first eight of the second half, to lead No. 5 Georgia Tech to a 59-49 victory over Wake Forest in Atlantic Coast Conference basketball last night.
Jayhawks survive scare by Colorado
United Press International
BOULDER, Colo. — Forward Ron Kellogg converted four free throws and a dunk in the final 45 seconds to give third-ranked Kansas a 79-74 Big Eight victory over Colorado last night.
"That last 45 seconds took forever," Kansas head coach Larry Brown said. "I thought we had the game won and I look up and Torrin Williams throws in a 25-footer. They came back and fouled and have a chance to win the ballgame."
Williams' 25-foot cut the Kansas lead to 75-74 with under 30 seconds to play. But two free throws by Kansas forward Calvin Thompson and a dunk by Kellogg gave the Jayhawks their 25th win of the year.
Forward Danny Manning led the Jayhawks with 25 points, including 17 in the second half. Kellogg finished with 20 points. Kansas is now 25-3 overall and 10-1 in the conference.
Guard Michael Lee scored 22 points to pace the Buffaloes, 8-16 and 0-11. Center Randy Downs added 16 and forward Matt Bullard had 14.
"We were fortunate to win." Kansas head coach Larry Brown said after the game. "They were much better prepared than we were. They did not look like a team with an 0-10 conference record."
Kansas scored the first six points and led Colorado by as many as 12 early on. Bullard hit a jumper with 59 seconds to play to put Colorado up 72-71. Kellogg then went on a six-point scoring spree and Thompson contributed his two free throws to lift Kansas.
Men's Basketball
Kansas 79,Colorado 74
Williams 0.12, Bittard 0.22, Witk 0.14, Wile 0.24, Oe 0.14, Lue 0.24, Lye 0.25, Down 0.16, Koumani 0.04
Wait, the numbers in the image are:
Williams 0.12, Bittard 0.22, Witk 0.14, Wile 0.24, Oe 0.14, Lue 0.24, Lye 0.25, Down 0.16, Koumani 0.04
Manning 10 6-5 25, Kelogg 8-6 20, Drewling 3-4 10, Hunt 4-0 27, Thompson 4-4 11, Paper 0-9 29, Marshall 1-2 4, Turgor 0-0 0, Totals 29 21 25.7, Colorado (74)
1, 2-4 L, 2-2 B, 7-2 D, 8-2 L,
2 Penix 6,000 Totals 10,104 74 -
2 Penix 6,000 Totals 10,104 74 -
Bullard, Reid, Rebounda,
Bullard, 30 (Manning 12), Colorado
(Bullard, Damon) 8, Assists-Kansas 15 (Hunter,
Kellogg 5), Colorado 22 (Reid. 7)
Colorado lead coach Tom Apten. Attendance
6,974
Buffs use late rally to subdue 'Hawks
By a Kansan sports writer
Tracy Tripp scored a game-high 23 points and Crystal Ford added 13, leading Colorado to a 77-68 victory over Kansas last night at Boulder.
The loss, the second of the season to Colorado, dropped the Jayhawks to 15-9 overall and 6-5 in the Big Eight, two games behind Oklahoma, the conference leader. Colorado improved its record to 16-8 and 6-5.
Evette Ott, who led four Jayhawks in double figures with 20 points, picked up one assist and became the fourth women's player in Kansas history to hand out 100 assists in a season.
Vickie Adkins, Kelly Jennings and Lisa Dougherty added 18, 12 and 11 points respectively for Kansas.
Colorado jumped out in front early at 16-6 before Adkins hit two of her 16 first-half points to tie the score at 13 apiece. Colorado, which later rebuilt the lead to as many as 10 points, led
Women's Basketball
35-30 at halftime
Kansas rallied and chipped away at the lead in the second half before tying the score at 54 apiece with 8:56 left. The Jayhawks took their biggest lead of the game at 58-55. Both teams exchanged the lead before Colorado stormed back, taking its biggest lead of the game at 77-66 with 14 seconds remaining.
Saturday, Kansas will return to the field house to face Kansas State, 14-10 and 5-6.
Colorado 77, Kansas 68
F-40 5-13, Tripp 9-6-23, Banks 3-2-3, Hollower 2-0, Turner 4-0, Turner 4-1, Moore 0-4, Carson 7-0, DeWitte 0-0-0, Hulstrom 0-0-0, Lampson 0-1-2
Totals 29 18 29 77
Akisne 6-18, 8-14, Duchyman 3-5-8, 11-11, Jennings 2-5-12
8-12, 9-2-20, Webb 1-1, Marsh 1-2, Mouthrood
0-2, Shaw 0-0, Miller 0-0, Toluski 26-16, 22-
18, Cox 14-16, Hancock 18-16, Kellner 18-16,
Cordon 20, Faber out—nose
United Press International
Georgia to seek retrial
Bowers, in a one-paragraph statement, said the motion for a new trial would be filed by Monday with U.S. District Court Judge Horace Ward, who presided during the case.
ATLANTA — Georgia Attorney General Michael Bowers said yesterday that he will seek a new trial in the Kanemp case. Kemp, a former Georgia instructor, received a $2.5 million award in the first trial, in which she said she was fired for protesting favored treatment to athletes.
During the six-week trial that ended last week, Kemp successfully argued that her right to free speech was violated when she was fired by the university for protesting the favored academic treatment of athletes.
The jury of six, ruling against defendants Leroy Ervin and Virginia Trottier, awarded Kemp $80,00 in back pay, $200,00 for mental stress, $1.5 million in punitive damages from Trottier and $800,00 in damages
from Ervin. Trotter is vice president for academic affairs and Ervin is director of the university's remedial studies program.
The decision to appeal the Kemp verdict was reached at the request of the defendants, with approval of the Board of Regents and Gov. Joe Frank Harris, Bowers said.
Bowers made it clear the state was appealing the entire verdict — not just the monetary award but also the jury's decision that Kemp's constitutional right of free speech was violated by Ervin and Trotter.
"If the motion for a new trial is unsuccessful or if the case is not otherwise disposed of, the case will be appealed to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals," he said.
Kemp maintained that her rights were violated by her demotion as English studies coordinator and her later dismissal because she spoke out against the favored treatment of athletes and the children of university contributors.
MISSOURI
14
MISSOURI
20
Wilfredo Lee/KANSAN
Jayhawk guard Evette Ott has become only the fourth woman Jayhawk to record 100 assists in a season. She got her 100th assist last night against Colorado.
Ott passes her way into record books
Guard is only fourth woman Jayhawk to get at least 100 assists in a season
By Dawn O'Malley
Last night, Kansas point guard Evette Ott accomplished what only three other KU women basketball players have done before — recorded 100 assists in a season.
Sports writer
Her name will be etched in the record books with Lynette Woodard, Cheryl Burnett and Mary Myers.
Ot picked up her 100th assisia against the Colorado Buffaloes in the Jayhawks' 77-68 loss last night at Boulder. It was Ott's only assist of the game.
In addition to collecting assists at a record-setting pace, Ott has been scoring more lately. Last night she led Kansas with 20 points, Saturday, Ott collected 18 points against Nebraska. In the past three games, she has scored 51 points. She is now averaging seven points and four assists a game.
"I was shooting for 100 in the season," Ott said. "I didn't realize I was so close. It is hard for a point guard to score, with assists a point guard can do more than others."
In the three years she has played
with Kansas, Ott has matured into a team leader.
"She has a big role to play to keep us mentally in the game," said Jackie Martin, Kansas forward. "She's a leader in directing us."
To aid her through the season and school, Ott has found strength through religion. Although she is not of a particular religious denomination, she believes that it is what is in her heart that matters.
"It will go to any church that is teaching and preaching from the Bible," Ott said, "but I don't want to get caught up in perverted teachings."
Ott said her faith has helped her through some rough times.
During her freshman season, Ott suffered a knee injury that required surgery. She now wears a brace to support her right knee in practice and in games. But Ott believes her injury was a part of God's plan.
"It helps me when we have lost, when I am tired or when something goes wrong." Ott said. "I can look to the Lord. There is nothing I cannot do if I stay calm and leave it up to him; let his will be done. I am not alone."
Family: Parents, Alexander and Izolla Ott.
Class and major: Junior in exercise physiology.
Age: 20
Evette Ott
Hometown: Flint, Mich.
Background: Earned All-City, All-State and All-League honors during her senior year of high school. Was named Saginaw Valley All-Conference co-MVP. Named an alternate National Sports Festival East Squad. Played in 26 games last season and shot 75 percent from the free-throw line.
The assist record is not the only goal that Ott has accomplished this year.
"My goal when I became an upperclassman was to treat the
"I knew I was going to be all right." Ott said.
freshmen differently, which is why we are so close," Ott said. "There is not a class superiority. We respect each other."
It is here at Kansas that Ott has found contentment.
"I am a born-again Christian," she said. "Somewhere I was searching for that joy and peace. I wanted it and I found it here. I want to do all I can for the Lord, for people to see Christ through me."
14
University Daily Kansan
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
BE_READY for MIDTERM! Attend the preparation for Exams Study Skills Workshop, time management, memory review, testing, text reading, more FREE! Wednesday, February 28, 7-9 p.m., Council Room, Kansas Union. Presented by the Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 844-404
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Lose Weight for Spring Break Guaranteed! Call Lorrie 914-7689.
Lose Weight! Gain Weight! or Just Feel Great!
HERBAL NUTRITIONAL PROGRAM gives you
good, basic sound nutrition that everyone is
able to achieve. Workshops! We call:
913-829-4761. DuPree Gillett & Assoc.
Hillel
current insertion of any advertisement
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Hillel Services Lawrence Jewish Community Center
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
once 130 rows/hour.
Round 1 key on a leather key ring. Call 864-2203.
917 Highland Dr.
Come join us!
Fri. Feb. 21
7:30 p.m.
Rent*19.7 W color $28.8 amonth. Smithy's TV
14' W, trx24 82-7331. Bulton's TV,
16' W, trx24 82-7331.
Rent-VCR, with 2 movies, overnight $99.00
Rental, with 2 movies, w/24hr. $421.93. Mon.- Sat.
Sunday; 5:15- 1.
SUA Board Member applications due by Thurs.
Feb. 20th, Questions? 843-347.
Want to coordinate entertainment and activities for the University of Kansas? Pick up your SUA application today! SUA Office, Level I, Kansas Union.
1982 Toyota 4 x 4 X S 380, p/s, p/b, a/c, am/fm
cassette. Callen B1-941 894-454.
Attention Sophomores. Owl Society in now accepting applications! Minimum overall GPA of 3.0. Applications in Rm. 403 Kansas Union. Applications and current transcript due March 7 at p.m. 5 p.m.
LOST/FOUND
Lost house/car key on metal ring. Vicinity
LOST house/Hancelall/Car key 864 = 86325 or 843-8434
2. keys on a leather key ring. Call 864-2534.
Found in Wesco Hale, a gray back pack with an English 1 and Radio 9 and TV textbook. Call 864-4520 or come to 3116 Wesco to claim.
LOST. 1 pair of Polo prescription glasses. If found call 749-7565 (reward)
Found: 1 pair of brown glasses and a light blue case.
Ethan 12 hours. Pick them up HDLF 19 hours.
Harry 8 hours. Pick them up HDLF 19 hours.
ENTERTAINMENT
Having a party? Need a DJ? Call Music Mix. The Best Mix of music in Town. 924-890-7500 get you 8 hours of great dance music. Music from Dugge E. Fresh to Modern English.
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE DJ DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-reck with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 749-4713.
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to provide the music for your next party, including a special event space and a large room and can accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in Lawrence, Manhattan and Salina. Call 841-894-3643.
A Readers Theatre Presentation
Actors will perform with scripts in hand)
2E
WILD BILL
an original play by John Clifford
Two performances only
Saturday, Feb. 22, 8 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 23, 2:30 p.m.
LAWRENCE COMMUNITY THEATRE
1501 New Hampshire
843-7648 (THE-SHOW)
Admission only $2
($1 with season ticket)
HELP WANTED
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,940/hr. 20-yr. Now
Hiring Call: 637-627-6800 Ext. R 1954 for current
job offered.
CRUISSESS HIRING! $16-$30.00 Carribean,
Hawaii, World! Call for Guide, Cassette,
Newservice! (916) 844-4444 X UKANSASCRUISE
GOVERNMENT JOBS. J.65 - $40 - $29.30 yr. Now
Hiring. Call: 1-855-677-6000 Ext. R-9758 for current
federal list.
HIRING TERRITORIAL MARKETING PERSONNEL. Progressive commission approximately $21,000 first year, $50,000 second年. Resume to HR@MiltonStreet13, 11 TDaua, 1214 Highway 7, Highway 7, Ala. Ma. 66063
MAKE MONEY during spring break. Substitute personal care attendant needed by handicapped U. staff member about 2 hours per day, morning, summer days. Summer employment possible. 842-1081.
ENTERTEL
offers YOU
- Paid training
- Advanced opportunities
- Hourly wage with incentive
- Pleasant working cond.
- Flexible hours
AND
$5-$6 per hour
Call 841-1200
NANNIES WANTED-Live-in child care for professional families in Boston. If you love children, please apply to the Nanny Programs Office at Write American AU Pair, P.O. Box 91, New Town Branch, Branch, Mass. Boston, Mass. Call 617-744-5154. Need dependable student to work downtown. 20 hrs. per week during spring and fall. Call 843-3689.
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer. yr, round. Europe.
S.A. Amherst, Arena. Alla. fields. $200-$200 mo.
mightseeing. Free info. Write LIC, PO Bx 52-K1-
Corona Del Mar, CA 92252.
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Phone: ___ ~ ___
Name:_
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Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Part Time Job. Flexible hours between 9 a.m. and
9 p.m. for inventory control. $8 an hour. Must have
carl. Call collect Dick Signorell 212-680-9283.
SUMMER CAMP JOB, Northern Minnesota.
Seeking qualified teachers & college students.
Experienced instructors must be
meets heads & assistants for crafts, art,
drama, rifley, horseback riding, sailing, tennis,
swimming, caneing, dance, boardsalting,
secretary-driver. Mid-June to mid-August. Apply to
the Summer Camp Program at A.E.R. N.A.W.,
Ridges, Minn. 505744.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Colorado Mountain Resort Employer is seeking male and female applicants for: Retail Sales, Food Service and office positions. Resumes must be submitted to September. Located in Lestat Park, Colorado. For further information: www.nationalspark.com/affiliates. 740 Oxford Lane, Port Louis, MO 80025
Hardee's
Hardee's of Lawrence on the Kansas Turnpike is currently hiring for all shifts.
CALL 843-8203 TODAY!
available
-Flexible hours
-Opportunity for
advancement
-Start at 3.50 per hour,
overnight shifts
start at 3.75.
-Hardee's is also hiring
an overnight supervisor
-Wages will be based
on food service
experience
Summer Jobs, National Park Cs. 21 Parks, 5000
Openings, Complete Information $5.00. Park
Resort, Mission Min., Co., 651 2nd Ave. W.N.
Kansas, MT 39001. MTT 39001.
-Full or part-time
AIRLINE HIRED BOOM: $143-$290,000
Stewardesses, Reservationists! Call for Guide,
Cassette, Newservice, (610) 944-4444 x UAW185.
CHECKERS Pizza has简便 openings for ten delivery drivers. Must be 18 years or older and have your own car and insurance. Our drivers average $6 per hour. Cash commission paid in person or in call checkers Pizza, 2141 Valore, 941-890.
WANTED: ARCHITECTURAL DRAPTMAN S
Park area.梦市,experience necessary.
Call (913) 648-2350.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidential assured. Greater area; call for appointment 913-345-1800
RESOURCE-A professional resume can get you more job interviews. Let me write one for you!
PERSONAL
A KU student from far East' Orient seeks a serious girl for war relationship. Please reply to helix@ku.edu.
White male age 24 seeks dating/relationship with black female. Interests in health, exercise, career. No job. Serious replies to Kevin, Box 3002 Lawrence, Ks.
ERIC LHJ. know what it like to have a crush on a guy who, while he knows you exist, don't see you as important.
I'll just use the first line again.
ERIC LHJ. know what it like to have a crush on a guy who, while he knows you exist, don't see you as important.
L-L, with my BLUE CARNATION Sorry I could not to talk to you Valentine's night. You looked like a man.
P. V. Trio, My country club crush, the past 6 months we been so excited. I love it. I love U. I love Fee Woe.
Happy Birthday,
Jennifer & Terri!
A Present for You
50% Off
any membership
expires 2/22/86
Come Join The Party
TO THE BRUNETTE at the nebraska game, wearing a knit jacket and owning a full-length, light tan coat. I was the girl two rows back and I wanted to wear it, so I packed to box 355 at the 10th Stuiffer, Fireman's Hall.
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
25th & Iowa 841-6232
Hey AOP'L where the hell is Arnold?' For some
reason, this same slot tomorrow for clan number 1.
Hie and Hera Hair Designs. Quality hair care at
the salon, and a free consultation. Please
give and give you the personal attention you deserve. Haircuts $7, perm $10 and with up hairdie included. Linda and Binda 841-589-1318
www.hairsdirections.com
Blue Heron Futons
810-3260 Weekly/Up Mailing Circulars! #1Qsier! Sincerely interred rush self-addressed envelope. Success, P.O. Box 740CEG, Woodstock, IL 60068.
Free refreshments & snacks
POINSETTA BEACH INN in the heart of the Fort La
Hawkesbury school STUDENT discount.
1000-1800
BUS. PERSONAL
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattresse
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.-Sat. 12:5:30 p.m.
841-9443
Living Room Disposal!! We have just received 2 truckloads of name brand living room furniture. These are close-out, discounted fabrics, and in excellent condition. They include this modern soft, loveseat, and chair, all upholstery with a $18 or turn over, over the bed or from choice. Inset at Midwest Furniture and Waterbed Liquidators 738 New Hampshire, use our 9d day no interest plan. Open everyday!
MENU HOT LINE 864-4567 The Union's recording of the day's entrees & soups.
SKT CULTUR RISING!
Skateboards & Accessories
QUALITY STUFF ONLY
Rent' 14.ly' Cost T $29.8 a month Curtis Mathers 14, W 23rd 842.3781 Mon- Sat- 9:30
Sunday 11:30am-6pm
Bedroom suits must go! We have 6 sets that are years models. Room must be made for the new styles. Suite includes dresser, mirror, cheek and chin stile. The suite is finished, finish, all 4 pieces only $12 or as low as $17.6 a month. Hurry to Mimel Furniture and Waterborne Bedding. The prices range everywhere. Everyday is like going to an auction.
UPTOWN BICYCLES
1337 Mass.
749-0838
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
Weekly Beer Special
Feb.19-25
Wiedemann 12 pk $3.52
Pabst 12 pk $4.63
Black Label 12 pk $3.52
Coors Light 12 pk $5.28
Miller 12 pk $5.28
Miller Lite 12 pk $5.28
*CAMP COUNSELORS-M/F- Outstanding Slim and Trifive Nutrition. Nutrition, Dietetics, Dienstein Nutrition, Nutrition, Dienstein, plus. Separate girls' and boys' campa. 7 weeks. Manuschettia, Pennsylvania, No. Carolina, California. Contact: Michael Friedman, Director, 97 Hewlett Dr. No. Woodmere, N.Y. N 1181.
Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
SPRING BREAK SPECIALS! Hurry, these packages
BREAK FOR THE REACH
Fort Walton Beach $109
Daytona Beach $127
Padre Island $149
Fort Lauderdale $159
- 7 night hotel accommodations
- SILVER CROWN
- 4 nights at Silver Creek Inn
- 4 days lift tickets
- Roundtrip air from K.C.
- March 10-14
- Roundtrip shuttle from airport to resort
Only $360 per person!
- Roundtrip air from K.C.
* 6 nights hotel accommodations
* Roundtrip transfer from hotel
* Hawaiian flower ler greeting
* Welcome champagne breakfast party
Mobility and the teacher pilot—shooting now
Mobility and the teacher pilot—shooting now
HAWAII
TRAVEL CENTER
Only $519 per person
Need custom imprinted awesheathtshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and prices on printed imprinted specialties plus speedy and reliable delivery. You design it or let our talented artists. 280 W. 2341 (Belgian Gate)
Southern Hills Center
M.F 9:5:30
Sat. 9:30-2 p.m. 841-7117
Thesis Binding
Rent'19. $Color T.V. $42.98 am. Smiffy's TV. 147 W. 324-755-7151. Mon-Sat: 9-30am. Sun: 1-5
**SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach. Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island or Oceanside or Vail from only 861. Deluxe lodging, parties, good bags, more. Hurry, call Sunchess Tours for more information and reservations toll free 1-800-742-1211. Representative TODAY! When your Spring break counts._count on Sunchease.
1601 W.23rd
- Word Processing
**TOP MAKING SENSE!** Becoming an ASRISHERHED from studying? Is your brain turning to LIQUID SKY? Going BANANAS figuring out the art of bandage-wrapping. BUNGER for外包, wrap up your CRAILING HAND and check us out. LIBERTY HALL IDEO-Video alternative. No membership. Jen28. 10 Mon.-Sat. • 4-Sun. **660 Mass.** 749-1912 Thousands of B & R albums #1 or less. Also collector items. Su & Sun only • 10 a.m. **660 Mass.** Campships. Buy, Sale, or Trade all music styles.
- Typesetting
- Copying
impatient passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, i-24 and of course, ffl. training.
- Design & Layout
LONG WEIGHT NOW. 10% guaranteed FDA approved on Herbal Products 842-7060.
BED
- Transparencies
.
- Laminating
26TH & IOWA
HOLIDAY PLAZA
Phone 749-5192
University
Materials
Center
Class Ring Day - Why wait for the man when its ring day at night at Ballestour House. 935 Mass.
Warm sweat衫, long sleeve T. Custom printed Shirtard. 749-1611.
DELI SPECIALS
Turkey &
Turkey & Today's Cheese Sandwich Special:
16 oz. Drink $2.55
THE KANSAS UNION
DELI
level 3
SANDWICH
Creative: thinking singles find 'kindred spirits through the directory for educated singles
LOVELINE, P.O. Box 3602DK, Lawrence, KS
00414 Oneiss membership $4.90
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School! Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided. 841-7749
GAVLEHSIAN? Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stumped, self-addressed envelope to: TRANGLE TIMES, P. 6: 2842 7680 KCM 61496.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $ (U) repair;
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $ Call 809-697-8000
GIRLFORD for information
GIRLFORD for information
THE FAR SIDE
BLOOM COUNTY
SERVICES OFFERED
LEISHAH/GAY SUPPORT GROUPS. For info, call 1-800-627-3555 or call mid-911. Biocle 412-200-4344.
Native German, frontal background, offers expert, informal tutoring both languages. 843-4000.
MATH TUTOR. Bob Mears holds A.M. in math from K.U. where 602, 102, 116, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professionally in 1975 and often tutors elementary statistics. 66 per 40 minute session. Call 843-9030. Tutoring. Call Peer Counseling. Completely confidential. Call GLSOK 864-3031. KU Info 843-5006, or Headquarters 841-2345.
1101 Mass.
Suite 201 749-0117
LAWYER
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-3716.
BIRTHRIGHT— Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling, 843-8421.
FOR RENT
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkeley Flats Vacancies available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 831-216.
**FEMALE-NEED A ROOMMASTER? Only**
$100/mo and 1/3 utilities wa/mo-lease. 1-blk. off 23rd and 2 blks. off, Mass. Call 842-2161
3 BR house, East Lawrence, bus route, 1894
built, insulated. Double lot, garden $757
bathroom.
Female roommate requires 2 Bdm duples, wash/dry chair up, baggage, yard. $410 plus 17% tax.
First come, first served, only a few two left. At 216 W. Bathroom on KU bus route, between Gibson & Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, dresses, and appliances. We will take you to your choice upon request. Square foot, carport, extra width or balcony. Call 843-6446 for appointment.
Furnished one bedroom apartment near University Downtown, utilities paid off with street rentals.
Just finished remodeling. 1 & 2 BR apartments;
3 & 4 BR apartments; new double glass windows; Pincerate window;
843-7736 after 5 or leave message on machine
1043-2692 before 5 to place Machine Place
1 more day free! 843-1212
LEASE NOW FOR FALL and/or SULEASE for spring and summer. Available possibly as early as April 1. Roomily and comfortable B BR duplex apt. in good location w/nice yard. Extra large MR. garage, laundry/storage no Pet. lease. Garden shed or outdoor office $65/roo. fall; spring and summer negotiable.
SUBLEASE now for summer. Studio. Good location. Rent negotiable. Call 924-8385 or 748-8153.
Rent office space on the upper level of tub, sauna. Located in Silverhorne, close to Breckleedge, Keystone and Kipworth $100/night.
Sublease now. 2-dft apt. Very nice and close to campus. 842-9738.
Make the cash flow.
TOWNHOUSE are immediately cornhit Cornish.
TOWNHOUSE are immediately Mendowborough Apk. at 843-590
at 841-590 at 841-590
Ufhrified studio apartment for at 130 aft.
Tennessee, newly remodeled, 476/mo plus elec-
gency. $525,000.
Sublease 3 furnished bedroom apt. 3 blocks from campus 465 plus utilities, can make a deal.
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. You can even make money among the profitable in classified. Make the cash flow in today. Place a classified ad.
Xansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
By GARY LARSON
2-20
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
"You know, Bjorg, there's something about holding a good, solid mace in your hand--you just look for an excuse to smash something."
PEER PRESSURE... EMOTIONAL CRISIS... TOO TALK PRAMES...
UNDERARM HAIR... IT'S CONNING AND I CAN'T STOP IT.
ADVERSE ROCK
by Berke Breathed
WHAT'S COMING?
ADOLESCENCE.
RUSHING HEAD-
LONG TOWARD ME.
REALLY?
YEAH!
DUCK! I'D LIKE TO!!
1
Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
15
For rent: 38 bdr., brand new apt. 1,12 lbs from
partner. $800/month plus utilities. Sublease a
pighability. Purchase at $150/month. p.bath. and Pam A842-6335 on a p.m. Keep trying.
Wanted: Female, non-smoking roommate to
share a bed apartment for remainder of
the month. Plus 1/3 utilities. Call 749-
4823. Keep trying.
FOR SALE
MASTERCAFTAFF offers completely furnished 1,2,
3 or 4 apartments in each new campus. Call
812-6181-8234, www.mastercaftaf.com
FIXED HIRES Look good, runs great. A/C
$2500 $2600 eligible Eric D & D339-886
trying
Auto sound equipment. Blaupunkt BPA-415-60-w
4-channel power amplifier. Blaupunkt BP-55-
5 band pre-amplify equalizer Best offer. Call
904-2018.
Basketball cards and sports mottaina. Buy, Sell
and Trade 1 J's Basketball cards. Open 10-3 M.S.
Sportsbooks.
Cash immediately for automobile exhaust canner converters. We pick up and pay cash.
Comic Books, Penthouse, pentuents, et Mat-
ics. Comics. Open 15-3 Pte., Sat. & Sun. 10-5-815
Computer Zenith II (Heathkit) and printer.
Software packages include Superplus x4 and printer.
GOVENMENT HOMES from $1 (U. repair).
Delhi government tax payer Call 818-675-6000
Kewdow KR-ATV2 receiver, 60 watt, 18 station
memory, scan, 7 band equiv. New saccf
device.
Living country, must sell 1980 & 2010 hatchback Chagvetroff Citation. Also, good clothes, men's jackets; slacks and shirts (M,L) call 945-6890. One pair DCM 'OED' speakers $350 or best offer.
One pair DCM 'QED' speakers $50 or best offer.
Pioneer 822-3908.
Philips turntable with little used audio Technica cartridge. Come see, make offer before I trade it
Plane ticket to Phoenix. Arizona for Spring Break. Great price. Call 864-1292 or 740-0322
saxed $1700. Alvarace two neck acoustic guitar; list at $147, ask $200, 913-25-034 (Topeka). SBs' boot women, 7-1/2, Nordica, men's 10-7/2-11, davensini, 843, all-836, Sucken.
©芯理 45-watt waft device, technician dual cassette
telephone, 20-FPTE TA-35A lamp, Call 749-1258,
or 20-FPTE TA-50A lamp, Call 749-1258.
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Reservers from $20, turntables from $15, speakers
from $45. All equipment is in excellent
stores all completely reconditioned and warranted
Lawrence Custom Radio, 914 W. 39rd St.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Makes them use to teach them. 1) As study guide, 2) For class material. 3) In classroom analysis. Analysis of Western Civilization available now at "Town Criet, The Jayhawk Bookstore," and online at www.westerncivilization.net.
I would like to buy your 1982-84 Scooter, 841-7614.
Classified Ads
AUTO SALES
1974 Pontiac GTO, new paint, overhand, and more. Rare. A must see. Call 843-2022 evening
1883 Citation 2 DHRH, PS, PB, AC, cruise, AMF
M cassette f4509 or best offer. 843-3532.
Car: 1976 Honda CVCC, fine condition $1500
843-866-566, weekends, weekdays
DRIVE A REAL SPORTS CAR C8 7900 2 plus 1
Rbal attention getter, Alpine竿 $4500
BAD ATTENTION
Moving Mum Sell. 1980 Old-Mobil Mobiles station wagon - Silver/Full Option, Just $700 *Call us*
Must sell 79 Madera RX-7, runs great. AM/FM,
Cass. AC 8350 or best offer. 480-886 ask
for more info.
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing. Judy. 842-7945.
1-1-1 TRIO WORD PROCESSING experienced, conciousness, reliable. Job jobs accepted. Call
1-3-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional, WORD
bases. Data, Data Base 841-9779
data. Data Base 841-9779
24-hour Typing, 10th semester in Lawrence
campus. Best quality and fastness. 91-400-
837-5144.
A: professional typing. Term papers, Tissues.
B: professional typing. Use ISM submitter.
I: reasonable. 842-3244
A. L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers. Phone: 842-9657/after 5:30.
A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc.
Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1800.
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing and editable fonts. Six same day service. 844. Illinois. 844. Illinois.
Accurate word processing, experienced,
reasonable, rate. Call Lauran 5-10 pm.
Telephone: (864) 239-1177
Ace Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable,
friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes.
Word Processing. Corrections. Vice
available. One block from campus. 842-2976.
Alpha Omega. Computer Services - Word
Processing/Typing. Corrections. Proofreading, Graphics.
Wordstar Document uploading. Free estimate.
DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE
available on shorter student papers (up to 38
p.m.) or Mommy's paper. 843-783-9148
before 9 p.m. Please.
Dissertations, Theses, Tern Paperings. Over 15 yrs.
experience. Phone 842-3210 after 5:30; BAR:
842-3210 before 5:30.
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing. Spelling/punctuation errors corrected, reasonable rates. Causes of errors corrected.
B, ENGLISH TYPING-TUTORING. Spelling
curation, overnight service available.
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let me handle your typing needs. Typed to your
reasonable, 16 years experience
Hakenson, 42-hour typing. IBM word processing.
Quick and reliable service. Lenni 841-5694.
Letter perfect papers and resumes. WRITING LIFELINE, 841-3409.
TYPIING PLUS assistance with composition, edgar, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, sumes. Have M.S. Degree, 81-6254
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, applications. Spelling corrected Contact: 803-7547
THE WORD DOCTORS. - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 943-3147
EXPERIENCED TYPEF, Term papers, these.
IBM Correcting Selective, I will correct spelling,
grammar.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing service. These services, these letter quality printing, etc. #83-602-96
YPING. Call 841-5804 evenings and weekends
Desperate! I need 2 K-State B-ball tickets 2/22.
Call 749-5917.
WANTED
Drummer and Bussiade for a newly formed progressive rock band. We have no pretenasions as to the music.
Female roommate needed for 2 BR duplex. Close to KU $120/mo + 1/2 utilities. KU428-330-898
LOUDSPEAKER SYSTEMS SYSMNT $300, Seventh $300,
Aiphon Allight $600, $412 pair. Cash only: 843-1418
For summer and/or fall! female roommate(s)
for a spacious bedroom $140 plus 1/2 utilities.
for a more compact bedroom $160 plus 1/2 utilities.
**mepacker Systems** Allien Sevenen $300 pair,
**mepacker Systems** $600 pair. Cash only: 841-142 or
481-279 for phone calls.
Non-smoking, male to share nice condo, with fireplace, cable TV, dishwasher, washer/dryer, microwave, etc. Only $175.00 monthly all utilities paid. Curt 814-4712.
WANTED: Roommate to share condo. Two large bedrooms, fireplace, nice quiet study, dishwasher, plenty of space, and I'm easy to get along with. 841-4635.
WANTED male roommate to deluxe detach apartment very close campus in Maidstone No. 20514288037 No. 945618085950
Wanted: 41" x 14" mw wheels in good condition. Call
804-6794 or 804-6675.
Wanted: Male roommate for large 3 bedroom townhouse, $120/month plus 1/ utilities. A42-681. JOBS Part time work for total pay $400-$1200 mo. Full Time工资 $800-$1000 mo. Work for the fastest paying staff in town and district distributors in Lawrence area; training provided. Call 913-829-6432 Dupree-Gillen & Assoc.
Deadline for entries in Recreation Services' International Olympics is Feb. 26. Entries should be taken to 208 Robinson Center. A meeting for the managers of International Olympics will be at 7 p.m., Feb. 26 in 202 Robinson Center.
Events for each day of the Olympics are table tennis and badminton on Feb. 28; volleyball and basketball on March 1; and indoor soccer on March 2.
Sports Briefs
KENNIEWICK, Wash. — Kansas City Royals third baseman George Brett and his family have purchased their second minor league team
The Brett family announced Tuesday that it had acquired the Tri-Cities Triplets of the Class-A Northwest League for an undisclosed amount of money. The family already owns the Spokane Indians of the same league.
Brett buys 2nd team
By acquiring the Triplets from Richard Leavitt, the Brett family becomes the third owner of the team in the past four years.
Entry deadline nears
At a news conference in Kennewick, Bobby Brett said a first
priority would be to establish working relationships with major-league teams. He said steps would also be taken to improve the team's stadium.
The USFL's 18-game regular season will begin Sept. 14 and end Feb. 1 with the championship game in Jacksonville — one week after the National Football League's Super Bowl. Two division winners and three wild-card teams will make the playoffs. Because of stadium conflicts, the USFL schedule will be announced after the NFL schedule comes out in mid-March.
NEW YORK — The United States Football League yesterday reaffirmed its plans to play a fall schedule this year and announced ownership changes for its New Jersey, Baltimore and Jacksonville. Fla., franchises.
The purchase has been approved unanimously by the Northwest League's board of directors.
USFL to play in fall and battle the NFL
Drive-thru open until 2 a.m.
1618 W.23rd St.
New Jersey owner Donald Trump bought his partner Steve Ross' half-interest in the Generals. Ross formed a partnership with Myles Tannenbaum in Baltimore
and former Denver owner Doug Spedding to become partners in Jacksonville with Fred Bullard.
The other franchises in the eighteam league will be in Phoenix, Ariz., Birmingham, Ala., Memphis, Tenn., Orlando, Fla., and Tampa Bay, Fla.
NATIONAL CITY, Calif. — Terry Rodgers, California's top football player, will play college football at Nebraska, the school where his father won the Heisman Trophy, it was reported yesterday.
Rodgers, a running back from Sweetwater High School in San Diego County, will formally announce his intentions at a news conference today. But the San Diego Tribune reported yesterday that he planned to attend Nebraska.
NU gets prep star
Nebraska, Ohio State, USC and Texas.
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
He is the son of Johnny Rodgers, who won the Heisman Trophy as a Cornhusker running back in 1972.
Rodgers ran for 3,764 yards in his high school career, and last season he set a single-season record for touchdowns with 32 and for total points with 202.
To our pledge dads & other actives
X $ \Theta $
For the Best in Party Pics!
call 843-5279
Thanks for the Road Rally and
pinning ceremony.
We appreciate your concern and support, MU Pledge Class
UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY
ST
Games People Play Rock Chalk Revue Hoch Auditorium
Feb. 27, 28, and March 1
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
1033 Mass. Downtown
ALL HAIRCUTS $6
Quality Haircuts at
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No appt. necessary - Closed on Mons.
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Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
Wacky Wednesday 16"2 topping pizza & 4 soft drinks — $7.99
Monday Madness
16" 2 topping pizza — $5.99
& .25 draws (dine in only)
Thrilling Thursday 10" 2 topping pizza & 2 soft drinks — $4.99
Terrific Tuesday 210" 2 topping pizzas &4 soft drinks — $7.99
Weekend Night Owl
Special
2 16" 2 topping pizzas
& a 6 pack of soft drinks
$12.00
CHECKERS MIDTERM MADNESS
KU Basketball Special
16" 2 topping pizzas — $5.99
& $1.50 Pitchers (dine in only)
Sunday Special
14" 2 topping pizza
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Every Day Special
Buy One Pizza Get the
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We are offering ALL our daily specials EVERY DAY through Sunday, February 23. So come in any day this week and order your favorite Checkers special for the special price!
C H E C K E R S
2214 Yale OFFER EXPIRES 2-23-86 841-8010
SAVE AT IMPORTS & DOMESTIC EXOTIC CARS
Ralph's AUTO REPAIR
707 N. Second 841-1205
INTERNSHIPS
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The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City is seeking qualified candidates for Management Development Internship positions. Interns demonstrating strong management potential will be considered for full time Analyst positions upon graduation.
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City 925 Grand Ave Kansas City, MO 64198
yello sub
DELIVERS
841-3268
The University of Kansas
Theatre Presents
The Picnic Project:
A Deconstructive Performance
(in Honor of William Inge)
8:00 p.m. nightly
February 21, 22, 27, 28 and
March 1, 1986
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the
Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved
For reservations, call
913/864-3982
VISA/MasterCard accepted
for phone reservations
Partially funded by the
KU Student Activity Fee
Thursday, February 13, 1986
Karen Winter
After this date, please contact your placement office or:
a deconstructive performance
V
in honor of william inge
half price for ku students
the picnic project
TABACCO BAG
the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187
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16
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Thursday, Feb. 20, 1986
'Hawks open spring season in Mexico
By Jerry Ryan
By Jerry Ryan Sports writer
The Kansas men's golf team opens its spring season today at the Pan American Invitational in Morteverey, Mexico.
The team begins the season with its top four players returning from the fall season, including senior Chris Hutchens and freshman John Ogden. However, head coach Ross Randall's goals are higher this spring than last fall.
"Our immediate goals are to play well and hopefully consistent," Randall said. "Our ultimate goal is to be invited to the NCAA
"It's a lofty one, but that's what we're trying to do."
Last fall, Kansas won the All- College Tournament in Oklahoma
Men's Golf
City and placed second in the Hal Sutton Invitational at Shreveport, La.
Four teams from each region are invited to the NCAA championships. Oklahoma is ranked No. 1 in the country and is not likely to be beaten very much, said Randal.
"Because it is almost certain that Oklahoma will be the No. 1 team in our region at the championships, we are going to have to plan on beating one or two of the other top teams such as Missouri or Oral Roberts," he said.
The top players for the Jayhawks Hutchens, Ogden, Brian McGreevy, sophomore, and
Steve Madsen, junior — are established.
"I got the opportunity to go down to Mexico, so you get it, go down to Mexico."
However, the key for the spring season is the performance from the fifth man, Randall said.
"If we get help from the fifth man it will help our team out alot," he said.
For the tournament in Monterrey, the No. 5 man would be freshman Rudy Zupetz.
Zupetz said he hoped to take advantage of the opportunity and maintain his position on the squad.
The top four golfers are all established players with respectable credentials.
Hutchens, a transfer student from Coffeyville Community College, is one of the top golfers on this year's squad and shot a low score last fall of 69.
He said he hopes to help the Jayhawks by setting a good example and being a team leader.
"I work at it as hard as I possibly can," Hutchens said. "I work 10 percent so that they can look to someone for leadership."
Randall said the importance of the fifth man was that the lowest four scores from each team of five are used to determine the winner.
McGreevy established himself as one of the top KU golfers and was named first-team All-Big Eight in 1884 after a fifth place finish at the 1984 Big Eight Meet.
Local player eager to start KU career
Although next year's volleyball season is still a way off, Jod Oelschlager, Lawrence High School senior, is already looking forward to playing for Kansas.
By a Kansan sports writer
Oelschlager her letter of intent to play volleyball Tuesday night. She received a full scholarship.
She is the daughter of Ron and Marsha Oelschlager. Her father is the team physician of the Kansas football team.
Oelschlager, who was heavily recruited by Virginia, Florida State and Notre Dame, said she chose Kansas so she could stay close to home.
"I picked KU because I wanted my
Volleyball
mom and dad to watch. "Oeschlager said, 'I am close to my family.'
---
Oelschlager, who is an outside hitter, said it would be fun to make a contribution to the team and maybe help turn it around.
"If my role is to come off the bench, fine," Oelschlager said. "I will do whatever they need me for, or ask me to do."
Francis "Frankie" Albitz, Kansas women's head volleyball coach, said, "It is nice that she chose us. It is a credit to her to stay at home. It was a mature decision."
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KU Pre-Med Club will meet tonight!
Time: 7:00 p.m.
There will be a speaker from the KU Med Center to discuss financial aid.
Place: Council Room Kansas Union
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---
The Now accepting applications from sophomores with a minimum overall G.P.A. of 3.0 Society
Owl
Applications and information in Rm.403 of Kansas Union
Applications and
The Junior Class Honor Society current transcript due March 7 at 5 p.m. Rm.403 of Kansas Union
WALL OF VOODOO
WALL OF VOODOO
Tuesday, Feb. 25
KU Student Union
Wednesday, Feb. 26
Parody Hall
with special guests
The Reducers
See our
Wall of Voodoo
Display at
VIDEO ENDERS
PRODUCTIONS
Tickets available
at all CATS outlets
5050 Larnar, Mission
6535 State Ave., KCK
TUES. FEB. 25
KANSAS UNION BALLROOM
8.00 P.M.
TICKETS $7.00 with KUID $8.50 General Public
On Sale NOW at the SUA Office
Jerm PRODUCTIONS
Tickets available at all CATS outlets
See our Wall of Voodoo Display at VIDEO VENDERS
5052
6535
Graduated Savings.
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OFF
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UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
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Date: Mon. Feb. 24-Wed. Feb 26 Time: 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
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Molecular Geometry
Place: Burge Union Bookstore
JOSTENS AMERICA'S COLLEGE RING
Last Blast SALE!
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50–70°/OFF
Winter Fashions
carousel
Mon.-Thurs. 10-8:30
Fri. & Sat. 10-6
Sun. 1-5
711 W. 23rd
The Malls
Main Street
SINCE 1889
Program hopes to promote lively downtown in Lawrence. See page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY, FEB. 21, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 102 (USPS 650-640)
STATION
Cold Details page 3.
Carlin calls for changes in faculty tenure system
The Associated Press
WICHITA — Gov. John Carlin unveiled his vision for the state's educational system yesterday in Wichita that included a review of the faculty tenure program — a program that a KU official said already was changing.
In his speech at the Eisenhower Lecture at Wichita State University, Carlin also said Washburn University in Topeka should not be admitted to the Board of Regents as an independent institution, but as an arm of KU.
"The time has come in this state for higher education to have an overall comprehensive plan for its future." Carlin said.
One of his goals was to improve classroom instruction. He said strong university administrators must prevent the sometimes overly restrictive tenure system from choking off our ability to adjust and to compete.
"We can no longer wait for professors to retire before getting what is needed in the curriculum." Carlin said.
Sidney Shapiro, chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, said he that thought the University of Kansas had been aware of the curriculum problems but that the tenure system may not be the cause.
"I think the governor is talking about a problem that we at KU have recognized for some time," Shaprio said. "But when you want to make changes, you have to make changes in light of personnel."
Shapiro said the nature of a university was to bring together a diversity
of courses, so that the sum of the parts was greater than the whole. Just because one department has a greater student demand, he said, doesn't mean another department should be cut.
"The support of universities has been declining in the state," said Shapiro. "You can't adapt without resources."
Carlin said each school should target its efforts, emphasizing its strengths and serving the particular needs of its area rather than trying to appeal to everyone's interests.
"For all our institutions, we need a focused, directed emphasis on individual roles that together best serve our state," Carlin said.
The need for practical, applied programs tailored to the needs of business must be balanced with the state's liberal arts tradition, he said.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said that there was a
See CARLIN, p. 5, col. 1
Regents duck ticket policy
Although season ticket sales to
Board members indicated that the request by the Legislative Educational Planning Committee put them in a ticklish situation.
TOPEKA — The Kansas Board of Regents yesterday dodged a legislative request that it take a stand on whether contributors to state universities should get preferential treatment in season tickets sales to athletic events.
POLICE
athletic events should be handled in a fair fashion, board members said, they cannot deny the right of schools in the Regents system to use priority-seating season tickets as a reward or incentive for financial contributions to endowment associations and scholarship funds.
United Press International
Technical Institute in Salina.
Board member Bill Roy Sr. said he had purchased season tickets to University of Kansas events since 1955. Each year since then his seating has been pushed farther and farther back from the court. But Roy said he was not complaining.
The Regents' schools are the six state universities plus the Kansas
"It's a very common experience across Kansas that if you want good seats, you pay extra for them," said John Montgomery, a board member.
"I have now been delegated to seats without backs now that I am reaching a geriatric age, and I still think this ought to be left up to each of the schools," he said.
See REGENTS, p. 5, col. 2
Diane Dultmeier/KANSAN
Bundled up to avoid the chilly weather, Erika Blackshear, Kansas City, Mo., senior, walks briskly down Jayhawk Boulevard. Yesterday's cold temperatures kept many people inside. Today should be warmer with a high of around 30.
Senate may delay debate on pari-mutuel gambling
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A resolution the Kansas House approved yesterday, which would give voters a chance to decide whether Kansas should allow pari-mutual gambling, may not be debated anytime soon in the Senate, according to kev officials in the upper chamber.
voted for final adoption of the proposal.
Senate President Robert Talkington and Sen. Edward Reilly, R-Leavenworth and chairman of the committee that will consider the proposal, made the remarks after the House adopted the resolution on a vote of 90-35.
The measure received tentative approval after about 45 minutes of debate and, in an unusual move, the House suspended its rules and
House Speaker Mike Hayden said he agreed to push the proposal through to a final vote because several lawmakers said they would be absent today, when the final action was scheduled.
"We're elated," said Jonathan Small, small lobbyist for Kansans for Pari-Mutuel. "Everybody's excited and pretty optimistic that we can get the resolution in a healthy form through the Senate."
The resolution, which would change the Kansas Constitution by liberalizing a prohibition against gambling on anything other than bingo, escaped without much opposition or any amendments.
See RACING, p. 5, col. 3
Gramm-Rudman cuts hole in KU veterans' educations
By Sandra Crider
Staff writer
Some KU veterans and qualifie dependents of veterans may find it difficult to pay for their college education after March 1.
Service mails 150,000 letters
The Gramm-Rudman Act, a plan to do away with the federal deficit through across-the-board cuts, will apply its budgetary刀 to the Veterans' Administration's educational grants.
Lorna Vickers, Huntsville, Ala., junior and a Vietnam veteran, receives benefits that enable her to go to school by paying for her daughter's day care.
Educational benefit payments for veterans and eligible dependents will be cut by 8.7 percent.
"The reason I'm going to school is to find a better job." Vickers said
See VETERAN, p. 5, col. 3
By Karen Samelson Special to the Kansan
The Selective Service System will mail letters today to about 150,000 students across the country to remind them to register to remain eligible for federal financial aid
"There won't be any problems if they register now," Sharon Messinger, a Department of Education spokesman, said recently. "But if they refuse, they're ineligible for federal financial aid and they're in violation of federal law."
KU students, like all students in the United States, are required to sign a statement of draft status to receive federal grants, such as Pell and Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, Guaranteed Student Loans, National Direct Student Loans, College Work-Study funds and State of Kansas scholarships.
But the use of financial aid programs for enforcing federal law has drawn criticism from some universities, including the University of Kansas.
KU and other universities lost their battle in 1984 when the Supreme Court rejected six Minnesota students' contention that linking financial aid with registration was unconstitutional. Ambler said.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said, "It makes the University a law-enforcing agency that it is not."
which mandates that universities require students to sign a statement of draft status before receiving federal funds.
Education Secretary William Bennett strengthened the cooperation in January when he agreed to give the names of 3 million federal aid applicants to the Selective Service to verify their registration.
Since 1982, the Selective Service has been sending out more than 50,000 letters each month to people who apparently are not registered, Barbara Cole, a Selective Service spokesman said. This is the first time financial aid applicants have been targeted.
The Education Department has been cooperating with the Selective Service since 1982, when Congress passed the Solomon Amendment
Selective Service officials plan to send at least one more letter to men who haven't registered before calling in the Justice Department for possible prosecution.
"We give them plenty of opportunity to register, but we won't dismiss the charges once the prosecution has begun," said Jack Williams, an assistant U.S. attorney in Wichita.
Conviction could result in up to five years in prison, a $250,000 fine or both.
The Justice Department has convicted 20 men, including one Kansan, since enforcement of registration began in 1982. Nearly all of the men prosecuted have refused to register on religious or moral grounds.
Other men don't register because they procrastinate, said Linda Stalvey, a Selective Service official. The compliance rate among 18 and 19-year-olds is slightly lower than the
99 percent rate among 20- to 26-year-olds.
The student financial aid office at KU uses a computer program to make sure that all federal financial aid recipients have signed a statement of draft status.
Students do not have to sign to obtain money that comes from the University.
Jerry Rogers, director of student financial aid, said that this month the program had identified five students, including two women, who had not signed the form. Women have to sign the form to declare that they are exempt from registration.
The purpose of the service's letters is to encourage compliance, not prosecution, service officials said.
"If the student hasn't registered, we will attempt to assist in straightening it out," Messinger said. "If he refuses to comply, his name will be turned over to the Justice Department for investigation and potential prosecution."
The U.S. attorney's office in Kansas then sends another letter to the person to make sure that no mistakes have been made, Williams said. The FBI then performs an investigation
Students who refuse to register also will be forced to pay back their federal aid. Messenger said.
People can get more information about the letters or registration by calling the Selective Service's toll-free number, 1-800-621-5381.
U.S. aids freedom, Caribbean
United Press International
ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — President Reagan said yesterday that the commitment to freedom that led to the 1983 U.S. invasion of the island also demanded U.S. help to rebels in Nicaragua.
Speaking before about 20,000 people in Queen's Park in the capital of St. George's, Reagan put a rhetorical exclamation point on a five-hour visit to the tiny island by linking a pledge of economic help to impoverished Caribbean states with an assertion the United States must help the Nicaraguan people free themselves from communist tyranny.
"A freedom tide is rising in our hemisphere," said Reagan, who announced some steps to help shore up the fragile economies of the Caribbean islands. This effort is essential to promote the development of strong democracies in a region historically vital to U.S. interests, he said.
A 21-gun salute roared during the official welcoming ceremonies for the commander in chief of the assault by a 7,000-man force Oct. 25, 1983, that swept aside the remnants of a Marxist government.
Minutes after his arrival, Reagan paused briefly to lay a wreath at a memorial to the 19 Americans killed in the Grenada operation, bowing his head in prayer before the six-foot high granite monument representing parchment blowing in the wind.
Despite the enthusiastic crowd and banners proclaiming "Thanks a Million, President," security was tight across the island, which is just about twice the size of the District of Columbia. The U.S. aircraft carrier Guam was off shore.
After a local entertainer sang a song praising "Uuncle Reagan," Prime Minister Herbert Blazie introduced Reagan to the crowd as "our national hero, our own rescuer." Blaze thanked Reagan and the Caribbean leaders who supported the invasion.
Reagan — locked in a high-stakes struggle with Congress over providing $100 million or more in military and other aid to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua — said the U.S. invasion thwarted plans by Grenada's Cuban-backed rulers to turn the island into a staging area for subversion and aggression.
"I will never be sorry that I made the decision to help you," he said, drawing loud applause.
Despite the parallel he drew between Grenada and Nicaragua, Reagan told reporters earlier in the day that Nicaragua presented a different situation than Grenada, and when asked whether he was ruling out the use of U.S. troops in Managua, he replied, "We never had any plans for any such thing."
Reagan used his visit to confer with Grenada's leaders and eight other English-speaking Caribbean countries about how to strengthen the sagging regional economy.
He sketched plans to enhance the benefits of his 2-year-old Caribbean Basin Initiative through an expansion of trade and U.S. assistance, although the administration scaled back aid to the region.
But the program has not yielded the progress some expected, as evidenced by a 23 percent drop in U.S. imports from Caribbean Basin countries.
Bill makes urine tests necessary
By Abbie Jones
TOPEKA — Anyone suspected of driving under the influence of drugs could be forced to take a urine test instead of a breath or blood test, under an amendment now before a Senate committee.
Fees may increase to pay for renovation
Staff writer
Sgt. Jim Daily, of the Great Bend Police Department and initiator of the bill, said the amendment would eliminate one unnecessary step in nabbing people who drive while under the influence of drugs.
"If we suspect a person is driving under the influence of drugs we don't have to run the blood or breath test," Daily said. "We can go directly to the urine."
By Lori Poison
Tentative chronology of Phase One renovation
The renovation of the Kansas Union may cause an increase in student fees as well as a reduction in the number of student offices. Union officials say.
Staff writer
The increase would come out of the restricted portion of the student fees, Ambler said. Tuition is divided into instructional and restricted fees.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said Tuesday that the board of directors of the University of Kansas Memorial Corporation was considering a $5 increase in student fees to help finance the Union renovation.
The board will propose the increase to the Board of Regents in Anrill, he said.
"The increase is tentative," he said. "We won't know until it goes."
Jan. 1887 to Dec. 1967 — Level I security removals involve taking place with the systema* installed, Offices for staff and security may be moved to Burgeon Union.
Dec. 1865 to Jan. 1987 — Pre-
construction. Master plan chosen,
design developed, contract drawn,
bids taken and contract awarded.
Jan. 1988 to July 1989 — Level The completed; Level Two renovation The restaurant will be closed. The Oread restaurant will be booksored and will be combined.
Restricted fees include a health
fee, a union fee, a Student Senate fee and a non-revenue and women's sports fee. Instructional fees pay for all items used for course work including faculty salaries and equipment.
Kansas residents paid $615 in fees this semester and out-of-state students paid $1,517.
But there also are other sources of income for the renovation costs, Greg Benttson, president of the board of directors, said.
"A good portion of the funding was made possible by the virtue of the reserve fund." he said.
Some student organizations may face another type of problem while the renovation is taking place.
Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, said the reserve fund was the money that was left after the debt for the Burge Union was paid in 1983.
Plans call for moving all of the student offices to Level Four which will cause many offices which now are located on Level Three to temporarily relocate while the changes are being made.
Ferguson said he did not know where the offices would be moved
"We're trying to find a place," he said. "They are looking at the Burge Union, but there might be some other places, too."
during construction.
The offices will be moved in December or January, he said, and won't be moved back to the Union until about July 1987.
"The Burge is a less-centralized place on campus," he said. "Now
Dan Parkinson, Scott City graduate student and president of Praxis, said moving his office would be frustrating and time consuming.
people can just stop by and ask questions. But there is not as much traffic flow on that part of campus."
But a representative of the Board of Class Officers said temporarily relocating the offices might prove beneficial.
"It will be good because a lot of us don't get over to that part of campus very often." Janet Rodkey, Overland Park senior, said. "We'll get to see some things that we don't ordinarily see."
17
When the offices are moved to Level Four, there may be some organizations that have to give up their private office space, Ferguson said.
"We can't guarantee that every group who wants it will get a private office," he said.
Although there will be single offices available, some smaller organizations will have to share work space in one larger area.
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
News Briefs
Iran says Iraqi jet shot civilian plane
TEHRAN, Iran — An Iranian passenger plane on a domestic flight was shot down by an Iraqi fighter yet jested, and a representative of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini was among the 40 people thought killed, Iran's official news agency reported.
Iraq denied the Iranian report, saying its attacks were confined to military targets.
The Islamic Republic News Agency said several members of the Majlis, Iran's parliament, also were on the plane.
Both sides reported shooting down military aircraft. However, this could not be confirmed by independent observers.
ATLANTA — The Food and Drug Administration said yesterday that it had found no production problems at Gerber plants that would account for the glass fragments reported to have been found in baby foods in seven states.
FDA finds no glass
Gerber spokesman Steve Poole suggested that the sudden rash of complaints might be a reaction to the Tyleneol incident.
Gerber and New York agriculture officials also announced that plant inspections and sample tests had revealed no glass particles inside unopened jars of the company's food products.
AIDS chances go up
WASHINGTON - The number of people most likely to develop AIDS after being infected by the virus may be as much as 29 percent higher than previously estimated, a new study said yesterday.
Studies by researchers at the National Cancer Institute had indicated that 5 percent to 19 percent of those infected with the virus would develop acquired immune deficiency syndrome. But the NCI raised the numbers after another year of study, said Dr. James Goedert, principal author of the study in the journal Science.
From Kansan wires.
U.S. favors mutual inspection talk
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The State Department welcomed a Soviet proposal yesterday for mutual inspections to verify compliance with a nuclear test ban treaty but reiterated American reservations about such an agreement.
"To the extent that this general Soviet statement may reflect development of common ground on this critical issue, it's hopeful," department spokesman Charles Redman said. "We welcome any dialogue with the Soviets that would narrow our differences on the issue."
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, in a message to a 40-nation Disarmament Conference in Geneva, earlier repeated his call for a total ban on nuclear tests and also agreed to a longstanding U.S. demand for on-site inspections to verify compliance with any such treaty.
"We've long advocated a dialogue with the Soviet Union to arrive at the improved verification procedures necessary for any nuclear testing limitations," Redman said. "This includes on-site inspections."
But Redman said the issue of how to verify compliance with a test ban agreement was not the only problem
the administration has with such an accord.
He had the State Department reissue a statement expressing a longstanding position that such an agreement should come only in the context of deep cuts in both superpowers' nuclear arsenals.
The statement said a comprehensive test ban was "a long-term objective of the United States in the context of achieving broad, deep and verifiable arms reductions, substantially improved verification capabilities, extended confidence building measures, greater balance in conventional forces, and at a time
when a nuclear deterrent is no longer as essential an element as currently for international security and stability."
The United States and Soviet Union are negotiating in those areas. They have yet to achieve agreements.
Redman noted that President Reagan last year invited Soviet experts to visit the U.S. nuclear testing site in Nevada to measure the yield of an American nuclear test, but as yet there has been no positive response from Moscow.
was tendered," he said.
"We remain hopeful the Soviet Union will accept this invitation in the spirit of good will with which it
Gorbachev's statement did not address the Reagan invitation and proposed on-site inspections after a ban is instituted. It said the Soviet Union "is agreeable to the most strict control over a ban on nuclear weapon tests, including on-site inspections."
All but underground nuclear tests were banned by a partial test ban treaty signed in 1963. Subsequent negotiations on a complete ban stalled because the Soviets rejected U.S. demands for on-site inspections. Reagan broke off test ban talks in 1981.
Subcommittee votes to stop aid
United Press International
WASHINGTON — A House Foreign Affairs subcommittee voted unanimously yesterday to end military aid to the Philippines and to cut off economic help to President Ferdinand Marcos until "a legitimate government" rules in Manila.
The bill passed over the objections of the House and Senate Republican leadership and the warnings of two senior administration officials that the severance could shatter the unity of the Philippine military.
Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y., one of the most bitter congressional critics of Marcos, and Rep. Gerald Solomon, R-N.Y., an ardent defender of U.S. security interests in the Philippines, pressed for passage of the bill.
"We can't condone what happened in the Philippines," Solomon said of the fraud-tainted, violent election of Marcos. "There is no way we in America can promote and believe in democracy and condone this type of action."
The bill would allow the U.S. aid program to the Philippines government to restart when Reagan reports to Congress "that a legitimate government has been established in the Philippines which commands the support of the people" and Congress passes a resolution agreeing with the finding.
Congressional critics have called on President Reagan to tell Marcos to step down in favor of opponent Corazon Aquino or risk a violent overthrow by communist insurgents.
Under the bill, the current $54.7
million in military aid would be put in escrow. Economic and humanitarian aid, now set at $181.2 million, would be channeled through private voluntary organizations and the Roman Catholic Church.
Secretary of State George Shultz and Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger told congressional leaders Wednesday that a swift aid cutoff could endanger U.S. interests in the Philippines.
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole and House Republican Leader Bob Michel of Illinois said Congress should avoid a significant policy action until special envoy Philip Habib returned from Manila.
"I think it's very important that we not rush to judgment in some of these areas," Dole said.
Solomon and Solarz said a cutoff of
aid or redirecting economic assistance through private groups would have no immediate effect on Marcos's government.
Solomon and Solarz said the full Foreign Affairs Committee wanted to hear Habb's report on his talks with church, business and political leaders before it took any definitive action.
Paul Wolfowitz, assistant secretary of state for East Asia and Pacific affairs, and Richard Armitage, assistant defense secretary for international security, made no hard effort to block the bill.
But they warned that the United States could not walk out on its responsibilities in the Philippines, which is beset by a stagnant economy, political polarization and growing Communist insurgency.
Marcos' allies are inching away
Europeans may boycott inauguration
earliest possible time.
Aquino, Marcos' opponent in the disputed Feb. 7 election, met diplomats — including 12 ambassadors — from 14 European countries and Japan. She told them she was determined to assume the presidency of the Philippines at the
The Associated Press
None of the ambassadors specifically endorsed Aquino's claim that she won the election but was cheated out of victory. She had asked them not to recognize Marcos' government.
The election has been widely criticized as fraudulent.
MANILA, Philippines — Some traditional allies of President Ferdinand Marcos appeared to distance themselves from his government yesterday, as European countries considered boycotting his inauguration and several ambassadors met with Corazon Aquino.
Ambassador Wieger Hellema of the Netherlands, acting as spokesman for envoys of the 12 European Common Market countries, was asked about reported plans for ambassadors from the trade bloc not to attend the Marcos inauguration, scheduled for Tuesday. He said it
was under consideration in the capitals because of the fraud allegations.
When asked whether any of the countries were considering withdrawing recognition of Marcos' government, he said there had been no word on that.
In Strasburg, France, the European Parliament voted unanimously to blame Marcos for most of the reported abuses in the special election, called by Marcos in an effort to prove his popularity.
Japanese Ambassador Kiyoshi Sumiya, after meeting with Aquino, told Japanese reporters she had asked him not to attend the inauguration. He said he told her he would relay the message to Tokyo.
Pilots'union and Eastern resume talks
sumya said that his country had no intention of intervening in Philippine affairs but that he hoped a bloody struggle would be avoided.
Aquino, widow of assassinated opposition leader Benigno Aquino, has launched a countrywide campaign to keep Marcos from continuing his 29-year rule. Among the things being done are strike protests, school walkouts and boycots of companies associated with Marcos and his friends.
The government has provided no details of Marcos' inauguration
United Press International
MIAMI — Eastern Airlines and its pilots' union sued contract talks yesterday. Chairman Frank Borman said a few zealots were keeping the financially troubled carrier from reaching a new wage agreement.
"There are some zealots out there that don't seem to either be capable of understanding or don't want to understand what a marketplace is all about," Borman said in a televised interview on WPBT's Nightly Business Report.
The company and representatives of the Air Line Pilots Association met with a federal mediator shortly after an Eastern announcement that it would shut down and lay off nonessential employees if there is a strike.
The airline had said earlier it would fly a limited schedule during a strike, as United Airlines did last spring.
It would be in the best interests of the airline to shut down if there is a strike, Jerry Cosley, Eastern spokesman, said. "All non-essential personnel would be notified not to come back to work."
A federally mandated 30-day cooling off period expires midnight Tuesday and if no agreement is reached by then, the pilots will be free to strike. A similar period ends at midnight Feb. 28 for flight attendants.
The ALPA confirmed it was counting authorization ballots for a possible strike that could come as early as midnight Tuesday.
FIND OUT WHO THESE PEOPLE ARE
(and see who KU sends to the MTV Regional Competition)
AT PARTY No.3 (after we bust K-State,we're gonna bust M.S.)
The Final Lip-Sync Competition including...
John Murphy as Tom Cruise
The S.A.M.S. Jayhawk Shuffle!!
S
Steve Pope as Billy Idol
BEARS
9
Shawn Donohoe as
Jim McMahon
IN COOPERATION WITH:
TV-30
KLZR
7TH HEAVEN
RAMONA STUDIOS
You've seen them on campus...
Lana Pace as Ann Wilson
MTV
MUSIC TELEVISION®
swatch+
MELANIE JOHNSON
Linda Proctor as Madonna
They are the Celebrity/Rock Look-A-Like Contestants and they're S.A.M.S. buster's competing for a campus grand prize trip to the BAHAMAS (come see who wins)! Vote for your favorite Look-A-Like and help bust M.S.!
STUDENTS AGAINST MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
EVENT TAKES PLACE:
February 22
10:00 p.m.
KU Ballroom
MS
We're Out To Tie Up & Bust M.S.
Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
University Daily Kansan
3
Campus/Area
News Briefs
Indiana man pleads guilty of rape in area
An Indiana man pleaded guilty Tuesday to the Dec. 8 rape and attempted kidnapping of a KU student after forcing her to stop her car on Haskell Avenue.
Jerry Nunn, 27, will appear before District Judge James W. Faddock for sentencing at 1:30 p.m. March 24.
Nunn pleaded guilty to raping the student after he bumped her car and then pulled in front of her, forcing her to stop. He then pulled the student out of her car and raped her in a nearby field, Nunn testified.
Nunn was arrested at the crime scene after he returned to get his car out of the mud where it had become stuck.
:
2 dinners planned
The African Student Association will sponsor African Night at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 11th St. A dinner, program and exhibits will be featured.
Also tomorrow, the Ellsworth Hall Black Caucus will have its annual Soul Food Dinner for students, faculty and staff at 6:30 p.m. at Ellsworth. The Rev. Mac Charles Jones of Kansas City, Mo., will speak on the "The Importance of Equality as a Reality."
Both events are part of Black History Month at the University of Kansas.
Editor to give speech
Monroe Dodd, managing editor for the Kansas City Times, will speak at 3:30 p.m. today in 210 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Sigma Delta Chi, the KU chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, will sponsor the presentation, titled "Managing the Times: One Year into the Job."
New members and visitors are welcome. New officers also will be elected.
KU to host debate
KU will host the 29th annual Heart of America Debate Tournament tomorrow. About 50 teams from colleges across the country will participate in the tournament.
The debate topic will be whether there should be tougher academic standards for U.S. elementary and secondary schools in language arts, mathematics or natural sciences.
Teams will debate in eight preliminary rounds where they will take both sides of the issue. The top 16 teams will then move on to elimination round competition
Represented in this year's tournament are Dartmouth College, Georgetown University, Harvard University, Northwestern University, the University of North Carolina and the University of Southern California.
Preliminary rounds will be tomorrow and Sunday in Wescoe Hall. The elimination rounds will be held Monday in the Kansas Union.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy and warmer with a high around 30 and northeast winds 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be fair with a low in the teens. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with a high in the 40s.
From staff and wire reports
Student's father named to Cabinet
By Brian Kaberline
Decisions made by the Department of Agriculture affect the lives of many people in Kansas. But the appointment of a new acting secretary of agriculture on Wednesday has especially influenced one KU student.
Staff writer
The man is his father.
Wes Naylor, Washington, D.C., senior, said he was suprised when his mother called with the news that his father, Frank W. Naylor, had been appointed to one of the most influential posts in the country.
The new acting secretary, Frank Naylor,
said yesterday from his Washington home that
Naylor has served as undersecretary for small community and rural development programs for the Department of Agriculture since 1980.
he graduated from the University of Kansas in 1961 with a degree in international relations and political science.
Before that, Naylor was a senior vice president of an agency that controls various farm lending institutions in five Western states. He served in different agricultural-related government agencies during the Nixon and Ford administrations.
Naylor was appointed to his new job after secretary John Norton resigned. Naylor
President Reagan appointed Lang to replace John Block, who resigned as secretary. Frank Naylor said he would like to see Lang, a friend with similar political views, confirmed as soon as possible.
will retain the post until the U.S. Senate completes confirmation hearings for Richard Lang, probably sometime in middle or late March.
Wes Naylor said he respected his father's advancements and was trying to follow in his footsteps.
Wes Naylor said he also planned to go into politics. He will graduate this spring with a degree in political science and then plans to head for Washington.
Eventually, he hopes to establish himself and run for some public office, he said. Five summers of experience working for various senators and congressmen have convinced him he can do the job.
"I was kind of born and bred into politics," said Wes Naylor. "As long as I can remember, someone in my family has been working for some campaign."
Wes Naylor said he didn't think his father's new position would change the way he acted or was treated. He learned not to brag about his father when living in Washington because anyone he talked to might have had a congressman or senator for a father.
Parking board passes plan to thwart sneakv students
By Leslie Hirschbach
Staff writer
Students will try anything to pull a fast one on parking services, said George Crawford, chairman of the parking board. But parking service employees say they've had enough
On many occasions, students without parking permits have backed their cars up against walls to hide sticker-less bumpers, Crawford said. The parking service employees have found it impossible to put mirrors in the small space to check for permits.
"You can't imagine some of the burdens of this work," Crawford said yesterday at the University Council meeting. He presented at the meeting the parking board's plan to thwart crafty students.
The University Council gave approval to a plan to wheel-lock or tow cars that seem to be hiding bumbers with no permits or license plates with no license tags. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, and Chancellor Gene A. Budig must give the plan final approval.
The council also approved changes in residence hall parking. One parking permit for all residence halls will replace the separate parking permits to prevent people who want to visit other residence halls from receiving tickets.
services, said the rule hadn't been enforced for two years because the tickets usually were invalidated, costing the parking services time and money.
Student Senator Gordon Woods expressed concern that a unified ticket would cause students from residence halls across campus to park at Daisy Hill on basketball game days and take up parking spaces.
Don Kearns, director of parking
The parking board also presented a plan to increase parking rates for special events by 50 cents. The price of football parking would be raised from $2.50 to $3 per space per game, and basketball parking would be raised from $1.50 to $2.
Athletic Director Monte Johnson objected earlier to the plan because he said the Athletic Department would lose $20,000.
Kearns said this wouldn't be a problem because on game days, students would have to have their individual residence hall identification cards to park in the lots on Daisy Hill.
Abandoning ASK not a solution to KU's concerns, director says
Johnson said most universities benefited from the added revenue. At the University of Kansas, the Athletic Department pays a fee to University parking services for parking spaces used during athletic events.
By Barbara Shear
Staff writer
If the University of Kansas pulled out of the Associated Students of Kansas, both would suffer, the executive director of ASK said yesterday.
Chris Graves, the executive director, said that even though the University had some concerns about its involvement in ASK, pulling out of the student lobbying organization would not be the best way to resolve those concerns.
"It would be better to present a united group, rather than a divided one," she said. "If KU pulled out, it would discredit both groups."
Graves said if the University left ASK, the organization would lose the money the University pays as a member of the organization. The University would have either no representative or would have to hire a professional lobbyist to represent it to the Kansas Legislature.
Mark Tallman, director of communications for Kansas Independent College Fund and former director of ASK, said he thought the University would be making a mistake by pulling out of ASK.
"ASK made strong strides after KU joined," he said. "If they pull out, KU would be alone, with only the alumni backing them. And ASK would lose a lot of political clout as well as money."
Amy Brown, student body vice president, said the Student Senate was considering pulling out of ASK because the Senate thought it was contributing much of the money that supported ASK. In return, she said, it was not being properly represented to the Legislature by the organization.
But Graves said the University was making the wrong assumption. Delegates from the other schools belonging to ASK had adopted some of the issues presented by the University, such as support of divestment from South Africa and concern about campus lighting.
David Epstein, student body president, said he had expected opposition from the other schools represented by ASK when he announced yesterday that the University was considering pulling out of ASK.
But he said none of the schools
seemed surprised by the decision.
"I expected opposition from the other schools, but they were not surprised, shocked or even moved," he said. "I guess they felt it coming."
If the University pulls out of ASK, Graves said, the other schools probably would try to recover the financial loss by raising their student body membership fees by about 50 cents. However, the other schools want the University to remain part of the organization.
The University now pays $24,436 to ASK, almost one-third of the organization's total budget. ASK receives a total of $79,000 from the six state schools and Washburn University, Graves said.
"If KU pulls out, then the other schools may adopt bad attitudes toward KU," she said.
Main Street program for all of downtown
CITY OF NEW YORK
By Juli Warren
Carolyn Shy, director of the Main Street Program, stands on Ninth and Massachusetts streets. Shy was appointed director of the program in January.
Mary Burger/KANSAN
"Many people who have businesses off Massachusetts have felt left out of downtown promotional activities," Carolyn Shy, director of the Main Street program, said recently. "The Main Street program is for everyone downtown."
Shy said one of her first tasks was to let businesses on side streets know they're part of downtown, too.
The name of the program may be Main Street, but it doesn't just include the main drag of downtown.
"The Main Street program is an opportunity to highlight downtown Lawrence's best features and to improve on the framework already established," said Shy, who started her job as director on Jan. 16.
She said that in her opinion, the boundaries of the downtown area were South Park, Rhode Island Street, the river and Kentucky Street.
Lawrence was chosen last fall as one of five Main Street cities in Kansas.
Goals of the program, which was established and sponsored by the National Trust for Historic Preservation in Washington, D.C., are to revitalize downtown areas economically and to emphasize the existing and historic assets.
Elements of the Main Street approach to building the downtown area's total image are organization, promotion, design and economic restructuring.
But, she said, she doesn't single out businesses that she'd like changed.
'Many people who have businesses off Massachusetts have felt left out of downtown promotional activities.'
- Carolyn Shv
Mainstreet Program director
Owners of downtown businesses who want to change or brighten up the appearances of their buildings notify her, Shy said.
It could be just paint or high-pressure water cleaning that the building needs, she said.
Promotional activities planned for the next year include bed races in the fall at the same time as the 10-kilometer Fall Classic.
She said she planned to contact KU student organizations to ask them to be involved.
An example of economic restructuring, she said, might be to designate an area as slum and blight in order to build a proposed downtown mall.
The area being considered is between Sixth and Seventh streets from Kentucky Street to the alley just west of New Hampshire, according to the request for proposals to do the study.
The city could condemn and buy land needed for the mall if the property was designated slum and blight.
The mall is planned by Town Center Venture Corporation, the city's developer of record.
Developments on the situation in that block will be followed closely to insure that they would unify downtown, Shy said.
Herrick, Feinstein Partnership, Overland Park, was named this week by the Lawrence Urban Renewal Agency to do the study to determine whether it was slum and blight.
Shy said Lawrence was a step ahead in design because it already had a developmental framework for owners considering changes.
A study of downtown building design was prepared in 1984 by five urban design graduate students for the Lawrence-Douglas County planning office.
"Lawrence is really lucky in that the major patterns of design in the downtown streetscape have been outlined in the study." Shy said.
The study describes strengths, weaknesses and opportunities for improvement in downtown design. It recommends compatibility, rather than standardization, of the buildings.
Although Shy reports to the Downtown Lawrence Association board of directors, she also is guided by the National Main Street Center.
Peggy Livingood, program manager for the Kansas Main Street program, said that, as part of the program, a resource team was selected by the center for each city to visit and recommend strategies for the next year.
Lawrence Book
1986
HOUSE OF USHER'S SPRING 1986
Lawrence Book
Welcome to Lawrence
Set your sights
on savings
PHOTO ENLARGEMENT SALE!
5X7 .89
8X10 1.89
From your favorite disc, 110, 126, or 135
C-41 color print negatives.
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.•Lawrence, Ks. 66044
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Expires 2-28-86
H
4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
No margin for error
Since the first American rocketed into space in 1961, the U.S. space program has enjoyed, and earned, the admiration of the country.
The honeymoon is over.
Space exploration appealed to our imagination and its safety record appealed to our national pride. We made heroes of its astronauts, Launches and landings were always news.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration benefited from this goodwill. Broad public support distinguished NASA from other government agencies.
It dodged charges of overspending aimed at the Pentagon. It avoided the divisiveness that plagued the Environmental Protection Agency or the government welfare programs.
The explosion last month of the space shuttle Challenger has called popular support for NASA into question. Increasingly the agency is seen as just another cumbersome, inefficient federal bureaucracy.
Bureaucracy may be a fine way to send out Social Security checks or even to field a peacetime army. Bureaucracies thrive on routine.
But no longer.
In the past, the space program has been characterized by its attention to the extra margin of safety. This apparently has given away to the mentality of the Department of Defense — when in doubt, proceed.
But putting seven astronauts atop what has been described as a small atomic bomb and blasting them into space is not, and should not be treated as, routine.
This mentality creates a pattern typical of large bureaucracies.
Upper-level officials deny there are any serious safety problems with the shuttle program. Middle-level engineers then come forth with their files full of warnings and com-
paints that they say have been ignored by their superiors.
NASA engineers who worried about the potential for a catastrophic failure of the Q-rings that sealed the shuttle's rocket booster sections — the apparent culprit in the explosion — were overruled. The problem, NASA determined before the explosion, was within acceptable margins of safety.
Despite all this, no one considers — or ought to consider — halting the shuttle program. Space exploration appeals to our imaginations and a sense of global purpose and must continue.
All this catches the shuttle program as it battles an image of overcautiousness and unreliability. Launches have been canceled or delayed because of threatening weather and computer glitches.
Even the personnel changes announced yesterday by NASA seem a part of this bureaucratic pattern. Naming a former astronaut to head the shuttle program looks more like a ploy to regain public confidence than to truly guarantee safe shuttle missions.
Engineers who work for the company that manufactures the booster warned that low temperatures on launch day could harm the rubber seals. The warnings never reached NASA. The company officially recommended that the launch proceed.
The expectations of the shuttle's commercial users have led the push toward the "routine" shuttle mission. And, as usual, safeguards considered unnecessary are the first to be branded expensive
But if we plan to send our representatives into already dangerous territory, those we charge with the job have to remember the special nature of their responsibility.
There is little margin for error and no room for negligence, recklessness or baste.
Rise above the 'Cats
The Wildcats are coming to town again.
But let's not get out of hand. Healthy rivalties become unhealthy when they are tainted with ugly incidents.
The added spice of the intrastate rivalry usually makes this a weekend of note. Many KU students will not be able to resist the chance to taunt and abuse the Purple People, especially since the Jayhawks already have clinched a tie for the Big Eight title.
Such was the case when our team traveled to Manhattan earlier this season. Many Wildcat fans were, well, obnoxious.
Live chickens were flung from the upper deck of Ahearn Field House, fluttering and swooping their way back to earth and onto the heads of the fans in the lower level of the stadium.
A constant rain of paper-
Even our Baby Jayhawk mascot was a victim, getting passed hand to hand up the rows of students.
And now the Wildcats are on their way here, and many KU fans probably are eager for the chance to send them home with their tails tucked between their legs.
Besides, anyone who has watched Willie the Wildcat's antics has longed to pass him up the stands and out the door.
wads made it necessary to post guards armed with trashbags around the basketball court.
But let's show a little more class tomorrow. The poorly behaved fans in Manhattan demonstrated the actions of losers in support of a losing team.
What greater humiliation could we inflict than refusing to lower ourselves to that level?
News staff
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Lauretta McMillen ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry ... Campus editor
David Giles ... Sports editor
Brice Waddill ... Photo editor
Susanne Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nixon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Lloyd Eckert ... Classified manager
Caroline Innes ... Production manager
Pullen Lee ... National manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
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ISN'T IT GREAT ABOUT
THE EXCHANGE FOR ANATOLY
SHCHARANSKY? BOY, WAIT
UNTIL THE RUSSIANS FIND
OUT WE GAVE THEM MEIR
KAHANE!
Bovcott may have sad consequences
Cafeteria food. It's the subject of many jokes and keeps the local pizza places in business. But what can you do about it?
Boycott we did, as was reported on the front page of the Kansan on Wednesday (Feb. 19). In retrospect, however, our actions were unorganized and misdirected. The unfortunate consequences may be that a few if not all of our full-time cafeteria workers will be moved elsewhere. That's not what we had in mind at all.
When a few Hashinger Hall residents decided to take the matter into their own hands last week, the majority of our residents were eager to jump on the better vittles band-wagon. "Boycott the cafeteria!" The shot rang out. Short of bombing the salad bar, it seemed a wonderful, non-violent form of protest.
Our story begins, appropriately enough, in the bathroom. One deep, dark night last week, flyers were placed in each of the Hashinger bathrooms. These papers strong, goget-em language made one lose his or her appetite for breakfast. They related how our cafeteria served grade "D" beef and how the food supervisors received bonuses and kickbacks for operating under budget. The flyers proposed a cafeteria boycott to let the powers that-bear know we felt.
"Ah-hah!" we exclaimed as we brushed our teeth that morning.
Eric Young
Guest columnist
"This explains everything! Grade D' beef? Must be pretty bad stuff." But was it true?
The handout had been written and distributed the night before by a handful of Hashinger residents. A witness said a member of the antidibles group who was running off the copies told him that the group didn't really know if the stuff was true.
Why would our residents want to start such a thing in the first place? It is not that Hashinger's food is of a markedly lower quality than that served in the other residence halls. (Indeed, students who've transferred from the other halls say there is no difference.) There was a growing feeling, however, that the dietary management was out of touch with our concerns and didn't seem to be responding. We wanted a way to make them aware of our feelings. A boycott seemed ideal.
When word got out that the Kansan would be covering the event, the fate of the meal was sealed. No one who believed in the American way, who held dear the ideals of of Thoreau and Gandhi, would be caught dead toting a cafeteria tray that night. Anyone for mom's hot dogs, apple pie and the
family Chevrolet was for the boycott.
We soon found out, however, that there was no such thing as grade "D" (except maybe from radioactive cows?) beef. And the part about the kickbacks was looking more and more suspicious.
No retraction was made, however.
New signs were posted that the
No one who believed in the American way,who held dear the ideals of Thoreau and Gandhi,would be caught dead tooting a cafeteria tray that night.
boycott was now scheduled for the evening meal, Tuesday, Feb. 18. Meanwhile, Lenoir Ekdahl, director of food services, agreed to meet with any disgruntled, indigated individuals Monday night. She was open to discussing our grievances.
Those who met with Ekdahl that night were not representative of the general feeling here at Hashinger. Indeed, we wondered, just what was the idea behind the whole thing? What were we boycotting, and why?
While still no one could answer that
question, only 41 of the 200 or residents who usually eat did sit Tuesday night. All seemed well, the reporters came, and with that act of civil obedience we probably made it into the next issue of the KU anarchists' handbook.
There is no happy ending to the story, however. The news the next day was not what we expected. Everyone could now see the whole matter had been handled inexply by a handful of self-appointed leaders who built their case on lies.
It no longer seemed such a great day for stomach rights activists.
Far from improving communication between residents and management, we may have harmed innocent people. Members of our cafeterias full-time staff may be relocated to other residence hall kitchens.
Let's stop this thing before it goes any further. Our attack was misdirected and maybe next time we'll think twice before blindly following self-appointed leaders. Maybe some good will still come out of this and management will agree to sit down with a group of level-headed residents and talk things out. But please don't let an injustice be done by moving the kitchen employees elsewhere.
Eric Young is a junior from Columbia, Ill., studying visual communications.
Senate majority too great a cost
Dole should avoid presidential race
Politics, as it appears, has a season all of its very own. This is especially true of presidential politics.
The mating season of presidential aspirants comes earlier and earlier every four years. At this very moment, with the 1988 elections still a mere 30-plus months away, the Great Political Position Jockey is on. Tally Ho!
George Bush, also known in some circles as the vice president, is desperately trying to prove to Reagan aficionados that he is really and truly conservative enough to continue the Reagan Revolution. Still, his East Coast preppyisms are simply too, well nice for some people.
Jack Kemp, one of the Republican Party's fresher faces from New York, is flying around the country hitting all the "in" places of mainstream conservatism. He hopes to organize his game plan to the White House much in the same way that he quarterbacked the Buffalo Bills: successfully.
Gary Hart, lord of the yuppies, announced he would not run again for his Colorado Senate seat, so he could concentrate on organizing his political action committee.
Mario Cuomo, governor of New
M. JOANNE BALCÓN
Paul Campbell Staff columnist
York, has offered what has got to be the strangest reason yet for seeking political office. Specifically, he has said that if slurs against his Italian heritage continue, he will be forced to run for the Democratic nomination.
Add to this list a local celebrity — none other than Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole. Like the others, he is not officially running yet, but the man who followed Howard Baker as senate majority leader to make the Senate more independent from the White House is considering a bid for the presidency. And he shouldn't.
Not that he is in any way incapable, but worries about the Senate complicate such a move. With nearly twice as many Republicans as Democrats up for re-election in the Senate in 1986, the GOP could lose its slender 53-47 majority.
This would remove Dole from his prestigious and publicly visible role
of Senate majority leader.
If the Republicans were to lose this majority, Dole would undoubtedly receive some of the blame. Not only would he lose his ability to influence the headlines directly, but much of the vital support that he would need for a presidential campaign would jump ship to the Bush and Kemp campaigns.
If this isn't enough, troubles are brewing in fair Kansas for the sunflower son who went to Washington.
Dole's support of the president's farm policy has earned him the ire of his farming constituents. Since many in the rural community think that the administration's agricultural policies are just so much manure, Dole's support of a Reagan veto measure against emergency farm aid last year cost him dearly in support at home.
As with any crisis situation, there is an antagonist. Enter Rep. Dan Glickman, Kansas' 4th District congressman. He is thought widely to be the only Democrat who could give Dole a run for the political money.
Although it is uncertain whether Glickman could unseat Dole, Glickman is known as a successful
politician and the proverbial "friend of the farmer" in Congress.
At the last Kansas State Fair, Glickman had scheduled a "Dump Dole" rally to voice the usual concerns. Unknown to Glickman, Dole had scheduled a news conference at the same time. Hutchinson News columnist Ray Hemman haughtily charged Dole with "abusing his station in the Senate" to draw media attention away from the Dole dumpers.
Dole, citing an oversight in planting, canceled.
This incident illustrates the political reality that when one aspires to greater political office, any tensions at home permit a potential successor to mount a significant challenge.
Dole has proven himself mastery in his handling of the Senate. Many of his party numbers who did not support him originally have gained great respect for his political acumen.
However, Dole should not take this respect as any sort of affirmation that he should run for the presidency. Dole's first priority should be maintaining his party's majority in the Senate. He can best do this by staying there.
Mailbox
A look into the future
The year - 1996.
The year 1853. The place - Liability, Kans.
Chris Bunker (Kansan, Feb. 12), once a promising young newspaper editor, is not feeling well. He is not happy with his occupation. Where he had once been a crusading columnist, exposing corruption and influencing people's opinion, he now limits himself to mild, favorable editorials
about the weather and local fishing.
Increasing cost of liability protection in the form of malpractice insurance has greatly curtailed his "freedom of the press." He doesn't risk misquoting a source or making a charge that could be proven wrong. He sometimes does let his true opinion leak out in anonymous letters to the editor.
It could be worse. Some of his
reellow journalists have limited themselves to writing obituaries.
His young wife is expecting their first baby. He worries about the 200-mile trip to the nearest physician that still delivers babies and about the $20,000 it will cost.
He thinks about changing to a profession where he doesn't have this to worry about, but he realizes that now there aren't any.
Chris is not feeling well. The constant fear of legal action against him and his increasing malpractice premiums have caused him to lose hair, have strenu m pains and severe headaches. He wishes there was a physician in this part of the state.
Lawrence Mage
student health physician
Watkins Memorial Hospital
Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Carlin
Continued from p. 1
need for universities not to duplicate each other, but that other strong universities within the Regents system made KU stronger.
"We would naturally support a system that would complement and not compete," Ambler said.
The master plan envisioned by Carlin should be based on the premise that the University of Kansas is the flagship university in comprehensive research.
"Until we have a master plan for higher education, we will continue to have a patchwork quilt of universities and programs built on self-interest and distrust rather than a system of higher education with cooperation among the members," he said.
Takf of long-range planning brought up discussion of adding Washburn, currently one of the few municipally owned universities in the nation, to the current list of six state-funded universities.
Several Topeka lawmakers are trying to bring Washburn into the Regents system to alleviate the property tax burden on city residents. Opponents say there aren't enough state funds now for six schools, much less a seventh.
"The question needs to be asked: Do we need another free-standing university in the Regents system?" asked Carlin, who teaches governmental administration at Washburn.
Kansan reporter Mark Siebert contributed information to this story.
Regents
Continued from p.1
University heads who were present at the meeting declined an opportunity by the board to discuss or defend their school's policy on season tickets sales.
The board discussed the request less than 10 minutes before informally deciding not to take a position, and to continue allowing each school to set its own policy.
The question of preferential treatment of financial contributors surfaced in the 1985 legislative session after one lawmaker received complaints about a 5-year-old policy at Wichita State University requiring contributions from people seeking to buy season tickets.
In other action, the board on a 5-0 vote, with four members abstaining, agreed to accept any decision the Legislature made on a bill that would place the state's 19 community colleges under the jurisdiction of the Regents.
Currently, the state Board of Education monitors the community colleges, although each is governed by a local board of trustees. State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, asked the Regents to take a position on his bill to place community colleges in the Regents system.
Winter said the Regents would have no more governing power over the community colleges than the state board of education had but would be in a better position to coordinate all of post-secondary education in Kansas.
Continued from p.1
However, Talkington, R-Iola, said he had no immediate plans to rush the pari-mutual measure through the upper chamber. Reilly, chairman of the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee, said his panel was booked for at least 10 days.
Racing
Best!, admitted he was discouraged by the vote but said, "I'd rather be defeated for less human suffering than to be a winner working to put more dollars in the pockets of gambling promoters."
Both houses of the Kansas Legislature must give two-thirds approval to proposed constitutional amendments, such as the pari-mutuel or lottery measures, before they can be submitted to voters. The pari-mutual measure cleared the House with six votes more than the 84 necessary for a two-thirds majority.
The Rev. Richard Taylor, director of Kansans For Life at Its
Taylor said he hoped to stop pari-mutuel in the Senate while holding the lottery in the House. He said if he had to choose between the two, he would rather see parimutuel go to the voters.
"With pari-mutuel you have to go to the track to lose your paycheck or look up the illegal bookie," he said. "But with the lottery, you lose your paycheck at the local grocery store, where everybody has to go."
During the House debate, Rep. Bob Ott, R-Salina, who promoted the resolution on the floor, said pari-mutuel would help Kansas preserve or improve its standing as the fifth-leading producer of quarter horses in the country and as the greyhound capital of the world. He also said polls had shown as much as 80 percent of all Kansans wanted to vote
The current proposal would impose a tax of between 3 percent and 6 percent on all pari-mutuelle wagers and only non-profit groups would be allowed to operate parimutuel tracks.
In addition, the measure would allow pari-mutuel gambling on a county-option basis.
Veteran
Continued from p. 1
yesterday. "It's getting next to impossible to get the education and take care of a family so I can find a better job."
She said she found out about the cuts a month ago by reading a Navy publication her husband received. They have been planning for the decrease in benefits by tightening their budget.
Despite the advance notice, Vickers said she was frustrated by the reductions coming in the middle of the year and was concerned that fewer federal dollars would endanger her ability to strive for a better job.
"If they cut any more, I may have to quit school altogether," she said.
Another Vietnam veteran, Janie Clayton, Lawrence junior, said he might be forced to take a part-time job to replace the lost income.
"When you're living on a fixed income, you budget down to the last penny," Clayton said. "I'll just have to find another way to get the money."
The Grammar-Rudman cut probably would not keep him from attending the University, but he would have to make some adjustments. he said.
About 2,700 Kansans receive educational benefits from the Veterans' Administration.
According to Donald Hibler,
Veterans' Service Representative at the Topeka office of the Veterans' Commission of Kansas, about 200 veterans and dependents of veterans who attend the University would be affected by the reductions.
Gary Thompson, director of student records and KU veteran services, said veterans probably would not be informed by the VA of the cuts before they occurred because the resources to send out the letters were not available.
Narcotics
Continued from p. 1
Present law prohibits officers from conducting a urine test without first conducting a blood or breath test, he said.
Daily said the breath test did not indicate the presence of drugs and the blood test only indicated the presence of alcohol.
"It just doesn't make sense when you're dealing with someone with narcotics in their system," Daily said.
The Senate Judiciary Committee will hear testimony on the issue Monday.
Lawrence police officer Richard Jump said he had seen accidents from people who overdosed on heroin in the 1970s, but saw it less today.
"I think it's good," Jump said of the measure. "Our hands are tied in so many ways. I would be upset if I was further restricted."
Officers normally stop those who drive erratically. They must first determine whether the driver is on medication or has some medical problem, Daily said. If there is no obvious indication that the driver has been drinking, such as open containers or the smell of alcohol, officers often conduct breath or blood tests if they still suspect some type of substance abuse.
The amendment also would save time for the officers, he said.
"This stems from convenience for officers and eliminating a step that is unnecessary," Daily said. "We're eliminating a 30 to 40 minute process."
Jump said officers needed the extra time to better protect the people.
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ISLAMIC VIEWS ON
TERRORISM, JIHAD and HUMAN RIGHTS
100
A LECTURE BY:
Dr. JAMAL BADAWI
Professor at SAINT MARY'S UNIVERSITY (Halifax-Canada)
Sponsored by the ISLAMIC CENTER OF LAWRENCE & the KU DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
DATE: WED. FEB. 26,1986 TIME: 7:30 p.m. PLACE: BALL ROOM (KANSAS UNION)
Everyone is Welcome
6
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
Low air fares make skies even friendlier
By Monique O'Donnell Staff writer
Airlines have engaged in an all-out price war, making quick excursions to Color add accessible to anyone with $39 to spare or an overseas jaunt for only $149.
Beverly Berens, travel consultant at Maupinture in the Kansas Union, said airlines once again were engaging in competitive fare reductions.
In mid-February, Frontier Airlines announced $39 one-way flights to Denver and $178 round-trip flights to Los Angeles. Since then, other airlines have tried to underbid or
match Frontier's low fare.
"Airlines have been trying to underbid each other's fares for some time, but these are some of the most drastic price cuts I have ever seen." Berens said.
Continental Airlines and United Airlines have matched Frontier's fare to Denver. The only difference is that Continental and United include baggage service in the price.
Farhad Sanadizadeh, Toronto, Canada, freshmen, said he had planned to take the bus to Colorado for spring break. But now that flying is
cheaper than taking the bus, he made flight reservations.
Andy Strasser, co-owner of Ports Unlimited, a local travel agency, said the low air fares were supposed to apply until April 15. But the problem, he said, is that the rates have been changing within a minute's notice.
"We don't know what changes to expect when we come here in the morning," Strasser said. "The airlines can change the ticket price at any time."
The only way a customer can be sure to travel at a given price, he
said, is if the ticket is purchased immediately. Reservations made by a customer don't guarantee the flight at the price quoted on the day the reservations were made.
Straisser said Peoples Express, a five-year-old airline, merged with Frontier in October 1985. Peoples, which doesn't fly out of Kansas City International Airport but does fly out of St. Louis Lambert International Airport, has been underbidding all national airlines.
Since the two airlines merged, cities on Frontier's routes have been receiving the low rates that before
were available only to a limited number of cities served by Peoples.
The economical fare makes flying Peoples or Frontier very appealing to students, Berens said. Students already are inquiring about making reservations for Peoples' summer flights from Newark, N.J., to Brussels, which were $149 one-way last year.
The problem with Peoples, said Dorothy Pogge, travel consultant at Sunflower Travel Service, is that the airline only books for two months in advance. And reservations, she said, are no guarantee.
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Social Welfare dean seeks national presidency
By Grant W. Butler
Custom Silkscreen Printing
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Being president of the National Association of Social Workers would be an opportunity for Pat Ewalt to lobby Congress for improvements in social programs.
"We need to have a continued presence on Capitol Hill, informing Congress and the congressional staff on the impact of people by favorable and unfavorable social policy action," Ewalt, dean of the School of Social Welfare, said recently.
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Evalt announced her candidacy for the presidency of NASW in
December. The election will be in April.
"We must demonstrate how the work force is affected by social programs," she said.
Because NASW has over 100,000
Ewalt said her experience with NASW had given her creative ideas which would help the organization be more effective, promote social policies and enhance study practices.
The other candidate in the election is Suzanne Dworak-Peck, a social work practitioner and assistant professor of social work at the University of Southern California.
members, Ewalt said it was important to have a strong leader who would emphasize the need for budget policy changes both on the local and national level.
"People can't do their part in the economy if certain services aren't available," she said.
"If mothers with children don't have day care, it becomes impossible for them to participate in the workforce. They could hire someone to take care of the children, but that would cost more than the day care."
Many social programs face as much as a 50-percent cut if government proposals, such as the Gramm- Rudman law, are enacted. These cuts don't make economic sense, she said.
The reason for the large cuts in social programs, Ewalt said, is the administration's excessive spending on offensive weapons. Rather than looking at the country's military capabilities, the administration should decide whether it has been successful by looking at the number of homeless people, she said.
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Top Shots
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Get a close-up look at a top-notch collection of shots. These supercharged photos represent the very best of the Kodak International Newspaper Snapshot Awards. To top it off, the winning photographers weren't big shots. They were amateurs . . . people who used imagination, emotion, and Kodak film.
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Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
Nation/World
University Daily Kansan
7
On the Record
A bicycle, valued at $300, was stolen Tuesday or Wednesday from a KU student's porch in the 900 block of Mainne Street, Lawrence police said. Thieves cut a lock to remove the bike.
An AM-FM cassette player and two speakers, valued together at $200, were stolen between 10 p.m. Tuesday and 6 a.m. Wednesday from a KU student's car in the 1800 block of Missouri Street, police said.
A 1972 Opel, valued at $200, was stolen sometime Monday from the 600 block of Locust Street, police said.
An outboard motor, valued at $1,000, was stolen Tuesday from a boat in the 700 block of Locust Street, police said.
A store in the 3000 block of West Sixth Street reported the theft of 1,957.37 between Nov. 25 and Jan. 25, police said. Police said an audit showed the money missing. An investigation is taking place.
Thieves broke into a pharmacy about 1:45 a.m. yesterday in the 1400 block of West Sixth Street and stole drugs of an undetermined value and type, police said. An inventory is being taken.
Tardiness, absence excuses is creative contest for some
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Most workers explain their tardiness or absence from work with prosocial tales of dead car batteries, missed trains or common colds.
But from a creative minority come explanations such as, "I thought Halloween was a holiday," or "Someone stole one of my shoes on the bus."
One hundred executives from some of the country's 1,000 largest companies were asked in a survey to describe some of the more unusual alibis they have heard.
"We're not talking about standard reasons," said Robert Half, whose employment company commissioned the survey.
Some examples:
"Suddenly, the doors of the armored car in front of me opened up, and $10 bills started flying out, causing a traffic jam."
"I ate so much during my vacation that none of my clothes
would fit me. So I had to spend the morning having them altered."
"I was having breakfast at a coffee shop when I fell asleep at the table. The waitress didn't wake me up until 9:30 a.m."
Employees seemed partial to blaming other people for their absence or tardiness, as in, "My husband forgot where he parked our car after he came home from his office party last night," and, "My 6-year-old son set all the clocks back an hour."
Some stooped to blaming dumb animals; "My parakeet spoke for the first time, so I waited for him to it again so I could tape-record it." And man's best friend: "The dog got hold of my toupee and hid it somewhere in the basement."
Other more questionable forms of life also were accused of causing delays.
"I spotted what looked like a flying saucer, and I followed it on the highway for about 50 miles," reported one tardy employee. "I
still don't know what it was."
A similar spirit of scientific inquiry was cited by another worker, who told the boss, "I didn't get any sleep the last couple of nights, because I stayed up looking for Halley's comet."
As might be expected, the super-natural is not unusual in these tales. "My astrologer warned me not to come to work before noon."
And the brazen is never far away, either, as in the case of the unfortunate employee who explained, "I had to take my grandfather to a baseball game."
James Thomas of Burke Marketing Research Inc. of Cincinnati, the company which did the survey, could not answer the most obvious question raised by the excuses — did anyone believe them?
But Half said most bosses weren't stupid, and he offered some advice to the tardy and truant: "Sometimes, if a weird thing really did happen, you're better off not saying anything."
Albino opossum stirs attention in Colorado
United Press International
HOLLY, Colo. — An albino opossum that Merle Neugebauer captured on his farm has created a stir in the sparsely settled farm country that does not often have much to be astir about.
People have driven as far as 30 miles just to look at it. It has been described as almost glaring white, with eyes so pink there appears to be no pumils.
C. V. Mills, who came from Lamar, after he heard about it, said, "It's the ugliest blooming thing you ever saw in your life."
Neubauer said, "It's not the prettiest thing in the world there is."
Neugebauer and his son, Travis, were burning winter-dead weeds out of irrigation ditches Sunday when they spotted the possum. Negebauer said they chased it and caught it by the tail, being careful of its teeth.
In some areas of the south, possums are considered edible and cooked with sweet potatoes.
"Yeah, I've heard that," Neugebauer said. "But I couldn't do it. Not the way this one looks anyway."
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---
8
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
Test scores getting better
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Education Secretary William Bennett said yesterday in a national report card that the past decade's huge decline in the quality of education seemed to have bottomed out and students were doing better in school and dropping out less.
Nationally, the average American College Test score was up a slight 0.1 percent last year, to 18.6 on a 36-point scale, while the average Scholastic Aptitude Test score was up nine points to 906 out of 1,600, the largest annual gain in 22 years, Bennett's report said.
Graduation rates improved 1.2 percent, the department said.
"This is good news," Bennett told a news conference. "But it is also clear that we still have much to do."
Bennett said the same states perpetually at the bottom of test score lists were still there and the 1972-82 decline in education was so great it might take a decade to recover to the levels of 20 years ago.
But Bennett, cited the state-by-state comparison of ACT and SAT test scores and dropout rates for 1982 and 1985, said the states with the most room for improvement
had improved the most.
More than one million college-bound students take the ACT and SAT tests annually. Bennett dismissed criticism that it was unfair to use the results to rank state education programs. He said state officials might think their improvement was reflected in their state's ranking.
The American College Testing Program, which runs the ACT, and the Educational Testing Service, which runs the SAT, have accused the government of misusing their data.
A public interest group, FairTest, called the practice an abuse that did harm to school curricula by focusing on test scores rather than learning.
"This year's state test score gains represent a dramatic turnaround compared to findings in the first report covering the period between 1972 and 1982," Bennett said. "Over that decade the test scores in every state declined.
"The best news in the 1986 wall chart is that high school students in 35 states have improved their academic performance since 1982," he said.
The graduation rate increased in 39 states.
None of the states reached improvement.
Officials said the comparison between the 1982 and 1985 years was chosen because it appeared the improvement trend began after 1982.
goals set by President Reagan.
"It certainly looks like we've bottomed out," said Bennett, citing the new results as proof the administration's excellence in education and back-to-basics movements were working.
were working. The top-scoring states were Iowa, New Hampshire and Wisconsin, while those showed the greatest improvement were South Carolina, Utah, Alabama, Kentucky and the District of Columbia.
States in the bottom rankings were in the South, including Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina and South Carolina. Bennett said these states were among the leaders of the reform effort.
In general, the higher the test score, the higher the graduation rate.
He said the figures also indicated:
■ Education expenditures had a weak association with test scores and dropout rates, suggesting the way money was spent was more important than how much. For example, Florida increased spending, while test scores dropped.
Downpour ends in West, floods still threaten area
United Press International
The sun shone on the West yesterday, breaking the weeklong deluge that killed 18 people and caused $285 million in damage, but gorged rivers burst levees in low-lying parts of California and sent 3,500 people scrambling for safety.
The last of the Pacific storms that drenched California, Nevada and Utah with the worst floods in decades rolled into the Rocky Mountains; dumping up to 3 feet of snow in Colorado.
Residents of the low-lying communities of Thornton and Walnut Grove, Calif., in the Sacramento River delta between Sacramento and San Francisco, were forced to flee after high tides destroyed three levees along the Mokelumne River.
Runoff from the storms flooded Utah and Colorado, straining dams to the breaking point. Heavy snow in northwest Colorado snapped power lines, cutting electrical and telephone service.
Flood control officials said runoff from heavy rain could push waters even higher
in the agriculture and resort area. Three islands and thousands of inland acres were already under water. Cows were left standing forlornly in water up to their knees.
Gov. Norm Bangerter declared three more northern Utah counties as flood disaster areas, saying Cache, Wasatch and Weber counties no longer had the ability to battle the heavy runoff.
A small earthen dam in Morgan County above Peterson, weakened by seven days of rain, could break at any time, county Sheriff Bert Holbrook said.
"The water is coming down the face of the dam. Both the geological people and the engineers are telling us the dam is totally unstable," said Holbrook.
In Colorado, the snow storm piled snow on frozen rain and caused hazardous driving conditions. Heavy snow accumulations of up to 15 inches buckled power lines.
Bitterly cold air spread across the northern Plains and spilled south as far as Texas, chasing out record highs. Winds 25 to 40 mph pushed wind chills to 40 below zero across northeastern Montana.
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TIME: FRI 21, 86
Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
9
Flu, pneumonia seize states
United Press International
ATLANTA — More than 800 people across the country died from influenza and pneumonia last week. Physicians saw more patients with respiratory illnesses than at any time since 1981, federal health officials said yesterday.
Kansas was one of 19 states that reported many cases of the flu.
Karl Kappus, physician at the national Centers for Disease Control's influenza surveillance branch, said all three indexes used by the CDC to measure flu activity across the country pointed upward.
Flu and pneumonia deaths in 121
U. S. cities accounted for 6.2 percent of deaths for the week that ended Saturday. The 830 pneumonia-fu fatalities last week represented the seventh straight week of increased mortality from those two ailments.
"All states have now either identified flu viruses or are currently reporting outbreaks of influenza-like illness," Kappus said.
The numbers of influenza viruses are increasing. Eighty-three percent of the viruses are listed as type-B flu, the agent that strikes many young adults.
The CDC's "sentinel" physicians — the network of family doctors who kept tabs on the flu — reported a national average of 11.5 cases for the week ending Feb. 5 compared with the 10.8 average for the preceding week.
The other 17 percent were identified as type A(H3N2), the same virus that caused numerous epidemics in the United States and overseas.
Before the flu outbreaks started in early January, the physicians were seeing an average of three to four cases of flu per week, Kappus said.
Kappus said 37 states reported widespread or regional outbreaks
last week, the most in any week since the beginning of 1801.
He said the influenza infections, which are so prevalent, might be causing other health problems — secondary infections that strike after the flu virus weakens the body's defenses.
The other states that reported widespread cases of the flu are Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Louisiana, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming.
Company health programs aid employee performance
United Press International
CHICAGO — Company-sponsored health programs can have a dramatic effect on employee fitness and can more than double the amount of exercise workers get, an exercise researcher reported yesterday.
Such programs, which combine health screening, exercise rooms and education, often pay for themselves with the savings from reduced hospitalization and absenteeism, according to Steven Blair of the Institute of Aerobics Research in Dallas.
"That is the key question, after all," Blair said. "Exercise changes, smoking changes, fitness changes, those are all good and fine, but you also have to see how that impacts on the company."
Blair studied Johnson & Johnson's "Live for Life" program, in which several companies under its corporate wing instituted wellness programs in the late 1970s.
The company arranged exercise and aerobics classes and offered programs in smoking cessation, weight control, stress management, nutrition education and blood pressure intervention.
Comparing 1,399 employees in four of the company's subsidiaries using the full program with 748 employees in three companies that had only the health screening. Blair found employees in the full program had a 104 percent increase in daily exercise over a 24 month period, while the other employees showed only a 33 percent increase.
Fitness measurements such as lung capacity also showed dramatic improvements for the full program group, Blair said.
Blair said his study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, was important because it was the first involving company-sponsored health programs that instituted proper scientific controls for comparison purposes.
“It’s definitely been cost effective,” he said. “It has had an enormous effect on morale. Whenever we take employee attitude surveys, it is considered the top benefit or one of very top ones.”
Melvin Benjamin, director of Johnson & Johnson's "Live for Life," called the program one of the most successful the company has ever offered.
Benjamin said company figures indicated that the money the company saved on hospitalization and absenteeism more than paid for the program. The program costs between $170 to $200 per employee.
Midwives in Massachusetts open clinics during obstetrician strike
BOSTON — Midwives hung posters in supermarkets and Laundromats yesterday advertising a free makeshift clinic to serve pregnant women rebuffed by obstetricians protesting high malpractice insurance rates.
United Press International
"We want to make sure women get all the care they need," said Peggy Spindel, spokeswoman for the midwives, who plan to open their clinic tomorrow in Gloucester. Mass.
A majority of Massachusetts obstetricians have carried their
refusal to accept new patients into a fourth week.
Spindel said the midwives wanted to provide care. She denied that they were trying to take advantage of the obstetricians' protest against soaring insurance premiums.
"That would be a slimy thing to do," she said.
The midwives, licensed by the Massachusetts Midwife's Association, plan to add more clinics in other areas.
Protesting doctors said they were upset to learn the state attorney general's office sent civil investigative demands, which are orders to provide information on physicians' activities, to many hospitals.
Spindel said midwives were bringing their own supplies, such as blood
The attorney general wants to know whether the actions constitute an illegal boycott.
pressure cuffs, stethoscopes and fetuscopes.
The obstetricians insist the move to curtail services represents individual decisions rather than illegal action.
Tylenol makers say they rejected new capsule type
United Press International
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. - Tytlenl maker Johnson & Johnson said yesterday that it had considered but rejected using a new capsule in 1984 after seven people died in Chicago from cyanide-poisoning and before a New York woman died from similar poisoning this month.
The company said the capsule would not adequately prevent tampering and decided against using it.
After seven people died in 1982 in Chicago from cyanide-laced Tylonel, Johnson & Johnson put tamper-resistant seals on its bottles.
Johnson & Johnson announced Monday it would no longer produce non-prescription drugs in capsule form because of the Feb. 8 death of Diane Elsbroth in New York from cyanide-tainted Extra Strength Tylenol cansules.
Elsrösh's death still is under investigation. No new leads were reported in the case or in the case of a second bottle of contaminated Tylenol found in a Bronxville store last week.
Millard Hyland, Westchester County medical examiner, continued examining reports on 165 deaths in Westchester this year in a search for links to evanide-laced Tylolen.
The issue of capsule technology centered on R.P. Scherer Corp., a Troy, Mich., supplier of capsules to Johnson & Johnson.
Scherer had developed "Soniseal," a process that the company claimed made capsules more tamper resistant by using sound waves to lock together the two pieces of gelatin.
"We looked at all new technologies quarterly since 1982, and we have never seen one that we thought was any better than the triple seal system we have been using," said Johnson & Johnson spokesman Jim Murray.
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店飯都京
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841-4599
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Dinner 4:30 p.m.-10 p.m.
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1
10
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
Commander leads shuttle inquirv
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Former shuttle commander Richard Truly took over the space shuttle program yesterday and will direct the space agency's internal investigation into the explosion of the shuttle Challenger and the deaths of its seven crew members Jan. 28.
Truly, a rear admiral who left the National Aeronautics and Space Administration $2_{1/2}$ years ago to head the Naval Space Command, vowed to ensure that NASA's decision-making process is working properly before another shuttle is cleared for flight.
The presidential commission investigating the accident already has found that NASA's top shuttle managers were not aware that engineers at Morton Thiolok, builder of the booster rocket suspected of
causing the accident, raised strong launch objections because they feared that record-cold weather might harm critical rubber seals.
"This tragic accident is going to cause a review — and if nobody else does it, I will — to make sure that the organization and the process that NASA has is proper," Truly said at a news conference announcing his appointment.
Truly, 48, replaced Jesse Moore as associate NASA administrator in charge of the shuttle program. Moore was named director of the Johnson Space Center in Houston five days before the shuttle disaster and was to have held both positions until June.
In Brigham City, Utah, the hometown of Thiokl rocket operations, Mayor Peter Knudson said he talked with several reputable Thiokl engineers and thought NASA might
have bullied them into the final launch decision.
In Chicago, chief Thiolok spokesman Tom Russell said. "I'm not aware of any pressure of that sort. I don't think that NASA brought any pressure to bear. Anything they said did not affect our decision-making process."
National Public Radio, quoting unidentified Thiolok engineers, reported that Lawrence Mulloy, chief of NASA's booster rocket program, argued with Thiolok and said, "My God, Thiolok, when do you want me to launch, next April?"
Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., a member of the Senate subcommittee reviewing NASA's budget, called for the resignation of NASA's acting administrator, William Graham, saying Graham misled the subcommittee Wednesday about NASA's knowledge
of the launch objections.
Truly, who commanded Challenger during an August 1983 flight, said it would take him some time to review the details of what happened. He said he had the "utmost confidence in our ability within NASA to deal with this situation."
Graham, who took over the helm of NASA in November when James Beggs took leave to fight federal fraud charges, said Moore would take over direction of the Houston space center immediately. It was headed by an acting director at the time of Challenger's loss.
Graham said Truly's appointment was not made in response to the Challenger commission's request last Saturday that NASA's own probe not be conducted by officials who might be put in the position of having to investigate themselves.
New orbiting station launched by Russia
United Press International
MOSCOW — The Soviet Union launched a sophisticated orbiting space station yesterday, ushering in a third generation of technology that brings the Soviets closer to establishing a permanent home for man in space.
The space station, named "Mir," or "Peace," was operating normally after being launched with no passengers aboard early yesterday, the official Tass news agency said.
It was not known when the first cosmonauts would be launched to board the station or how many people the craft would hold.
The station has six docking ports, four more than the Soviet's Sulayut-7 station presently in orbit, and four modules for research and living quarters that can operate independently, Tass said.
The launching of the station marked the first time in the history of the Soviet space program that two stations were in orbit simultaneously.
The Peace station has an increased energy supply than earlier stations and more comfortable living quarters, including special cabinets equipped with desks, arm chairs and sleeping bags. Tass said.
The station also is equipped with advanced electronic and computer technology. Tass said.
Alexei Leenov, deputy chief of the cosmonauts training center and a member of the U.S.-Soviet space mission in 1975, told the news agency the station was a third-generation Soviet space laboratory.
The station will function as a base for assembling a multi-purpose permanently-operating manned complex for scientific and economic research, Tass said.
"The module is a kind of unmanned large-volume craft which has life-support and power systems and which is capable of performing independent maneuvers in outer space," Leonov said.
Senator asks officials from NASA to resign
WASHINGTON - Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., yesterday called for the resignation of acting National Aeronautics and Space Administration Administrator William Graham and James Beggs. now on leave from the post.
He said Graham had misled a congressional panel about knowledge within the space agency of engineers' objections to launching the ill-fated Challenger space shuttle in cold weather.
"It is becoming increasingly apparent that NASA made a high-level political decision to go ahead with a morning launch of the shuttle, despite strong objections from Morton-Thiolok engineers, who said the temperature was far too cold for a safe launch," Hollings said in a statement.
But Graham said he tried to make it clear to the committee
that the decision-making process was very complex.
Hollings serves on a Senate subcommittee monitoring the presidential commission investigating the Jan. 28 explosion of the shuttle Challenger.
Hollings was also critical of the investigating commission, headed by former Secretary of State William Rogers, saying the panel's investigation was flawed.
Morton-Thiokol, maker of the suspect solid-fuel rocket boosters, initially recommended against launching in cold temperatures, which could reduce the effectiveness of rocket segment sealing rings. But a top company official later signed off on a statement approving a launch.
"This looks like it was an avoidable accident, not an unavoidable one, as we had been led to believe," Hollings said.
For more information, contact the Office of Residential Programs, 123 Strong Hall and ask about KU's
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We promise you a rare combination of virtuosity and musicianship.
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Kalichstein, Laredo, Robinson Trio
Joseph KALICHSTEIN, Piano
Jaime LAREDO, Violin
Sharon ROBINSON, Cello
Presented by the University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
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Sunday, February 23, 1986
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
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Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
11
JOHN BURKE
Steve Mingle/KANSAN
Hartman to bid farewell to rivalry
Kansas State head coach Jack Hartman will pace up and down the sidelines of Allen Field House for the last time tomorrow when the Wildcats take on the Jayhawks at 3:05 p.m. Hartman will retire at the end of this season after 16 seasons at K-State.
Kansas State head basketball coach Jack Hartman will sit on the visitor's bench in Allen Field House for the last time when his Wildcats meet Kansas tomorrow at 3:05 p.m.
By Matt Tidwell Sports writer
Coach's retirement closes the door on an era of K-State-Kansas battles
Sports writer
Unless the two teams meet in the Big Eight post-season tournament, his part in the schools' 79-year
Kansas State
Men's Basketball
16-10 (Big) 4-7
3.05 p.m. tomorrow
(channels 9 and 27)
at Lawrence
TIGER
rivalry will be over. Hartman announced his retirement from coaching last month.
"Those types of experiences always trigger certain memories and certain nostalgia." Hartman said yesterday. "Anytime you beat Kansas in Allen Field House it's very special."
In Hartman's 10 years at Kansas State, he has a 21-22 record against the Jahawks—including six wins in Allen Field House, more than any other Big Eight coach except
"It it would be tough for me to think of any win there that was the biggest for our team," Hartman said. "I think that when you play in places with great tradition like Allen Field House, it's always an added bonus to win."
Missouri's Norm Stewart
But Hartman said his chances of getting one last win in the field house could be tough, as the Wildcats, 16-10 overall and 4-7 in the Big Eight, are faced with breaking Kansas' 31-game home court winning streak.
A Kansas win would clinch the Big Eight title.
Hartman said Kansas' quickness could cause K-State its biggest problem. He compared the Jayhawks, ranked third in the country by both national wire service polls, with Oklahoma State. The Wildcats beat Oklahoma State on Wednesday night 78-73 in Manhattan.
"They're both very quick teams, but Kansas is better and much more experienced," Hartman said. "Their experience is what makes the difference. They start three good seniors and (Danny) Manning and (Cedric) Hunter play like seniors. I think they're totally deserving of
their national ranking."
The Jayhawks, 25-3 and 10-1,
returned to Lawrence yesterday
after surviving a near-upset at
Colorado on Wednesday night.
"Colorado out-played us," Turgeon said. "I think a lot of it had to do with the way we executed, but we weren't as intense on the court. They played much better out there than they did here."
The win, combined with Oklahoma's 66-64 loss to Nebraska, assured the Jayhawks of at least a tie for the Big Eight title.
Kansas last met the Wildcats on
Feb. 1 in Manhattan and came away
with a 6450 win. Danny Manning
drove points and grabbed nine
rebounds.
Kansas State center Norris Coleman and guard Joe Wright have been Hartman's offensive weapons. In the Oklahoma State win, the two combined for 52 points, including 30 by Coleman.
"I think we've started to take 30-point games by Norris for granted," Hartman said. "I think he and Joe have carried us offensively throughout the season."
Probable Starters
Kansas
Jayhawk Notes — In the Colorado win, the Jayhawks had two players score over 20 points for the first time in eight games. Manning had 25 and forward Ron Kellogg added 20. Hartman's Allen Field House record is 6-10. He hasn't won in Lawrence since 1983. K-State's 50 points in the last game was the fewest by a Kansas opponent this season.
F 25 Danny Manning (6-11)
F 44 Ron Kellogg (6-5)
C 30 Greg Drilling (7-1)
G 35 Calvin Thompson (6-6)
G 22 Cedric Hunter (6-0)
F 32 Ben Mitchell (6-9)
F 41 Mark Dobbins (6-5)
C 44 Norris Coleman (6-8)
G 20 Joe Wright (5-4)
G 25 Ty Walker (7-3)
Javhawk wins make beautiful music
Kansas State
By Frank Ybarra
By Frank Ybarra
Staff writer
To the NFL championship the Bears shuffled, now some KU fans want to do it to the finals of the NCAA tournament.
One of those fans is Mike Kirsch, co-owner of Gammons, 1601 W. 23rd, who wrote a rap song, titled "Naismith's Delight," about the KU basketball team.
Kirsch said yesterday that he wrote the song to show his appreciation of the team's success.
After writing the song over a period of a few weeks, Kirsch asked one of his employees, John Gamble, Overland Park junior, to sing the lyrics to some background music.
The song was played first at Gammons on Wednesday night. It already has been played on a local radio station. A music video also is in the
making.
Bob Newton, station manager of KLZR-FM in Lawrence, said his station received a copy of the song and played it for the first time last night.
Even though it wasn't top-4 material, Newton said the song would be played periodically on the station as long as it was timely.
Charley Crabtree, advertising director for Sunflower Cablevision, said the cable service probably would make a video of the song, highlights from some of this year's KU basketball games.
"It's true, blue Jayhawks," he said.
He said the video probably would run as a introduction to KU basketball games televised on Sunflower Cablevision or possibly before the Larry Brown Show
hours to write the song and about 6
hours to record it.
He had to secure the rights of a record company in order to use the background music from a label record.
The song, which sounds somewhat similar to the "Super Bowl Shuffle" by the Chicago Bears, may be offered for sale, according to Kirsch, if about 200 or 300 people asked for copies. Kirsch said he probably would change the name of the song if a record was made.
The rap song features descriptions of Larry Brown and the five starting players on the team and some reserve players.
One part of the song describes the play of Calvin Thompson and Mark Turgeon:
"Next comes Calvin, who can do it all."
Alley-oop, slam dunk just give him the ball!
On the next possession, here comes the break.
Turgeon the surgeon will make you quake."
Another part describes Brown's activities on the bench:
"Brown is up and out of his seat, With his hand in the air, they can't be beat.
Look out Dallas, here they come,
The Jayhawks are shooting for No.
1."
Larry Epley, Topea junior, said he had heard the song at Gammons and thought it would motivate the fans.
However, he said, he didn't think he would buy a recording of the song.
Maryland stuns Tar Heels in OT
United Press International
Bias gave Maryland, 15-11 overall and 4-7 in the conference, a 73-72 lead in overtime. With with less than a minute remaining, North Carolina's Brad Daugherty intercepted an inbounds pass, but Bias rejected North Carolina's final shot.
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Len Bias scored 35 points, including the game-winner in overtime, and blocked a shot with 15 seconds left last night to lead Maryland to a 77-27 upset of No. 1 North Carolina in Atlantic Coast Conference action.
Keith Galtin hit 2 free throws with seven seconds left, then scored the game's final baskets with six seconds remaining.
Jeff Wolf, who scored 15 points for North Carolina, hit the front of a one-and-one, but missed the second shot. Maryland's Tom Jones hit a jumper to put the Terrapins up 71-70, their first lead since the first half.
With North Carolina leading 69-67,
Kenny Smith missed the front of a
one-and-one, and Maryland's Jeff
Baxter, who finished with 10 points,
hit a jumper with four seconds left in
regulation to carry the game into overtime at 69-all.
Michigan State 74, Michigan 59
in Big 10 Conference college basketball.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Junior guard Darryl Jarryl scored 26 points and combined with teammate Scott Skiles to spark a ball-hawking Michigan State defense as the No.19 Spartans upset no.7 Michigan, 74-59.
The victory raised the Spartans' record to 18-6 overall and 9-5 in the Big Ten. Michigan, which fell to 22-4 and 10-4, suffered its first home loss of the season.
Skiles finished with 20 points, but was even more productive on the defensive end of the floor. Skiles held Michigan's Antoine Joubert to eight points.
Michigan was led by sophomore guard Gary Grant with 16 points, including 4 steals.
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Steve Alford scored 24 points last night to help No. 14 Indiana hold off a late Illinois rally and move into the lead in the Big Ten with a 61-60 victory.
Bv a Kansan sports writer
The Kansas women's basketball team needs to play an inspired game of basketball if it is going to beat the Kansas State Wildcats, Marian
Kansas State
Women's Basketball
14-10, (B) 8-5-6)
12:15 p.m. tomorrow
Lawrence
TUCKER CITY HIGH SCHOOL
Washington, Kansas women's head coach
toach said yesterday.
Kansas is scheduled to play the Wildcats at 12:15 p.m. tomorrow in Allen Field House.
basketball coach said yesterday "The game will be all over if we don't." Washington said "It will be a great contest. The rivalry is very strong."
Jayhawks' record to 6-5 in the Big Eight and 15-9 overall. They are two games behind conference leader Oklahoma.
Kansas is coming off a 77-68 loss to Colorado, which dropped the
The key to beating K-State, Washington said, is that her team will have to put two good halves together with special attention paid to the middle.
Kansas State, 5-6, 14-10, is in sixth place.
"We have allowed too many easy buckets underneath," she said. "The middle people need to play inspired ball, or we are going to be hurting. We hurt ourselves if we are not playing hard on defense."
"Carlisa can hurt you badly," Washington said of K-State player Carlisa Thomas. "If you let her loose she can really tear a club up."
Washington said that her team needed to control the middle lane better to win.
Thomas is a 5-foot-10 forward. She averages 10.5 points and 8.6 rebounds a game.
Schedule maker keeps 'Hawks on road
In each of K-State's last two games, they have scored over 80 points — defeating Iowa State and Oklahoma State.
F 33 Lisa Dougherty (5-8)
F 25 Vickie Adkins (6-1)
C 40 Kelly Jennings (6-5)
G 24 Evelite Ott (5-7)
G 30 Toni Webb (5-8)
Probable Starters
Kansas State
F 35 Cindy Durham (6-0)
F 51 Famla Holley (6-1)
C 23 Carlisa Thomas (5-9)
G 11 Susan Green (5-8)
G 21 Theza Flitzpatrick (4-4)
Kansas
Kansas State
KU head tennis coach Scott Perelman said the matches would determine what his Jayhawks were made of because of the caliber of the competition.
The Kansas women's tennis team will continue its road schedule this weekend at Wichita with three matches in as many days beginning today.
Av Jim Suhr
Sports writer
For the Jayhawks, this weekend will be the latest edition to their continuing story of road adventures. The Jayhawks have compiled a 4-20 record without playing a match at home this season.
The Jayhawks must face New Mexico today, a team which Perelman said was similar to Kansas' in terms
Women's Tennis
of depth. Kansas will face Minnesota on Saturday. The Jayhawks will finish their road trip with a Sunday afternoon match against Wichita State, the host team and a perennial intrastate rival of Kansas.
Perelman said the tournament, which matched Kansas against what he thought were three extremely well-coached teams, would be the toughest of the season for the Javahaws.
"It's going to be a tough weekend, but it will be the best indicator of how strong we really are at this point," he said.
Last weekend, the team traveled to Springfield, Mo., where it defeated
Arkansas 5-4 on Saturday for its second win of the season over the Razorbacks. Kansas then defeated Southwest Missouri State 7-1 on Sunday.
Perealman said the victories last weekend had improved the mental attitude and confidence of the team. He said he hoped the rigorous practices had conditioned them physically.
He said that because his team matched up well with the teams it faced this weekend, Kansas' success would be determined by its performance in doubles competition.
"I think we are ready to go." Perelman said. "But as in any sport, you never know how ready you are until you get there."
Turgeon leaves mark in classroom
By a Kansan sports writer
People usually see Kansas guard Mark Turgeon turn in his best performances on the basketball court, but the Big Eight Conference honored Turgeon this week for his off-the-court accomplishments.
Turgeon earned a 2.9 grade point average last fall, good enough to land him a spot on the All-Big Eight academic team.
"I'm pretty happy," Turgeon, a junior in personnel administration, said yesterday. "I struggled a lot my first couple of years, so I'm really glad I made it."
Turgeon is joined by Colorado guard Mike Reid, Nebraska guard Brian Carr, Nebraska forward John Matzke and Oklahoma forward Dave Sieger on the first team
Turgeon said the time constraints of varsity athletes sometimes made it hard to fit studying in. Basketball players have to work studying around practice, which takes up much of their afternoons.
"I just tried much harder than ever before," he said. "I studied a lot more in the afternoons and just tried to stay on top of things and not fall behind in any of my classes."
Bv Dawn O'Mallev
Eight swimmers to make final splash
Sports writer
They will swim in their last meet of the season this weekend at the Phillips 66 pool in Bartlesville, Okla.
Five days a week, the Kansas swim team undergoes two hours of intensive in-the-pool conditioning. And three times a week the team lifts weights. The season which never seems to end will conclude this weekend for eight swimmers.
The rest of the team will be preparing for the Big Eight Championships March 6-8 at Lincoln, Neb.
The meet begins at 7 p.m. today. It continues at 9 a.m. tomorrow and
Celine Cerny, graduate assistant swim coach, will coach the eight swimmers this weekend.
100 YEARS AGO
WESTERN CHAMPIONSHIP
MISS JANE MORGAN
"I am looking for the best swims out of them this weekend," Cerny said. "This weekend is what we've been working for all year."
The eight who will go to Bartlesville are Laura Hagerson, Wichita freshman; Patti Crane, Lawton, Okla., sophomore; Anne Bloomfield, Bartlesville sophomore; Becky Heil, Little Rock, Ark., junior; Mice Crouch, Lakewood, Colo., freshman; Tom Dow, Woodlands, Texas, freshman; Jeff Stone, Topeka sophomore; and Scott Chamberlain, Newton junior.
Jeff Stone, a member of the KU swim team, works out for the Phillips 66 Swim Meet, which starts tonight, in Bartlesville, Okla. Stone and the rest of the team were practicing yesterday at Robinson Natatorium.
"I've enjoyed this season," Crane said, "but it is frustrating that I don't get to compete at the Big Eight."
She said that the disappointment lasted a day but that she decided she would go into the meet with the intention to swim for her best times.
"You take a chance. There are no guaranties of who will be chosen to go to Big Eight." said Gary Kempf, Kansas head swim coach. "These are good kids and an integral part of what we do."
"The greatest satisfaction I'll get is proving myself," Chamberlain
Chamberlain said he understood that Kempf took only the fastest swimmers to the Big Eight Championships. He said he was just going to swim and hoped to improve his times.
said. "I can do it and have fun."
Although tapering physically aids the swimmers, the men have a ritual
The swimmers, who are going to Bartlesville, had to speed up their tapering process.
Tapering, Kempf said, involves decreasing the swimmer's practice load so that they can store energy. The stored energy is used toward swimming faster.
to mentally help them — shaving their heads.
Stone is using his head to show his school spirit. He shaved an inscription "Hawks" into his hair.
)
Stone swam last season until Thanksgiving break. He said he returned this year because he missed the sport and wanted to see if he could improve over last year.
12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
Sports
CARLISLE
Bowling ballet
Ty Drake, Garden Grove, Calif. sophomore, hopes for a strike as he releases the bowling ball. Drake, a member of the Super Heroes bowling team, played last night at the Kansas Union Jay Bowl.
Sports Briefs
Washburn beats KU in battle of JV teams
Pat Denney scored 22 points and Kevin Downing added 16 to help the Washburn junior varsity defeat the Kansas junior varsity 88-67 last night in Topeka.
The Jayhawks were led by Scooter Barry's 22 points and Doug Henkilz's 13. Kansas trailed 40-37 at halftime. Washburn took command in the second half to coast to the win.
The loss dropped the Jayhawks record to 12-6. Kansas will finish its season 5 p.m. tomorrow against Kansas State. Washburn improved its record to 7-4.
Rugby season starts
The Kansas rugby team opens its spring season tomorrow against Oklahoma in Norman.
The varsity and club teams will play tomorrow and the reserve side will play Oklahoma on Sunday.
Vaulters mix words
INGLEWOOD, Calif. — After a week of trading insults, Billy Olson and Soviet rival Serguei Bubka will do their talking in the pole vaulting competition at today's Los Angeles Times Indoor Games.
holder at 19 feet $8\frac{1}{4}$ inches, has topped the indoor mat twice this season — only to have Olson beat both efforts. Sunday, he said the Dallas vaulter left much to be desired as an athlete.
He followed that remark Tuesday by noting that Olson has never competed in the World Championships or the Olympics.
MADRID — Renalo Nehemiah and Willie Gault, world-class hurdlers who gave up Olympic dreams to play professional football, should be allowed to compete in the Olympics, the head of track's international governing board said yesterday.
Plavers case argued
"If the big-money making tennis stars are allowed to play in the Olympics, there is no reason why Nehemiah and Gault should be banned," said Primo Nebiole, the Italian President of the International Amateur Athletics Federation.
Nebolio's comments come after the recent endorsement by the International Olympic Committee and President Juan Antonio Samaranch of a move to allow professionals to compete in the Games, subject to the approval by the governing body in their sport. Several sports, including tennis, already have approved the participation of professionals in the Olympics.
Sizzlers consider moving to Topeka
United Press International
Topeka is building the Kansas Expo Centre, which will include a 10,000-seat arena. The complex is scheduled for completion in March 1987. If the Sizzlers moved to Topeka in the meantime, they possibly could play their home games at Washburn University.
Topeka officials contacted the CBA a year ago and again this season about an expansion franchise. They made their presentation this year to Bernie Glannon, the head of the CBA expansion committee and owner of the Sizzlers.
"I am extremely impressed with Mayor (Douglas) Wright," Glannon said. "He's aggressive and has brought together the business community to hear the CBA story. He's come to games here with business
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Sizzlers of the Continental Basketball Association are considering a franchise move next season to Toneka.
So impressed was Glannon that for the last three weeks he has discussed with Wright and Topeka officials the possibility of moving his own franchise 70 miles west to the Kansas state capital for the 1986-87 season.
and political people. I have toured the new arena site and seen the plans. Topeka is a place the CBA would like to be."
"I feel very good that Topeka will have a CBA team, maybe as early as next year but certainly within two years when the Expo Centre is completed," Mayor Wright said. "I think our community is the ideal size for the CBA, and the Expo Centre will be an added attraction to the Sizzlers or any other team."
The Sizzlers have been a disappointment both on the court and at the gate in their first season. They are holding down last place in the seven-team Western Division with a 15-19 record and are averaging 2,820 paid admissions through their first 19 home dates.
"If the CBA put an expansion franchise in Topeka," Glannon said, "I believe they'd wait until the following year and then go into the new arena. But if the Kansas City Sizzlers were to move there, I believe it could be a possibility next season if (home dates at) Washburn were available."
Club officials had projected an average attendance of 3,500 in the team's debut season at the 8,700-seat Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo. The Sizlers have drawn crowds of more than 3,000 for only six home dates, including a season-high 7,012 in their opening game.
The Sizzlers drew crowds of 4,117 and 3,415 when they used the San Diego Chicken as a promotion and another crowd of 3,843 when the club gave away basketballs. Kansas City has had crowds of under 2,000 on five occasions.
"My first choice is to operate in Kansas City," Glannon said. "I started the franchise here, and I'd like to see it successful here. But you have to be realistic. We've got another 30 days in our season, and we
hope things turn around. But we have had no indication that things might turn around dramatically.
Judge hears a motion on Kapaun sanctions
"The city has treated us fairly, and we have an attractive lease. Mayor (Richard) Berkley has been very cooperative, and the lines of communication remain open and excellent. But it's no secret we're very disappointed with the attendance. We've had NBA-type talent, and we just haven't drawn."
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Judge Fred Jackson of in Shawnee County District Court yesterday considered a motion by the Kansas High School Activities Assocation asking him to dissolve a temporary restraining order that suspended sanctions against Wichita's Kapaun-Mt. Carmel High School.
The most successful teams in the CBA are Casper, Wyo., La Crosse, Wis., and Albany, N.Y., while teams in the larger cities such as Baltimore, Cincinnati, Detroit and Kansas City have struggled. The Toronto franchise moved to Pensacola, Fla., at midseason.
Jackson said he would make a ruling by 2:30 p.m. today whether to set aside his order or keep it in effect so Kapaun's wrestling team could compete in a regional tournament beginning tonight in El Dorado.
"The CBA trend seems to be the move from larger cities to cities in the 100,000-to-150,000 range," Wright said. "The CBA has a good style of basketball, and I'm convinced Topeka is ready for a professional sports franchise. I hope we can put it together."
He gave Randell J. Forbes, the Topeka attorney who represents the KHSAAA, until noon today to cite cases that indicate that participation in school extracurricular activities is not a right that would be lost to the students if the judge's order was lifted.
Robert J. O'Connor of Wichita, the lawyer for the nearly 200 students and their parents who fitted Tuesday seeking to overturn the sanctions imposed against Kapau by the activities association's executive board, argued that the school's nearly 550 students would be harmed if they were not allowed to compete in the wrestling and basketball playoffs.
Those sanctions included prohibiting Kapaun athletic, music and debate teams from competing
Forbes and O'Connor argued the motion in a case involving illegal payment of tuition for three student athletes at Kapaum over the past three years.
He said being allowed to compete was a property right.
"If the sanctions are imposed," O'Connor argued, "then they are irreparably harmed. These kids can't get back their chance to compete."
Rita Noll, an assistant attorney general, appeared at yesterday's hearing on the KSHSAA motion. She said Attorney General Robert Stephan thought the executive board violated the Open Meetings Act. She said his investigation was expected to be completed Monday.
O'Connor argued that the activities association issued an overly broad sanction against Kapau when it prohibited all its students — not just the three involved in the case — from participating in post-season competition.
Forbes said the three athletes and the school admitted the violations, and the sanctions imposed were no different from the National Collegiate Athletic Association's forbidding teams from competing in its championship tournaments after being found guilty of violations.
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He said if the KHSHAA was found to be correct in the sanctions it imposed, it could always impose new ones on Kapau.
The students and parents who challenged the sanctions said in their petition that the executive board's ruling should be voided. They said the board violated the state Open Meetings Act by going into executive session three times during a six-hour hearing Feb. 12 without taking a vote or stating why it was closing the meeting.
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Coaches Terry Holland of Virginia and Jim Valvano of North Carolina State both hope the NCAA selection committee will keep their schedules in mind when it picks the 64 teams for the playoffs.
ACC may dominate NCAA tournament
Valvano said, "Our problem is the level of play in our schedule right now is very high. We have North Carolina, Georgia Tech and Oklahoma left. I think anybody would have a difficult time coming away from that schedule with a win"
The regular-season ACC race is expected to go down to the final day, which is March 2, when Duke plays North Carolina. At the moment, the pace-setting Tar Heels have a 9-1 league record.
Duke, whose only two losses this season came in back-to-back visits to North Carolina and Georgia Tech, is 10-2.
But the ACC's automatic berth in the NCAA East Regional goes not to the regular-season champ but to the winner of the ACC tournament March 7-9 in Greensboro, N.C.
United Press International
ATLANTA — An all-Atlantic Coast Conference Final Four for the NCAA basketball championship isn't as unrealistic as it may sound.
If the National Collegate Athletic Association spreads its teams around as expected, the ACC, which currently has three of the top-five slots in the national rankings and three other teams that probably would be in the top 20 if they were playing in some other league, should dominate this year's national playoffs.
The ACC has long been reknown as a bastion of college basketball. But this season, the league has been virtually in a class by itself with North Carolina (25-1) No. 1, Duke (26-2) No. 2 and Georgia Tech (20-4) No. 5 in this week's rankings.
The league's only other nationally ranked team, at No. 17, is North Carolina State (17-9). But unranked Virginia (17-7) has won against both North Carolina, and North Carolina State and State has non-conference victories over No. 7 Kentucky and No. 11 Nevada-Las Vegas.
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Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
13
University Daily Kansan
The University Daily
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147 W. 21rd B. 4751,圣盾 S.术; 9:30-10:00
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $9.66.
Smarty RV, 147, Ward 3, 83rd (548), Sam St.
Safari RV, 147, Ward 3, 83rd (548), Sam St.
Hillel
917 Highland Dr Come join us!
Hillel Services Lawrence Jewish Community Center
Tonight!
7:30 p.m.
- Attention Sophomores: Owl Society is now accepting applications! * Minimum overall GPA of 3.0. * Applications in rm. 465 Kansas Union, Application No. 21908, on March 7 at 5 p.m. * rm. 465 Kansas University
ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE DJ DANCE MUSIC A mixture of newrock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 749-4733.
**2023 Toyota 4 x 4 SR-4. S/p/b, a/c, am/fm**
*cassette Call B: 891-454-994*
*Spinners Books* & *Webbery has Rosemary*
*Nueer's latest books and other titles by women*
on spirituality and the politics of women's*
life. *Spinners Book* off 80% S1. 124
*Mon.-Sat.*, Th. 11 h. 843-9747
A Readers Theatre Presentation
(Actors will perform with scripts in hand)
WILD BILL
an original play
in by
John Clifford
Admission only $2.
($1 with season ticket)
Two Performances only
Saturday, Feb. 22, 8 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 23, 2:30 p.m.
LAWRENCE COMMUNITY THEATRE
1501 New Hampshire
843-746-789 (THE-SHOW)
FOR RENT
BH house, East Lawrence, bus route, 1864
grubh, innited, Double lot, garden $375.
grubh, innited, Double lot, garden $375.
You are tired of living in a dorm? Come and live
in Berkeley Flat. Vacancies available now and
this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall.
543-3116.
**GEMENES-NEED A ROOMMAZE? Only 100/mo. and 1/1 utilities w/o ma- mo. lodge; off. 32rd and 2 bks. off. Mass. Call 842-2161 after 8:30 p.m. Keep tryin'!
Nevada housemate. Quite neighborless, sun
son-in-law, garage, studio, garden. Non-smoker. Call
(855) 357-6920.
*romanite roommate needles 2. Dbkm duplex,
*dwaindriver hook up, garage yard* *plus 12*
*feet*
very come, first served, only a few two left. At 3648 Wmth. 0 KU bus route, between Giselon and Walmart. We find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We pay hot and cold water, you choose options. Call us at 914-8446 for appointment.
Just finished remodeling. I & 2 BR apartments.
I am trying to create a new double
window glass windows. Picture: 178-297.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL and/or SUBLASELE for spring and summer. Available possibly as early as April 1. Roomy and comfortable 2 BR duplex ut. in good location w/nice vard. Extra large
spring and summer. Available possibly as early as April 1. Roomy and comfortable B HR duplex apt. in good location w/nice yard. Extra large sunroom with balcony, staircase and Retina. Couple or small family pref. $46/mo. fall; spring and summer negotiable. 843-7736. After 5 or leave message on machine.
one roommate needed. Have your own bedroom
& bathroom for only $13/month. Convenient location
on bus route and close to shopping. Call 842-3891,
late afternoon or early evening.
SUBLEASE NOW. 1.BDRM Hanover Place al.
one month free rent! 841-1212.
SUBLEASE now for summer Studio. Good location. Rent negotiable. Call 842-3883 or 749-2415.
Spring break Delaware 3-bedroom pool, hotel
and restaurant in the heart of Downtown,
breckenridge, Copper, and Keystone; 110-night
guest accommodations.
bubbles now 2-3d mpt. Very nice and close to
amputa. 842-9738.
Sublease 3 furnished bedroom apt. 3 blocks from
465 plus utilities, can make a deal.
78-065
TOWNHOUSE should be immediately Cornish Sq.
TOWNHOUSE immediately Apollo Bk. at 842-200
Meadowbreeze at 842-3541
Meadowbreeze at 842-3541
Unfurnished studio apartment for rent at 1500
Federal Way, WA 97203/mao, plus electric,
water, heat. bill 841-312-6120
Wanted: Female, non-smoking roommate to
situate yourself. $150/00/95 and 178/utilities. Call
415-327-6870.
MASTERCHEF offers completely furnished 1
and bedroom apartments all near campus. Call
(800) 695-1234.
FOR SALE
FIRST BREWD Goods look, runs great. A/C,
cassette $250 vegetable Eric A/B 641-838-6388
3 man dome tent with rain fly. Factory reconditioned. Only $100. Everything but ice 6th & 8th
Auto sound equipment: Blaupunkt BP-A14-65 80
watt 4-channel power amplifier: Blaupunkt BP-E35
5 band pre-amplify equalizer. Best offer. Call
664-2918.
BABY DAYE ELECTRIC CUPHAT; Candy-apple
825-710 ask for Ned.
825-710 ask for Ned.
Baseball cards and sports nontown. Buy, Sell
and Trade. J D'Basse球掌卡。Open 10-8 M-S.
Sportscenter.
Big Casio box-boys/synthesizer $19.12; Raleigh record bicycle 10-mi $18.13; Technure turntable, linear tracking, programmable plus cartridge $14.18; IBM peir plus software $599, 814-2399.
cash immediately for automobile exhaust catalytic converters. We pick up and pay cash.
Comic Books, Playbills, Penthouses, etc. max.
Comic Book, 11-3 Pubs, Sat. & Sun. 10-5 B1-81
Computer Zenith @ (Heathkint) and printer. Software package includes Supercalc, wordprocessor, image editor.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U; repair).
Also discharges the phone. Call 817-685-6000.
Go to www.governmenthomes.com.
HAFLER 600 watt power amplifier. Brand new with warranty. Must sell $50. Tom 424-1510.
Loudspeaker Systems. Allison Sevens. 300 pair. Alison eights, $200 pair. Cash only. 843-1413 or
One pair DCM-QED speakers $350 or best offer.
Phone 822-309.
Philip will turbine with little used audio Technica
carriage. Come see, make off before I trade it.
I will be available.
saw $1700. Alvarae double two acoustic guitar; list at $147 and $600, 813-255-404 (Topeka). Sko boots women, 7-1/2; Nordica; men's, 10-7/12, vendini $35, ea $35-566.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sense to use them: 1) As study guide 2) Analysis of Western Civilization 3) Analysis of Western Civilization 'available now at Town Crier, The Jayhawk Bookstore,' and
Plane ticket to Phoenix, Arizona for Spring Break. Great price. Call 844-219-740 or 743-6332.
I would like to buy your 1828-84 Scooter. 841-7614.
BONNISH TINRITE 19 inch COLOR TV-Cable Ready. Four months old MINT CONDITION. Mant sell-Bent offer. 841-763 Keep Trying!
Technics 45-watt watters, technics dual cassette
watters. Call TECHNICS 201 for free JTF 200 for free JTF 94-190. Call TKF 749-1576.
Receivers from $22, turntables from $15, speakers
$13 a pair. Tape decks, boxes and car stairs,
all completely reconditioned and var-
ies custom Custom Audio, 914 W. 20th St.
840-5511.
AUTO SALES
**88 Toyota Celica, 2 door Coupe, 5spd, fully**
**charged, 4WD, incl. 40, mpg; 690, 740-240 veh, or weekends**
LOST/FOUND
Roland GF70 guitar synthesizer; list at $3000,
selling $1790. Alvarene double root acoustic guitar
synthesizer; list at $2490.
SUCE TREEME EQUITY MEMT FOR SAI
CAFE STEREEM EQUITY MEMT FOR SAI
pakkeWERKSTELLEN
Loading country, must sell 1900 to 3 dr. hatchback
man's cabin, shades and shirts (48) man's cabin,
shades and shirts (48)
Car: 1976 Honda CVCC, fine condition $1500-
$480, evening, weekends.
LOST: 1 pair of Polo prescription glasses. If found call 749-7565 (reward)
Moving Mant Sell. 1980 Old-Mold Coultile station wagon V-silver Fully Opitied $100; *Call* 100.
1083 Citation 2 DHRH, PS, PB, AC, cruise, AM
fm Cassette 450 or bent offer 943-5532
Found: d keys on a leather key ring. Call 864-2203.
Found in Wesco Hale, a gray back pack with an English I and Radio & TV textbook. Call 864-4530 or come to 3116 Wesco to claim.
Must sell 79 Mazda RX-7, runs great. AM/FM,
C$150 or RX-80. 748-436 ask for
http://www.honda.com/
LOST 5 bounce car keys on metal ring. Vicinity
Hall Make Hake Mirror 846-9323 or 843-4843
DRIVE A HEAL SPORTS CAR 750 II 2+ plus
DRIVE A HEAL SPORTS CAR 750 II 2+ plus
Alpine, Alpine 1, $400 OBJ
841-5671
HELP WANTED
CASH DAILY. Dominic's Pizza is now accepting applications to hire 10 drivers. If you are a self-motivated, high energy person, you could become part of the world No. 1 Pizza Delivery team daily. Our drivers make $5-8 per hour and more. You must be 18 or older, have a driver, current driver's license and proof of insurance. Apply by phone, email or live. No Iowa. No phone calls. Please EOE, m/
Get Something Going!
Kansas Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
CRUISSEES HIRING! $18-$3000 Carribean,
CARRIE STATE HIRING! $45-$900 Newserice!
Newserice! i/103 9444-4444 UXANUSCRUSE
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16.00 - $29.20 yr.How
Call! 405-677-6000 Ext. R794 for current
HIRING TERRITORIAL MARKETING PERSONNEL. Progressive commission approximately $21,000 to $45,000 second year. Resume to Mary K. Marsh, UTD, Data 124, Highway Z, Kaiko, O6k 3691.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,960 or 25%/yr. New
Hospital Call: 857-857-6007 Ext. R-7887 for current
resume.
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer, yr. round, Europe,
S.A. Amber Australia, Asia. All fields $2000-3000
might seegee. Free info. Write LC, PO Bx 52-K1-
Corona Del Mar, CA 92025
NANNIES WANTED-Live-in child care for professional families in Boston. If you love children, we have the right job for you! Summer jobs, too. Mail resume to 973-648-2100, Branch, Boston, Mass. 02258. Call 847-619-5444. Need dependable student to work downward. 20 hr per week during spring and fall. Call 843-806-3980.
Part Time Job. Flexible between 9 a.m. and
9 p.m. for inventory control. 88 an hour. Must
have car. Call collect Dick Signorelli 212-688-0000.
Resident Career is seeking male and female
applicants for: Retail Sales, Food Service and other
oriented jobs. Openings from May to Sept.
For further information see: National Park Village,
North, c/o Scharf Schieffers, 740 Oxford Lane, Fort
AIRLINE HIRING BOOM! $14-$39,000
Stewardesses, Reservatistians! Call for Guide,
Cassette, News.crtc.us (810) 944-4444 x UW1833.
CHECKERS Pizza has innere openings for ten delivery drivers. Must be 18 years or older and have your own car and insurance. Our drivers will travel by CALL communication daily. Apply in person or call Checkers Pizza, 214 Yale, 841-8010.
Hardee's
Hardee's of Lawrence on the Kansas Turnpike is currently hiring for all shifts.
Part or part time
available
-Flexible hours
-Opportunity for
advancement
-Start at 3.50 per hour,
overnight shifts
start at 3.75.
-Hardee's is also hiring
an overnight supervisor
-Wages will be based
on food service
experience
CALL 843-8203 TODAY!
A KU student from far East Orient seeks a serious girl for warm relationship. Please reply to Neil.
PERSONAL
WANTED: ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN for immediate full or part-time work in Overland Park area. 6 mo, experience necessary. Call (912) 409-6855
RESUMES-A professional resume can get you more job interviews. Let me write one for you!
JOBS Part time hours for full 'time' pay $400-$1200
m. full "Time" pay $600-6000. Work for the fastest growing co. in American history. We need
these professionals to be provided.
n. all 813-629-7400 Dupree-Gillen & Assoc.
ERIC L: I know what it like to have a crush on a guy who, but he knows you exist, doesn't seem real. Or maybe he's just that weird.
L-L, with my BLUE CARNATION. Sorry I could not talk to you. 'Victoria's night.' You looked at me. 'No, that's just a photo of me.'
White male age 24 weeks dating/relationship with
other person. Visits job site. Serious regrets. Koez, Boston
joke. Serious regrets. Koez, Boston
joke.
-Beware Captain Energy is coming! Are YOU conserving energy?
POINSETTA BEACH INH I in the heart of the Fort Lauderdale station *STUDENT* discerns
101-380 WeeklyUp/Mailing Mailring No. 101-380 WeeklyUp/Mailing Mailring No.
Successes. P.O. Box 74625, GEOD, Woodstock,
USA
Mike the Pike. The sun is yellow. The snow is white.滑雪 in the day, Romancing at night,14 more days until Breckenridge. Love, Your Snowbunny
To Ray J.误…I see you had a first name! See you at Johnny's same both:D.J.W
Where the hell is Arnold's? Look for an eatin' place in the south east part of town. It's not too far, you can eat in your car, and car hops state to stall number 20 and you'll find your clue.
**CAMP COUNSELORS - M/F** Outstanding Slim and Trim Down Camp; Tennis, Dance. Dismantle Camp; Discipline plus. Separate girls' and boys camp. 7 weeks Camp Canelo on College Campees at a California Contact: Michel Friedman, Director, California. Contact: Michel Friedman, Director, #9 Hewlett Dr. No. Woodmere, N.Y. N 13581.
fashion on
eyeland
THE ONLINE BRANDING
041-8100
6th and Lawrence
Park, New York 174.101.101
"the best vêture in style"
BUS. PERSONAL
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattress
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.-Sat. 12:50 p.m.
841-9443
Blue Heron Futons
**LOSE Weight!** Gain Weight! or Just Feel Great! HERBAL NUTRITIONAL PROGRAM gives you good, basic sound nutrition that everyone is working for. Call 919-325-4000 (Dafne-Gross & Asa)
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
The Union's recording
of the day's entrees & soups
841-9443
Imant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course, flight.
Creative, thinking singles find kindred spirits through the directory for educated singles. LOVELINE, P.O. Box 30620, Lawrence, Ka 60046. One-time membership $4.00.
ON CAMPUS
LOSE WEIGHT NOW. 100%, guaranteed FDA approved on Herbal Products 8427060.
Jayhawker Towers
tool, rhinoweb3.0bbl - 1124 also or course,
portraits, Swels Studio. 749-1611.
2-Br. Apts. for KU students
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- Individual Contract Option
- 9½-Month Leases
- 9½-Month Leases
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors
- Academic Resource Center
- Air Conditioned Swimming Pool
- Swimming Pool
- On Bus Line
- Furnished or Unfurnished
- Laundry Facilities
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advance output abortion, quality medical care, confidentiality assured. Greater area. Call for appointment. 913-346-1400
a different deli special every day
DELI SPECIALS
Today's Special:
$1.90
THE KANSAS UNION DELI
SANDWICH
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation involved. 841-7749
GAYLEISBIAN? Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to: TRANGLE TIMES, P.0 Box 2642, KCMO 64196.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U; repair).
Also偿付 tax property. Call 800-687-0000.
Call 800-687-0000.
Modeling and theater portfolio -- shooting a beginner to professionals, call for information
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-coming event 7 & M Favors offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specialties plus speed and reliable delivery. You design it or let it be printed. 2201 W. Baldwin (Delphin's) 814-4349
Happy Birthday, Jennifer & Terri!
A Present for You
50% Off
any membership
expires 2/22/86
Rent-19' Color TV $28.88 a month. Curtis
Townsend $34.83 - 847.53s. Mon - Sat, 9-11
a.m.
Thousands of R & R Albums—$2 or less. Also collectors items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quintnills 311 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all style music.
Rent'19.0* T.C. V. $28.58 m. Smith's YM.
1447 W. 32nd-8425. S715th: Maturity: 9:30-9:40; Sun: 1-5
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre
Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort
Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aranas
from only $81. Deluxe lodging, parties, goodie
bags, more..Hurry, call Sunchease Tours for more
information and reservations to lift free
1-800-321-5911 or contact a local Sunchease
county office. Visit your Spring
break counts..count on Sunchease.
Come Join The Party
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed Shirt 2349-7811.
Free refreshments & snacks
Class Ring Day - Why wait for the ring man when its ring day at hourly House. 953 Mass.
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
25th & Iowa 841-6232
STOP MAKING SENSE! Becoming an ERASEHEN from studying? Is your brain turning to LQUID SKY GO! Going NAMAS FAGURING HUNGER for hot bananas, wrap up your CRAWLING HAND and use alternative. No member! Open 12-8, Mon.-Sat., 8-4, Sun. 6mm, Mass. 749-1912.
SERVICES OFFERED
BIRTHRIGHT— Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-8421.
Native German, French background, offers expert, informal tutoring both languages, 843-8400.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
MATH TUTOR. Bob Meers holds an M.A. in Math from K.U. where 102, 112, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professionally in 1975 and often tutors elementary statistics. $6 per 40 minute session. Call 843-9832. NEED TO KAIL 'WELL LISTEN.' Lesbian/Gay Peer Counseling. Completely confidential. Call U.K. Info 843-8368, or Headquarters 841-2344.
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large.
Accurate and affordable typing. Judy, 824-7945.
1-1-1 TRIG WORD PROCESSING experienced, reliable, reliable, reliable Job acceptance, Call 360
1-3 Dependent, Accurate, Professional, WORD
1-3 Dependent, Accurate, Professional, papers,
e.g., data.DATA 841 874 670
24-Hour Typing. 10th semester in Lawrence
Hemmes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus.
Visit the Web site www.lexington.edu/hemmes.
A2 professional typing; Term papers, Themes.
I3. Requires typing. Using IMB Selective
III. Resistance. 843-3248.
A.L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers
N483-8687 5/30.
Hackerson, 24-hour typing. Lypm word processing.
Quick and reliable service. Lynn 941-5894.
BLOOM COUNTY
THE FAR SIDE
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing and
invoicing (IBT). 5-6 M-F. Many day set
session for the IBT.
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
Accurate word, processing, experienced,
responsible rates. Call Usanar 5-10 p.m.
or email usanar@tech.sunny.edu.
Ace Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable,
friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes,
term paper, themes, dissertations. 14-hour-service.
Alpha Omega Computer Services. Word Processing/
Typing. Corrections. Proofreading, Graphics,
Wordstar Document updraget. Free estimates.
DENDEABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAPPER— Typing Service.
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape
843-8077.
DISSERTATION / TIRESES / LAW PAPERS/
typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE available on shorter student papers up to 30 p.m.
Mommy's "Mommy's" 943-3878 before 9 a.m. Flight.
Dissertations, Theses. Term Papers. Over 15 yrs.
experience. Phone: 842-2310; after 5:30; BAR.
B.A. ENGLISH, TYPING-TUTORIAL, Spelling
onboarding, overnight service available.
Great rates on this course.
Let me handle your typing needs. - Typed to your specifications, Reasonable, 16 years experience.
Letter perfect papers and resumes. WRITING
LIPELINE, 841-3469.
The WORLDTOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you have wordprocessing? 843-3147
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Ttyping Spelling/punctuation corrected reasonable rates. Cassette audits
QUALITY TYPING. Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscript resumes, thesis, letter of recommendation
EXPERIENCEED TYPET. Term papers, theses.
IMC Correcting Solicitie. I will correct spelling.
MLL Correcting Solicitie.
TYPING. Call 841-3841 evenings and weekends
WANTED
Drummer and Bassist need for a new formed progressive rock hand. We have no pretensions as an
artist.
Female roommate needed for 2 BR duplex. Close to QR $120/mo plus 1/2 utility. 922-308-2588
LET'S CHECK OUT A PLAYBOY.
WHO'S LOOKING?
WHO'S LOOKING?
EVERYBODY THAT'S WHO.
Housemate in 5-bedroom house. Pets. Furnished, but your own bedroom 4000 +1/2 units + utilities plus
For summer and/or fall, female roommate(s) for
18th grade: 410 plus 1/2 ushers
Lady 794-601-3584
Male 794-601-3584
Non-smoking, male to share nice condo, with fireplace, cable TV, dishwasher, washer/dryer, microwave, etc. Only $175.00 monthly all utilities paid. Curt 491-4712.
WANTED: Roommate to share condo. Two large bedrooms, fireplace, nice quiet study, dishwasher, plenty of space, and I'm easy to get along with. 841-4835.
Get
Wanted: Roommate to share three
house. Very nice & clean neighborhood.
842-9738.
Wanted- 4'14" mug wheels in good condition. Call 864-6794 or 864-6675.
Wanted: Male roommate for large 3 bedroom
household. $120/month plus 1/3 utilities. 824-481-881.
Make the cash flow.
Get Something Going!
Get business back in the black by increasing sales with a hard-working classified ad. Many people classified daily and associate it with quality, value, and affordable prices. Place your name among customers at www.cash-finder.com cash in new inventory. Place a classified ad.
Kansas Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4588
By GARY LARSON
2. 21 Jason
2.21
The invaluable lizard setter.
MILQ.
MY DAD SEZ
"I'LL GET
"FOLD OUT,".
"MY MOM ON
MISS JULY,
CANDI CRACHERS."
MY NESSE
IF I REWY
THIS STUFF.
by Berke Breathed
"CRANIT DIGGS
'THE BEE GEES,
FRIEND OF DISCO.'
HAP NEED
MOUSSTARCHES."
YEAH?
HOW ABOUT
NEE PRIMLES?
14
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Friday, Feb. 21, 1986
Devotion to KU drives man
[Image of a man standing on a staircase]
Brvan Graves/KANSAN
Dick Wintermote, special projects director for the Kansas University Endowment Association, stands on the stairway in the Adams Alumni Center. Wintermote helped plan and finance the alumni center while he was the executive director of the Endowment Association.
By Tim Hrenchir
Staff writer
It's 6:30 a.m. and much of Lawrence is asleep.
But Dick Wintermote's day is already in full swing. The special projects director for Kansas University Endowment Association is sitting at his regular table at the Village Inn Restaurant, 821 Iowa ST, reading through three newspapers.
If he finds a story that concerns people at the Endowment or Alumni associations, he'll clip the story and give it to them.
After breakfast, Wintermote drives to his office in Youngbear Hall, where he's been the Endowment Association's special projects director since last July. He works about 40 hours a week, but Wintermote calls it semi-retirement.
For 32 years, he worked 70 to 80 hours a week. Wintormote was executive director of the University of Kansas Alumni Association for 20 years until he stepped down in July 1983.
While he was director, the Alumni Association gained a reputation as one of the country's best.
"He was absolutely perfect for the job," said Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association.
Winternote began working at the Alumni Association in 1951 as assistant secretary. At the time, the Association had a three-room office in Strong Hall.
The office staff consisted of eight people, and the annual operating budget was $60,000.
In 1963, Wintermor became executive director, replacing Fred Ellsworth, who had headed the Association for 38 years.
When Winternote stepped down 20 years later, the staff had grown to 30 people, a Kansas City office had been opened and the annual operating budget was $1 million.
A painting of Wintermote now hangs behind the receptionist's desk in the Alumni Association office.
As executive director, Wintermote's grueling work schedule involved working full days at the office, then meeting with alumni at night and on weekends.
He traveled often, he said, which separated him from his wife, Barbara, and their two children
Endowment trustee Dolph Simons Jr., who worked with Wintermote in Alumni Association activities for more than three decades, said, "He has a genuine love affair with the University."
Others who worked with Winter-
mote for years agreed that he was demanding but compassionate.
B. J. Pattee, director of membership development, worked with Wintermute in the Alumni Association for 17 years.
Patttee said, "Dick was a taskmaster — he expected us to do the job and do it well, but he was fun to work with.
"Sometimes he would get pretty mad at us, but that was part of his job." Pattee said.
"He could churn out more work than anyone I've ever known, and his work habits rubbed off on everybody else."
Wintermute's hard work paid off for the Alumni Association.
Seymour said, "Dick has made an immense number of friends for the University."
He said Winternite's personality naturally was appealing.
"People tend to think, 'If my friend, Dick Wintermote, is working so hard for KU, it must really be a
worthwhile University,''' Seymour said.
Olin Petfish, Endowment Association trustee, said, "He can walk into a large group of alumni and know each one of them by name, even if he hasn't seen half of them for 10 years.
Pattee said Wintermote was very understanding with employees.
"His greatest ingredient is his personal warmth and love of others."
"If we had a sick kid or some other crisis at home, he would let us stay home with the kids," she said. "He always realized that the family came first. And his door was always open, no matter how busy he was."
Wintermote says he is particularly proud of Adams Alumni Center, which was built while he was executive secretary.
"Dick had close relationships with the people who were able to make large contributions to that building," Petefish said. "His relationship with the people in Phillips Oil Company were deep and long-lasting."
When the Center was nearly completed, Wintermote decided to step down as executive secretary. He said he wanted to spend more time with his family.
For two years, Wintermote was joint director of special projects for the Alumni and Endowment associations. Last July he began working solely for the Endowment Association in fund-raising projects.
"The Alumni Center had been completed, and we had no big deals in the fire." Wintermote said. "So now I have nights and weekends to play with my kids and my grandchildren, which is terribly important."
"Anytime someone outside the University has something they want to know about, they're going to contact a person they know and trust," Seymour said.
Though the job isn't as demanding as previous ones, it keeps Wintermote busy.
"Generally, that's Dick Winterstein."
Students jump at chance to start exercise-diet club
By Peggy Kramer
Staff writer
What started out as a joke for two Ellsworth Hall residents has turned into a program dedicated to helping others get into shape.
Drew Blossom, Topeka junior and Ellsworth resident, said he and Bruce Miller discussed starting a diet club at Ellsworth. They didn't think residents would be very receptive.
Miller, Fern Creek, Ky., junior,
said, "When 50 people signed up for the diet club we decided to take it seriously."
The club now is gathering information. Last week, questionnaires were sent to the students who showed interest, Miller said.
Jeff Fehr, Chanute sophomore, was one resident who filled out the questionnaire.
Fehr said, "My freshman year took its toll around the middle, and I would like to get back into shape."
Miller said the students had been receptive, and the diet club would be organized by the end of the semester. The club also could be
formed in the other campus residence halls.
Students have indicated that the top priority is exercise, Blossom said, and working out with a group would provide the incentive.
Miller said the club would be a combination of an aerobics program and diet tips. He said another idea was to invite dietitians and fitness experts for guest lectures.
Kathy Kilo, St. Louis sophomore, said she thought the diet club would be a great way to get in shape for the summer.
One of the most important things to remember, Kohl said, is not to skip meals. Students should not go more than four to five hours without eating.
Ann Kohl, registered dietitian at Watkins Memorial Hospital, said there were several tips students could follow.
Cutting from the diet fatty foods such as bacon, ice cream, cheese and gravies is another health tip.
"Fat causes more problems than sugar," she said. "Even Coke and candy bars don't have as many calories as fat."
Theologian urges women to examine religious roles
By Tom Farmer Staff writer
The ultimate goal of feminism is a future in which women and men are treated equally, a renowned theologian said last night.
Rosemary Reuther, the theologian, spoke to a crowd of about 400 people about "Feminist Spirituality and Historical Religion: Renewal or New Creation."
Reuther's speech was part of the Humanities Lecture Series sponsored by the Joyce and Elizabeth Hall Center for the Humanities.
Reuther described her speech as a self-critique aimed at renewing ethical conduct in religious practice.
The question of renewal, or new creation, asks whether women are engaged in renewing existing religious traditions, or if they are seeking a departure in their feminism to constitute new religious traditions. Reuther said.
Women in the history of theology usually have played subordinate roles. Reuther said. The reason for
this may be that men assumed dominant roles based on interpretations of the Bible.
"When you have one God who is presumed to be male, that tends to set up a hierarchy of God over humanity as parallel to the hierarchy of men over women." Reuther said.
In religious traditions, Reuther said, males seem to develop through
The first stage is when the son is most dependent on his mother. However, he soon outgrows this need and sees the mother in a less important role.
Finally, the male reaches a point where he relegates women to a subordinate religious role.
"Women become primarily consumers of religion, if you will." Reuther said, "while teaching duties remain in a male class."
She said that women needed to ask themselves at what point they should depart from old roles and into the generation of new stories and rituals.
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MONDAY, FEB. 24, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 103 (USPS 650-640)
Dance with the sun
Mild Details page 3.
Mary Louise
CARNIVAL
Alberta Wright, a clerk in the occupational therapy department, dances in a traditional Spanish costume at the eight annual Brazilian Carnival. She won first prize in the female category for best costume Saturday night.
Locals join celebration from Brazil
By Monique O'Donnell Staff writer
Masquerades, music and madness are becoming part of Lawrence's Brazilian Carnival tradition
Students, Lawrence residents and people from around Kansas gathered Saturday night to indulge in a carnival celebration — Brazilian style. Long lines of people in colorful costumes were turned away by security officers at the door of the Elk's Lodge. 3705 W. Clinton Parkway.
Monday Morning
Lawrence's eighth annual Brazilian Carnival, sponsored by the Brazilian and Portuguese club, attracted people of all nationalities.
Inside, it was standing room only. The only place with any room to move was the dance floor, where people danced to traditional Latin American carnival music.
Ioma Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, junior, and Marcos Melo, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, senior, were both dressed up as elves, in short, green silk shirts and matching caps. They said they didn't mind the clutter.
"It's a great atmosphere here." Melo said. "It's fun when it’s this crowded, because people have to dance if they want to have a little more room."
The party, which started at 9 p.m., was getting overcrowded by about 11 p.m. The 600 tickets issued for the event had all been sold, but thruces of people kept coming.
Jose Neto, professor of Spanish and Portuguese at the Benedictine College in Atchison, said he enjoyed being with all the fellow Brazilians he met at the party. It didn't bother him that it was too crowded in the lodge.
"Hearing the rhythm of the Samba and speaking Portuguese makes me feel at home," Neto said
Charles Saler, a security officer from Benchmark security in Lawrence, said he turned away at least 200 people at the door. And Marie Robinson, manager of the Elks Lodge, said she thought that there were far too many people at the lodge, but that they were a nice crowd and hadn't caused any problems.
"I know there are well over 1,000 people here," Robinson said. "I'd like to see our junior's face in the morning when he comes in to clean up."
Angela Duarte, president of the Brazilian and Portuguese club, said people usually acted insanely at such events, but that was part of the Brazilian carnival tradition.
During the carnival season, which in Brazil lasts for five to seven days before Lent, she said, people can indulge in anything they want.
"The Brazilian carnival is based on a Catholic tradition," Duarte said. "There's no promiscuity throughout the year, but then at the carnival people do whatever the flesh desires and on Ash Wednesday they repent."
This year the Brazilian and Portuguese club had difficulty renting a place for the carnival before Lent. Duarte said many people kept asking her when they would have the carnival.
She said she didn't consider it a problem that
the carnival in Lawrence was held after Lent began.
"The carnivals we hold in Lawrence are usually so well-behaved that we don't feel bad."
Costumes on Saturday night gave a slight indication of the colorfulness of the traditional
carnival dress. Gustavo Quesada, San Jose, Costa Rica, sophomore, was wearing a short skirt, bandeau and turban in a bright floral print. Quesada wore false eyelashes and bananas and grapes adorned his turban. Quesada said he was dressed as Carmen Miranda, a well-known Brazilian actress.
Rebels take over station, Marcos cites emergency
United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — President Ferdinand Marcos went on state-run television to declare a state of emergency today and rebels captured the station and pulled the plug on the embattled 68-year-old president as he spoke.
Mutinying military officers formed a provisional government headed by Corazon Aquino — the loser in the
See related stories p. 8.
government-controlled vote count in a fraud-tainted Feb. 7 election that at least one independent count showed she won.
The rebels battled loyalist forces around the presidential palace where Marcos was held up with his family and supporters today — one day before Marcos's scheduled inauguration.
A rebel helicopter roared over the palace grounds, drawing fire from ground forces. The pilot said he fired six rockets into a palace building.
An ambulance raced through the gates of the heavily guarded palace about five minutes after shots were fired near its gates. Minutes later, the ambulance left with a man in a military uniform lying in the back.
Mutineers also destroyed five helicopters on the ground at the Phillipine air base.
Rebel forces, who numbered only a few hundred when the rebellion
began last Saturday but picked up formidable military and civilian strength yesterday, moved to the offensive early today.
Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile, who with Lt. Gen. Fidel Ramos led the rebellion, said Aquino was head of the new provisional government and her running mate, Salvador Laurel, was named vice president.
Aquino was expected to appear later today at Camp Crane, where 50,000 Filipinos celebrated what they said was a "people-powered victory" over the 20-year Philippine ruler.
In an interview on church-run Radio Veritas, Aquino urged all Filipinos to join with her in rebuilding the nation.
"We have recovered our freedom, our rights and our dignity with much courage and, we thank God, with little blood," she said.
Marcos, in a television broadcast cut short by the rebel victory over state-run television, declared a state of emergency but added that he remained firmly in control of the country.
He authorized loyal military units to use small-arms fire against the rebels and said he had been in contact with the U.S. government on the
See REVOLT, p. 5, col. 1
Marcos warned not to use force
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The White House today called for an end to any violence and the "peaceful transition to a new government," in the Philippines amid reports loyalist troops attacked rebel forces, Deputy Press Secretaryary Laurey Speaks said.
"We have received disturbing reports of a possible attack by forces loyal to General (Fabian) Ver against elements of the Philippine armed forces that have come to the support of (Lt.) General (Fidel) Ramos and Minister (Juan Ponce) Enrile." Speakes said by telephone around 5:30 a.m. EST today.
"We urge those contemplating such action to stop."
"President Marcos has pledged to refrain from initiating violence and we appeal to him and those loyal to him and all other Filipino people to continue do so.
"Attempts to prolong the life of the present regime by violence are futile."
be achieved through a peaceful transition to a new government."
Speakes noted that the White House's labeling "futile" any attempt by Marcos to remain in power through violence and calling for a "transition to a new government" are "something we have never said before."
He said President Reagan has "no plans for a direct phone call" to Marcos to ask him to step down and that his advisors do not want to say flatly that they want Marcos out, but "clearly that is what they mean."
"A solution to this crisis can only
Marcos, however, has vowed he will not step down and has repeatedly hinted he would use violence in attempt to quash the rebellion, supported in the streets of the Philippines by hundreds of thousands of demonstrating Filipinos.
President Reagan yesterday threatened to cut off all U.S. military aid to the Philippines if Marcos attacks the rebel forces supporting opposition leader Corazon Aquino.
Kids push for state to honor box turtle
---
Bv Mark Siebert
Staff writer
Eleven-year-old Andrea Stetz and her 16 classmates in the sixth grade at Caldwell Elementary School want to give Kansas a birthday present.
The class from Caldwell, a small town south of Wichita, wants the Kansas Legislature to pass a bill designating the ornate box turtle — technically Terrapene ornata, Agassiz — as the official state rentile.
And they've been putting pressure on state legislators to get it done.
Stetz said she had written about 30 letters asking people to support the turtle campaign.
She said she thought it should be the state reptile because most people like it and it wore the Kansas colors of brown and yellow.
State legislators deal with special interest groups and lobbyists almost every day, but they are finding these youngsters a little hard to turn down.
the other fine symbols of our state." wrote Stetz.
Larry Miller, the sixth-grade teacher at Caldwell, said nearly 75 out of the 165 state legislators had either expressed support for the bill or said they would give it serious consideration — including Speaker of the House and gubernatorial candidate State Rep. Mike Hayden, A-Town.
"Everyone in my class hopes that you will support the orate box turtle and work to have it named the state reptile," wrote Stetz in her hand-printed letter to State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R.Lawrence.
Tammy Wittum, another member of the sixth-grade class, said she thought the turtle would be a good present for the state on its 125th birthday.
"They feel that the ornate box turtle would be an excellent addition to
No legislators have yet to stick their necks out to oppose the ornate box turtle.
True. The state flower is the sunflower, the meadowlark is the state bird, the official state tree is the eastern cottonwood. The state even has an official insect — the honey bee.
"A lot of people know it and they're fun," Wittum said. "It's not mean and Kansas doesn't have a state reptile."
Joe Collins, a KU zoologist, said he didn't think any reptile would be getting slighted if the ornate box turtle were named to the honorable position.
Costs for Union renovation increase
"Most people don't like lizards and
By Lori Polson
See TURTLE, p. 5, col. 2
Staff writer
The Board of Regents approved a revised architectural plan Friday for the renovation of the Kansas Union which would increase the estimated cost of phase one of the renovation by $1.5 million.
Jim Long, director of the Union, said yesterday that the increase would raise the cost of the phase one renovation from $5 million to $6.5 million.
"The $5 million was a guess estimate we made in 1984," he said. "As we have gotten further into the planning,
we realize that it is going to cost more."
Work on phase one of the renovation is tentatively scheduled to begin in December. Phase one projects include moving the food service area to Level Three, consolidating the bookstores on Level Two and moving the student offices to Level Four.
"When we have to make changes in the system of this nature we receive no federal aid," he said. "We try to finance them internally or we try to get the state to finance them or we borrow money from another fund to nav for them."
The necessity of installing a $500,000 air conditioning unit also has increased phase one's cost. Long said.
Keith Nitcher, director of business affairs, said the renovation planners determined the cost increase would be necessary because of mechanical improvements that needed to be made.
on asbestos removal and on installation of a new air conditioning unit.
Long said he did not know the amount of asbestos which was present in the Union building.
Union officials expected that asbestos removal would be part of the job, Long said. It seemed logical
The construction firm will examine areas for asbestos before each primary renovation step begins, he said. The actual asbestos removal will take place in stages, with areas being cleared of asbestos before construction work begins.
to combine the removal with renovation.
The University will not receive federal money to help pay for asbestos removal. Nitcher said.
Higher enrollment strains resources
By Sandra Crider
A rise in enrollment is not always a positive sign, according to some KU administrators.
Some professional school administrators said yesterday that the negative side of the increase stemmed from higher enrollment combined with fewer state resources available to the University.
cent over last spring.
"I am concerned about this kind of growth because of our already-stretched resources," Del Brinkman, dean of journalism, said.
The School of Journalism had an undergraduate gain of about 13 per
John Tolleson, dean of business, also said he was concerned about the steady upward trend in enrollment in the School of Business.
"We've had real problems in the current year providing classes for all students."
Enrollment has risen by 164 students, almost 14 percent, since last year. This increase, according to Tollefson, has created a large squeeze on the school's resources.
Social Welfare and the School of Medicine.
Brinkman said, "This growth is
Other enrollment increases were in the School of Engineering, the School of Fine Arts, the School of Law, the School of Pharmacy, the School of
The school has grown steadily in the last few years, but this will be the first semester that enrollment in the school, including graduate students, will be over 800.
Brinkman attributed increased enrollment in the School of Journalism to an attractive job market for journalists and to the high reputation of the school's faculty, staff and programs.
Dana Leibengood, associate dean of journalism, estimated the total
more dramatic than we've seen in a long time."
The school may be facing shortages in section openings and in faculty members to teach additional students, he said, because state funds are not accessible for expansion.
"I'm pleased on the one hand that students seem to be giving our program a vote of confidence," Brinkman said. "But I'm concerned how we will keep that high quality up in that kind of enrollment pressure."
Tollefson said one possible reason
See ENROLL, p. 5, col. 2
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Monday, Feb. 24, 1986
News Briefs
15 drown after boat capsizes in India
NEW DELHI, India — A boat capsized yesterday on the Meshva River in western Gujarat state, drowning 12 schoolgirls and three teachers, the Press Trust of India reported.
The accident occurred near the town of Shamaiji about 400 miles southwest of New Delhi, the news agency said. The cause was not immediately known.
List may aid police
MIDDLEBURY, Vt. — A list of names found after police arrested the son of former vice-presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro on drug charges may be to arrest other students at Middlebury College, police said.
The boat carried 18 people. Twelve female students between the ages of 11 and 15 and three teachers escorting them on a picnic were drowned. Three students survived by swimming to the river bank.
NEW YORK — About 500 Vietnam veterans rallying yesterday outside the Vietnamese Mission to the United Nations demanded the release of American soldiers thought still alive in Indochina.
John Zaccaro Jr. pleaded not guilty Friday in Vermont District Court to a charge of possession of a regulated drug with intent to sell. If convicted, he could be sentenced to five years in prison, fined $5,000, or both.
500 veterans rally
Speakers at the rally urged American and Vietnamese governments to get Americans home.
Among signs at the rally were "Hanoi Take Jane Fonda. Give Us Our Back," referring to Fonda's 1972 visit to Hanoi. Police estimated about 500 people were at the rally.
Probations increase
WASHINGTON — One of every 35 adult men in the United States is on probation, on parole or imprisoned, and offenders under community supervision now outnumber those who are in jail 3-to-1, a Bureau of Justice Statistics study said yesterday.
From Kansan wires
United Press International
Shuttle debate goes on
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A 15-foot-long piece of debris that may have been torn from Challenger's external fuel tank was brought to port yesterday after being recovered from the ocean floor 25 miles offshore.
meanwhile, the cause of the tragic explosion remains controversial as experts swap theories on the reasons why.
The 200-pound metallic piece was brought into Port Canaveral for examination by experts from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Salvage crews also photographed what appeared to be parts of the shuttle's main engines, lying under 90 feet of water 18 to 20 miles east of the cape, said Lt. Cmdr. Deborah Burnett.
Also, two fishing boats picked up two chunks of debris and turned them over to the Coast Guard for further study by NASA to see whether they came from Challenger.
It it the explosion of the liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen in the 184-foot external tank that destroyed Challenger Jan. 28, killing its crew of seven. Some investigators think the blast was touched off by a rupture in
However, a group of rocket scientists, including the man who pioneered solid-propellant boosters for Morton Thicklok's shuttle program, sharply disagreed yesterday with theories that failure in O-ring seals on the booster rocket caused the Challenger explosion.
The scientists, including the former president of Thiolol Corp., are urging the president's shuttle commission to investigate the possibility that a leak of liquid hydrogen from the external fuel tank, not the O-ring seals on the booster, sparked the chain of events leading to the Jan. 28 catastrophe.
the side of the shuttle's right-hand booster rocket.
"If there were a hydrogen leak then almost everything else fits like a glove," said John Osburne, former Thiokil engineer, now rocketry specialist for Purdue University. "It's a far better fit than to try to arrange an explanation using O-rings."
One great discrepancy in the hydrogen leak theory, the scientists admit, is the existence of an extra plume of flame seen coming from the lower booster section. The pattern of the flame is clearly that of escaping solid-propellant gases, said former Thiolok president Harold Ritchey.
Other scientists who do not subscribe to the O-ring theory, which
is the focus of the commission's current investigation, include Henry Shuey, who has worked on space and army missile-propellant systems in Huntsville, Ala., for 45 years; Ed Fitzgerald, former consultant for NASA's booster program at Georgia Tech; and Tom Sovoca, a former manager of the Wasatch, Utah, division of Thiolok.
The scientists said that before ignition, the shuttle's main liquid fuel tank sprang a leak of hydrogen in the lower section. As it lailed, the hydrogen acted as a coolant, causing temperatures around the booster casing to fall. The hydrogen leak caught fire, burning the cork and causing the puff of smoke.
The scientists said the hydrogen continued to burn and the flame weakened the struts that formed the point of contact between the big tank and the booster.
Two explosive bolts blew out and the booster began its fatal bending motion which forced it into the main fuel tank at a critical juncture, at the point separating hydrogen and oxygen bulkheads, they said. The result was a fireball.
If the wreckage retrieved yesterday from the Atlantic is from the big fuel tank, it might provide some clues as to how the explosion occurred.
Amendment stirs S. Korea
United Press International
SEOUL, South Korea — Controversy is reaching a boiling point in South Korea because of a proposed constitutional amendment which would allow direct presidential elections.
The ruling and opposition camps appear headed on a collision course over the issue and bitterness deepens after each confrontation.
The government has placed some 200 opposition party members under house arrest and sealed off their headquarters to prevent circulation of a petition calling for the amendment.
The government of President Chun Doo Hwan has outlawed the petition drive for 10 million signatures and warned that the government would punish anyone involved in the petition drive.
Under the 1980 constitution, the chief executive is picked by an electoral college chosen by popular vote. Chun was elected in February 1981 under that process.
Chun, who is constitutionally required to step down at the end of his term, has called on the opposition to postpone debate on the issue until after the 1988 elections so the nation can channel its energies toward the Seoul Olympics of that year.
Chun's foes, including the New Korea Democratic Party, backed by Kim Dae Jung and Kim Young-sam, argue that indirect elections do not give a fair chance to opposition candidates and are undemocratic.
Chun says he hopes to establish a tradition of peaceful transfer of power in 1988. Virtually all past governments in South Korea have met violent ends.
The two Kims, often called the godfathers of the chief opposition party, were forced out of politics in the election process which brought Chun to power after the assassination of President Park and a period of martial law which followed.
They were barred from politics along with about 800 others put on a political blacklist. Kim Dae Jung was sentenced to death for masterminding a bloody nine-day insurrection in the capital of his hometown province in May 1980. His sentence was later reduced to 20 years and then suspended.
Both Kims were leading oppositionists under Park and were strong contenders for the presidency.
When parliamentary elections were conducted Feb. 12, 1985, the two Kims used their influence behind the scenes for the birth of the NKDP.
The NKDP controls 90 seats in the 276-member unicameral National Assembly. But more important is that the party, under de facto control of the two Kims, subscribes to hardline strategy and tactics against the ruling camp.
Constitutional amendment for direct presidential election was one of the party's chief slogans during last year's elections and the NKDP leadership threatened a petition drive to collect 10 million signatures supporting their cause.
$100,000 bounty offered in search
United Press International
SELLS, Ariz. — A $100,000 reward was offered yesterday to bolster a hunt for three suspected drug smugglers thought to have killed a U.S. Customs agent in southern Arizona and possibly fled into Mexico.
The U.S. Customs Service issued the bounty for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killers while a search was conducted on both sides of the border.
"We've got people on the scene, on foot and vehicles talking to different people," said Dick Rogers, senior agent in charge of the Tucson FBI office. "We're pulling out all the stops."
Mexican officials joined with state and federal law enforcement agencies in seeking the killers of Glenn Robert Miles Sr., 42. Miles was found shot to death late Friday along a dirt road, 25 miles south of Sells and $1\frac{1}{2}$ miles from the remote San Miguel border crossing into Mexico.
Customs Service spokesman Charles Conroy.
Conroy said Miles had advised his Tucson office Friday night that he was pursuing three men on foot on the Papago Indian Reservation: Dispatchers became concerned when Miles did not check back and sent other officers, who found Miles' body.
Aerial photographs revealed three sets of tracks leading back into Mexico. Conroy said.
Authorities said Miles had been following three suspected drug smugglers with backpacks.
"The suspects were what is referred to as 'mules' — they carry drugs across the border," Steele said. "They headed into the United States, and when they noticed they were being followed they headed back south,
"Miles got between them and the border, and they shot him."
Joining in the investigation are the FBI, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, the state Department of Public Safety and the U.S. Border Patrol.
Damaged capsules contain no cyanide
United Press International
NANUET, N.Y. — Federal officials said yesterday that tests showed there was no poison in a suspicious bottle of Panadol capsules found in a community near the New York suburb where a woman died from vanside-tainted Tylenol.
The discovery of Panadol with damaged capsules was reported Saturday in Nanuet, a suburb near Westchester County, where Diane Elsoth died Feb. 6 of acute poisoning after taking two Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules.
Food and Drug Administration spokesman Bill Grigg said tests on the Panadol were negative for cyanide. He said the problem appeared to be a manufacturing error.
The death of Elsroth, 23, and discovery of a second tainted bottle of Tylenol led Johnson & Johnson to stop making non-prescription drugs in capsule form. There were no new leads yesterday in her death.
Grigg said tests found one Panadol capsule was creased and two others were empty.
Earlier, Rockland County Executive John Grant urged the public to carefully examine any product in capsule form because the box of Panadol apparently had its protective seals intact.
"It looks like some demented person is just trying to harm people but we're treating this as a local isolated incident." Grant said.
The FDA also reported yesterday no evidence of tampering in a damaged bottle of Children's Tylenol opened by a New York woman.
Patrica Eldstein, 27, of Batava said the foil seal on a bottle of children's Tylenol tablets was broken when she opened the container, while the plastic seal on the outside of the package was intact.
Lois Meyer, a district consumer affairs officer for the FDA, said there was nothing wrong with the tablets in the bottle.
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Monday, Feb. 24, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
Police seek suspect in attempted rape
Lawrence police are looking for a suspect who attempted to rape a KU student early Saturday morning at her apartment.
The suspect reportedly forced his way into the apartment. He then slapped the victim, knocked her down and attempted to rape her.
Papers win awards
The Defiance (Ohio) Crescent-News was named sweepstakes winner in the 1986 Editorial Excellence Contest sponsored by the William Allen White Foundation for the Inland Daily Press Association.
The Crescent-News — also judged the best in its circulation class of 10,000 to 25,000 — and winners in three more circulation categories are to be honored today in Houston at the Inland meeting.
The top finishers in the circulation category of more than 50,000 were the Fort Wayne (Ind.) Journal-Gazette, first; the Quincy (Mass.) Patriot-Ledger, second; and the Gary (Ind.) Post-Tribune, third.
For newspapers of 25,001 to 50,000, the top finishers were the Salina Journal, first; the Rochester (Minn.) Post-Bulletin, second; and the Aurora (III.) Beacon-News. third.
Woman is stabbed
A woman was stabbed in the stomach with an unknown weapon in the 800 block of New Hampshire Street around 2:00 a.m. Saturday, Lawrence police said yesterday.
The victim was described as in good condition Sunday, a spokesman for the Lawrence Memorial Hospital said.
Hall elections near
The Association of University Residence Halls will conduct its annual elections March 3-4. Two coalitions had filed by Friday's deadline, said Drew Blossom, AURH president.
Students may vote for an entire coalition or they may vote for a president-vice president team, and separately for the secretary and treasurer.
The Fidelity Coalition candidates arc. Blossom, president, Ellsworth Hall; Wanda Wood, vice president, McCollam Hall; Sarah Hart, secretary, Oliver Hall; Bruce Miller, treasurer, Ellsworth.
The Genesis Coalition candidates are: Tom Foster, president, Templin Hall; Casey Waskiewicz, vice president, Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall; John Cissell, Joseph R. Pearson Hall; Michelle Davis, treasurer, Lewis Hall.
Series hosts speaker
Luther S. Williams, president of Atlanta University, will be speaking at the University of Kansas as part of the University Lecture Series and Black History Month. His speech, "The Black Intellectual: The Second Reconstruction," will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with a high temperature near 50. Winds will be from the south or southeast at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear with a low in the mid-30s. Tomorrow look for sunny skies and milder temperatures in the upper 50s to low 60s.
From staff and wire reports.
A partner can improve workouts
WWW.WWW.WWW
Bv Lvnn Maree Ross
Saturday was sunny, beckoning Frisbee fanatics to take advantage of the warm weather. People of all ages streamed to Allen Field House to watch two basketball teams put into practice what they had learned during the week's workouts.
Staff writer
Michelle Brouillette/KANSAN
Meanwhile, two students concentrated more on their own workout than on the weather or what would soon take place on the court.
Danny Shapiro and Kenny Goldman, freshmen from Highland Park, Ill., were lifting weights in Robinson Center.
"If your mind's not into it you won't have a good workout," Goldman said Saturday.
Gerry Wente and his wife, Jo, 2450 Jasu Drive, above, work out on treadmills as part of a walk-jog course. The class is held weekly at the Lawrence Memorial Hospital Wellness Center.
David Cook, director of sports psychology and assistant professor of physical education, said exercising with a partner or a group was important because it provided social interaction and pressure.
"You're challenged by the other person." he said.
That challenge includes winning and the commitment to the partnership, which makes finding the right partner important, he said. It's important to find someone with the same level of commitment.
Having a partner is good for safety.
Having a partner is good for safety. Shapiro said that a weightifier always should have a spotter nearby and that a regular partner was best. Goldman knows when Shapiro needs help and when to stay out of the way.
A partner also can motivate the litter.
Shapiro's face was red, his knuckles white, as he pressed the barbell over his head.
Having a partner to be spotter also means not having to wait around between sets of lifts, which allows muscles to cool off. Shapiro said if Goldman wasn't his partner he'd have to wait until someone else who was working out could come spot for him.
Shapiro said when he lost the drive to go work out Goldman would get him going again.
"Push," Goldman said. "Come on, only one more."
"He won't let me take a day off," he said.
But a workout partner is not the only source of exercise motivation. Jim LaPoint, associate professor of physical education, said a husband or wife could encourage a spouse who has decided to lose a few pounds.
While many people participate in sports in high school, he said, interest in exercise slacks off during college. But at 28 to 30 years of age, many people renew their interest in physical fitness.
Harold Mallonee, a lieutenant with the Lawrence Fire Department, said Friday that his wife, Sandra, played
He said people would suddenly ask themselves why they had such a big stomach, or why they ran out of breath running to the bus stop.
a big part in his decision to start an exercise program.
But Mallonea has a double advantage because his wife also is his workout partner. Since last August they have been working out together at a local health club.
After the first three months, Harold said, his body fat decreased from 22 percent to 15 percent. His cholesterol levels also decreased.
JOHN HARRIS
An exercise partnership, she said,
is like a marriage because the person
you work with must have an interest
in what you're trying to achieve.
But as in marriage, it is important to find a compatible exercise partner. Sandra Mallonee said.
Harold Mallonee said, "Good workout partners are hard to find." Sandra Mallonee prefers a male
Harold Mallonee assists his wife, Sandra, while she lifts weights. The couple worked out Friday morning at Junkyard's Gym, 535 Gateway Drive, where Sandra is an employee.
sandra Mallonee prefers a male
Gerry and Jo Wente, 2450 Jasu Drive, are a retired couple who take
partner. Because men are stronger, she said, and women have more endurance, they can help each other with their weaknesses.
advantage of the walk-jog program offered at the center.
Wente said he decided to start exercising because of his weight. He also had problems with decreased blood circulation.
2 students revive Big Brothers, Big Sisters
Special to the Kansan
By Jenny Causey
The KU Big Brother, Big Sister program almost ceased to exist last semester, but two students, required to do volunteer work for a class, have the program back in shape.
April Rethertford, advises to the program,
that there was no student coordinator at the
ski resort.
Retherford said that in the past, the students involved in the program selected their own coordinator. They elected officers in the spring for the following semester.
Jeff Mathis, Junction City junior, and Jolane Harrington, Stillwell senior, have helped organize over 100 Big Brothers and Sisters. The program, financed by Student Senate, provides Lawrence children with an older friend to spend time with.
There were no elections in the spring of 1985. "Basically the program quit," Retherford said.
But Mathis and Harrington sparked a revival.
Last semester, when students began calling Retherford about the program, she referred their calls to the Volunteer Clearing House, a Lawrence volunteer service group.
Mathis and Harrington were required to do a volunteer project for their Personal and Community Health class, HPER 260. When they were unable to reach the Volunteer Clearing House, Mathis and Harrington took it upon themselves to rebuild the program.
"The Volunteer Clearing House never answered their phone. It was pretty much up to you."
Harrington said the first thing she and
Mathis did was contact a local school psychologist who had been involved in the program before.
"In October we began sending out flyers to students on campus and placing ads in the paper," Harrington said.
"In the beginning, I just wanted to get involved. I had heard about the program, but never saw anything about it." she said.
Mathis said he wasn't sure why he chose the Big Brother, Big Sister organization as his project.
"I never had an overdying interest to be president of it, I was just interested in helping out," he said. "I just wanted to be a Big Brother."
Harrington said most of the children were underprivileged and came from single-parent families.
"But you can't categorize all the kids under just one area," she said. "We have kids who come from regular homes and just need an older person to look up to. We also have kids who have lots of brothers and sisters, and their parents just don't have enough time for them."
Harrington said she and Mathis probably wouldn't run next year's program, but it would be much more organized.
"I'm not quite sure how it will work yet, but I know there will be no problem getting the program organized," she said.
Mathis said he thought enough students were actively involved to make finding a student coordinator for next year easy.
Former KU dean of law dies
"For the past 20 years there's always been a Big Brother, Big Sister program at KU," he said. "I'd hate to see it end."
Staff writer
Bv Sandra Crider
Frederick J. Moreau, former dean of law who was considered a gentle teacher by his colleagues, died Friday night in Carthage, Mo.
A native of Cascio, Wis., Mr. Moreau joined the KU School of Law faculty in 1929 and was dean from 1937 to 1957 and acting dean from 1959 to 1961. Mr. Moreau taught until he was 85, then health problems prevented him from continuing his career.
Mr. Moreau, 92, died at McCuneBrooks Hospital after a recent illness. He and his wife had been visiting relatives in Carthage.
professor emeritus of law. "He had great stamina. He just didn't want to stop teaching."
Francis Heller, Roy A. Roberts distinguished professor of political science and law, said, "He took a genuine delight in teaching. He didn't quit until he had to."
"I was always amazed how he went
"and on," said Charles Oldfather,
Following his tenure at the University of Kansas, Mr. Moreau was a visiting professor at the University of Oregon in Eugene. He joined the faculty at Hastings School of Law in San Francisco in 1964. In 1973, he began teaching at Pepperdine University in Malibu, Calif., where
In 1957, he went to Iran as a Fulbright Lecturer in Law and taught at the University of Tehran for a year.
he remained until his retirement in 1978.
Paul Wilson, professor emeritus of law, said, "He was a gentleman, a learned gentleman. I think that's the best way to describe him."
Mr. Moreau is survived by his wife, Jeanne McCrae Moreau, of the home; two sons, Frederick Jr. of Stanley and David of Baldwin City; and five grandchildren.
Funeral arrangements are being handled by Warren-Meilwain Mortuary, 120 W. 13th St. Services will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St., and inurnment will follow at Pioneer Cemetery, West Campus.
Freshman member of rugby team dies
By a Kansan reporter
Daniel J. Dzubay, St. Joseph,
Mo., freshman, died at about 6
a.m. Saturday in his apartment,
Lawrence police said yesterday.
Mr. Dzubay died from a self- inflicted gunshot wound, police said.
Mr. Dzubay, a member of the KU Rugby Football Club, was active in extracurricular activities in college and at Central High School in St. Joseph.
He was the senior class president, on the football team and a
Mr. Dzubay, 13, is survived by his mother, Mrs. Lee Dzubay, St. Joseph; a brother, James A. Dzubay, of the home; paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Dzubay, Minneapolis, and a maternal grandmother, Mrs. Edna E. Gierach, St. Joseph.
staff member of Outlook.
Memorial services for Mr. Dzubay will be at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Meierhoffer Fleman Chapel in St.Joseph, Mo. Burial services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Homewood Memorial Garden, Homewood, Ill.
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4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
M
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Black history has a story to tell—not only to blacks but to all Americans. It's a story of 200 years of slavery, followed by segregation, discrimination and an ascent of a race out of despair.
Time to remember
It's a story of the South and of the North. It's a story of the bloody Civil War, of people and their attitudes toward people of different skin colors. It's a story of martyrs, bigots and racists. A tale of sit-ins, bus boycotts and walks for freedom.
February is adorned with the title Black History Month, a time to look back and see how far the nation has come and how far it has to go.
It is necessary to remind ourselves of the years of black suffering so that the negative passages in the story can not repeat themselves.
A story that too few understand and too few care to remember.
Black History Month is a time to recognize great men and women of the past and their contributions to a country which did not recognize them as citizens for so long.
Remember Crispus Attucks, who led the patriots to the Boston Massacre. Remember Harriet Tubman, an escaped slave who risked her freedom to help other slaves escape. Remember Sojourner Truth, who shouted for women's rights.
It was the philosophies of Marcus Garvey, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. that helped prick a nation's conscience and awaken it to the fact that the time had come for the nation to do something about its hypocrisy.
King rallied a nonviolent movement. Malcom X called for a separate state and Marcus Garvey proposed a movement back to Africa.
Remember Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. Du Bois, Booker T. Washington. Their words were fiery; their message, divided, but with one aim: to correct the indignities suffered by blacks in their time.
Hysteria returned for a repeat performance in Kokomo, Ind., last week. A 14-year-old boy, who was barred from school after he contracted AIDS from tainted blood, was allowed to return to school Friday for the first time in more than a year.
These people's words and actions made black history an important thread in the intricate fabric of the history of our nation.
Unfounded fears
His triumph was short-lived. Once again, hysteria swept through the community and many parents kept their children home in protest and in fear of AIDS. Before the day was over, a judge had issued a restraining order to keep the boy, Ryan White, out of school again.
AIDS researchers have stated time and again that AIDS is transmitted through sexual contact, contaminated needles, blood or blood products and from an infected mother to an unborn child. Even prolonged kissing is not considered dangerous.
The fact is, not one person who has had normal, close, daily contact with a person
with AIDS has contracted the illness. Family members have lived with AIDS victims for several years — hugging, kissing, sharing the same eating utensils and in a few cases even using the same toothbrush. None of them got AIDS.
People with AIDS are not lepers. They do not have the bubonic plague, polio, mumps, measles or scarlet fever. The county health official ruled that White poses no threat to students or teachers. All research has reached the same conclusion.
Yes, there is much that is unknown about AIDS. But its mode of transmission is very well documented. And that mode of transmission does not include the kind of contact that would occur in school.
The attitude of the parents, and especially the judge, is shameful. Issuing a restraining order to keep Ryan White out of school only adds to the hysteria by legitimating it.
Driven by desperation
He then lit a newspaper, touched it to his clothes and exploded in a fire.
A man, depressed and unemployed, doused himself in gasoline as he stood outside the gates of the White House last week.
The man, Orland Payne McCafferty, left a three-page letter in his car addressed to President Reagan. He expressed his disappointment with the economy and his delayed Social Security retirement benefits.
"Let me light the way," he wrote on the last line of the letter.
In his hometown of Lee's Summit, Mo., McCaffery was not thought of as a lunatic indulging in civil disobedience.
Friends and relatives described him as a hard worker who was not particularly involved in politics.
His frustration reflects the frustrations of other unemployed people looking for work in despair.
His desperate act reminds us that not all is well simply because the economy is at a high. Many still are poor, others are homeless, down and out of work.
McCafferty sacrificed himself so that those in the White House would take notice. His act is tragic, but it should not be taken in vain and written off as a meaningless act by a demented human being.
News staff
News staff
Michael Totty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Editor
Lauretta McMillon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Managing editor
Chris Barber. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Campus editor
David Giles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sports editor
Brice Waddill . . . . . . . . . . . . Photo editor
Susanne Shaw. . . . . . General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Business manager
David Nixon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Campus manager
Erdert Lonn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Classified manager
Caroline Innes . . . . . . . . . . . Production manager
Pallen Lee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . National manager
John Oberzan . . . . . . . . . . Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest posts. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Fint Hall.
The University Dialysis Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairford Flint Hall, Lawn, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at the Post Office or in local mail offices. Students in Douglas County and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $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.
EASTER
FLY, HELL!
I WANT TO
SOAR!
Monday, Feb. 24, 1986
Mailbox
Heroes, not wimps
Concerning Chris Shannon's letter of Feb. 14 about civil disobedience and divestment; I believe this criticism of protesters on this campus is wrong. Those who have the power to fight injustice and do not should be held partially responsible for it. (May I point out the Kitty Genovese incident of Queens, N.Y.)
South African injustice remains a problem for two reasons. The first is laziness. Some of us don't like injustice but we think "my schedule is too full," or, "I don't want to be threatened with expulsion," or, "showing my face at a rally won't make a difference."
The usefulness of civil disobedience lies not in breaking the law but in people power. Those who spent even a few minutes listening to their rights being read or a ticket being made out to them suffer because they're alone and because any efforts they make are weak, not in the actions themselves but in the numbers that make them.
What I'm screaming is this: most people who care don't even say anything! The more who do, the sooner we will follow the just sense of many other universities and the sooner blanks will stop be-
The second reason apartheid continues is that money is much closer and much more important than any bloodshed in the background of our lives and much more important than the faint voice coming over the tube. It seems that our wallets are too close to our hearts and our brains too close to where some keep their wallets.
For those of us who care about injustice, the KU protesters should be held as heroes, not wimps. In Kansas, our protesters may seem like wimps, but a few faces at a rally, in a courtroom or in a police car are far more courageous than any of us who whines because our BMW is dirty.
inged murder, jailed, tortured and oppressed every day. KU, please stop killing, torturing and oppressing blacks in South Africa.
Jason Newsom Lawrence junior
I truly hope Mr. Cunningham's column on seat belt laws vs. civil liberties in the Feb. 19 issue of the Kansan was more tongue in cheek than serious.
Yes, Mr. Cunnyngham, it is your choice to wear or not to wear your seat belt. But how can a proposed law designed only to help someone be construed as an infringement upon your civil rights? I find the logic of your argument very frightening.
If I understand you correctly, any law which impinges upon your right to make your own decision between one act or another is a violation of your civil liberties.
OK, let's get creative. Should the laws against murder, arson, rape, robbery, embezzlement, forgery, child abuse, traffic violations, fraud, etc., all be repealed? Does this equate with your comment, "To give up the liberty of choice is much more costly than the alternative. To pay for the right to make personal decisions is a small price no matter what the cost?"
I really don't think this is "the Deal!" our founding fathers made.
Some of our laws are in effect to prevent chaos, some to protect us from others and some to protect us from ourselves. I don't know you sir, but I wish you no ill will. Beyond that, there are undoubtedly many who do know you and would consider your death, no matter what the cause, to be a tragic and sorrowful loss.
But if that loss was preventable, and you did not avail yourself of that prevention, then I contend, sir, you are violating the civil liberties of many. People will no longer be able to make the decision whether or not to talk to you, visit
you, write you letters, bear your children, share your happiness, console you in sad times, etc. I don't think you have the right to be that fish.
I hope you read this and laugh that you sucked some poor person in with a satirical column. If not, I hope luck is always on your side
Phillip E. Litts
chairman of the department of aerospace studies
Women carry burden
Opponents of legal abortion want to protect life. If abortion becomes illegal, it is the logical conclusion that the majority will assume responsibility for the lives affected.
Government financing will be appropriated to supplement the income of unwillingly pregnant women who have increased expenses due to prenatal care, maternity leave or loss of employment. A follow-up job placement program for women fired because of unwilling pregnancy or laws preserving job security for pregnant women will be needed. Children kept by unwilling natural parents will need a program to ensure that they do not suffer malnutrition, physical or psychological abuse from their ill-equipped parents.
Because many men involve themselves in preventing abortion, men will become actively responsible in birth control and self-restraint. If a man is not prepared to accept the responsibility of a pregnancy and child, he will not participate in the heterosexual sex act, ever. He knows as well as a woman that no birth-control method is 100 percent effective.
Having relieved the woman of this moral, personal decision, we take on the responsibilities forced upon her. We must work together so that women will not be forced to accept the brunt of poverty anymore.
Shelly Sanders
Wellsville, N.Y. senior
Group exploits abortion issue
Probably the most divisive issue of our time is abortion. Those who oppose abortion argue that abortion is murder. They think that human life begins at conception and that any interference with that life, no matter how it was created, constitutes a deliberate taking of a human life with malice aforethought.
Those who support abortion as a legitimate option argue that a fetus is merely a conglomeration of cells, like a toenail. They think that a woman should be allowed to choose what to do with those cells. They also argue that legal abortion prevents illegal abortions and saves women's lives.
The problem with the abortion issue is that it requires a balancing of rights, those of the woman against those of the unborn. To many it seems unfair to impose a death sentence on a fetus who is clearly blameless of any wrongful act.
My personal opinion is abortion should be available in some cases but should not be used as a substitute for careful and conscientious birth control. A woman who is a rape victim, who is mentally incapacitated, who is a victim of incest or who has consciously followed her birth control regimen should not be penalized with a pregnancy.
100
On the other hand, many think it is just as unfair to impose nine months of physical discomfort and a lifetime of mental distress on a woman against her will, especially if that woman has been the blameless victim of a rape.
Chris Bunker Staff columnist
On the other hand, a woman who has no mitigating circumstances or has not followed a program of birth control has no right to penalize the
Now that you have my opinion, and I'm sure many of you disagree with it, I want to focus on one group that has grown up around the issue of abortion. That group is called Women Exploited by Abortion.
WEBA is a anti-abortion group comprised of women who have had an abortion. They say they were not given sufficient information to make an informed choice on whether or not to have an abortion. And of course, the villain in their whole scenario is Planned Parenthood.
unborn she is carrying for its existence.
WEBA needs to rethink its position. Like all people, these women have a right to change their minds. And they have a right to advocate their points of view and urge the public policy that they think is right.
But their assertion that they were exploited by abortion is just flat wrong. When they had their legal abortions they had a choice. They chose abortion. Planned Parenthood didn't make the decision for them.
Indeed, no one required them to even listen to Planned Parenthood's opinion or to walk through Planned Parenthood's door.
If they did not have enough information to make an informed decision on whether or not to have an abortion, it was their responsibility, not Planned Parenthood's, to make sure that they gathered sufficient information. In other words, these women were adults, making an adult decision, and now after Planned Parenthood has done the exact thing that these women asked them to do, they are unset.
The real tragedy for the members of WEBA is that they did not walk through Planned Parenthood's door with their sexual partners several months before they had their abortions.
If they had, they would have discovered that Planned Parenthood is a large dispenser of safe and effective birth control. They would have discovered that Planned Parenthood's philosophy is that children should be responsibly planned for instead of being the result of an irresponsible accident.
And if the members of WEBA had walked through Planned Parenthood's door several months earlier, they probably wouldn't have had abortions at all.
The members of WEBA are not victims. If they have changed their minds on abortion, then they should reflect on the error of their ways and resolve never to make the same mistake again. But by placing the blame on Planned Parenthood, they merely deny their own responsibility for their abortions. A vandal might just as well blame the crowbar she used to break and enter.
Most of you already have an opinion on abortion. And few of you are likely to change your opinion because of this column. But if you haven't formed an opinion yet on the issue, I urge you to consider the views of legitimate anti-abortion and prochoice groups, not the misguided diatribes of WEBA.
Bright side doesn't exist in election
One of President Reagan's most endearing qualities is his ability to look at the bright side of a situation and make us all feel better.
For example, the Philippines just finished holding a presidential election and many Americans were horrified at the way it was run.
There have been dozens of murders, and most of the victims have been supporters of the party trying to unseat President Ferdinand Marcos. $ ^{9 c} $
There was blatant vote fraud of every kind: buying votes, stealing ballot boxes, altering the results, bashing heads, cutting throats.
Mike Royko Chicago Tribune
And Marcos has said that if the election didn't turn out right he might have just canceled the whole thing and remained in office.
This has dismayed many idealistic Americans who thought that because the Philippines was our ally and patterned their form of government after ours, the election should be run on the legit.
Even those who are more practical-minded figure that Marcos, having stolen hundreds of millions of dollars, ought to be content to step aside gracefully and let somebody else have a chance. At his age, Marcos can't even spend the interest on his stash.
But President Reagan has managed to find a bright side to the election chaos.
He said, "In spite of all these charges, there is at the same time evidence of a strong two-party system now in the islands."
What a cheering thought. It has caused me to rethink some of my cynical views on Chicago elections, which have had a lot in common with the Philippines, although on a less grand scale.
in the days of Prohibition, when A Capone was the unofficial mayor election day always featured the porping of machine guns and some corpses up turn here and there.
Capone, like Marcos, was a greedy power-hungry, depraved kind of guy. If bribes were effective, he used them. If not, he'd just have his boy ventilate the problem.
I guess Big Al was ahead of his time.
But nobody ever said that machine gun bullets whirizing through a polling place was evidence of a strong two-party system.
Years later, the Daley Machine found ways to make the vote totals sit up and smile. Instead of violence, if used sleight of hand, making one vote turn into 10; miracles, causing the dead to rise and cast a straight ticket; and kindness, offering a bottle of muscate for a trembly vote or two.
Poor sport that he was, Richard Nixon in 1960 shrieked that Daley had stolen the White House for John F. Kennedy.
I guess it never occurred to Nixon that Daley was just demonstrating that a strong two-party system existed in Illinois.
With his eye for the bright side, President Reagan even proposed a solution for the Philippines' turmoil.
He expressed hope that no matter how the election turned out, Marcos and his opponent, Corazon Aquino, would "come together to make sure the government works."
That would be so nice. It kind of makes me choke up just thinking of Marcos pouring a drink for the widow Aquino and saying something conciliatory, such as.
"Well, Corazon — can I call you Cory? I think we should heed the words of my friend President Reagan and get together. Want to shake on it?"
"I don't know, Ferdinand. Was it really necessary for you to have my husband murdered at the airport?"
"Aw, come on, Cory, that's politics. Let bygones be bygones. Say, are you interested in New York commercial real estate?"
"Ferdinand, you had already railroaded my husband into prison and caused us to go into exile."
"Hey, Cory, there's nothing to be gained by crying over spit husbands. What do you say to clear title to an oceanfront house on Long Island? I'll throw in a new Mercedes."
"Ferdinand, do you realize how many of my supporters were murdered in the election?"
"That's just supporters over the dam. You got any interest in Swiss bank accounts?"
If this becomes a reality, President Reagan should start urging other adversaries to take the same warm approach.
He might propose that when members of Solidarity have wedding parties, they send invitations to the Kremlin.
Nothing like a few drinks and a fast polka for getting people mellowed out.
Monday, Feb. 24, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Revolt
Continued from p. 1
situation, Marcos appeared on the broadcast with members of his family and Armed Forces Chief Gen. Fabian Vered.
"I intend to remain as president," Marcos said.
But as the he spoke, mutineers battled loyalist troops for control of the station — a building that also houses the government radio station. Television screens went black as the rebels seized control.
After a two-hour standoff, punctuated by bursts of automatic weapons fire and several negotiating sessions by bullhorn, about 30 Marines surrendered and joined the rebels.
A single rebel Sikorsky helicopter swept low across the presidential palace while loyalists fired back. The helicopter's pilot, Col. Antonio Fotele, said he fire six rockets into a building in the palace grounds and veered off.
Riot police outside Camp Aguinaldo, the military headquarters adjacent to Camp Crame, cheered wildly and danced arm-in-arm with civilians upon hearing reports Marcos and his family had fled. The reports later proved to be false.
And Marcos was unyielding in his broadcast.
"There is no way which I can step down or resign from the position of president no matter what the situation is since I've been duly proclaimed," he said. "I'm taking the oath. I intend to stay as president."
Enroll
Continued from p.1
for the recent enrollment increase in the School of Business was changes limiting enrollment in certain classes to students within the school, encouraging other students who are qualified to seek admission.
Once again, more money is needed to expand the teaching staff to keep up with student interest, he said.
"We had reductions in our budgets in '82 when the state had revenue problems, and we've never really recovered," Tollefon said.
Although some administrators had mixed feelings about a large influx of new students, at least one dean was optimistic about a loss of student enrollment in his school.
Paul Haack, dean of education,
said the slight drop in enrollment indicated a positive turn-around in light of large decreases over the last few years.
This spring's figures show a combined Lawrence-Kansas City enrollment in the School of Education of 17 fewer students than last year. From spring of 1880 to this spring, enrollment has plummeted by more than 700 students. From spring of 1984 to 1985, enrollment dropped by more than 150 students.
"It probably indicates more than a slowing down of the decline in enrollment." Haack said.
Enrollment was also down in the School of Architecture and Urban Design, the Graduate School, the School of Nursing and the School of Allied Health.
The number of special undergraduates, which is included in the school's enrollment figure, had dropped, indicating that more students were actually in the education program.
Turtle
DANNY
Brenda Steele/Special to the KANSAN
Continued from p.1
The ornate box turtle is harmless, easily recognizable and found in all 105 counties, he said.
The turtle campaign is slowly gaining momentum.
a drawing of an ornate box turtle, were the words: "Ornate Box Turtle, State Reptile of Kansas."
Gov. John Carlin talks to Go-Go impersonator Jill Kaiser, Deerfield, Ill., sophomore, and Billy Idle look-alike Steve Pope, Prairie Village freshman. They were at the Students Against Multiple Sclerosis benefit dinner Friday night.
snakes and that leaves only turtles," Collins said.
Miller said they were selling the shirts for cost, $4, and already had sold about 500.
Last week, after the bill was introduced in the Legislature, Winter displayed a yellow T-shirt on the Senate floor. In brown ink, encircling
For now, House Bill No. 3014, has been assigned to the House Committee on Energy and Natural Resources 'and awaits hearings.
Carlin attends SAMS benefit dinner
By a Kansan reporter
Carlin, who has declared February "Multiple Sclerosis Month," said he admired the effort students had put into the fund-raising campaign. The students, he said, had shown the community that they were capable of taking on responsibility.
A $5-a-plate benefit dinner attended by Gov. John Carlin Friday evening at the Adams Alumni Center raised $18,000 for Students Against Multiple Sclerosis, said the organization's KU president, Steve Vogel.
SAMS, and Jan Mann, a volunteer for SAMS and the wife of jazz musician Herbie Mann, both of New York, attended the dinner and commended the students on their campaign.
Noyes said the students in the campaign had demonstrated that they were the "we care" generation.
Bev Noyes, national director of
CLASSIFIED EMPLOYEES
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---
6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Feb. 24, 1986
Campus/Area
Campus hooks up new phone system
By Peggy Kramer
Staff writer
Southwestern Bell is helping the University of Kansas plan for the future.
Today Southwestern Bell will begin rewiring the phone system in Joseph R. Pearson Hall. The new wiring will eventually allow students to transmit voice and computer data simultaneously through the phone line.
"This will be the way of studying in the future," said Dick Mann, University director of institutional research, information systems and personnel service.
Dewey Allaire, director of KU telecommunications, said rewiring KU residence halls was only part of Southwestern Bell's initial project.
The project began when the phone company rewired the state capitol complex about two weeks ago, Alaire said. The University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas State University, Wichita State University and Fort Hays State University also are in the project.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said, "This is a project whose time has come."
When the new University-wide line installation is complete, the lines will be computer accessible, he said. Hall residents still will have the same phones, just different lines.
Allaire is KU's primary contact
The new system will have access to KU's main computer frame, but it hasn't been determined exactly what method will be used, he said.
with Southwestern Bell and is assisted by facilities operations planning and maintenance.
Allaire said the current wiring was being replaced because it was becoming costly to maintain, some equipment was harder to get and it wasn't as flexible as the new system.
Mann said, "KU is in an archaic phone system and no longer economical."
The new system is a support for new technology. It is an investment many universities are making, he said.
Allaire said Southwestern Bell would be paid $2.4 million for the rewiring and approximately $600,000 for the equipment. The contract is for the main campus, but doesn't include Sunflower Housing, Stouffer Place, Jayhawker Towers or some buildings on West Campus.
Mann said the residence halls were being done first because they had single line phones and the process would be less disruptive to the students than to offices with multiline phones.
Allaire estimated that one residence hall floor would be rewired a day. Each room would be out of phone service for a maximum of 30 minutes.
A new bill that would place Kansas community colleges under the state Board of Regents wing has evoked mixed emotions from community college presidents, a state senator said yesterday.
By Leslie Hirschbach Staff writer
The 19 community colleges now are controlled by the State Board of Education, and the six state schools and the Kansas Technical Institute, are controlled by the Regents.
At the monthly Regents meeting Friday, members gave the bill their support by a vote of 7-0.2. Norman Brandeberry and Patricia Caruthers abstained from the vote.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, who spoke to the assembly Thursday, said he introduced the bill because he thought placing all of the institutions of higher education under one governing body would make higher education more efficient.
Regents bill gets mixed reaction
Winter said the Regents would perform the same job as the Board of Education. State statutes pertaining to community colleges would contain the words, "Board of Regents," instead of "Board of Education."
Some community college presidents are concerned that Regents control of curriculum will take away some of the schools' flexibility, Winter said.
"The bulk aren't sure yet and think the state will take over authority," he said.
The Regents would be responsible for each college's budget recommendations to the governor and the Legislature and coordination of each college's curriculum, he said.
Many colleges, he said, had a curriculum they didn't want changed and feared the Regents would make changes.
Donald Wilson, president at Pittsburg State University, said he supported the proposal, but some college
Sub&Stuff
Wilson said the bill wouldn't create any economic advantages for his college, but would force colleges statewide to work together more closely.
Robert Glennen, president at Emory State University, said he supported the proposal because it worked in another state.
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Glennen was vice-president of a community college in Nevada, where the colleges are controlled by one
He also said the comfortable relationship that community colleges had with the Board of Education would have to be developed anew with the Regents.
presidents feared that the Regents would be stricter than the Board of Education.
governing body, he said.
Glennen said one system created better curriculum and a better recruiting system.
He said it also would make transferring from a community college to a university much easier.
Arno Knapper, chairman of the University Council, said he wasn't sure how well the proposed system would work.
Keith Nichter, University director of business and fiscal affairs, said he didn't have an opinion about the bill. He said he could see the advantages of having one governing body for higher education.
Winter said he also saw a need for the bill because people were concerned about an overabundance of community colleges in small areas.
In southeast Kansas, he said, there are five schools within 40 miles.
Food service meeting yields results
By a Kansan reporter
Surveys conducted and monitored by Hashinger Hall residents was one recommendation introduced at a meeting last Friday between students and the director of KU food services.
Lenor Ekdahl, the director, said yesterday that the meeting was positive and some of the resident's requests already had been met.
The suggestions were made by residents at the meeting after they complained about the hall cafeteria meals. Some residents peacefully demonstrated Tuesday and Wednesday by not eating the cafeteria meals.
A radio in the dishroom also was installed upon students' request, but there are some guidelines for use, she said.
Liz Walz, Topeka sophomore and Hashinger resident, said a petition with 250 signatures advocating music in the dishroom was presented to Ekdahl and Ken Stoner, director of student housing, Friday.
discussed at the meeting included suggestion boxes in the hall and establishing a food committee to meet regularly with anyone who had concerns or suggestions.
Students requested a wider variety of breakfast cereal, Ekdahl said. The new cereals were available Friday, all except one — Cap'n Crunch.
Eric Young, Columbia, III., junior and Hashinger resident, said the main purpose of the meeting was to get more students' opinions on possible improvements for the cafeteria.
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Monday. Feb. 24. 1986
Nation/World
University Daily Kansan
7
U.S. finds itself badgered by Nicaraguan proganda
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration suddenly found itself knee deep last week in the irony of trying to fight Nicaraguan propaganda with secrecy.
U. S. officials hope to repair some of the damage today when a document from Managua's Marxist-led government is scheduled to be released by the State Department, allegedly showing evidence of a Sandinista "sophisticated campaign of disinformation."
The document, shown to dozens of members of Congress last week in White House meetings to warn them of attempts at communist lobbying, will be stripped of names.
Those names, according to Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams, are of American lobbyists who might be approached to persuade Congress to vote down aid to Contra rebels in Nicaragua and of individual Americans who might be asked to volunteer — so they would not have to register with the government as paid foreign agents.
The administration apparently acted too soon last week in revealing the disinformation campaign, building up expectations of a plot that when publicly disclosed would probably turn out to be not only legal, but expected of any foreign government with an interest in foreign aid.
After the first of the congressional meetings Tuesday, in which top aides tried to win support for President Reagan's plan to give $70 million in secret military aid to the rebels, House Republican leader Robert Michel revealed the existence of a Nicaraguan disinformation campaign.
Other lawmakers, usually happy to talk about what they heard, were unusually grim-faced and tight-lined about the document.
White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes hammered on the theme for two straight days — but offered little proof of the charges, saying intelligence sources and methods had to be protected.
Asked if Congress could be persuaded more by Sandistina public relations than administration lobbying, Speaks replied, "It remains to be seen."
A senior administration official took the accusations to a higher level Wednesday, saying Americans who volunteer to help the Sandinistas did so out of outright, sheer hatred of the president.
By Thursday, the official, speaking as Abrams, promised that the
sanitized documents would be released and if those named knew about it, they would be shocked.
The administration official, apparently at odds with the CIA, conceded that reporters were making a very effective argument for declassification by suggesting that the vague charges put a cloud over anybody on Capitol Hill who might oppose the administration aid proposal.
Sen. David Durenberger, R-Minn., chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said he feared the administration would portray every senator and congressman who voted against lethal aid as a stooge of communism.
"The White House decision to declassify a secret, sensitive Nicaraguan government document is outrageous." he said.
White House spokesman Edward Djerejian called those charges untrue.
At work in this episode were the desire by White House policy makers to inoculate Congress and public opinion against Nicaraguan arguments and the propensity of the intelligence community to classify almost everything.
Kansas City-based group vies for top reggae band Grammy
United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Blue Riddim Band, a blue-eyed reggae group from jazzy Kansas City, is vying for a Grammy this week — making it the first all-white band to be nominated for the coveted award in the reggae category.
"People say, 'Yeah right, a reggae band from Kansas City. All white. Sure," said蓝Riddim drummer Steve "Duck" McLane.
The band is nominated for best reggae recording of the year for its album "Alive in Jamaica" — which was recorded in 1982 at the Sunspill festival in Jamaica and released last year by the Chicago-based Flying Fish Records.
Blue Riddim's competition includes music performed by reggae heavy Jimmy Cliff and the Melody Makers — made up of the children of the late reggae superstar Bob Marley. Nominated for the best reggae recording is Cliff's "Cill's Hanger," the Melody Makers "Play
the Game Right," Burning Spear's "Resistance," and Judy Mowatt's "Working Wonders."
Blue Riddim isn't counting on winning tomorrow night at the Grammy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles — but the thrill of being nominated is apparent.
"We feel really good to even be nominated," said McLane in an interview before the band left for Los Angeles. "I don't think we even have any great level of expectations. If for some reason we would win, we'd be in a great position."
Bass player Andy "Drew" Myers quickly interjected, "Just being nominated is an honor."
The nomination marks the first time a Kansas City-based group has ever been in the running for the prestigious industry award and it came as a surprise to Blue Riddim.
Reggae is the native pop music of Jamaica so being American and white — on top of being from Kansas City — is not always easily accepted by those who first hear about the
Blue Riddim Band
But the band made quite an impression at the 1982 Sunsplash Festival at Montego Bay in Jamaica
— where an estimated 16,000, mostly black reggae puirists — gathered for the world's biggest reggae festival. Jamaican journalists called the Blue Riddim's set the highlight of the four-day festival.
The band came on stage about 6 a.m. the last day of the festival before a sleepy crowd that moaned as the all-white band was introduced. But Blue Ridim's first song brought the drowsy reggae fans to their feet. When it was all over, the Kansas City band tied for the festival's best band honors.
The performance resulted in the Grammys nomination, an extensive tour across the United States and international notice for Blue Riddim.
"Now it's gotten to the point Jamaican think there's some great Jamaican or reggae scene here in Kansas City," said McLane. "At least people don't scoff anymore."
On the Record
Three persons reported in separate incidents Saturday that their license plates were missing, Lawrence police said. The thefts occurred in the 1200 block of Rhode Island Street, the 700 block of Massachusetts Street and the 2700 Redbud Lane.
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automotive services and higher operating costs, may reach epidemic proportions if current trends continue more than a few weeks.
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He said national brand dealers had been hurt by the high cost of oil from large refineries, while the independents have been able to seek lower-priced gasoline.
Buried behind piles of files, George Lopez, Wichita junior, goes over notes during the Heart of America Debate Tournament. Preliminary rounds were held Saturday and yesterday. The tournament will conclude today with elimination rounds in the Kansas Union.
Those with high-volume sales are best suited to withstand the price cuts, Lundberg said, because they can stay current with market prices.
Making a case
Damage to dealers of national brands, especially those with
wholesale price of oil were factors contributing to what he foresaw as a shakeup in the wholesale and retail markets.
Analyst studies gas benefits
Dealers of national brands may be hurt the most, he said, noting that prices at full-service gas stations have not fallen as quickly as those at independent self-service retailers who are able to shop around for the best wholesale prices.
In his weekly newsletter, analyst Dan Lundberg said Saturday that higher operating costs, increased competition and the uneven
LOS ANGELES — Falling oil prices will benefit consumers in the short-term, but the lower prices may lead to a decline in the number of retail gasoline and automotive service stations, an oil industry analyst reports.
A bike valued at $500 was stolen sometime between 1:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Saturday, police said. The bike was stolen from the owner's place.
United Press International
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8
University Daily Kansan
The Philippines
Monday, Feb. 24, 1986
Military spurs isle reform
United Press International
It consisted of about 2,000 officers dedicated to cleaning up the graft and cronyism that has plagued the 250,000-member military during President Ferdinand Marcos' 20 years of rule.
MANILA, Philippines - The rebellion in the Philippines grew in large part out of a military reform movement that surfaced one year ago.
Reports of a crackdown on the reform group and the opposition in part spurred Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and military Lt. Gen. Fidel Ramos to revolt against the 20-year-old Marcos regime Saturday, saying Marcos should resign because his Feb. 7 election victory was fraudulent.
The move left the southeast Asian nation of 54 million people teetering on the edge of civil war for the first time since the Philippines gained independence from the United States in 1946.
Although he never formally acknowledged membership, Ramos has long been associated with the Reformed Armed Forces Movement. He is a West Point-trained
The reform movement surfaced a year ago, while Armed Forces Chief Fabian Ver went on leave to stand trial in the 1983 assassination of popular opposition leader Benigno Aquino.
career soldier who Washington hoped would spearhead reforms in the Philippine armed forces.
Most members, who said they wanted to see more discipline and professionalism in the military, are graduates of the Philippine Military Academy, and during its annual alumni parade, the junior officers unfurled signs before Marcos demanding reforms in the military, which faces a growing communist insurgency.
"We saw a very pronounced system of patronage, which we felt transceded the normal political environment and had adverse effects on the armed forces as a whole," said Col. Greg Honasan, 37, one of the reformists and among hundreds of soldiers in the rebellion.
Eventually, Honasaan said, this undermined the officer corps and the effectiveness of the military's counterinsurgency drive, worrying the United States, which has two large military bases in the country.
Diplomats renounce Marcos
United Press International
Philippine diplomats in the United States, Spain and Britain yesterday renounced the government of President Ferdinand Marcos, calling his Feb. 7 re-election over opposition leader Corazon Aquino a fraud.
The two high-ranking Philippine military officials seized the nation's defense headquarters Saturday,
Officials at the Los Angeles and Honolulu consulates said the diplomatic rebellion was in support of Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and deputy chief of the armed forces Fidel Ramos.
precipitating the latest crisis.
Speaking for the opposition group in Hawaii, Tomas Gomez said discussions were under way with other Philippine consulates in the United States, "Others will follow. We still don't know which ones."
There was no immediate indication whether Philippine Embassy consults in New York, Seattle, Vancouver, Wash., San Francisco or Chicago would follow suit.
In Houston, six of 10 consular officials, including consul general Rudolfo Severino Jr., signed a statement urging Marcos to resign, but refused to endorse Aquino.
In Madrid, a top Filipino diplomat, who asked not to be identified, said he did not recognize Marcos.
Asked if the statement referred to Aquino, Severino said, "I refuse to talk personalities."
The diplomat said Marcos' election victory over opposition candidate Aquino, which was marred by charges of widespread fraud and violence committed by the government, was the last straw.
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O
Aug. 25 --- Commission formed to investigate the murder.
Philippines/Chronology
Significant events in the Philippines since the August 1983 assassination of opposition leader Benigno Aquino;
JOSTENS AMERICA'S COLLEGE RING
Aug. 21 — Benigno Aquino is gunned down, allegedly by a borne gunman, while under military escort at the Manila Airport on return from three years of self-exile in the United States. Alleged assassin is killed by soldiers.
1983
March 28 — Security guards Erian Ranae and Olivia Reyes, in commission testimony, are first of several witnesses to contradict military statement that Aquino was shot on airport tarmac.
Aug. 30 — Government identifies notorious criminal Rolando Galman as the assassin.
Oct. 10 — Commission resigns under criticism that its members are beholden to Marcos. 1984
May 14 — Day of nationwide elections. Marcos opponents gain strength in Marcos-controlled National Assembly.
Oct. 24 -- Majority report of inquiry commission says Armed Forces Chief Gen. Fabian Ver and others plotted Aquilo murder.
Jan. 23 - Ver and 25 others named in Inquiry commission's report are charged in the Aquino staying.
1985
Feb. 1 — Trial of the 20 begins.
Nov. 3 — Under U.S. pressure,
Marcos promises presidential election.
Dec. 2 — Ver and 25 others acquitted in seven-month trial.
Feb. 22 — Defense Minister Juan Ponce Encele and Lt. Gin. Fidel Ramos, the military's vice chief of staff, steal control of the nation's military headquarters, demand that Marcos resign.
Dec. 3 — Corazon Aquino announces she will run for president. 1986
Feb. 15 — Philippine National Assembly proclaims Marcos winner of presidential election. Aquino, victor in an independent tally, calls for non-violent protests. Reagan statement blames Marcos for widespread fraud and violence.
CINCINNATI — The niece of Philippine opposition leader Corazon Aquino, on a tour of the United States, stopped to gather grassroots support in her campaign to urge President Reagan to acknowledge Aquino as president.
Feb. 7 — Filipinos vote in election monitored by U.S.
"Call Ronald Reagan. Tell him you are very concerned about the situation in the Philippines," she said. "One call is worth so much. I have a good feeling that we are going to make it. But the questions of when and how many lives will be lost in the meantime, we do not know."
Wearing a sweatshirt emblazoned with "Cory Aquino is my president," Andrea Aquino Luna said Saturday that Filipino Americans represented the hope of her people back home.
Feb. 23 -- Marcos deploye armored combat units against rebel soldiers holed up in military installation.
Luna made the comments to about 35 people gathered at the home of her long-time friends Bondoc and Angelina Antonio. She plans to meet with Reagan aides today.
Filipino asks for support
A government-backed panel declared the incumbent Ferdinand E. Marcos the victor, but Luna said she knew differently. Despite the fraud, violence and murder of the election proceedings, Luna said her hope for democracy remained strong.
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Monday. Feb. 24. 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
9
Jayhawks beat Kansas State, clinch Big 8 title
Bv Matt Tidwell
Sports writer
The guy who gets paid to climb up in the rafters of Allen Field House and hang Big Eight championship banners is finally going to get some business — after an eight-year dry spell.
The Kansas Jayhawks used Saturday's televised game against archrival Kansas State to win their first conference championship under Larry Brown, their first title since 1973 and their 38th overall league championship.
The Jayhawks, 26-3 overall and 11-1 in the Big Eight, beat the Wildcats 84-89 in front of a sold-out field house crowd of 15,400.
And, despite some tense moments in the first half and dazzling performances by the Wildcats' Joe Wright and Norris Coleman, this win was vintage Kansas:
The second half charge — After being pulled to sleep by a tough Kansas State half-court offense in the first half, the Jayhawks stormed back as they've done so many times before by shooting 75 percent from the field in the second half. Kansas shot 62.1 percent for the game.
- The unselfish offense — The Jayhawks again placed four players in double figures. Ron Kellogg scored 16 of his game-high 30 points in the second half, but Brown bragged most about Kellogg's team-leading and career-high nine assists. Kellogg's 30 points were the most by a Jayhawk in a single game this season.
Fans were calling for the scissors and a ladder, but the team quietly stopped.
The fast break — The Jayhawks used tough pressure defense to force turnovers and subsequent fast break baskets in the second half — including championship-sealing slam dunks by Calvin Thompson and Danny Manning.
The win was a sweet one for the Jayhawks, but the team didn't cut down the nets after the game. And although everyone was happy in the locker room, Kansas players were treating this win like another day at the office.
"That's not us," Thompson said. "Some fans came up and asked me if we would cut down the nets but that's just not us. We won it and I don't think we needed to cut down the nets to show that. Besides, we have other goals to meet."
Thompson said he was happy that the fans got to see the championship-clincher at home.
It's great that we did it in front of
Men's Basketball
our fans," Thompson said. "This is a reward for them. They sit out in the cold and wait to see us play and it's kind of a pay-off for them."
Brown said that winning the conference title was an accomplishment that the team shouldn't take lightly, but that cutting down the nets in front of Hartman and the Wildcats wouldn't be appropriate.
Kansas guard Cedric Hunter said the win represented just another milestone in what the Jayhawks hope would be a longer list of accomplishments.
"Everyone thought it would come down to the game at Oklahoma," Hunter said. "I'm happy we won it here. We set goals at the beginning of the season. The first was to win the NIT tournament in New York. After that, we just wanted to play well every game and win the Big Eight and we did that."
Kansas State coach Jack Hartman, who has seen other Kansas championship teams, voiced the frustrations all the Big Eight coaches have experienced against the Jayhawks.
Kansas 84
Kansas State 69
Kansas State
| | M | FG | FT | 4A | R | A | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Mitchell | 35 | 6-11 | 3-4 | 7 | 8 | 1 | 19 |
| Coleman | 34 | 8-15 | 5-5 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 21 |
| Meyer | 31 | 2-5 | 2-2 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 61 |
| Smith | 39 | 0-1 | 0-1 | 2 | 7 | 3 | 0 |
| Wright | 41 | 0-9 | 9-11 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 27 |
| Green | 1 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Simmons | 1 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Edite | 1 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Muff | 5 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
| Totals | | 25-50 | 19-22 | 27-15 | 15 | 6 | 16 |
Percentages: FG, 500 FT, 894. Blocked Shots: (1) (Michelle I), Turnovers: (16) (Michelle Coleman, Meyer, Smith, Wright) Streams: 4 (Michelle Coleman, Meyer, Smith, Simmons) 1 (Technicals: None)
Kansas
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Manning | 35 | 7-12 | 1-2 | R | 3 | 4 | 19 |
| Kellogg | 37 | 13-17 | 4-4 | 5 | 9 | 4 | 30 |
| Drilling | 33 | 4-9 | 2-3 | 5 | 9 | 2 | 10 |
| Hunter | 34 | 4-8 | 2-3 | 5 | 9 | 2 | 10 |
| Bauerson | 36 | 8-11 | 2-2 | 3 | 5 | 2 | 18 |
| Marshall | 31 | 9-12 | 2-0 | 2 | 5 | 2 | 10 |
| Turgeon | 10 | 0-0 | 2-2 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| Piper | 5 | 0-1 | 1-2 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| Hull | 1 | 0-0 | 1-2 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| Totals | 1 | 0-0 | 1-2 | 23 | 28 | 20 | 84 |
*M* FG FT R A F T
Manning 35 7-12 1-2 R 3 4 19
Kellogg 37 13-17 4-4 5 9 4 30
Drilling 33 4-9 2-3 5 9 2 10
Hunter 34 4-8 2-3 5 9 2 10
Bauerson 36 8-11 2-2 3 5 2 18
Marshall 31 9-12 2-0 2 5 2 10
Turgeon 10 0-0 2-2 1 1 3 2
Piper 5 0-1 1-2 1 1 3 2
Hull 1 0-0 1-2 1 1 3 2
Totals 1 0-0 1-2 23 28 20 84
Percentages: FG; 621, FT, 857. *Blacked Shots*: 3 (Drailing 2), Turnovers: 9 (Kellogg 4). Steals: 6 (Manning 4); Technicals: None. Halt: Kansas State 34-43. Officials: Spitter, Waterman.
HART: Kahlah State 34-33. Officials: Spinner,
Mayfield, Wulkow.
Mayfield, Wulkow
A: 15,400.
N.C. State beats N.C.
The Associated Press
No. 20 North Carolina State and unranked Purdue sprang upsets in college basketball yesterday, while No. 9 Syracuse escaped with a 64-63 victory over No. 13 Georgetown.
Led by sophomore Chris Washburn's 26 points, N.C. State gave top-ranked North Carolina its second straight loss, 76-65, in an Atlantic Coast Conference game at Raleigh.
Host Purdue tripped No. 15 Indiana
88-68 in Big Ten play as the Hoosiers lost sole possession of first place in the Big Ten.
North Carolina, which lost to Maryland on Thursday, played without starting guard Steve Hale.
who is recovering from a collapsed lung, and 6-foot-11 Warren Martin, the Tar Heels' top shot blocker who had a sprained foot.
N. C. State raised its record to 18-9, 7-6, while North Carolina, 25-3, 9-3, dropped into a second place ACC tie with Georgia Tech behind Duke, which North Carolina visits Sunday.
At Syracuse, Dwayne Washington's 24 points, including a free throw for the game-winner, paced the Orangemen, which solidified its hold on first place in the Big East with a 13-1 mark. Syracuse is 22-3 overall.
Michael Jackson missed with a 25-footer at the buzzer for Georgetown, which fell to 20-6. 9-5.
KORNELIUS 23
Chris Magerl/KANSAN
Kansas guard Calvin Thomson and forward Chris Piber iumped for an offen- sive rebound in the first half of Saturday's game.
Jayhawks, fans bid adieu to Hartman
By Matt Tidwell Sports writer
For 16 years, Kansas State coach Jack Hartman had has to take verbal abuse from Kansas fans.
Saturday, in his last appearance at Allen Field House, Hartman was hit by a car.
The sold-out crowd of 15,400 gave Hartman a game-standing gown
tion and seemed to forget, for a moment, that he was the coach of the rival Kansas State Wildcats.
Hartman will retire at the end of the season.
The Jayhawk fans who sit behind the Kansas bench presented Hartman with a farewell banner. The banner, signed by some of the fans behind the bench, said "We'll miss you Jack."
But make no mistake, Hartman said it was the warm reception from the Kansas fans that made him most proud.
you're on the road and the home people do that for you," Hartman said after the game. "It was very special. I've always been treated with a lot of respect at Kansas."
"Those things are very humbling and I appreciate it very much when
The presentation of the gifts from Kansas coach Larry Brown and his players was planned. The standing ovation was not.
Suspense is gone, but OU game is big
By Frank Hansel
Associate sports editor
The ESPN executives had to be salivating when they booked tonight's game between the third-ranked Kansas Jayhawks and the ninth-ranked Oklahoma Sooners.
Oklahoma
Q
Men's Basketball
23-5. (Big 8- 8-4)
8.30 tonight
(106 ft and ESPN)
Rarely do their cameras make it west of the Mississippi, and yet ESPN was going to televised to the entire nation what was supposed to be the decoding game in the Big Eight race — but something went wrong.
The Sooners, 23-5 overall and 8-4 in the Big Eight, fell victim to three
So, while tonight's game won't have all the luster that it was originally intended to have, it isn't entirely tarnished either.
upsets in two weeks, Missouri, Iowa State and Nebraska defeated the Sooners, and Kansas, 26-3 and 11-1, survived upset bids by Colorado and Kansas State to wrap up its first conference championship in eight years, 48 hours before the cameras were to be turned on in Norman.
"This is a chance for us to spotlight our conference and it's an opportunity to show people that we have quality teams," Kansas head coach Larry Brown said Saturday.
Outside of showingc the Big Eight, both teams have something at stake. Oklahoma is in a second-place tie with Iowa State.
With the conference trophy already Lawrence-bound, the Jayhawks only
have the pressure of their national ranking to preserve.
"There is pressure on us to fight for our national ranking." Brown said. "There has been very little talk about the Big Eight championship because of our ranking and the post season tournament."
The Sooners helped to silence the talk about who the Big Eight champion would be. On Feb. 8, Oklahoma was tied with Kansas for the conference lead. Then, in a period of 11 days, the Sooners lost three conference games while Kansas continued to win.
Kansas guard Cedric Hunter said a win over Oklahoma would give the Jayhawks more momentum and confidence heading into the post-season conference tournament.
tournament. The Sooners, who started out with a 17-0, have gone 6-5 in their last 11 games. Kansas handed Oklahoma its first loss of the year, a 98-92 defeat Jan. 21 at Allen Field House.
Oklahoma could also use a victory to better its chances in the NCAA
Kansas
Probable Starters
F 25 Danny Manning (6-11)
F 44 Ron Kellogg (6-5)
C 30 Greg Drilling (7-1)
G 35 Calvin Thompson (6-6)
G 22 Cedric Hunter (6-0)
Oklahoma
F 30 Daryl Kennedy (6-5)
F 25 Anthony Bowie (6-6)
C 55 David Johnson (6-7)
G 11 Linwood Davis (5-11)
G 32 Tim McCallister (6-1)
Jaylan
Kansas forward Jackie Martin is kept away from the Wildcats' Sue Leiding by a referee after the two got into a dispute in Saturday's game. The incident occurred with 2-46 left in the second half after Leiding was called for a foul. Kansas beat Kansas State 81-70.
Chria Manarl/KANSAN
'Hawks battle past K-State
By Dawn O'Malley
Sports writer
Saturday's game was an unusually explosive confrontation between women's basketball rivals Kansas and Kansas State.
Despite an exchange of words and elbows, Kansas held on to win 81-70 in Allen Field House.
Wildcat guard Susan Green led all scorers with 20 points. Kansas forward Vickie Adkins led the Jayhawks with 19. Guard Lisa Dougherty and forward Jackie Martin each added 14 points for Kansas. Martin also had 10 rebounds and two assists.
The incident began when Leiding was called for fouling Martin. Martin responded by elbowing Leiding. Leiding threw the ball at Martin and both teams rushed from their benches onto the court.
Martin and K-State's center Sue Leiding had a brief alteration on the court with 2:46 left in the game and Kansas leading 71-53.
Martin was called for a technical.
"Players are going to react," Mossman said. "I cannot fault either kid. It was a reaction on Sue's part. Tempers are going to flare."
Martin was called for a technical "The referee wasn't blowing his whistle when he got to get away from me." Martin said. "It wasn't anything I planned."
Leiding said Matildie Mossman, K-State's head coach, told her to go for the ball, and when she did she drew a foul.
Both Mossman and Kansas head coach Marian Washington said they
Women's Basketball
thought the officials allowed the game to become too physical.
"It was more physical than I expected," Washington said. "I felt that a lot of things were permitted and not called which does bring about frustration."
Leiding's outburst against Martin wasn't her only one of the game. With 31 seconds remaining in the game, she drew a technical for throwing the ball at Jayhawk forward Sandy Shaw.
"I wanted her to pick the ball up because the time was running," Leiding said. "My aggression took over."
The Wildcats were down to six players at the end of the game because forward Amanda Holley fouled out with 2:26 left.
At halftime the Jayhawks led 38-32.
Kansas improved its Big Eight record to 7-5, 16-9 overall. K-State now is 5-7, 14-11.
The Wildcats started Saturday's game with only seven players. Last month three players, Cassandra Jones, Cheryl Jackson and Sheila Hubert, left the team for personal reasons. Carlisa Thomas also sat out Saturday's game because of academic problems.
"It hurts to be without your leading rebunder and second leading scorer," Mossman said. "But you still have to stay out of foul trouble and control the tempo of the game."
Kansas will play the Oklahoma Sooners Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at Norman.
Kansas 81,
Kansas State 70
Ramsar state
Durham 4-1-0 Helley 5-9-3-1 Leidong 6-3-7-1
Green 5-10-20, Helley 5-9-3-1 Leidong 6-3-7-1
Kuubel 10-20, Fitzpatrick 3-2-2, Blaekirac 1-2-
5, Kuubel 0-0-0, Totale 25-29-70.
Kansas (1)
6, 14; 15; 18; Dougherty 4-6 8-14; Jennings 5-12-11;
0-5 9-13 13; Webb 0-2; Mason 6-24 14, Broughtier
0-1; 2-11; Shaest 2-3/7; Killian 0-0; Tolos 19-31 27-18;
Hattimeke Kansas 38-32 Total: foulsups State 23;
Kansas 24 Fouled out-Huffman 24 (Leiding) 14;
Kansas 38 (Minton 10); Assens-Kansas 11 (Green; Fitzpatrick 4); Kansas 22 (Dougherty 5); Technikins-Marin,
Lieding, Kaisers Lake Bench.
IV loses to K-State
The Kansas junior varsity lost to Kansas State 77-76 Saturday in Allen Field House.
The Wildcats used Walter Wright's 25 points to post a 40-37 lead at halftime.
Kansas came close in the second half and outscored K-State 39-37 before losing by one in regulation.
Kansas had four players in double figures led by Scooter Burry with 24.
Wing 11-15 Width 8,5 Inch; Basket 2 D-2 D-4; J Width 9-10
Wing 11-15 Width 8,5 Inch; Basket 2 D-2 D-4; J Width 9-10
Wing 11-15 Width 8,5 Inch; Basket 2 D-2 D-4; J Width 9-10
Wing 11-15 Width 8,5 Inch; Basket 2 D-2 D-4; J Width 9-10
Kansas State (77)
Games 0 0-0 0, Stallings 0 0-0, Bank 1 0-2 Witz 0 1-2,
Hormer 0 4-2 Hymmer 1 6-8, Hartlik 5 1-3, Jeff Johnson
0 4-0, Stacey 0 9-0, Ben 10 4-4, Patner 4 3-1 11,
Tales 32, 12, 17, 26
Halfime Kansas State 40-37. Total louss—Kansas State 19, Kansas State 17. Fouled out—Kansas, Peimer. Rebounds—Kansas State 32, Kansas 28. Assists—Kansas State 19, Kansas State 22. Techniches—none
10
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Monday, Feb. 24, 1986
Golf team finishes 10th in Mexico
By Jerry Ryan Sports writer
The Kansas men's golf team finished 10th in a field of 19 teams this weekend in its season opener at the Pan American Invitational in Monterrey, Mexico.
Texas A&M won the tournament with a team total of 867.
Kansas finished with a three-round total of 907, and finished behind regional rivals Missouri and Oral Roberts University. Missouri had 679 and ORU had 893.
The top performer for the
Jayhawks was senior Steve Madsen,
Men's Golf
who shot rounds of 77-70-76 for a total of 223. The top finisher was Roy Makenzie, of Texas A&M, who shot a total of 213.
"We played pretty well considering this is our first tournament of the year." Randall said.
Kansas head coach Ross Randall said he was pleased with the team's performance.
"We made some improvements over the first day and I was encouraged by the way we finished."
Randall said the team showed it hadn't been outside much because of the inconsistencies in the short game
Randall said Rudy Zupetz gave the team the help he was hoping for before the season began.
"I was pleased the way Rudy played," Randall said. "Every round he played counted for the team score."
Zuetz scored rounds of 79-75-77 for a total of 231.
"I'd like to help a little more," Zupeet said. "I need to work on my trajectory with my shot so the wind doesn't play on the ball so much."
Grav sets record in 1,000-yard run
SAN DIEGO — Johnny Gray wound up his indoor season in style yesterday by setting a world indoor record of two minutes, 4.39 seconds in the 1,000-yard run at the Michelob Invitational.
United Press International
Gray, who also holds the indoor 880 record, began his kick with two laps to go, slipping past Santa Monica
Track Club teammate Earl Jones and gliding to the victory.
Greg Foster scored a double victory in the 50- and 60-yard hurdles. Foster, the world indoor record holder in the 50 at 5.88 seconds, ran 5.99 in the 50 and 6.94 in the 60.
Joe Dial won the pole vault with a leap of 19-1/4 after Serguel Bubka of the Soviet Union withdrew because of
an injury and Billy Olson failed to clear 18-4%.
Dial tried three times for a new world mark of 19-8/4, but failed.
Bubka, the world record holder in the event at 19-5% was a late scratch after complaining about an injured left shoulder.
Olson complained that the long season was starting to take its toll.
Saberhagen agrees to random drug tests
FORT MYERS, Fla. — Bret Saberhagen, who at 21 became the youngest American League Cy Young award winner, had a random drug-testing clause included in his Kansas City Royals' contract at his suggestion.
Sports Briefs
Saberhagen, a 20-game winner last year, won a $925,000 salary arbitration case and requested the Royals add the drug-testing clause.
"I thought that since it is a good contract for me, if the Royals have any questions about my ability, I have nothing to hide," Saberhagen said westerday.
John Schuerholz, the Royals' general manager, said Saberhagen made the request
without any demands from the club.
When a player goes to arbitration, only the salary can be decided in a standard player's contract, which does not include drug testing. Schuerholz said drug-testing clauses have been included in several Royals' 1986 contracts.
Tennis team wins 3
The women's tennis team extended its perfect record to 7-0 over the weekend by defeating New Mexico, Minnesota and Wichita State and winning the Wichita State Invitational Tennis Tournament.
The Jayhawks beat Minnesota 6-3 on Saturday.
Kansas 'tennis coach Scott Perelman said his team played
well on Sunday as they beat the host team. Wichita State 9-0.
"Four years ago they were beating us 7-2, 8-1, but now we're beating them 9-0. That's a tribute to the girls and the work they've done." Perelman said.
In singles play, Tracy Treps, Barb Inmar, Marie Hibbard and Christie Kim won all three of their matches. Jennette Jonsson and Christine Parr were 2-1. In doubles, Inman-Jonsson and Trepp-Pars won their three matches and Hibbard-Kim were 2-1.
KU rugby team wins
The Kansas varsity rugby team beat the Oklahoma Sooners 16-8 in Norman on Saturday.
The Oklahoma club team beat Kansas 32-27.
From staff and wire reports.
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Mrs. Winners
Owens Flowers
Ellena Ford
Jayhawk Bookstore
Gammons
Moto-Photo
Douglas County Bank
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
FAST-N-FREE DELIVERY
YOU'VE TRIED THE REST NOW TRY THE BEST!
MONDAY MUNCHIES
1 - 10" PIZZA WITH ONE TOPPING & A 16oz. PEPSI
$4.75 VALUE ONLY $4.00
WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH
M
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH
PIZZA SHUTTLE 1601 W.23RD
HOURS
Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-2 a.m.
Fr.&Sat. 11 a.m.-3 a.m.
Sunday. 11 a.m.-1 a.m.
WE ACCEPT CHECKS (25* Service Charge)
16oz. Pepsi's - 25*!
Monday, Feb. 24, 1986
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 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 Friday 4 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 4 p.m.
Classified Display ... $4.40
per column inch
POLICIES
11
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 ads. All nonclassified ads will not overflow allowed in classified display ads.
- Words set in ALL CAPS can as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD FACE can as 3 words
* Deadline is 4 p.m. — 2 working days prior it
- Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
- Correct insertion or ally attachment
* No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only.
68th Annual Antique Show and Sale Coming
on Friday, January 23rd. Admission is $10,
m.p., Sunday 11 a.m.-5 p.m., At National
Guard Armory, 200 Iowa. Sponsored by Pilot
Hub. Admission $2.00 with this ad .25 off.
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established.
- correct insertion of any advertisement.
* No refund on cancellation of pre-paid classified
- Blind ads ads - please add a $54 service charge
- classified display advertisements.
- *Classified display ads do not count towards mon
- Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in newspapers or by calling the kansas business office at 804-4358.
- Blind box ads—please add a $5 service charge;
* Blind box assists—all classified ads marked
with a blind box tag.
ALL DISCIPLINES
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement.
6th Annual Antique Show and Sale coming February 28-March 1, 2nd. Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. at Guard Armory, 300 Iowa. Sponsored by Pilot Bhd. Admission $2.00 with the $4 off each $20 gift card.
**RE READY FOR MIDTERM?** Attend the preparing for Examn Study Skills Workshop. Covered topics: time management, memory, organization, study skills, more. FREE! Wednesday, February 26, 7 p.m., Council Room, Kansas Union. Presented by the Student Assistant Center, 121 Strong Hall.
10" Turtle' Color T. $28.98 a month. Smarty's TV.
Nest W. 32rd. B42-7531. Mon. Sat. 6:30 - 9:00 Sun.
Wed. 6:30 - 9:00 Wed.
PRIVATE PLACEMENT SERVICE
Call Ken Wilson 841-1085 or 842-5752
200 Professional Headhunters are waiting to see your resume.
VCR-VCH with 2 movies, overnight 89.66
- Bid: 1447 W 21rd, 842-8451.701 - Mon,
Bid: 8 Sqh. I
- Fee: $445
Spinners Books & Webbert has Rosemary Ruether's best books and other titles by women in spirituality and the politics of women's life. The book cover off `M.H.S.1.8` *Mon, Sat., Th. U! B. 8.94.6974*
Get Published! SF and Fantasy magazine acceptance submissions. Linda 864-5892 evenings.
Attention Sephoromes: Owl Society is now accepting applications! Minimum overall GPA of 3.0. Applications in Rm. 400 Kansan Union. Application in Rm. 396 Kansan Union due March 1 at p.m. in Rm. 403 Kansan Union.
RIGHT LIFE MOBILE DJ DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 749-4713.
ENTERTAINMENT
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to provide the next party we meet. We use a Jabra sound system and a sound pack to accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in tranquility, Mahatam and Salina. Call 181-9432 or 9433.
FORRENT
For rent: 2 bdrm, brand new apt. 1.12 bfc rks.
Kansas Union $330. plus utilities. Sublease a
gasibility. Call Chuck Ledom 485-3238 8 a.m. +
p.m. and Pam 485-3238 11 a.m.
Meet us at Newark near University; Y
& Downtown. Most utilities paid with off street
parking. No pets please. 841-5500.
LEASE NEW FOR FALL and/or SUIBLASE for during and summer. Available as early as possibly in mid-January or February in good location w/ lawn yard. Extra large MBR, garage, laundry/storage. No pets. Lease and Kefs. req. Couple or small family. Prefer qualified laundry service. 457-736 (3) 901-2521. 457-736 (3) 901-2521.
First come, first served, only a few rows left. At 2106 W. 218th on KU bus route, between Gibson's and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, draps, and appliances. We can also help you choose your option. Square foot, carport, extra bath or balcony. Call 853-6446 for appointment.
3 BR house, East Lawrence, bus route, 1984,
8975. Kitchen, laundry room, gardenable,
and utilities. Phone 206-467-7878.
we you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkeley. Florida, Vacancies available now and his summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 843-2116.
Female housemate. neighbor-behind, sun room, garage, studio, garden, non-smoker.
Male roommate needs. Have your own bedroom & bathroom for only $132/mo. Convenient location on bus route and close to shopping. Call 842-2891, late afternoon or early evening.
Spring break-Delkette 2-bedroom condo, pool, hot tub, sauna. Located in Silverstone,horne to Brecklebridge, Copper, and Keystone $100/night.
(303) 428-1713.
SUBLEASE NOW. 1.BDMR Hanover Place apt.
One month free rent! 841-1212.
Newly remodeled just 2 berm ap $25 plus lay
utilities plus deposit. Lease ends July 31, 2013.
Insurance required.
Sublease now. 8-3d apt. Very nice and close to campus. 943-9738.
Sublease 3 furnished apartment. 3 blocks from campus $45 plus utilities, can make a deal.
TOWNHOUSE available immediately Corrish Bn.
Townhouse Availability Bowpole Abr 84:430-590
Bn. 84:430-590
Bn. 84:430-590
TRAILRIDE-Now leasing for Summer & Fall. Studios-large, cheerful, large closet, quiet rooms with hardwood floors. APARTMENTS-1-2, 3-8 bedrooms, appliances include dishwasher, laundry in building, gas heat & water paid. TOWNHOUSES-2.3 & 4 bedroom, kitchenette, bathrooms, 1/1 to 1/2 baths. Excellent maintenance services. 3 swimming pools, tennis, basketball, close to shopping, 1/2 block to Centennial Park, on campus.
Unfurnished studio apartment for rent at 1300
Rockaway Ave., 56th Fl. or plus electric,
water, heat pad, buildup. 841-3182.
MASTERCAST® offers completely furnished 1, 2,
and 3 bedroom apartments all near campus. Call
(800) 743-2691.
FOR SALE
Baseball cards and sports nostalgia. Buy Sell
and Trade J D'Bauer's盒装. Open 18-May-
24.
University Daily Kansan
Cash immediately for automobile exhaust
intelligent converters. We pick up and pay cash
Big Casio box-box synthesizer $199. Raleigh record bicycle 10-ml . $139. Tecnics turntable, linear tracking, programmable plus cardboard $140. IBM cei software $590. 841-2399.
Loudspeaker Systems. Allison Seven, 830 pair.
Pair. Cash only. 845-143-101
or 827-290-700
RCA 18 inch B/W TV UHF, VHF, works good.
Best Offer 749-3628.
One pair DCM 'QED' speakers, $350 or best offer,
Phone 842-909-380.
Comic Books, Penthouses, pents, eta. Max
Comics. Open 11-4 Tue-Fri. Sat. & Sun. 10-5 Mfi
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U. repair).
Ahli obsolete tax property. Call 816-679-4500.
Mail or fax: 816-679-4500.
Roland GRT70 guitar synthesizer; list at $3000,
selling $150 each note nets second guitar;
list at $600, selling $200 each guitar;
asking $1000, selling $200 each guitar.
CLASSIFIEDS
Classified
Heading:
Write ad here:
Net a
Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
at $1147, askd. 600, 913-235-0447 (Topkaka)
skb_books.com.vemma.7 (Nordic men.)
skb_books.com.vemma.8 (Nordic men.)
Skis boots womens, 7-7/1-2, Nordica, men's,
10/12/-11, vrannish. dresms $183,男士 843-$566.
Classified Display
1 col. x 1 inch — $4.40
Phone:
Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
1 col. x 1 inch = $4.40
| | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-6 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1-15 words | $2.60 | $3.75 | $5.25 | $8.25 |
| For every 5 words added | 30* | 50* | 75* | 1.05 |
B. C. Rich Warick Bass with case, 2. Ladwig Hervé Cymbal Stands, Palate 502 rude and rude crash, all in excellent condition. Call: 841-7929. 1978 FREIRIGHT Birds good, runs nice.
1977 FTIBREID Looks good, runs great. A/C
cassette $260 negotiable 4E/4E $398 Keep
on power $398 Keep on power
1965 Schimberg Mountain Bike Reliable transportation with very few miles. Call 842-6899 after 2 p.m. 3 man dome tent with rain fix. Factory conditioned. Only 80% Everything in Ice, 8% & 8%
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Receivers from $20, turntables from $15, speakers
from $30. Includes all complete stereo,
all completely reconditioned and
lawrence Custom Radio, 914 W. 29rd St.
MARY DEAN ELECTRONIC GUITAR: Candy appl
870-8416 for Ned. $350 for 870-8416 for Ned.
*
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them: 1) An study guide, 2) For case analysis of Western Civilization, 3) Analysis of Western Civilization; available now at Town Crier, The Jayhawk Bookseller, and online.
80 BIN TRINITRON 19 inch COLOR TV-Cable
Must mount both devices. Must keep
Must hold both devices. 84-718 Keep Trying)
AUTO SALES
1982 Toyota 4 x A-SR 3-p/ s/p, p/b, a/c /mf
camellie. Cassel B-914 894-1948
76 FIREBIRD-Runs great, looks good, 24 mpg,
85 BLESSING-684M 86A8M 6104
nokia 8426 8424
Must sell 7 Mazda RX7, runs great. AM/FM,
DEC. AE $2750 or best offer. 740-866-m
acm@macmotor.com
Car: 1976 Honda CVCC, fine condition $1500.
B45-355, evenings, weekends.
DRIVE A REAL SPORTS CAT 78 2900 2 plan +
real attention. Alpine white. *4000 OBJ*
*2 plan*
Moving Must Sell. 1890 Olds-Mobil station sation vagon VSiegel Full, Option Ull. Call $2,700. Call mw
LOST/FOUND
Found: 2 keys on a leather key ring. Call 844-2203.
Wool Herington overcoat and red scarf. Lost Saturday night. Feb. 15, 843-1772 David C. Reward.
HELP WANTED
RUSESHISSE HIRING! $10-$3,000 Carribbean,
Israel, World Wide $14-$29,000 U.S.A. KAUCHANSE
USA. 844-746-1444 KAUCHANSE USA.
CASH DAILY. Dominic's Pizza is now accepting applications to hire 10 drivers. If you are a self-motivated, high energy person, you could be a driver for this company. We pay cash commissions on deliveries daily. Our drivers must $5-$8 per hour and more. You must be 18 years or older, have a car, current driver's license and proof of insurance. Apply by phone at WheelchairNow. No phone calls, message FD.FL mf
Lawrence's largest computer store COMPUTER OUTLET, seeks a personable , aggressive sales person for NCR, Leading Edge, IBM, Sperry and Corona micro's. Work includes assembly and office responsibilities.
SALES-SUPPORT
MICRO-
COMPUTERS
Requires micro familiarity. This is a long term position with tremendous growth potential.
Join the sharpest computer team in NE Kansas. Salary — commission.
Send resume to COMPUTER OUTLET,
804 New Hampshire,
Lawrence, KS. 66044.
EOE-MF
SUMMER WORK/JOINSON COUNTY, KS
Work and drive a car. Work as part of a work
work. Work consists of door-to-door data collection.
Car and driver's license required. For interview
March 6, please contact Jane Kautz,
jkautz@ksd.org
HIRING TERRITORIAL MARKETING PERSONNEL Progression commission approximate $21,800 first year $35,200 second year. Resume HIRED by 4/7/14. TCD, Data 124, Highway 6, Highway 7, Ka骨6011.
}
NANNIES WANTED-Live-in child care for professional families in Boston. If you love children, we have the right job for you! Summer jobs, Job #1, 80th Street, New York, NY, Branch, Beach, Mass, 02258, Call 617-244-5144.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,040-$29,020; yr New
government $857-877,000 Ext. R-1789 for
current job(s).
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16.40 up. $29.20 down. New
Jobs 81-857-687-600. Ext. RATR$ for current
federal job.
Send resume to
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT -Colorado Mountain Resort Employer is seeking male and female applicants for: Retail Sales, Food Services and other job duties. Req's bachelor's degree in September. Located in Ritter Park, Colorado. For further information write: National Park Village North, c/o Mar Schifferhins, 740 Oxford Lake, Port Bend, CO 81625.
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer, yr. round, Europe,
S.A., Amererail, Air. All fields, $900-2000
mightseeing. Free info. Write LC, PO Bx 2KS-1
Corona Del Mar, CA 92825.
WANTED: ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN for immediate full or part-time work in Overland Park area. 6 mo. experience necessary. Call (913) 499-8655.
Part Time Job. Flexible hours between 9 a.m. and 8 p.m. for inventory control, 4 a.m. to 8 p.m. for production, and 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
CHECKERS Pizza has immediate openings for ten delivery men. Must be 18 years or older and be available on request. Check average $9-9 per hour. Cash payments paid daily. Apply in person or call CHECKERS Pizza, 2124
AIRLINE HIRING BOOM: $243-$90,000
REQUESTS: In-house recruits.
Call Connecticut,
New Jersey or Florida.
Email HR@airline.com.
PERSONAL
JOBS: Part time work for full time pay $400-$1200
m. Full time $3000-$6000 m. Work for the fastest growing co in American history. We need
providers. Call 913-289-6492 Dupree-Gillen & Assoc.
White male age 24 seeks dating/relationship with black female. Interests in health, exercise, career. No joke. Serious replies to Kevin, Box 3002 Lawrence, Ka.
A KU student from far East Orient nears a various girl for warm relationship. Please reply to Nehil.
*captain energy says, "There are better ways to spend your money. Help conserve energy."*
To Ray Jr. see I need you had a first name! See
at Johnny's same booth. D-J.W
L, with my BLUE CARNATION. Sorry I could not help to you 'valentine's night.' You looked better.
yon at Johnny's same booth. D-J W
Yong Systipied in my life in "The Suicide" can we
Ya Gymed into my life in "The Suicide" can we meet? Respond here. Four row, red sweater.
Me respond here. A four-way, flat sweater
POINSETTE BEACH INN in the heart of the Fort
Lauderdale strip. STUDENT discount.
1-305-237-1800.
BUS. PERSONAL
$10-$350 Weekly/Up Mailing Circulars! No apology! Sincerely interested rush self-addressed envelope: Success, P.O. Box 47CKEG, Woodstock, IL 60088.
Blue Heron Futons
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattress
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.-Sat. 12:50 p.m.
841-9443
*CAMP COUNSELORS - M/P* - Outstanding Slim and Trim Down Camps; Tennis, Dance, Swimming; Volleyball, Soccer; Drills plus. Separate girls' and boys' camps. 7 weeks. Campamel on College Campses at Arizona State University in California. Contact: Michele Friedman, Director. 904 Hewlett Dr. No. Woodmere, N.Y. 11581.
1234567890
COMPHEBENISEI HEALTH ASSOCIATE:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentially assured. Greater Kansas City area. Call for appointment.
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
The Union's recording
of the day's entries & soups.
Creative, thinking singles find kindred spirits through the directory for educated singles. LOVELINE, P.O. Box 3602KD, Lawrence, KS. 640-1954. One-use membership. $4.00.
Word Processing
Copying
- Thesis Binding
- Typesetting
- Design & Layout
- Resumes & Flyers
- Transparencies
Laminating
26TH & IOWA
HOLIDAY PLAZA
Phone 749-5182
University
Materials
Center
Modeling and the theater portfolio — showing new
theater productions, call for information,
Swell Studio, 745-1611.
Warm sweet shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed Shirtte. 749-1611.
Get Something Going!
---
Get
Cash.
Cash in on shopping convenience without ever leaving home, and carry savings one step at a time. Cash is used by everyday people, ready to pass on values to you. Take advantage of quality merchandise at an affordable price for shopping at the store of shopping at home—read classified.
And carry.
Kansas Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4558
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School! Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841-7749.
GAYLESIHAN> Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stamped, self-address envelope to: TRIANGLE TIMES, P.0 Box 28429, KCMO 64196.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U. repair).
Call 801-692-6000.
Eat GH92# for information.
Eat GH92# for information.
Rent '17+' Ticket T. V.C $20.0 a month. Curtis
9:00-10:00; 10:00-11:00. Mon-Fat. Sat-9:00-
10:00; Sun-1, 5.
Instant impass, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, ID and of course, financial aid.
*LOose Weight! Gain Weight! or Just Feed Great!*
HERBAL NUTRITION PROGRAM gives you good, basic sound nutrition to everybody every week! work! call 813-859-4761. DuPree-Gilen & Assoc.
Rent'19. TColor T.V. V. 825 m.88 month. Smity's T.V. 1447 W. Rd. V. 361 Mon.-Sat. 9:30 am-Sun. 5:30 SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aranas from only 88; and skiing at Boatland or Van from only 88] Deluxe lodging, parties, game bags, more. Hurry, call Sunshine Tours for more information.
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 speedy and reliable delivery. You design it or it being shipped. 220 W. 151 (Behind Gibbon) #84 - 84434
bags. more.. Hurry, call Sunchase Tours for more and reservations to tail free. Call Sunchase locally to local Sunchase Representative TODAY! When your Spring Break count...count on Sunchase.
STOP MAKING SENSE! Becoming an ERASERHASE from studying! Is your brain turning to LIQUID SKY GOING HANANA FAGURING you to this new adventure? HUNGER for hot video, wrap up your CRAWLING HAND and check us out. LIBERTY HALL VIDEO-your video alternative. No membership. Open 12, 4 Mon.-Sat. 4-8 Sun. 644 Mass. 791-1012. Thousands of A R album's $2 or less. Also collector items. Sat & Sun only 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. In the studio at Camphire. Buy, Sale, or traded style music.
Cass Ring Day - Why wait for the ring man when it rings every day at Balfour Hotel 633 Mass. M54.
SERVICES OFFERED
LEISAN/GASY SUPPORT GROUPS. For info.
about B10C 4 floor Rearmars
Union or call 959-3281.
Native German, French background, offers
formal tutoring both languages, 843-8400.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in
Lawrence, 841-7161.
BHRTHRIGHT- Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 943-8421.
MATH FUTOR. Bob Mears holds an A. M in math with a bachelor's degree in 102, 118 and 123 among the courses he completed in college. He nationally in 1975 and often tutors elementary statistics. He can per 40 minute session. Call 845-903-9021 or info@mathmasters.org for more information. Peer Counseling. Completely confidential. Call GLSKO 845-3041. KU Info 845-3043 or Head on line at www.glsko.edu/peer.counseling.
TYPING
1-1-1 TRIO WORD PROCESSING experienced, concientious, reliable. Rush john accept Call.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large.
The book is affordable typing, Tudy, 842-7958 or
www.tudy.com
1-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional WORD
text files for professional papers, observations,
books, etc. WordRust 8.0.2
Accurate word processing, *experienced*, 1-5 pts.
Meadowbrook location, 740-1003.
McGraw-Hill Education.
Ace Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable,
friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes,
term sheets. Available on campus. 842-2976.
AlphoneOmega Computer Services - Word Processing/Typing. Corrections. Proofreading, Graphics.
Wordstar Document uploading. Free estimates.
DEFENDABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAFFER—Typing Service.
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape.
843-8977
DISSERTATIONS, THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics, ONE-DAY Service
available on shorter student papers (up to 30
papers), Mommy 9 papers (up to 367
before 9 p.m. Please).
THE FAR SIDE
24-Hour Training, 10th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus
locations.
A professional typing. Term papers, Theses,
Essays, Reports. Used by IBM SYSTEMS
II. Requires 843-3264.
Available at: http://www.ibm.com
ATTN MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS Ex-
cellingly. APA normal experience
Call Pat. 848-271-5900
Phone: 842-8087 f5:30
ATTN MEDROWRB RESIDENT
A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers,discussions, etc. Roasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850.
Almostly Your Type! Word processing, typing
Almostly Your Type! Word processing, typing
Service available. 84 illinois. 93-618
Service available. 84 illinois. 93-618
Dissertations. Themes, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs.
experience. Phone 942-2310 for 5:30; barr. 630-
7158.
B. ENGLISH, TYPING-TUTORING. Spelling correction, overnight service available. Great benefit.
QUALITY TYPING Letters, themes, disclosures,
resumes, applications. Spelling corrected
Let me handle your typing needs. . . Typed to your
specifications. Reasonable. 16 years experience.
Letter perfect, papers and resumes. WRITING
LIFELINE, 841-3469
Hakemon, 24-hour training. IBM wd processing.
Quick and reliable service. Lynn 841-5594.
GOOD IMPERSIONS Typing. Spelling/punctuation errors corrected; reasonable rates. Causes:
TYPNING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word pro-
gramming, scripting, data analysis and qui-
tility printing, e.g. 84-502- and
84-503-
THE WORLD DOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147
TYPING. Call 841-5804 evenings and weekends
EXPERIENCED TYPHT. Term papers, theses.
IBM Correcting Solitaire. I will correct spelling.
IBM Correcting Solitaire. I will correct spelling.
WANTED
Drummer and Bassist needed for a newly formed progressive rock band. We have no pretensions as to the
Female roommate needed. 2 Bdrm duplex, wash/dryroom/garage. yard 410 plus 1/2
*Call 841 683-5780*
Housemate in 5-bedroom house. Pets. Furnished,
your own bedroom. $100 plus / 7 utilities plus
e c summer and/or fall; female roommate(s) for
spacious rooms ( $40 plus 1/3 utility )
WANTED: Roommate to share coords. Two large bedrooms, fireplace, nice quiet study, dishwasher, plenty of space, and I'm easy to get along with. 814-4835.
BLOOM COUNTY
1
Mature individual needed to provide compani-
ship and complete homemaking tasks for home-
bound clients. Call Douglas County VNA 943-3738
EOF.
Wanted: Roommate to share three bedroom house. Very nice & clean neighborhood.
Wanted: 4·14" mug wheels in good condition. Call
864-6794 or 864-6675.
Wanted: Male mowhouse for 3 large bedroom
townhouses /10/month plan plus 1/Utilities 842-6481.
Wanted: Female, non-smoking roommate to share a 3 bedroom apt. for remainder of semester. $159.00/mo. plus 1/3 utilities. Call 748-8233. Keep trying.
If you can't buy it...bargain.
Don't do without the things you really want. Don't buy the stuff that is expensive in bargain. Many of the nane items available in stores are listed at lower prices in classified. Sometimes you can even find some interesting items on many items in classified are sold by private parties. Don't do without –do it with confidence.
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4588
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
Testing the carnivore-proof vest.
These past strips provided while Bercel Breathed recoverers from an airplane accident.
SURE WOULD LIKE TO BANG YOUR LOVE OR POSSUM. I WANT MAYBE A WOOD- CHUCK. HOW BOUT YOU, LUNK?
WHAT
WAS THAT!
I DUNNO!
NORRE! IT'S A 'REP-BELLIED'
SAY LUKE... IS THAT A
WOMAN TRIED
PHENSANT!
OVER THERE!
BUM!
ZING!
by Berke Breathed
OO!
WHAT
WAS
IT?
A FAT-BELLIED
STOCHE
SUCKER*!
AMP THEM'S
GOOD EATIN!
12
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Mondav. Feb. 24, 1986
Duke may be next in line for top spot
United Press International
Is Duke the new king of college basketball?
The second-ranked Blue Devils appear to hold the inside track on being named No. 1 this week in the United Press International's Board of Coaches ratings, after a weekend during which top-ranked North Carolina 'tost its second consecutive game and two other top 10 clubs were beaten by unranked teams.
North Carolina, stunned by Maryland earlier in the week, lost its second consecutive game to an Atlantic Coast Conference team Sunday when 17th-ranked North Carolina State topped the Tar Heels 76-65 at Raleigh, N.C.
Center Chris Washburn scored 26 points to help spark North Carolina State's victory. The Wolfpack, 18-9 overall and 7-6 in the Atlantic Coast Conference, also got a career-high 18 points from junior forward Bennie Bolton. Senior guard Nate McMillan added 10 points and senior guard Ernie Myers had 11.
North Carolina starting guard
Steve Hale miss the game because of a partially collapsed lung, suffered Thursday in the Tar Heels' 77-72 overtime loss to Maryland. Reserve center Warren Martin was out with an ankle injury.
Duke turned in a solid performance on national television Saturday by defeating No. 9 Oklahoma, 93-84, to run its record to 25-2. The Blue Devils and third-ranked Kansas, an 84-69 victor over Kansas State Saturday, figure to get the bulk of support for No. 1 in this week's ratings.
Duke senior forward Mark Alarie said, "We have put ourselves into position to be the No. 1 team."
But Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski doesn't put much stock in being ranked No. 1 at this point.
"This team has been ranked in the top five all year. We have never once discussed national rankings, and there's no reason to change right now," said Krzyzewski.
Fourth-ranked Memphis State and sixth-ranked St. John's missed opportunities to make a claim for No. 1 honors by losing to unranked teams Saturday. Memphis State was
defeated by Florida State, 82-80, and St. John's was turned back by DePaul, 81-72.
Devall, 8.72.
In other games involving the top 10 ranked teams, No. 5 Georgia Tech beat Maryland 77-70, No. 7 Kentucky beat Georgia 89-75, No. 8 Michigan beat Alabama-Birmingham 62-54 and No. 10 Syracuse beat Georgetown 64-63.
04-83
At Tallahassee, Fla., freshman Pat Conner slammed in a missed shot with one second remaining and helped lift Florida State to victory. The Seminoles, last in the Metro Conference and losers of 10 of their last 12 games, led the heavily favored Tigers most of the way. Memphis State, 23-3, tied the score on a 3-point play by Baskerville Holmes with 23 seconds remaining.
second half as the Yellow Jackets held off determined Maryland with 18-for-21 shooting from the field. Georgia Tech, 20-4 overall and 9-3 in Atlantic Coast Conference play, sho
34-for-48 in the contest.
At Rosemont, III., Dallas Comegys scored 21 points and Rod Strickland contributed 17 and led DePaul to victory. The Blue Demons, 15-10, reeled off 14 points midway through the first half, came back with a 10-point spurt midway through the second half and beat the Redmen, 25-4.
At Athens, Ga., Kenny Walker scored 22 points and Winston Bennett added 20 as Kentucky clinched its 36th Southeastern Conference basketball championship. The Wildcats, under the guidance of first year coach Eddie Sutton, improved to 24-3 overall and 15-1 in the SEC.
At Ann Arbor, Mich., guards Antoine Joubert and Gary Grant combined for 20 second-half points and helped lead Michigan to victory. Joubert, who led all scorers with 20 points, sank the only five field goals Michigan made in the first 10:12 of the second half before turning things over to Grant, who keyed a Michigan defense that limited Alabama-Birmingham to just nine points in the final 10 minutes.
Oklahoma loses to Duke; ISU, OSU win
United Press International
Duke, No. 2, beat No. 9 Oklahoma
93-84 Saturday in a non-conference
game at Durham, N.C.
fought off the Oklahoma charge.
game at Duke. Duke built a 23-point lead 12 minutes into the game but Oklahoma rode the shooting of David Johnson to reduce the lead to 66-65 with $11_{1/2}$ minutes remaining.
But Duke's David Henderson scored eight points in a 13-7 run that
"To show you what I know, I thought in the middle of the first half that we had them on the ropes," said Duke coach Mike Krzewzelski. "They looked tired and we were fast-breaking like crazy. But throughout the rest of the game, they reminded me of a heavyweight championship fighter. They looked tired, but kept delivering knockout blows."
way to a career-high 31 points but his effort wasn't enough to prevent Oklahoma from losing for the third time in four games. The Sooners dropped to 23-5.
Johnson hit 13-of-15 shots on his
In other Big Eight action Saturday, Iowa State defeated Nebraska 82-73 and Oklahoma State downed Colorado 90-85.
Elmer Robinson scored all 16 of his points in the second half, rallying Iowa State from a 38-35 halftime
deficit. The win gave the Cyclones a share of second place along with Oklahoma. Jeff Grayer chipped in 20 points to help offset a 22-point effort by Nebraska guard Brian Carr.
Terry Faggins scored 26 points and Andre Ivy as Oklahoma State dropped Colorado to 0-12 in Big Eight play. Faggins hit 11-of-18 shots from the field and Ivy sank 14-of-19 free throws in helping the Cowboys improve their record to 14-11.
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SINCE 1839
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY, FEB. 25, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 104 (USPS 650-640)
BIOLOGY
Mild Details page 3.
Rebels install Aquino, isolate Marcos
United Press International
(1)
MANILA, Philippines — Corazon Aquino was sworn in as president of a provisional government today by rebels who blacked out the inauguration of Ferdinand Marcos and ran a John Wayne movie instead.
'Sovereignty resides in the people, and all government authority emanates from them.'
Corazon Aquino
Corazon Aquino
Marcos was about to be sworn in during live broadcasts on three independent television stations in the Broadcast City complex when attacking rebels finally managed to gain control of the stations just after the national anthem and an ecumenical prayer.
NATHANIE BARRON
See related story p. 8.
Ferdinand E. Marcos
The master of ceremonies said,
"And now the moment you've all been waiting for, the inauguration of the president." Then television screens suddenly went blank. A panel of three commentators said there were technical difficulties, and moments later Channel 9 played a John Wayne movie.
order, she appointed Laurel as prime minister-designate.
"My dear countrymym," Aquino told a cheering crowd at an elite sports stadium in the Manila suburb of Greenhills, "sovereigny resides in the people and all government authority emanates from them.
Aquino, who claims that Marcos cheated her out of victory in the Feb. 7 election by fraud, was sworn in for a six-year term by Supreme Court Senior Associate Justice Claudio Teehankee. In her first executive
"On the basis of a people's mandate, I and Salvador H. Laurel are taking power in the name and by the will of the Filipino people as president and vice president, respectively."
The proclamation resolution by the opposition members of the National
Assembly named Aquino the duly elected president and declared null and void the Parliament's Feb. 15 ratification of Marcos as victor in the presidential balloting.
In her second executive act, Aquino renamed Juan Ponce Enrile, one of the co-leaders of Saturday's
rebellion, as defense minister and promoted the other co-leader of the mutiny, Lt. Gen. Fidel Ramos, to a full general and named him armed-forces chief of staff.
Marcos vowed to attack the rebels, and loyalist troops were preparing an assault on Camp Crame, the mutineers' suburban headquarters. Enrile said he doubted whether Marcos still had the power to order an assault.
"I'm just wondering why Mr. Marcos would do that, knowing fully well that he has no more capacity to govern the nation," Enrile said. "If I were in his place, I'd probably call it a day, retire completely from politics and rest for the rest of my life."
Marcos, besieged in the presidential palace, gathered his family, his loyal military chief, Gen. Fabian C. Ver, and several hundred heavily armed soldiers, for his oath-taking. About 2,000 people filled a courtyard in front of the palace to attend.
But his isolation grew throughout the day. Rebel forces seized Manila's international airport, cutting off a possible escape route for the man who has ruled the Philippines for 20 year.
See PHILIPPINES, p. 5, col. 1
Prof leaves KU for Minnesota, cites low wages
Staff writer
By Tom Farmer
The lack of funds necessary to compete with other universities has forced the University of Kansas to say goodbye to its director of women's studies and professor in communication studies
Karlin Kohrs Campbell, women's studies director for three years and professor in communication studies for 12 years, said yesterday that a better salary offer from the University of Minnesota was a deciding factor in her leaving KU at the end of this academic year.
"Money is the key to all of this," Campbell said. "I'm terribly upset about the commitment of the state of Kansas to education. We are having to do more and with less and less.
"The Legislature has the notion that without providing more money for faculty salaries, that they can keep people who are attractive to other institutions, and that's just not true," she added.
Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that the state's commitment to education was actually pretty good but that with so many other financial demands, the state was in a tough spot.
Lineberry said a proposed 7 percent increase for Board of Regents faculty salaries to be voted on Thursday by a Senate committee would help alleviate the problem of faculty leaving for more attractive salary offers.
"I think that it would be a good start," Lineberry said. "The faculty members know the state of the state is not good."
Campbell cited several advantages to accepting the position at Minnesota. The foremost was a substantially better salary than what she received here.
In addition to the raise in pay, Campbell said, she will receive more than $2,000 in word processing equipment and software, which she doesn't receive here, more research support and more time to concentrate on women's studies and teaching.
Minnesota also offers an extensive center for feminist studies for graduate students, which allows students to concentrate solely on their women's studies. Campbell said.
Claire Jerry, Oxford, Ohio, graduate student, has been working on her dissertation — a study of the role of newspapers in the 19th century women's movement — for two and a half years under Campbell. She has another year of work before it is completed.
She and seven other graduate students face the problem of who will take over in assisting them in
See QUIT, p. 5, col. 2
JANE FREEMAN
Shauna Norfleet/Special to the KANSAN
Karlyn Kohrs Campbell, director of womert's studies and professor of communications studies, will be leaving the University of Kansas after 12 years of teaching. She said she would be going to the University of Minnesota to teach next semester because of inadequate salaries for faculty at KU.
Bv Abbie Jones
Staff writer
Prof seeks salary boost for faculty
A KU business professor asked a Kansas Senate candidate yesterday for a 7 percent increase in salaries for Board of Regents faculty to keep the University of Kansas on top of academic competition.
Morris Kleiner, executive board member of the American Association of University Professors, said he pushed for the 7 percent increase to keep professors from leaving the University for better paying jobs at peer schools.
"We are just not able to compete," Kleiner said. "The effect is that we lose senior people and replace them with junior people. The end result is that students suffer."
But the Regents may get a political alternative Thursday when the Senate Ways and Means Committee plans to vote on the measure.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said the committee probably would consider a 3 percent to 4 percent increase in faculty salary and a 1 percent salary contribution to its retirement fund. Faculty members now pay 5 percent of their salaries into the fund.
Gov. John Carlin does not include a faculty pay increase in either his base budget or investment budget.
However, the investment budget asks the state to pick up the cost of faculty members' contributions to their retirement fund, costing the state about $9.5 million, Winter said.
"I support the Regents request," Winter said. "Politically I think 7 percent is not a reality. My job is to find the highest acceptable political reality."
He said the Legislature's alternative wasn't changing the amount of cost to the state, just dividing it up differently.
Kleiner said the University lost 18 faculty members in the 1984-85 school year to schools that offered better salaries, professional advancement and research programs.
In the 1983-84 school year, the
See REGENTS, p. 5, col. 6
I
Filipinos see rebels as victors
By Sandra Crider
Staff writer
The people of the Philippines agree it's time for a change. And the will of the people will bring an end to the oppressive regime of Ferdinand Marcos, several local Filipinos predicted yesterday.
"On election day, what impressed me most was that ordinary people did everything they could to protect those ballot boxes." said Ray Dean Salvosa, Baguio, Philippines, graduate student.
People now are willing to sacrifice even more in the rebellion, which began Saturday.
"The people, with their bodies, are now protecting soldiers that have joined forces with them," Salvosa said. "Soldiers who were once tools used to oppress them."
"What you're witnessing is a very magnificent display for democracy."
There may be more trouble before Marcos steps down because of his pride and legalism. Because the assembly originally declared him the winner, Marcos thinks he should remain president. Salviosa said.
Modesto Gonzales, a recent KU graduate from Quezon City, Philippines, also said she thought that Marcos would fight.
"I'm sure calm will prevail. Everyone agrees it's time for a change." Gonzales said.
Two KU professors are intimately involved with the situation in the Philippines, Carl Lande, professor of political science, has spent the last month in the Philippines studying the politics there.
His wife, Nobleza Asunción-Lande,
said her husband was in Australia
and planned to return to Lawrence
next week. She said he would not
comment on the situation until he
returned to the United States.
He was selected by the Asia Society, a New York-based foundation for public education about Asian culture
Lande had planned to return to the Philippines after visiting Australia. His wife said his plans changed when he found he might not be able to get another flight out of the country.
Grant Goodman, professor of history, is in Washington, D.C., at an academic conference on the Philippines. The conference was organized to analyze recent events and discuss the possible future of the country.
Goodman specializes in East Asian history and was a visiting professor at the University of the Philippines last spring.
The Filipinos are more optimistic now and will be more content if the regime changes hands. But a different president would not necessarily bring about significant improvement in the country's situation, Goodman said.
Marcos and Aquino are distantly related and come from similar oligarchic backgrounds, he said.
Meanwhile, the KU students are watching anxiously for the next development in the troubled country.
"Whether it is possible to anticipate some dramatic change is open to question," he said.
Salvosa's family still is in the Philippines. He has been unable to contact them since the rebellion began. His brother lives just a few blocks from the center of rebellion activity, near Camp Cram, and probably is involved in the demonstrations, Salvosa said.
"I'm very concerned about them," he said. "But I can't say I'm sorry about what has been happening.
"If it gets rid of Marcos, this is cause enough."
Airline woes may not hurt break plans
Ry Russell Grav
Staff writer
KU students who travel on Eastern Airlines for spring break probably will not be affected by a takeover of the company, travel service managers and an airport official said yesterday.
- Eastern announced yesterday that it will be taken over by Francisco Lorenzo's Texas Air Corp. If Eastern had not sold out, it would have had to file for bankruptcy because of strike
Plunging oil prices drain job openings
- See related story
Consumers love it. Farmers praise it. But oil companies and petroleum engineers fear it.
See AIRLINES, p. 5, col. 2
By Sandra Crider
At $14 dollars a barrel, it calculates to the cheapest gallon in over seven years. Oil, that is. Black gold. Texas tea. While a boon to many, lower prices mean fewer jobs for some, KU professors and students said recently.
Staff writer
"The hurt will come a lot quicker than the benefits," said Floyd Preston, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering.
Opinions were divided on whether the downward price trend was new or part of a cycle. But everyone agreed the cause was political, brought about by Saudi Arabia's decision to flex its well-oiled muscles.
Other countries, unwilling to be cut out of the world market, had to match the Saudi Arabian prices, then began undercutting one another to gain more revenue, professors said.
One of the repercussions of the low prices is less demand for petroleum engineers.
Phil Walton, Wichita senior and a petroleum engineering student, said no one would interview for petroleum engineers because of the price war.
"Right now there are no companies interested in petroleum engineers," Walton said. "It's definitely hurting our chance of getting jobs."
Sheryl Steck, Lawrence senior, is graduating in May with a degree in petroleum engineering and said she still had not found a job. She is considering a move to
Dallas or Los Angeles where larger markets may improve her chances of finding a job
"There's got to be jobs out there somewhere even though they might not be very good," Steck said. "It just doesn't look good."
However, Preston was more reassuring.
Some students are rearranging their academic careers to avoid seeking employment while jobs are scarce, said Paul Willhite, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering.
"People try to stretch their graduation date out to keep active interests and graduate when the job market is more favorable," he said.
However, Preston was more reassuring. He said, "As long as there is petroleum produced, there will be a need for petroleum engineers."
Willhite said the effects already were devastating.
"In the short-term, our graduates in May are going to have to hustle to find jobs." Willhite said. "In the long-term, if jobs for petroleum engineers are going to go down and the demand for them goes down, our enrollment will go down drastically."
An example for the opposite case occurred during the energy crisis in the mid-1970s. Prices were high and a degree in petroleum engineering was like gold. The average starting salary in 1977 was $18,144 a year.
Facing graduation in three months without employment, Steck agreed that jobs and the price of oil were closely intertwined.
"Jobs are directly proportional to price drops in the market," she said.
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1986
News Briefs
Gerber files lawsuit against Maryland
BALTIMORE — Gerber Products Co. filed a $150 million federal suit yesterday charging Maryland officials with creating a scare by banning the sale of Gerber strained peaches after reports of glass contamination being in the jars.
Maryland is the only one of 13 states that has banned the sale of Gerber products after consumers complained of glass particles in Gerber food.
Maryland health officials issued the formal recall and sales ban after Gerber officials refused to withdraw the products.
SEOUL, South Korea — President Chun Doo Hwan promised Monday to halt a police crackdown on the opposition and said the constitution could be revised in 1899 to allow for direct presidential elections.
Leader vows reforms
WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration said yesterday that General Foods Corp. is recalling all of its 1- and 2-kilogram wheels of plain, unflavored Brie cheese because the cheese may be tainted with a potentially fatal bacteria.
Chun's remarks appeared to reflect a desire to iron out differences with the opposition before the 1988 Summer Olympic Games in Seoul, which Chun hopes will increase global respect for South Korea.
Brie cheese recalled
FDA spokesman said the cheese, which went to more than 24 states, may be contaminated by a disease-causing bacteria that can be life-threatening to children and others with a weakened immune system.
Women egg queen
AUCKLAND, New Zealand — Queen Elizabeth II was hit sunday by an egg thrown by women protesting Britain's 146-year-old treaty with New Zealand's Maori tribes, police said.
The queen was riding in an open car past 40,000 children when two women posing as crowd control wardens hit her coat and car with eggs. The queen is on a nine-day tour of New Zealand.
From Kansan wires
Texans lose grade appeal
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court opened the way yesterday for school systems across the country to follow Texas' lead in adopting "no-pass, no-play" rules that bar students with failing grades from extracurricular activities.
The justices, citing the lack of a substantial federal question, dismissed an appeal by parents and students who argued the Texas rule, which has sidelined some of the state's best high school athletes, is unconstitutional.
The court's action, while not a full ruling on the merits, holds the weight of legal precedent and should remove doubts about the legality of no-pass, no play proposals.
"I hope we will now be able to get this issue out of the courthouse and get the emphasis on academic achievement back into the classroom where it rightly belongs," said Texas Education Commissioner William Kirby.
The Supreme Court of Texas uphold the law in July and dissolved a temporary injunction that had prevented the state from enforcing it. The law says a public school student who earns a grade of below 70 out of 100 cannot participate in extracurricular activities for six weeks. The significance of the rule has been the sharpest in football, which is viewed with near-religious reverence in the state, where a D is considered a failing grade.
Nonetheless, the state court said the rule was an incentive for the state's 3 million public students to get good grades and was rationally related to the legitimate state interest in providing a quality education.
On appeal to the high court, the lawyer for the students and their families said the Texas court did not take into account the First Amendment rights of students nor the arbitrary and capricious application of the law.
athletes, but to students in student government or on the debate team or school newspaper, all which are protected activities under the Constitution.
"A student with all 'As' and one 'F' in basket weaving can take part in no such endeavors whatsoever." the appeal said.
The appeal noted the law applies not only to
Eddie Joseph, assistant vice president of the Texas High School Coaches Association, which opposes the rule, said he was not surprised by the court's action.
"I really did not think they would rule otherwise." Joseph said. "I don't think we ever questioned whether it was constitutional. What we really believe is if a youngster is passing he should be able to play."
Since Texas lawmakers enacted the no-pass, no-play law in 1984, many school districts around the country have followed suit. But the Texas rule is among the harshest, the appeal argued.
Court to hear appeal on budget act
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court stepped into the debate over the federal deficit yesterday, taking up an emergency review of the landmark Gramm-Rudman balanced-budget act cutted by a lower court.
The justices announced they will hear arguments April 23 on an appeal from Congress, which is challenging a lower court ruling that the law's automatic budget-cutting procedure violated the Constitution's doctrine of separation of power.
The law, passed in December, requires across-the-board cuts if Congress and the president are unable to reach annual deficit targets through the traditional budgetmaking process. Congress is required to meet gradually decreasing deficit targets each year until the deficit is reduced to zero by 1991.
take place this week since the law remains in effect while under appeal.
Ordinarily the court does not schedule cases for argument this late in its term, but the importance of the dispute prompted the justices' action. A ruling is expected by July, although the first round of Gramm-Rudman cuts will
A three-judge district court ruled earlier this month that the law's key provision was unconstitutional because it required the comproller general to begin budget cuts.
If the justices agree with the lower court that the budget-cutting trigger in Gramm-Rudman is invalid, the law will still stand, but any cuts will have to be approved by the House and Senate in a joint resolution rather than automatically.
Supreme Court makes decision on pornography
United Press International
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court brought to an end the latest battle in the war on pornography yesterday, ruling it is unconstitutional to define sexually explicit material as sex discrimination.
The court's decision was a big defeat for an odd coalition of feminists and conservatives who joined forces to fight pornography by defining it as sex discrimination and allowing those aggrieved to bring civil charges against those selling or producing the material.
The court affirmed a ruling by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that found an ordinance passed by the city of Indianapolis and supported by that coalition was unconstitutional. Three justices wanted to rehear the case, one justice short of the traditionally required four.
"By upholding the decisions below, the court has removed any doubt that this type of statutory scheme is unconstitutional," said Michael Bamberger, a lawyer representing a group of publishers and booksellers fighting the Indianapolis measure."
Feminist author Andrea Dworkin called the court's action outrageous.
Houston man buys airline
"It shows that the legal system protects the pornography industry and anything that the pornography system does to women is all right." she said.
"We are obviously disappointed that we didn't get a second hearing," said Indianapolis Mayor William H. Hudnut. "We don't feel it is a wasted effort, because we have focused attention on a way to deal with pornography."
The Associated Press
MIAMI — Racing against strike deadlines from unions and default threats from creditors, Eastern Airlines announced yesterday that it would be taken over by businessman Frank Lorenzo and his Houston-based Texas Air Corp.
No details were disclosed, but union officials said they understood that Lorenzo, whose company also operates Continental Airlines and New York Air, would continue Eastern. the country's third-largest carrier, as a separate airline.
Charles Bryan, president of the International Association of Machinists local that represents 12,000 Eastern workers, sent Lorenzo a telegram offering cooperation.
Bryan, who also is a member of Eastern's board of directors, said Chairman Frank Borman told other board members he would resign
from the company following their 1-45 a.m. vote on Lorenzo's offer. Borman, a former astronaut, has headed the Miami-based airline since 1975.
The Texas Air agreement must be
Big creditors had given Eastern management a Feb. 28 deadline to present a long-term plan to turn around the airline, which was $2.5 billion in debt.
Eastern spokesman Glenn Parsons said Borman and other company officials were quite unlikely to hold a news conference before today. Lorenzo did not return repeated telephone messages.
Late Sunday, Eastern reached agreement with its 4,200 pilots to avert a strike threatened for tomorrow, but there was confusion about a tentative verbal agreement with flight attendants, who could strike March 1.
Bryan said he expected Lorenzo to run Eastern the way he ran his other airlines. Bryan urged him to avoid laying off any of the current 41,000 employees.
approved by Eastern's creditors, shareholders and federal authorities. A union source and a New York-based airline analyst, said Lorenzo's effort to buy 51 percent of Eastern stock in an agreement reported to be for between $600 million and $700 million in cash and securities, could trigger a bidding war from other sources. The sources spoke on the condition that they not be identified.
Some union officials and Eastern employees said they were chagrined at the takeover, citing what one called Lorenzo's anti-union reputation. Bryan, accused by Borman of being a major obstacle in resolving Eastern's crisis, said his union was studying legal options.
Soviet Union rejects U.S. arms proposal
United Press International
MOSCOW — The Soviet Union yesterday dismissed President Reagan's new arms proposal on eliminating medium-range nuclear weapons as a tough and non-constructive repetition of previous U.S. positions.
The response, carried by the official Tass news agency, came on the eve of the Soviets' 27th Communist Party Congress. Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev will open the meeting with a speech covering domestic and foreign issues.
Reagan's new arms control proposal was presented at the U.S.-Soviet arms control talks in Geneva yesterday. The president
sent a letter to Gorbachev over the weekend reply to the Kremlin's call on Jan. 15 for elimination of all nuclear weapons by the end of the century.
U. S. officials in Geneva said Reagan's letter touched on all aspects of nuclear arms control but concentrated on eliminating all medium-range missiles from Europe and Asia over the next three years.
"The reply does not go farther than repeating the well-known U.S. non-constructive stand in this matter which is of major importance to the destiny of the world." Tass said.
Tass accused Washington of issuing the new proposal to divert world attention.
Looking Good!
Looking Good!
We've never looked better.
And now we're offering our NEW APPLICATIONS for the 1986/87 Fall and Spring Semesters!
*Applications will be offered beginning at 8:30 a.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 26th.
*Demand has never been greater so be sure to make your plans NOW to live at NAISMITH HALL next Fall!
If you haven't seen us lately, drop by for a tour and we'll be glad to show you what everyone is talking about!
For more information call or come by
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
(913) 843-8559
Lookin' Good!
We've never looked better.
And now we're offering our NEW APPLICATIONS for the 1986/87 Fall and Spring Semesters!
*Applications will be offered beginning at 8:30 a.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 26th.
*Demand has never been greater so be sure to make your plans NOW to live at NAISMITH HALL next Fall!
If you haven’t seen us lately, drop by for a tour and we’ll be glad to show you what everyone is talking about!
For more information call or come by
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
(913) 843-8559
WALL OF VOODOO
With the YARD APES
TONIGHT!
8 P.M.
KANSAS UNION BALLROOM
Don't Miss A Rockin' Good Time!!
Tickets: $7.00 WITH KUID
$8.50 General Public
On Sale Now at the SUA Office
SMA
Special
Events
WALL OF VOODOO
With the YARD APES TONIGHT!
8 P.M.
KANSAS UNION BALLROOM
Don't Miss A Rockin' Good Time!!
Tickets: $7.00 WITH KUID
$8.50 General Public
On Sale Now at the SUA Office
Tuesday. Feb. 25. 1986
100
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
Buildings planned for West Campus site
Two new buildings will be built on West Campus to house four facilities operations departments, Allen Wiechert, the university director of facilities planning, said Sunday.
The new buildings will be located east of Chamney Barn. They will house the vehicle maintenance, motor pool, grounds and construction departments. These departments present are located in the Quonset huts north of the Computer Center
The construction will start on the first warm day of spring, Wiechert said yesterday. The project, estimated to cost $1 million, should be completed by July.
The four huts that presently house the departments will be destroyed after the move to West Campus to make way for the construction of the Human Development Center.
13 firearms stolen
Thirteen firearms of undetermined value were stolen from a pawnbash in the 800 block of Massachusetts Street early Saturday morning, Lawrence police said.
A KU student who lives near the shop saw a man near the building about 1:30 a.m. and asked him what he was doing, police said. The man told him he wasn't doing anything and then left.
The student told police the man returned and politely asked whether he could use a ladder that was near the building. The suspect told the student he had been growing marijuana on the roof and needed the ladder to get his grow lights from the roof, police said.
Flood plan discussed
Lawrence city commissioners discussed a proposed text amendment to the city flood plain regulations yesterday afternoon in a study session.
A flood plain is an area prone to periodic flooding from creeks and streams.
Commissioners expressed the most concern about a recommendation by the planning commission that would require some owners of tracts of land in a floodplain to have a study done if they wanted to develop the land.
Owners of tracts of more than five acres would have to submit a study on the effect of the proposed development on the flow of water in the area, according to the proposal.
The commissioners were concerned that the cost of the study might be high compared to the amount of useful information it would give.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, one coalition running in the officer elections of the Association of University Residence Halls was misidentified in yesterday's Kansan. The correct name of the coalition is Fertility. Candidates for the Fertility Coalition are: Drew Blossom, president, Ellsworth Hall; Wanda Wood, vice president, McCollum Hall; Sarah Hart, secretary, Oliver Hall; and Bruce Miller, treasurer, Ellsworth.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny and mild with a high temperature in the mid-60s. Winds will blow southwest at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear with a low temperature around 40. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and mild with a high temperature in the low- to mid-60s.
From staff and wire reports
Recruiting methods to be studied
By Leslie Hirschbach
Senior high school classes in Kansas are getting smaller, but KU officials are trying to prevent those low figures from decreasing future KU enrollment.
Staff writer
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, has appointed a task force to study methods of bringing more seniors to the University of Kansas and keeping enrollment up.
Ambler said he had appointed the group in December because high school senior classes had decreased since 1977.
Although the University has enjoyed a continual but modest growth in spite of smaller senior classes, enrollment figures should balance out within 10 years and begin to drop, he said.
The task force, Ambler said, would study the University's past recruiting techniques and find new ways to draw students to the University.
Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions and chairman of the group, said the University had been reluctant in the past to use recruiting methods
Now, he said, the University may have to engage more extensively in programs such as the college fair, where college representatives speak to high school students about the assets of their respective universities.
because enrollment figures steadily remained high.
Lindvall said he thought it was the first time a task force concerning recruiting had been formed at the University. The group has not met yet, but should begin discussions in March.
Another recruiting method the University hasn't taken advantage of, Lindvall said, is the ambassador program, where KU students are sent to their high schools to talk to students.
Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design and a member of the task force, said the group also would study the coordination of current on-campus recruiting methods.
The annual visit by National Merit Scholars winners to the University is another good way to draw students. Lucas said.
Lindvall said the task force comprised administrators, professors and students who would pool their resources to find solutions before enrollment drops.
The group, he said, would do individual research and would meet regularly until a report could be written.
"We should have the report by the end of the year," he said.
Ambler said he wanted KU faculty members to be more involved in recruiting methods than they previously have been.
Those faculty members who have time, he said, may be effective at distributing information about the University.
The faculty would have to be trained, though, so they could give accurate information about the University to high school students. Ambler said.
He said the study also would give Lindvall, the new director of admissions, a chance to present new ideas about recruiting techniques.
By Tom Farmer
KU professor to step down after 37 years
Staff writer
After 37 years of teaching and researching geology, William Hambleton knows without hesitation what he will do when he retires on Jan. 1. 1987.
"I'm going to learn to play a pipe organ," Hambleton, who announced his retirement Feb. 14, said yesterday. "I love the instrument and now I'm going to get to play it."
Hambleton, 64, said he had been too busy to learn to play the instrument because of his duties as director of the Kansas Geological Survey at the University of Kansas. He has been teaching at KU since 1949
In 1956, he became assistant director of the survey. Hambleton was appointed as the survey's associate director in 1962. He was in that position until 1970, when he became the director.
"I've been director of the survey for over 15 years," Hambleton said. "It's probably time for new leadership."
Robert Bearse, associate vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, will appoint a selection committee shortly after the first of March to find a replacement for Hambleton.
"I regret that he's retiring," Bearse said. "He's contributed a lot to the University and a lot to me personally."
Rex Buchanan, assistant director of publications for the survey, said Hambleton was responsible for making the survey what it is today.
"He's provided a lot of leadership in the survey and he'll be greatly missed," said Buchanan.
Hambleton said that while he directed the survey, it had gained recognition for many things, especially its advancements in the application of computers in geological work.
"Over the last decade, the geological survey has been recognized nationally and internationally." Hambleton said. "We're strongly a mathematics-oriented system."
Hambleton said that in the 1950s he realized the impending emergence of computers in the study of geology and decided that subject was what he would pursue.
The survey has a staff of 50 professionals, 25 teachers and clinical researchers and 75 graduate students from 13 departments throughout the University.
Computer software used to produce geological maps was designed by the survey and is being used internationally in over 700 locations, said Hambleton.
"Our relations with the academic departments
W. J. Hancock
William Hambleton, director of the Kansas Geological Survey, will retire Jan. 1, 1987. Hambleton, professor of geology, has taught at the University of Kansas since 1949. He has been director of the survey for more than 15 years.
are great." Hambleton said. "We're a very strong supporter of graduate students."
of nuclear waste. He said the project was costing the government millions of dollars.
Hambleton also is a member of a national committee appointed by the Department of Energy to select a site suitable for the underground disposal
In addition to his work with the survey and the Department of Energy, Hambleton has had other positions on geological committees.
Bavlor debaters argue way to victory
By Debra West
Staff writer
Forty-one teams representing 28 universities from across the country competed in the preliminary rounds Saturday and Sunday. This field was narrowed down to the top 16 teams, which competed in the elimination rounds.
The tournament, which is hosted by the University of Kansas every year, was won this year by a Baylor
The elimination rounds of the twenty-ninth annual Heart of America Debate Tournament were conducted yesterday in the Kansas Union.
The debate topic had participants questioning the need for more
University team of Mark Dyer and Lyn Robbins.
rigorous academic standards for all elementary and or secondary schools in the country in language arts, mathematics or natural sciences.
John Culver, Overland Park junior and one of the members of the KU debate team, "Ethos," received a fourth place speaker award.
The speaker awards are based on the number of points a speaker earns
in the preliminary rounds, Culver said.
In the preliminary rounds, teams alternate which side of the topic it debates, so no team argues the same side all the time, he said. In the elimination rounds, the side a team will argue is decided by a coin toss.
Culver and his partner, George Lopez, Wichita junior, were ranked as one of the top 16 teams.
KU student sues players for $10,000
By a Kansan reporter
A civil lawsuit was filed last week in Douglas County District Court against a member and two former members of the KU football team.
The men named in the petition are Mike Norseth, former KU quarterback; Jeff Anderson, a senior tight end who was red-shirted last season, and Jay Hager, a former member of the team.
Attorneys for Kevin McKinney, a KU senior who lives in Topeka, filed a petition stating that he had suffered severe pain and mental anguish as a result of an incident in the parking lot of a Lawrence private club on April 5.
Larry E. Gregg, attorney for the plaintiff, said McKinney was asking for punitive and actual damages in excess of $10,000.
On May 9, 1985 the three defendants were found guilty of criminal battery and were sentenced to 30 days in jail and then granted two years probation. They also were ordered to perform 100 to 175 hours of community service.
In addition to suffering "severe pain and anguish," McKinney "has incurred significant out-of-pocket expenses, including medical expenses," according to the petition.
Gregg said he was waiting for a reply from the players before taking any further action.
Staff writer
Committee to schedule ASK review
By Barbara Shear
An ad hoc committee, formed to gather information about the Associated Students of Kansas, decided last night to meet with administrators and students as the first step in evaluating KU participation in the student lobby organization.
The committee has chosen nine people to speak at the planned hearing, scheduled for Thursday evening. Seven of the nine have been confirmed to speak.
ASK is a student lobbying organization that represents the six state universities and Washburn University in Toopeka.
The seven people confirmed to speak at the hearing are Chris Edmonds, former campus director of ASK; Mark Tallman, director of communication for Kansas Independent College Fund and former director of ASK; Richard von Ende, executive secretary of the University; Chris Graves, executive director of John Allen, assistant lobbyist; Ladale George, Lawrence senior and Jessica Wornall, Leawood sophomore. Both of the students also have been involved with ASK.
Each person will have 15 minutes to speak about ASK and then another 15 minutes to answer questions from the committee members, said Jason Krakow, Prairie Village sophomore and chairman of the ad hoc committee.
Committee members said they planned to ask speakers about the original intent and purpose of ASK, the feelings that other schools have toward the University and how KU is being represented in the Legislature.
They also will try to determine what would happen to ASK if the University pulled out of the organization and what the cost effectiveness of the organization would be.
The committee also decided to investigate how effective ASK has been for KU by looking at the minutes of previous legislative assemblies, ASK board meetings, ASK's effectiveness in the Legislature as well as hearing the representatives' opinions.
WEDNESDAY
1.00
Bar Drinks
11 a.m.-3 a.m.
No cover
Also: Spare Rib Special $525
the Sanctuary
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
WEDNESDAY
1.00 Bar Drinks
11 a.m.-3 a.m.
No cover
Also: Spare Rib Special $525
the Sanctuary
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
TACO JOHN'S.
February Taco Sale!
2 for 99¢
offer good thru Feb. 28th
at all three locations!
1626 W. 23rd - 1101 W. 6th
1006 Mass.
TALK ABOUT GREAT TIMES!
Look into the Work Opportunities at
Worlds of Fun and Oceans of Fun
We will be visiting your campus on Thursday, March 6th
to interview people for summer jobs and internships.
Contact your University Placement Office for additional information
864-3624
Worlds of Fun
Oceans of Fun
TACO JOHN'S.
February Taco Sale!
2 for 99¢
offer good thru Feb. 28th
at all three locations!
1626 W. 23rd - 1101 W. 6th
1006 Mass.
It's Taco musical!
TALK ABOU
Worlds of Fun
TALK ABOUT GREAT TIMES!
Look into the Work Opportunities at
Worlds of Fun and Oceans of Fun
We will be visiting your campus on Thursday, March 6th
to interview people for summer jobs and internships.
Contact your University Placement Office for additional information
864-3624.
Worlds of Fun Oceans of Fun
Oceans of Fun
4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A newcomer to the University of Kansas, hoping to grab a hamburger or buy a Jayhawk sweatshirt, now has to search the Kansas Union to discover the Hawk's Nest or the KU Bookstore.
And every semester, during the crush of registration, hundreds of students look first for their textbooks in the Oread Bookstore.
The bookstores would also be combined. The Oread would be moved to Level 2, adjacent to the KU Bookstore.
Best of all, the renovation includes plans for a late-night food service. This would satisfy those who have long been frustrated by the unavailability of a sandwich or a cup of coffee on campus after 7 p.m.
All food service would go on Level 3, and the often frustrating food lines would be replaced with a "scramble system," where customers could go straight to the food or drink of their choice.
The Union has suffered from piecemeal attempts over the years to meet students' changing needs. But now a comprehensive vision of what the Union should be is guiding the plans for its renovation.
Although this would be more convenient than the current separation of the bookstores,
planners must be careful to maintain the special atmosphere of the Oread. The quiet retreat offered by the Oread could suffer from too close contact with frenzied textbook shoppers.
The level is now a labyrinth, where only the adept can find some of its hidden offerings. Few know, for example, where to find Alderson Auditorium or the Student Organizations and Activities Center.
The planned renovation would change all that. Walls would be removed and the entrance widened so that the level would be more like a modern shopping center, with all its services clearly visible.
The most ambitious part of the plan is the attempt to open up the main level, Level 4, so that all the services offered on that floor are easy to see and to find.
The Kansas House of Representatives would have us believe otherwise.
To help finance the renovation, the Union's governing board intends to ask for a $5 increase in student fees. This seems a modest request in light of the proposed improvements.
Throughout its 59 years the Union has been the center of activity for students. Any changes must continue and enhance that role, and not sacrifice its special character for the sake of some architectural ideal.
Contradiction in House
A horse is a horse, and gambling is gambling.
The House last week passed a resolution that would put pari-mutuel betting before the voters in November. Just two days earlier, the House voted down a proposed amendment to the state constitution that would have allowed voters to decide whether to establish a state-run lottery.
One possible explanation for this confusing move is offered by the Rev. Richard Taylor, director of Kansans for Life at Its Best! Taylor opposes both forms of gambling in Kansas, but said if he had to choose, he would pick pari-mutuel betting.
"With pari-mutuel you have to go to the track to lose your paycheck or look up the illegal bookie," Taylor said. "But with the lottery, you lose your
Unfortunately, arguments about the social differences between pari-mutuel and the lottery don't hold water.
paycheck at the local grocery store, where everybody has to go."
The real answer to the House's actions lies just a furlong or two down the road in the direction of the nearest racehorse or racing breed operation. The Legislature is acknowledging that parimutuel involves two significant segments of the Kansas economy.
But this concern for Kansas' economy should dictate that the Legislature adopt both resolutions. The lottery and pari-mutuel both would pump much-needed revenue into Kansas' faltering economy.
The Legislature's distinction between the two amounts to hypocrisy. Gambling is gambling, no matter where it takes place.
Problem beyond Tylenol
A New York woman died of cyanide poisoning after taking Tylenol. Another bottle of poisoned capsules was found.
Although Tylenol poisonings and other cases of medication tampering have yet to touch this part of the country, the problem should be of nationwide concern.
Johnson & Johnson has stopped producing capsules. A report yesterday of Panadol capsule tampering turned out to be a false alarm caused by factory damage.
But the hysteria that is sending drugstores and consumers scrambling to inspect their medications may not be
all bad. If all of us are suspicious, the chance of accidentally taking a medication which has been tampered with is reduced.
Johnson & Johnson's decision to discontinue capsule manufacturing was a good one. Although capsules can pack more medicine in, they are easier to tamper with than other medication forms.
But the wise consumer will remain on his toes when dealing with drugstore medications of any kind. The removal of Tylenol from drugstore shelves by no means removes the danger.
News staff
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Lauretta McMillen ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Cindy McCurry ... Campus editor
David Giles ... Sports editor
Brice Waddill ... Photo editor
Susanne Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
David Nixon ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Lori Eckart ... Classified manager
Carolina Innes ... Production manager
Pallen Lee ... National manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
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writer will be given the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
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THAT'S RIGHT,
MARCOS!
I'M FOR
AQUINO!
SO WHAT?
THAT'S RIGHT,
MARCOS!
I'M FOR
AQUINO!
SO WHAT?
BLOODY!
ISN'T DEMOCRACY
WONDERFUL?
BLOOEY!
JACK POTTER
ISN'T DEMOCRACY
WONDERFUL?
Corruption will always be with us
My parents raised their children under a rigid code of respect for the rules and for the representatives of authority. Even though they reserved their greatest esteem for religious authority, they nonetheless would brook no breach of civil authority by their children.
Such an upbringing did not prepare me for my first encounter with a New York City policeman right after I bought my first used car. It was a wreck of an old Volkswagen beetle. I had all the things wrong with it you might expect in the costing $400. Tooling up Riverside Drive in Manhattan on my first Saturday night date, I couldn't believe the siren I heard was intended for me to pull over. I handed over my driver's license to a big, burly cop who could have come out of a recruiting poster for New York's finest, as we called the men in blue in those days.
"Robert," the officer began in a solemn voice as he studied my license, "we have a serious violation here. You have no working tailights. Theoretically, I should not permit you to proceed. Who's the pretty girl in the car, your wife? . . . Girlfriend?" This could be embarrassing if I have to pull you in. You don't want that, do you?
PARKER
Robert C.
Maynard
Oakland Tribune
I stood stock still in amazement. I
was being shaken down in the very shadow of Riverside Church, one of the great edifices of the town. I fished out $5, about half of all the cash I had. The officer palmed it defyed and gave me a mern warning about getting my taillights repaired.
Ever since, whenever a big urban corruption scandal breaks out in the newspapers, I think with a certain cynicism that no great expose is likely to scratch the surface of big city corruption. I am afraid the corrupt we will have with us always.
I am confirmed in that view after spending several hours with one of the most remarkable books I have ever read on the subject of corruption. It is called "Bribes" by John T. Noonan, who has taken the trouble to trace the bribe through 2,000 years of recorded history.
In ancient times, the bribe was synonymous with the corrupt and the unclean, but it somehow managed to seep its way into virtually every culture. Each society's highest ideals have been thwarted by examples of
people who perverted the system through cash.
Lately, the newspapers of New York, Washington and Chicago, to name just a few, have been filled with stories of officials who violated their trust in one way or another for cash.
In New York and Chicago, it is the cash from parking violation fees that somehow wound up in the pockets of public officials. In Washington, a prominent official pleaded guilty to a kickback scheme.
Even though, as Noan points out, the bribe has been universally condemned throughout time, it is still very much with us. The reason, I suspect, is that we are ambiguous in our feelings about bribery. We abhor it, but not so much that we are prepared to punish it with the severity we reserve for other offenses.
The pimp, the pusher and the murdered are not people with whom decent society readily identifies, so we have less difficulty punishing such offenders to the full extent of the law.
The bribe taker, on the other hand, is all too often someone with whom most decent people in the community can identify to some extent because he tends to be like everyone else.
Furthermore, to a greater degree
than we realize, we are affected by the defense that "everybody does it"
For example, there was a huge scandal at the turn of the century in San Francisco in which virtually the whole board of supervisors was up for sale to the railroads, the telephone company, the trolley lines and just about every other monied interest in the city.
It was a newspaper, the Bulletin, that blew the whistle. When the dust settled, one notorious fixer went to San Quentin. The very newspaper that set off the scandal worked for his release. The reasoning of the editor was that the fixer was really just a victim of a corrupt environment.
Ever since my youth, I have thought about the officer who shoot me down. I have wondered what would have happened and I refused to pay him off. Or, I wonder, what would have happened if I had turned him in? I som show doubt justice in New York woul, I have been improved by my act of rectitude.
The reason I say so is this: I am sure bribery is universally abhorred, but I think we have managed to ingest white collar crime into our cultural corpus whenever it is convenient in our reasoning to do so. That is why we will have corruption with us always.
TV creates an intellectual wasteland
Bill rolls over in his bed, staring groggily at his alarm clock. He instinctively reaches for a cigarette and fumbles for a lighter. It is 7:30 a.m., and before the day is over, Bill will have smoked three packs of cigarettes.
R. J. Reynolds, manufacturer of the cigarette, says there is no causal link between smoking and lung cancer. We know better.
Andria is an alcoholic. She can't go more than a few days without a drink. She often gets drunk. Her college friends can't see a problem; they think she is the life of the party. Andria does not comprehend that alcohol is slowly eating her liver. She says everything is under control. We know better.
PETER ROBINSON
Mary sits in front of the television and stares into the screen. "All My
Joe is a miner in West Virginia. Mining is the only thing he has ever known. Like his father and his grandfather, Joe spends his day mining the rich black coal far below the earth. Everything down below is permeated with fine black coal dust. It's in the machines, it's in the rafters and it's in the lungs. The owners of these mines deny black lung's effects. We know better.
Tim Erickson Staff columnist
Children" is on and Sam has just learned he's pregnant. If Mary is typical, she will continue to watch TV well into the night. She may exceed the national average of seven hours of viewing a day.
Mary says she doesn't believe much of what she watches. She says it doesn't affect her. We know better. Don't we? Don't we?
TV is a wasteland, and we have allowed it to inundate our society. It is teaching us things we'd be horrified to learn if we saw them on a printed page. We watch death, horror, chain-saw massacres, adultery, rape and murders in front of our eyes nightly. Many can't, discern the difference between Dan Rather describing a murder and seeing a dozen murders on "Miami Vice."
It is easier for us to cry for Erica than for the human race. We are continually manipulated by screen writers and producers to feel some counterfeit emotion. But when a real
person comes to us for healing, many of us would rather turn his channel.
We can't figure out why we have a 50 percent divorce rate in this country. Maybe it's because marriage looks so easy on TV. All those happy TV couples hold hands and drink wine by the fire.
And when TV does show divorce, it's mostly with black and white clarity. The lines and demarcations of real life divorce are seldom as clear and defined as portrayed by the tube.
If you want to know about divorce, go talk to somebody who has joint custody of a child or two. Go talk to the kids, many of whom are wielded about like swords. Let them tell you about the manipulation and guilt they feel.
We absorb these TV images every day and say it does not affect our behavior or outlook. I can't believe it. Would you drink gasoline? Would you eat dirt? Would you breathe carbon monoxide? We clearly recognize the overt ramifications of feeding our body trash, but feign naive when it comes to what we put in our brains.
TV is the great unifier. It has spanned this nation in a way no other medium ever could. But it has done
so by appealing to the lowest common denominator. There is a term in the TV industry called LOP. It stands for least objectionable programming.
Most network programming fails in line with LOP. TV producers want you to continue watching their station throughout the night. They will feed you mush rather than something that might cause you to switch channels.
And don't fool yourself into thinking that TV serves any higher social good. TV executives are not concerned with morality. What they care about is money. They want ratings and shares and demographics. These things impress advertisers.
ABC's great rise from the cellar was not accomplished by appealing to intellect, but with down-and-dirty T-and-A shows like "Charlie's Angels."
The only thing I can think of worse than TV in general is "MTV" and its equally squail clones.
The best thing I could suggest you do with your TV is to waste it. Sell it, burn it or give it to somebody too far gone to realize the damage it does. The stakes here are high; your mental sanity is on the line.
Well levels reflect game's popularity
The way I figure it, using one of the rating formulas, television sets in more than 41 million homes were tuned to this year's Super Bowl game.
According to another rating service reporting last week, the audience totaled 127 million viewers, give or take a couple of kids who were channel-hopping at the time. That figure amounts to about half the nation's population, making it the largest TV audience in history, despite the lopsided score.
If these statistics don't impress you, you might prefer some approximations made by Jay Lehr of Worthington, Ohio, executive director of the National Water Well Association.
He estimates the water level in many of the nation's 13.5 million wells dropped as much as 11 inches, the length of football, during the halftime break in the game.
Dick West United Press International
United Press International
Talk about complicated! The water well method of judging the relative popularity of TV shows is even more complex than the techniques used by conventional rating systems.
Lehr conceded it was only an educated guess to say that up to 50 million gallons of water were consumed by stay-at-home football fans in just two minutes during halftime.
He also guessed that more well water was used for drinking and flushing during halftime than during the minute of silence observed by a pre-game show.
Only the U.S. Geological Survey maintains a continuous monitor on
many municipal water supplies, he told me. But orthodox rating systems tended to bear out his supposition.
The latter happenstance would be improbable even during the halftime of such an important game as Super Bowl XX between the Chicago Bears and New England Patriots.
Once a month, the spokesman explained, district engineers submit reports, but nothing unusual was
After talking with Lehr, I called the Geological Survey and learned that there are constant fluctuations in the 6,500 surface and underground water sources it monitors.
A spokesman said one day's measurements would be meaningless unless all of the taps were turned on simultaneously.
noted on Super Bowl Sunday.
Lehr agreed it was unlikely the engineers would have noticed anything. He said it would take an awful lot of money to check municipal water tables at a specific time on a specific day.
However, his estimates were close to rating system calculations that about half of the population saw it least part of the game, making it the most-watched sporting event of all time.
You can, of course, draw your own conclusions from these estimates. One of my deductions is that professional football televisioners have camel-like bodily mechanisms that enable them to wait until halftime before going to the bathroom for a drink of water.
From Page One
Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1986
University Daily Kansan
5
Philippines Continued from p.1
Continued from p.1
Ramos, a West Point-educated military man, said the rebels were in control of 85 percent of the 280,000-strong military, and soldiers defected throughout the day, including the 800 Filipino guards at U.S. Clark Air Base, the largest overseas U.S. facility.
'The Reagan administration, bringing growing pressure on Marcos, urged the embattled president to resign and hurriedly ordered special envoy Philip Habib back to Manila last night to arrange a peaceful solution. Marcos' own diplomatic corps around the world also advised him to quit.
In what the rebels call "people's power," thousands of Filipinos formed human chains around the two military camps outside Manila to stop tanks — a tactic they also used yesterday.
In Washington, the State Department warned Americans not to travel to the Philippines. Most flights into Manila airport were cancelled, and the airport was intermittently closed.
Airlines
deadlines and problems with its creditors.
Continued from p. 1
Maupintour Travel Service, 801 Massachusetts St., has received some calls about the takeover and its affect on spring break, said John Novotny, retail general manager.
He said it was senseless to speculate about the takeover's effect on flights until his service received certification from Eastern or Texas Air Corp.
Maupintour had experienced no rush to change reservations as of yesterday, Novotny said.
Joan Messineo, manager of Sunflower Travel Service, 704 Massachusetts St., said she didn't know what the effects of the takeover would be and neither did the two airlines.
Sunflower has had no rush for reservation changes because the company had been careful about how the sticks were made, because of the strikes, she said.
The takeover averted a strike, which prevented a rush to change reservations, she said.
Eastern generally charges 25 percent of the ticket cost for cancellations.
Messinae said she wanted to see how Eastern treated students who wanted to cancel reservations because of the airline's problems.
Kathryn Gilbert, Tulsa junior, who is flying to Mexico on Eastern for spring break, said she was worried Sunday but quit worrying when Eastern announced its takeover yesterday.
She said she would reserve another flight if it wasn't too expensive, or would drive if the strike was not settled.
"We're going. We're not staying here," she said.
Molly Brooks, Cleveland sophomeh, said she had made reservations for the same price on three other airlines besides Eastern.
If the strike does happen, Brooks said, she will just take another flight.
Brooks said she went to Maupitt tour yesterday, where they told her that if Texas Air Corp. bought Eastern the strike could be avoided.
"I don't think a strike will be that big of a deal," she said.
Quit
Continued from p. 1
Campbell said that she didn't know how much she would do for her graduate students without pay from the University after she leaves but that she was committed to her students.
"It's not a question of hostilities," Jerry said. "It's a question of availability."
Regents
"They are just working frantically." Campbell said of her graduate students. "And just seeing
where they are, I hope something can be worked out."
The search for replacements to fill Campbell's vacated positions already has begun.
Continued from p.1
their post-graduate work when Campbell leaves. Jerry said she worried about starting over with someone who knew nothing about what she had been working on the past 2½ years. She said she understood the situation.
Ann Schofield, assistant professor in women's studies and American studies, is leading the search committee to find a new director.
University lost 24 faculty members and in 1982-83 it lost 16, he said.
"It takes a long time to develop a faculty member," Kleiner said. "You get what you pay for. If you're paying low salaries, you're getting a lower quality faculty member."
Kleiner said a professor at a Regents schools makes an average of $1,700 less than professors at peer institutions. Associate professors make $1,900 less and assistant professors make $900 less.
The Regents schools are the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
Kleiner said the low salaries also caused morale problems among teachers who couldn't leave the University.
"It also creates dissatisfaction for those who can't leave," he said. "You don't think you're being treated fairly. You don't work as hard."
Del Shankel, acting vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the University had lost some of its best professors.
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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, 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 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 diak 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 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 Oullet says that, "Price and Performance will make this the hottest selling micro in 1985."
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University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1986
Red Cross wants to tap KU blood
By Lynn Maree Ross
Staff writer
KU students are an untapped resource that a local blood donor center wants to draw from.
Ann Campbell, Roeland Park senior, said yesterday that the Lawrence Red Cross Center, 329 Missouri St., hired her at the beginning of the semester to recruit student donors. Although students aren't in Lawrence all year, she said, they are a large source to be drawn from.
Matthew Stein, a Lawrence hematologist and oncologist, said getting KU students to donate blood was a good idea.
"I think that would be admirable," he said.
"I think that would be admirable," he said. Stein said that when he lived in Iowa City, Iowa, university students supplied the city, then with a population of 60,000, with all the blood it needed.
Alan Sanders, a physician and medical director of the pathology laboratory at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said that until a few years ago the Wichita Red Cross Center supplied the hospital with blood. That arrangement was satisfactory, but in cases of emergency, blood sometimes was not available immediately.
KU students could provide the state with a blood supply, Stein said.
"It seemed like the most reasonable thing to do," he said.
Stein said that after some Lawrence doctors talked to people at the Wichita Red Cross center, the Red Cross decided to open a satellite center in Lawrence. The Lawrence center opened in August 1984.
A blood center in Lawrence was needed because more specialists began practicing medicine in Lawrence, and the need for certain types of blood components increased. Sanders said.
sanders said because blood components were
available locally, doctors could treat some patients in Lawrence instead of sending them elsewhere. Also, the supply of blood is more reliable and available in larger quantities.
Colleen Denker, a nurse at the Lawrence center, said the blood was collected, then taken to the hospital for testing and separating. Technicians test for blood type, Rh factor and diseases such as syphilis, hepatitis and AIDS.
After testing, the blood is spun in a centrifuge and the plasma, red blood cells and platelets are separated and packaged for use.
So far, she said, none of the blood tested contained HTLV-3, the antibody to the acquired immune deficiency syndrome virus.
Plasma has a shelf-life of over one year, but red blood cells only have a shelf-life of 42 days and platelets only 7 days, Denker said.
David Vance, who would become general manager of the proposed Remington Park in Oklahoma City, said the entire racing industry was facing a crisis because of a saturation of the market.
Too many horse tracks, promoter says
OKLAHOMA CITY — Pari-mutuel horse racing in the United States is choking itself to death, a spokesman for the Edward J. DeBartolo family told the Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission yesterday.
"Saturation of the racing calendar is the biggest
United Press International
problem facing the racing industry today," he said at a hearing on two proposed racing commission rules requested by the DeBartolos.
The promoters want the commission to ban any big tracks within 100 miles of Remington Park and all tracks within 75 miles. They also want no other tracks until the combined handle of Remington Park and the existing Blue Ribbon Downs tops $230 million for two years.
Vance said that of the 24 racing jurisdictions in the United States, 13 have some type of economic protection for tracks. He listed 12 states in which
race tracks have closed recently because of financial problems.
"Our most recent history presents a pretty bleak picture for racing." he said.
Opponents of the proposed rules say the DeBartois, who operate Louisiana Downs, are seeking a monopoly on racing in Oklahoma. They said the state could support several tracks.
Two legislators told the commission the new rules could be a moratorium, which would be unconstitutional.
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On Campus
The KU Math Club will meet at 4 p.m. today in Room 315 Strong Hall.
Two free films, "Watching Ballet" and Doris Humphrey's "The Shakers," will be shown at 4 p.m. today in Room 252 Robinson Center. The films are part of the dance history film series.
The seminar, "Is the Homosexual My Neighbor," will be presented
at 4:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 210 Oread Ave.
The KU Ki-Aikido Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in Room 130 Robinson.
**Expressions, the KU Dance Club, will meet at 7 p.m. today in Room 242 Robinson. All interested persons are welcome.**
Games People Play Rock Chalk Revue .Hoch Auditorium Feb.27, 28,and March1
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Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1986
Nation/World
University Daily Kansan
7
Official vows to renew NASA's image
United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The new chief of the shuttle program, vowing to re-establish NASA's image as a forthcoming public institution, arrived at the spaceport yesterday to get a firsthand look at the agency's inquiry into the Challenger disaster.
Rear Adm. Richard Truly, appointed associate administrator for space flight last week, arrived at the Kennedy Space Center shortly after 2 p.m. on the eve of key hearings by the presidential disaster commission to investigate the decisions that led to Challenger's fatal launch.
"I'm down here to do two things," he said. "One is to get some firsthand information as to what has been discovered by the teams that have been taking a look at the data and the recovered salvage from the Challenger accident.
"And secondly to discuss with (senior NASA managers) an organization so we can fully support the president's commission to study this accident." Truly said.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's internal investigation generally has been shrouded in secrecy, but Truly, a former shuttle astronaut, vowed to improve the flow of information.
Truly also said there was no way to judge when shuttle flights might be able to resume at this early stage in the investigation.
"My only purpose is to make sure that we reestablish the media's belief that NASA is a forthcoming public institution," he said.
"There are a lot of options that have to be studied. When I've had the time to take a look at those options and evaluate them, I'll try to come up with a rational recommendation. I just honestly do not know."
The space agency study is centered at the Kennedy Space Center. Of the astronauts participating in the investigation, 14 are working in Florida under ace shuttle pilot Robert Crippen, seven are
In addition, astronaut Sally Ride is a member of the presidential commission charged with investigating the worst space disaster in history.
based at the Johnson Space Center in Houston and two at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.
The commission scheduled public hearings today and tomorrow in Washington. The hearings are expected to shed light on the controversial decision clearing Challenger for launch on Jan. 28 after a night of sub-freezing weather and a debate about the effect of the cold on crucial rocket booster seals.
William Lucas, director of the Marshall Space Flight Center, where the booster program is managed, left for Washington late yesterday to testify before the commission. When asked about reports that word of the debate never reached top NASA managers, he said, "I don't know that's the case."
WHAT CAN THE REGULATION OF HANDGUN SALES ACCOMPLISH?
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When City Commissioner David Longhurst urged his fellow commissioners to respond reasonably to the now superficially restricted sale of handguns within city limits, there was a predictable roar from the local National Rifle Association (NRA) contingent. In his December 15th Hunting and Fishing column, Journal World contributing writer Mike Pearce attributed the following statement about waiting periods to NRA Executive Vice President Ray Arnett: "I know of no case that shows such a regulation has any effect on crime." Local NRA enthusiast John Barrett had begun this dige in the December 14th Journal-World by describing waiting periods as "a dismal failure . . . (whose) only apparent effect . . . is to divert police resources away from more productive activities." Apparently, neither of these gentlemen knows that two years ago the inhabitants of Broward County, Florida, voted for (by a 2-1 margin) a waiting period and background check for those wishing to buy handguns. Since its ordinance, recently upheld by the Florida Supreme Court, took effect in mid-1984, the county has experienced a marked decrease in handgun homicides. Although Mr. Barrett may disagree, many of us consider this an inherently productive use of police resources.
In his letter, Mr. Barrett also held that "those who are truly hurt by restrictions on cheap handguns (Saturday Night Specials) are the poor, especially blacks who live in high crime neighborhoods and need a gun for protection, but cannot afford a higher-priced gun." But more than two months before Mr. Barrett composed his letter, the Maryland Court of Appeals ruled that a West German manufacturer of Saturday Night Specials was liable for injuries sustained during a robbery because this firm should have foreseen that its inexpensive and flawed product would be used chiefly in "criminal activity." In this case, Mr. Barrett, an attorney, is disagreeing with some very distinguished members of his profession.
A short time ago the NRA-backed McClure-Volkmer bill—which would undercut state handgun laws requiring registration, licenses to carry, waiting periods and background checks—was railroaded through the Senate without a single hearing. Although even such conservative organizations as the Fraternal Order of Police, the Police Foundation, the Police Executive Forum, the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the National Troopers Coalition, and the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives oppose the McClure-Volkmer bill because they recognize the need for some control over the sale of handguns, the NRA now is trying to highhandedly wheel the McClure-Volkmer bill through the House of Representatives also.
Why does the NRA fear public hearings and the exchange of ideas? When Mr. Barrett, in his contribution to the Journal-World's December 14th Public Forum, discussed the safeguards which must exist in "a truly free society," he undoubtedly was voicing a view held by most NRA members. But Mr. Barrett erred when he claimed the "founding fathers did not provide a system through which we restrict personal freedom as an experiment to see if it will produce some desirable result." His failure to see that one individual's freedom stops when it encroaches upon another's freedom enables him (and his NRA associates) to consider the 50 to 100 million handguns now floating around the country to be an expression of liberation.
Yet if the wholesale distribution of these concealable weapons has enhanced our freedom, then why, in 1980, did only 8 handgun homicides occur in Great Britain, 77 in Japan, 18 in Sweden, 24 in Switzerland, 4 in Australia, 23 in Israel, and 8 in Canada, while 11,522 took place in the United States? When these figures are factored for population, the resulting number of handgun homicides per 100,000 people is .0142 in Great Britain, .0659 in Japan, .2168 in Sweden, .3750 in Switzerland, .0274 in Australia, .5897 in Israel, .0335 in Canada and .5,0624 in the United States. The regulatory apparatus which exists in every of these seven free countries to oversee the sale and exchange of handguns obviously provides the populace of each with much more protection than does the porous structure our national government finds acceptable.
Sarah Brady, wife of White House Press Secretary James Brady who was wounded in the 1981 assassination attempt on President Reagan, recently discovered that the "toy gun" her five-year-old son had picked up from the seat of a friend's truck was really a fully-loaded Saturday Night Special. This incident convinced Mrs. Brady that "the time had come for her to join the movement to keep handguns out of the wrong hands and to ensure that people who have handguns for legitimate reasons know how to keep them safely."
Although each city commissioner certainly wants "to keep handguns out of the wrong hands," several of them don't seem to realize that this worthy goal can't be achieved as long as the essentially unregulated sale of handguns in our community continues.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th Street Terrace
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University Daily Kansan
The Philippines
Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1986
Governments urge Marcos' dismissal
United Press International
Governments around the world yesterday called for a return to democracy in the Philippines, and Filipino diplomats stationed abroad urged President Ferdinand Marcos to resign.
In Canberra, Australian Foreign Minister William Hayden said the sooner Marcos resigns, the quicker that divided country will "get on with its proper and lawful business of democratic government."
Hayden made the tempered call for Marcos' resignation after a meeting with Ray Fernandez, the former Australian ambassador to the Philippines who was recalled after the fraud-tainted election. Feb. 7 in which Marcos was officially declared the winner
On Saturday, Philippine Lt. Gen.
Fidel Ramos and Defense Minister
Juan Ponce Enrile broke with Marcos
and held themselves up with
loyal soldiers in a military compound
in the outskirts of Manila.
Ramos and Enrile said they broke with Marcos to protest gross irregularities in the election, which opposition candidate Corazon Aquino says she won, as well as widespread corruption in the Marcos administration.
In Washington, the White House warned Marcos and his loyal troops against any violence and called for a peaceful transition to a new government. Reagan said he would cut off military aid to the Philippines if Marcos' forces used violence against the rebels and civilians.
The British Foreign Office in London said, "These latest developments reflect the strength of feeling in the Philippines over the fraudulent conduct of the elections and the pressing need to restore democracy."
Spain's socialist government issued a statement saying, "The Spanish government believes that the only possible way to a solution hinges on respect for the will of the people, a majority of whom has expressed its support for democratic change, and the formation of a legitimate government based on that will."
Five countries in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations — Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Singapore and Brunei — said a critical situation had emerged in the Philippines which might spell bloodshed and civil war.
"As members of ASEAN, all of the five countries have followed with increasing concern the turn of events," said a communique issued in the capitals of the five nations. The Philippines is the sixth member of the Asian alliance.
Thai Foreign Minister Stitthi Savastialas said Thailand would not congratulate Marcos on his reelection, reversing Bangkok's earlier decision to send a congratulatory note to Marcos.
In Moscow, the Philippine ambassador to the Soviet Union unrew his support behind a provisional government announced yesterday.
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Aquino supporters stage rally near White House
In the country's capital, protesters read a proclamation to Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., calling Aquino the winner of the Feb. 7 presidential election and asking the U.S. government to honor the will of the Philippine people.
WASHINGTON — Some 200 supporters of Corazon Aquino, chanting "stay Marcos to Siberia," staged a rally across from the White House yesterday and asked President Reagan to assist the Philippines in a peaceful transfer of power.
United Press International
Demonstrators picketed in several U.S. cities, including the Philippine consulate in New York, demanding that Ferdinand Marcos leave office. Six pickets took up positions in front of the consulate with signs that said "Stop U.S. Support for Marcos" and "Marcos Sten Down."
"We call upon President Reagan
Most protesters were wearing yellow ribbons, the symbol adopted by the Marcos opposition.
to acknowledge and honor the sanctity of the votes of the Filipino people to desist from giving aid and comfort to enemies of freedom and democratic institution to pave the way for a peaceful transfer of government," said Heherson Alvarez, of the Ninoy Aquino Movement.
Kerry — a member of the U.S. delegation sent to the Philippines to oversee the elections — told the rally at Lafayette Square that the tide had turned in the strife-torn country.
"People know that the army protects people, but today the people are protecting the army," he said. "The world stands in awe of the special commitment to courage of the Phillipine people. They have given a new definition to the term freedom fighter.
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I
1
Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
9
Manning comes alive in second half
By Doug Ferguson Speciat to the Kansan
NORMAN, Okla — Sophomore forward Danny Manning was just another guy on the bench in the first half of Kansas' 87-30 Big Eight conference victory over Oklahoma last night.
Danny Manning
"I was sitting on the bench a lot in the first half thinking about it," Manning said after the game. "I was just
listening to the coach talking to me and knew what I had to do."
What Manning did was put the crunch on a pesky Oklahoma team. When he was finished, so were the Sooners.
Manning pumped in a game-high 25 points, but 20 of them came in the second half when the Sooners were trying to make a run of Kansas.
When OU guard Anthony Bowie canned a jumper to tie the game, 53-53 with 12:45 remaining, Manning went to work. He scored Kansas' next eight points. And soon the Jayhawks found themselves leading, 61-57.
"I knew I had to get into the paint
more," he said. "They played me. But no one was in front, so I could get the ball and turn and shoot on them."
Manning silenced the crowd for good when center Greg Dreiling threw an alley-oop and Manning tipped it in while being shoved out of bounds.
"He tried to push me out," Manning said. "I think it was a little bucky."
The Jayhawks victory snapped OU's 48-game winning streak at Lovel Noble Center.
"It's a great feeling to beat them on their home court," Manning said. "The last team to win here was a KU
team, so that makes it even better."
team so that makes less betrayal. Although Kansas moved up to No 2, behind the Duke Blue Devils, a team Kansas lost to in the finals of the Big Apple NIT, Manning said the Jawhayes couldn't be satisfied.
"We can't let down," he said.
"Coach Brown has been there, so we just listen to him. We love it."
Jayhawk notes — Kansas' 1983 conference championship was the 29th time the Jayhawks have won the title outright and the 40th time they have won or shared the championship. . .
There have been seven Big Eight champions since Kansas last won the title.
HELAND
KU player vaulter, Scott Huffman, is one of only two Jayhawks from the men's team to team so far for the National Collegiate Athletic Association Indoor Championships on March 13-15 in Oklahoma City. Huffman set both Kansas indoor and outdoor fresh records last season.
Dreaming of vaultsaids KU's Huffman
By Jim Suhr
Sports writer
Pick any day of the week, and at some point during that day you'll find Kansas' pole vaulter Scott Huffman in a different world.
Huffman, one of the country's top three vaulters this season, uses a guru-like routine as part of his pre-meet preparation. It's a routine that has made him a winner in one of tracks most unique and dangerous events.
"I project myself standing there and doing it," he said. "When you finally get to the meet, it's like you're already there."
He visualizes what the meet's crowd might be like. He sees himself holding his 15-foot 9-inch pole vertically in the box and gazing reflectively at a bar placed 17 or 18 feet off the ground. He imagines himself standing at the end of the runway, readying himself and breaking into a headlong sprint. He plants his pole and catapults skyward, clears the bar and lands safely on the soft pits.
Such mental conditioning has helped Huffman's career take off. Last season, his first at the collegiate level, Huffman set Jayhawk freshman records in placing second at both the 1985 Indoor and Outdoor Big Eight Championships, clearing $17\cdot 7_{\frac{1}{2}}$ and $18\cdot 5_{\frac{1}{2}}$. His outdoor mark last season set a national freshman record.
This season, Huffman's goals are set higher.
In his first meet of the season, Huffman cleared the 17-12%, the height required to qualify for the NCAA national meet. Since that first meet, he has jumped higher than the qualifying mark in every meet and has placed in two meets where world indoor records were set.
weekend when he and the rest of the Jayhawks travel to Lincoln, Neb. for the 1986 Indoor Big Eight Championships.
Huffman will be tested this
ruffman said he wanted to be the best in the event that has snapped 15 of his poles and was responsible for a concussion when he struck the track after vaulting beyond the pits.
"Being the best college jumper is not a claim I can hold right now," he said. "I wish it were, but there are two or three vaulters jumping better than I am. I feel I could beat them on a good day.
Huffman and fellow pole vaulter and roommate Chris Boban are the only two Jayhawks who have qualified for the national meet.
Huffman said the special relationship that he shared with Bohanan on and off the track was a contributing factor to his success this season.
Rick Attick, Kansas' jump coach,
said competition usually made
Huffman rise to the occasion. He
said Huffman had all the physical
qualities that successful pole
vaulters should have: a spinner's
speed, a weight man's strength
and a gymnast's flexibility and
agility.
"He really pushes me," Huffman said. "If I'm having a bad day and get frustrated, Chris will just jack up the bar and jump it. That pushs me up."
"His progress is so quick that his confidence may not have fully caught up with him," Attig said. "It will have to grow with him as he grows with the event."
However, Attig said Huffman's mental toughness would have to be sharpened.
Hometown: Quinter, Kan.
Duke gets top spot; KU climbs to No.2
JOHN HENDERSON
Family: parents, Galen and Karen Huffman
Age: 21
United Press International
NEW YORK — Duke, taking advantage of back-to-back losses by previously top-ranked North Carolina, yesterday reached the No. 1 spot in the weekly United Press International Board of Coaches college basketball ratings for the first time in 20 years.
HUFFMAN PROFIL
Background: Redshirt during his freshman season in 1984. Set Jayhawk freshman indoor and outdoor records with second place finishes at both the 1985 Indoor and Outdoor Big Eight Championships. State high school pole vault champion during his senior year at Quinter. Named all-league in track in 1983 and played football.
Class and Major: Junior in journalism.
Kansas, 27-3, took over the No. 2 spot after clinching the Big Eight Conference's regular season title. The Jayhawks moved up one place from a week ago after toppling Big Eight rivals Colorado and Kansas State.
Duke, 27.2, received 41 place votes cast by the 42-member UPI coaches board and made it to No. 1 for the first time since February of 1966.
The Blue Devils' climb to No. 1 in the ratings ended North Carolina's 12-week reign as the kingpin of college basketball. The Tar Heels, 25-3, dropped into a tie for third with Georgia Tech, 21-4, this week after losing to Atlantic Coast Conference rivals Maryland and North Carolina State in successive games, Georgia Tech received the only first place vote not awarded to Duke.
Scott Huffman
22-3, jumped four places to No. 6 after scoring back-to-back victories over Big East rivals Pittsburgh and Georgetown.
Kentucky, 24-3, advanced two spots to No. 5 after a pair of victories over Florida and Georgia, and Syracuse,
Memphis State, 23-3, lost its only game of the week to Florida State at the buzzer. This cost the Tigers a drop of four places in the ratings, to No. 8, but Bradley, boasting the best record in the country at 28-1 and the longest winning streak at 19 games, continued its climb by jumping three places to No. 9.
Nevada-Las Vegas, 27-3, also climbed four places to No. 7 after collecting three victories.
St. John's, 25-4, tumbled four places to No. 10 after being defeated by unranked DePaul on national television Sunday.
The victory ended a 48-game homecourt winning streak by the Sooners, who previously had lost at home in 1983 to Kansas. The Jayhawks improved to 27-3 overall, 12-1 in the Big Eight. Oklahoma, which has lost three straight, dropped to 23-6 and 8-5.
NORMAN, Okla. — Kansas forward Danny Manning scored 20 of his game-high 25 points in the second half last night to carry the second-ranked Jayhawks to an 87-80 Big Eight Conference basketball victory over No. 13 Oklahoma.
After Oklahoma came from a seven-point halftime deficit to tie the score at 53 with 12:46 to play, Manning caught fire.
'Hawks end streak of OU wins at home
Oklahoma's inability to shoot from the field and the foul line helped give Kansas a 39-32 halftime lead. The Sooners missed seven shots in a row at one stage as Kansas went from a 15-14 deficit to a 20-14 lead with nine minutes remaining.
From Kansan wires
Darryl Kennedy, who finished with 22 points, scored nine of them during a 13-8 Oklahoma run that brought the Sooners within three, 77-74, with 1:50 remaining. But the Sooners got no closer as Kansas made eight of nine free throws in the final 1:29.
The 6-foot-11 sophomore kept the Sooners at bay by scoring 10 of the Jayhawks' next 12 points to make the score 65-61 with 7:47 remaining.
Kansas opened its widest lead. 69-61, when center Greg Dreiling slammed the shot at the 63-1 mark.
L. Duke (27.2)
K. Kansas (27.2)
N. North Carolina (21.4)
t. tie Georgia Tech (23.4)
K. Kentucky (24.3)
S. Syracuse (22.3)
N. Nevada Las Vegas (23.3)
M. Memphis State (23.3)
B. Bradley (26.1)
I. St. John's (23.4)
M. Michigan (23.4)
N. Notre Dame (18.5)
O. Oklahoma (23.6)
L. Louisville (21.7)
G. Georgetown (20.6)
I. Indiana (18.6)
T. Michigan State (18.6)
N. North Carolina State (18.9)
A. Alabama (19.4)
P. Virginia
For the half, Oklahoma shot just 38 percent from the floor and made only two of six free throws. At the same time, Kansas was shooting 48 percent and sinking nine of 11 foul shots.
Men's Basketball
For the game, Kansas made 23 of 27 free throws while Oklahoma made eight of 17.
| | M | FG | FT | T | R | A | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Mannings | 31 | 8-11 | 9-10 | 7 | 3 | 4 | 25 |
| Kellogg | 38 | 6-12 | 6-7 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 18 |
| Drelling | 35 | 8-8 | 4-5 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 16 |
| Treile | 35 | 8-8 | 4-5 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 16 |
| Thompson | 36 | 6-14 | 0-0 | 6 | 5 | 1 | 12 |
| Marshall | 12 | 2-8 | 0-0 | 0 | 5 | 1 | 14 |
| Turgeon | 9 | 0-2 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Troyle | 9 | 0-2 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Pinto | 32-81 | 32-27 | 32-27 | 1 | 1 | 19 | 87 |
Percentages: FG, 525, FT, 852. Blocked Shots: (2 Drilling, Thompson), Turnovers: 12 (Hunter 2), Steals: 4 (Hunter 2); Technicals: None.
Kansas 87
Oklahoma 80
Kansas
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Watson | 4 | 8-16 | 6-17 | F | 3 | A | 52 |
| Johnson | 5 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Bowie | 3 | 8-15 | 8-15 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 16 |
| Bowie | 4 | 4-11 | 0-2 | 2 | 4 | 7 | 18 |
| McCallister | 40 | 8-21 | 2-4 | 4 | 1 | 3 | 18 |
| Roberts | 29 | 9-21 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 20 |
| Davis | 13 | 1-2 | 0-0 | 0 | 3 | 1 | 2 |
| Totals | 36-78 | 8-17 | 8-17 | 30 | 14 | 3 | 8 |
Oklahoma
Louisville wins by 11
Percentages: FG, 462, FT 471, Blocked Shots: 2 (Bowie 2) Turnovers: 7 (Bowie, Johnson, Kennedy 2) Steals: 8 (Bowie 3). Technicals: None.
Half: Kansas 39-32. Officials: Wukow,
Eichner, Linebach.
From Kansan wires
Mitt Wagner scored 12 points and Billy Thompson 11, as Louisville improved to 22-7 on the season. Rickey Brown scored a game-high 15 points for the Jaguars, no 16-15.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Herbert Crook scored 13 points and 14th-ranked Louisville shot 73 percent from the field in the second half to post its seventh straight victory last night, a 66-55 triumph over South Alabama.
Club organized to increase ticket sales
Memphis State 86, South Carolina 73.
COLUMBIA, S.C. — William Bedford scored 17 points to lead five Memphis State players in double figures, as the fourth-ranked Tigers beat South Carolina 86-73 in Metro Conference basketball play.
By Frank Ybarra Staff writer
Ray Evans played halfback for the KU football team in the early 1940s when leather helmets and natural turf were in style.
During those years, he said, the KU football team had little fan support. Often, only 4,000 or 5,000 fans showed up to watch the Jayhawks in the 35,000 seat Memorial Stadium.
Evans left Kansas in 1943 to fight in World War II and returned to play football in 1946. The team had greatly improved in that time, he said, and along with success came large fan support. Fans often filled the stadium to watch the team and its All-American halfback Ray Evans.
These days Evans is busy trying to recapture the spirit of the late '40s. He is the head of the Kansas City area Hawk's Club, a group of KU supporters who are trying to increase the number of public season ticket sales to KU football games.
The club, which will meet for the first time March 4, will ask its
members to sell at least 10 season tickets to other KU supporters in the area, Evans said. About 100 people have expressed interest in the club.
According to Kent Weiser, director of marketing for the athletic department, members will be awarded prizes based on the number of season tickets they sell. He said the club was similar to the Royal Lancers, a group of fans who promote ticket sales for the Kansas City Royals.
"Enthusiasm breeds enthusiasm," he said. "We just need people to get it started."
One reason that the club was started, Weiser said, was because of the low number of season ticket sales at Kansas.
According to statistics recently compiled by, Susan Wachter, assistant athletic director, Kansas ranks second to last in the number of football season ticket sales in the Big Eight Conference.
Kansas sold 19,896 season tickets last year. Only Kansas State, with 11,944 season tickets, sold fewer.
In public season ticket sales — the
Other Universities, according to the Athletic Department, reported these figures;
Nebraska — 70,392 season tickets, 47,364 sold to the public
area the club will concentrate on — Kansas also ranked second to the last. Kansas sold 10,711 season tickets compared to 5,120 at K-State.
Oklahoma — 58,800 season tickets, 42,834 to the public
*Iowa State — 34,432 season*
tickets, 21,390 sold to the public
Oklahoma State — 32,986 season
Missouri — 28,392 season tickets,
17.203 sold to the public
Colorado — 20,495 season tickets,
13,961 sold to the public
Kansas ranked third to the last in student season ticket sales and second to the last in faculty season ticket sales.
Evans said he became interested in season ticket sales when Monte Johnson, athletic director, showed him the statistics for sales.
"It's embarrassing, it's a disgrace,
Weiser said the club also would offer discount season ticket rates to people who did't mind sitting near the goal lines. The regular season ticket price will be $87 for this fall's games, but the discount prices will be $69.
and it's not right." he said.
There are over 35,000 KU alumni in the Kansas City area, Evans said, and only 3,000 have season tickets. He said the club hoped to increase that number to about 5,000.
Head football coach Bob Vales ante said he was pleased with the effort of Evans and other supporters but there was one sure way to increase fan support.
Weiser said the Kansas City club was only one of three in this area which would be started soon.
"The best way to continually improve attendance," he said, "is to continually put a good team out on the field."
A club in Lawrence and Topeka will be started within a month, he said.
Breakdown of Big 8 season ticket sales
Faculty-Staff season tickets General Admission seating
Student season tickets Public admission tickets
Kentuae 21% 63%
K-State 14% 72%
Missouri 4% 54%
Iowa State 20% 72%
Oklahoma 9% 72%
Oldahoma State 6% 85%
Nebraska 10% 85%
Seating capacity of stadiums in the Big 8 Conference
Memorial Stadium (Kansas) 51,500 KSU Stadium (K-State) 42,000 Faurot Field (Missouri) 62,000 Polisom Field (Colorado) 91,941 Memorial Stadium (Nebraska) 73,650 Memorial Stadium (Oklahoma) 78,004 Lewis Stadium (Oklahoma State) 80,440 Cyclone Stadium (Iowa State) 50,000
Source: Department of Intercollegiate Athletics
Bill Skeet/Kansan
7.
10
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1986
Eight reluctantly finish season
By Dawn O'Malley Sports writer
Eight KU swimmers would have preferred to swim at the Big Eight Championship in Lincoln, Neb., but their season ended Sunday at the Phillips 66 Meet of Champions in Bartlesville, Okla.
The eight swimmers were not chosen to compete for Kansas at the conference championships March 6-8.
"They all did excellent considering the circumstances," Celine Cerny,
Swimming
graduate assistant coach said yesterday. "They were given short notice for their taper (a work-out reduction). They displayed themselves well and were recognized as a team."
Cerny coached the team over the weekend.
Jeff Stone was the only individual winner for Kansas. He won the 50-yard freestyle with a time of 22
"Swimming lifetime best times helped me psychologically." Stone said. "Celine told us to swim our own race, have fun and not to worry about anyone else."
seconds. Mike Crouch finished eighth at 23.1 seconds.
Stone took advantage of the opportunity to improve his times, and he did so.
Dionne keeps improving, reunited with teammates
By Dawn O'Malley Sports writer
Karen Dionne's laugh rings out from her hospital room. She is laughing and smiling now, and with little or no assistance, Dionne is taking her first steps.
Hillcrest Medical Center in Tulsa, Okla., has become a second home for Dionne on her road to recovery.
The KU swimmer was in a automobile accident over Thanksgiving Break that left her in a coma for almost a month. Doctors never thought that she would be walking today.
When Dionne made an appearance at the Phillips 66 Meet of Champions to watch her teammates swim Saturday, she got a heroes welcome from them.
"I got lots of hugs and kisses," Dionne said.
Then showing off Sunday
"I wanted the chance to improve," Stone said. "It made the work and year pay off."
what she had been practicing, Dionne took 150 unassisted steps, up and down a hallway, in front of head coach Gary Kempf, teammate Anne Bloomfield, her boyfriend Brad Wells and her sister, Kelly.
Raymond Dionne, Dionne's father, said she took her first step Wednesday. And since then it had been a gradual build up to where she is now.
"Her progress is not a surprise," said Becky Heil, KU swimmer, "because she is strong-willed, dedicated and motivated."
Heil said she had visited Dionne before and there was a noticeable improvement.
"She is talking a lot more," Heil said. "and smiling and laughing."
Dionne said she usually spent her time at the movies and eating her mother's home cooking.
Several of the swimmers finished the events with personal best times.
In the women's 500-yard freestyle, Patti Crane finished ninth for a personal best of 5 minutes and 18.91 seconds. She also had a personal best time of 1:59.1 in the 200-yard freestyle to come in tenth.
In the men's 500-yard freestyle, Tom Dow had a lifetime best time of 4:45.5, for fifth place.
Although Crane finished two of her events with personal best times, she said she would have liked to have gone faster in her sprint events, the 50-yard and 100-yard free.
"A lot hit personal goals which makes a season a success." Cerny said. "When you have hit a personal goal, you can walk away proud."
"I was hoping to swim for best times," Crane said. "It didn't surprise me at all. I went for lifetime bests and proved I could do it. All the work paid off this weekend."
The swimmers' performance came as no surprise to Cerny because of their collegiate swimming experience.
Kansas sophomore Danny Manning is listed as one of ten finalists for the Naismith Trophy for the College Player of the Year, the Atlanta Tip-Off Club announced last week.
"Every night we had someone in the final," Cerny said. "Their attitude was excellent. They competed as a class team, and supported the University. They deserve a pat on the back. They made the best of it."
Manning already has been nominated to receive the John Wooden Award from the Los Angeles Athletic Club.
Manning nominated for Naismith trophy
In both cases, Manning was the only sophomore nominated.
NU's Carr honored
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Brian Carr of Nebraska, who hit the winning shot in the final seconds in a 66-64 upset of Oklahoma, was chosen the Big Eight player of the week.
Carr's winning shot accounted for two of his 18 points in the victory. He also scored a career-high 22 points in an 81-73 loss to Iowa State.
The Cornhusker junior won in a split vote over Kansas senior Ron Kellogg, who scored 50 points in two games, including 30 in the 84-69 victory over Kansas State which clinched Kansas' first Big Eight championship in eight years.
SAN DIEGO — Dick Williams resigned as manager of the San Diego Padres yesterday, 11 weeks after an attempt to buy out his contract was blocked by team owner Joan Kroc.
Padre manager quits
Williams had failed to report to the Padres' spring training camp in Yuma, Ariz., on Sunday, the day pitchers and catchers reported.
Williams and Kroc embraced and kissed after Kroc thanked Williams for the Padres' championship season in 1984.
want to manage the Padres another year?' My honest answer finally was 'no.' Williams said.
"For the past few weeks, I have been asking myself, D do I really
Pitching Coach Galen Cisco tem-
porarily will lead the team. A new
manager is expected to be named
next week.
Williams, 56, had sought an extension of his contract to manage the team but was rebuffed by Ballard Smith, team president. Ballard said Williams could serve out the last year of his pact, which would have been the 1986 season.
Stephan files lawsuit
TOPEKA — Attorney General Robert Stephan yesterday filed a lawsuit against the Kansas State High School Activities Association, alleging it violated the Kansas Open Meetings law 25 times when imposing sanctions against Wichita's Kapau-Mt. Carmel High School.
The suit, filed in Shawnee County District Court, asks the KSHSAA to permanently prevent the KSHSAA from enforcing the sanctions it imposed against Kapau. Stephan filled the lawsuit against the association and the nine members of its executive board.
The suit alleges that at a Feb. 12 meeting, where the executive board imposed the sanctions, the board violated the Kansas Open Meetings law by discussing topics not allowed in executive session. The board also allegedly reached agreement on the sanctions in executive session, and failed to include information required by the open meetings law into its motions to recess into executive session.
From staff and wire reports
Overland Park, KS / 913-345-1400
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UNIVERSITY
PHOTOGRAPHY
- SHAMPOO/HAIRCUT/BLOWDRY
- PERM
- HIGHLIGHT 841-5499
- EAR PIERCING 2338 ALABAMA
- SET OF NAILS
- MONTH OF TANNING
WALK-INS WELCOME EXP/31/87
BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320
--to meet to share ideas and concerns with K.U. students with hearing disabilities
25% OFF
PORTAL POSTERS
The Palace
GIFTS CARDS
8TH & MASS.
expires 3/1/86
843-1099
--to meet to share ideas and concerns with K.U. students with hearing disabilities
1730 W. 23rd
Across from J.C.Penney
842-3664
Daily Special
Border Bandido
4-6p.m.
½ price on dozens of all donuts and rolls
K-ZR 106 DAY SPECIAL Border Bandido
11 a.m. - 11 p.m.
1528 W. 23rd
88 W. 23rd 11 a.m. - 11 p.n.
*Texas Burrito for $1.06
*2 authentic Tacos for $1.06
*Texas draw beer 32 oz. for $1.06
*** FREE order of chips and dip with your laser gold card.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN special AROL LEE DONUTS
Call us about our large order specials/Open 5a.m.-6 p.m. Daily
"Atlasta Good" DONUT and PASTRY!
B
For Anytime...
* Freshly made
Donuts daily
* Soups, Salads,
Sandwiches
* Assortment of
delicious cookies & rolls
You are invited
SAC
STUDIO CINEMAS
606 W. 2ND ST.
BROOKLYN, NY 10470
Wednesday, February 26
3:30 p.m.
Alcove D, Kansas Union Cafeteria
POLICE
To Your Good Health THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION at WATKINS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL OFFERS
CPR
(American Red Cross Certification)
classes
For more information
March 4 and 6
April 8 and 10
To register call 843-4455 Ext.46
BRAND NEW & LUXURIOUS SUNRISE VILLAGE
Leasing for the Fall!
Featuring:
- 3 bedroom townhouse with 1460 sq. ft., private garage, $2\frac{1}{2}$ baths, and can accommodate up to 4 people.
- tennis court and swimming pool available.
- we also offer studios, 1, 2, 3 & 4 bedroom apartments, available at Sunrise Place & Sunrise Terrace.
Stop by our office at Sunrise Place,
9th & Michigan, or call
841-1287.
MICHAEL BRANDWEIN presents
LASERBEAM
A Positive System of Teaching & Managing Behavior
LA
Thursday, February 27, 1986
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Big Eight Room
presented by
Prairieview National Honor &
Recognition Association in Education
School of Education Student Organization
and Student Affairs
Student Activity Fee
OFFICER OPPORTUNITES AVAILABLE NOW!
Call 913-841-1821
Marines We're looking for a few good men.
CLASSIFIED EMPLOYEES
A rep. from the Governor's Office has been invited to a Classified Senate meeting to discuss legislative issues which affect us.
Please Attend!
Tuesday, Feb.25, 5:15 p.m.
Burge Union
Party Room (first floor)
FUELLE
DE L'ENOIRE
PASSAGE D'ELEVÉRATION
yello Sub
"How many Subhumans can you fit in a volkswagen?" Enough to fix you a delicious nutritious yello sub!!!
We deliver 5-midnight 841-3268 12th & Oread
1
Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1986
11
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 | 9.30 |
| 20-25 | 3.10 | 4.25 | 6.15 | 10.50 |
| For every 3 words add: | 40% | 50% | 75% | 1.05 |
Classified Ads
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.
*Classified Display $4.40
*very column inch
*Classified advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No reveries allowed in classified ads. No overflows allowed in classified display ads. No overburbs allowed in classified display ads.
POLICIES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- Blint box ads - please add a $4 service charge;
* Blint box ads - must all accompany a classified ads mailed
to the address listed on the ad.
- Tearaesthesis are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correction insertion of any advertisement classified
- NBW rates based on connectivity day in information.
* No responsibility is assumed for more than one in
- thrfully earned rate discount
Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
- Words set in ALI CAPS count as 2 words.
* Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words.
* Deadline is a 4-m – work days prior to
publication.
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions
until credit has been established.
* Tear sheets are not provided for classified or
Found course can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed on norium or by calling the Kansan business office at 604-4358.
classified display advertisements
*Classified displayed ads do not count towards more
ANNOUNCEMENTS
SERVICE
ALL DISCIPLINES
18th Annual Antique Show and Sale Coming
June 26 at the Lakewood Civic Center
9 p.m.-11 p.m. Sunday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. At National
Guard Armory, 200 Iowa, Sponsored by Pilot
Bldg. Admission $2.00 with this ad, 25 off each
20th Annual Antique Show and Sale coming
on Friday, April 18 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
11a.m-5p.m., Sunday 11a.m-5p.m. At National
Award Armory, 200 iowa. Sponsored by Pilot
Club Admission $20 (with this ad $2 off each)
through May 26.
PRIVATE PLACEMENT
18th 'Color' TV. $29.80 mmon. Smity's TV.
147 W, trd. 32, B731-8571. Mon., Sun. 9:00
147 W, trd. 32, B731-8571. Mon., Sun. 9:00
BentVCM with 2 movies, overnight $9.65
SUNNY'S TV 14:47 W 82:43 h 82:51M - Mon - Sat
08:30-10:15 PM
- No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
200 Professional Headhunters are waiting to see your resume.
Call Ken Wilson 841-1085 or 842-5752
BE READY FOR MIDTERM? Attend the preparation for Exams Study Skills Workshop. Topics covered: time management, memory, and note-taking. Book online free: FREE! Wednesday, February 26, 7: p.m.; Council Room, Kansas Union Presented by the Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, h8-404-64
Spinsters Books & Webbery has Rosemary
Rotherm's latest book and other titles by women
on spirituality and the politics of women's
spirituality. She is on board off 8(1) St. 184.
Won. Shall Th. 11, 8, 834-8747.
Hillel לילד
Hillel Lunch Ilai Alon
"Islamic Background of the Arab-Israeli Conflict"
Get Published! SF and FAency magazine accepting
承发表es: Linda 844-5892 evenings.
Wed. February 26
11:30-1:30
Alcove C
Kansas Union
Spring Break! Bake: supplies of tents, sleeping
lugs, coolers, etc. Make reservations now!
Wilderness Discovery Level Burge Union. phone
943-387-387
ENTERTAINMENT
Attention Sophomore: Owl Society is now accepting applications! Minimum overall GPA of 3.0.
Applications in Rm. 409 Kansus Union. Application to Rm. 409 Kansus Union, dated March 6 t.p.m. to Rm. 403 Kansus Union.
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE J DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Buccouns for student organizations. 749-4713.
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to provide the music for your next party. We use a 100-80-70 combination mixer and an audio accomodate outdoor parties too. Units in (913) 827-8448 and Satiana and Salma. Call (913) 854-8448 or (913) 827-8448.
FOR RENT
BR house, East Lawrence, bus route, 1984
rebak. insulated. Double lot, garden $750.
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkeley Flats, Favoca's available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 803-2116.
farmate housemate.邻居吧, sun
garage, studio, garden, Non-matcher
garage
as come, first served, only a few twent. At 9:30 Wk, on KU bus route, between Gibson's Daltal Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We buy hot and cold water, you choose options, we provide a bathroom or bath. Call 843-6446 for appointment.
Pursuit one bedroom apartment near Universi-
dia & Downtown. Most utilities with off street
connections. $150/week.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. (and without number 18) Deluxe 3 or 4 BH duplex, or 2 batteries. Sparement garage equipment. Energy efficient. low utilities. On bus route. No pets. Refs. required. Must see to us.
Male roommate need. Have your own bedroom
@ bathroom for only $133/month. Convenient location
on bus route and close to shopping. Call 922-2891,
late afternoon or early evening.
newly remodeled quiet 8 bathroom $22 plus
quarter price depon. Leave end July 31. 251 In-
house tenant
New two bedroom apartment, Aspen West. No
gifts. $230.00 per month. 749-1288.
NOWHOUSE are immediately Cornish CQ,
CB, substances from Meadowbrook Aph. at 04:44-48
06:15.
BURLEE NOW. 1 BDMK Hanover Place apt
one month free rent! 841-1212.
Spring break-Breide 2-bedroom condo, pool, bona, sauna. Located in Silverthorne, close to Brackenridge, Copper, and Keystone $100/night.
(863) 429-1713.
Studio apartment one block from campus. No
locks. 871-959. per month. 749-1288.
batesville now 2-1dhrm apt. Very nice and close to campus. 943-9738
TRAILRIDGE-Now leasing for Summer & Fall. Studios-large, cheerful large closets, quiet rooms, and a sunroom in the APARTMENTS-1.2, & 3 bedroom, appliances include dishwasher, laundry in building, gas heat & water paid. TOWNHOUSES-2.3 & 4 bedroom. Vacations on-site, free meals, 1/1/2 to 1/2/3. Excellent maintenance services. 3 swimming pools, tennis, basketball, close to shopping malls, family park, Onsite Park, 500 w. Width 84, 733-733
MASTERCASTER offers completely furnished 1.
room and校区 all new campus. Call
841-1212, 841-2033.
FOR SALE
1978 FIREBIRD Looks good, runs great. A/C
1978 FIREBIRD Looks good, runs great. A/C
1978 FIREBIRD Looks good, runs great. A/C
2000 EAGLE 2500食醋 Excitable 641-8386
1985 Schism Mountain Bike-Reliease transportation with very few miles. Call 432-688-023 after 3 p.m. in man dome set with rain fly. Factory reconditioned Only $30. Everything But ice 6th & 8th
BABY DEAN ELECTRIC GUITAR: Candy apple
650 firm 950 soft 1300
845/720 ask for Nod.
785/720 ask for Nod.
B. C. Rich Warick Bass with case, with 2 Ludwig Hervich Cymbal Stands. Paisle 502 ride and rude crash, all in excellent condition. Call: 841-7929
Baseball cards and sports nontailog. Buy, Sell
Baseball cards. Open 10-8 M-S,
and W 2nd Street. Open 10-8 M-S.
Big Casso boom-box/synsizer $199. Raleigh
record bicycle 10-mil i32. *Mircens ternitable,
linear tracking, programmable plus cartridge*
$148. IBM jpcp plus software $599. 841-2399.
Cash immediately for automobile exhaust
Cash immediately for pay and pay cash
Call Jerry Penner. 913-229-2500
Comic Books, Playful, Penthouses, etc. Mass.
Comics, Tues. Fr., Supt. & Sat. 10-5-81
New Hampshire
GOVERNMENT HOMES from #1 (U) repair;
Call 860-657-6900
GOVERNMENT for information
Loudspeaker Systems, Allison Sevenen, 300 pair, Allison eighta, 500 pair, Cash only, 845-143 or 845-176.
One pair DCM 'QED' speakers $350 or best offer.
Phone 842-3968.
RA 10 inch B/W TV UHF, VHF, works good.
Best Offer. 749.328.328
TWO-NINE EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Recoveries from £8, turbiltraisher to H1, speakers
from £6, speaker rack, amplifier,
three, all completely reconditioned and warranted.
Lawrence Custom Radio, 914 W. 21st St.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make senses to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class discussion. 3) For a personal analysis of Western civilization; available now at Town Clerk, The Jayhawk Booksstore, or at www.westerncivilization.com.
SONY TRINITRON 18 inch COLOR TV Catable
Must sell best: 841-273-6549 Keep Trying!
AUTOSALES
AIRLINE HIRING BOOM! $143-$1,900
Stewardesses; Reservations! Call for Guide
Cassette, Newservice, (916) 944-4444 x UWAIL5.
CHECKERS Pack has immediate openings for ten delivery drivers. Must be 18 years or older and have your own car and insurance. Our drivers average $69 per hour. Cash commission is free, you can call or email Checkers Pack, 2214
Valuel: 941-801-7400
1982 Toyota 4 x 4 SR-4, s/p/b, a/c/m/ftm
callen. Callian Bk 641-8944.
Moving Mint Sale. 1980 Olds-Mobel station wagon $ silver. Fully Just. Oft! Call 7100 *Call now*
184 Toyota Celica, 2 door Coupe, speed, fully
enabled, A C seat capacity 1800 ml, mg 87500
kg
DRIVE A NEAL SPORTS CARS 78 kWh 2 plus 1
intention attention, Alpine White, *4000 OBD II*
Must sell 1 MRAX RD7, runs great. AM(FM),
ACC. ATC $750 and 748-846 amortization.
CACC. ATC $750
LOST/FOUND
HELP WANTED
SUMMER WORK/JOHNSON COUNTY, RS
Four-hour leave. RS office door access.
Required of door-to-door data collection. Car and driver's license required. For interview 6, please contact J.Kaust.
GOVERNMENT JOURNS $JOB, 650 - $9,250 - yr. Now
Hire CALL 1-877-0587-4000 Est. 879 - for current
members only.
JOBBS. Part time hours for full time pay $400+$120.
moll. time $300+$600. work for the fastest growing co.
in, in American history. We need
experienced IT professionals.
Call 913-878-5141 Dugene GILEN & Assoc.
Found-1 watch at Watson Library on
2/21/16. Check at Reference Desk.
HIRING TERRITORIAL MARKETING PERSONNEL. Progressive commission approximately $21,000 first year, $32,000 second year. Resume CDT 7148, CDT 1124, Highway 7, Oakathe, A6 6601.
Wool Hirrington overcoat and red scarf. Lost
Saturday night. Feb 15, 843-7172. David C
NANNIES WANTED-Live-in child care for professional families in Boston. If you love children, we have the right job for you! Summer jobs, too. Please contact Jennifer at jennifer@nannies.org. Branch, Branch, Boston, Mass., 02258, Call 817-344-1544.
GOVENMENT JOBS, $16,000-$23,500; now
Birtal Call: 867-657-8000. R/798 for
new employees.
OVERSEAS JOBS Summer, Jr. or Europe.
OVERSEAS JOBS Summer, Jr. or Europe.
Sleek Sizinge Free, Write intl LC, PC B2-05 K2-14
Sleek Sizinge Free, Write intl LC, PC B2-05 K2-14
Part Time Job. Flexible hours between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m. for inventory control. $8 an hour. Must have car. Call collect Digit Signal 213-690-8800. Need to have a Bachelor's degree. Resort Employee is seeking male and female applicants for. Retail Sales, Food Service and other oriented jobs Openings from May this year until October of the next further information write: National Park Village North, cao Mc Schifferis; 740 Oxford Lane, Fort Worth.
SALES-SUPPORT MICRO- COMPUTERS
Lawrence's largest computer store COMPUTER OUTLET, seeks a personable , aggressive sales person for NCR, Leading Edge, IBM, Sperry and Corona micro's. Work includes assembly and office responsibilities.
Requires micro familiarity. This is a long term position with tremendous growth potential.
COMPUTER OUTLET,
804 New Hampshire,
Lawrence, KS. 66044.
EOE-MF
Join the sharpest computer team in NE Kansas. Salary - commission.
Send resume to
CASH DAILY. Dominic's Pizza is now accepting applications to hire 10 drivers. If you are a self-motivated, high energy person, you could work for us. We also accept payments. We pay cash communications on deliveries our. Our drivers make $5-8 per hour and more. You must be 18 years of older, have a car, current driver's license and proof of insurance. Apply by calling 718-423-9691, no phone calls, we EOE, m/7.
WANTED: ARCHITECTURAL, DRAFTSMAN for immediate full or part-time work in Overland Park area. $6 mo. experience necessary. Call (913) 409-6806.
GRUISSEHPS HIRING! $163.00-$400 Carribean
Gruisseehps, World! Call for help! Cassette,
CD! Send resume! Compiling Services is seeking a half-time student
monthly Software Trainer. Salary $50 per month.
Duties include being a FOCUS expert; design
software projects using Java; write FOCUS document for end
users; provide some consulting. Required:
computerization skills; knowledgeable about
computerized data bases and their use; experience
imaging systems; and three references to John Bacher,
Computing Services, University of Kansas,
Lawrence, KS; 600-2851 Application deadline:
FURY
PERSONAL
University Daily Kansan
White male age 24 seeks dating/relationship with black female. Interests in health, exercise, career. No joke. Serious replya to Kevin, Box 3902 Lawrence, Ks.
A RU student from far east Orient seeks a serious girl for warm relationship. Please reply to Nebha Zakaria at info@rudyschool.org.
CORBERT MAYER
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation avoided. 841-7740
810-4360 Weekly/Up Mailing Circulators! No qs! Sincerely interested rich user self-addressed envelope; Success, P.O. Box 740CEG, Woodstock, I. 00008.
COMPHEMENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater area; Call for appointment.
913-345-1600
Happy Birthday J.K.!
BUS. PERSONAL
POINSETTA BEACH INN in the heart of Fort
Houston. 609-257-1701 strip STUDENT discount.
309-257-1701
Captain Energy says, "There are better ways to spend your money. Help conserve energy."
To Ray J.iree | "I see you had a first name! See you at Johnny's same birth." D.J.W
AFRICAN ADORNED
S.E. 7th 842-1376
"CAMP COUNSELORS - M/F - Outstanding Slim & Trim Down Camps; Tumples, Dance, Skimmer; Physio; Massage. Pls. phone: Separate girls' and boys' camps. 7 weeks. Separate girls' and boys' camps. Manitouille, Pennyville, No. Carolina, California. Contact: Michelle Friedman, Director, 947 Wetzel Drive, No. Woodburn, N.Y. 11538.
HAND-MADE JEWELRY SALE!
All ceramic jewelry in stock and other selected items
Rent' 19·% T V $28.08 a month Curtis Mathen, 14th W, 2rd F, 23rd M, Mon - Sat, 5e
Monday, 6th W, 7th F, 8th M, Mon - Sat, 10e
Sunday, 11th W, 12th F, 13th M, Mon - Sat, 16e
Saturday, 17th W, 18th F, 19th M, Mon - Sat, 23e
The Union's recording of the day's entrees & soups
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $ (U. repair).
Also donates tax. Phone: 865-697-6000.
Website: www.governmenthomes.com
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization passport, ID, 1D, and of course, fine passport. Swells Scald.
SKT CULTUR RISING!
Skateboards & Accessories
QUALITY STUFF ONLY
**Loose Weight!** Gain Weight! *& Just Feel Great!*
HERAL NUTRITIONAL PROGRAM give you
the power to lose weight and feel
dominant. Dr. Reeves *'It's safe & it
works!* Call 913-826-4761. Dutree-F吉伦 & Asso-
cies. Modeling and theatre portfolios - showing now-
today. Call for information, call for info,
Swells Studio, 749-1611
GAYLESBIAN: Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stamped, self- addressed envelope to: TRIANGLE TIMES, P.0 Box 26492, KCMO 64198.
Blue Heron Futons
MENU HOT LINE
364-4567
A
Jayhawker Towers
UPTOWN BICYCLES
1337 Mess.
749-0838
ON CAMPUS
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattresser
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.-Sat. 12:50 p.m.
841-9443
2-Br. Apts.
for KU students
- For 2, 3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- 9 $ \frac{1}{2} $ -Month Leases
- Air Conditioned
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors
- Academic Resource Center
- Swimming Pool
- On Run Line
- On Bus Line
- Laundry Facilities
- Apply Now for Fall/Spring
- Furnished or Unfurnished
1603 W. 15th 843-4993*
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 imprinted specialties plus speedy available delivery. You design it or it will be shipped. 220 W. 181 (Belgium Globe) #81-4349.
**Rent* 12" T. C. V. $23.98 mth. Sunny "TV" 1447 W. 247-9531, Sat. Mon; Sat. 9:00-5:00. S-1
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre岛, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas
from only $69. Dedicate locking, parties, goodie bags, more. Hurry; call Sunchease Tours for more
information and reservations to toll free 1-800-321-5911 or contact a local Sunchease
business; count on Sunchease.
Spring Break?
Protect Your Skin! Start Your Tan Now!
Tan Here In Lawrence!
Complimentary Day Membership*
Check Us Out-No Obligation
20% Off
20% Off
Members and Non-members
Welcome
STOP MAKING SENSE! Becoming an ERASEERHAD from studying! If your brain turns into a HUMAN, THE MEANING OF LIFE? If you get the HUNGER for hot video, wrap up your CRAWLING HAND and check out us. LIBERTY HALL 12-6, 12-7, Sun-Sat., 8-4, 6-30, Magn. 749-1921. 12-6, 12-7, Sun-Sat., 8-4, 6-30, Magn. 749-1921.
Expanded Hours-Open 7 Days
8 Beds-Tan Daily, No Waiting
lowest price, best service best tan
*$2 per tanning sess
New customers only
EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25th & Iowa 841-6232
New customers only
LEISHER/GAN SUPPORT GROUPS. For info:
LiesherGroup.com BICM 3 floor Kraasen
Union or call 494-2001
SERVICES OFFERED
Native German, French background, offers expert, formal tutoring both languages, 843-8400.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-5716.
LAWYER
HARPER
BIRTHRIGHT—Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling 843-821-8
MATH TUTOR - Bob Means teaches A. in math M U K, U wbere 002, 102, 118, and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring profesional students. Statistics statistics $6 per 40 minute session - Call 843-9632. RESUMES-A professional resume can get you job interviews. Let me write one for you! 790-767-
TYPING
Thousands of R & R albums – 82 or less. Also
offer items. Tabs at Sun and only 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quintillus 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell,
or Trade all style music
1,100 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing, Judy. 89274585
www.judyharris.com
The latest styles in ladies fashion hosiery are available now at the Ec. Shop, 732 Mass., 945-801. Floral lace, painty lace, side frontal, back seam, daints, dangle shoes, shimmers; other styles, others; 945-801 Berkshire, Berkshire 11:5:30 Mon-Sat., 8 p.m. Thurs.
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve 'T.' Custom printed Shirtian 740-1611.
1-1-1 TRIO WORD PROCESSING experienced,
concientious, reliable. Reach jobs accepted. Call
(800) 555-3222.
1-3-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional, WORLD
Paper, papers, publications, papers,
books, etc. ID# 841 - 9720
A2- professional typing. Term papers. Thesis.
B2- technical writing. Using IBM Selectric IH.
Responsible 842-329-6250.
Class Ring Day — Why wait for the ring man when its ring day at every ballet House 633 Mass.
24-Hour Typing, 108th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus.
Includes computer lab.
A. S.LITHM TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term papers. Paper 842-8687 after 5:30.
ATTN MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS. Excellent typist熟悉. APA format experience.
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing
and web design services. 932-611-6818,
service available. 844 Illinois, 932-611-6818.
A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850.
Accurate word processing, experienced,
reasonable rates. Call Lauren 10 p.m.
(800) 555-3267.
Ace Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable,
friendly. Proreading, corrections, Humes,
references. Wordprocessing. Available,
vice available. One block from campus. 842-2976.
AlphaOmega Computer Services. Word Processing/Typing. Corrections. Proreading, Graphics.
Wordstar Document updating. Free estimates
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service.
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape.
843-8877
Dissertations, Theses, Tern Paper. Over 15 yrs.
experience. Phone 842-3101: after 3:30. Bars:
DISSERTATIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE
available on shorter student papers (up to 30
papers). Mummy's Mapping / Mummy's
before 9 p.m. Please.
B.A. ENGLISH TYPING-TUTORING, Spelling
overnight service available. Great
Rates. Call (212) 630-5790.
Hakkenon, 34-hour typing. IBM word processing.
Quick and reliable service. Lymn 814-5094.
THE WORKDOCTORS. - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147
TYPING. Call 841-5804 evenings and weekends.
TOP-NOPT SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter writing.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, these, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resume H.M.S. Degree, B14-4254.
Let me handle your typing needs. Try to write
me confidently, Reasonable, 16 years experience
QUALITY TYPEING, Letters, themes, dissection,
applications, applications, Spelling corrected
Call: M27491-8
Classified Heading:
WANTED
Female roommate needed. 2 Bdrm duplex, wash/dryhole up, garard, yard $4 plus/1 $8. Roommate needed. 2 Bdrm duplex, wash/dryhole up, garard, yard $4 plus/1 $8.
EXPERIENCED TYPH1. Term papers, theses.
EXPERIENCED KITCHEN. I will correct spelling.
849-8544.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Name:___ Address:___
WANTED: Rommate to share condo Two large bedrooms, fireplace, nice quiet study, dishwasher, plenty of space, and I'm easy to get along with. 841-4835.
For summer and/or fall: female roommate(s) for
sparring 3 bedrooms $140 plus 3 / utilities
for separate rooms $260.
Mature individual needed to provide companion and complete homemaking tasks for homebound clients. Call Douglas County VNA 843-3738 EOE
Housemate in 3-bedroom house. Pets. Furnished.
You own your bedroom $100 plus 1 uslites per room.
Wanted- 414" mpg wheels in good condition. Call
804-6794 or 804-6675
Write ad here:___
BLOOM COUNTY
Wanted: 4 tickets to KU-ISU game. 841-1499
Wanted: Female roommate to share three bedroom house. Very nice & clean neighborhood.
842-9738
Wanted: Female, non-smoking roommate to
share a 3 bedroom apt for remainder of
semester. $150.00/mo. plus 1/3 utilities. Call
749-4823. Keeprying.
Uthandale. Male Roofmach for large 3-bedroom
towerhouse. Male Roofmach for size 12 units.
Bauchtown. Male Roofmach for size 18 units.
Bauchtown. Male Roofmach for size 18 units.
Phone:
Dates to run: ___ to ___
| | 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 word added | 30* | 50* | 75* | 1.08 |
Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Classified Display
1 col. x 1 inch = $4.40
THE FAR SIDE
1986 Universal Press Syndicate
By
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
By GARY LARSON
OO! OW!
WHO'S BEEN SHOTIN' AT US, LUKE? I TELL YA, IT'S THEM CRITTERS, ABNER! EXCUSE ME...
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
2-251
---
.
Putooey Putooey Putooey
AFTER THE BOYS SKIM, SHOT
AND GUT THE BODY OF YOU,
WILL BE TYING YOU TO THE
PENNER OF OUR TRUST AND
TUMBLES YOU HOME TO CAME
THIS, WHOW? YOU CAN EVER
BE PREPARED?
In the days before soap.
NOW PERSONALLY 'I'D
JUST LOVE A COURSE OF
ROASTS. BUT THEN
THERE'S ALWAYS STEW!
ATTACKS
by Berke Breathed
A POPE IS LISTENING TO A BOTTLE OF MARINE WATER.
WHAT A BUNCH OR.OF. ANIMALS!! THAT'D BE THE ROASTS THEN. FINE!
12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1986
We've done it again. ALDI reduces prices on 19 more items!
Pink
Salmon fancy grade 15.5 oz.
was $1.59 $149
Frosting Mix white or chocolate
15.5 oz. 69¢
was 79¢
Roast Beef with Gravy
12 oz. $1.29
was $1.39
Brownie Mix 16 oz.
was 79¢ 69¢
Thuringer
Sausage
11 OZ. was $1.89
$159
Chocolate Syrup
24 OZ. was 99¢
79¢
Breakfast
Orange Mix 27 oz.
$1.49
was $1.69
Vanilla Wafers
12 oz. was 79¢
69¢
Honey
grade A fancy
24 oz. was $1.69
$149
Pitted Ripe Olives fancy grade 6 oz. 79¢ was 89¢
Colby or
Sharp Cheddar
Cheese 10 oz.
$129
was $1.39
Thorn Apple
Valley
Smoked
Sausage 16 oz.
$169
was $1.99
Shredded Cheddar or Mozzarella Cheese 99¢
8 oz. was $1.19
Chocolate Chip Cookie Mix 14 oz.
69¢
was 79¢ 69¢
Frozen Apple Juice
12 oz. 59¢ was 69€
Frozen Sandwich Steaks 14 oz.
$1.69
was $1.99
was $1.99
Chocolate
2 Layer
Frosting Mix
Brownie Mix
NATURAL COCOA
CHOCOLATE
SYRUP
Roman Acid
PURE HONEY
ARTIFICIALLY FLAVORED
VANILLA WAFERS
LARGE
EHMANN
OLIVES
Pauly
SHREDDED
Cheddar
Cheese
Thorn Apple Valley
Chocolate Chip
Cookie Mix
Blue Diamond Brand
100% BEEF
SANDWICH
STEAKS
7 STEAKS
Seanet
PINK SALMON
Celebrity
ROAST BEEF
TEURINGER
SUMMED
SAUSAGE
100% FROZEN
CONCENTRATED
APPLE
JUICE
Cherry Pie Filling
pie-rite
CHERRY PIE FILLING
21 oz. can
ALDI
Low price
79¢
Fruit Cocktail
choice quality, heavy syrup, 16 oz. . . . .
Tuna
SEANET TUNA
6.5 oz.
can
chunk light,
oil or water pack
ALDI 49¢
Low price
Pre-Creamed Shortening 99¢
42 oz.
Vegetable Oil 89¢
24 oz.
Powdered or Brown 79£
Sugar, 2 lb.
Cake Mix, white, devil's food
or yellow, 18.5 oz.
Flour 59¢
5 lb.
Pancake Syrup 69¢
maple flavor, 24 oz.
Pancake Mix 69¢
32 oz.
Quick Oats 99¢
42 oz.
Fruit Circles $1^{59}$
15 oz.
Evaporated Milk 39¢
12 oz.
100% Pure Orange Juice 99¢
grade A fancy, 46 oz.
100% Pure Grapefruit 89¢
Juice, grade A fancy, 46 oz.
Tomato Juice 59¢
grade A fancy, 46 oz.
Apple Juice 99¢
grade A fancy, 64 oz.
Rich-N-Ready
Citrus
Punch
gal.
ALDI 99¢
Low price
Peanut Butter, creamy or chunky, grade A fancy, 18 oz. ... $89¢
Catsup
grade A fancy, 32 oz. ... $69¢
Noodles
extra wide, 12 oz. ... $39¢
Spaghetti or Macaroni
32 oz. ... $69¢
Nabisco Oreo Cremes
mint, 16 oz. ... Special Purchase
Nabisco Chips Ahoy
19 oz. ... Special Purchase
Potato Chips, regular, ripple,
sour cream & onion, BBQ, 8 oz. ... $49¢
Paper Towels
jumbo roll ... $39¢
Bathroom Tissue
single ply, 4 roll pkg. ... $59¢
Zest Deodorant Bar
5 oz. ... $49¢
Gathered Leg Toddler Diapers, 40 ct. ... $4^99
Aluminum Foll
25 ft. ... $49¢
Adult Aspirin ... $99¢
250 ct. ... $99¢
Wild Bird Seed
5 lb. ... $69¢
Agar
Canned
Ham
5 lbs.
agar
ALDI $699
Low price
Shedd's Country Crock $159
Spread, 3 lb. ... $119
Sliced Bacon premium quality, 16 oz. ... $29c
Hamburger or Coney Buns, 8 pk. ...
Premium
White Bread
20 oz.
ALDI 25¢
Low price
English Muffins 39¢
6 pk
Grade A Large Eggs 69¢
doz.
Oscar Mayer Smokie $159
Links, 12 oz.
Cottage Cheese
grade A,
small curd,
24 oz.
Nurture Farm
Wheat Flour
Cottage Cheese
ALDI 89¢
Low price
NEW! Green Giant Corn
on the Cob, frozen 6 ct. ... $9¢
NEW! Green Giant
Broccoli Cuts, frozen 16 oz. ... $9¢
Jeno's Pizza, sausage or
combination, frozen 10.8 oz. ... $69¢
100% Pure Ground Beef
3 lb. chub ... $299
Crunchy Fish Sticks
32 oz. ... $199
High Liner Perch Fillets
16 oz. ... $169
On-Cor Salisbury Steaks
32 oz. ... $169
Indian River Grapefruit
U.S. #1 grade, pink, ea. ... $19
Sunkist Navel Oranges
large size fancy grade. 4 lb. ... $149
Red Potatoes
U.S. #1 grade, 10 lb. ... $89
Yellow Onions
U.S. #1 grade, 3 lb. ... $49
Brach's Easter Candy Complete Assortment at Lowest Prices in Town!
These are not weekly specials. These are everyday ALDI $ ^{ \circledR} $ low prices.
23rd and Louisiana — Lawrence STORE HOURS:
Fri 9:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.
Sat 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
M-Th 9:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m.
Closed Sunday
ALDI
©1986 ALDI Inc.
We reserve the right to limit quantities. We welcome cash and food stamps. No checks please.
The Stock-Up Store:
Voodoo rock Band's potion of music invokes the sleazy and mundane. See page 3.
SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 26, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 105 (USPS 650-640)
SUN
Balmy Details page 3.
Aquino takes power after Marcos resigns
United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — Ferdinand Marcos surrendered the presidency of the Philippines and flew into exile at dawn yesterday aboard a U.S. Air Force plane. Washington immediately recognized the new government under Corazon Aquino.
See related stories p. 8,9
Filippines stormed the gates of the presidential Malacanang Palace on learning Marcos was gone and began looting the ornate Spanish-style mansion. Thousands poured into the streets of Manila and other cities, while motorists honked horns and waved at each other.
At least one person was reported killed and 27 injured, bringing the unofficial death toll in the rebellion that toppled Marcos to 14, with 55 reported injured, at least nine seriously.
Arriving in Guam, Marcos walked down the airplane staircase without assistance but appeared frail, said Guam's Acting Governor Edward D. Reyes, a member of the party that greeted the deposed leader.
Reyes said Marcos was scheduled to leave Guam for Honolulu by 8 a.m.
It had been expected that Marcos would be taken to U.S. Naval Regional Medical Center at Agana, Guam, but Reyes said Marcos had a physician with him on the plane.
Marcos, forced to yield power in the face of the insurgency growing from charges of fraud in the Feb. 7 presidential election against Aquino, fled the Philippines less than 12 hours after he insisted on taking the oath for another six-year term.
The man who dominated the Philippines since 1965 agreed to leave the country and to exchange his office for safe passage for himself and his family.
In all, 55 people — Marcos, his
family and political supporters — flew into exile, Pentagon officials said.
In the end, Marcos' departure was rapid.
The revolution began Friday with the defection of Marcos' Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Deputy Armed Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Fidel Ramos. It culminated Monday with the inauguration of Aquino and recognition of her government and role by the United States.
The 53-year-old Aquino appeared on state-run television early yesterday to announce a new beginning.
"The long agony is over," she said. "We are finally free and we can be truly proud of the unprecedented way
we achieved our freedom, with courage and with determination and, most important, in peace.
“A new life starts for our country tomorrow,” Aquino said, “a life filled with hope and I believe a life that will be blessed with peace and progress.”
But at the presidential palace and an adjacent administration building, thousands of people brushed aside military guards and began carting off everything in sight. Soldiers shouting, "Cory, Cory!" removed barricades at entrances to the palace.
The mobs, screaming, "Long live Cory!" and "Marcos is a thief!" tore portraits of Marcos and his wife from the walls and set them on fire, ripped chandeliers from the ceilings and
hurled government records out the windows.
The Marcoses' bedrooms and his specially built medical clinic, were guarded by Aquino supporters and kept intact. A kidney dialysis machine was found in a palace clinic, giving credence to persistent reports that Marcos suffered from a degenerative kidney ailment.
Marcos began his final two days in the Philippines by taking the oath of office in tears Monday as the disputed winner of the election against Aquino. He abandoned the presidential palace the next morning, flying by U.S. Air Force helicopter to Clark Air Base for an eight-hour stay.
ATO passes new rules that restrict drinking
See MARCOS. p. 5, col. 1
By Debra West
Staff writer
Brew Ha Ha, Alpha Tau Omega's annual beer bash, is a thing of the past.
The fraternity's national board of directors passed new guidelines on drinking and parties last year to be followed by its 151 chapters, Mark Mullinix, assistant executive director of the national headquarters, said yesterday.
The eight guidelines, called a Resolution on Risk Avoidance, were passed because of the fraternity's concern about alcohol abuse, Mullinix said. They went into effect Nov. 27, 1985, and offer a way to exercise control on each chapter's practices concerning alcohol.
"We want our members to act responsibly," he said.
The guidelines state that the fraternities' parties will be by individual invitation only. No open parties will be allowed.
A trained bartender should be pre
sent at parties, no alcohol can be served at rush parties, alcoholic beverages won't be sold at parties and chapters can't sponsor any function with a beverage distributor or brewing company, according to the guidelines.
Mullinix said he was most interested in eliminating open parties and implementing a dry rush program.
Open parties and rush parties where liquor is served leave the fraternities open to lawsuits if any of the guests are injured after consuming alcohol, he said. The guidelines will reduce this risk.
Questionnaires have been sent to every chapter asking how the chapter is implementing the guidelines, he said.
Chapters found ignoring the guidelines will be penalized, Mullinix said. The penalty could range from a reprimand to removal of the
See DRINKS, p. 5, col. 1
Buyers should prepare consumer advocate says
Staff writer
By Brian Kaberline
Students know how much easier life in the classroom can be when they do their homework. But not as many realize that this same principle applies when they are buying a car.
Consumers can cut down on many of the problems they encounter when buying a new or used car if they do their homework, Clyde Chapman, director of the Consumer Affairs Association, said Monday.
The homework includes determining the buyer's financial condition, finding a dealer, asking about warranties and maintenance packages and taking steps to determine whether someone is trying to pass off a lemon.
Gary Bennett, general manager at Laird Noller Ford-Mazda, said students often didn't realize the expenses that went along with buying a car. Expenses such as property tax, insurance and maintenance can add up.
Ratings of different models of cars can be found in certain consumer and car magazines, Chapman said. Consumer Reports magazine is a good source because it provides side-by-side ratings and is an objective source.
"It's just like running a business. They ought to keep the overhead costs down," he said.
Determining how much can be spent leads to the next step, deciding what the buyer wants in a car.
Additional car safety information, including any recalls, crash test results, fuel economy ratings and other consumer information may be obtained from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, an
Car performance magazines may be more helpful for some information, but they may not be as objective as Consumer Reports because they depend on advertising for revenue, Chaplan said.
See CAR, p. 5, col. 4
BOLLEY
Joe Wilkins III/Special to the Kensan
Shootin' Hoops
Scott Burns, Overland Park senior, takes a shot over Stephanie Grant, Prairie Village senior, during a one-on-one game of basketball. The two played Sunday afternoon in an alley at 12471° 18 Kentucky.
Loopholes discovered in new bill
Bv Abbie Jones
Staff writer
TOPEKA — A House bill prohibiting minors from dancing dune for money in a public place should be reworded to nab the employers, critics of the proposal said yesterday.
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee heard testimony on a bill making it illegal for anyone under the age of 18 to engage in, or agree to engage in any public performance in which they expose their genitals or pubic area.
Ben Coates, director of juvenile offenders for the state department of social and rehabilitation services, said the bill missed its intent to curb the exploitation of children.
"We support this concept, but we think the real penalty ought to lie with the owner," Coates said.
The bill says that any juvenile violating the act would be considered a child in need of care. They would fall under present welfare protection of children.
John Lamb, director of Alcoholic Beverage Control, said the bill should include private clubs where most of the nude dancing occurs.
City officials now will have to enforce ordinances which prohibit lewd and lascivious behavior, he said. But nude dancing probably would not be a problem in most Lawrence clubs.
"If this bill would pass in its present form, it would not apply to private clubs, which is an area where it will occur more often," Lamb said.
"I don't see nude dancing being a big item in Lawrence," Lamb said.
State Rep. Clifford Campbell, R.Beloit, and sponsor of the bill, said he received a request for the bill from administrators of a youth center in Beloit.
Campbell said the administrators had heard juveniles saying it would be possible to earn money dancing nude at one place in the city.
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Dawrence, said the committee would either fix loopholes in the bill before they take action or kill it.
Benefit song takes home 4 Grammys
LOS ANGELES — The all-star recording of "We Are the World" won four Grammys including best song and record last night, capping a year of triumph for the anthem that raised millions of dollars for starving Africans.
United Press International
Docking to announce bid for governor
Veteran rocker Phil Collins collected three Grammys, including album of the year, for "No Jacket Required," and the British rock group Dire Straits won two.
"We Are the World," the call to compassion that sold millions of records and raised public awareness of world hunger, also won for best pop group performance and best short video.
Lionel Richie and Michael Jackson accepted the "We Are the World" songwriting award and Richie told the audience, "The most important thing was that when we called, you responded."
See GRAMMYS, p. 5, col. 6
By Mark Siebert
A handful of Democrats, including five members of the KU Democrats, decorated the Crystal Room of the Eldridge House, 7th and Massachusetts streets, and greeted Docking, who flew in from yesterday's pre-announcement in Wichita.
Stan Winn
Lt. Governor Tom Docking arrived late last night at the Eldridge House amid a roomful of streamers and helium-filled balloons to prepare for his formal announcement today of his candidacy for Kansas governor.
Staff writer
Docking said he wanted the first official announcement to be made in Lawrence for personal and political reasons.
"I just wanted Lawrence to be the first place to hear me say, 'I am a candidate now.'" Docking said. "I have so many family ties here."
Docking was born in Lawrence and earned bachelor of arts degrees in economics and political science from the University of Kansas in 1976. He went on to earn a law degree from the KU School of Law and in 1980 earned a master's degree in business administration from the University.
Docking said his family's history in government would help him as governor.
His grandfather and father both served as governors of Kansas. His father, Robert Docking, was governor from 1967-1975, and was the
only Kansas governor ever to serve four terms.
only Kansas governor over to serve four vet ins.
After today's announcement, Docking will make campaign stops in Topeka, Overland Park and Kansas City. Kan. He finishes his initial campaign tour with engagements in Pittsburg, Salina, Dodge City and Hays.
Docking is the first Democratic nominee to announce candidacy for governor and, in one newspaper poll, is considered the front-runner in November's gubernatorial election.
"I get a little nervous about being called a front-runner this far out." Docking said. "It doesn't mean they'll feel that way by November."
Although KU Democrats helped Docking prepare for his initial campaign announcement, Brian Courtney, the club's president, said the group wouldn't endorse a candidate until after a primary.
Docking said, "The most important thing is that this gets young people involved in politics. These Young Democrats have an active group and that's unusual."
The KU Democrats are a division of the Kansas Young Democrats. Courtney, Desoto senior, said the campus group had about 200 registered members.
A. S.
Docking said he would try, if elected, to protect the quality of the programs at KU and enhance them where possible. Significant expansion is going to be difficult because of the poor financial situation of the state, he said.
Tammy Stude/KANSAN
Lt. Governor Tom Docking will formally announce today that he is running for governor. Last night Docking was at the Eldridge House Restaurant and Club, Seventh and Massachusetts streets, where KU Democrats and other supporters were decorating the Crystal Room for the announcement.
L
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1986
News Briefs
U.S. cruise missile crashes in Canada
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — An unarmed U.S. cruise missile strayed off course during a test flight yesterday and crashed into the Beaufort Sea. It was the second crash of a cruise missile in less than five weeks, and Canada immediately suspended testing.
The missile crashed moments after it was launched from the wing of a B-52 bomber for a 1,500-mile test flight across northwestern Canada. An earlier missile missle ran out of fuel and crashed 35 miles from its target Jan. 22.
College drops charges
HANOVER, N.H. — Criminal charges against 18 Dartmouth College students arrested in an anti-apartheid protest have been dropped at the college's request, school officials said yesterday.
The students were arrested Feb. 11 when they tried to stop workmen from removing an anti-apartheid shanty from the campus green. Their cases will be turned over to a college disciplinary panel, Dartmouth spokesman Alex Huppe said.
Gerber to delay suit
BALTIMORE — Lawyers for Gerber baby foods agreed yesterday to delay a $150 million lawsuit against Maryland Gov. Harry Hughes and seek a compromise with state health officials who banned the company's strained peaches.
The agreement came after the Food and Drug Administration reported only two specks of glass were found in 17,800 unjared jars of Gerber baby food and said reports of glass in the food stemmed mainly from breakage and publicity. The FDA called the findings consistent with good manufacturing standards.
FBI balks at arrest
NEWARK, N.J. — An armored car driver wanted since 1984 for stealing more than $370,000 tried to surrender to the FBI earlier this month and was turned down, his lawyer said.
A lawyer for Allen Edwin Tildsley, 45, said Tildsley tried to surrender but was unable to persuade the FBI to arrest him.
From Kansan wires.
Engineers say they knew of danger
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Morton Thiokol engineers testified yesterday that company managers overruled their fears that a cold-weather liftoff might doom the Challenger, and sources revealed that investigators have uncovered a pre-launch protest from the manufacturer of the space shuttle.
situation.
Managers of Morton Thiolok, which makes the rockets that launch the shuttle into space, reversed their company's initial opposition to the launch, and skeptical commission members questioned them intensely about their justification for that.
The company's own engineers said they were almost unanimously opposed to the launch, one recalling he warned last summer that such a catastrophe could happen.
Roger Boisjoly, a Morton Thiolok engineer who deals in booster rocket structures, said he did all he could to stop the launch on the night before
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — NASA Administrator James M. Beggs, under indictment for fraud and on leave from his post, resigned yesterday to let President Reagan name a new chief for the embattled space agency.
White House spokesman Albert
R. Brashear said Beggs' letter of resignation was received yesterday afternoon and that Reagan would move quickly to name a successor.
Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes had hinted that Reagan would not ask for Begg's resignation but would accept it if offered.
Leading contenders for the job
are said to include former NASA Administrators James C. Fletcher and Thomas O. Paine.
lift-off. "I expressed deep concern about launching in low temperatures."
During his tenure, Beggs was a strong promoter of the shuttle program. He took a leave of absence after being indicted on fraud charges stemming from his duties as an executive of General Dynamics Corp.
Testifying before a presidential investigating commission, Boisjoly said that not a single engineer in a private caucus of company officials on the eve of the space shuttle launch was in favor of going ahead the next morning.
nearly five-year-old shuttle program. The shuttle exploded 73 seconds after launch on Jan. 28, destroying the ship and killing all seven in its crew.
The engineer said he had expressed concern about launching after a night of sub-freezing temperatures. He said that when the rubber-like Oring seals between segments of the booster rockets were cold, they would not fit properly into their seats.
Meanwhile, sources said, a protest against the launch came from Rocco Petrone, president of the space division of Rockwell International. The sources said Petrone expressed fears that ice might fall from the space
Last month's Challenger launch was the coldest in the history of the
shuttle's external fuel tank and! damage Challenger's fragile tiles.
Petrone is a former NASA launch director and his involvement was to be disclosed today or tomorrow as the presidential commission summoned Rockwell officials
Boisiyol said a Thiokol engineering superviser, Arnold Thompson, tried to sketch for Morton Thiokol management their concern with the seals.
Boisjoly and Thompson said they both warned their management last summer about a potential catastrophe
Another Morton Thiolok engineer testified that he was absolutely positive that top NASA officials would be told of his deep opposition to launching Challenger.
the engineer, Allan McDonald, learned later that Jesse Moore, the NASA official with final say over the launch, never heard of McDonald's fears of the effect of cold on safety seals.
Court OKs theater isolation
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court yesterday extended cities' power to curb adult theaters, ruling 7-2 that such establishments may be isolated in undesirable parts of town.
The decision in the case from Renton, Wash., a suburb of Seattle, amplified a 1976 ruling in a Detroit case that permits cities to limit the number of adult theaters in one area.
Cities may regulate adult
theaters by dispersing them, as in Detroit, or by effectively concentrating them, as in Renton," Justice William Rehnquist said for the majority.
The court's action came a day after the justices struck down a measure from Indianapolis that sought to fight pornography by defining it as discrimination against women.
"The Renton ordinance, like the one in (the Detroit case), does not ban adult theaters altogether, but merely provides that such theaters
may not be located within 1,000 feet of any residential zone, single or multiple-family dwelling, church, park or school."
However, Justice William Brennan, joined by Justice Thurgood Marshall, said the ordinance was unconstitutional
David Utevsky, a Washington lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, which opposed the Renton ordinance, called it a de facto ban on adult entertainment because it sets 95 percent of the city off limits to adult theaters.
Governors at odds over tax plan
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The nation's governors, who strongly disagree with key cuts in President Reagan's budget proposal, failed yesterday to agree on an alternate plan built around their taking over the federal gasoline tax.
At a White House meeting Monday, the governors denounced Reagan for dumping more than $1 billion in Medicaid costs onto state budgets. As an alternative, some of them told Reagan the federal government should pay all Medicaid costs while
ue states paid for transportation projects other than the interstate highway program.
But the governors, at the winter meeting of the National Governors' Association, voted 17-15 against a proof provision asking that Congress turn the 9-cents-a-gallon federal gasoline tax over to the states.
The hastily drafted proposal was beaten by a coalition of governors from big states, who were afraid of losing federal funds for subways and other mass transit projects, and other governors, mainly from the West, who feared their legislatures
would never approve state imposition of the tax.
Gorbachev criticizes Reagan, U.S. policies
but leaders of the governors' conference said the idea was in keeping with their plan for federalism — turning more programs over to the states with the means of paying for them — and they predicted it would come up again.
Reagan's budget proposal would reduce the federal share of Medicaid costs by $1 billion and cut another $1.1 billion by limiting open-ended federal grants to states. The cuts would be partially offset by a $300 million one-time payment.
United Press International
MOSCOW — Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev opened the 27th Communist Party Congress yesterday with a scathing attack on U.S. foreign and domestic policy and a rejection of President Reagan's arms reduction proposals.
Gorbachev, addressing his first congress since becoming general secretary of the Communist Party almost a year ago, said he saw no point in meeting for talks with Reagan unless there were chances an agreement could be reached.
Gorbachev admitted that previous Kremlin leaders made mistakes in politics and called for an economic rebirth during his daylong speech to 5,000 party delegates of the congress, which meets every five years. Some 150 foreign delegations attended, headed by leaders such as Cuban President Fidel Castro and Poland's Wolcine Jarzuelski.
Documents prepared for the 10-day meeting cover policies that will guide the Soviet Union through the year 2000. Major personnel changes were certain during the meeting.
Although calling for peaceful superpower co-existence, Gorbachev painted a dismal picture of life in
America as culturally impoverished and rife with unemployment. The country is ruled by a military, industrial complex that is "gorging itself on the arms race beyond reason," he said.
the 54-year-old Soviet leader contrasted what he called Soviet progress in culture, economics and society with decadence, poverty and unemployment in the West, singling out only the United States by name.
He accused Washington of merciless exploitation of developing countries through political maneuvering, blackmail, military threats and intimidation.
Gorbachev rejected Reagan's latest arms proposals, which were outlined in a letter and delivered during the weekend.
He said there were some positive elements in the proposals, but they were "swamped with reservations, linkages and conditions which in fact block the solution of radical arms, reductions."
Gorbachev noted that he and Reagan agreed during their summit last fall to meet this year in the United States.
united states.
"But there is no sense in holding empty talks," Gorbachev said. "We shall not remain indifferent."
Looking Good!
We've never looked better.
And now we're offering our NEW APPLICATIONS for the 1986/87 Fall and Spring Semesters!
*Applications will be offered beginning at 8:30 a.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 26th.
*Demand has never been greater so be sure to make your plans NOW to live at NAISMITH HALL next Fall!
If you haven't seen us lately, drop by for a tour and we'll be glad to show you what everyone is talking about!
For more information call or come by NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
(913) 843-8559
Pyramid Pizza's Wednesday
Pre-Springtime Special
coupon
small 10" one-topping pizza $4.95
+ 2 free Cokes
good Wed., Feb. 26
842-3232 free delivery
coupon
medium 13" one-topping pizza $6.95
+ 2 free Cokes
good Wed., Feb. 26
842-3232 free delivery
coupon
large 16" one-topping pizza $8.95
+ 4 free Cokes
good Wed., Feb. 26
842-3232 free delivery
REMEMBER ALL YOU CAN EAT SUNDAYS AT PYRAMID PIZZA
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
Car accident causes minor head injuries
A three-car accident yesterday resulted in one person being taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for minor head injuries, Lawrence police said.
A car driven by Sandra Morris, Wichita freshman, was leaving the intersection of Iowa and Harvard streets when she was struck from behind by a car driven by Leanor Valencia, 2404 Brush Creek Drive.
Valencia had been hit from behind by a car driven by John Clawson, 1436 Westbrooke St. Clawson told police he was following too closely and could not stop in time. Police cited Clawson for following too closely.
Valencia and a passenger in her car were treated at the scene for neck injuries. Clawson was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for head injuries. He was treated and released.
Winter is talk topic
Paul Ehrlich will speak about "Nuclear Winter" at 3:30 p.m. Friday at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. The free lecture is sponsored by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and Sigma Xi.
The nuclear winter theory proposes that a nuclear war would create a large cloud of smoke and debris. Nuclear winter theorists think this cloud would block the sun's rays and lower the temperature of the earth's surface to dangerous levels.
Ehrlich is a professor of population studies at Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif., and a KU graduate. He is the author of "The Population Bomb" and "Extinction," which he co-wrote with his wife, Anne.
Hall deadline nears
Students interested in living in KU scholarship halls next semester must turn in their applications by noon March 1 at the office of residential programs, 123 Strong Hall. The office will accept late applications after the deadline, but they will not be given priority.
Nunemaker to close
Nunemaker Center, which houses the KU College Honors Program, will close March 5 for repairs and will probably remain closed for the rest of March, said Janet Jackson, honors program secretary. The re-opening date will be announced later.
127
The offices of the honors program will be moved temporarily to 550 Snow Hall, she said. The telephone number, 864-4225, will remain the same.
Readers who have ideas for stories or photographs may call the Kansan newsroom at 864-4810. For ideas about campus and area coverage, ask for Cindy McCurry, campus editor. For magazine ideas, ask for Sharon Rosse, magazine editor. For arts and entertainment ideas or On Campus items, ask for Jill White, arts editor.
Where to call
For sports, ask for Dave Giles,
sports editor. For photographs,
ask for Brice Waddill, photo
editor.
Today will be partly cloudy and mild with a high in the low 70s and northwest winds 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers and a low in the low 40s. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers and a high around 50.
Band makes social statement
Weather
From staff and wire reports.
By Grant W. Butler
Staff writer
Andy Prieboy, lead singer for the Wall of Voodoo, belts out a song during the band's performance last night. About 300 people attended the concert at the Kansas Union Ballroom. The show was sponsored by Student Union Activities, Firm Productions and radio station KLZR.
The love poems John Hinkley Jr. wrote to Jodie Foster seem like a strange subject for dance music.
But for Wall of Voooo, a five-man band from Los Angeles, such a combination makes a strong statement about American society in the song "Far Side of Crazy."
"I just started writing it from his point of view. It's based on his love poems and his situation." Andy Priebey, vocalist for the band and the composer of the song, said yesterday.
"Some people asked us 'Is this your attempt at top 40 radio,' and that's great because it's based on this guy who took some pot shots at the president."
Wall of Voodoo brought its potion of music depicting the sleazy and mundane sides of American life to the Kansas Union Ballroom last night. About 300 people attended the concert.
The concert was part of the Student Union Activities Standing Room Only Concert Series, and was presented by SUA Special Events, Firm Productions and radio station KLZR.
The band's set featured an energetic performance by Prieboy, who bantered out the songs' lyrics while dancing and gesturing wildly to the audience. The concert was a fusion of various musical styles, ranging from country to hard rock, and lasted a little over an hour.
The music relied heavily on preprogrammed drum beats, strong lead guitar by Marc Moreland and the vivacious voices of Priebov.
Bruce Moreland, bass, said the band's music parodied the image of wealth and high society that many rock stars and television series portrayed.
"People project this image of life that you have to be so much better than others, and if you're not upper-middle class you should feel like there's something wrong with you," he said. "America's not like that."
The band's music, which Bruce Moreland described as "Western speed metal," has influences from many areas.
"Our biggest influences are Johnny Cash, Hank Williams, Beethoven, Stravinsky and Black Sabbath, he said. "That's all true. We love country music. It's our favorite. And Black Sabbath's great and Beethoven's great."
The band's latest album is called "Seven Days in Sammystown." The band performed most of the songs from the album. The title refers to the sleaziness of Los Angeles and Las Vegas, Pribow said.
"We were looking for a name that would sum up Los Angeles and a
place like Las Vegas," he said. "Mare's girlfriend suggested 'Sammystown' since she had just been in Vegas and had seen an ad for Sammy Davis Jr. that said 'Welcome to Sammy's Town.' That kind of sleaziness covered both L.A. and
Vegas as well as a small town. '
The biggest response from the audience came when the band played the song "Mexican Radio." Priebey jumped into the audience at the outset of the song, and sang most of it while dancing with audience
Marc Moreland said that just because the "Mexican Radio" video appeared on MTV, people should not conclude that Wall of Voodoo got its popularity from MTV. The song also received a lot of radio air time.
members.
Pay raise for nurses proposed
By Lynn Maree Ross Staff writer
If a bill now in the Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee passes, nurses at the University of Kansas Medical Center won't have to beg the Legislature each year for a pay rate increase.
The bill would authorize the Med Center to provide a shift differential to nurses who work late shifts. Late shifts run from 3 p.m. to 7 a.m.
A shift differential is an amount added to the nurses' base rate of pay because of the hours they have to work.
Terri Rosselet, executive director for the Kansas State Nurses' Association, said yesterday that nurses working late shifts at the Med Center already received a 10 percent shift differential, but the hospital had to beg for the money every year during budget hearings.
Geraldine Davis, associate director of nursing service at the Med Center, said the bill was important "because of the difficulty we have enticing people to work those shifts."
Anyone whose work begins during or carries over into the 3 p.m. to 7 a.m. time slot would receive the additional pay.
If the bill passes, she said, the state would be required to give the Med Center the money, making budget proceedings for the hospital less complicated.
"It's a matter of cleaning up the process," said Richard von Ende, executive secretary of the University.
Although the state supports eight other medical facilities, this bill would only apply to the Med Center. Other state-supported hospitals are in Norton, Winfield, Parsons, Osawatomie, Topeka, and Larned and also the Kansas Neurological Institute in Topeka and the Rainbow Mental Health center in Kansas City.
Rosselot said she knew why the Med Center was covered by the Senate bill, but was unaware of why the other hospitals were excluded.
"KU is the one where recruitment is the most difficult," she said.
Use resources, speaker says
Von Ende said he hoped a 10 percent differential was enough. Some of the other hospitals in Kansas City are considering increasing the differential they pay late-shift nurses from 10 percent to 15 percent, he said.
Staff writer
The Med Center also has the most nurses, she said. Because of the competition for late-shift nurses in Kansas City, the hospital needs to offer an additional incentive to get nurses to work at the Med Center.
By Tom Farmer
The advancement of society includes the utilization of all of its resources and the available knowledge of minorities, the president of Atlanta University, said last night.
Luther Williams, the president of the university in Atlanta, Ga., spoke to about 150 people in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. His speech was titled "The Black Intellectual: The Second Reconstruction."
Williams's speech was sponsored by the University of Kansas Lecture Series and was a part of Black History Month.
The second reconstruction, he said, is recognition by the entire community of the potential of minorities. This, he said, is possible only through opportunity and challenge.
Williams said the first reconstruction was the integration of most colleges and universities.
"Historically, black colleges and universities were actually limited in
the numbers of activities they took part in." Williams said. "Now, they play a vital role in scholarship and opportunities for minorities."
An effort that Williams said needed to be made in U.S. society was the recognition of black scholars. They have equal stakes in the major issues of concern in the United States today—the economy, education, foreign trade and international relations, Williams said.
"Evolution of the country, the whole society, is unavoidably dependent upon the work of individuals," he said.
There are minorities performing scholarly studies on critical research issues, he said, but they often do not receive the recognition enjoyed by their peers.
"The only practical course to make twenty-first century advances is minorities keeping involved in major issues." Williams said.
He used a recent television commentary made by a nationally known journalist as an example of how minorities were not used in situations
where they could have been beneficial.
The commentary, about the crisis of the black family, was by white CBS newsman Bill Moyers. Williams said the use of Moyers for the commentary was an example of how minorities were overlooked in situations where they could contribute their scholarly abilities.
On the subject of college athletics, especially the academic requirements placed on student athletes, Williams agreed that the requirements should be followed. He said the colleges and universities also should provide programs to assist the athletes in their studies.
"The universities should address needs of student athletes," Williams said. "If they cannot make it academically, they should cease to be student athletes."
Williams has a master's degree in biology from Atlanta University and a Ph.D. in microbial physiology from Purdue University. He has been president of Atlanta University since 1984.
Staff writer
By Peggy Kramer
Hall residents identify parking lot problems
Security in residence hall parking lots should be the top priority for improvements, according to eight hall residents who met Sunday night at Hashinger Hall.
Kelly Bond, Reynolds, Ga. graduate student, said yesterday that the purpose of the meeting was to define parking lot problems and decide which deserved immediate attention.
Liz Walz, Topekia sophomore, said, "All the other concerns could be eliminated if there was a handle out on security."
The meeting was an effort to unite residence halls and identify each hall's specific parking-lot problems, she said.
In addition to vandalism, other problems residents faced were lighting and lack of parking space for residents and visitors, she said.
A petition, circulated by Bond earlier this month, helped trigger an increased evaluation of parking-lot problems. The petition requested more frequent police patrols of the Daisy Hill extension parking lot, repair of potholes, and security and lighting improvements.
Because the residents agreed on a top priority, they could work together toward solving related problems. Bond said.
Drew Blossom, Association of University Residence Halls president, said AURH would work with parking services and KU Police Department to increase current efforts. Both groups expressed interest in working out the specifics of each problem.
"Iimproved lighting is still something we want to work on and right now it is a campuswide issue," he said.
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Attention Student Organizations It's Budget Time
Budget request forms for FY 87 are now available in the Student Senate Office B105 Kansas Union. These forms must be completed and returned by 5 p.m. Friday, March 7.
Two workshops will be held to explain the forms and answer any questions. It is strongly recommended that all organizations attend a workshop.Incorrect Budget Requests can result in delayed or reduced funding.Last workshop will be held at 4 p.m.February 26 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
paid for by student activity fee
4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Legal disguises
Last week the Lawrence Police Department used a legal process to disguise illegal action.
Roadblocks were set up around town to check for persons driving with expired drivers' licenses or no licenses at all. Every car that passed through these roadblocks was stopped and every driver was asked to produce a valid driver's license.
The police call the roadblocks routine checks, and such checks for drivers' licenses are legal.
The roadblocks, however, were set up on late weekend nights, and almost all of them were just down the street from local taverns and clubs.
The underlying purpose for the roadblocks was obvious. The officers were hoping to snag drunken drivers, cite them and get them off of the road.
That may seem a noble cause, but it was achieved through a questionable use of
state laws. Although it is legal to stop everyone and check for drivers' licenses, it is illegal to randomly stop drivers to check for drunkenness without probable cause.
instead of driving home over the bridge from parties or bars across the river, many students said they took the turnpike to the other side of town. Instead of drunks driving 30 miles an hour, we had drunks driving 55 miles an hour.
As a result, they are on the verge of pulling out of ASK. a move that could cripple the statewide student lobbying group.
Before such a move, the Student Senate administration and its members have a lot to consider.
Their locations were publicized in advance, and drivers avoided them by choosing different routes instead of limiting their drinking.
Drunken driving is dangerous and methods to stop it must be found. But those methods should not bend or stretch the laws to achieve their end.
The Student Senate says that perhaps the University of Kansas is not best represented by ASK. It seems the Student Senate thinks that since KU is the biggest school in the group and contributes the most money, its interests should be maid special attention.
And legality aside, the roadblocks did more to harm the cause than help.
Statements made lately suggest that the Student Senate might better spend its money lobbying independently of ASK and looking out for only KU's interests.
Some Student Senate members have the wrong idea about what the Associated Students of Kansas is supposed to accomplish.
But ASK was not designed to look out for the specific interests of member universities. It represents the students of the six state universities and of Washburn University in Topeka. All of them.
Asking too much
KU spends thousands of dollars lobbying for KU-specific issues; ASK is designed to address statewide student problems in the legislature. The two do not, and should not, often overlap in their purposes.
KU has long participated in ASK. The recent flap has a great deal to do with the lobbying group's recent decision to take no stand on the issue of whether Washburn should be included in the Regents system. KU strongly opposes making Washburn a Regents school.
But Washburn is also represented by ASK, and a decision one way or the other would have pitted ASK against itself. No stand was exactly the correct move for ASK to take, and Student Senate should be able to realize that.
Change is brewing at Hashinger Hall.
After a boycott of the cafeteria last week and subsequent meetings between residents and management, many complaints have been aired and tensions dissipated.
Food fight folly
The cafeteria boycott followed the distribution of a flyer in which some residents alleged that the kitchen used grade D beef and the supervisors received kickbacks for operating under budget.
A situation that could have been hurtful to both hall residents and cafeteria workers was diffused, largely because of the finesse and sapience of Lenoir Eckdahl, the director of food services.
The authors of the flyer admitted they didn't know
But the process used to bring problems to the attention of management is a lesson in carelessness and irresponsibility.
whether the information was true; they based the flyers on rumors they had heard. And those rumors were false.
Many residents naively followed the leaders, trusting that the information was correct. Once the flyer was distributed, the battle cry of a few became a chorus. Suddenly Hashinger had the worst food and the worst workers of all the residence halls.
This time, the irresponsibility of these people did not result in permanent damages such as full-time workers being moved to other residence halls.
But none of the students involved in writing and distributing the flyer and in organizing the boycott had approached Ekdahl with his complaints before the group declared war.
But the potential for injuries should not be ignored. It should serve as a warning to future activists.
News staff
News staff
Michael Totty ... Editor
Laurettu McMillen ... Managing editor
Chris Barber ... Editorial editor
Gregy McCurry ... Campus editor
David Giles ... Sports editor
Brice Waddill ... Photo editor
Susanne Shaw ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Brett McCabe ... Business manager
Nixon David ... Retail sales manager
Jim Williamson ... Campus manager
Lori Eckert ... Classified manager
Caroline Innes ... Production manager
Pallen Lee ... National manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone 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 fewer than 700 words. The
writer. The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall,
The University Dally Kansan (USPS 650-040) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuaffter Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and on Wednesday during the summer months. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
Boston University
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 68045
Don't blame music for society's woes
A few nights ago, I attended a presentation at McColllum Hall by an individual who is making the rounds of the residence halls. I was able to watch a videotape and then listen to this particular individual discuss the evils of the values prevalent in today's society and offer his solutions to them.
to them.
His primary focus wasn't abortion, prayer in public schools, nuclear war, or even digestion, but rock music.
He began with a videotape documentary on the history of rock 'n' roll, which singled out such groups and musicians as AC/DC, Motley Crue, Ozzy Osbourne, Ronnie James Dio, Van Halen, the Rolling Stones, the Beatles and Tom Petty as being bad influences on the impressionable, Silly-Putty type minds of American teen-agers.
Of course, to provide some measure of equality and fair play, the narrator of the video pointed to the bands u2, Kansas and one or two others as good influences.
Apparently, the video's objective was only to inform us that a problem existed, while the aim of its sponsor, a fundamentalist "Christian" was to introduce his answers to this burning issue.
He supported warning labels on records (CAUTION PARENTS): If your child listens to this album, he or she may entertain a sudden desire to commit mass murder, etc.) and changes, possibly forcible, within the recording industry to halt the spread of the music of these devilish, guitar-swinging, rock 'n' roll rebels.
CAMPAIGN BETWEEN THE NEW AND OLD COUNTRIES
Roger Long
Guest columnist
He alleged that rock music was a prime cause of violence and crime perpetrated by teen-aggers.
Someone sitting behind me countered that music only reflected societal trends; society affects music, not the other way around.
I was inclined to agree. After parental neglect and indifference, peer pressure and a host of other factors, the negative influence of certain kinds of music without a doubt trails far behind as a real attitude-forming force.
I wondered about who, or what,
would determine which bands are acceptable and which are not. The speaker answered, the Bible.
Well, that's all fine and good, but once the freedom of expression of Iron Maiden and Prince were eliminated, who would be next? Who would be the members of the board that decided what groups would be allowed? Who would interpret what the Bible had to say about heavy metal and punk rock, anyway?
Sound rock music end up being the only medium regulated? What about videotapes, T-shirts, hairstyles, radio stations, television stations, billboards, magazines and newspaper advertisements? What about books and personal ideas?
I realize this may sound a little farfetched, but it is true that any type of regulation of individual choice tends to lead eventually to its complete censorship. And, I thought, all of this is in the name of God and Jesus Christ?
Unfortunately for the people who push for censorship, they forget a key point. The point is that none of them is Jesus Christ, or even, I am sorry to say, a distant relative.
So who are you — and here I speak to every one of the Jerry Falwell disciples on this campus — to tell me
What, exactly, gives you the right?
Not the Constitution of the United States, that's for sure. The Bible?
Whose interpretation? Not, I might venture to say, Jesus Christ's.
what I can or cannot listen to, can or cannot learn, should or should not think?
It really is frightening that such backward and primitive thinking still exists in this country in 1986. Simple solutions just don't work any more — we are a complex society with complex problems. Maybe there would have been an audience for these "answers" a few hundred years back — perhaps during the Spanish Inquisition.
to those who see blatant immorality and injustice in our society, and to those who desire change, I agree totally. We definitely are not perfect.
But don't look for restrictions of personal freedom as the world's salvation, and don't support those who want to force others into their way of thinking. Instead, expect beneficial change to come from the individual, and allow him the liberty to make his own choice. That's what America and freedom are all about.
Roger Long is a Wichita freshman
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Iacocca may run, but can his cars?
But is such a candidacy possible?
The Statue of Liberty financing dispute has stirred more talk about Lee laccocca as a possible presidential candidate. One of the national news magazines last week carried a scenario on how he might do it.
But is such a candidacy possible? There's no question that lacocca is smart enough to be president. If recent history has taught us anything, it is that just about anybody — even the bartender in "Cheers" — is smart enough to be president.
And there's name recognition. Because lacocca has been in so many TV commercials — the fastest route to celebrity status in America — he's much better known than the governors and senators who lust for the White House.
Some observers point to his best-selling book as evidence of his fame. But the book is just a byproduct of his being on television. If Charlie the Tuna could write, he'd be on the best-seller lists.
Iacocca's other credentials include the kind of hard-nosed personality this country admires, a successful business career and the up-by-the-bootstraps background.
But the question is, could he overcome his one, glaring, personal deficiency?
No, I'm not talking about his having too many vowels in his name, and the recent view of some political experts that an Italian-American would have a hard time becoming president.
Mike Royko Chicago Tribune
I am a fan of the book.
That's nonsense. If anything, we're in an era of Italian-chic. The movie screens have been dominated by people name Stallone, DeNiro, Pacino and Travolta. Sports fans idolize Montana and Marino. And we're consuming almost as much pasta as Italy.
raccoon's weakness can be found in a thick file I maintain. When it becomes more than a foot thick, I throw it away and start another one. I've done that at least a dozen times over the years.
over the years.
The file contains letters that represent the greatest common complaint I've had from readers. It is a subject that causes them greater outrage than the conduct of politicians, their utility bills and the sexual preferences of others.
It is cars. More specifically, new American-made cars.
"I bought a new car from Goodgy Dealer," they write, "and within a week, the woozits valve fell off, the hogmetam burned out, it developed a
wobble, a shimmy, a tremble, a cough and a stutter. I have had it in for service 48 times in the last six months. I spend more time with the service manager than with my children. I would go in my garage, turn on the ignition, and kill myself, except that the engine keeps conking out."
There is no product that we buy with greater excitement and anticipation. And none that begins falling apart as quickly.
There is no product that we buy with greater excitement and anticipation. No product, except housing, that we spend as much money on. And none that begins falling apart as quickly.
as quickly. Every morning across America there is a massive motorcade of misery and broken dreams. It takes shape outside the service entrances of the thousands of car dealers.
As the owner of one high-pired lemon wrote, "Do they have a special
training program so that poole who work in the service departments never look you in the eye, never ever glance at your face, never tell you anything except how much you owe?"
The name on the car doesn't matter. All the car makers roll out a certain number of lemons and limes. They all make cars with knobs and handles that fall off on the way home with latches that don't latch, light that don't light.
And this is what Isaacca would have to contend with. Once the initial hoopla was over, countless Americans would look at him and think of the window that wouldn't roll up, the door that rattled, the tire that wobbled.
'They'd remember those mornings when they waited outside the service entrance for the opportunity to be ignored by the guy with the clipboard
They'd remember making the last payment almost on the day that it gave one final grunt and died in the driveway.
There was a time when Richard Nixon's enemies got laughs by asking, "Would you buy a used car from this man?"
winn facceca it would be far worse — the tormented, accusing cry; bought a new car from that man. Can anyone give me a lift home?"
Mailbox
Stop parking takeover
The Athletic Department and parking services need to be put on a leash. Their slow but methodical takeover of parking lots on campus needs to be curtailed. Immediately. They have decided to include the Academic Computer Center parking lot in their ever-increasing takeover of parking lots on campus.
Responding to other complaints that they had been taking over too many parking lots, they had always taken the defensive, citing the academic computing lot as one that was near campus and was still available to students.
Well, what are they going to say now? As of right now, the lots they control are: 90 (O zone); 72 (Burge Union); 54,155 (west of Murphy Hall and south of Learned Hall); 56,57 (north of Allen Field House); 30,71,125 (surrounding Allen Field House); and 34 (Computer Center).
These total almost 1,912 parking spaces — an additional eight if you include handicapped parking. Since the field house seats 15,100 people, I see the entire campus parking eventually eaten.
For all of us students who need to work on something on the south part of campus, parking is becoming almost nil on Wednesdays and Saturdays.
True, this season is almost over. However, I for one, do not want to come back next year and find that I can't park in any campus parking lot short of the stadium parking lot.
Money is one thing, but our rights as students to partake in activities besides basketball (no offense please to our fantastic Jayhawks) is another.
It's bad enough we have to wait until 5 p.m. on weekdays to park on campus, and now we will have to forgo this privilege on Wednesday nights and Saturday afternoons as well.
Thurman Miller Seattle senior
Issue breeds enemies
I used to think Chris Bunker had future in politics.
Any smart politician knows that the moment you say anything about abortion, more people will despite you than will wear your campaign buttons.
It is bad enough to attempt to write about this issue, but not to rely on the dogma established by both sides is tantamount to heresy. Well, Chris would have voted for you, but it is the late now.
Paul Longaba Lawrence seni
Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1986
From Page One
---
University Daily Kansan
Marcos
Continued from p.1
In Manila, Ramos cautioned against plundering the palace.
"That is not the property of Mr Marcos," he said. "That is the property of the people . . We have started right. Let us not destroy this now that we have reached victory." "But bediam reigned throughout the
But bedlam reigned throughout the capital.
Automatic weapons were fired into the air, and state-run television reported people identified with a left-
Marcos loyalists tried to drive demonstrators away from the palace, opening fire on the crowd and throwing stones, wounding 27 people and killing one before troops backing
wing labor union had broken into the palace armory and carted away an undetermined number of M-16 military rifles. A mob knocked one Marcos supporter to the ground and began stoning him.
Aquino arrived and drove them away.
In her first orders, Aquino appointed Enrile, 62, as defense minister and promoted Ramos, 58, to a full general.
In a series of directives, Aquino called for the resignation of all appointed government officials, beginning with members of the Supreme Court, but asked civil servants to stay.
Drinks
Continued from p.
chapter's charter, depending on the circumstances.
The new guidelines eliminate the annual Brew Ha Ha, an annual campus party sponsored by the fraternity, said Dick Hall, president of KU's chapter of AO, 1537 Tennessee St.
But he said the guidelines shouldn't present any trouble for the fraternity, except for the dry rush.
"Most fraternities will have a dry rush next year," he said. "It'll be mandated by either the national councils or the University. But we'll
be under a handicap this year."
Lenny Geist, president of Theta Chi fraternity, 1011 Missouri St., said his chapter had adopted new rules to reduce the risk of lawsuits.
Geist also submitted a copy of the rules to the fraternity's national chapter to send to other chapters as an example.
The new rules include having designated drivers at every party. These fraternity members won't drink before or during the party and
will drive home anyone who becomes intoxicated.
The rules also state that no member will violate any fraternity, University, state or federal drinking law. Drinking games also are prohibited.
Sigma na fraternity, 1501 Sigma Nu Place, passed a chapter rule prohibiting hard liquor or beer with more than a 3.2 percent alcohol content in the house, said Lance Hodges, president of Sigma Nu.
agency of the U.S. Department of Transportation.
Continued from p.1
Car
Bennett said it also was important to try to buy from a local dealer, because it was easier to check out a local dealer from consumer organizations and friends and to return should problems arise.
To obtain the information, the buyer may call (800) 424-9393 on weekdays between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.
At this point, the consumer must take different steps in the purchase of a car.
Used-car buyers must be careful to check out the condition of the car
The law says the dealer must replace the vehicle with one of equal value or refund the purchase price, minus an allowance for wear, if it has not been repaired after a "reasonable number of attempts."
A person buying a new car has an easier time choosing the perfect car because of the selection available. But the buyer has other things, such as warranties, financing plans and service contracts, to worry about.
New car buyers in Kansas having warranty disputes or recurring car troubles can take advantage of the state's "lemon law," which went into effect in July 1985.
before buying. Although Kansas has an implied warranty law, which says the car must run as expected for a car of its age and mileage, it is difficult to invoke, Chapman said.
Because the law applies only to dealers, the only legal recourse open to someone who buys a car from an individual is court, he said.
Consumers recently have been helped by a law which requires usedcar dealers to put window stickers on their cars to give information on the state of the car.
The stickers include any warranty, including terms of the agreement, whether or not the dealer has checked out the car, a list of some major defects which occur in used cars and the dealers' identification.
An individual should always check out the car on their own and then have it checked by a qualified mechanic.
The car should be checked for problems with the car frame, lights, alignment, brakes, oil and other fluids, steering, starter and transmission, among other things.
A checklist can be obtained at the Consumer Affairs Association, 819 Vermont, Chapman said.
Grammys Continued from p. 1
Dire Straits won Grammys for best rock group performance for the single "Money for Nothing" and best engineered recording for the album "Brothers in Arms."
The Grammys, voted by members of the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, are the music world's equivalent of the movies' Oscars and television's Emmys.
Tina Turner was named best rock female vocalist for her "One of the Living" single. Don Henley, a previous winner as a drummer and singer with the Eagles, won on his own as best rock male vocalist for "The Boys of Summer."
Continued from p. 1
Whitney Houston was named best pop female vocalist for her hit single, "Saving All My Love for You."
Rosanne Cash, Johnny's daughter, was named best country female vocalist for "I Don't Know Why You Don't Want Me."
Sade was named best new artist over a field including John Lennon's son, Julian.
BORDER BANDIDO
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the Sanctuary
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MAD HATTER SPECIALS:
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TUES No Cover-25c draws
WED: Don't Miss This! $1.50 for a Beer and a Shot
THURS:
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The MAD HATTER
6
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1986
Tax increase gets support of committee
TOPEKA — The Senate's tax committee yesterday recommended passage of Gov. John Carlin's proposed 1-cent sales tax increase bill, which had been delayed a day because Democrats on the committee were not prepared to vote.
United Press International
The bill was endorsed by the Assessment and Taxation Committee on a 6-5 show of hands that revealed both Republicans and Democrats were divided on the issue.
Increasing the sales tax to 4 percent from the current 3 percent is expected to raise $190.7 million in fiscal year 1987. The increase is a cornerstone of Carlin's budget.
Senate Majority Leader Paul Burke, R-Leawood, made a motion to endorse the bill, with a second from Sen. Leroy Hayden, D-Satanta, the ranking Democrat on the committee.
The committee amended the bill to allow retailers to keep part of the sales tax they collect, to compensate them for the cost of collecting and sending the tax to the state. Now retailers must collect the tax at their own expense.
The amendment would allow retailers to keep 2 percent of the tax they collect, up to $50 per month. Revenue Secretary Harley Duncan said that would cost the state $5.9 million per year.
The committee rejected an amendment that would have exempted sales of food from the sales tax.
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
1307 Mass phone 843-111
Games People Play Rock Chalk Revue Hoch Auditorium Feb.27,28,and March 1
comprehensive health associates
- free pregnancy tests
* abortion services
* counseling
* gynecology
* contraception
BELLE'S
SPIRIT SHIRTS
Custom Silkscreen Printing
t-shirts, sweats, and party favors.
Huge selection! Wholesale prices!
Call your KU rep, Tom Bell,
at 842-0977 or 749-3758.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
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DOWNTON AVE. 280 W. 45th ST.
about
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SPEELBERG FILM
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about A STEVEN SPIELBERG FILM The Color Purple
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Date 10:30 - 9:30 6:30 Sat & Sun 12:30
Plan would aid small business
The Associated Press
Bargain Show
TOPEKA - Small companies dominate the Kansas business scene, but still need all the support they can get. A Senate committee was told yesterday.
A Kansas Small Business Development Center official told the panel that her agency was requesting $300,000 for the next fiscal year to keep working to keep small business in Kansas afloat.
"Numerous studies have shown that businesses are particularly vulnerable in the first five years of life and that failure comes most often from lack of capital and an absence of sound management and planning practices," Susan Osborne-Howes, director of the center, told the Senate Labor, Industry and Small Business committee.
Osborne-Howes said the headquarters of her agency was in the College of Business Administration at
Wichita State University and oversaw other centers sponsored by Kansas's six state universities, Washburn University of Topeka and Johnson County Community College.
Only 145 businesses in the state are not classified as small, said Osborne-Howes. That means 99.8 percent of all Kansas businesses are in the small category, which includes all companies that employ under 500 workers.
Officials of small businesses that have problems go to the center for counseling in areas such as bookkeeping and marketing, she said. The center has also helped some farmers with business decisions.
The center has requested that the Kansas Legislature approve the money for the coming budget year as part of the State Board of Regents budget. The money would then go to Wichita State to be distributed between the various centers, Osborne-Howes said.
HARRY BEAR'S
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(formerly Campus Hideaway)
TRY OUR SALAD and POTATO BAR
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7 am-10 pm Oon... Sat.
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Prices Good Thru March 4, 1986
SIGA DISCOUNT
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Boneless
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BONELESS ROUND STEAK 1.59 LB.
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI, DIET PEPSI FREE, SLICE & DIET SLICE ALSO IN 6 PAK 1.99 LB. 2 LTR. BTL.
IMPORTED SEEDLESS WHITE GRAPES .79
U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET POTATOES .79
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NORTHERN BATHROOM TISSUE .99
4 ROLL PKG.
GRADE "A" WHOLE FRYERS .49
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GOLD MEDAL FLOUR .89
5 LB. BAG
PURINA DOG CHOW 5.99
$1.00 OFF LABEL
SHEDD'S COUNTRY CROCK MARGARINE .69
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JENO'S PIZZA 10 OZ.
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GUY'S POTATO CHIPS 7 OZ.
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Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1986
University Daily Kansan
7
Commission debates overcrowding issue
By Juli Warren
Staff writer
Campus/Area
Some city commissioners expressed concern last night about possible overcrowding in areas zoned residential-dormitory as they approved a site plan for eight-plex at 1244 Ohio St.
Staff writer
However, Commissioner Howard Hill said after the meeting that he didn't think the commission would discuss the issue further unless approached by property owners.
The house now at the address will be destroyed, Mike Stultz, owner of the house and prospective builder of the eight-plex, said after the meeting.
He said he planned to have the eight-plex ready for occupancy by kill.
Marci Francisco, a member of the Oread Neighborhood Association said she thought units were being squeezed into the lots.
Francisco said, "The assumption is that if it's allowable, it should be possible.
"In this case, I really do feel that the zoning is inappropriate."
The house now has five units, Dean Palos, of the planning staff, said. According to zoning requirements, the lot can have up to 10 units.
On
The requirements for parking spaces may be adequate for families that have fewer cars than student roommates, Francisco said. But when students share apartments and each has a car, there is not enough parking.
Twelve parking spaces will be in the side yard, on 13th Street, the planning staff said.
On Campus
Overcrowding is evident in parking, she said.
David Holmes, professor of psychology, will speak about "Physical Fitness and Psychological Functioning" at the University Forum at 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1264 Oread Ave.
Kathleen J. Turner, associate professor of communication studies at the University of Tulsa, will speak about "In Defense of Arguments from Expediency: From Elizabeth Cady Stanton to Lyndon B. Johnson" at p.m. today in the Council Room
*Student Services and Legal Services for students will present a workshop concerning taxes for foreign students at 3:30 p.m. today in the Conference Room of the Burge Union.*
of the Kansas Union.
The KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in the Multipurpose Room of Robinson Center.
C. Dean Ferguson, director of Chapter Operations, will visit the Delta Sigma Pi meeting at 5:30 p.m. today in Room 119 Summerfield Hall.
Dungeons and Dragons will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union.
The Dr. Who Fan Club, KUDWAS, will meet at 7 p.m. today in Parlor C of the Kansas Union.
The Student Assistance Center will present a workshop, "Preparing for Exams," at 7 p.m. today in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
On the Record
A pickup truck, stereo receiver and turntable, valued together at $800, were stolen last Wednesday in the 2100 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police said. The pickup truck and stereo equipment were loaned to a former roommate of the victim and not returned on the agreed date, police said. The suspect has not been found.
Two $20 bills and a bottle of
change, valued together at $240, were stolen at about 4:20 a.m. Monday from a house in the 400 block of North Street, police said.
A siren and lights, valued together at $845, were stolen between 1 a.m. and 7 a.m. Monday in the 900 block of Alabama Street from the roof of a Lawrence Fire Department car, police said.
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Notarization of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon, thru Friday
117 Burge (Satellite) 864-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee.
VOLKSWAGEN
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Lawrence, Ks.
843-3055
Support of Mandela urged by chain letter
By Piper Scholfield
Staff writer
A chain letter now circulating around the KU campus urges students to write letters to Nelson Mandela, imprisoned leader of the African National Congress, in order to encourage his release.
Woods suggested ways to support the South African major when he spoke on campus Feb. 5. One suggestion Woods offered was to write letters directly to Mandela, who is in custody at Pollsmoor Prison in Cape Town. South Africa.
Chris Bunker, third-year law student and an originator of the letter, said the idea came from a speech given by South African journalist Donald Woods.
The chain letter includes a sample letter to Mandela and instructions telling students to make two copies of the chain letter and give these to
Staff writer
friends. Students are encouraged to copy the sample letter or compose a letter of their own to mail to Mandela.
Bunker said he and friends began printing and distributing the letters two weeks ago.
"There has been so much talk about freeing Nelson Mandela," Bunker said. "This is one way we're hooting to encourage change."
There is no way of knowing how many students have responded to the letter, Bunker said. He made 100 copies of the letter
Dana Apple, Lawrence first-year law student, said she picked up a copy of the letter at the National Lawyers Guild information table in Green Hall.
Apple said that although she hadn't written a letter to Mandela yet, she expected to as soon as she had the time.
OFFICER OPPORTUNITES AVAILABLE NOW!
Call 913-841-1821
Marines We're looking for a few good men.
Don't leave for Spring Break without a T-Shirt from Balfour!
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Visit Balfour's new K.U. Spirit Shoppe!
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COUNTRY inn Good: Mon, Tues, Wed, & Thurs.
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BUY ONE DINNER... GET ONE FREE!
- CHICKEN • CHICKEN FRIED STEAK
(Not good w/any coupon) Expires:2/28/86 1350 N. 3rd
843-1431
You are invited
to meet to share ideas and concerns with K.U. students with hearing disabilities
GAMMONS
GAMMONS
wednesday, February 26 3:30 p.m.
SAC
NEW YORK, NY 10024
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a cut above
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711 W. 23rd
Malts Shopping Center
842-1144
UNO
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8
University Daily Kansan
The Philippines
Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1986
U.S. grants Marcos sanctuary
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The United States, with praise for the dignity and compassion displayed by both sides, gave sanctuary yesterday to Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos and formally recognized a new government headed by Corazon Aquino.
Marcos, his family and political clowns flew in four U.S. helicopters from the presidential palace in Manila to Clark Air Base north of the capital after President Reagan guaranteed, in the words of White House spokesman Larry Speaks, his peace, his safety and his dignity.
Marcos, apparently ill, later left the Philippines aboard U.S. Air Force planes for the U.S. possession of Guam, where U.S. officials said he would stay temporarily and receive a checkup at a Navy hospital.
It was not known where Marcos might eventually settle, but Secretary of State George Shultz offered the ex-president haven in the United States.
U. S. officials said the decision on a final destination is up to Marcos, whose dictatorial rule was supported for 20 years by the United States, mainly to guarantee the protection of vital American military bases on the islands.
The dramatic change in the U.S. stand on the Marcos regime, a shift Speakes said was carefully orchestrated, came just two weeks
after Reagan stunned election observers by declaring both sides were responsible for the violence and fraud in the Feb. 7 presidential election between Aquino and Marcos.
Since then, support for Marcos on Capitol Hill and among top administration officials dwindled to the point that the White House said Monday a solution to imminent civil war could only be achieved through a peaceful transition to a new government.
"We praise the decision of President Marcos," Shultz said in announcing formal recognition of the Aquino government. "Reason and compassion have prevailed in ways that best serve the Filipino nation and people."
Marcos, faced by insurrection from much of his army, opposition from the Catholic Church and throngs of civilians in the streets protecting the military mutineers, finally resigned yesterday just after he was inaugurated for a new term and a day after he vowed to fight until the last.
Shultz supported the outpouring of democratic spirit in the Philippines and said, "We stand ready to work with the new government of President Aquino."
While it was plain that the United States had stage-managed Marcos' departure, officials credited the Philippine people for the peaceful revolution.
"It was essential that it be seen as a Filipino"
decision," said Speakers, who said the U.S. role was "a carefully orchestrated one to reach a peaceful solution, to reach a democratic outcome."
However, a senior administration official who asked not to be named said the outcome was less likely to have occurred without U.S. maneuvering. Nonetheless, he said, "The people dignified the democratic process. It was not an open rebellion."
The key event came Monday when Marcos telephoned Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., a friend of Reagan's, who had urged Marcos to reform in a trip to Manila last year. During the call Laxalt deferred giving advice, then consulted with Reagan and Shultz and called Marcos back with advice that he quit.
But Speakes said, "There was no deal."
In White House meetings Monday, Speakers said, "The president indicated that he would like to guarantee President Marcos his peace, his safety and his dignity," a message that Laxalt apparently passed on.
Schultz said, "The president is pleased with the peaceful transition to a new government of the Philippines. The United States extends recognition to this new government headed by President Aquino. We pay special tribute to her for her commitment to nonviolence, which has earned her the respect of all Americans."
Millions of Filipinos celebrate new leaders
United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — Go-girls abandoned bars, motorists honked horns and passengers on a Manila-bound jet broke into applause when they learned that President Ferdinand Marcos stepped down yesterday after 20 years in power.
The news that Marcos was leaving the country sparked a spontaneous celebration in Manila and its suburbs by millions of people that was punctuated by the sounds of automobile horns and firecrackers.
"We have been waiting for this day for a long, long time," one taxi driver said. "When we heard that Marcos was gone, we could not believe it at first. But it is true, and the people are very happy now."
All across the city, automobile tires were burned in the streets to greet the downfall of Marcos and welcome the inauguration of Corazon Aquino, who was sworn in as the nation's seventh president and first woman chief executive.
Reports of looting and gunfire at the presidential palace marred the fiesta atmosphere that gripped the
city of 8 million people, but civilian volunteers moved in to protect the compound.
The celebrations were peaceful elsewhere in the capital.
in the Ermita tourist district, scantily clad go-go girls chanting Aquino's nickname, Cory, abandoned the bars where they worked and danced in the streets.
Traffic through the business district of Manila slowed to a crawl as happy Filipinos crawled over stalled cars, cheering, waving banners and chanting for "Cory."
Seaside Roxas Boulevard, one of Manila's main streets, was jammed with cars filled with cheering young men.
The news even prompted a celebration in a Manila-bound jetliner over the South China Sea. An announcement by the captain that Marcos had stepped down and "we have a new president, Corazon Aquino," brought cheers from Filipino passengers heading home.
The impromptu celebration in the capital ended as suddenly as it began, and the streets of the capital were quiet shortly after midnight.
BE READY FOR MIDTERMS
PREPARING FOR EXAMS
Study Skills Workshop
FREE!
Wednesday, February 26
7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
Council Room, Kansas Union
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
ALQAYM
UNIVERSITY OF MADRID
1470 S.A.R. CENTRO
LASERBEAM
MICHAEL BRANDWEIN presents
A Positive System of Teaching & Managing Behavior
Thursday, February 27, 1986
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Big Eight Room
presented by
Lumiere at National Honor
& Achievement Association in
Education
School of the Art and Student Organization
School of the Arts
Student Activity Fee
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1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Shopping Center
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NAME ___
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EYPHREZ 06-06-88
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842-1212
DATE ___
EXPIRES 06-06-86
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 Contact Captain Kennard, Room 206 Military Science Building 864-3311/3312
ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS
Wednesday. Feb. 26. 1986
The Philippines
University Daily Kansan
9
Philippine future uncertain Aquino inherits problems
17 United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — The downfall of President Ferdinand Marcos and the rise of Corazon Aquino marks the beginning of an uncertain transition for a people whose lives have been controlled by one man for 20 years.
Aquino has vowed to put the Philippines on the road to recovery from its worst economic crisis since World War II and implement policies aimed at crushing a worrisome communist insurgency that made unprecedented gains in the final years of the Marcos government.
She has inherited formidable legacies — a record $23 billion debt, a currency worth less than half what it was two years ago, a 16,000-strong force of communist guerrillas and a system rife with corruption.
In the campaign leading up to the Feb. 7 election, Aquino outlined how she intended to deal swiftly with what she regarded as the more notorious evils that Marcos had been unable to banish.
The first was carried out yesterday when Marcos agreed to step down in exchange for safe passage out of the country. Aquino's popularly elected government took power, though in an unconventional manner, ending 14
years of authoritarian rule that began when Marcos imposed martial law in 1972.
The martial law period formally ended after eight years, but remained a tacit fact of life until Marcos stepped down.
Marcos himself may have helped return power to the people in the way he handled his own downfall by agreeing yesterday to leave office. Loss of life was minimal. The transition was mostly peaceful.
News Analysis
That in itself, Aquino thinks, will isolate the extreme leftist forces in the country and have a chilling effect on the growth of the communist-led New Peoples Army.
She has pledged to go further to deal with the insurgency and called for a six-month cease-fire and negotiations with leaders of the rebel forces. The communist leaders earlier suggested the election was a contest between "local reactionaries."
Aquino also has vowed to immediately release all political prisoners in the country, thought to number about 600.
If the communists renounce
violence. Aquino has said she would work toward a legalization of the Communist Party of the Philippines.
Aquino's principal weapon in aiding the economy after two years of negative growth rests with a restoration of confidence in the government, including clear economic guidelines and changing laws and rules that have favored Marcos' closest business associates.
She also has set down a program patterned on a Latin American model of dealing firmly with the country's creditors, which are 483 banks, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and foreign governments.
Advisers have recommended that she call soon for a renegotiation of the country's foreign debt, pegging payments to a percentage of the country's gross national product.
Aquino's foreign policy is uncertain, but the United States, which maintains two of its most strategic military installations in the Philippines, does not appear too concerned.
Aquino has pledged to respect a treaty covering the U.S. Clark Air Base and Subic Bay Naval Base through 1991, and although she has left her options open beyond that, she has not closed the door to an extension of the treaty.
yello sub
DELIVERS
841-3268
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707 N. Second 841-1205
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yourcompany.com
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UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY
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WOULD YOU STICK YOUR HEAD IN THE CHI OMEGA FOUNTAIN FOR $8.34?
You can receive 6% back in cash by saving your Bookstore receipts from cash and check purchases. So if you spent $139 on textbooks in the fall, turn in your receipts in the spring and we'll give you $8.34 in cash. No obligation to us or the Chi Omegas.
You don't have to.
Keep your head dry and make money the easy way — only at the KU Bookstore.
KU
KUBookstores
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VCR w/2 movies-$9.66
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Store Hours:
Mon-Sat: 9:30 / Sun: 1-5
SMITTY'S TV
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Offering
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A COMPLETE LINE OF VW ACCESSORIES
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service work includes:
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Interfraternity Council Spring FRATERNITY Open House
Saturday March 1st
Registration : Kansas Union
Big Eight Room
Noon—1:00 p.m.
Visitations 1:00----5:00 p.m.
For more information contact the IFC Office at 864-3559
---
NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA
LairdNoller
TOYOTA
Spring Break Special
Wants you to have a safe trip.
Oil & Filter Change
$14.95 * *
* Includes up to 6 qts. of Prem. Oil
* Toyota Brand oil filter
* Add 'Parts & Labor extra
Toyota Vehicles only
$21.00
*Check Brakes
$21.00
COUPON
SAFETY CHECK
*Check Brakes
*Check Lights
*Check Overail Safety
Toyota Vehicles only
of vehicle.
of vehicle.
Minor Engine Tune-up $39.95 * *
1116 W.23rd
1116 W. 23rd
842-2191
*Replace Spark Plugs*
*Replace Fuel Filter ***
*Replace Points and Condenser (if equipped)
*Set Engine to Manufacturer's Spec.
*Add part's labor extra
*Fuel injected cars slightly higher
7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Monday-Friday
SERVICE EXCELLENCE AWARD WINNER
Service, Convenience, and Dependability
LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA LAIRD NOLLER
10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1986
WOW! IT'S WOLFE'S FABULOUS 28TH ANNUAL DOG SALE!
MasterCard
Our doors open at 8 a.m. sharp February 27th with huge savings on new and used cameras and video, accessories, demonstrators, trade-ins and discontinued items.Bring cash, MasterCard or VISA, but hurry to Wolfe's Camera & Video for the most dynamic sale ever. Sale starts Thursday. Open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday, 8:30-5:30 Friday and Saturday.
Snoopy and his friends are being carried by a big cart. They look very happy and excited. The cart is made of wood, and Snoopy's fur looks soft and fluffy. The cart has four wheels, and Snoopy is running along the side of it with his legs. There are many other dogs in the background, but they are not clearly visible. The overall mood of the illustration is cheerful and playful.
PHOTO
35mm SLR CAMERAS
PREFERRED BAILLE
SALEY
Pentax ME Super 12 (8)
330.00 | 109.99
Senator TLS 14.1 (8)
189.00 | 49.99
Minolta SRT 207 12.1 (8)
289.50 | 119.99
Minolta SRT 100 11.7 (8)
289.50 | 119.99
Minolta XGJ 12 (8)
289.50 | 119.99
Pentax N12 16 (8)
169.95 | 39.99
Yeohail TL Electro 31.7 (17)
299.50 | 99.99
Riich A100 16 (8)
299.50 | 99.99
Minolta XBZ 12.8 (8)
139.50 | 199.99
Pentax PQH Fullhall 80mm 11.8 (8)
298.00 | 149.99
Nikonos 111 (11)
145.00 | 29.99
Mamiya Sokon 500 11.2 (12)
179.50 | 59.99
Kanica Auto RTS 14.8 w/winder (12)
399.50 | 139.99
Contax RTS 85 (12)
600.00 | 139.99
Olympus OM-2 Body (Blk) (12)
350.00 | 139.99
Nikon RD Body (12)
279.50 | 119.99
Kanon F11 (14, 8 Winder) (12)
499.00 | 169.99
Nikon OM-10 Body (12)
499.00 | 169.99
Nikon Battery pack w/1.4 Water (12)
299.50 | 249.99
Kanon TLR 18 (12)
695.00 | 84.99
Pentax Spatimattec 14 (11)
330.00 | 119.99
Monochrom SRT 201 12.1 (8)
189.50 | 29.99
Pentax ME SE 12 (12)
300.00 | 89.99
Canon TX 18 (18)
200.00 | 69.99
Canon F18 11.8 (18)
524.00 | 429.99
Canon F18 11.8 (18)
470.00 | 429.99
Riich RX 10 w/28/72 12.8
520.00 | 249.99
F尼克 FG 18.6 (18)
437.00 | 239.99
Phakto M112 18.8
380.00 | 199.99
Phakto M112 Program 12
380.00 | 199.99
Lakex R45 (8)
998.00 | 639.99
Canon AEPf w/28/72 12.8
650.00 | 319.99
Canon P2 Program 2
300.00 | 199.99
Canon KXA30 Program 2
362.00 | 229.99
Lakex R4 Body
1450.00 | 99.99
Canon 150 w/28/72 12.8
449.99 | 319.99
Canon X30 Program 2
359.00 | 199.99
Riich RX 15 (8)
240.00 | 529.99
Contax 137 45/8.2 Znns
525.00 | 279.99
Contax 137 45/8.2 Znns
525.00 | 279.99
Contax 137 45/8.2 Znns
525.00 | 279.99
SLIDE PROJECTORS
U FIX IT
As usual we have a collection of 35mm SLR cameras, instratmats, lenses, projectors and such at crazy prices. Find out what makes a camera tick (or not). $099
ZOOM LENSES—CRAZY PRICES
| IF NEW RETURN | SKIP |
| :--- | :--- |
| Montréal 20004 | 118.95 | 99.99 |
| Laval Premiere (色织 used) | 698.00 | 159.99 |
| Kodak Electrophilic Alloy | 452.00 | 324.99 |
| Mediald Carousel (2700) | 400.00 | 309.99 |
| Mediald Carousel (4200) | 400.00 | 309.99 |
| Mediald Carousel (4200) | 249.95 | 159.99 |
| Sonyyx 310 Remote | 219.95 | 129.99 |
| Kodak Carousel 4600 | 358.00 | 274.99 |
Buy an SLR for only
180-550mm F4.5-6.3 IS STM
| RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- |
| Bell & Howell 10mm Projector | 199.95 | 109.99 |
| BRA11 71 J Sound Projector | 249.95 | 149.99 |
| BRA8358J Camera | 359.95 | 199.99 |
| BRA174 25mm (bino) Projector | 249.95 | 149.99 |
| Nikon AF 520mm Camera | 249.95 | 199.99 |
| Nikon AF 620mm Camera | 249.99 | 199.99 |
| Chiono Sound Projector (used) | 255.00 | 79.99 |
| GS4 Sound Projector (used) | 289.00 | 99.99 |
| Bell & Howell Super 5 Slient (used) | 195.00 | 79.99 |
| Sonyyk CME 1000 (used) | 195.00 | 79.99 |
| Kodak (1000mm) | 1300.00 | 79.99 |
| Kodak TZO 200 Camera | 199.00 | 99.99 |
SUPER
8MM
CAMERA
Orig. Retail
$139.95
$3999
Bell & Howell zoom movie camera, low light, focus free, compact.
COMPARE
LEICA
MOVIE CAMERAS & PROJECTORS
TELE/WIDE
LENS SETS.
Wide assortment, available for
many autofocus cameras like Pen-
tax, Ricoh, Canon.
SALE
$1999 to $4999
IF NEW
BAILAL
Leco R4 12 (used) 1850.00 $799.00
LecoFacile S12 T2 (used) 1450.00 $649.99
LecoClm L12 Oman (used) 598.00 $329.99
Leco M3 (used) 640.00 $239.99
Leco N8 (used) 640.00 $23
COMPARE AT SALE
75-150mm f4.5... $ 999$4999
100-200mm f4.5... $1399$6999
28-80mm f3.5... $1799$8999
TELE/WIDE
LENS SETS
SALE
$1999 to $4999
POINT & SHOOT 35
| Nissan 1135 AF | 519 | $9.99 | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Yahsan 1 AF | 290.00 | 159.99 | ---: |
| Kanpon P10 | 69.50 | 49.99 | ---: |
| Risih F90FAA | 290.00 | 159.99 | ---: |
| Olympus Quickshooter | 290.00 | 159.99 | ---: |
| Olympus EP7 | 99.95 | 139.99 | ---: |
| Connex GII R7 | 204.00 | 99.99 | ---: |
| Yahsan Portier AF | 160.00 | 89.99 | ---: |
| Risih B5 | 89.50 | 89.99 | ---: |
| Toshiba 0 | 99.50 | 89.99 | ---: |
| Anso 1000 | 89.95 | 89.99 | ---: |
| Olympus MX4 Marra | 180.00 | 119.99 | ---: |
| Yahsan MG-1 (used) | 99.00 | 84.99 | ---: |
| Yahsan IC (used) | 169.99 | 84.99 | ---: |
| Yahsan Elite A5 (used) | 89.95 | 14.99 | ---: |
| Yahsan Dineri 0 (used) | 109.95 | 9.99 | ---: |
| Yahsan Elite S3 GS (used) | 169.95 | 12.99 | ---: |
| Yahsan Milton L75 (used) | 179.95 | 12.99 | ---: |
| Kanteo A2e S2 (used) | 149.50 | 32.99 | ---: |
| Kakda Retina II C (used) | 225.50 | 62.99 | ---: |
| Kakda Retina II C (used) | 185.50 | 62.99 | ---: |
| Kakda S1-5 | 198.00 | 198.00 | ---: |
| VSira 5E (used) | 89.95 | 14.99 | ---: |
| Minimaira G-2 (used) | 119.95 | 24.99 | ---: |
| Olympus XA MW/II | 184.99 | 24.99 | ---: |
| Olympus Sore Steel | 198.00 | 69.99 | ---: |
| Olympus Trip A2 | 129.95 | 69.99 | ---: |
MEDIUM FORMAT
IF NEW
NAME
$59.99
108mm 4.856 Jumbo
985.00
2X Victor H645
335.00
Hasselbald P4M press matter
135.00
Astfilters for Hasselbald 830 no.
32.00
Oman View 0 to 120 Kamera 90
645.00
Carson 695.00
Monivy 23 w/100mm (used)
550.00
Kion Omega Rapid (used)
680.00
Super Speed Graphic (used)
1095.00
Speed Graphic A5 (51)
499.00
65mm 4.5 for R640 (used)
800.00
Column View (used)
295.00
110mm Q7 (used)
575.00
B84 S7/x View (used)
750.00
Hasselbald 500 Body (uses)
179.00
Hasselbald 150 14 Cr (uses)
1350.00
Hasselbald 150 14 B1 (uses)
1350.00
Hasselbald 150 14 B2 (uses)
1350.00
Hasselbald 110mm F2 (uses)
1650.00
Hasselbald Auto Diprogram
80mm F2.8 (uses)
1699.00
Mamiya C330 body (uses)
380.00
Mamiya C220 80mm F2.8 (uses)
390.00
Mamiya C45 80mm F2.8
850.00
Kamio Xeon G445 (uses)
950.00
Mamiya Motor Drive 645 (uses)
255.00
Bronica E7 12mm F2.8 (uses)
650.00
Bronica E7 12mm F2.8 (uses)
475.00
Bronica S2 150mm F3.5 (uses)
425.00
Bronica S2 Remount 150mm
13.5 (used)
580.00
99.99
CREATIVE FILTERS
13.5 (used) 389.0 99.99
Bronica S2 50mm 13.5 (used) 398.0 199.99
LENSES FOR CANON
1/2 PRICE
CREATIVE FILTERS
Versatile Square filters, plus holders and adaptors. Most fit Cokin system.
1/2 PRICE
BONUS: Buy any 5 items, get 6th (lowest cost one) absolutely free.
INSTANT/DISC/110 CAMERAS
| IF NEW RETAIL | IF NEW RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Kodak Ektra 10 | 30.99 | 19.99 |
| Kodak Modem II Disc | 47.95 | 49.99 |
| Kodak HD25 | 65.95 | 49.99 |
| Kodak 1400 Disc | 65.95 | 39.99 |
| Anse MKS5 Television | 69.99 | 29.99 |
| Vivitar 814 | 33.95 | 19.99 |
| Vivitar 845 | 39.95 | 19.99 |
| Anse Dx 320 | 29.95 | 16.99 |
| Anse Dx 350 | 49.95 | 24.99 |
| Anse 3020 110 Tele | 64.95 | 39.99 |
| Polaroid 600SE | 57.90 | 19.99 |
| Polaroid 640 | 57.90 | 19.99 |
| Polaroid 640SE | 245.00 | 169.99 |
| Polaroid 680SE | 300.00 | 209.99 |
| Allen 110 Water Proof | 69.95 | 19.99 |
| Vivitar Underwater | 123.95 | 59.99 |
| 640 Audio (used) | 265.00 | 89.99 |
IF NEW REMAIN $A19.9$
28-80mm 13.54.5 Pro 269.50 149.95
28mm 12.8 Pro 169.90 64.99
35-200mm 13.4-5 Pro 169.50 179.99
75-300mm 15.6 Pro 299.50 169.99
55mm 12.8 macro Quantorety 399.50 139.99
28-85mm 13.5-4 Signa 359.50 119.99
28mm 12.8 Sigma 143.90 79.99
70-210mm 14.5 Signa 259.90 99.99
70-250mm 13.4-5 Signa 319.90 99.99
70-250mm 13.4-5 Signa 319.90 99.99
28-135mm 14.6-4 Signa 699.95 199.99
80-200mm 12.8 Tekna 619.95 339.99
35-105mm 12.4-Viator 999.95 129.99
75-205mm 13.4-B Viiator 999.95 129.99
80-200mm 12.8 Tekna 999.95 129.99
100-150mm 14.4 Macro Canon 475.00 349.99
135mm 12 Canon 460.00 329.99
200mm 12.8 Canon 500.00 349.99
200mm 12.8 Canon 460.00 349.99
200mm 12.8 Canon 460.00 349.99
28-85mm 14 Canon 287.50 189.99
28-85mm 14 Canon 287.50 189.99
28mm 12 Canon 413.50 299.99
28mm 12 Canon 413.50 299.99
200mm 12.8 Canon 643.00 312.99
35-105mm 13.5 Canon 384.10 169.99
35mm 12 Canon 314.50 129.99
500mm 18 Canon 580.00 409.99
35-100mm 14 Canon 270.00 199.99
28-80mm 13.5-4 Intoneza 349.99 199.99
75-150mm 14.5 Makino 199.95 49.99
80-200mm 14.5 Makino 199.95 49.99
80-200mm 14.5 Makino 199.95 49.99
28-85mm 14.5 Makino 249.50 69.99
28-105mm 14.5-Viator 469.50 119.99
50mm 11.4 used Canon 200.00 409.99
f1 50mm 11.4 used Canon 95.00 19.99
135mm 12 (used) Dije 72.00 19.99
135mm 12 (used) Dije 149.50 19.99
135mm 12 (used) Kf Kenney 69.50 14.99
200mm 12 (used) Reastar 129.50 14.99
35-70mm 13.4-5 used (Tognoma) 198.00 59.99
35-70mm 13.4-5 used (Tognoma) 198.00 59.99
35-70mm 13.4-5 used (Tognoma) 198.00 59.99
85-205mm 0.8 used (Viiator) 249.50 59.99
85-205mm 0.8 used (Viiator) 249.50 59.99
85-205mm 0.8 used (Viiator) 249.50 59.99
85-205mm 0.8 used (Viiator) 249.50 59.99
TELECONVERTERS
Assorted mounts and brands, New and Used. Double the power of your lens. Orig. $25.99 to $59.99.
18-55mm f/3.5-4.5 IS USM
Assi Patel panel (used for sale)... 79.95** ... 24.99*
Patelar 230 (used)... 129.95** ... 39.99*
$499
to
$2999
WINDERS/MOTORS
| IF NEW REQUIRED | NEW REQUIRED | NEW REQUIRED |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Winder for Pentax MC/Program | 79.99 | $49.99 |
| Pentax PC35 | 34.00 | $9.99 |
| Kamera T14 Winder | 130.00 | $10.99 |
| Olympus Windio X or G | 655.00 | $109.99 |
| Windio for Olympus | 79.99 | $9.99 |
| Windier for Mfg/FG20 | 79.99 | $9.99 |
| Duger Winder for Cameo (used) | 79.99 | $9.99 |
| Windier for Mega | 130.00 | $10.99 |
| Auto Windier (used) | 129.95 | $19.99 |
| Winder for Minolta (used) | 79.95 | $19.99 |
| Pentax Windier MC (used) | 195.00 | $19.99 |
| Pentax Windier MC (used) | 180.00 | $19.99 |
| C29 Intra Windier 11 (used) | 160.00 | $59.99 |
KODACHROME
3+1
INTEGRATED
EXPERTS
IN TECHNOLOGY
PORTABLE VHS VIDEO
NODACHROME
35mm Film
ASA 64 135-24
$279
each
Final Cost
Sold Only in 4 Pack
Promotional Box
LENSES FOR OLYMPUS
IF NEW RETAIL SALE
13mm 12.8 Olympics 3100 1599
13mm 14.5 Macs Olympus 4250 2399
18mm 12.8奥运 7750 4999
18mm 13.5 Olympics 7900 4599
200mm 14.5 Olympics 8300 4199
200mm 14.5 Olympics 8350 2999
24mm 12.8奥运 5350 2999
24mm 12.8奥运 5350 1499
30mm 14.5奥运 2850 2899
35-105 13.5-4 Olympic 3900 2399
35-70 Olympic 4250 2999
200mm 14.5奥运 2000 1699
35mm 12.8奥运 2050 8999
24mm 12.8 (oad) Machine 1980 1999
24mm 12.8 (oad) Machine 1980 4999
24mm 12.8 (oad) Pro 1490 6499
28mm 12.8 (oad) Pro 1690 4999
24mm 12.8 (oad) Machine 2050 4999
80mm 14奥运会 (oad) Olympus 4040 4999
135mm 12.8奥运 2800 8999
135mm 12.8奥运 2800 10999
200mm 13.5 (oad) Pro 2290 9999
35mm 12.8 (oad) Pro 2450 9999
35-105 (oad) Pro 2940 9999
35-105 (oad) Pro 1429 9999
31-135 13.5-4 Olympus 3899 12999
50-200mm 14.5-4 Sigma 6499 24999
70-200mm 14.5-4 Sigma 6590 11999
70-200mm 14.5-4 Sigma 2199 11999
75-200mm 14.5-4 Sigma 3199 9999
75-200mm 14.5-Salger 2790 9999
28-135mm 14.5-Takino 6995 11999
28-135mm 14.5-Takino 6995 11999
28-40.5-4 Swiener 2599.5 11999
28-512.8-2 Wiener 3950 11999
28-90-2 Swiener 4290 11999
28mm 12.8 Wiener 1999 11999
70-200mm 14.5-Wiener 3695 11999
70-200mm 14.5-Wiener 3695 11999
80-200mm 14.5-Wiener 3695 10999
100-200mm 14.5-Wiener 3950 10999
400mm 15.6-Hayes 3695 10999
24mm 12.8-Makion 2295 4999
28mm 12.8-Makion 1795 4999
80-200mm 14.5-Makion 1995 4999
28-40.5-4 Miikon 2590 8999
100-200mm 14.5-Miikon 2490 8999
200mm 13.5-Miikon 4695 11999
28-40.5-4 Miikon 4695 11999
35-200mm 13.5-3-P 4995 1399
100-200mm 14.5-Sigma 2995 1399
135mm 12.8-Makion 7995 2499
Quasar 4 head portable $699 video recorder, 14-day/8-event programmable, wireless remote, quartz tuner, 139 channel, includes battery.
VIDEO PRODUCTS
IF NEW
| | INF |
| :--- | :--- |
| Emerson VC77 Port VCR (dem) | 800.00 | $39.99 |
| Elmo EC10 Zoom Color Camera | 599.99 | $199.99 |
| KA4 C30 Color Camera MOS (dem) | 1250.00 | $199.99 |
| GE 5032 Mini Camera (dem) | 615.00 | $79.99 |
| GE 6018 Hi Res Recorder | 1350.00 | $79.99 |
| GE 6046 WV Camerator | 1500.00 | $1349.00 |
| Multibush 31 WHS Recorder (dem) | 1500.00 | $1319.00 |
| Multibush 40 Big Screen #402 | 1000.00 | $1319.00 |
| Multibush 750 Big Screen #402 | 1000.00 | $1319.00 |
| Quorum Delta Comp TV System | 2000.00 | $1199.00 |
| Panasonic Port VCS (used) | 900.00 | $1199.00 |
| Olympus Port VCS (used) | 1099.00 | $999.00 |
| Ge 2 Head Port VCS (used) | 695.00 | $999.00 |
| Quorum S740 Port VCR | 1095.00 | $699.00 |
| KA80 DSLR Camera | 900.00 | $699.00 |
| PV Video Slider Camera | 995.00 | $59.99 |
| Ovate Video Lite | 1499.00 | $89.99 |
Panasonic STD 1200
5730
Panasonic
VHS $499
T-120 each
For 10 or more
For 10 or more
PANASONIC VIDEO TAPE
Panasonic
T-120
$549
LESS than 10
each
LENSES FOR MINOLTA
| IF NEW RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- |
| 28-85mm 13.5-4.5 Miniso | 2940.00 | 169.99 |
| 28-12mm T2 Miniso | 4190.00 | 179.99 |
| 28-12mm T2 Miniso | 2180.00 | 179.99 |
| 85-210mm 14.5 Dinner | 289.95 | 59.99 |
| 85-210mm 14.5 Dinner | 199.95 | 59.99 |
| 85-210mm 14.5 Matrix | 199.95 | 89.99 |
| 28-80mm 13.5-4 Mikoan | 2590.00 | 89.99 |
| 100-200mm 14.5 Doeues | 199.95 | 89.99 |
| 100-200mm 14.5 Doeues | 199.95 | 89.99 |
| 28-10mm 13.5-4 Pro | 499.50 | 119.99 |
| 28-80mm 13.5-4 Pro | 399.50 | 149.99 |
| 35-200mm 19.4-5 Sigma | 499.50 | 159.99 |
| 28-84mm 13.5-4 Sigma | 399.50 | 159.99 |
| 28-84mm 13.5-4 Sigma | 142.90 | 159.99 |
| 70-210mm 14.5 Sigma | 319.90 | 99.99 |
| 75-230mm 14.5 Sigma | 319.90 | 99.99 |
| 28-135mm 14.6 Takosu | 699.95 | 119.99 |
| 35-135mm 14.6 Takosu | 699.95 | 119.99 |
| 35-135mm 14.6 Takosu | 199.95 | 119.99 |
| 28-80mm 13.5-4 Vistor | 259.95 | 119.99 |
| 28-128 Vistor | 129.95 | 159.99 |
| 70-210mm 13.5 Vistor | 329.95 | 159.99 |
| 80-200mm 14 Vistor | 264.95 | 189.99 |
| 80-200mm 14 Vistor | 69.95 | 199.99 |
| 128.08 (used) Bushellh | 121.50 | 30.99 |
| 188.14 (miniso) Miniso | 140.00 | 29.99 |
| 135mm 12.8 (used) Silagur | 69.50 | 9.99 |
| 135mm 12.8 (used) X7 Visive | 71.50 | 2.99 |
| 135mm 12.8 (used) Miniso | 119.90 | 12.99 |
| 135mm 12.8 (used) Miniso | 225.00 | 59.99 |
| 200mm 14 (miniso) Miniso | 198.00 | 29.99 |
| 200mm 14 (miniso) You/Fire Star | 99.00 | 59.99 |
| 280mm 13.5-4 Miniso (Abbiorn) | 129.95 | 34.99 |
| 85-205mm 12.8 (used) Pengar | 169.50 | 49.99 |
| 51-105mm 12.8 (used) Pengar | 119.95 | 29.99 |
JUNK AND STUFF
Come browse, rummage and dig through all kinds of photographic gems. Camera supplies, cases, accessory darkroom items. Cheap
29' and UP
LENSES FOR
PENTAX/RICOH K
IF NEW RETAIL
40mm Z8 (2.8 inch) Pentax
50mm Z8 (2.8 inch) Pentax
135mm Z8 (2.8 inch) Sigma
135mm Z8 (2.8 inch) Dinor
135mm Z8 (2.8 inch) Kodar
80-205mm Z8 (3.0 inch Pro)
80-205mm Z8 (3.0 inch Pro)
280mm Z8 (Compar)
280mm Z8 (X-5.4 Violet
70-210mm Z8 (4-inch CF)
70-210mm Z8 (4-inch CF)
80-200mm Z4 Violet
80-200mm Z4 Violet
85-205mm Z8 (3.5-4.5 CF)
85-205mm Z8 (3.5-4.5 CF)
80-200mm Z4 CK
80-200mm Z4 CK
88-24 Z8 (4-inch CF)
88-24 Z8 (4-inch CF)
31-155 Z8 (3.4-4.5 Signa
31-155 Z8 (3.4-4.5 Signa
31-155 Z8 (3.4-4.5 Signa
31-155 Z8 (3.4-4.5 Signa
71-150mm Z8 (4.3 Magnina
71-150mm Z8 (4.3 Magnina
100-200mm Z8 (4.5 Shoes
135mm Z8 T8 Pro
24mm Z8 T8 Pro
24mm Z8 T8 Pro
35-200mm Z8 (4.3 Pro
35-200mm Z8 (4.3 Pro
75-210mm Z8 (4.5 Signa
75-210mm Z8 (4.5 Signa
310-155 Z8 (4.3 Talon
310-155 Z8 (4.3 Talon
280-100mm Z8 (4.6 Rush
280-100mm Z8 (4.6 Rush
28mm Z8 Rush
35-70mm Z8 (4.5 Rush
35-70mm Z8 (4.5 Rush
20-210mm Z8 Rush
20-210mm Z8 Rush
150mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
160mm Z8 Rush
50236789
PORTRAIT LENS
SALE $1499
(Requires Optional T-Mount)
100mm f2 Sima soft focus lens to fit most SLR's. Retail $49.95.
LENSES FOR NIKON
RETAIL SALEL
28-105mm 13.5-4.9 Pro 499.50 119.99
35-200mm 13.9-4.5 Pro 499.50 189.99
28-105mm 13.5-4.5 Signa 319.90 169.99
20mm 12.7 Signa 499.90 119.99
30mm 10.5-4.5 Signa 499.90 119.99
50mm 10.5-4.5 Signa 649.90 249.99
70-210mm 4.5 Signa 259.90 99.99
70-210mm 4.5 Signa 319.99 129.99
75-210mm 4.5 Signa 319.90 129.99
75-210mm 4.5 Signa 319.90 129.99
75-300mm 4.5-6.0 Signa 649.99 179.99
75-300mm 4.5-6.0 Signa 649.99 179.99
35-105mm 4.3-6.0 Taka 649.99 139.99
80-270mm 7.8 Taka 649.99 139.99
80-270mm 7.8 Taka 649.99 139.99
28-80 I3 15.4 V Visitor 259.95 119.99
28-80 I2 V Visitor 169.00 69.99
70-210 I3 15.5 W Visitor 119.95 69.99
24-120 I2 (used) Nikkor V 129.90 69.99
24-120 I2 (used) Nikkor V 899.00 399.00
43-680mm I3 0.35 (used) Nikon V 298.00 69.99
35-135 mm I4 0.35 (used) Takino 349.00 69.99
80-200mm I4 15 (used) Rahimono 249.00 69.99
80-200mm I4 15 (used) Salgier 249.00 69.99
80-200mm I4 15 (used) Salgier 197.50 69.99
28-120 Nikkor V 500.00 364.99
28-120 Nikkor V 715.00 89.99
300mm I4 5 Nikkor 900.00 38.99
300mm I4 5 Nikkor 929.00 189.99
50-135 mm I3 5 Nikkor 540.00 189.99
50-135 mm I3 5 Nikkor 340.00 189.99
500mm IB Rallier Nikkor 636.00 439.99
80-200mm I4 Nikkor 755.00 499.99
100mm IB Rallier E 160.00 69.99
100mm IB Rallier E 160.00 69.99
35-125 mm IB Rallier E 113.50 69.99
80-200mm I4 Matix M 199.95 89.99
28-80mm I3-5.4 M Aikinob 259.90 89.99
100-200mm I3-5.4 D Showa 149.50 39.99
130mm I3-5.4 Fao Ran 199.95 39.99
SALE $24999
Disc Tape VCR TV MVCH MP3 MP4 DVD FM Radio Television
Panasonic
Panasonic VHS Video recorder,
front loading, 10 function wired
remote, 14-day/2-event programmable.
LENSES FOR KONICA
IF NEW RETAIL SALE
400mm 15.6 Neye 189.95 199.95 89.99
80-200mm 14.5 Matrix 199.95 89.99
100-200mm 14.5 Oswaon 249.50 89.99
135mm 12.8 Pro 149.50 199.95
24mm 12.8 Pro 199.95 199.95
280-300mm 14.5 Pro 199.95 109.99
80-200mm 14.5 Pro 169.95 169.99
280-300mm 13.4-5 Pro 499.50 169.99
70-210mm 13.8 Pro 399.50 149.99
75-200mm 14.5 Pro 399.50 149.99
200mm 12.8 (used) 169.50 169.50
Pre 12.8 (used) 129.50 29.99
Kerliss 13.5 (used) 149.50 29.99
Virtel 13.5 (used) 119.50 29.99
Bulmeland 200mm 3.5 (used) 169.95 169.95
Bulmeland 200mm 3.5 (used) 169.95 169.95
Sigma 35-70mm 2.8 (used) 295.00 295.00
Virtel 35-70mm 2.8 (used) 295.00 295.00
Virtel 35-70mm 2.8 (used) 295.00 295.00
Saliger 75-200mm 4 (used) 339.00 339.00
Saliger 100-300mm 4 (used) 265.00 265.00
Saliger 100-300mm 4 (used) 265.00 265.00
Kerliss 80-200mm 15.6 352.95 149.99
Hoya 100-300mm 15.6 449.00 149.99
Quantayne 80-200mm 14.5 249.95 139.90
Sigma 84-200mm 13.5-4 339.90 139.90
Tikirler 75-195 13.5-4 279.00 179.00
Tikirler 75-195 13.5-4 269.90 119.99
Tikirler 12.8 149.50 119.99
Virtel 28-80 13.5-4 259.95 109.99
Virtel 28-80 12.8 129.95 109.99
Virtel 28-80 12.8 129.95 109.99
Tikirler 75-195 13.5-4 269.90 119.99
Tikirler 75-195 13.5-4 269.95 109.99
Tikirler 12.8 149.50 119.99
FLASH/LIGHTING
RETAR TALY 119.9
Plexiglass AI Specialist 169.95 169.95 299.99
Laminate Parquet Outlet 589.00 589.00 499.00
Newport 400 Set 649.00 649.00 499.00
Stone LS7 Stand 59.99 59.99 199.99
Reiner Light w/ Padrine 34.99 34.99 199.99
Lowek 1700 Tape Kit 485.00 485.00 459.99
Studie Mirror 699.00 699.00 439.99
10' Light, Grip and Clamp 9.99 9.99 6.99
Star 0550 Slide 59.99 59.99 39.99
Reflective Sheet F72 59.99 59.99 69.99
Reflective Sheet 26° Unbuffered 124.95 69.99
Reflective Sheet 26° Unbuffered 67.95 49.99
5-47 Umbracle 29.99 29.99 19.99
November 3' Unbuffered 124.95 124.95 10,000
November 3' Unbuffered 230.00 120.00 10,000
Sunshade 372 199.95 199.95 139.99
Hyperion 4000 199.95 199.95 139.99
Magnon 6000 Powerwrench 199.95 199.95 139.99
Bosch 414 199.95 199.95 24.99
Dryer 414 159.95 159.95
METERS
| | RETAIL | SALINE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Shepherd K128 Flush | 89.95 | 59.99 |
| Virtor Floater Miter | 93.95 | 59.99 |
| Sebastian K128 Digapt | 450.00 | 249.99 |
| Sebastian Digera S1 I1 | 591.00 | 149.99 |
| Sebastian Digera S1 II | 150.00 | 69.99 |
| Gosnard Lainland | 130.00 | 69.99 |
| Capital Ambassador Fliff EII | 229.95 | 119.99 |
| Capital SPI Miter Spit | 229.95 | 119.99 |
| Minibus Sportmaster M (used) | 429.95 | 249.99 |
| Minibus Sportmaster S | 39.95 | 9.99 |
| Sebastian Audience (used) | 36.95 | 9.99 |
| Sebastian Underwreath | 47.95 | 24.99 |
| Lumares SPG (used) | 180.00 | 79.99 |
DARKROOM
| | RETAIL | SERVICE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Bester Boss Extender 23C | 35.30 | 9.99 |
| Bester PMA4 Anhydrater | 35.30 | 19.99 |
| Bester PMA4 Anhydrater | 37.50 | 239.99 |
| 11:14 EPSOF Borderless Case | 27.90 | 15.99 |
| 11:14 Sorter Esail | 29.99 | 22.99 |
| Omega 140 Timer | 39.99 | 9.99 |
| Omega 140 Timer | 34.99 | 19.99 |
| Orange 130 Timer | 99.99 | 54.99 |
| Retention 17 | 29.99 | 139.99 |
| Retention 16 | 49.99 | 19.99 |
| Dalee 502 Timer | 35.95 | 24.99 |
| FLT Comp w./thermometer | 24.95 | 13.99 |
| Bester PMA3L Anhydrater | 616.50 | 209.99 |
| Bester PMA4 Anhydrater | 615.00 | 209.99 |
| Orange 23C Drum | 27.90 | 9.99 |
| Airt Paper and Chemistry | | ½ Price |
| Darkroom Xk III m/n enlarger | 69.95 | 9.99 |
| Airt Royal KI 8 C Dry Printer | 69.95 | 9.99 |
| DI Elmere | 1.99 | .4 |
| Pace Print Dry Rook/View | 19.99 | 19.99 |
| XRay Illuminator | 19.99 | 19.99 |
| Display Camp | 54.95 | 29.99 |
| 500mm Provenite Item kit | 29.99 | 19.99 |
35MM COLOR
PRINT FILM
$129
each
Fuji
135-12
Choice of
ASA 200,400,1600
ELECTRONIC FLASH
RETAIL RETAIL SALINE
Solger 240 89.95 79.99
Solger 300 139.95 79.99
Solmap 1440 97.95 79.99
Solmap 1210 Minten 69.95 79.99
Solmap 2210 Minolta 69.95 79.99
Solmap 2210 Pentax 69.95 79.99
Solmap 2210 Fujinon 74.00 79.99
Solmap 3440 Ded 139.95 79.99
Solmap 4330 Nikon 166.00 79.99
Vivitar 285 144.95 79.99
Vivitar Ded 144.95 79.99
Vivitar 2250 86.95 79.99
Doux 260 Ded 59.95 33.99
Hanimax 171-1 Bounce 89.95 59.99
Lemoodya System 89.95 209.99
Canon T700 92.00 99.99
Canon 2441 74.00 49.99
Canon 2771 126.00 19.99
Mamiya K818 105.00 49.99
Kanonic 1229P 98.00 49.99
Canon X24 Flash 92.00 49.99
Olympus T20 91.00 35.99
Somai 611 235.90 185.90
Canon S.9-3 (used) 19.95 29.99
Canon S.9-9 (used) 99.95 24.99
Tokunami AF 14 (used) 39.95 12.09
Balei E158 (used) 39.95 4.29
Minolta 132X (used) 29.95 2.99
Canon 177A (used) 98.00 34.99
Canon 173A (used) 98.00 49.99
Braun T34 (used) 69.95 14.99
Promax 2500 FT 119.95 59.99
Promax T400 166.00 89.99
Promax SAC 1100 79.95 14.99
Promax Z440 90.00 49.99
Rafix Flat 240
GADGET BAGS
AND CASES
Evidence cases, camera bags of
vinyl, nylon, aluminum.
99¢ up
ENLARGERS
| IF NEW RETAIL | IF NEW RETAIL |
| :--- | :--- |
| Organge A600 (soned) | 114.10 | $99.99 |
| Lacura Valley (soned) | 425.00 | 179.99 |
| Begon Z2 w/98 | 172.00 | 109.99 |
| Philips FC31 130 | 490.00 | 229.99 |
| Oxygen 750A (Dekro Dwr 500) | 490.00 | 229.99 |
| Oxygen 750A (Dekro Dwr 500) | 466.95 | 229.99 |
| Durst CS3 | 299.00 | 229.99 |
| Brenner 23C Kilo (soned) | 739.95 | 349.99 |
TRIPODS/STANDS
WOLF
COASTAL
PARK
| NEW RETAIL | IF NEW |
| :--- | :--- |
| Size 14 Compact | 69.99 | SALE |
| Tortoise C-17 Comp. Shroud. | 62.95 | 44.99 |
| Gravesong Trigged | 99.95 | 39.99 |
| Pro Golden Mini | 29.99 | 19.99 |
| Sorrist Mantel Truginal Mini | 24.95 | 10.99 |
| SVR H2 V21 Video | 18.99 | 7.99 |
| SVR P200 | 18.99 | 29.99 |
| SVR P237 | 18.99 | 29.99 |
| SVR hI-102 | 18.99 | 44.99 |
| SVR hI-112 | 18.99 | 54.99 |
| Video SVR H1 112 | 19.99 | 59.99 |
| Video V24 | 89.95 | 59.99 |
| Video V28 | 53.95 | 39.99 |
| Video Star-Scr D-110 | 79.99 | 49.99 |
| SV Markick 12000S 4 | 49.95 | 17.99 |
Wolfe's CAMERA & VIDEO VP4 STORE HOURS:
Thursday 8:30 to 5:00
Office Windows 8.30 to 5.30
Closed Sunday
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 913-235-1386
Topeka, Kansas 66601-1437
8
Sports
Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1986
University Daily Kansan
11
Hawks
2
Jacki Kelly/KANSAN
Guard Evelette Ott, who leads the Jayhawks with 108 assists, will try to help Kansas defeat Oklahoma for the second time this season. The Jayhawks and Sooners play at 7:30 tonight at Norman.
'Hawks out to end OU streak
But the Jayhawks may have a difficult time beating the Sooners. The Sooners have a 27-game home-court winning streak at the Lloyd Noble Center.
"They are the only team in the Big Eight not to have lost at home," Marian Washington, Kansas head coach said yesterday. "They definitely have a home court advantage. But I want to beat a fine ball
ball twice.
A victory would mark the second time this season the Jayhawks would beat the Sooners.
Kansas defeated the Sooners earlier in the season at Allen Field House, 85-67. In that game, Kansas forward Vickie Adkins led all scorers with 35 points.
The Kansas women's basketball team is looking to steal another game from the No. 15 Oklahoma Sooners when they play them in Sooner territory tonight at Norman.
"I'd like to score that again," Adkins said. "But as long as the points spread out it doesn't matter. It will be nice to break (the streak). They better look out because we're coming."
QJ
Oklahoma
"I like to win, I don't care who it is."
Women's Basketball
21.4 (Big 8-9:3)
7:30 toonf
JHK-IM-6
Okla, Okla
Maura McHugh, Oklahoma head coach, said Kansas caught the Sooners in a slump.
"Kansas caught us in the thick of our slump," McHugh said. "That was the worst. Outright, we know we are a better team than we showed them last time."
By Dawn O'Malley Sports writer
"We've got to play physical to hold our own ground," Adkins said.
Like Washington and Adkins, guard Evelyeott Ott said she wanted to break Oklahoma's home court winning streak.
And if the Sooners get physical, so will the Jawhays, Adkins said.
McHugh said she expected a physical game like the last one.
"In the five years I've been here we've never turned anyone down," he said.
Konzem also said KU would have 1,700 tickets available for the National Collegiate Athletic Association Final Four Tournament in Dallas on March 29 and 31 — if the team makes it that far.
He said the number of tickets set aside for students was based on the low number of tournament tickets sold to students in previous years.
Probable Starters
Kansas
The number of tickets that would
"We need the win to fire our team up," Ott said. "We've not been playing up to our abilities. This will pull us back up."
In order to win again, Kansas will have to put forth 110 percent in effort, Ott said.
F 33 Lisa Dougherty (5-8)
F 25 Vickie Adkins (6-1)
C 40 Kelly Jenkins (6-5)
G 24 Eveltte Ott (5-7)
G 30 Toni Webb (5-8)
Oklahoma
F 14 Jacquetta Hurley (6-1)
F 13 LaTrena Phillips (6-0)
C 52 Lisa Allison (6-3)
G 13 Vickie Green (5-9)
G 20 Viki Green (5-6)
Court approves Texas' standards
Few tickets available for post-season play
By Matt Tidwell
The University of Kansas was allotted 250 tickets, Konzem said. Besides the tickets to be sold to students, tickets also will be sold to players' parents, members of the athletic department, faculty and administration and the band.
Sports writer
Notre Dame trailed 21-19 with eight minutes to play in the first half but ran up 10 straight points and took a 29-21 lead with 5:49 remaining.
Staff writer
Konzem said an undetermined number of tickets would be available at 8:30 a.m. on March 11 at the ticket office. The price of the tickets will be $45 at Minneapolis and $38 at Dayton.
be available to students has not yet been determined, he said, but a certain amount would be made available. The $46-dollar tickets would go on sale at 8:30 a.m. on March 21.
Ever since the NCAA passed its Proposition 48 requiring high school athletes to meet minimum academic standards, college recruiters have had to quiz recruits on their academic performance.
On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court took Proposition 48 a step further. The Court said the state of Texas "no pass-no play" regulation that forces high school students to receive a passing grade in all courses or be sidelined for six weeks was constitutional.
Trailing 37-30 at halftime, DePaul pulled within 48-15 with 11-45 to play, but the Blue Demons had three starters foul out. Notre Dame was then able to build the lead to as many as 13 points.
David Rivers added 14 points for the Fighting Irish, 20-5. Kevin Holmes and Dallas Comegys scored 15 points each to lead DePaul, 15-11. Tony Jackson, who fouled out with 5:24 left in the game added 13 for the Blue Demons, 11 in the first half.
Tickets also will be sold to any other NCAA tournament games KU plays in, Konzem said.
By Frank Ybarra
"Also, we look for athletes who are good students. With our limited scholarship budget, we can't afford to have a guy who can't make grades."
KU students will have a chance to buy a limited number of tickets to the Big Eight Post-Season Tournament at Kemper Arena on March 7-9, according to Richard Konzem, director of the University of Kansas Williams Fund.
Kansas assistant athletic director for rules interpretations, Gary Hunter, said there were differences between Proposition 48 and the Texas requirements and that recruiters
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Donald Royaled scored 26 points last night, including 16-of-16 free throw attempts, and led No. 12 Notre Dame to a 70-59 triumph over DePaul.
According to Betsy Stephenson, who works in the championship department of the NCAA in Kansas City, Kan., no team is guaranteed a certain region, regardless of its record.
She said there was no way of telling where KU would play in the post-season. But previous years have indicated that the team with the best record in its region usually stays in that area.
Konzem said about 20 tickets would be available to students at 8:30 a.m. on March 4 at the ticket office in Allen Field House. Tickets for the three-day tournament will be $52. Only one ticket will be available to each student with a KU LD.
"I have mixed emotions about it," Kuefer said. "It's very good from the standpoint of stressing the importance of academics, but I think many young people stay in high school because of their sport and wouldn't have that incentive if they were forced to quit.
About 1,000 tickets also will be made available to KU if the Jayhawks play in the Midwest Regional Finals at Kemper on March 21-23, he said. A number of those would be for sale to students at 8:30 a.m. on March 18 at the ticket office. The cost of those tickets will be $32.
"Under Proposition 48, you could get a non-passing grade and still make the minimum GPA," Hunter said.
The ruling cleared the way for other states' school systems to adopt the policy.
would look much more closely at the high school transcripts of recruits.
But the "no pass-no play" rule could cause high school athletes to take short cuts with their education in order to continue playing. Kansas recruits said yesterday.
Also, Jayhawk football recruiting coordinator Jim Cochran and assistant track coach, and instructor Steve Kueffer said they wouldn't be interested in athletes who had come in conflict with the policy.
surge and a 24-12 lead in less than five minutes.
If KU plays in the Midwest Regional, the first- and second-round games would be in either Dayton, Ohio, or Minneapolis, Minn, on March 14-16.
Oklahoma State could come no closer than seven points after trailing
Cochran said that the idea of increasing academic standards was good.
"I don't think there's anything the matter with upgrading the standards," Cochran said. "The part that worries me is if a kid elected not to take a class because he thought he wouldn't do well enough in it to keep playing. Aren't we then encouraging kids who are average high school students to shy away from college preparatory classes?"
Cyclones clinch second with victory over OSU
Iowa State improved its record to 9-4 in the conference and 18-8 overall while the Cowboys dropped to 5-8 and 14-12.
Notre Dame 70, DePaul 59
Virgil's jump shot one minute later and a pair of free throws by Grayer started the Cyclones on a 14-point
Cochran said the nation-wide requirements of Proposition 48 affected Kansas recruits more than the Texas rule, since the Jayhawks don't recruit much in Texas.
AMES, Iowa — Sophomore Jeff Grayer poured in 25 points as Iowa State cruised to a 76-61 Big Eight Conference basketball victory over Oklahoma State last night.
The Cyclones took advantage of three early turnovers to jump to an 8-10 lead as Sam Hill hit his first three shots and Jef Hornacek made the fourth. But the Cowboys scored 10 straight to grab their only lead, 12-10, on a shot by Faggins with five minutes played.
The victory, which clinched a second-place league finish for the Cyclones, was ISU's 17th straight win during two seasons at home, giving Iowa State its first unbeaten home schedule in school history.
From Kansan wires
Ron Virgil, one of three seniors playing his final home game for head coach Johnny Orr, added 12 points while reserve Tom Schafer added 10.
Terry Faggins led Oklahoma State with 22 points, and Alan Bannister added 12.
By Jim Suhr Sports writer
Perelman hopes his bubble won't burst
KU tennis coach Scott Perelman dreams of an inflatable bubble that would cover the four tennis courts next to Allen Field House.
It's a dream that he estimated would cost about $250,000 and would be an immeasurable boost to a KU tennis program that he said yesterday had top-20 potential.
His dream, however, will not become a reality unless he receives an initial donation that would get his project off the ground — a donation ranging from $100,000 to $150,000.
Perelman pleaded for the bubble to the Athletic Department for several
reasons. The bubble, he said, would give the Jayhawks a permanent place for unlimited practice, allow them to host more home matches and aid in recruiting.
"It would be the best thing to happen to the tennis program in years," he said of the bubble, which also would be used for recreational classes.
Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, said that although Kansas had information from several companies that could install the vinyl, nylon and polyester blend bubble, the Athletic Department would take no action until substantial amounts of money were raised for the project.
"It is certainly an alternative to the problem," Hunter said. "It's something we would love to have, but it is so expensive."
The Jayhawks now practice at the privately owned Alvamar Tennis and Swim Club, which Perelman said had caused problems by restricting the team to practice during only three time periods. Those periods are from 5:45 to 7:45 a.m., 2 to 4 p.m. and 10 to 12 p.m. With a bubble, however, he said his teams would have both unlimited time to practice and more time to rest and to do schoolwork.
"Our bubble is our future," Perelman said. "Alvamar has been good to us, but it is a private club
with its own interests. Successful programs in the Midwest have control over their facilities, and we don't have that control."
Perelman said Alvamar, as a private tennis club, also was unable to reserve the courts for Kansas to use for weekend matches, which has forced the Jayhawks to travel to every meet this season. The bubble, he said, would make Kansas less dependent on Alvamar and allow the team to practice outside while being protected from harsh winter elements.
Perelman said Kansas' recruiting also would benefit from the bubble
Mark Mohler/KANSAN
Keeping warm
Joe Benvitos, Lubbock, Texas senior and Kansas short-relief pitcher, tries to stay warm in the inside of the infield taurpainil Monday while the season opener Friday against Missouri at Quigley Field.
12
University Daily Kansan
The University Daily
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Call 864-4358
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| Words | CLIENTS IN DEVICES |
|---|
| 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: | 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 ... $4.40
POLICIES
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 displays. No overhauls allowed in classified display ads.
- Deadline 14 a. p.m. —2 working days prior to publication
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
- Words set in BOLD FACE count as 1 words.
- Deadline is 4 m — 2 workdays prior to.
- *hiried earn line nscutom*
*Samples of all mail order items must be submitted*
- Team sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one item *
* cannot insert or any advertisement *
* should not be posted on any website *
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only
- Checks must accompany All Classified assms to the University Daily Dagman
- Blind ads—please add a $4 service charge *
* Checks must accompany all classified ad males
- Classified display ads do not count towards more thin-crown sale discount
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 Kansas business office at 804-4538.
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
No impatience is essential to keep one cared for. No impatience is essential to keep one cared for. No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified insurance.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
28th Annual Antique Show and Sale Coming
on January 4, 2019. The Antique Show,
Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. at National
Guard Armory, 300 Iowa. Sponsored by Pilot
Club Admission $2.00 with this ad 25 off each.
28th Annual Antique Show and Sale coming
on Monday, February 15. Sunday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m., At National
Guard Armory, 200 Iva. Sponsored by Pilot
Club. Admission $2.99 with this ad. $2.95 off.
Announcing Lawrence's newest record store. Ask about our guaranteed buy back, new and used albums, we buy and sell, tape special, 2 Maxell Tapes, Last Chance Labels, Records 914 W. 23rd St. 845-5311
SERVICE ALL DISCIPLINES
Wednesday, Feb. 26, 198
PRIVATE PLACEMENT SERVICE
200 Professional Headhunters are waiting to see your resume.
BE READY FOR MIDTERM$^2$ Attend the preparation for Exams Study Skills Workshop, memorizing, reviewing, test-taking strategies, memory more. FREE! Wednesday; February 26, 7-9 p.m., Council Room, Kansas Union. Presented by the Student Assistant Center, 121 Strong Hall.
Call Ken Wilson 841-1085 or 842-5752
Rent-VCR with 3 movies, overnight $9.99,
Mon - Tue, 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
Wed, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Rent* 12% Targ. $82.98 a month. Smity's TV
147 W. tcd. D. 842-7531. Sat. Mon.-Sat. 9:30
147 W. tcd. D. 842-7531. Sat. Mon.-Sat. 9:30
Get Published: SP and Fantasy magazine accepting submissions. Linda N84-5042 evening.
Attention Sophomores: Owl Society is now accepting applications! Minimum overall GPA of 3.0 Applications in Rm. 400 Kansas Union, Application in Rm. 401 Kansas Union, on the day March 7 p.m. in Rm. 402 Kansas Union
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE DJ AANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 749-4713.
Spring Break: Limited supplies of tents, sleeping bags, coolers, etc. Make reservations now! Wilderness Discovery Level Burge Union. phone 604-3897.
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to provide the music for your next party. We use a 1000-watt amplifier and have a band that can accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in stock include Saltation and Salmon, Call (913) 893-884 or (913) 872-8848.
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkeley Flats, Vacancies available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 843-2116.
First come, first served, only a few to go. At 2106 W. 58th on KU bus route, between Gibbon's and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We have a large office space, openly equipped square foot, carport, extra bath or balcony. Call 843-6446 for appointment.
Applications are now available for the 1986/87 Fall and Spring Semesters.
Space is limited! SO APPLY TODAY!
Call or come by for a tour.
NAISMITH
HALL
1800 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
(913) 843-8559
LEASE NOW FOR FALL: (with or without summer 1986) Dessert box $ 4 HR duplies, or 2 baths, bookcase $ 16, kitchen backsplash $ 50, hookup, ice maker. energy efficient; low utilities. cooktop $ 100; microwave $ 75, refrigerator $ 800; $ 600/mo, negotiable. 937-775.
Male roommate need. Have your own bedroom & bathroom for only $123/mo. Convenient location on bus route and close to shopping. Call 842-2891, late afternoon or early evening.
Newly remodeled quick 2 bed apartment. $800 plus us
utilities plus deposit. Ends July 31. 251 florida
address.
New two bedroom apartment, Aspen West. No
rent. $890 per month. 746-1298.
pets, $23.00 per mile, 749-1286.
Share large 2 pack / apt. 1/8 rent is $128/mo. NoUtil.
Petts apartment one block from campus. No pets. $175.00 per month. 749-1288.
Share large $ 3 cpt. /1 rent $ 4128 mo. NoUtil.
Bill $ 836-1809 days $ 814-1902 eyes
Sublease available for Summer. Contemporary 2
RH furnished rooms. AC, carpet. 1/2 bath.
BK furnished apartment, AC, carpet, 1/2 bath,
Near campus and down-town. Call 563-8550 or
www.ncsu.edu/campus.
Furnished one bedroom apartment near University
and 10 min walk to Cedar Ave. Multiple utilities paid with off street
water. No parking.
TRAILRIDE-Now leasing for Summer & Fall. Studios-huge, cheerful, large closets, quiet rooms. ASPARTAMENT-1-2, 3-4 bedroom, appliances include dishwasher, laundry in building, gas heat & water paid. TOWNHOUSES-2.3 & 4 bedroom, furniture included. 1/1 to 1/2 bath. Excellent maintenance services. 3 swimming pools, tennis, basketball, gymnasium. Centennial Park, on bus route 50. W 689-4344.
Unfurnished apartment available for immediate occupancy at Brady Apts. 1530 Tennessee. Newly remodeled, $720/month plus electric. 414-813-3920. No injuries or sickness on arrival. No injuries to summer or秋假 people.
FOR SALE
MASTERCRAFT offers completely furnished 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments all near Calgary. Call us at (604) 597-5800.
FITERED HIGH LOOKS good runs great. A/C
causes $250 vegetable Eric B. 841-358-Bee
causes $250 vegetable Eric B. 841-358-Bee
1965 Schmidt Mountain Bike-Relieved transportation with very few miles. Call 842 6893 after 2 p.m. 19 inch portable bicycle in vivid, dazzling color $790. Early availability 'best' 841-9844.
3 man dome tent with rain fly. Factory reconditioned. Only $10. Everything But Ice 16 & 48 inch.
A Zemith, 19 inch, color TV, Used for one year
$200. 2 chests of drawers, both $70. A dressing table, $40. a bed and 4 mattresses, all $160. A vacuum cleaner, $40. Call 79-4283.
BABY DEAN ELECTRIC GUITAR - Candy-apple
458-710 for nod. plus case; $500 first
458-710 for nod. For
B. C. Rich Warlock Bass with case, 2 Ludwig Hewitt Cymbal Stands. Palmats 562 ride and rade baseball cards and sport nontailgns Baseball cards and sports nontailgns Buy, Sell and Trade J. B's baseball cards: Open 10-8 M-S
Big Casio box-box/synthesizer $19.18e
record bicycle tool -10 mi. $33. Technic turnable,
linear tracking, programmable plus cartridge
$14.19m TIR ncr mini software $59.1-423.99
Big assignment of men's clothes. Like new.
1980 Clemson Citation 115, W 19th Wt. B4-600. 1980 Greenville Citation 115, W 19th Wt. B4-600.
BOOTSHIP brackets, front DEKAILERLITE, and SHIFTERS included. Call 864-8411 or 749-8410.
Cash immediately for automobile exhaust catalytic converters. We pick up and pay cash on time.
Comic Books, Playbills, Penthouses, etc. Max's
Cool Books, Playbills, Fri., Sat. & Sun 10-5-11
New Hampshire
For Sale: 1831 Schwimm Leturte, lots of extras,
great shape, $350. Call after five (811) 461-697.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from (U) Repurchase
additional tax property Call 609-697-6000
Loudspeaker Systems. Allison Sevenen $90 pair
Ailion eights, $00 pair. Cash only. 841-413 or
1413.
Must sell: Eagle AMC 181, 4 wheel drive, two doors, FM radio, air condition, wine-colored. 32,000 miles, in excellent condition. $900. Call 749-4263.
NIKKOR 50 mm 1.08, *66*. Access 35-70.3 Macro.
nikon Mount 90. $235. Chuck 84-3258.
**66.**
New fender telecarier electroic guitar. Dean
Mackley 20k Amp. Cry baby flex pedal.
Necessary cords $500. Neg. 381-9243. Ask for
Janet.
cost. A poster depicting German firms and their intermediaries. May have been found last semester. You have or have seen the vital asset to the German Dept., please call Chris M3-4666. Wool Hirringenbüro overcook and red scars. Lost Saturday night Feb. 18. 8:13-1772. David C.
RCA 18 inch B/W TV UHF, VHF, works good.
Best Offer 749-3283.
Western Civilization吼吼: Now on Sale! Makes sense to listen. An essay study for "School for the Improvement of Life." For a follow-up analysis of Western Civilization! available now at Town Creek, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and on the website www.westerncivilization.org.
Roland GFR70 guitar synthesizer, list at $3000,
ankling $1790, Alvarace double neck acoustic guitar.
10-1/2 lb boys, 7-7/1-2; Nordica; men's,
10-1/2-1 lb, dvenimish, 24.3; nage 843-566.
AUTO SALES
at $147, asking 800, 913-235-0447 (Topeka);
sbi boys books, 7-7-12; Nordic girls;
north american.
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
26 ft. acre, 3 bister, tape Deck, boom boxes and car stereo, all completely reconditioned and warranted. Lawrence Custom Radio, 914 W. 32nd St.
1975 Mustang II 4.2l v1.4d, A/C/AM/FM
caseless, new tires and brakes. Very dependable,
sharp looking, good MPG. At 14th & Kentucky.
8700, 749-0498 on 6 p.m.
10 'Toyota Celica, 2 door Coupe, 5 speed, fully equipped, A/C Cabin, 1800ml m³,40 mm, 765kg
HELP WANTED
1982 Toyota 4 x 4 S XR4 - p/s, p/b, a/c, am/fm
cassette. Caller B1-841-0943
1978 Honda Civic, 5 gpd, 60 miles, gray tundra,
upake, brake job. Excellent car. Christie
75 **FIREBIRD**-Runs great, looks good, 24 mmp,
timer & battery, AM/FM, cassette 1024
*
75 VV kabafi, TDABi, fuel-buil. $673
75 VV kabafi, rebuilt-carb, new fuel-buil. $773
71 Diazin, great engine, some need repair.
71 Diazin, great engine, some need repair.
1083 HMW 239-1 Baltic Blue AM-FM cassette, amd
1083 HMW 239-1 Baltic Blue AM-FM cassette,
amd
LOST/FOUND
*Moving Mant Sell*. 1902 Old-Mold Motul Station station motor car silver. Full Option. Just $788 *from*
Must sell 7* Yanda RX-7, runs great. AM/PM,
Cass. AAC 830 or best sale. 749-866 run.
Would love to know if there is a stock.
BRUSH RANCH CAMP for girls located in northeastern near Saan Fe N M, now hiring female camp counselors; drama, fencing, dance, music, tennis, swimming (eynys), and WBL and English Reading Post-Secondary. We are offering a team of trainedview held at U. A. March 24th, contact JamesCodon 509-759-6141 or w/ P.O. B40, Barao 509
Found-1 watch face at Watson Library on 02/26/2008. Check at Reference Dunk
Personalized JC license plate stolen.
I replicate, semicolon value, please return
Join the Fastest Growing Profession in Child Care Become a Nanny Summer employment or full-time
Personalized 2C license plate stolen 19
362-7486 7451 Switzer
Shawnee Mission, Ks.
Meet with our Coordinator in the Student Union Parlor A, Wednesday February 26,1-4 p.m. Georgetown Nursing Medical Resources Corp.
CASH DAILY. Dominic's Pizza is now accepting applications to hire 10 drivers. If you are a self-motivated, high energy person, you could become part of the World's No.1 Pizza Delivery Team. You will receive a daily. Our drivers make $5-$8 per hour and more. You must be 18 years or older, have a car, current driver's license and proof of insurance. Apply between 2-4 p.m. at 9th and 11th noon. Phone calls,
CRUISHIPS HIRING $16-$30.00 Carribbean, Hawaii, World! Call us for Guide, Cassette, Newservice! 918) 444-9444 X UAKANSASCRUISE.com www.uakansascruise.com Software Trainer! $50 per month. Duties include becoming a POCUS expert; design and deliver FOCUS training sessions for end users; maintain computerized data bases and their uses; experience using mainframes and letter of application, including the use of pattern
SUMMER WORK/JOHNSON COUNTY, TENNESSEE
to attend the April August.会议含了 door-to-door data collection. Car and driver's license required. For interview March 6, please contact June Kuntz.
GOVENMENT JOBS $16.90 up $25.90 up
Hiring Call 81-657-8670 Ext. R794 for current
SALES-SUPPORT MICRO- COMPUTERS
BUS. PERSONAL
Lawrence's largest computer store COMPUTER OUTLET, seeks a personable , aggressive sales person for NCR, Leading Edge, IBM, Sperry and Corona micro's. Work includes assembly and office responsibilities.
Requires micro familiarity. This is a long term position with tremendous growth potential.
Join the sharpest computer team in NE Kansas. Salary - commission.
Send resume to COMPUTER OUTLET,
804 New Hampshire,
Lawrence, KS. 66044.
EOE-MF
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Colorado Mountain Resort Employer is seeking male and female applicants for: Retail Sales, Food Service and other job duties. Please apply to the September. Located in Lakes Park, Colorado. For further information write: National Park Village North, c/o Mark Schiffermann, 740 Oxford Lane, Fort Worth, TX 76129.
SUMMER CAMP JOBS, North Minnesota.
Seeking qualified teachers & college students in music education. Apply to music head & assistants for archery, crafts, drama, rhythm beakhead and music director, boarding, secretary-drive, Mid-June to mid-August. Apply to Sherwood Forest Camp, ms 2nd A.E., N.W.
ABRINE HIRING BOOM! $143-$8,000
Stewardesses, Reservations! Call for Guide,
Casette, Newseevie, 19218; call for Guide,
Casette, Newseevie, 19218; time pay 8:00am,
full time. Time budget 8:000 - 8:000. Work for the
fastest growing co in American history. We训
distributors in Lawrence area: training provided.
Hire now at [website](http://www.arbinehiring.com).
NANIERS WANTED-Live-in child care for professional families in Boston. If you love children, we have the right job for your summer! Summer jobs are offered at: Branch, Branch, Boston, Mass; 02588, 0171-644-5154.
GOVMENTMEN JOBS. $14,600/29hr. $20wr.
Hiring Call 803-857-4000 Ext. R749 for current
810-8500 Weekly/Up Mailing Circulators! No 810-8500. Interestingly surfaced right self-addressed envelope, Success, P.O. Box #79CEG, Woodstock, H.II. numn
WANTED: ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTMAN for immediate full or part-time work in Overland Park area. 6 mo, experience necessary. Call (913) 825-4072.
A FU student from far East Orient seeks an girl for war relationship. Please reply to Nehal.
fashion eyeland
www.fashioneyeland.com
841-8100
Rit and Lawn Services
630 W. 17th St.
Town, NY 1710. Tel. (212) 595-1031
"the best online on eyeland"
Captain Energy says, "There are better ways to
spend your money. Help conserve energy."
E enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841-7740.
ON CAMPUS
of Ray Jr-see! ? see you had a first name? See if I adohny'a same booth. D.J.W
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
Jayhawker Towers
2-Br. Apts. for KU students
PONSITTE BEACH INN in the heart of the Port
LAUNDERATE street STUDENT discount
$100
- Individual Contract Option
- 9½-Month Leases
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors
- Academic Resource Center
- On Bus Line
- Air Conditioned Swimming Pool
- Laundry Facilities
- Free Cable TV
- Apply Now for Fall/Spring
- Furnished or Unfurnished
PERSONAL
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
COMPREHEXIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater
health area. Call for appointment
913-365-1400
SUNFLOWER BOOMS.
A
Spring Break Special
$50 plus deposit
HEAD, TYPOLA, PAICHLE
DOWNHILL SKI RENTALS
HEAD - TYROLIA - RAICHLE
843-5000
GAY/LESSHAIY: Need local information or want
address envelopes to TRANGLER TABLE. P. 6.
Telephone: (212) 457-9030.
Get a 12" custom made pizza with 1 Coke for only $4.99
Rent' 10% Rent' $ T. $28.00 a month. Curtis Mathews M. W. 3rd. B24-9754. Man. - Sat. 9-10:30
Blue Heron Futons
on
832 Iowa 1445 W.23rd.
841-8002 841-7900
WILD WEDNESDAY and FABULOUS FRIDAY
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattresses
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.-Sat. 12:5:30 p.m.
841-9443
This is an open offer No coupon required
GOVERY/MENT SURPULS: Raincoats, over-caps, field jackets, camouflage clothing, sleeping bags, tents, camping gear, much more. St. Mary's Surplus Sales. 1-437-3734.
All ceramic jewelry in
HAND-MADE JEWELRY
All ceramic jewelry in stock & other selected items
AFRICAN ADORNED
F 2th 843 1376
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa. I.D. and of course fairs.
Weekly Beer Special
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY
808 W.23rd
Feb. 26 - Mar. 4
30 min. FREE delivery or $3.00 off
Wiesdemann 12 pk $3.52
Pabst 12 pk $4.63
Black Label 12 pk $3.52
Coors Light 6 pk $2.69
Miller 12 pk $5.28
Open for lunch
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
STOP MAKING SENSE! Becoming an ERASERHEAD from studying? Is your brain hurt to LIQUID SKY Going HANAMAS FAGRING the way it should for hot video games. HUNGER for hot video games, wrap up your CRAWL-ING HAND and check out u out. LIBERTY HALL VIDEO-your video alternative. No membership. Open 12, 6 Mon.-Sat., 4 Sun. 64 Manas 79-192. Hunger is real. See the店. Available now at, aet. Shop. Ets. 752. Manas-843. 681. Floral lace, paisley lace, side formal, back seams, dangle dots, nail roses, shimmers and many others. $2.50 to $14.00. Quality Berkshire Hinterland. 11:30 - 5:30. 8 p.m.
Thousands of R A R albums—or less. Also collectors items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quintillus 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $ (U) repair.
Also偿付 tax property. Call 868-607-6000
or 868-615-3244.
"CAMP COUNSELORS. M/F - Outstanding Slim and Triven Camp Courses. Dance, Dance, Dance plus. Tennis, Tennis plus. Separate girls' and boys' camps. 7 weeks. Massachusetts. Pennsylvania. No, Carolina, California. Contact: Michael Friedman, Director, iHerb Dr. No. Woodmere, N.Y., 11581.
Warm sweat shirts, long sleeve T's. Custom printed Shirttart 749-1611.
**Loose Weight! Gain Weight! or Just Feel Goo**
HERBAL NUTRITIONAL PROGRAM gives good, basic sound nutrition. It everybody can use and sound naturally! Call us 913-828-6987 DuFine-Glass & Asn
MENU HOT LINI
864 - 4567
The Union's recording
(865) 234-1234
CLASSIFIEDS
of the day's entrees & soups.
Write ad here:
Modeling and theater portfolio— shooting in Beginner to Professional call for informa-
LEISANN/GAY SUPPORT GROUPS. For its
leisann/gay bios B1048 2nd floor Kram
Union or call 864-795-3041.
Class Ring Day—Why wait for the ring man who is ring day every day at Balfour House. 935 Mad
SERVICES OFFERED
Need. custom imprinted sweatshirts, 1-abl
glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an up-cor
event? J & M Favors offer the best quality
prices available on imprinted specialties p
speedy and reliable. You design it. We
provide. 202, W. 21 (Behind son's)
n81-4349
- Support Groups
**Rent* 18' Tour T. V. $239.96 a month. Smith's Y'**
1447 W. 23rd, 82-7531. Mon. 9-30; 9:00-9:00.
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Pan-
land, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, F
Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Anra-
n from only 800, and skiing at Steamboat or V
boating in the nearby lakes and bays,
bags, more..Hurry, call Sunshelle Tours for
information and reservations toll fro-
l-1800-321-5911 or contact a local Sunche-
n in Rockville, MD to arrange your Sper
break counts, or sunshade
G.L.S.O.K.
Free孕震 Counseling for the individual's or couple as well as for their families. Additior to the provided services, including family and adoption, Siding scale fee. Available for Birth, Adoption, and Special service P. Box 324, 329 Manhua 841-007-67
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services
Lawrence, 841-5716
BIRTHHIGH— Free Pregnancy Testing. C
idential Counseling 843-6213
- Speakers' Bureau
BLOOM COUNTY
- Resource Center
- Peer Counseling
- Legal- Medical Referrals
- Current Information
Current information
Stop by GLSOK office B104C
3rd floor Kansas Union or
cell 884-2001
THE FAR SIDE
Classified Heading:—
RESUMES-A professional resume can get 3% more job interviews. Let me write one for you 20%
MATH TUTOR - Bob Meurs holds an M.A. in入 from K.U. where 102, 116, 121 and 123 are the courses he taught. He began tutoring professionally in 1975 and often tutors elementa statistics at K.U. per 40 minute session. Call 823-94-6780 FEED UP FALKY WE LISTEN LEISSON; B23-V9/GCHEE PUBLICATIONS; Confidential GLSOK 804-3091, KU Info 804-5398, or Heo quarters 841-2435.
By GARY LARSON
THIS COW
BELOWS
TO DARRY
JAMES 20
HANDOUT
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
PSSBT!
RUKINDY!
WHAT?
SEE ANY GAME!
NOT YET.
by Berke Breathed
PANDED TRIP:
WARMINTS, THOSE
HUNTERS:
TRY YOUR
HUNTER
CALL.
LITE BEER!
PASS
THE LITE
BEER!
HERE,
THEY
COME!
1
Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1986
University Daily Kansan
13
TYPING
Classified Ads
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large.
And affordable type, Judy. 842-7948 or
www.socialmediacom.com
1-3-1- TRI Word PROCESSING experienced, connectionless, reliable. Reach jobs accepted. Call
1-2-3 Dependable, Accurate, Professional, WOLD
2-30 WOUNDING, waste, diarrhea, papers,
drugs, food, chemicals
24-Hour Typing, 10th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dissertation papers, Close to campus
in Lawrence. Mail resume to: Lawrence
University of Massachusetts
A professional typing, Term papers, Theses,
A1 preparation, Recourses, etc. using IBM Selective
Coding System.
A.L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term
papers. Phone 842-9657 after 5:30.
- **TPN MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS** Ex-
call Phone number. APA format经验.
Call Pu1.
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing
and editing. This book gives you "Same day
service" 844 illus. 959; same-day service
844 illus. 959.
A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850.
Accurate word processing, experienced.
MindWand location: 749-180
MindWand location: 749-180
Ace Wordprocessing Accurate, affordable,
friendly Proofreading, corrections, Resumes,
paper term, theses, dissertations, 24-hour service
available. One block from campus. 842-2576.
Sports
DO IT NOW
Then call Jennie to
TYPE IT
749-1837
Reasonable Rates, Fast, Editi-
nable, Deposit, Available
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAFFER— Typing Service.
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape:
843-8877
DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics, ONE-DAY Service
available on shorter student papers (up to
30 pages) *Call Kathy*, Mommie *Typhon*, 842-3878
Dissertations, Theses, Tern Paperings. Over 15 yrs.
experience. Phone 822-3109; after 5:30. BAR. B.A. ENGLISH TYPING-TUTORING. Great
correction, overnight service available. Great
communication.
Hakenson, 24-hour typing. IBM word processing.
Oracle and reliable service. Lvm 881-5584.
AlphaOmega Computer Services - Word Process-
ing/ Typing, Corrections, Proedding, Graphics,
Wordstar Document upgrading. Free estimates.
740-118
let me handle your typing needs. *Typed to your*
specification. Reasonable, 16 years experience.
Letter perfect papers and resumes. WRITING LIFELINE, 841-3469.
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, applications, Spliced corrected Cell Rep 624-7218
TYPIING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes Have M.S. Degree. 814-6254.
THE WORDCOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147
WANTED
EXPERIENCED TYPEB. Term paper, them
IBM Correcting Solicite. I will correct spelling,
grammar, and punctuation in the paper.
TYPING, Call 841-5804 evenings and weekends
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional wordpress
service. In-house testing. Dieses, letter
quality printing. eqs. 843-9002.
FEMEA ROOMMATE WANTED for new apartment close to $130/month 842-7959
Female roommate needles 2. B3rm duplex, washdry衣钩 up, garage yard. zard 414 plus 1/2
up.
For summer and/or fall, female roommate(s) for
specific roomsp. $410 plus 7/8 utilities
or $590 plus 2/3 utilities.
Housemate in 5-bedroom house, Peta. Furnished,
your own bedroom, $100 plus 1 us/unitile plus
$25 per room.
Mature individual needed to provide companion and complete homemaking tasks for homebound clients. Call Douglas County VNA 943-3738 EOE.
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Intramural agenda hectic before break
Two of their biggest annual events, the intramural basketball playoff and the International Olympics, are scheduled before March 6.
The remaining week and a half before spring break will be a busy time for the people in the Intramurals Office at Robinson Center.
By Robert Rebein Sports writer
The intramural basketball playoffs have been underway for the past two weeks. The championship games in each division will be played before March 6. Teams that haven't been eliminated have gone through a rigorous test, said John Johnson, graduate assistant for team sports.
The highest level of play, according to Johnson, is taking place in the Men's Greek and Independent Trophy Leagues.
"The best teams in both divisions have a lot of ex-juco players," he said. "I've officiated the league for three years and I think that our best intramural teams could compete with small college teams."
"We started out with over 200 teams in eight divisions," Johnson said, "so the teams we've got left are the serious competitors."
The players in these leagues take
Intramurals
"Sometimes I think they take the games too seriously," he said. "Some of the guys like to pretend they're playing for KU. They can get a little carried away. We've had some pretty tense moments out there."
the games very seriously, Johnson said.
Richardson's positive testing constituted a third offense under the NBA's anti-drug policy adopted $2 \frac{1}{2}$ years ago. After the two year period, Richardson can apply for reinstatement, but must be approved by the league and the NBA Players Association.
The Greek Trophy League champion will play the Independent Trophy champion for the Hill Championships March 6. The women will play at 4:55 p.m., the men at 7:30.
Stern said reinstatement was not automatic.
International Olympics will be Friday through Sunday in Robinson Center. Teams will compete in table tennis, badminton, volleyball, basketball and indoor soccer. Roberts said that about 12 teams had signed up to compete.
"In the past, it has been mostly foreign student organizations who have competed and won," Roberts said. Last year's winner was the Malavisian Student Association.
"This is a tragic day for Michael Ray Richardson," the commissioner said. "What we have here is a destruction by cocaine of a once flourishing career."
Times for the individual events are: table tennis and volleyball, 5 p.m. Friday; badminton, 7 p.m. Friday; basketball, 9 a.m. Saturday; indoor sport, 1:30 p.m. Sunday.
500 tickets available for Iowa State game
Sports Briefs
Padres pick Boros
Before Saturday's Kansas-Iowa State men's basketball game, 500 extra tickets will go on sale, Doug Vance, Kansas sports information director, said yesterday.
The game starts at 3:05 p.m. and the tickets will go on sale 30 minutes before tip-off at the athletic ticket office in the main lobby of Allen Field House.
'Hawks given break
The team will resume regular practices today in preparation for Saturday's final regular season game against Iowa State at 3:05 p.m. in Allen Field House.
The Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team earned a day off from practice yesterday after Monday's 87-80 conference victory over Oklahoma at Norman.
NEW YORK — New Jersey Nets guard Michael Ray Richardson has been banned from the National Basketball Association for at least two years after a drug test conducted Thursday proved positive,
NBA Commissioner David Stern
announced yesterday.
Richardson banned
Steve Boros, the San Diego Padres director of minor-league instruction, was named the Padres field manager yesterday, replacing Dick Williams. Boros signed a one-year contract for his new job.
Padres president Ballard Smith announced Boros' appointment in San Diego, after a meeting attended by both men, as well as Padres owner Joan Kroc and Jack McKeon, the club's vice president of baseball operations.
From staff and wire reports.
Seaver says this is final year in Chicago
From Kansan wires
SARASOTA, Fla. — Chicago White Sox pitcher Tom Seaver, who wants to be traded to an East Coast team, said he would play only one more season with Chicago.
Seaver confirmed Monday that he would like to play near his home in Greenwich, Conn., and said the statement was not a threat, but just a fact.
"I definitely want to be with
the Sever said of his family.
"It's my family."
White Sox general manager Ken Harrelson has been trying since he took the job last fall to trade Seaver to the New York Yankees, New York Mets, Baltimore Orioles or Boston Red Sox. But those teams, Harrelson says, are not offering enough talent in return for the 41-year-old future Hall of Famer.
Harrisonel said Boston was still talking to him about Seaver. Harrisonel said part of the problem in trying to make a deal for Seaver was that clubs were afraid that this would be his last season regardless of where he was playing.
But Seaver said Monday that he wouldn't retire if the situation was good.
"If I'm pitching well, I could see going another two or three years," he said.
Spring Training Round up
Kansas City Royals
FORT MYERS, Fla. — Kansas City pitcher Bret Saberhagen, a 20-game winner last year, was bothered yesterday by a sore arch at the Royals spring training camp.
Saberhagen's minor ailment is the second injury of the spring for the world champion team. Catcher Mike Macfarlane will be sidelined at least two months with a slight rotator cuff injury.
The Royals have 20 pitches and seven catchers in camp. The first full squad workout is scheduled Saturday.
New York Yankees
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- New York Yankee manager Lou Piniella yesterday chose Butch Wyngear as his No.1 catcher over Ron Hassey for this coming season.
There had been some question regarding the No. 1 catching job because Wynegar had been hobbled by two different injuries and batted only .223 last year while Hassey, who was recently traded to the White Sox then reacquired by the Yankees, batted .296 with 13 horners and 42 RBI in 29 games.
Citing Wynegar's injuries as a major reason for his slump at the plate, Pinilla also felt the switch-hitting, 30-year-old Wynegar was superior defensively to Hassey. New York Mets
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Veterans Keith Hernandez and George Foster arrived at the New York Mets training camp a day early yesterday and seemed more excited than ever about the team's chances for success.
"You have to be confident," said Hernandez. "We won 88 games last year, and it looks like we're better this year."
Foster, without mustache or sideburns for the first time in about 10 years, took some ribbing from his teammates for showing up the day before full-squad workouts were scheduled.
Cincinnati Reds
TAMPA, Fla. — The Cincinnati Reds"shortstop of the future" arrived at spring training yesterday.
Kurt Stillwell, 20, who is expected to challenge veteran Davey Concepcion, 37, for the starting shortstop job this season, reported to training camp two days early. Concepcion hadn't arrived in camp yet, but wasn't obligated to report until tomorrow.
Stillwell, who spent the past three
seasons in the minor leagues, was attending his first major league spring training.
Stillwell has just a half-season of experience above the Class A minor league level. A year ago, he was jumped from Class A to Class AAA, but he only played a half-season at Denver last summer, hitting 264 before he broke his right shinbone.
"I've never played up there, so I don't know what it takes, but that's what I'm here for, to go for it," said the native of Thousand Oaks, Calif. "I could get used to this, though. It's nice."
Even if Stillwell doesn't replace Conception this year, club officials think he will eventually succeed Conception.
Minnesota Twing
ORLANDO, Fla. — Minnesota Twins manager Ray Miller broke the monotony of drills on fundamentals and the drudgery of running a scrimmage game yesterday.
The six catchers and 18 pitchers in camp chose up sides for a loosely played game that one observer termed controlled chaos.
"These games fortify my belief in the designated hitter," Miller said as he watched his pitches flail away in the batter's box."
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THE ALEXANDER STORY
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14
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1986
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
C
THURSDAY, FEB. 27, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 106 (USPS 650-640)
Windy Details page 3.
Marcos in Hawaii to start exiled life
United Press International
HONOLULU — Ousted Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos arrived without ceremony at a restricted military base in Hawaii yesterday to begin a life of exile from the island nation he ruled for 20 years.
In contrast to the flag-waving crowds that had met him in the past as president, Marcos arrived quietly with his wife, Imela, and their entourage at Hickam Air Force Base aboard two U.S. Air Force C-141 Starlifers.
See related stories p. 10.
Docking Docking
The ailing Marcos, was helped down the six-step aircraft ramp and onto the tarmac, where he was given the traditional leis by a small group that included Hawaii Gov George R. Arivoshi and Lt Gov John Wainee.
Marcos, 68, dressed casually and wearing a golf cap, then walked unaided to a limousine and drove off in a fleet of seven vehicles to a group of cottages on the base. There were no speeches or band music during the 10-minute arrival.
"He will stay at the base temporarily until he decides what he wants to do and where he wants to go," said MaJ. Virginia Pribyla, spokesman for the Commander in Chief for the Pacific.
Ariyoshi, who met with Marcos for an hour, said the former Philippine president would stay at the base at least 24 hours, then may decide to spend some time in Hawaii. However, he emphasized that the former president was in Hawaii temporarily.
The governor said Marcos appeared spry and in good spirits.
Marcos has no real estate holdings in Hawaii but while visiting the islands in the past he stayed at the Honolulu homes of two supporters, Antonio Florirendo, known as the "Banana King" of the Philippines, and millionaire Bienenvenido R. Tantoco.
The island's Filipino community, which makes up about one-tenth of the state's population of 1 million, is divided over whether the deposed president should be given sanctuary in Hawaii.
Marcos had once enjoyed strong support in Hawaii because many of their Filipinos come from Marcos' home area of Iloos Norte.
Raul Rabe, consult general of the Philippine consulate in Hawaii, and six of his top aides were among the first consult personnel to withdraw support of Marcos and to pledge allegiance to the new Philippine government.
Marcos was carried onto the plane on a stretcher Tuesday for his flight from the Philippines to the U.S. administered Pacific island of Guam but appeared to have recovered his strength when he left hours later.
The former leader, who sur- rendered power Tuesday and left the government in the hands of the new Philippines president, Corazon Aquino, "looked very well rested and in good spirits, as was Mrs. Marcos," said acting Gov Edward D. Reyes of Guam, who saw the ex-president's party off.
Among the passengers on board the plane for the eight-hour flight to the base outside Honolulu, were Marcos's wife, his former military chief of staff, Gen. Fabian Ver, and Ver's wife.
He left with 88 relatives and supporters, headed for Hawaii and refuge in the United States, which asked him to step down Monday following a rebellion by top Filipino military leaders, who joined with thousands of civilians to drive him from the country.
Officials said they did not know how long the Marcos party would remain at Hickam or where they planned to go from there. Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said there have been discussions on the possibility of Marcos staying in Hawaii.
Speakes said Marcos had his personal physician with him and seemed to be regaining his strength.
There have been reports that Marcos is suffering from degenerative kidney disease and a dialysis machine was found in his palace when it was overturn by Aquino supporters Tuesday.
An extra detachment of Marines augmented normal security at Andersen Air Base.
Mark Mohler/KANSAN
TOPEKA — Victoria Morales, a lifetime Topeka resident, shows her support for Lt. Gov Tom Docking Docking, a Democrat, was at the Capitol yesterday to announce officially his intention of running for Kansas governor.
Tom Docking opens his bid to be governor
By Mark Siebert Staff writer
As expected, Lt. Gov. Tom Docking officially announced his intention to run for Kansas governor yesterday morning at the Eldridge House, Seventh and Massachusetts streets.
Docking, whose father and grandfather were Kansas governors, is the first Democratic candidate to announce candidacy in the governor's race that will be decided in November.
The announcement was not a surprise. He had been hinting he would run for some time, but more than 150 showed up to cheer Docking as he began the second day of his initial campaign tour.
Docking said improvements in public education and farm economy would be important campaign issues.
"As we enter the fight for the future, our biggest weapon is the Kansas strength and the Kansas traditions that have carried us this far and will carry us further still," he said.
A band played "Happy Days Are Here Again" as Docking greeted guests and moved through the crowd to make his announcement.
"I am on my way to Topeka today to declare my candidacy for governor of this great state," he said.
Docking, a native of Lawrence, earned a bachelor's degree in economics and political science from the University of Kansas in 1976. He later earned a law degree and a master's degree in business from KU.
Docking said he was grateful for the lessons he learned in Lawrence and was anxious for the future.
"Today marks the beginning of the most critical round in the fight for the future of our state and of our children." he said.
After the Lawrence engagement, Docking flew to Topeka, where he announced his candidacy at the Capitol.
In Topeka, Docking praised his father, Robert Docking, and grandfather, George Docking. But Docking said he did not want to depend on the accomplishments of his family.
"I stand here before you today as Tom Docking — my own man," he said. "And while I am thankful for the wisdom, experience and insight I learned from these men, from this day forward, I run on my own."
About 350 supporters and onlookers carried signs and chanted Docking's name.
He also made campaign stops in Overland Park and Kansas City, Kan. Announcements in Pittsburg, Salina, Dodge City and Hays are planned for today.
NASA flaw cited at shuttle hearing
United Press International
"It seems to me that there was a failure in the process," Chairman William Rogers said after hearing testimony that the warnings never were forwarded up the chain of command to the shuttle launch directors.
WASHINGTON — A flaw in NASA's decision-making process let Challenger fly last month despite warnings from some engineers that its rockets might be unsafe in cold weather, the chairman of the Rogers commission said yesterday.
See related story p. 11.
Two middle-level rocket managers for the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration testified that had they known the extent of reluctance among Morton Thiokol Inc. engineers, they might have asked for a flight delay.
The space agency officials, George Hardy and Lawrence Mulloy, acknowledged that they challenged Thiolok's initial recommendation not to launch in cold weather, but they denied that their complaints pressured four Thiolok vice presidents to reconsider and agree to launch.
The concern of Thiolok engineers was that the record cold spell at Cape Canaveral, Fla., might harden the crucial O-ring seals in rocket segment joints to the point they might
See DOCKING, p. 5, col. 3
fail to prevent the escape of 5,900-degree gases, triggering an explosion.
"I would hope that simple logic would suggest that no one in their right mind would knowingly accept increased flight risks for a few hours of schedule," Hardy told the
Hardy, deputy director of science and engineering at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., said any suggestion that safety was disregarded by NASA does a great disservice to many dedicated, committed professionals.
Challenger's right-hand booster rocket ruptured and the shuttle blew up 73 seconds after launch Jan 28, killing its crew of seven.
presidential commission investigating the disaster.
Stan Reinartz, manager of the shuttle project at Marshall, said it was he who decided not to inform NASA officials higher up the chain of command about concern over weather effects on the rocket seals.
"In hindsight, it may have been better to inform level 2," Reinartz said in the second of three days of hearings on the events leading up to the shuttle catastrophe. Level 2 is the management level within NASA that has ultimate responsibility for clearing a shuttle for flight.
Rogers, secretary of state under Richard Nixon and attorney general under Dwight Eisenhower, question-
Reinartz said he was not aware of the dissent among Thiolokl's engineering staff or memos written last summer by Thiolok engineer warning of serious problems with the synthetic rubber O-rings used to seal rocket joints.
ca Remartz repeatedly about his failure to inform higher-ups about the issue.
"Doesn't the process require some judgment?'" asked Rogers. "Wouldn't common sense require that you tell decision makers about this serious problem?"
Reinartz replied, "I felt that the Thiolot and Marshall people had fully examined that concern and it had been satisfactorily dispositioned."
New laws may restrict spring break fun
NACIONAL PROBIBITION ON BEACH.
UNIVERSITY DAVID KAUFMAN
By Barbara Shear Staff writer
Thousands of college students, weary after half a semester of hard work and cold weather, flock to the beaches of Florida in search of one week of sun and fun.
The ordinance was passed last summer in Fort Lauderdale, Daytona Beach, Fla., has had a similar ordinance for 10 years.
But this police, in Florida are trying to keep the fun under control.
After two alcohol-related deaths and thousands of complaints from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., residents last spring break, the community passed an ordinance banning open containers on public beaches.
"The ordinances are used more as crowd management," Ott Cefkin, media relations director for the Fort Lauderdale Police Department, said yesterday. "We can't arrest thousands of people. We just hope to ease the crunch."
Cefkin said that one student died last year after he fell out of a car. Another was hit by a car as she crossed a street near the beach.
After spring break last year, he said, residents of the resort community complained about students blowing horns, screaming, throwing up on residents' doorsteps and
urinating on lawns and about the condition of the beach.
"The beach smelled like a brewery and looked sleazy." he said. "Things just got way out of hand."
This year, the police department plans to increase their force tenfold, he said. They are receiving extra assistance from the county.
"We think most people will abide by the ordinance but we don't know what to expect," he said. "We want everyone considered. It can't hurt."
Paul Scheer, Lenexa senior, said that when he went to Fort Lauderdale last year, students just ran around and were out of hand.
"There are so many people, police really can't control them," he said. "I only saw two people arrested. One threw a bottle of a ledge and the other was passed out on the street. I don't think things will change this year. They're just trying to scare people."
Although Daytona Beach has had its ordinance for 10 years, it recently began sending lists of rules to universities across the country outlining ordinances and rules that it hopes students will obey while on spring break there, said Lt. Richard Zalewski, a member of the Daytona Beach Police Department.
"Although we do have a certain amount of arrests, we don't have that many problems," he said. "We do increase our forces 100 percent, though."
Stephen Szabo, communication sergeant for Daytona Beach police, said the penalty for having an open container containing alcohol was $250 and a maximum of 10 days in jail. However, most people pay a $35 to $50 fine.
"Last year, we drank on the beach every day and there wasn't a problem," he said. "With so many people, police can't enforce it with everybody. If students are discreet, they can have a great time. There are always ways around the ordinance. Students are devious people; they can figure out a way around it."
South Padre Island, Tex., does allow open containers on the beaches, but no glass.
Tim Ransford, Chicago senior and a campus representative for a Daytona Beach spring break trip, said some students had asked him about the open container ordinances but most were concerned about the legal drinking age, which became 21 this summer.
KU professor joins council on the aging
Staff writer
Russell C. Mills, director of the Long-Term Care Gerontology Center at the Med Center, was nominated by Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole on Dec. 18.
A professor at the University of Kansas Medical Center was the first person appointed to the Federal Council on the Aging under a new appointment process.
By Lynn Maree Ross
Although council members are not paid for their work, they must take an oath of office.
Dorcas Hardy, assistant secretary of Human Development Services, swore Mills into office Tuesday in Washington.
Dole was able to nominate Mills under a new process that allows the Senate and the House to nominate candidates for the council. Previously only the president was authorized to make nominations.
Mills returned to Kansas City yesterday after his first two-day session with the council. He said the appointment was an honor.
"it hadn't really expected it," Mills said. "It's a very distinguished group."
Mitch Rose, press assistant to Dole, said yesterday that Dole nominated Mills for the position because of his record as the director of the Gerontology Center and his connection to Kansas.
In addition to his work at the Gerontology Center. Mills is also president of the national council on Long-Term Care Gerontology Centers and has worked with various state units on aging.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig, in a prepared statement, said, "Dr. Mills does an outstanding job as the director of the Long-Term Care Gerontology Center.
'ire is widely recognized in this region as a leading advocate for older citizens and as an innovative leader in this rapidly expanding area.'
See AGING, p. 5, col. 3
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Thursday, Feb. 27, 1986
News Briefs
Smith College sit-in enters its third day
NORTHAMPTON, Mass. — Dozens of Smith College students yesterday gave no sign of leaving the administration building, which they took over Monday to protest the school's investments in South Africa.
Students at the elite women's school renewed their vow to hold College Hall until the school agreed to divest the $22.3 million it has invested in companies which do business with South Africa.
Smith trustees voted over the weekend against complete divestiture.
20 poisoned in Haiti
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Members of ousted dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier's private army poisoned the water supply of a northern town, Port-de-Paix, killing 20 people, radio reports said.
The reports, which could not be confirmed, came amid fears that former Ton Tons Macoutes members were seeking revenge against civilians whose violent protests forced Duvalier to flee Feb. 7.
American Airlines and Eastern Airlines canceled flights to Haiti yesterday.
WASHINGTON — Navy Cmdr. Donal Billig, 55, the former chief of heart surgery at Bethesda Naval Hospital, was convicted in a court-martial yesterday of involuntary manslaughter and negligence in the deaths of three of his patients, and of 19 counts of dereliction of duty.
Surgeon convicted
Billig faces dismissal from the Navy, up to 11 years, nine months in prison and other possible fines and penalties.
Ruth's a Pepper, too
DALLAS — Coca-Cola officials say they won't alter Dr Pepper's "out of the ordinary" advertising campaign, which features Ruth Westheimer joining company President John Albers in giving away millions of cans.
The "good soda" ads follow Westheimer's "Sexually Speaking" radio-show format, focusing on people seeking help with some provocative diet-drink problems.
From Kansan wires.
Reagan defends military spending
United Press International
WASHINGTON President Reagan said yesterday that any effort to cut back Pentagon spending from the $311 billion in his new budget was dangerous, and he warned that the strength of the United States was in jeopardy.
While saying the nation had made considerable progress in the past five years — in which $1.2 trillion has gone into military spending — Reagan said the "hard, cold reality of our defense deficit" demanded nothing less than the amount he is seeking for fiscal year 1987.
Further, he maintained, it was his rearming of the nation that forced the Soviet Union to think seriously about cutting nuclear arsenals.
"Now that the Soviets are back at the table, we must not undercut our negotiators," he argued.
The $311 billion amounts to an 8.2 percent increase over present spending levels and would represent the first payment on a new five-year military spending program that carries a price tag of $1.8 trillion.
Reagan, speaking to a nationwide television audience from the Oval Office, said large military imbalances still remained between the United States and Soviet Union. And he bluntly put congressional foes on notice that he would fight for every dime in his latest spending outline.
Going over the politicians' heads to the people, the president said, "I will never ask you for what isn't needed. I will never fight for what isn't
Reagan's speech was his first devoted exclusively to defense since his March 1983 address, in which he announced his Star Wars plan to build a high-tech anti-missile defense that would make nuclear weapons obsolete. That project is being researched and still is the subject of fierce debate.
necessary. But I need your help. . . "
Last night's speech contained no new initiatives. The president opened his talk with his first spoken remarks on the overthrow of Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos, saying, "We salute the remarkable restraint shown by both sides to prevent bloodshed during these last tense days."
"Our hearts and hands are with President Aquino and her new government as they set out to meet the challenges ahead," Reagan said, never referring to Marcos — whose 20-year rule ended abruptly with the withdrawal of U.S. support this week.
Marcos resigned Tuesday as support for a new government under
A senior administration official, speaking with reporters, said the speech was designed to kick off debate on the defense budget, and when questioned about its allegedly defensive tone replied, "It is an effort to sell the defense budget."
Corazon Aquino became overwhelming.
President Hosni Mubarak, facing his worst domestic crisis since the assassination of Anwar Sadat in 1981, pronounced the insurrections crushed at an emergency Cabinet meeting yesterday evening.
country is going to have a useful debate on national security, we have to get beyond the drumbeat of propaganda and get the facts on the table."
Pointing to an approaching clash on Capitol Hill over the 1987 budget — the first to come under full pressure from the Gramm-Rudman balanced budget law — Reagan said, "If our
Pitching for the 8.2 percent defense increase while most domestic programs face cuts, Reagan said, "The biggest increases in defense spending are behind us."
He said he accepted a defense freeze last year with 3 percent real growth scheduled for this year, only to have it result in a reduction because of the Gramm-Rudman law.
Diplomatic sources said many people apparently were killed or wounded, but they had no exact figures. The newspaper Al Akhbar said 64 people were wounded and hospitalized in Giza, 10 miles south of the capital.
Troops crush Egypt revolt; hotels burn
Two army helicopters fired rockets at the Giza police camp and tanks moved into the burned hotel section to crush the riot, the semi-official Al Ahram newspaper.
"Instead of a freeze, there was a sharp cut—a cut of over 5 percent," he said. "And some are now saying that we need to chop another $20, $30, even $50 billion out of national defense."
United Press International
CAIRO, Egypt — Army troops using tanks and rocket-firing helicopters crushed a revolt by police conscripts yesterday in which the mutineers burned down three luxury hotels on the avenue to the pyramids, the semi-official Al Ahram newspaper said.
The mutiny, which erupted at police ccnspark consept the Giza Pyramids south of Cairo, spread to other camps as far south as Suhag, 300 miles from the capital, and to Ismailia, 90 miles north of Cairo.
Up to 60 foreigners, including as many as 130 Americans, were evacuated from the Holiday Pyramid, Holiday Sphinx and Jolie Village hotels, a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy said.
U.S. won't link summit to arms
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The administration yesterday rejected Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's suggestion that the timing of the next summit should be tied to progress at the arms control negotiating table.
President Reagan later, in a nationally televised address on defense, put the burden for arms control progress on the Kremlin but did not touch on the latest wrinkle in U.S.-Soviet relations and the possible challenge to a second superpower summit.
Reagan noted that U.S. negotiators presented his latest plan for eliminating intermediate-range nuclear missiles to the Soviets at the Geneva negotiating table this week.
"And we are pressing the Soviets for cuts in other offensive forces as well." he said.
State Department and White House spokesmen earlier said about Gorbache's suggestion, "That kind of linkage simply won't work."
State Department spokesman Bernard Kalb said Reagan made a serious response to Gorbachev's Jan. 15 initiative proposing complete
elimination of nuclear weapons by the year 2000.
But Gorbachev, in an address to the 27th Congress of the Soviet Communist Party in Moscow on Tuesday, attacked Reagan's response, which proposed the elimination of U.S. and Soviet medium-range nuclear weapons from Europe and Asia during a three-year period.
"General Secretary Gorbachev seems to have missed a central point in the president's letter," Kalb said. "As the president said Monday, we are pleased that the Soviet Union now appears to agree in principle with our
ultimate goal of moving to the total elimination of nuclear weapons when this becomes possible."
The Soviet Embassy held an unusual news conference to promote Gorbachev's speech, his first to a party congress since succeeding Konstantin Chernenko almost a year ago. For the most part, three Soviet diplomats referred reporters to Gorbachev's speech.
In that address, Gorbachev said he found it hard to detect in Reagan's response "any serious preparedness of the U.S. administration to get down to the cardinal problems."
Tylenol capsule found near body Cvanide claims victim in Tennessee
United Press International
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A man found dead with a single capsule of Extra-Strength Tylenol under his bed was killed by a massive dose of cyanide, the Nashville area medical examiner reported yesterday.
The level of cyanide found in the remains of Timothy Green, 32, was 20 times the lethal dose, Medical Examiner Charles Harlan said, but he stopped short of saying the poison came from a Tylenol capsule.
from," he said, but he noted that the Tylenol bottle smelled of cyanide and that traces of material that appeared to be cyanide were in the only remaining capsule.
"At this time we have not determined where the cyanide came
Hours later, the FBI in Washington said it had discovered that the cyanide involved in two New York cases earlier this month had been introduced into the capsules after the packaging process.
The Nashville capsule was in the hands of the state crime laboratory, and Harlan said it would be given to the Food and Drug Administration for testing.
The FDA said it would send the
capsule to its labs in Cincinnati as soon as it was received from the state crime lab. The FDA said no results of tests could be expected before late today at the earliest.
Green, a Minnesota native, was found Sunday on his bed in the apartment where he lived alone. Harlan said he had been dead four or five days.
Tests on the remains were negative for alcohol and drugs - including acetominophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol, Harlan said.
He said that could mean that Green did not take a Tylenol, or the Tyienol could have been
removed from the capsule and replaced with cyanide.
The FBI moved into the case and the Tennessee Health Department issued a ban on the sale of whatever Tylenol capsules might remain for sale in the state.
The Health Department also warned that Tylenol in capsule-form must not be taken by anyone and that the capsules not be disposed of but retained.
Johnson & Johnson, makers of Tylenol, refused to discuss whether the bottle came through the same distribution point as the cyanide-tainted bottles found earlier this month in New York.
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In another scene, a man and a woman sit in a chair. The man is wearing a plaid shirt and shorts, while the woman is wearing a striped top and skirt. They are both smiling at each other, enjoying their time together.
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
New board members announced by SUA
Student Union Activities announced last week the selection of its new board members for the 1986-87 year.
Mike Lauer, Seneca junior, was named president, and Mike Brown, Overland Park junior, was named vice president, Margaret Palmer, Independence junior, was named the new secretary, and John Heeney, Topeka junior, was named treasurer.
Gary Price, Wilmette, Ill., junior, was named board member in charge of films, and Victor Osmolak, Glenview, Ill., junior, was named board member in charge of forums. Charles Palmer, Independence freshman, was named indoor recreation board member, and Peggy Brien, Lenexa sophomore, was named fine arts board member.
Brent Padgett, Greenleaf junior, was named outdoor recreation board member, and Jennifer Dunbar, Gillette, Wyo., senior, was named public relations board member.
Steve Traxler, Overland Park sophomore, was named special events board member, and Ty Drake, Los Angeles sophomore, was named travel board member.
2 stipends created
Two new Chancellors Club teaching professorships have been created by the Kansas University Endowment Association's executive committee, the Endowment Association announced yesterday.
Chancellors Club professors
receive $5,000 in stipends each year
One professorship will be filled at the Lawrence campus and the other will be filled at the University of Kansas Medical Center or the University of Kansas School of Medicine at Wichita. Recipients will be announced at convocation in August.
Nominees should be faculty members at one of the campuses. The office of academic affairs will distribute information about nomination procedures.
Applicants are judged on teaching ability, use of innovative and thorough teaching materials, and recognition of excellence by students and colleagues.
Bomb threat at store
Customers were evacuated from a Dillon's grocery store, 1312 W. Sixth St. Tuesday afternoon after the store received a bomb threat. No bomb was found, Lawrence police said yesterday.
Police said the store received a call at about 3:20 p.m. claiming a bomb had been planted in the store. The store was evacuated then.
Art Werth, manager of the store,
said police searched the store for
about 40 minutes before they
determined there was no bomb.
Customers then were allowed into
the store, he said.
Weather
Today will be mostly cloudy and windy with a high temperature in the mid-40s. Northerly winds will gust at at 15 to 25 mph. Tonight should be clearing with a low temperature in the lower 20s. Tomorrow will be sunny with a high temperature of 40 to 45.
From staff and wire reports
Groups aim to perfect skits for opening night
Rock Chalk
By Monique O'Donnell
Staff writer
It's a competition, a show, an entertaining spoof and a lot of hard work for the ten groups who've combined efforts for the 1986 Rock Chalk Revue.
Ten fraternities and sororites will perform five 17-minute musical skits starting at 7:30 tonight, tomorrow night and Saturday night in Hoch Auditorium.
The work began in September when various groups who wanted to participate submitted their ideas for the performances to a jury. The groups were given the theme "Games People Play" and had to
The Delta Chi fraternity and Alpha Delta Pi sorority came up with the skit "Neuron My Mind." The 46 performers are in groups wearing yellow, green, lavender, blue and red costumes. Each color represents a part of the brain.
compose a musical performance to match the theme.
Clint Van Trease, Garden City freshman and performer in the act, said the story was about a boy and a girl who spot each other in class; their emotions are mixed. Some parts of their brains try to get them together while other parts try to break them apart.
"Finally all girl and boy neurons get mixed together," Van Tarese
said. "We've spent a lot of late nights working on the act and I think it looks really good."
Scott Swenson, KU graduate and producer, said there were still some rough edges in the performances. But he thought the performers would derive a lot of energy from having a live audience and would improve the performance.
"Rock Chalk is supposed to be a spoof," Swenson said. "It's kind of a vaudeville performance, rather than a polished kind of 'Chorus Line' production. That's part of what makes this fun for the performers and the audience alike."
uniform and long blond wig. He said his parents would attend Saturday night's performance and probably would be a little surprised to see his costume. Kennedy will perform in the Phi Delta Theta-Kappa Kappa Gamma show, "Back To Pair O' Dice."
"It been a fantastic experience, but I really have to hit the books next week," Kennedy said. "We've been rehearsing late for the last couple of weeks."
The other segments of the show are "Chariots Afire," The Kappa Psi-Alpha Chappa Omega; "Bunge in the Jungle," Kappa Sigma-Gamma Phi Beta; and "Picking Up the Pieces," Delta Upsilon-Kappa Alpha Theta.
The revue also has five In Between Acts.
But the groups consider the time and effort worthwhile. Sixty percent of the proceeds will be donated to the Lawrence United Fund. The remaining 40 percent will be used first to meet production costs and a provide a donation for the band. What still remains will be divided among the groups to cover their expenses.
Ron McCurdy, director of the band accompanying the performance, said that three years ago, Rock Chalk Revue's band performance was organized as a class.
b
Harmonizers '86 Revue's added stars
"Having it as a class makes for a better, more consistent performance." McCurdy said.
By Alison Young Special to the Kenne
Special to the Kansan
Harmonic Function, a group of four creoons who will perform in tonight's Rock Chalk Revue, couldn't even get an audition for the show two years ago. This year they are one of its highlights, a Rock Chalk director said recently.
Pam Jones, Rock Chalk In-Between Acts co-director, said Harmonic Function, an a capella vocal ensemble, and Rex Boby, juggler and comedian, would be featured in the variety show. This will be the first time in the show's 33-year history that acts not formed specifically for the show will perform as part of the In-Between Acts.
Scott Swenson, Rock Chalk producer, said that originally skepticism had arisen about the format change. In the past, a troupe of dancers and singers were the only preformers in the In-Between Acts.
Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Phi Delta Theta fraternity per-
Harmonic Function sings original arrangements of songs from the late '50s and '60s.
"Big Chill stuff," Marty Wall, Parkville,Mo., senior and member of the group.said.
In his Rock Chalk act, he will juggle items such as a bowling ball, a tennis racquet, and clubs. He also incorporated basketballs into his routine in honor of the Javhaws.
Steve Smith, Kansas City, Kan., freshman; Richard Turner, Kansas City, Kan., senior; and Lennie Wesley, Wichita junior, are the other members of the group.
Boyd, an Overland Park sophomore, is a professional juggler and has performed at nightclubs in Westport in Kansas City, Mo., and has done street theatre in the Kansas City area and Chicago.
Craig Sands/KANSAN
Jones said. "We've tried to bring in people who wouldn't usually be in Rock Chalk Revue. We want to involve as many parts of campus as possible."
Wall said an audition was set up two years ago, but Rock Chalk officials did not show up for the
Auditions were held in November for individual acts and In-Between Acts troupe members.
appointments.
John Allison, Rock Chalk executive director, said he didn't know of that instance, in but past years, InBetween Acts were not open to individual acts.
form during dress rehearsal for Rock Chalk Revue
Jones said it took a lot of encouragement and several phone calls to get the group to audition this year.
Turner said, "Rock Chalk was our ultimate dream."
Harmonic Function received an enthusiastic response at first run
through of the show Sunday night. Within the first few bars of their opening number, "Under the Boardwalk," there were cheers and whistles from the audience of about 200 cast members. And for each of the two songs that followed, they were given standing ovations.
The group does not use sheet music and only one member, Wesley, has had formal vocal training.
For both Harmonic Function and Boyd, Rock Chalk is the biggest performance of their careers.
Boyd, who has performed at Stanford & Sons in Westport and at the Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs, said Rock Chalk would be a good chance to improve his skills as a performer. He plans to spend next year performing his act on the streets of Chicago and New York.
Jones said she was pleased with Bovid's act.
"He's very crowd-adaptable," she said.
Pro-choice groups oppose abortion bill
Staff writer
By Abbie Jones
TOPEKA — Pro-choice advocates huddled in the corner of a packed Senate committee room yesterday preparing for day two of testimony on a bill requiring parental consent for minors to get abortions.
The Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee heard opponents of an amendment that would require girls under the age of 18 to obtain consent of their parents for abortions.
On Tuesday, the committee heard testimony from proponents of the bill, many of whom said that girls under 18 were not old enough to make a decision to have an abortion.
Melissa Ness, a law student at Washburn University in Topeka and a board member of the National Abortion Rights Action League in Washington, yesterday said, "This is strictly an attempt to constrict the rights of minors to obtain an abortion.
"Adolescents are a group of few rights and remedies under our existing laws."
said the committee could debate and take action on the bill Monday or Tuesday.
State Sen. Ed Reilly, Jr., R-Leavenworth,
The bill also prohibits performing an abortion after the first trimester of pregnancy or in anywhere other than a hospital or licensed surgical center.
The bill says an aggravated criminal abortion is one performed by anyone other than a doctor or without first obtaining the written consent of the parents in custody of the minor.
Ness said some minors were victims of incest and may need the medical alternative. She did not agree with anti-abortion pleas that the bill would help family communication.
"A parent's right to know in comparison pales to the adolescent's need to obtain sound medical advice." she said.
Adele Hughey, executive director for Comprehensive Health Associates of Overland Park, park said appearing before a judge could slow the process and cause more second trimester abortions that may be more dangerous.
Under the bill, any minor who wants an abortion has the alternative of going to a district court judge, who may waive the consent requirement. If a medical emergency exists, the parental and judicial consent may be waived.
"Going before a judge is not going to help the family." Hughey said.
Mike Cavell, a member of Kansans For Life who testified before the committee Tuesday, said yesterday that a minor would appear before a judge no later than 10 days after she filed for the judicial waiver.
"I see no problem in allowing a little lee time for the child to be counseled." Cavell said.
Pat Goodson, a spokesman for the Right to Life of Kansas who spoke at the beginning of yesterday's meeting, said the committee should strike the emergency portion of the bill because it took away parental powers.
"Right to Life of Kansas strongly believes in the right for parents to counsel their child," she
The penalty for conducting an aggravated abortion would be made a class B felony under
Anne Moriarty, a lobbyist for the Kansas National Organization for Women, said groups on opposing sides of the issue should work together to take steps to stop unwanted pregnancies before they start.
Class D felonies are punishable by a minimum sentence of no less than one year. Class B felons receive a minimum sentence of no less than five years.
"Abortion is not the problem," she said. "Sex is not the problem. Teenage pregnancy is the problem."
the proposed bill. Present law says it is a class D felony.
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"Let's not get in a hurry," Ott said. "Let's see what the Supreme Court will say."
Belva Ott, public affairs director for Planned Parenthood of Kansas, said the committee should wait for legislation nationally regarding parental consent.
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4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Thursday, Feb. 27, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Kansas Board of Regents decided last week that sometimes the best stand to take is no stand at all.
Don't give preference
The Regents took the easy way out by refusing to take a stand on whether contributors to state universities should get preferential treatment in season-ticket sales to athletic events.
The Legislative Educational Planning Committee had asked the Regents to take a stand.
In simpler terms, the system means those who pay the biggest bucks get the best seats.
er the Regents to take a stance. In ducking the issue, the Regents declared that each school should continue to set its own policy on the matter. But the Regents should have taken a stand, and that stand should have been against preferential treatment.
It is not fair to those who are willing to pay full price for a season ticket to have to sit farther back than those who have more money to spend. One
board member said he had purchased KU season tickets since 1955 and had seen his seat moved farther back each year.
Seats at a ballgame are not items that a university should auction off to the highest contributor. They should be available on a first-come, first-served basis, with everyone paying the same price for the same seats.
Good seats at Jayhawks' games also should not be a carrot held in front of the nose of potential donors to get them to give more. The Williams Fund sent letters last spring telling some Williams Fund ticket holders that in order to keep their seats, they would have to increase their donations.
While enrollment at other schools around Kansas is dropping, KU enrollment keeps going up. In fact, a 1976 prediction that enrollment would stabilize at about 16,000 by this time has proven to be far understated.
Contributors to the University are a valuable, needed resource. But their contributions should not give them privileges at the expense of other members of the University community.
People are always looking for the best deal for their money, and the University of Kansas is just that.
Even though the numbers of high school students have been declining, the numbers at the University rose to a record high this year.
University is a great buy
The enrollment increases should be a sign that the University is doing something right. In the midst of complaints of too little money and too little emphasis on
academics, more than 25,900 students chose to spend their education dollars here.
And these students' dollars ought to bring more from the state. The more money KU brings in through its students, the more likely the Kansas Legislature is to open its pocketbook. High enrollment this spring should be reflected in the amount of money allocated to the University years down the road.
The University deserves a pat on the back. Its faculty and students have helped make KU one of the best places to go for a good education at a reasonable price.
Those in the market for a good buy should take a second look.
Exploitative shuffle
Call it the university athletic shuffle.
Recruit them, shuffle them through the system and hope they make it to the pros when they leave. If not, well too bad.
Recently, Jan Kemp, a teacher at the University of Georgia, won a $2.58 million suit against the university for speaking out against that university's shuffle.
She eventually was fired for speaking out against the preferential treatment of Georgia's athletes.
Her victory over the university should catch the attention of universities throughout the country that recruit athletes simply on the basis of whether they can play ball yet overlook their academic abilities.
At many universities, it doesn't matter whether athletes are able to compete in the classrooms as long as they can compete on the field.
She was demoted from her position as coordinator of the English section of Georgia's Developmental Studies Program to a position as a remedial English teacher.
Many athletes in revenue- producing sports - basketball
and football are used by universities as a means of producing profit.
They're shuffled in to play and to play their best. When their playing eligibility is up, they're shuffled out. If they don't make it to the pros, they're out of luck. Some leave those universities barely able to read or spell.
The Georgia case reveals the massive exploitation of athletes who are often used as raw material in the shuffle board and spat out at the other end. Many get nothing in return.
When athletes, sometimes called students, leave their universities, they should be able to use what they've learned and find jobs.
One athlete dropped out of Georgia after three years in its remedial academic program and took a job working on a garbage truck.
"Did you notice that the verdict came down on Lincoln's birthday?" Kemp said. "I don't know if it's symbolic or not, but he freed the slaves and that's what I'm trying to do, too."
News staff
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OH, DARN, THERE GOES THE PLANE AGAIN! WOULD YOU EXCUSE ME A MOMENT? WITH ALL THESE CUTBACKS, IT'S SO HECTIC BEING A PILOT AND A FLIGHT ATTENDANT!
Pulling off a media snow job
Soviets manipulate U.S. journalists
No news is good news, and distorted news is even better.
Or so says the Soviet government. Their actions prove it; their doctrine demands it.
Their totalitarian society has all but turned Western correspondents into political propaganda echo machines.
Two former Moscow correspondents explain why this situation exists.
While some may say it's all the Soviet's fault, the final blame rests squarely upon the shoulders of the Western media.
Former Moscow correspondent for Newsweek, Andrew Nagorski, has written a book, "Reluctant Farewell," which analyzes the role of Moscow correspondents. He says that most of what we read, see and hear about the Soviet Union is exactly what the Soviet regime wants us to believe.
He says, "During my tenure in Moscow, an Associated Press correspondent estimated that 90 percent of his bureau's copy amounted to a rewriting of dispatches and articles from Tass and the Soviet press. And few news organizations could claim substantially lower percentages."
---
Almost all of what Nagorski said
Victor Goodpasture Staff columnist
was confirmed by David Satter in the Wall Street Journal, Oct. 22, Satter, a Moscow correspondent for the Financial News from 1796 to 1982, is now a special correspondent for the Wall Street Journal in Paris.
Both men, in separate columns,
gave the same reasons for the blatant
lack of journalistic integrity of
Moscow correspondents.
One reason is fear. Correspondents fear KGB retaliation. Journalists also fear that if they meet with Russians who try to establish contact, and thus learn the truth of what's going on, they'll be cut off from official Soviet contacts. Most of their stories come from these officials.
According to Satter, hundreds of Soviet citizens are willing to become contacts, but "Western journalists are often neither willing nor able to take advantage of the opportunities that exist."
Nagorski says, "Contrary to popular perceptions, a genuinely open reporter does not lack access to
russians. Indeed, he lacks the time to see contacts as often as they would like."
Journalists who cooperate with the Soviets are treated well and given so-called exclusive interviews with top Soviet officials. Those that don't cooperate are roughed up by the KGB and eventually expelled from the country. Such was the case with Nagorski.
Nick Daniloff, a Moscow correspondent for U.S. News and World Report, said in an interview with Washington Journalism Review, "I don't consort with dissidents. The magazine considers them a passing phenomenon of little interest."
Nagorski points out that most Western news organizations neither prepare Moscow-bound correspondents properly nor encourage original reporting once they are there.
So much for fair, unbiased and accurate reporting.
Both Satter and Nagorski agree that ignorance on the part of correspondents is also part of the problem.
He says, "Along with a lack of language skills, these reporters usually arrive with minimal knowledge of Soviet affairs. Wiper services, in particular, tend to send young correspondents with no prior foreign experience."
Satter says that at one point during his tenure, 90 percent of the American correspondents could not speak Russian.
he says that the translators were supplied by the KGB when interviews with Soviet citizens actually took place.
Soviet authorities do not expect Western journalists to believe Soviet propaganda, Satter says, but only to repeat it uncritically. They hope that, enhanced by the credibility of important American publications, the Soviet Union's officially sanctioned misuse of language will begin to have as numbing an effect on Westerners as on Soviet citizens.
When it comes to Soviet affairs, the American media are turning all of us into marshmallows.
The Soviet system is organized to create illusions. For the last seven decades they have pulled the snow job of the century.
The solution is for foreign correspondents to be as aggressive in Moscow as they are on Capitol Hill and in the White House. They have to stop snuggling up to the Soviets. They have to face reality.
Customized products cause confusion
My problem is, I don't know what kind of scalp and skin I have.
One is supposed to buy modern shampoos and other hair preparations, along with the assorted epidermal oils and lotions now on the market, according to whether one has dry, oily or normal scalp and skin.
I considered going in for medical tests, but, frankly, I would feel pretty silly asking an internist or a gynecologist, or even a dermatologist, to determine whether my scale and skin are dry or oily.
That they aren't normal I have already figured out for myself. But maybe I should try "normal" anyway. I suppose I will as soon the next bottle is empty.
My guess is that I have an oily scalp and dry skin. or vice versa.
I am pretty sure they are opposites, but I can't really tell from the shampoos, conditioners, oils and lotions I have purchased. They all leave me looking and feeling basically the same.
Looks aside, the feeling is rotten. I noticed during my last trip to the drugstore that I now have a couple of other things to worry about.
Two questions sprang to mind as I browsed through the paperback and periodical shelves: What body type am I, and what color should I wear?
On the non-fiction shelf were several copies of "Dr. Abravanel's Body Type Program for Health, Fitness and Nutrition," now available in a drugstore edition.
Goodness knows I want to be healthy, fit and nutritious. But I'm afraid I could never choose among the four body types the good doctor writes about.
Dick West
United Press International
That a choice is essential may be seen in his statement that a body type is an "expression of how our metabolism is controlled."
Programs are customized for each body type. Although the book supposedly contains everything the layman needs to know about vitamins, minerals and exercise, to say nothing of "stress-reduction and preventive medicine," a sneak peek inside its covers convinced me my metabolism is doomed to run wild.
So I didn't buy a copy for $4.50. The same goes for a $9.95 copy of "Color Wonderful."
The authors of the latter work might well provide a "comprehene
sive, personalized color service." They say "each person must determine what shades and combinations are most complimentary," and certainly no one would quarrel with that — not for less than $10.
But I knew right off I could never decide what color type I was, any more than I could decide whether my skin and scalp were oily, dry or normal. Hence, the section devoted to helping readers choose "what shades are best for you" would be lost on me.
I personally think I look good in red, which seems to match my eyes, although the 32-page chart I hastily glanced at suggested I might find something in blue more flattering.
But which color goes best with a scalp and skin that are either dry, oily or normal? Try shopping around for some flaky outfits and you'll see what I mean.
Mailbox
Pagan's views warped
Since feminism was placed on a pedestal, not quite a generation ago, its first line of defense against potential critics has been its ambiguity.
This impenetrable feminist armor was on display when Rosemary Ruether presented a lecture on feminist spirituality at Woodruff Auditorium recently.
For nearly two hours, she ridiculed everything associated with Christianity.
Ruether suggested that all of religion was a male creation, designed to imitate the language of reproduction.
Ruether has long advocated the worship of pagan goddesses as more appropriate than Christianity for women.
women.
She has previously urged women to develop feminist liturgies, which would include "Wiccan and Shamanistic traditions." She suggested forming base communities, or covens, of thirteen believers and has even written liturgies for a Halloween celebration in remembrance of the burning of witches.
Were it not that Ruether is reputed to be a Catholic, nothing she says would be worth repeating.
She writes for the National Catholic Reporter and a local Catholic priest advertised her lecture and endorses her views. However, the NCR is a notoriously anti-Catholic publication and is continually at odds with Catholic Church teaching.
No one should be deceived about Ruether's religious orientation. She advocates a radical feminism, with an occult twist, that is extremely hostile to Christianity.
Timothy J. Williams Lawrence graduate student
That such anti-intellectual ravings are sponsored by university schools of religion is a sad commentary on the moribund state of education.
Advertisers ruin TV
I applaud Tim Erickson's views in
regard to television (Kansan, Feb.
25) . TV is indeed a wasteland.
If this is the extent of the unifying force of TV, then count me out. Although the TV industry has never pretended to be a source of culture, what we are presented leaves much to be desired.
As Erickson says, TV is the great unifier. My question is, "For what end are we unifying?" Are we unifying to compare peanut butters? Or maybe we are unified in our hate of a particular villain on one of the popular nighttime soaps.
Granted that our capitalistic society would prohibit non-commercial TV, there is much room for improvement in the quality of what we have to choose from.
It's time we began to see TV in its true light, as one of the many mediums being exploited by the money-hungry advertising industry simply to move their clients' particular brand of merchandise.
Advertising should take heed, for they could reach a much larger audience by directing improvement and the addition of higher-quality
programming
Until advertisers reform their methods of catering the public with their support of "least objectionable programming," they will remain the real culprits responsible for the mindless drivel that continues to pour forth from our TV sets.
Stephen Wooten
Lawrence sophomore
'Pro-abortion' offends
I was offended by a recent letter to the editor which referred to "proabortionists." Those who the writer were referring to are not advocates of abortion, but advocates of the right of women to make their own decisions.
"Pro-choice" means just that, it does not specify one choice more than another.
Nobody wants an abortion to take place if it can be helped, but the legal right to choose one must be an option if we are to continue calling our country free.
Mary E. Kelly
Overland Park sophomore
Thursday, Feb. 27, 1986
University Daily Kansan
From Page One
5
Senate tables vacancy bill, OKs publishing prof guide
By a Kansan reporter
Student Senate tabled a bill last night that would have changed the procedure for filling vacancies in the Senate.
The bill would allow the elections committee to choose replacement senators from a pool made up of the student body president's nominees, election committee nominees, and candidates who did not obtain a seat in the previous election.
The current procedure awards the Senate position to runners-up in the previous election, with no additional candidates considered.
Amy Brown, student body vice president, said before the meeting that the new bill would make it easier to fulfill platform promises.
Brown said that under present pro
cedures, by the end of the term. Senate positions could be filled by senators from the previously opposing coalition.
"Then you're trying to fulfill platform promises with senators who are former opponents," Brown said.
Stephanie Quincy, Student Senate Executive Committee chairman and an author of the bill, said it would allow the Senate to make wiser decisions about vacant Senate positions.
"This is not a coalition-against-coalition issue," Quincy said.
In other Senate business, a resolution was passed approving the publication of a KU guide to professors. Professors would submit a list of requirements for the classes they teach.
Also, $1,800 was allotted to the Malaysian Student Association.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said, "Dr. Mills is a first-class human being."
Rose said Dole liked to help Kansas by appointing qualified Kansans to government positions.
J. B. Conroy, executive director of the council, said that in the past the president made all nominations, which then were confirmed by the Senate.
Aging Continued from p.1
In 1984, an amendment to the Older Americans Act of 1973 gave the president, Senate and House of Representatives the power to nominate members, Conroy said. Each is responsible for appointing one-third of the fifteen council members.
Now, he said, the appointment becomes official as soon as the nomination is made. However, the president still appoints the chairman
of the council.
Mills will serve on the council for three years. He and the 14 other council members, Conroy said, will advise and make recommendations to the president and Congress.
During the two-day meeting, Mills said, the council gathered information for their work in the coming year. Otsie Bowen, the new Secretary of Health and Human Services, told
the council of his concerns about the elderly getting insurance for catastrophic illnesses, he said.
Docking
Mills appointment to the council is a positive reflection on him and the University, KU administrators said.
"He will do an excellent job on the Federal Council on the Aging, and provide important input for the president and for federal agencies," said Budig.
Continued from p.1
David Berkowitz, chairman of the Douglas County Democratic Party, said he was pleased with the turnout at the Lawrence announcement and said he thought a good cross-section of people were represented.
Docking has been Lt. Governor under Gov. John Carlin since 1983. He is a practicing lawyer and a
full partner at the Wichita law firm of Regan and McGannon.
The only other Democrat known to be considering a bid for the gubernatorial nomination is Joan Finney, state treasurer. Finney said last week she was still studying the race and had no timetable for making a decision.
So far, two Republicans have declared their candidacies for the GOP nomination - House Speaker Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, and Larry Jones, a Wichita businessman.
United Press International supplied some information for this story.
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University Daily Kansan
Arts/Entertainment
Thursday, Feb. 27, 1986
BALLET 1976
I'll just use a placeholder for the text. It looks like a tree trunk with twisted branches.
Let's try to find some clues:
- The background is a wall with horizontal lines.
- There are no visible signs of people or animals.
- The ground appears to be grassy.
Wait, let me look at the bottom part of the image again. It's just a blank space.
The tree trunk has a rough texture and twists in an irregular manner. It's not straight.
Okay, I'll go with this description.
Mary Burger/KANSAN
Imagery
Eduardo Olivares, Peru sophomore, completes his stretching exercises during his advanced ballet class in Robinson Center. The tree at 2146
Music to spur emotion in orchestra's concert
Bv Monique O'Donnell
University Symphony Orchestra, will perform its spring concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the Craton-Prover Theatre in Murphy Hall. The concert is free.
They begin with brassy fanfares and end with musical cries from the depths of the human soul.
KU's symphony orchestra has tried to tame a difficult combination of compositions for the upcoming spring performance. Director Zuohuang Chen chose compositions by Leonard Bernstein, Gabriel Faure and Gustav Mahler for the concert.
The piece by Mahler is the longest and most difficult to perform, said Katie Lehman, Prairie Village junior and a violinist in the orchestra. Mahler's "Symphony No. 1 in D Major" is laden with a variety of emotional experiences, she said, but without a doubt, it is the most difficult piece for the orchestra to perform.
Lehman said she thought the director was taking a big chance programming this piece for a student orchestra performance.
"I've never heard so many people in the practice room," she said. "We practice a lot on our own, because it's important to know the music so we can work out harmonies during the rehearsals."
Chen said the first piece in the concert, Bernstein's overture to "Candide," was light and only five minutes long. The audience will probably be familiar with this piece.
The second piece, Faure's "Pelleas and Melisande," is the most simple and most concise, Chen said. The composition contains four movements. It is a typical French piece, in the sense that there are no heavy instrumentations.
"Bernstein's music is very Americanized. The music is based on a feeling of hope, and this usually attracts the audience's attention immediately." Chen said.
Stephen Miller, Salina junior and a violinist in the orchestra, said the Mahler piece was his favorite. The
gigantic piece, which takes up the last part of the performance, is written in a very intimate style and is reminiscent of something a chamber orchestra would perform.
"It is always difficult for student orchestras to carry out a lot of the nuances in the composition," Chen said. "Mahler's symphony is a challenge for any orchestra because it requires a great performance."
"We are learning to listen to each other more during our rehearsals," Miller said. "We have been able to pull together, and we are beginning to sound harmonious now. It's a difficult and monumental piece to learn."
Because Mahler is a song composer, Chen said, there are obvious vocal qualities throughout the entire symphony. Capturing the delicacy of the style requires real virtuosity.
For the musicians, sitting in the middle of the orchestra can be an overwhelming and sometimes confusing experience. Miller said the only feeling he was aware of while playing the violin was the pure sensation of all the other sounds from the orchestra around him.
Mahler's symphony also contains four movements. The first movement depicts the awakening of nature in the early morning, Chen said. The sound is very thin and light, and a bird's song seeps through the background.
"I will not limit my imagery to this," he said. "There are many things to be heard in the music."
Lehman said Chen had given the orchestra members several other image descriptions to help them gain a feeling for what they were playing. She said he described the fourth movement of the Mahler piece as the deep cry from a human heart.
Chen said, "The fourth movement is not a description of nature. I can feel human beings cry. I feel the depression, the struggle and sometimes the joy."
Typical movie plot reaches for greatness, but satire on organized crime misses mark
Staff writer
Bv Grant W. Butler
Prizz's Honor, directed by John Huston. 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Rated R, 129 min./color.
"Prizii's Honor," a film directed by John Huston, reaches for greatness by pitting the down-home standards of love and marriage against the deceit and revenge of gangland mob violence. But the greatness is never quite achieved.
This tried and true Hollywood formula usually works except when boy and girl are both hitmen for the mafia.
Boy meets girl. Boy falls in love with girl. Boy marries girl. Boy and girl live happily ever after.
Charley Partanna, a middle-aged hitman for the Prizzi family of Brooklyn, N.Y., played by Jack Nicholson, falls in love at first glance with a beautiful blonde he sees at a mafia wedding.
Partanna tracks the blonde, Irene Walker, played by Kathleen Turner, to California, asks her to lunch and then flies across the country for the date. He is captivated by her and proposes marriage only to discover that he beautiful Walker is deadly.
Review
Walker is also a hitman who is hired by the Prizzi's whenever they need a job done by someone from out of town.
Endless comic possibilities present themselves given the "let's murder the burn and then have dinner" relationship Irene and Charley have, but the possibilities are not fully explored. The humor never goes beyond the clever, yet reserved lines. The film seems like something good that could be great if the plot had taken some different twists.
changes in the screenplay written by Richard Condon and Janet Roach.
The background music used in the film is a recycled Italian opera, but this seems predictable and does little to fill up the emptiness in many of the scenes.
Sure, this would have meant
Part of the emptiness can be attributed to Turner's performance. Granted, she is beautiful, but the characterization of Walker never seems to be anything more than skin deep. She comes across as just a pretty face.
in short, "Prizzi's Honor" is an excellent idea that has the potential to be a great movie, but only ends up being good.
Nicholson, in contrast, is super in his portrayal of the balding Partanna. His character is a gruff man with a pauchy stomach, who looks on the world with hesitation and skepticism but with a biting will to succeed.
Students compete in Gold Show
By Monique O'Donnell
Star writer
For two weeks, sculptures, drawings, paintings and photographs displaying the talent and hard work of high school students will adorn KU's Art and Design Gallery.
Gary Nemchock, associate professor of design and director of the show, said 75 high schools in Kansas had submitted art work for the "Gold Show." It began Sunday, with an awards ceremony, and will continue through March 8.
A jury composed of artists and teachers from Kansas selected more than 291 pieces to display in the art gallery on the third floor of the Art and Design Building. More than 2,900 pieces of art work had been submitted.
Chan Townsley, a former KU student who now works as a contemporary goldsmith in Kansas City, Mo., served as a member of the jury. He said that the quality of the work submitted was very high and that the jury had deliberated for six hours. There were separate juries for two dimensional design, three dimensional design and photography.
Works from the high school scholarship competition also were included in the exhibit, but these works were judged by KILL's art and design faculty members.
Students from Lawrence High School won most of the
awards: Daisy Reduque, Lawrence High School junior and a gold medal winner in the pencil drawing competition, said her art teacher had inspired her work in art
"Actually, the work that won the gold metal was an assignment," Reduque said. "Our teacher gives some very difficult assignments. She makes us work very hard, but that's good."
Pat Nemchock, Lawrence High School art teacher, said she was proud of her students' achievements. She said she had been driving herself crazy trying to select works for the competition. Most of the seniors also entered their work for competitions at other Universities. Nemchock tried not to put too much emphasis on winning the competitions.
the competitors.
"I tell my students that if they get in the exhibit at KU that's fine. If not, that's okay, too, because there are other things they can enter," she said.
offer things they can do. The "Gold Show" is intended to draw high school students' attention to KU, said Vicky Eudaly, administrative assistant in the show.
Immense baseball bat. But Nemchock said some of the high school seniors in art didn't want to attend KU because they'd rather get away from Lawrence.
Kirstin Wiechert, a Lawrence High School senior who won a $1,000 scholarship in art and design at KU, said she hoped to study art someplace other than KU. She also was a finalist in two scholarship competitions at other universities.
Snapshots
Beethoven to play
Camper Van Beethoven, a fivemember band from California, will perform at 8 p.m. Monday in the Party Room of Burge Union.
The concert, sponsored by Student Union Activities and KJHKFM, is free to the public. The band's music has been described as loud, raw and simplistic.
Music symposium shifts to biennial schedule
Cult exhibit to open
Artful representations of Symbols and Saints are powerful objects in the Hispanic folk belief.
The exhibit will feature Mexican music performed by the Hispanic Communities in Lawrence and Topeka at the opening at 2 p.m. Sunday in the museum
The exhibit "The Cult of Saints in Hispanic Nations" reflects particular cultural and religious ideologies, rather than displaying objects for their age or value, says Robert Smith, professor of anthropology and curator for the Museum of Anthropology.
Weekend Outlook
Dow Jones and the Industrials at 9 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday at Cogburns, 737 New Hampshire St.
Guitarist Brett Hodges at 10 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday at the Up and Under, 403 N. Second St.
■ Mackender-Hunt at 9:30 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday at the Jazzhaus, $92½% Massachusetts St.
Blues Express at 9 tonight at
Johnny's Tavern, 401. N. Second St.
By Grant W. Butler
Staff writer
The 1968 Symposium of Contemporary Music is an important forum for new music because it's the only way that many works might ever get played and it's a good educational tool, a co-chairman of the symposium said Monday.
"It's a valuable way for students and other interested people to learn what's going on in music," said Charles Hoag, a co-chairman and professor of music. "It's educational for the listeners as well.
The symposium for new music has been an annual event at the University of Kansas since 1959. But because of shortages of funds and a desire to keep high quality performances, the program will go to a biennial schedule.
"There's electronic music. There's vocal music. There's instrumental music of all kinds."
Edward Mattila, professor of music and a co-chairman of the Symposium Committee, said it was unfortunate that the symposium would only occur every two years because there was a need for more exposure to new music.
Hoag said the symposium, March 3-5, was a variety of concerts featuring both instrumental and vocal groups, demonstrations, lectures and panel discussions about the state of new music in America. All of the events take place in Murphy Hall and are free to the public.
"People need to hear contemporary music to know what's going on in the world," he said.
The discussions of the new music will be important, he said, because they will involve people from outside
"I've called on some of my colleagues in the humanities to come in and discuss the music, to discuss what's going on," Hoag said. "That's an attempt to bring in people from the humanities. After all, music is a part of the humanities."
the music department.
Tower, who holds a doctoral degree in composition from Columbia University, has had her compositions played by orchestras throughout the United States. She is the Exxon Composer in Residence with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra.
"Joan Tower is a very strong, up-and-coming American composer," Hoag said. "This year alone Joan is having nine performances of her works by major American symphony orchestras.
This years symposium will feature Joan Tower as the guest composer and the Da Capo Players as the guest ensemble.
"That may not sound like a lot, but it is. That's a mind boggling statistic, especially since the U.S. is the forefront of new music."
Many different types of ensembles can play Tower's music, Hoag said, because she has written so many varied pieces.
"Any composer worth the name is going to write for everyone," he said. "She's an all-around composer."
Mattila said it also was important to have Tower as a guest composer because she was a woman.
"She's only the second woman composer we've ever had at the symposium. It's important that we have female as well as male composers," he said.
"She writes primarily for live performers, emphasizing acoustic
music rather than electronic music." Tower will speak at 2:30 p.m. on Friday.
Tower will spend 20 minutes in Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
The Da Capo Players, of which Tower was a founding member, won the 1973 Naumberg Award for chamber music. Each year they present four concerts in New York.
Members of the group are Laura Flax, clarinet; Joe Lester, violin; Patricia Spencer, flute; Sarah Rothenberg, piano; and Andre Emelianoff, cello.
The next symposium, in 1988, will host the American Society of University Composers, Hoag said. It will bring over 150 composers to the KU campus as guest artists and speakers.
The ensemble will perform "Petroshakes," which was composed by Tower, in its concert Tuesday night. Hog said it was a retrospective work that reflected the ballets of Igor Stravinski.
"It will be a much larger event," he said. "For that reason we're foregoing our 1987 symposium to store up money."
The symposium will continue to be a biennial event on even numbered years to improve the quality by having two years' worth of financing for each symposium.
"It it costs money to bring these people here. Our funds have been on the short side, so we had to do something to keep bringing them here," he said.
Joan Tower
The scheduling change was necessary, Mattia said.
Hoag agreed, saying that two years' worth of financing will help maintain the status of the symposium.
"We're not looking for a world class music symposium because we're already there," he said. "We are world class."
PETER KAUFMAN
The
1986 Symposium of Contemporary Music
10:30 a.m.: Michael Kimber
presents Schulter's "On Light Wings,".
Skilton Lounge.
Monday
2:30 p.m.: Richard Reber presents C. Curtis Smith's "Rhap-
antles" 402 Murphy Hall
3:30 p.m.: Laura Flax, pianist with the Da Capo Chamber Players, presents "What makes a performance exotic? The piece?" The performance?" Skilton Lounge.
8:00 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall
Concert, works by Tann, Jackson,
Gullivan, Snith and Messiaen.
Tuesday
**10:30** s.m.: Swarthout Recital Hall Concert of Student Compartments. Works by Niebaum, Moreland, Branson, Hogan and Cleveren. Joan Tower will give a guest lecture, Swarthout Recital Hall.
3:30 p.m.: The Da Capo Chamber Players present "Renewal Techniques for New Music," Swarthout Recital Hall.
Wednesday
8:00 p.m.: The Da. Gap Chamber Players present a concert, Swainorth Recital Hall
**10:30 a.m.** Joan Tower and Steven Alden will lead a panel discussion, "New Music: Views from the Humanities."
2:30 p.m.: Jack Winerock
presents "Six Preludes by William
Duckworth," 402 Murphy Hall.
8:30 p.m.: John Boulton and Richard Reber will present a concert, Swarthout Recital Hall.
8:00 p.m. : Swarshout Racial Hall Concert, works by Mobbeyer, Duckworth, Shatzkin, Mattila and Addias.
Thursday. Feb. 27, 1986
Arts/Entertainment
University Daily Kansan
7
Music performed in memory of KU conductor
By Lori Polson Staff writer
Staff writer
A piece of music dedicated to his name seems a fitting way to memorialize a former conductor of the University Symphony Orchestra.
Edward Laut, professor of music and cello, and an ensemble performed "Elegy for George Lawner" for the first time last night in Swarthout Recital Hall. The performance was part of the Department of Music Faculty Recital Series.
Stephen Addiss, professor of art history, composed the piece.
George Lawner was a respected and honored faculty member of the department of music. In addition to conducting the University Symphony Orchestra, he had directed opera workshops and many opera and
musical productions during his 19 years at the University of Kansas.
On Jan. 17, 1985, Lawner suffered a heart attack. He died on May 31, 1985. Launt said the music had been written to eulogize Lawner. He dedicated the recital to his memory.
"In addition to being a fine musician, George Lawner was a close personal friend," he said.
Members of the ensemble performing the piece were Laut; Rori Satsuki, professor of music, violin; Michael Kimber, associate professor of music, viola; and Emily Powell, music teaching assistant, cello.
The audience of about 100 listened intently as the ensemble played the slow, moving music. At times haunting, and always strikingly sad, the
preece had the distinct feeling of
mourning.
Addiss said he had started composing the piece before Lawner suffered his attack.
"I was working on it in January, before he had his heart attack," he said. "He had heard some of the orchestrations." Addiss, finished "Eleeg" in June, after he had decided to dedicate it to Lawyer.
"I thought I'd like to do something to remember him," he said. "The fact that he had heard some of the piece makes it even more meaningful."
Addiss has written several pieces for KU's department of music and is now working on a piece for a composer's symposium.
One of the most fascinating aspects of the piece was the choice of chords the composer used. The dissonance of the music increased its mournful intensity.
A long pause at the end of "Elegy for George Lawner" indicated that the audience shared some of the composer's emotions.
For the second piece, "Sonata in E Major," by Giuseppe Valentine, Laut was accompanied by pianist Alice Downs, assistant professor of music. The evening was completed with the duo playing "Sonata in C Minor, Opus 6," by Samuel Barber; "Sonata in A Major, Opus 69," by Ludwig van Beethoven; "Apres un Reve," by Gabriel Fauré; and "Intermezza," by Enrique Granados.
SCHOLAR
Edward Laut, professor of music and cello, performs.
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
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8
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Thursday, Feb. 27, 1986
Company vends technology, clothing
By Juli Warren Staff writer
From grease to maternity wear and from China to Japan, one Kansas City, Mo., company is trying to win the market.
The president and executive vice president of Strateco Engineering Inc. spoke to engineering graduate students and presented $2,000 to the department of chemical engineering yesterday afternoon.
The company, which has about 20 employees, sells technology and equipment for grease manufacture and for alkylation, the process that makes high-octane additives for gasoline, according to Diane Graham, the president.
Terry Robertson, the executive vice president and Graham's husband, said that because technology and equipment sales did not lend themselves well to repeat customers, the company expanded its market, both in area and in products.
"We don't get a lot of repeat customers, but we have a reputation for quality." he said.
Stratco has had contracts in China and Japan, according to Graham.
Robertson said he thought China and Japan now needed the company's technology and equipment more than the United States.
China, he said, has few cars, but needs the process for exporting gasoline products.
"They're finding a lot of oil there," he said.
Japan needs the technology, he said, because so many cars are there.
Graham said that on a business trip to China 18 months ago, when she was nine months pregnant, she had the idea of maternity wear for career women. She was having a difficult time finding appropriate clothes.
"They all had that little-girl look," she said.
Graham said her line of clothes also could be worn by women who weren't pregnant.
Under the name Diane's Designs, the clothes are sold by mail order and in some stores in the Kansas City area, Graham said.
The lecture and slide presentation, focused on selling chemical engineering technology, Norman Kolb, Lawrence graduate student, said the business side of chemical engineering sometimes was overlooked.
MATTHEW J. SMITH
Diane Graham, president and chairman of the board of Stratco Engineering, talks to her husband Terry Robertson, executive vice president of Strato.
On Campus
Mike Horton/Special to the KANSAN
A free film, "Hunger For Proft," will be shown during the National Lawyers Guild meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in 104 Green Hall.
The Latin American Solidarity will meet at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., for rice and beans.
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Friday, Feb. 28 - Saturday & Sunday, March 1 & 2 South Junior High School
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thursday, Feb. 27, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
9
Islam seeks peace, faith not terror,scholar says
By Debra West
Staff writer
The Islamic religion is not a religion of warriors, Jamal Badawi, a professor from Saint Mary's College in Halifax, Novia Scotia, said last night.
Badawi spoke at the Kansas Union about Islamic views of terrorism, jihad and human rights. The speech was sponsored by the Islamic Center of Lawrence and the department of political science.
Badawi said people who commit senseless acts of terrorism are not true Muslims, despite what they may call themselves. He spoke hoping to promote good relationships between Muslims and non-Muslims and to clear up misunderstandings about the religion.
Islam means the attainment of peace through submission to the will of Allah, Badawi said. Jihad has been defined by the media as "holy war." He said this was a grave error.
Jihad is actually the struggle for Allah and guidelines that establish what is acceptable to Allah are set up in the Koran, the Islamic holy book.
It is forbidden for Muslims, who practice Islam, to fight to force people to accept their religion. It also is forbidden to fight to satisfy personal ego, to assert superiority
over another race or to attain personal benefit, Badawi said.
The only acceptable reasons for fighting are self-defense or to remove tyranny that will not allow Muslims peacefully to spread the word of the Allah, as the Koran admonishes them to.
Besides giving guidelines on when fighting is acceptable, the Koran also gives specific rules for behavior before, during and after battle, Badawi said.
The Koran states that the Muslims must declare war. Surprise attacks are forbidden. They also must make a final offer of peace before going to battle.
During the battle, they must give refuge to any enemy who seeks it, spare the lives of anyone not fighting against them and never kill an injured person.
Stealing by force during a war is forbidden as is the torture of prisoners of war. Muslims must never mutilate a body and must allow a dignified burial, Badawi said.
After the battle, the Koran says Muslims must avoid haughtiness, for victory only comes from divine intervention.
The Koran gives certain rights to every person, Badawi said.
Life is sacred, he said, and killing must be justified. Humans have the right of freedom of religion.
Virginity cult rites, earned social status and the marriage of entire families are old prescriptions to contemporary problems such as teenage pregnancy, wife abuse, and divorce.
Prof speaks on African rites
Bv Sandra Crider
Staff writer
These unusual solutions are found in traditional African culture, said a man wearing a flowing orange-patterned robe, a cap of many colors and a digital watch.
"Since the present system does not give any security in marriage or other kinds of values, maybe the answer lies in those traditional values." Nbudi征 E. Nwafor said last night after his program.
Nwafer, visiting professor in African studies, lectured on African cultural heritage in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The program was the final event in a series sponsored by the office of minority affairs for Black History Month.
Nwafor is a professor at Idabaun University in Nigeria where he also directs the National Children's Theater, which performs traditional folk plays.
Through music, poetry, dancing,
theatre, masquerades and
ceremonies, high values can be
instilled in young people, he said.
Nwafer told the tale of the African virginity cults. After a young girl reaches puberty, at about the age of 12, she begins to participate in the virginity rites.
Before the wedding of an honorable young woman, all virgins and honorably married women get together to sing and dance to pay
tribute to chastity. The songs of the rites are often sung outside of ceremonies.
Nwafer told his listeners, "Mothers sing it to their daughters whenever they suspect any untoward romance: 'See me, look at me, but don't touch me.'"
In a U.S. society that pays over $19 million a year to deal with teenage pregnancy, he said, such discouragement of premarital sex could be beneficial.
If the girl remains chaste until marriage, she has the opportunity to marry honorably and to be treated well. In their old age, such women are allowed into the council of elders, provided with gold and ivory beads and receive special kinds of respect.
They are the happiest women
alive," Nwafar said. "They are treated with respect and are never beaten in the street."
The prevention of premarital sex also stops wife abuse. Traditional African values preach, in a very convincing way, the same tenet of the "Me" generation: Respect for oneself will elicit the respect of others.
"Critics blame the recent problems of U.S. blacks on inherent inferiority and a decadent culture," Nwafer said. "In many countries in Africa, festivals and ceremonies are the people's theatre where young learn from old."
And culture in Africa anchors family life, he said.
Flasher suspect nabbed near sorority
By Brian Whepley
Staff writer
fronted and held him behind the Kappa Kappa Gamma house, Gower Place.
A man who allegedly had flashed members of a KU sorority house several times since last fall was apprehended by two KU students shortly after midnight yesterday, police said.
Jamison was charged with four counts of lewd and lascivious behavior, said Mike Glover, city prosecutor. Jamison was released on personal recognition bond and will appear in Lawrence Municipal Court in about 10 days.
police said. No one reported a flashing incident last night.
Jamison was arrested in connection with flashing incidents on Oct. 27. Jan. 13 and Jan. 17 at the house,
Margaret Salisbury, Topeka sophomore and resident of the house, said Jamison fit the description of a man who had been flashing house members.
Bernard Clark Jamison, 312 W. 16th St., was arrested by Lawrence police officers after Tighe Larue, Lawrence senior, and Thomas Murphy, Prairie Village sophomore, con-
A man had been seen previously in the parking lot of the house and on the house's fire escape, she said. The man would wait until a woman saw blim and then flash her.
Salisbury off at the house when they saw Jamison coming up the hill. Jamison went up behind Fraser Hall and the chancellor's house and then back down to the sorority house, Larue said. He then hid in some trees near a rear door.
Larue said he and Murphy, who was in another car outside of the house, decided to confront Jamison about the past incidents because they had scared house members.
Larue said he was dropping
"They were pretty nervous."
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STUDENT TEACHING MANDATORY MEETING
FOR: All Students in the School of Education who plan to Student Teach during the 1986-87 School Year.
WHEN: TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1986 3:30 p.m.
WHERE: JAYHAWK ROOM, KANSAS UNION
If you are planning to student teach during the 1986-87 school year, YOU MUST ATTEND THIS MEETING.
How to buy shades.
With the American Express® Card you can buy everything from new spectacles to some pretty spectacular clothing. The latest in audio equipment and the latest albums. The Card is the perfect way to pay for just about anything you'll want during college.
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Because we believe that college is the first sign of success, we've made it easier for you to get the American Express Card. Graduating students can get the Card as soon as they accept a $10,000 career-oriented job. If youre not graduating this semester, you can apply for a special sponsored Card. Look for student applications on campus. Or call 1-800-THE CARD, and tell them you want a student application.
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10
University Daily Kansan
The Philippines
Thursday, Feb. 27, 1986
Aquino frees 33 political prisoners
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — President Corazon Aquino ordered the immediate release today of 33 political prisoners, and her government announced that the cases of another 400 people were being studied.
Gen. Fidel V. Ramos, the new military chief, announced the releases after an early morning Mass, where one prisoner, identified as Jaime Verdan, told the crowd, "I cannot say how happy I am. I thank 'people's power' and God."
Human-rights groups estimated that about 500 people were held under the Presidential Detention Act adopted during the 20-year rule of Ferdinand Marcos.
Aquino said earlier yesterday that she would seek a cease-fire with communist guerrillas but not the extradition of Marcos, who was driven into exile by her "people power" revolt.
Salvador Laurel, the new vice president, announced plans for a general political amnesty and said the insurgents were not truly communists, but people Marcos forced into fighting. There has been little guerrilla activity since the election, which they boycotted.
The United States had been concerned about the insurgency and urged Marcos to reorganize the military to combat it. A primary barrier to reorganization was Gen. Fabian C. Ver. Marcos' armed-forces chief and confidant, who fled with him.
Aquino, who blames Marcos for the 1983 assassination of her husband, Benigno, told a news conference, "I have said I can be magnanimous in victory. I would like to show by example that the sooner we can forget our hurt, then the easier it will be for our country to start rebuilding from the ruins left us."
Gen. Fabian C. Ver, Marcos' armed forces commander, and 25 others were acquitted of conspiracy in the slaying. Ver fled the country with Marcos.
Aquino met with 11 members of the Marcos government yesterday, including Prime Minister Cesar Virata, and asked them to stay on until her appointee receive National Assembly approval.
Marcos, 68, was brought down by a fraud-tainted presidential election, which Aquino refused to concede, combined with U.S. pressure and a military-civil revolt.
Another special commission will study constitutional reform, she said.
Aquino, 53, said a new Commission on Good Government would investigate alleged illegal transfers of wealth from the country by Marcos and his associates.
Loud applause greeted her announcement that although the riverside presidential palace will remain the seat of government, she will not live there because it is not fitting for the leader of an impoverished nation to live in extravagance.
18 receive positions in Philippine cabinet
United Press International
MANILA, Philippines - President Corazon Aquino appointed 18 members of her Cabinet and inner circle yesterday, including prominent human rights lawyers, businessmen, civic leaders and veteran politicians who previously supported her predecessor, Ferdinand Marcos.
"There is a gathering of talents," said Ramon Mitra, a member of the National Assembly who is a cattle
raiser and was appointed as agriculture minister.
Aquino also reappointed Juan Ponce Enrile, defense minister, who co-led the rebellion which brought down the Marcos government on Tuesday. Enrile had supported Marcos for more than 20 years.
Aquino named Rene Saguisig, a Harvard-educated lawyer, as her spokesman and Joker Arroyo, an attorney, as her executive secretary. The presence of Arroyo and
Saguisag, two of the country's leading human rights lawyers, underscores Aquino's concern for improving the country's dismal human rights record.
One woman was appointed to the Cabinet yesterday, 43-year-old Lourdes Quisumbing, as education minister.
Salvador Laurel, vice president who surrendered his presidential ambitions and agreed to run on Aquino's ticket, was rewarded by being
nominated for prime minister and by being appointed foreign minister.
Jovito Salonga, Yale-educated and one of the country's top lawyers, was appointed to head the Commission on Good Government and will work to retrieve the hidden wealth allegedly stashed abroad by the Marcos family and his supporters.
Aquilino Pimentel, a Jesuit-trained former law school dean, was appointed minister of local governments.
4
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Thursday, Feb. 27, 1986
University Daily Kansan
11
Nation/World
Panel told NASA needs new shuttle
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The acting chief of NASA and a top Air Force official told Congress yesterday that a new shuttle must be built to replace Challenger.
"If it were up to me, I'd start this morning," said William Graham, acting chief of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The $2 billion proposal would take 3½ years to complete.
Graham and Edward Aldridge. Air Force undersecretary, said the space program's ability to carry cargo and U.S. security interests required a new shuttle.
Graham conceded to the House Science and Technology space subcommittee that an interagency group of government officials had not yet decided whether the government should ask Congress for the money needed to replace Challenger. The Challenger shuttle exploded Jan. 28, killing all seven crew members.
Aldridge termed the loss of launch capacity a national emergency. He said the taxpayers would have to pay for it so there shouldn't be any worry about whose budget it came from.
Republicans on the panel said it might be hard to justify buying another shuttle while Congress and the White House are trying to reduce the federal deficit.
Aldridge warned that any significant delay in resuming the shuttle service would create a backload of
cargo that would create problems for NASA and the Pentagon.
Graham told the panel the administration is considering the use of single-use rockets to help take up payloads delayed by the halt in the shuttle program.
A year's delay in resuming flights, which NASA is predicting, could create a backlog of 25 to 30 flights before more shuttle space could be obtained in 1989, said Aldridge.
The Pentagon, he said, would encourage strongly the construction of a new orbiter now to regain the fleet launch capacity and to ensure meeting launch requirements of future space programs.
Graham said $450 million in structural spare parts soon to be available could reduce construction time for a new shuttle to about $3½ years.
A combination of shuttles of adequate size and commercial missile fleets appears to offer the best and most effective approach at least through 1995, Graham said.
There are a number of missiles, such as the Delta, Scout and Atlas Centaur, that could help the shuttle in delivering payloads, he said.
The ranking Republican on the full committee, Rep. Manuel Lujan of New Mexico, said it would be hard to pay for a new shuttle even though there apparently was considerable public support for a replacement.
"You have to look at where you get the money to do it," said Lujan.
BOSTON — A physician fed with the timidity of his colleagues urged other physicians yesterday to encourage patients with smoking-related illnesses to sue the tobacco industry.
Michael L. Charney, a psychiatrist, predicted in a letter to the New England Journal of Medicine that legal action by patients would drive up prices,
United Press International
Physician urges lawsuits against tobacco industry
generate negative publicity about smoking and pressure the industry to place warnings such as skulls and crossbones on their products.
The lawsuits, presenting vivid examples of how addictive cigarettes are and powerful illustrations of suffering, would deter habitual tobacco use, Charney said.
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GOOD LUCK IN
ROCK CHALK 86
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Thursday, February 27, 1986
7:00-9:00 p.m.
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Opponents say litigation is expensive, time-consuming and may produce contradictory results.
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12
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Feb. 27, 1986
Court rules cities can set rent limits
Nation/World
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of rent control yesterday, rejecting landlords' arguments that the practice violates antitrust laws.
The ruling, in a case from Berkeley, Calif., gives a legal blessing to similar rent-control regulations in dozens of cities which set limits on rent.
The high court, in an 8-1 opinion, said rent-control laws were legal as long as they were not the result of a conspiracy to restrain free trade.
Writing for the court, Justice Thurgood Marshall said the function of government might often be to tamper with free markets, correcting their failures and aiding their victims.
However, he said, there may be cases in which what appears to be a state- or municipal-administered price stabilization scheme is really a
private price-fixing conspiracy, but the Berkeley ordinance was not.
Manuela Albuquerque, Berkeley city attorney, said the ruling, which affirmed a decision by the Supreme Court of California, would be very beneficial to all cities across the country.
Albuquerque said the law had had the effect of lowering rents in Berkeley and providing a larger pool of affordable housing.
But landlord Muriel Rosenkrantz, a past president of the Berkeley Property Owners Association, said, "The law is wiping out property owners, confiscating their property."
Also, she said, the law had led to a loss of rental housing and estimated a decline of at least 5,000 units since the law was adopted.
Rosenkranz promised to continue the fight with a lawsuit showing the damage the law did to property owners.
Kentucky journalist asks for libel law reformation
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Homer Marcum, publisher, editor and the only reporter and photographer for a weekly newspaper in the Kentucky coal fields, told Congress yesterday that libel laws need to be changed.
Marcum said he and his paper, the Martin Countian, have been sued for libel seven times during the past 11 years. He has never lost but has paid more than $30,000 for legal defense.
"I can't even afford to win one."
Marcum told a House subcommittee on civil and constitutional rights.
He said losing parties in libel actions should be required to pay
legal fees and court costs.
"At the rate I am going, I will not be able to successfully defend the next frivolous libel action because my financial resources will have been exhausted." Marcum said describing what he called "the chilling effect" of the legal system on journalism."
Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said the series of hearings promised the most extensive congressional exploration to date on U.S. libel law.
Schumer has proposed libel-reform legislation that would permit public officials to sue for a judgment on whether an article or broadcast was true or false, rather than for monetary damages.
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Thursday, Feb. 27, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
Thompson needs 5 points to pass Chamberlain
KANSAS
35
The fifth point Kansas guard Calvin Thompson scores in Saturday's game against Iowa State will move him into fourth place on the all-time Kansas scoring list. He will pass Wilt Chamberlain.
By Matt Tidwell Sports writer
With his fifth point in his last game at Allen Field House on Saturday, Calvin Thompson will move past the scoring mark of a Kansas legend — Wilt Chamberlain.
Calvin Thompson
KAN SAC
It is fitting that Thompson will eclipse Chamberlain's point total, 1,433, in the field house. The field house is where Thompson, a 6-foot-6 shooting guard, has delighted Jayhawk fans for four seasons with memorable offensive performances.
But Thompson said yesterday that to have his name mentioned in the same breath with Chamberlain's would be a humbling experience.
THOMPSON PROFILE
"It has sort of crept up on me with all the success of our team right now," Thompson said, "but it is a great honor to be in the same boat with Wilt Chamberlain."
Thompson will move into the sixth spot on the all-time scoring list. He will enter the Iowa State game Saturday with 1,429 career points and, depending on his performance in the post-season, could move past former Kansas greats Tony Guy, 1,488, and Bud Stalworth, 1,495, and finish as the fourth-highest scorer ever at Kansas.
"I've had some great times and I leave with a lot of memories," Thompson said. "It's weird because it seems like just yesterday that I got here. It's really gone fast but I've enjoyed myself."
Thompson has come a long way since arriving in Lawrence as a highly recruited high school All-American from Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kan. The thought of putting on his uniform for the last time in front of the home crowd is sobering, he said.
Kansas fans got their first clue about Thompson's offensive skills when, as a freshman, he met
Hometown: Kansas City, Kan Age: 21
Oklahoma in the first round of the Big Eight tournament and he stunned the Sooners and all-everything forward Wayman Tisdale with 30 points in a Kansas win at Norman.
Family: Katie Young, mother
Class: Senior
Background: Was a high school All-American at Wyandotte High School. Most sought-after player in Kansas in 1982, averaging 21 points and 11 rebounds a game. At Kansas he has averaged 11.1 points and 3.7 rebounds a game during his three years on varsity. He holds the Big Eight record for consecutive free throws, 33, during the 1983-84 season.
When new Kansas coach Larry Brown arrived, Thompson struggled to fit into Brown's system.
Brown said Thompson's commitment to team success had caused him to limit some of his individual talents.
"He's a great shooter and scorer and he's had to sacrifice some of his individual skills to help us become better and I appreciate that," Brown said.
Brown said Thompson's improvement was a key reason for the Jayhawks' success.
"All the seniors have had great years or we wouldn't be 27-3." Brown said. "But Calvin's certainly been a big part of that. I think every area of his game has gotten better. He becomes more of a complete player."
be thought of as one of the main cogs in this championship season.
"I want to be known as a member of this great 1986 team we have," Thompson said. "Individual stuff really means nothing now."
Fellow senior Ron Kellogg, said Thompson's leadership qualities on and off the court have meant the most to his teammates.
"Calvin's really done a good job fitting into the system and being a leader on our team," Kellogg said. "He's got to be a leader for us to be successful, especially when he's out with younger players."
Thompson said a chance at playing in the National Basketball Association would make him happy after his college career. Brown said the success of the team will greatly effect Thompson's chances.
"He's going to be drafted," Brown said. "The better our team does, the higher he'll be drafted. I think his game has to be elevated in all areas for him to do well in the pros, but Calvin's no different from other pro prospects in that respect."
KU softball begins play ranked 7th
By Jim Suhr
The Kansas softball team,ranked No. 7 nationally in preseason polls and one of five Big Eight teams in the top 20, will open its season this afternoon against Johnson County Community College
The game, scheduled to begin at 3 p.m., is one of a few games that Kansas head coach Bob Stancliff had scheduled as a result of this season's unseasonably warm
Softball
Stancillt said he expected Kansas and second-ranked Nebraska to dual for the conference title again this season.
winter weather. He said that Kansas normally did not schedule games this early in the season but that these two games would be a good test for his team.
The Jayhawks open the season with all of their starters returning from a team that finished 38-17 overall and runner-up to Nebraska in the Big Eight last season.
Kansas will be lead by starters Tracy Bunge and Ann Brent, Kansas' only two seniors this season and All-Big Eight and All-Region performers from last season.
Bunge led the Jawahar koffe
last season in hits (54), runs batted
in (24), doubles (10), triples (5),
home runs (2) and batting average
(.358). Bunge, who was Kansa's
pitching ace last season, finished
with a 24-11 mark with two saves,
seven shutouts and an 0.82 earned
run average in 255 innings pitched.
Freshman walk-on is success on court
Kansas' Secrest gains confidence as No.5 player
Sports writer
By James Larson
Seldom does a coaching staff take much interest in an unrecurred freshman athlete, but KU head tennis coach Scott Perelman is delighted he noticed Jim Secrest.
"He doesn't realize how good he can be," he said about Secrest, his current No. 5 player. "I really feel he is capable of becoming a great college tennis player."
Secrest has a 7-6 record at Kansas including a big win against Wisconsin last week. The Badgers won the first three matches over the Jayhawks. Secrest's win along with the No. 4 singles and all three doubles lifted Kansas to a 5-4 victory.
The win against Wisconsin, along with a victory over Northwestern, raised the Jayhawk's spring record to 4-1.
Secrest went to his first Kansas practice while he was still attending Guilford High School in Rockford, III.
"I was so nervous I could barely hang on to the racket," he said. "I really wanted to make the team."
"It's hard to put into words what an accomplishment it is to come in as a walk-on and contribute as a top five player." Perelman said. "You test walk-ons early to see how badly they want to play.
When he returned in the fall as a student and a walk-on, he felt more relaxed and played well enough to make the team.
the gutter; they have to constantly play challenge matches, and they may not get the respect or the attention they want."
"They have to fight their way out of
At 6 a.m. on the day of the Jayhawk's first fall tournament, the KU Invitational, Perelman woke Secrest with a phone call and told him to get ready because he was putting him in the lineup. His first match would be against Iowa State's best player.
Men's Tennis
"I went out there with the attitude that I have nothing to lose," Secrest said. "I beat him in three sets." In the next round, he defeated teammate Darin Herman, the Jayhawk's No. 4 player. That was when he started to feel like a part of the team.
Secrest said that his freshman year was going well but that if he ever needed advice or encouragement, his brother, John, lived downstairs from him. John influenced Jim's decision to attend Kansas.
Secrest said he had a good relationship with his teammates. He said he valued being able to talk with team captains Mike Wolf and Mike Center because they helped him with his game and his attitude about life. But Secrest is aware that he is the youngest player on the tennis队 and that it is not always an easy situation.
"It's different from high school," he said. "I was the one everybody did things for. Now it's all reversed. When somebody needs something they call 'the freshman.' I had to adjust to that."
KC
TENNIS
Jayhawk tennis player Jim Secrest, follows through on a backhand swing.
Secrest, a freshman, joined the tennis team as a walk-on this year.
Jayhawks upset OU, end streak
By Jim Suhr Sports writer
The Oklahoma Sooners found out last night that lightning does indeed strike twice in the same place.
Kansas beat Oklahoma earlier it the season at Allen Field House 65-67.
Just as the Kansas men's basketball team had done 48 hours earlier, the Kansas women brought another Oklahoma home winning streak to an end. The Jayhawks, for the second time this season, upset the No. 15 Sooners 77-72 and snapped Oklahoma's 27-game home win streak.
On Monday night, an 87-80 Kansas victory in the men's game snapped
Women's Basketball
Oklahoma's Big Eight-record 48-game home winning streak.
Kansas, 17-9 overall and 8-5 in the Big Eight, was led by 18-point performances by Vickie Adkins and Kelly Jennings. Evette Ott and Lisa Dougherty added 13 and 10 points respectively for the Jayhawks.
Oklahoma's Viki Green led five Sooners in double figures with 17 points. Oklahoma, which already has clinched the Big Eight title, fell to 21-5 and 9-4.
"We're thrilled to beat them for the second time," Kansas head coach Marian Washington said after the upset. "Our consistency and confidence are beginning to come through."
And come through Kansas did.
Oklahoma held its biggest lead of the game early in the first half at 11-8 before Kansas rallied to the score at 13. The Sonkers never led again.
The Jayhawks, using a half-court defense that stymied the Sooners, took the lead for good at 17-15 with 12 minutes remaining in the first half. Kansas increased its lead to as many as 11 points in the first half at 30-19, but 10 straight points by Oklahoma's Erika Notzke, who finished the game with 12 points, brought the Sooners closer.
KU led 37-33 at halftime. Kansas shot 53 percent in the first half while Oklahoma shot 40 percent.
In the second half, Kansas jumped out early and maintained its pressure on Oklahoma before increasing the lead to 11 points once again.
The Sooners rallied and cut the lead to three at 67-64 with 3:10 remaining, but the Jayhawks surged again with two baskets by Kelly Jennings to boost the lead to seven at 75-68. Kansas used six-of-six shooting from the free throw line in the final minute of the game to ensure the win.
Kansas finished the game shooting 52 percent from the field. The Jayhawk defense, which forced Oklahoma to shoot 41 percent from the field for the game, also shut down the Sooner's lead scorer, Jacquetta Hurley, to three points. Hurley was averaging 13.8 points a game.
Kansas will end its Big Eight season Saturday in a 12:15 p.m. game against Iowa State at Allen Field House.
Kansas 77, Oklahoma 72
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Adulton 8.27-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.28-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.29-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.30-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.31-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.32-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.33-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.34-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.35-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.36-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.37-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.38-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.39-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.40-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.41-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.42-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.43-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.44-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.45-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.46-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.47-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.48-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.49-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.50-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.51-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.52-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.53-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.54-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.55-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.56-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.57-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.58-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.59-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.60-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
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Adulton 8.62-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.63-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.64-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.65-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.66-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.67-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.68-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.69-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.70-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.71-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.72-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.73-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.74-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.75-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.76-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.77-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.78-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.79-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.80-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.81-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.82-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.83-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.84-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.85-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.86-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.87-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.88-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.89-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.90-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.91-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.92-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.93-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.94-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.95-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.96-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.97-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.98-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 8.99-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.00-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
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Adulton 9.05-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.06-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.07-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
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Adulton 9.09-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
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Adulton 9.11-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.12-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.13-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.14-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.15-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.16-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.17-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.18-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.19-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.20-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.21-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.22-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.23-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.24-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.25-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.26-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.27-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.28-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.29-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.30-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.31-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.32-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.33-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.34-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.35-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.36-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.37-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.38-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.39-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.40-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.41-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.42-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.43-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.44-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.45-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.46-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.47-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.48-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.49-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.50-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.51-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.52-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.53-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.54-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.55-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.56-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.57-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.58-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.59-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.60-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.61-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.62-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.63-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.64-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.65-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.66-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.67-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.68-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.69-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.70-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.71-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.72-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.73-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.74-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.75-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.76-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.77-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.78-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.79-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
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Adulton 9.81-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.82-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
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Adulton 9.87-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.88-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
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Adulton 9.94-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
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Adulton 9.96-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.97-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10,
Adulton 9.98-16, Mann 2.4-9, Doughtyher 8.4-10},
\end{table>}
Hurray 14-4, 6th, Phillips 5-0, 12th; Ailson 8-2, 12nd, Green
8-11, 17 streets; S 50 0, 10 miles; W 11-2, 13 miles; Moeow 0, 0
0; N 5-2, 12, 12; Rogers 0-0, 0; Callan 0-0, 0; Totals
31, 10-12, 12.
Halftime Kansas 37-33. Total fouls - Oklahoma 23,
Kansas 15. Fouled out - Allison. Rebounds -
Oklahoma 42 (Phillips, Green 7). Kansas 32
(Jennings 7). Technique - None.
St. John's tops Syracuse; Duke, N.C. win
From Kansan wins
NEW YORK — Walter Berry scored 27 points and St. John's capitalized on a new of Syracuse fouls last night, seeding the No. 10 Redmen to an 86-79 victory and placing them in a tie with the No. 6 Osangemen for first place in the Big East Conference.
In raising its overall record to 26-4 and its conference mark to 13-2, St. John's moved into excellent position to win the regular-season league title this weekend.
The Redmen and Ortingen, 22-4 and 13-2, both have one g me remaining. If each wins, as expected, St. Joan's would capture te regular-season crown through a ie-breaker because of its better reced against the conference's third-plce team, Georgetown.
S. John's hosts Seton HJ Saturday and Syracuse visits Connecticut
Berry, who had 12 rebounds, was backed by Willie Glass with 4 points and 12 rebounds and Shelte Jones with 14 marks. Mark Jackson an the offense exceptionally well antinished with 14 points and eight sists while Ron Rowan had 12 points nd 10 assists.
Dwayne Washington, slithering through the lane and along the baseline, finished with 35 points for Syracuse and Wendell Alexis contributed 19 points and 12 rebounds. Duke 77. Clemson 69
Dawkins broke Danny Ainge's NCAA record for career games in which he scored in double figures. Dawkins has scored 10 or more points in 119 of his 123 varsity games. Ainge scored in double figures in 118 games at Brigham Young.
CLEMSON, S.C. — Senior guard Johnny Dawkins scored 27 points as No. 1 Duke beat the Clemson Tigers, 77-69, last night.
The Blue Devis, 28-2, moved to substantial leads over Clemson three times in the game only to see the scrappy Tigers battle back. Duke now has an 11-2 Atlantic Coast Conference record with a critical game against North Carolina on Sunday.
Clemson now has an 11-12 overall record and is 3-10 in the ACC. Forward Horace Grant scored 19 points for the Tigers.
N. Carolina 85, Virginia 79
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Brad Daugherty scored 18 points and freshman Jeff Lebo contributed 17, all in the second half, last night to
help co-No. 3 North Carolina snap a two-game losing streak with an 85-79 victory over Virginia.
The Tar Heels improved to 26-3 overall and 10-3 in the Atlantic Coast Conference after their last regular-season game in Chapel Hill. Virginia dropped to 18-8 and 7-6.
Joe Wolf added 16 points, including 10 in the second half, and Kenny Smith had 15 for North Carolina.
The Cavaliers led 37-33 at the half, but the Tar Heels used a 12-3 run in the first four minutes of the second half to take charge. Wolf's basket 2:55 into the second half gave North Carolina the lead for good at 41-40. Georgetown 90. Boston Col. 76
Virginia's Olden Polynice played the final 17:17 with four fouls, but still finished with a game-high 24 points.
LANDOVER, Md. — Reggie Williams scores 22 points and No.15 Georgetown broke open a close game with a surge early in the second half last night to down Big East ee Boston College 90-76.
The Hoyas, who had lost three of their previous four games, improved to 21-6 overall and 10-5 in the Big East. The Eagles, losers of eight of their last 10, dropped to 13-13 and 4-11. It was Boston College's sixth
straight loss to Georgetown dating back to the 1982-83 season.
Georgetown used a 15-2 scoring spree to turn a 38-38 tie into a 53-40 lead with 13:30 left. Williams and Ralph Dalton each scored two baskets in the Hova run.
The Eagles drew to within five with 9:41 remaining on the strength of a 13-5 run ignited by six points by Roger McCready. The Hoyas countered with an 8-2 run, capped by a driving jam by Ronnie Highsmith, to rebuild the lead to 66-55 with 5:39 left.
Horace Broadnax added 17 points and Ralph Dalton 12 for Georgetown, whose five starters each scored in double figures.
Louisville 65, S. Carolina 63
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Milt Wagner hit two free throws with two seconds last left night to lift 14th-ranked Louisville to a 65-63 Metro Conference victory over South Carolina.
The victory set up Sunday's regular-season Metro title game between the Cardinals and eighth-ranked Memphis State.
Louisville, 23-7 overall, has won eight straight. The Gamecocks, who lost their sixth straight, dropped to 12-14 and 2-9.
From Kansan wires
Missouri erased a 24-18 Kansas State lead with a 12-4 scoring burst in the final $5_{1/2}$ minutes of the first half. The Tigers led 30-28 at halftime.
Sophomore Lynn Hardy, who had 12 points, gave the Tigers their largest lead at 75-57 when he sank
Mizzou tops K-State; Colorado loses 13th
Missouri, 20-12 overall and 7-6 in the Big Eight, gradually built its lead before Strong broke the game open during a five-minute 16-6 Missouri scoring spree with 10 of his 22 second-half points.
COLUMBIA. Mo. — Jeff Strong scored 24 points, including 22 in the second half, and Derrick Chievous added 23 to lead the Missouri Tigers to an 84-69 Big Eight Conference victory last night over Kansas State.
The Tigers held an insumountable 65-50 lead with 8:11 left. Retiring Kansas State coach Jack Hartman, who was honored before the game, and his Wildcats never mounted a comeback.
one of two free throws with 3:12 left.
Ben Mitchell had 18 points, Norris Coleman added 17 and guards Benny Green and Joe Wright had 13 each for Kansas State, 15-12 and 4-9.
Nebraska 79, Colorado 72
LINCOLN, Neb. — Senior Harvey Marshall scored 23 points to lead nebraska to a 79-72 win over Colorado in Big Eight Conference basketball last night.
Nebraska trailed Colorado by one at the half, but outscored the Buffs 16-8 in the first 10 minutes of the second half to take the lead for good.
Nebraska's last 18 points came from the free-throw line.
seniors John Matzke and Chris Logan had 10 and 12 points respectively in the their last game in the Bob Devaney Sports Center while Bernard Day had 12 and Brian Carr 16 for the Huskers.
Colorado, which has lost all 13 of its Big Eight games, was led by Mike Reid with 14 points.
]
14
University Daily Kansan
Classified Ads
The University Daily
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Classified displays do not count towards most earned rate discount
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28th Annual Antique Show and Sale Coming February 15, March 1. 12 p.m., National Armed Forces Center, 3 a.m., 8 p.m., National Armory, 200 Iowa. Sponsored by Pilot Club. Admission $2.00 with the ad 25 off.
- Teenbooks are not provided for classification or classified display advertisements.
PRIVATE PLACEMENT
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oil refiners will be required to pay in advance
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Call Ken Wilson 841-1085 or 842-5752
Announcing Lawrence's newest record store. Ask about our guaranteed buy back, new and used albums, we buy and sell, tape special, Records 914 W. 22rd St. Last Chance. Recordings 914 W. 22rd St. 845-5311
- correct on display of any advertisement
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You'll find ... GREEK
WEEK '86. March 17-23
FESTIVAL
Rent'19.杯 T-25 $8.8 m 曼 mon Smitty's T-147. W 3rd; B4.732 - V5.733. Mon. Sat. 9:00 - Sun. 14:37
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $9.06
Rent-VCR with 2 wdrs, 824l $12.05 Mon, Sat,
Sat, Sun, 5:15, 1:15
in honor of
--submissions. Linda 864-889-8925.
Spring Break! Limited supplies of tents, sleeping bags, coolers, etc. Make reservations now!
Wilderness Discovery Level Burge Union, phone
Attention Sophomores: Owl Society is now accepting applications! Minimum overall GPA of 3.0 Applications in Rm. 400 Kansas Union, Applicaton in Rm. 300 Kansas Union, on the March 17 p.m in Rm. 400 Kansas Union
Tuesday.
FILM
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4350
"ONE FINE DAY"
"AMERICAN
DADADE:
Women's History Week March 3-7, 1986
Tuesday, March 4, 1986 7:30-8:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room Kansas Union
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
ENTERTAINMENT
Spring Break Disc-Off Party! Wednesday; March 5, Coghurn's presents CBS recording artists the Elvis Brothers. $cover. Don'v miss this show! Tired of DY? Bring your party to life with live dancing, party rock-n-rush music for the FANs looking special rates for spring 2019-3433 Jim
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE DJ DANCE MUSIC, A mixture of new-rock with the classics. Professional sound system, computerized light system. Discounts for student organizations. 749-4713.
PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE WILL use to pre-
pare your music for your next party. We use a 1200 watt system that can fill, any size room and can accommodate outdoor parties too. Units in Lawrence, Manhattan and Salina. Call 841-3643 or (913) 827-8948.
FOR RENT
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live in Miracle Flats. Vacancies available now and this summer. Plan ahead, plan now for next fall. 843-2116.
Available for sublease, furnished apartment 2
block from campus. 1 bedroom, 2 beds, really
neat and newly remodeled. Call 842-0519 and we
can negotiate.
First come, first served, only a few two left. At 20 W 360th, on KU bus route, between Gibson and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, dressings, and appliances. We pay hot and cold water. We carry carpet, extra bath or balcony. Call us at AAA for appointment.
Furnished one bedroom apartment near University & Downtown. Most unit pairs with off street parking. Call 212-563-8780.
parking NO FOR PALL.
LEASE NOW FOR PALL (with or without summer 1980) Deluxe 4 or 4HR (duplex, or 2 baths Basement, carpet, all drapes, CA, W/D makeer. Energy efficient: low utilities. On bus路机. No pets. Refs. required. Must use to: appreciate $500/room. negotiable. 847-736.
Studio apartment one block from campus. No pets. $175.00 per month. 749-1288.
Newly remodeled 4 bed 2 bath apt. $250 plus
cleaning fees. Lease ends 31 July 31.
Indiana 841-6931
Two new bedroom apartment, Aspen West. No pets,
$239.00 per month, 749-1288.
SUBLEASE 1. BR SUNDANCE APt furnished.
1. EA $249.00 (mid-May through July
8): 9:00-12:00 (Eveighens)
$249.00 (Eveighens)
Share large 2 BR apt. 1/2 rent @ $438.00. No mo.ILL Bill #183-1689 days. Bill #189.192 see
Applications are now available for the 1986/87 Fall and Spring Semesters.
Space is limited!
SO APPLY
TODAY!
Call or come by for a tour.
NAISMITH
HALL
1800 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, Ks. K6445
(913) 843-8559
oubless available for Summer. Contemporary 2 BR furnished apartment; AC, carpet, 1/2 bath Near campus and down-town. Call 842-5503 or 841-1212
TRAILRIDGE-Now leasing for Summer & Fall. Studios-large, cheerful large closets, quiet building next to laundry building, water paid. Studio-low, clean, quiet laundry, dishwashing, laundry in building, gas heat & water paid. TOWNSHOIRES 2.3.2 & 4 bedroom, studio, large. Excellent maintenance services, 3 swimming pools, tennis, basketball, close to shopping, 1/2 block to Centennial Park, on property.
FOR SALE
MASTERCASTER offers completely furnished 1 and
2-bedroom apartments all near Camellia. Call
841-312, 841-525 or 841-690.
1985 Schumann Mountain Bike-Reliease transportation with very few miles. Call 824-6886 after 2 p.m.
19 inch portable television in a vivid, dazzling color.
24 early summer host, BUI-8984
3 man dome tent with rain fly. Factory record-
dance $30. Everything $20. Ice beth 4%
Vermont 8%.
A. Zemith, 19 inch, color TV, Used for one year $200. 2 chests of drawers, both $70. A dressing table, $40. A bed and 4 mattresses, all $160. A vacuum cleaner, $40. Call 749-4283.
Big Casio boom-box synthesizer $199. Raleigh record bicycle to 10-mi $138. Technics turbellary, linear tracking, programmable plus cart-drive $149. IBM pcjr plus software $599. 841-2399.
This 100 watt watt Kenwood, Amplifier will make everyone dance $252, or the AKAI programmable timer $75, linear tracking and lighted 20 band equalizer $200, tunable $110. You will have full control of your stereo.
BABY DEAN ELECTRIC GUITAR: Candy apple
423-7810 for Nod. $350 firm
423-7810 for Nod.
B. C. Rich Warwick Bass with case; 2 Ludwig Hewitt Cymbal Stands; Paule 58 ride and rude baskets; Knots 16 race and baseball Baseball cards and sports nostalgia - Bull; eyel and Tyrade, J.D.'s Baseball card. 01-18 M.S.
big assignment of men's clothes. Like new,
reasonable. Stacks 225, 325, skirt, dress, med, etc.
with a zip and hook closure.
Cash immediately for automobile exhaust catalytic converters and up pay cash
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U. Repair):
Government Call: 817-607-6000
for information for information
Cornell Comic Books, Penguinbooks, etc. Max's
Comics, Open 11 a.m. Tue., 5 p.m. Sat. & 10-6 i.m.
Campus.
841-7614
CANNONDLE SR-390 FRAME and 58 cm.
button bracket, front DERAILLUR, and
SHIFTERS included. Call 684-6811 or 749-4818
after 6 a.m.
**Broad range Sale:** $129.00 for 4-wheel drive.
For Sale: 180 Honda Civic. 910-841-3962, call
Must sell: Eagle ACM-1861, 4 wheel drive, two doors, FM radio, air-condition, wine-colored, 32,000 miles, in excellent condition. $3900. Call 749-403.
For Sale: 1812 Schimm Letour, lots of extras,
great shape, $150. Call for five. 841-6467.
Quantaray Auto. Lens-85-210 mm/F3.8 Macro/Zoom. $80 best or 841-6077.
NIKKOR 50 mm 1.8, 465 Access 37.5, 9.5M
Nikon kick mount 900. 6uck 845-8523
Micr-Sonora portable electric/carridge ribbon typewriter w/ $98 best or $100 best. 841-6077. REQUIRES from $28, turntables from $15, speakers $1a pair. Tee deck, boxes and car stereo, all completely reconditioned and warranted. Lawn Custom Radio, 914 W. 23rd St.
New tender lehman electric guitar, Dean
Mackley 50k Amp. Cry baby flex pedal.
Necessary cords $500. Neg. 381-9243. Ask for
Janet.
Western Civilization Studies: Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them. 1) As study guide; 2) For class analysis of Western Civilization; 3) Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Town Creek, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and online.
Sierra Computers electric/cartridge ribbon
typewriter w / case, $90 or best offer 814-867-67
www.silvercomputers.com
Observe Executive computer; 2 drives, 128K memory and Epson dot-matrix printer. 500 words of software including MediaMaster (reads, written, formats IBM). Wordzard, Supercure2, MusicCreativ, MusicLab, more. 4320 KB disk at 91:57-97:57 workdays on 0-61:49 am 0 & weekends.
tong Skiing? New Boggmer med. jacket/size
bult tyms or best offer! Also sweaters/goggles
1975 Musselman H. II, cylinder, 4 qipped, A/C, AMFM K2,
sharp looking, good MPG, ATI 148 & Bremont
sharp looking, good MPG, ATI 148 & Bremont
AUTO SALES
1978 Toyota Corolla SL3-5hkcc. One owner,
10 years, but runs great. $1500 or best offer
with a full year lease.
1979 Honda Civic, 5 ptd, 60 miles, gray tundra, up brake, up job. Excellent car. Christina
1983 BMW 202-18 Blue Bell AM-FM cassette, sun
roof, automatic transmission, show room
condition, 26,000 miles, $13,500. Call 913-491-4790.
Engine: engine, fine condition. Needs
rebuilding.
75 VW Rabbit, rebuild-carb, new fuel-pump, $675 OBO 71. Daten, great engine, some rust, need starter, $400 OBO. Call Luke A64-8223/94-8989
75 FIREHUD. good looks, good 24mm.
76 FIREBIRD-Runs great, looks good, 24 mm,
14 mm battles. AM/FM cassette $460
batteries. Bluetooth $59.
**84 Toyota Celica, 2 door Coupe, speed fully equipped. A.C. Vehicle Engine 1000 hp 40 mpg, #785043.**
- 18p Impala engine, tires fine condition. Needs body work. Best offer 841-1055, ask for Kob.
LOST/FOUND
Moving Mint Sell. 103s Olds-Motor Carlss station
Battery. 85% Full Option. Just $1758
989-6917
Lott: A post depicting German firms and their interrelations. May have been seen in the vault asset to the German Dept., please call Chris 834-6486. Personalized JC license plate no. 21216.
Found 1 - watch face at Watson Library on
02/18/.88, Check at Reference Desk.
Wax Hiringberg overcame and red scarcit. Lent
Sunday night might Pebb, 15. 83-1782. David C
Morgan
Personalized JC license plate stolen. Irre-
pleasable, sentimental value, please return.
BRUSH RANCH CAMP for girls located in nearby santa Fe NM now hiring female counselors; drama, dancing, dance, music, swimming (syncry), and WSD) and English riding. For girls interested in a 2014 interview held at U.K. March 24th, contact James Congdon 769-727-6141 or write P.O. Box 240, San Diego.
HELP WANTED
Naismith Hall Resident Assistant 1986-1987
Applications now available
Naismith front desk 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
until Spring Break
CASH PAID DAILY. Dominie's Pizza is now accepting hire to 10 drivers. If you are a self-motivated, high energy person, you could work for us. Please contact us. We company we pay cash commissions on deliveries only. Our drivers make $5-8 per hour and move. You must be 18 years or older, have a car, current driver's license and proof of insurance. Apply today. We offer a free drive, no Iowa. No phone calls, EOE, m/
call 843-8559 for additional information
Requires micro familiarity. This is a long term position with tremendous growth potential.
Lawrence's largest computer store COMPUTER OUTLET, seeks a personable , aggressive sales person for NCR, Leading Edge, IBM, Sperry and Corona micro's. Work includes assembly and office responsibilities.
SALES-SUPPORT MICRO- COMPUTERS
Join the sharpest computer team in NE Kansas. Salary - commission.
Send resume to COMPUTER OUTLET, 804 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS. 66044. EOE-MF
CRUISHEPSH HIRING! $140.000 Carribean, Hawaii, World! Call for Gunset, Cannabis, Marijuana, BDSM! GOVERNMENT JOBS $16.000 $29.320 yr. New! Call 8-507-467-0000. Extr. R758 for current
Thursday. Feb. 27, 1986
COULD YOU BE BOSTON NANNY?
Are you a loving, nurturing person who enjoys spending time with children? Join the network of over 300 people who have come to Boston to care for children through our agency. Live in lovely suburban neighborhoods, enjoy excellent salaries, benefits, your own living quarters and limited working hours. Your round-trip transportation is provided. One year
Two continuing boury hour positions; book publisher seeks 2 students who type (60 plus) wpm & have previous office experience to assist in planning and preparing assignments for qualifications; 20 hrs/week during semester, 20-40 hrs/week during summer. Complete application at University Press of Kansas, 328 Carroll Street, Springfield, IL 61705.
GOVERNMENT JOBS, $10.440/day yr.20w. For
government jobs @ 857-687-0000 Ex RTR 879 for current
federal labor.
AIRLINE HIRING BOOM! $14-$30,000
Stewardesses, Reservations! Call for Guide,
Cassette, Newsvice, 9:00am, full time pay $80-$120
mo. Full time pay $80-$900 mo. Work for the fastest growing co., in American history. We need distributors in Lawrence area; training provided.
Email: hr@airlinehiring.com
WANTED: ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN for immediate full or part-time work in Overland Park area, 6 mo. experience necessary. Call (913) 69-8065.
Your round-trip transportation is provided. One year commitment or write Ms. Fitzli, Childcare Placement Service, 1803 East 46th Street, Brookline, MA 02416 (815) 565-6284.
Computing Services is seeking a half-time student monthly Software Trainer. Salary $80 per month. Use of the computer will include training and deliver FOCUS training sessions for end users; write FOCUS documentation for end users; provide some consulting. Required experience must be demonstrated in computerized skills; knowledgeable about computerized data bases and their use; experience working with students in the job resume, and three references to John Bucher, Computing Services, University of Kansas, 371/768 AU Employer application deadline: 3/17/08.
A KU student from far East Orient seeks a serious girl for warm relationship. Please reply to Mehdi
PERSONAL
Captain Energy says, "There are better ways to spend your money. Help conserve energy."
Happy Birthday to the intoxicated hitchiker,
Mama. From your apartment buddies in 4B and
5B.
SUMMER WORK/JOINSON COUNTY, KS
Work with the HVAC department to ensure
work. Work document to door-to-door data
collection. Car and driver's license required.
For interview March 6, please contact Joan
Kuust, HVAC.
Semi-desperate student waitress seeks interesting, as well as exciting, male for companion. If interested, come to Valentines on Thursday, Feb. 25, Ack for Calbe J, and Dan. Need
Looking for woman to have my first child. Send remit to STUD, in personalms.
To Rag JP, iee? !see you had you a first name! See you at Johnny's same-boot D-J.W
PONSETTA BEACH INN in the heart of the Fort
Lauderdale daterd STUDENT discount.
www.fortlauderdale.com
810-4360 WeeklyUp Mailing Circulars! Our
aunt! Sincerely interested rush self-addressed
envelope. Success, P.O. Box 470CEG, Woodstock,
IL 60098
BUS. PERSONAL
Blue Heron Futons
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattres
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.-Sat. 12:5-3 p.m.
841-9443
841-9443
Euroll now in Lawrence Driving School Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841-7749.
Telephone
The Union's recording of the day's entrees & soups
GAV/LEBISHN? Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to: TRANGLE TIMES, P. 0
62492, KCMO 64196.
MENU HOT LINE
864-4567
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater area call. Call for appointment.
913-345-1400
Barb's Vintage Rose
NEW ARRIVALS
Rhinestone Jewelry
necklaces, bracelets
earrings-brooches
Airline Counter Prices!
Leaving Town?
841-2451 927 Mass, M-S170 p.61n.
Thurs.tf 8
ON-CAMPUS LOCATION!
NO SERVICE CHARGE!
The latest styles in ladies fashion hostelry are available now at the Etc. Shop, 732 Mass., 843-691. Floral lace, painette lace, side foral, dea skinny, dots ankle, roses, shimmers and others. Rentals $14.014. Quality Berkeley Hostelry, 11-5:30 Mon.-Sat., 9 p.m. Thursday.
We Sell Airline Tickets
Pabst
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY
808 W.23rd
Wiedemann
Pabst
Wiedemann 12 pk $3.52
Weekly Beer Special
Feb.26-Mar.4
Black Label
12 pk $3.52
Coors Light Miller
STOP MAKING SENSE! Becoming an ERASERHEA from studying? Is your brain turning to LIGHTNING OF LIFE? If you are figurining HUNGER for hot video, wrap up your CRAWLING HAND and check us out. LIBERTY HALL GAMES 12:00pm-4:00pm 12:30pm-6:00pm 12:45pm-10:00pm 12:45pm-10:00pm 12:45pm-10:00pm 12:45pm-10:00pm 12:45pm-10:00pm 12:45pm-10:00pm 12:45pm-10:00pm 12:45pm-10:00pm
---
- Word Processing
- Thesis Binding
- Copying
- Typesetting
- Design & Layout
.
- Laminating
- Transparencies
26TH & IOWA
HOLIDAY PLAZA
Phone 749-5192
University
Materials
Center
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U repair).
Do not delivery or package. Call 855-687-6000.
E-mail: govserv@governmenthomes.com
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
KU Union
900 Massachusetts
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas and other coasts. Enjoy from only 881 Deux lakehide, parties, good baggies, more._Hurry, call Sunchase Tours for more information and reservations to lift free 1-800-321-5911 or contact a local Sunchase Tours office. Your Spring break counts. count on Sunchase.
Thouands of R & R albums—8 or less. Also collectors items. Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quartitles 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or trade all styles music.
V
"CAMP COUNSELORS M-F. Outstanding Slim and Trim Down Campus 'Temps', Dancer, Swimmer, Lifeguard, Volunteer plus. Separate girls' and boys camp. 7 weeks. Cammelot罢 ocollege Campuses at a time. California Contact: Michele Friedman, Director. #97 Hustler Dr. No Woodner N.Y. N-1884.
-
SKT CULTUR RISING! Skateboards & Accessories QUALITY STUFF ONLY
UPTOWN BICYCLES
1337 Mass.
749-0835
GOVERNMENT SUPPLUS* Raincoats, over-caps, field jackets, camouflage clothing, sleeping bags, tents, camping gear, much more! St. Marys Surplus Sales. 143-773-614
Rent-'19' Color T. V. $2.98 a month. Cartin
Mahler. 147 W. Color T. B. 924-8733. Mon.-Sat. 9:30-
10:30
All ceramic jewelry in stock & other selected items
*Lose Weight! Gain Weight! or Just Feed Great HERBAL NUTRITION PROGRAM given you good, basic sound nutrition that everyone loves! Work with us at 911-829-4761. DuPree-Gilson & Anson* call
AFRICAN ADORNED S E.7th 842-1376
V
19th *Rent* 12.0% T $238 m 8 month. Smitty's TV 14
W 23rd. 842-7571. Mon-Sat: 9:30-10:00. Sun-1
4
THE FAR SIDE
SERVICES OFFERED
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 let it be. (220. W 231. W108 (Gibbon Glids) #811 - 48494).
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in
Lawrence. 841-5716
Free Pregnancy Counseling for the individual and or couple as well as for their families. Additional services include pregnancy education, family, and adoption. Siding scale fee. Available on site. P.O. Box 320, 220 Maine-841-007.
MATH TUTOR - Bob Meers holds an A in M math from K. U. where 002, 102, 116 and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professional students. He attended 60 minutes' session; $6 per 40 minute session. Call 843-9032.
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
HARPER
LAWYER
TYPING
1101 Mass.
Suite 201 749-0117
RESUMES-A professional resume can get your more job interviews. Let me write one for you!
NEED TO TAKE? WE-L LISTEN. Leebian/Gay Peer Counseling. Confidential completely. GLISK 864-3091, KU Info 864-3506, or Headquarters 864-2145.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Costs
affordable and affordable typing. JUDY. 842-7945.
www.judybook.com
1. 3-Dependent, Accurate, Professional, WORD
books, etc. Data Word 841-9770
24-Hour Typing, 16th semester in Lawrence
Broadway. Master's degree in quality and best service. B51-4008
www.western.edu
1-1-1 TRIO WORD PROCESSING experienced,可靠的, reliable Rush jobs accepted, call
AL. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, these, term papers.
A.L. 842-8857 after 5:30.
A-1 professional typing. Tern papers, Theses,
Selective. Use with IBM Using IBM.
I. Responable: 843-3946
ATTN MEADWBOOK RESIDENTS.
Excellent typet butyric. APA format experience.
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing Spelling/punctuation Cases of punctuation Cases of transcription also 841-4207
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
By GARY LARSON
So, what d ya say?...Maybe we could go back to my place...Have a few drinks...a little alfalfa...
Maybe we could show each other our brands...Ha ha ha ha ha
BLOOM COUNTY
Cattle hustler.
SAY PORTNOY...DOES THE MORALITY OF HUNTING WILD HUNTERS EVER DISTURB YOU?
I'M SUPERVSED AT YOU!
YOU KNOW DRUMmed TOOTH!
THAT WITHOUT US, WE MISSED HUNTERS WOULD ORDER/MAKE EEOYSTEM EOSIMA NO TIME, AND THEN STRAINED THE DINASTER!
A
UNION
I VIEW, I LIKE *T* THINK
I WORK FOR THE LOVE
BETWEEN HIS EARTH
HONOR ON GOD'S GREEN
EARTH.
bv Berke Breathed
BUT THAT DON'T MEAN I STILL NOT 'BLISH BLOWN' THEIR GRANKS OUT '
OH ME NEITHER!
ursday, Feb. 27, 1986
University Daily Kansan
15
Classified Ads
Workprocessing/Typing Service produces
city resumes, papers, dissertations, etc.
enable rates with quick service. File storage:
840-1850.
Your Type! Your Word processing, typing edith. IBM/OS-6/5, 9-5, M-F Same day service-available. 844 Illinois, 843-6618
Erate word processing, experienced,
sensible rates. Call Laraun 5-10 pm.
dowbrook location. 749-1963.
Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable,
only, Proofreading, corrections, Resumes,
in papers, these, dissertations, 24 hour
available. One block from campus. 942-3276.
Hatham Computer Services - Word Process
Typing, Corrections, Proofreading, Graphics,
rather Document upgrading. Free estimates
1118
PENDABLE, professional, experienced.
METTE SHAFFER - Typing. Service.
ANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape.
4077
SENTATIONS/ THESIS / LAP WAZES/
and Editing and Graphics, ONE-DAY Service
on shorter student papers, up to 30
p.m. Please call 855-214-7969, typing "855"
@ p.m. Please.
interations, Theses. Term Papers. Over 15 yrs.
perience. Phone 842-2310 after 5:30; Barb.
Jenson, 24-hour typing, IBM word processing,
erik and reliable service. Lvn1 841-5594
4. ENGLISH TYPING-TUTORING. Spelling creatlon, overnight service available. Great. 843-9643
we handle your typing needs. Typed to your
requirements. Reasonable, in 15 years experience
Wait, the "15" is very small.
Let's look at the first word again. It's "me".
The second word is "handle".
The third word is "your".
The fourth word is "typing".
The fifth word is "needs".
sperfect paper and resumes. WRITING
WELINE. 841-3409.
VALIDITY TVPING Letters, these, dissertation applications. Applications Spelling corrected 304274
YPTING PLUS assistance with composition,
kid, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
directions, papers, letters, applications.
sumes. Have M.S. Degree. 843-6254.
EXPERIENCED TYPITR, Term papers, theses
IMC Correcting Sextile 1 for correct spelling
of words in American English.
The WORDOCTORS - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147
TOP-NOPT SERVICES professional work processing, manacies, resumes, dossiers, letter writing.
quantity phone. nt-445-8003
TYPNING. Call 841-5804 evenings and weekends.
WANTED
FU sferumber und or faul female porum (s) for
Sferumber and/or faul female porum (s) for
Formale, nonstuder for spacious apt. through May, renewable WD to campus, town $165.00
Housemate in 5-bedroom house. Pets Furnished,
but your own bedroom $100 plus 4 unities plus
rent.
Mature individual needed to provide companion and complete homemaking tasks for home-bound clients. Call Douglas County VNA 943-3738 EOE.
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED for new apart
more allow to寝 113/month. M2-7899.
WANTED: Roommate to share coords. Two large bedrooms, tirapiece, nice quiet study, dishwasher, plenty of space, and I'm easy to get along with. 841-4835.
Wanted: 4 tickets to KU-ISU game. 841-1490.
Wanted: 4 tickets to KUJSI game. 841-1499.
Wanted: Female roommate to share three bedroom, house. Very nice & clean neighborhood.
842-9738
Wanted: Female, non-smoking roommate to share a 3 bedroom apt. for remainder of semester. $150.00/mo. plus 1/3 utilities. Call 749-4823. Keep trying.
Want to go skiing? We need 12 couples to share
Want to snow in Winter, spring, break Call
Me on (518) 370-8495
We buy your used audio equipment. Receivers, speakers, amps, car stereo equipment. Lawrence Towers. 718-340-5200. www.lawrencetowers.com
CLASSIFIEDS
Classified
Heading:
Write ad here:
Net a
Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Phone:
Name:
Address:
Dates to run: to
1 Day
2-3 Days
4-5 Days
10 Days or 2 Weeks
1-15 words $2.60 $3.75 $5.25 $8.25
For every
5 words added
30* 50* 75* $1.05
Classified Display
1 col x 1 inch = $4.40
vello sub
DELIVERS
841-3268
SAVE AT IMPORTS • DOMESTICS EXTIC CARS
Ralph's AUTO REPAIR
707 N. Second 841-1205
NOTICE!
In order to enter a program to become a certified teacher, a student must pass two entrance exams: MATHEMATICS and WRITING.
Students who have completed their teacher training and wish to be certified in Kansas must pass two additional exams: READING and PROFESSIONAL KNOWLEDGE.
Registration information is available at the Testing Center in the University Counseling Center: 116 Bailey Hall.
TEST DATES
April 5, 1986
June 28, 1986
REGISTRATION DEADLINES March 3,1986 May 26,1986
QUESTIONS?
TEACHER EDUCATION OFFICE
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
117 BAILEY HALL
864-3726
Pizza Shuttle says: Get it together!
842-1212
$2500
Additional Pizzas $2
Additional items 50*
16 oz. Pepsi 25*
10—1 item 10" Pizzas
Feed your
fraternity, sorority, office, dorm floor groups of any kind!
1601 West 23rd Southern Hills Mall
Pizza Shuttle
PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST-FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
TALK ABOUT GREAT TIMES!
Worlds of Fun
Oceans of Fun
Be a part of the Excitement at Worlds Of Fun and Occasions of Fun!
Take advantage of the opportunity to meet over 2,000 new friends while entertaining over one million guests this season. Make this the summer to remember!
We will be visiting your campus on Thurs. Mar. 6th to interview for summer jobs and internships.
Please contact your university Placement Office for additional information at 864-3624.
Students save 10%
on Kansan Classifieds!!
JUAREZ
TEQUILA
The Magic of Mexico.
JUAREZ TEQUILA
The Magic of Mexico.
Buy 2 - Get 1 Free
MIRA TAYLOR
Create a set from matching pieces of the Romance Collection by Lily of France.
Buy any two and receive any one item FREE!
UNDERCOVER
21 West 9th
Store hours:
M-F 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Th. open until 8 p.m.
Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sun. 1-5 p.m.
321 THE QUALITY PRINTER
NEW PRODUCT
PIXMA
- Letter quality and draft speeds
- 218/72 cps
Superb graphics at 180 x 180 dots per inch
Introductory Sale
$649
TOSHIBA IN ONE
LEADING EDGE
COMPUTER
OUTLET
Your computer
connection at
843-FLUG * 804 N.H.
COUNTRY Inn
COUNTRY Inn
• CHICKEN • STEAKS
• RIBS • SHRIMP
• PRIME RIB
BUY ONE DINNER
GET ONE 1/2 PRICE
(Good Thurs,Fri,Sat,Sun)
1350 N. 3rd
(Not good w/any other coupon)
Expires:2/28/86
843-1431
WE HAVE GIVE AWAYS TOO!
At Basketball Games they shout "Pizza!"
At Basketball Games they shout Pizza!
And back of tickets offer free Hamburgers.
CAN WE MATCH THAT?
Ours is a good place for hugs and tears.
We offer tremendous blessings: God's (and FREE)
This is a good place to meet friends
(Right, John?)
AND this Sunday we've got a bunch of WENDY'S coup
AND this Sunday we've got a bunch of WENDY'S coupons!
Lutheran Campus Ministry
1204 Oread 843-4948
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
KU Pre-Med Club will meet tonight!
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Place: Council Room Kansas Union
The speaker will be a third-year med. student from the KU Medical Center
All interested are welcome!
The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City is seeking qualified candidates for Management Development Internship positions. Interns demonstrating strong management potential will be considered for full time Analyst positions upon graduation.
INTERNSHIPS
We will be available for on campus interviews:
After this date, please contact your placement office or:
Karen Winter
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
925 Grand Ave
Kansas City, MO 64198
Thursday, February 13, 1986
---
Always time to remember Pearl*
No need to wait for a special occasion to add on to your favorite girl's Natural Add-a-pearl Necklace. Say you love her...any time...with a gift of lustrous Genuine Oriental pearls. With each addition, her Add-a-pearl Necklace will grow in beauty and value.
We invite you to call us today or visit us in person to make your selection.
your selection.
THE
Odette Pearl
NECKLACE
ORGANIC ORNATE PEARLS
McQueen
JEWELERS
809 Massachusetts
McQueen JEWELERS
809 Massachusetts
16
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Thursday, Feb. 27, 1986
Sports Briefs
500 tickets available for Iowa State game
Before Saturday's Kansas-Iowa State men's basketball game, 500 extra tickets will go on sale. Doug Vance, Kansas sports information director, said Tuesday.
Norton is improving
The game starts at 3:05 p.m. The tickets will go on sale 30 minutes before tip-off at the athletic office in the main lobby of Allen Field House.
LOS ANGELES — Former heavyweight champion Ken Norton yesterday was progressing well from surgery to repair a fractured jaw and skull suffered in a freeway traffic accident, hospital officials said.
"He continues to make smooth medical progress," said Ron Wise, spokesman for Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. "We are going to keep him for at least another day in the critical unit so doctors can monitor him closely. For that
reason, he's still listed in serious but stable condition. We are looking forward to moving him into his own room. hopefully tomorrow."
Norton, 40, was injured Sunday night when his 1978 Excelsur went over the side of the Santa Monica Freeway near Vermont Avenue, California Highway Patrol officer Manny Anvila said.
Tampa names coach
TAMPA. Fla. — Jim Stanley, who coached the Michigan Panthers to the USFL championship in 1983, yesterday was named defensive coordinator for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers of the National Football League.
Stanley, 51, has reached a verbal agreement with Tampa Bay to replace Doug Shively, who resigned as defensive coordinator Feb. 4 to join the coaching staff of the Houston Oilers. Stanley is expected to sign a Buccaneer contract next week.
Stanley, a former Texas A&M offensive lineman will rejoin Tampa Bay head coach Leeman Bennett.
Stanley served as Bennett's defensive line coach in Atlanta from 1980 to 1982. The next year, Stanley guided the Panthers to a 12-6 mark as Michigan won the title in the inaugural season of the United States Football League.
Bengal wants trade
CINCINNATI — Discontented quarterback Turk Schnorch, who has asked the Cincinnati Bengals to trade him, said yesterday that the Atlanta Falcons were the team most interested in acquiring him.
"There is no deal about to be made right now, but Atlanta is the team most on my mind right now," Schonert said.
"My agent told me when I got back from Australia last week that the Falcons had been showing the most interest of any team, and to this point, we've talked more with them than anyone else," he said.
Atlanta coach Dan Henning confirmed that the Faleons were interested in Schonert.
From staff and wire reports.
Winfield skips first practice
United Press International
What would baseball be without some sort of controversy involving the New York Yankees?
It didn't take very long for controversy to erupt in the Yankees' spring training camp at Fort Lauderdale, Fla. On the day the regulars were to report, right fielder Dave Winfield was absent yesterday without an excuse.
Rickey Henderson, who had an excuse, and Winfield were the only absentees among the first-string players as manager Lou Pininiella put the sound through its first workout.
Henderson was given permission by the Yankees to report on Friday because of root-canal treatment he was receiving on his teeth in Oakland, Calif., where he lives. Winfield, however, did not inform the Yankees he would not be in camp and was simply a no-show.
Under terms of the Basic Agreement, position players other than catchers and pitchers do not have to report to spring training until March 5. But all the Yankees were in camp with the exception of the two outfielders and Dan Pasqua, who earlier in the week was given permission to report late because of the death of his mother.
Yankee principal owner George Steinbrenner, who has feuded openly with Winfield over numerous issues in the past, refused to criticize outwardly the $23 million right fielder this time, but indicated privately his annoyance that Winfield did not bother to call with any excuse for missing camp.
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Orioles' camp in Miami, Fla., infielder Jackie Gutierrez reported, but speculation persists that the club is seeking to reverse the trade that brought him from Boston.
Spring Training
According to reports, the Orioles have appealed to Brown to have Gutierrez returned to the Red Sox because of the erratic behavior the infielder displayed during the offseason.
Hank Peters, the Orioles general manager, departed for Dallas yesterday afternoon to attend a major league owner's meeting. Peters also plans to meet with American League President Bobby Brown.
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Gutierrez, who had been in Baltimore to undergo physical and psychological tests, said he was not upset with the club's request that he undergo the tests.
"They had to check me out and I wasn't afraid," Gutierrez said. "There's nothing I don't want on the table."
The Orioles say only that Gutierrez is in camp now, but won't speculate on his future with the club.
At St. Petersburg, Fla., the New York Mets made a trade that could improve their bench strength when they signed veteran left-handed first baseman Tim Corcoran to a minor-league contract.
Corcoran, 32, who was designated for assignment by the Phillies on Dec. 10 and released 10 days later, was signed to a Triple-A contract after working out in California. He will arrive at the Mets' major-league camp tomorrow and be given every
opportunity to make the club.
Corcoran, an outfitier and first baseman, would give the Mets some insurance at first in case commissioner Peter Uebroeth hits Keith Hernandez with a suspension due to his testimony at the Pittsburgh drug trials last year.
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"At some point this season, we feel Tim will contribute to our club," said Mets' vice president Joe McIlvaine.
Appearing in 103 games for the Philadelphia Phillies last year, Corcoran hit .214 in 182 at-bats with no homers and 22 RBI. He went 4-for-32 as a pinch hitter. In 184, Corcoran hit .341 with five home runs and 36 Corcoran BRI going to 10 for 37 as a pinch hitter.
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First base was a problem for the Philies last year, but the club hopes to rectify the situation by shifting Von Hayes to first from center field.
Hayes appears delighted with the move, which would freeride him from being on the board base.
The full squad is not due to report to spring training camp until tomorrow, but Hayes showed up yesterday and worked out at first base.
SMITTY'S TV
Hayes, who played first base regularly in college but only sparingly in the major leagues, impressed Philies manager John Felske with his agility around the bag and the way he handled ground balls.
1447 W 23fd 842-5/51
**************************************************************
Hayes was shifted to first after the Philies acquired Milt Thompson from Atlanta and installed him in center, surrounded by newcomer Gary Redus, obtained from Cincinnati, and Glenn Wilson in right.
"Von is a real good athlete," Felske said. "We don't expect him to have much trouble moving from the outfield."
Olympic committee designates air carrier
United Press International
NEW YORK — An historic agreement that could generate up to $200 million for the worldwide Olympic movement was signed yesterday, beginning a new era of commercial cooperation.
The marketing committee consists of members from the International Olympic Committee, the Seoul and Calgary Organizing Committees and the United States Olympic Committee.
BELLE'S
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Coca-Cola was actually the first company to be designated as a principal sponsor, but Federal Express' signing marked the first time that all of the involved parties were brought together.
Juergen Lenz, executive vice president of ISL, the exclusive marketing agent for the IOC, said about 30 companies covering 44 product categories were expected to sign up as official sponsors before the 1988 Olympics — the Winter Games in Calgary, Canada, and the Summer Games in Seoul. South Korea.
Lenz said it was difficult to estimate how much revenue these companies could be expected to contribute to the Olympic movement, but he projected the figure to be between $178 to $200 million.
For the first time, members of the International Olympic Marketing Committee came together for a joint announcement, heralding the addition of Federal Express as the official air carrier for the 1988 Olympics.
Bill Breen, president of ISL Marketing USA, said the signing of several more companies, including Eastman Kodak, was expected shortly.
ISL, headquartered in Lucerne,
Switzerland, signed on as the official
sales agent for the Olympics in May.
Through a program called TOP (The
Olympic Program), sponsors can
sign up for both the 1988 Winter and
Summer Games on a global and
product-exclusive basis.
The revenue raised through these commercial ventures will go to the two organizing committees, the USOC and the IOC, which will distribute money to national Olympic committees.
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Dick Found, one of two members of the IOC representing Canada and a member of the committee's Executive Board, read a telegram from Juan Antonio Samaranch, IOC president, welcoming Federal Express
Pound, an Olympic swimmer in 1960, said, "It is very encouraging for us to put a lot of work in this program and see it bear fruit."
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SINCE 1889
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY, FEB. 28, 1986, VOL. 96, NO. 107 (USPS 650-640)
Cold Details page 3.
KUEA reports stocks, bonds hit high mark
Staff writer
By Tim Hrenchir
The investments and finance department of the Kansas University Endowment Association pulled in a record profit during the last fiscal year.
And if the stock market continues to prosper as it has, the future of the Endowment Association looks even brighter.
The Endowment Association made more than $15.6 million through securities investments during the 1984-85 fiscal year, according to the Endowment Association's annual report.
Stock and bond dividends and interest brought the Endowment Association almost $10 million. In addition, more than $5.6 million came in from sales of stocks and bonds.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average,
a leading indicator of stock market
trends, closed out yesterday at
1713.99 - an all-time high.
"We're optimistic about our investments," Jeff Davis, Endowment Association treasurer, said Wednesday.
The Endowment Association received information from various financial sources indicating there was room for even more stock appreciation, he said.
But he said he was less confident about the future of bond investments.
"We're facing declining interest rates," Davis said, "so the interest income level on our bonds may be coming down."
Interest levels on bonds rise or fall with the economy's interest rates.
The total value of Endowment Association securities last year was $156.3 million. If the Endowment Association had decided to sell all its stocks and bonds last year, it would have received $156.3 million, Davis said.
The Endowment Association's total investment income was almost $19 million.
The investments pay off for the University in scholarships, construction costs, salaries, equipment and "just about anything else you can think of," said George E. Stewart, vice president for administrative services.
The investments department administers more than 2,000 different fund accounts. All money in those accounts is available for investment, Stewart said.
Depending on restrictions that donors put on the accounts, profits from the accounts may go toward
See ENDOWMENT, p. 5, col. 1
Six speakers say KU should stay in ASK
By Barbara Shear
Staff writer
(2)
Six administrators and students spoke in favor of KU's remaining in the Associated Students of Kansas at an ad hoc committee hearing last night.
The speakers thought that KU would significantly weaken its influence and reputation with the Legislature and other state schools if they pulled out of the student lobby organization, which represents the six state universities and Washburn University.
"ASK has a good reputation with the Legislature," said Richard von Ende, executive secretary of the University. "If KU pulled out now, it would only hurt KU and their reputation to the Legislature."
Sandra Binyon, former campus director of ASK, said she thought that KU would have more influence in the Legislature if it remained a part of ASK.
"Eighty thousand students have more power in the Legislature than 25,000." Binyon said. "It is a large organization that encompasses many students, not just 25,000. It is also a very viable organization with a great track record."
But Binyon said she did favor pulling out of ASK if the organization decided to support Washburn's entering the Board of Regents. She said the decision could harm the status of professional schools, especially the KU School of Law, if Washburn
See ASK, p. 5, col.1
A piece of KU history falls to the bulldozers
By Brian Kaberline
Staff writer
People paused as they walked by,
but few watched for long. To the
passing students, the builder was
just tearing down another old house.
But it was also pulling down pieces of KU history.
The large white house that was home to hundreds of KU students since it was built in 1920 was razed yesterday by its new owner, Mastercraft Corp. 1927 Moodie Road.
Mastercraft owns several apartment buildings and townhouses in Lawrence
The house, 1145 Louisiana St., originally was owned by the Alpha Delta Pi sorority. The sorority stayed in the three-story brick house from 1920 until it moved to its present house in 1954.
When the sorority moved out, the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity moved in. The fraternity stayed in the house until a combination of too little room and campus unrest over the Vietnam War forced it to move in 1971, Walter Hicks, a local architect, said.
Hicks, treasurer of the fraternity's housing corpitation, said the fraternity had outgrown the house. The house could hold a maximum of 45 people and the fraternity wanted to expand to about twice that size.
Trouble in the neighborhood crowded the house members from the outside too. Hicks said.
He said he remembered many strange incidents involving the house and its neighbors.
One story, he said, was of a person who used to walk into the house, apparently high, to play the fraternity's piano. No one ever knew who he was — he just played the piano.
Because the most notorious saloon in town — now the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St. — was next door and people were sleeping all around outside, Hicks said, the house was not a place he would want his son to live at the time.
Mike Wahlstedt, house manager for Pi Kappa Alpha, said he had heard the house was just getting to be too hot of a spot to be in.
Pi Kappa Alpha then sold the house to Wahid Qadi, who rented out both single rooms and apartments in the house, said Qadi'il's son, Kelly.
Kelly Qadi, Lawrence junior, said the house was empty for the last few months before it was bought by Mastercraft.
I
Hicks said he was 'not suprised that apartments in the house did not last
Top — The west side of the house at 1145 Louisiana St. is demolished by workers of the Terracorc Corp., 1927 Moodie Rd. Above — Children from the Hiltop Child Development Center, 1314 Jayhawk Blvd., look on intently. The house, which was once owned by the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, was being demolished yesterday.
long because of its layout. The group bathrooms and smaller rooms of the house were built for group living, not for private tenants.
Officials from Mastercraft could
not be reached for comment on the future of the property. But workers at the house site said the last of the house's remains should be hauled off in the next couple of days.
Committee asks for increases in salary for faculty, students
Bv Mark Siebert
Staff writer
TOPEKA — Student and faculty salaries received a boost yesterday from a Senate committee that reviewed Gov. John Carlin's budget proposals for Board of Regents schools.
schools. But although the increases are improvements from the governor's recommendations, Richard von Ende, University executive secretary, yesterday said that the financing fell short of fulfilling the needs of the University of Kansas.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee recommended increases in student and faculty salaries that would total over $2 million for the University. They also suggested a fee adjustment program that would return $226,326 to the University to help support increased enrollment.
Subcommittees still have to decide on requests from individual schools before the full committee votes on the entire Regents package. The proposal then goes to the full Senate for debate.
senator for the State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., RLawrence, a member of the committee, said he was pleased about the committee's recommendations.
"I'm pleased in some areas but very disappointed in
"others," xon Ende said. "We've got a long way to go."
"What we did today is very good news for higher education." Winter said.
The committee's proposal to increase the governor's financing levels and not take a passive attitude was a sign that the Legislature would not allow Kansas" investment in higher education to deteriorate. Winter said.
The Regents schools are the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
The committee recommended a 4 percent increase in the student salary base, which would allocate an additional $54.395 to student salaries at KU.
The Regents asked for a 7 percent increase in student salaries. The governor did not designate any funds for such an increase.
Von Ende said students would have a tougher time paying for their education without the full increase in money for campus jobs. He said off-campus jobs were especially hard to find at KU and Kansas State University because
"We made the right choice in a very tough economic situation," he said.
THE KU BUDGET Recommendations of the Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee on systemwide issues for the Regents schools.
■ Student salaries:...4 % inc.
■ Faculty salaries:...3 % inc.
■ Faculty retirement: ...1 % add.
■ Fees from higher enrollment: ...$226,326
A Regents request to increase student wages was rejected by the committee.
Another recommendation by the committee was a 3 percent increase in salaries and a 1 percent addition to the retirement program for unclassified employees at Regents schools.
Both the committee's and the governor's recommendations would cost the state $9.1 million. The Regents were asking for a 7 percent salary increase and a 1 percent addition to the retirement program — an $18 million cost to the state.
In his investment budget Carlin recommended that the state pay all 11 percent of employee's contribution to the retirement plan but not include a salary increase.
Winter suggested a 4 percent salary increase along with the 1 percent increase in retirement benefits, but the
Lawrence and Manhattan were relatively small cities.
The state now contributes 6 percent to employees' retirement benefits.
The committee also recommended that schools with increased enrollments keep the increases in student fees they collected.
KU experienced the highest enrollment increase of Regents schools - 338 students - and would receive $226.326 if the proposal passed.
Von Ende said that the extra money helped pay additional instructors and graduate assistants but that it was far less, than the $804,772 the University had requested.
In the past, an increase in fee money went to the state general fund rather than to the institution.
The governor had no provisions for fee adjustments in either of his budgets.
Photos hint seal caused blast
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The shuttle commission, surprised by dramatic new pictures of the initial booster rocket trouble, ended three days of hearings yesterday by concluding that NASA's launch clearance process was marred by maybes and second guessing.
Chairman William Rogers said recommendations to delay the launch of Challenger because of cold weather either were not forwarded to top project officials or were misunderstood.
"The process as it worked in this case was clearly flawed," he said. "It seems to me if you're going to have a decision-making process with key people involved, it ought to be clear where they stand.
An agency engineer said the pictures, from a different angle and clearer than those previously released, appeared to show a black puff of smoke emerging at rocket ignition from the same area that erupted into flame 58 seconds later.
The panel members appeared taken aback by the pictures which
Otherwise there is a lot of second guessing."
Earlier in the six-hour hearing, two National Aeronautics and Space Administration engineers presented new pictures to the presidential panel that strengthened evidence indicating that a breach in a booster rocket joint triggered the Challenger explosion.
The panel reached its conclusions about the space agency's decision-making process after hearing testimony revealing that Challenger's builder recommended against launch as well as engineers for the company that built the ship's solid fuel boosters.
were displayed to illustrate another point.
Rockwell International officials were concerned about ice on the launch pad damaging the shuttle at liftoff, something that apparently did not happen. Morton Thiolok Inc. engineers feared cold weather might make crucial rocket seals unsafe.
Pictures of the smoke had been seen before but they did not make clear its origin.
Song could violate NCAA rules
By Frank Ybarra Staff writer
Staff writer
A rap song about the KU basketball team is causing some question whether the song violates National Collegiate Athletic Association rules, said Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director.
2
Hunter said he contacted the NCAA about the song after Mike Kirsch, coowner of Gammons, 1601 W. 23rd, asked him to check into possible rule violations.
Kirsch wrote the lyrics to the song, which is known as the "Jayhawk Shuffle."
Hunter said NCAA officials told him the song could violate its rules concerning the use of student athletes' names for commercial use.
Hunter said he was sending a letter to Kirsch asking him to stop playing the song.
The shuffle, which has been played on local radio stations, was heard by someone at the NCAA offices in Kansas City, Kan., Hunter said. The NCAA was pleased Hunt had contacted them before they had to take any action.
Kirsch, when informed of the contents of the letter last night, said he wouldn't do anything to jeopardize
The rules aren't clear in this case, Hunter said, because the University of Kansas didn't promote the song. But to comply with the rules, the Athletic Department has to take some action to prohibit the playing of the song.
the basketball team's standing with the NCAA.
"I suspect the prudent thing to do would be to back off," he said.
Kirsch said he would contact his attorneys to see whether he could still play the song if it was determined the NCAA was being unreasonable in its interpretation of the rules.
He said he thought the players' names should be available for public use.
Hunter said that if the song continued to be played, the players potentially could be declared ineligible.
But he said he wasn't upset the soub had been recorded.
"I think it's great," he said. "I wish we could use it."
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Friday, Feb. 28, 1986
News Briefs
Haiti wants return of ousted Duvalier
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Haiti's new government announced yesterday that it would request the extradition of ousted President Jean-Claude Duvalier from France in an apparent move to halt a new wave of looting and unrest in the capital.
Gourge did not say whether Haiti would put Duvalier on trial.
Paris store bombed
The government also said it would move to extradite Albert Pierre, chief of the feared Ton Tons Macoutes secret police, whose flight Sunday provoked anger against officials of the new administration who allowed him to escape.
PARIS — A bomb exploded early yesterday in a Latin Quarter bookstore specializing in anticommunist works, causing extensive damage but no injuries, police said.
The explosion sparked a fire. It blew out store windows and damaged windows in 15 neighboring buildings.
The explosion came a day after another explosion in central Paris. Sit-in goes third day
Sit-in goes third day
NORTHAMPTON, Mass. — Smith College students held control of the campus administration building yesterday for a third day, but the protesters and trustees of the school agreed to meet.
As many as 200 students continued their occupation of College Hall to protest the trustees' refusal to completely divest of $22.3 million in stock in companies that do business with South Africa.
Students have refused to allow employees into College Hall since Tuesday morning.
Cosmic Contest won
NEW YORK — A frail, elderly woman, who in the propeller-plane days of the 1950s envisioned high-speed jet travel, global weekend jaunts and helicopter shuttles, yesterday won a 30-year-old contest on the future of air travel.
TWA officials awarded Helen Thomas, 80, of Cambridge, Mass., $50,000 as the winner of the "Cosmic Contest." The contest asked people boarding TWA flights in 1955 to predict what commercial air travel would be like in 1985.
From Kansan wires.
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — President Corazon Aquino's Cabinet took over yesterday and her office announced that records in several ministries reportedly had been destroyed by Marcos loyalists.
Aquino Cabinet takes control
The new government said hundreds of political prisoners held by the fallen Marcos regime could be freed next week, but extensive paper work slowed the process.
Some political prisoners were freed yesterday, but only one of the 39 people on the list for immediate release actually had gone home by nightfall, said Armando Maley, head of a group of prisoners' families called Kanatid, which means Brother.
Other prisoners were taken from jails to processing centers and had emotional reunions with relatives
Officials said more than 500 people were in jail on assorted political charges when Ferdinand Marcos ended 20 years of rule in the Philippines and fled the country Tuesday. He now is in Hawaii.
while .bureaucrats dealt with the documents.
Philip Habib, the special U.S. envoy, spent 1½ hours with Aquino yesterday. A statement from her office said Habib extended "the warmest greetings of President Ronald Reagan and the American people."
He told Aquino that the uprising that forced Marcos from office, which was largely peaceful, had "deeply moved the American people and those in the highest circles of the U.S. government," the statement said.
Habib paid a fact-finding visit last
week during the tense standoff created by Aquino's refusal to concede the Feb. 7 election, which was marred by violence and widespread evidence of fraud. The Marcos-controlled National Assembly proclaimed him the winner.
Members of the Cabinet announced by Aquino on Wednesday assumed their posts yesterday, meeting with their predecessors and staff.
Aquino's executive secretary, Joker Arroyo, ordered heads of government offices to preserve all records and make inventories of their assets and finances.
A government announcement said he issued the directive in response to reports of "deliberate destruction and pilferage" of records at several ministries and agencies. Among them were Human Settlements, a heavily financed ministry headed by Imelda
Marcos, the former president's wife; the Government Corporate Counsel.
Aquino's official spokesman, Rene Saguisip, told a news conference that a five-member committee was reviewing lists of political prisoners and making decisions to release individuals on a case-by-case basis.
He said the committee would meet again tomorrow, and "we would hope to be able to announce by then the release of maybe hundreds of political detainees."
Sagusug is a lawyer who, with Arroyo and several human rights groups, led a campaign under the Marcos government for release of prisoners.
Former Sen. Jovito Salonga is chairman of the committee, which also has Saguisag, Arroyo, Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Gen. Fidel V. Ramos.
Irate smoker threatens hijacking
United Press International
NEW YORK — A woman, enraged after being told to put out a cigarette on a TWA jetliner yesterday, threatened to hijack the Miami-to-New York flight with a knife she was using to slice salami, authorities said.
The woman, who had a history of mental problems, was arrested by FBI agents when the Boeing 727 landed at Kennedy International Airport at 5:15 p.m., Trans World Airlines spokesman Sally McFlireth said.
Authorities said she would not be charged.
Tom Middlemiss, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the airport, identified the woman as
Frances Lieberman, 37, of New York. The FBI had earlier identified her as Frances Cohen Sitton. 39.
Lieberman was interviewed by a doctor after her arrest and taken to a local hospital where she was put under observation, said Bernard Graber, a Port Authority police lieutenant.
McElwreath said Lieberman had been smoking and pacing the aisle of the jetliner as it was taxing for a 2:50 p.m. takeoff from Miami International Airport. She was told to extinguish the cigarette and take her seat. Lieberman complied with the order but was unhappy. McElwreath said.
FBI spokesman Joseph Valquette said the captain was aware of the disturbance but thought it was safe to continue with the flight once Lieberman sat down.
Later, however, she started to cut some salami and make threats, McElwweather said. She emphasized that Lieberman never brandished the knife.
"Apparently (Lieberman) said the word 'hijack,' " McElwreath said. The threat was reported to the captain. He notified air-traffic controllers in New York and said he wanted to be met on arrival by the FBI.
Graber said Lieberman surrendered the knife to a crew member without a struggle. He would not describe the knife and said police couldn't explain how it passed airport metal detectors.
Robert Penn Warren, 80 named 1st poet laureate
Lieberman has a history of psychological problems and was put under observation at the Queens Hospital Center, Graber said.
United Press International
FAIRFIELD, Conn. — When a poem is right, "You feel it in your toes." Robert Penn Warren said yesterday, speaking modestly of his work after being named the country's first official poet laureate.
Warren, 80, the only writer to have won the Pulitzer Prize twice for poetry and once for fiction, was named U.S. poet laureate by Daniel J. Boorstein, the librarian of Congress.
A law passed after years of lobbying by Sen. Spark Matsunaga, D-Hawaii, established a poet laureate in the United States only last year.
tant in poetry at the Library of Congress — a position created more than 50 years ago and held by Warren in 1944 and 1945.
The bill also authorized a consul-
Britain has had a poet laureate since the 17th century.
Warren's most famous novel, "All the King's Men," appeared 40 years ago. Although he has written in almost every literary form, Warren said he enjoyed poetry most.
When a poem is right, "You feel it in your toes, in the back of your neck, your stomach, everywhere."
Writing is about the author's sense of existence, Warren said, and the writer often is the last to know when he or she has succeeded.
Prosecutor recommends acquittal of Bulgarians
The Associated Press
ROME — The prosecutor recommended yesterday that three Bulgarians be acquitted because he could not prove they conspired in the shooting of Pope John Paul II. He said he was not given time to complete his case.
Antonio Marini appeared to suggest in his summation, however, that the jury exercise its right to ignore his recommendation. Italian law requires prosecutors to ask for acquittal if they feel the evidence is insufficient.
Marini tried to have the trial
reopened at the last minute so he could call more witnesses. The judge denied his request, and Marini said he was obligated to seek acquittals.
Three Bulgarians and four Turks were charged in the case. The panel of two judges and six citizen jurors is not bound by the recommendation, and all defendants in custody will be held until a verdict is delivered.
Italian juries reach their decisions by majority vote.
Acquittal would cast doubt on the alleged Bulgarian and Soviet connection.
President plans aid to Contras
WASHINGTON - President Reagan, applauded by congressional leaders for his handling of the Philippines crisis, sought yesterday to convient the ovation into support for his plan to give $100 million to the Nicaraguan Contras
"We stood for democracy in the Philippines. We have to stand for democracy in Nicaragua," spokesman Larry Speakes quoted Reagan as telling the lawmakers.
Reagan spoke to 32 members of Congress about his foreign policy and defense initiatives, including his new $311 billion Pentagon budget and his plan to funnel covert military aid to the rebels who are fighting the leftist Nicaraguan government.
During a picture-taking session at the start of the meeting, Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole told Reagan, "I want to thank you for your outstanding work in reference to the Philippines. We appreciate it very much."
Everybody in the room, including Democratic leaders, applauded, and Wright praised Reagan's clear-eyed, level-headed approach to the change of power in the Philippines following the election of U.S.-backed President Ferdinand Marcos.
Reagan said he saw several parallels to the Philippine situation in Nicaragua.
"The most important parallel between the two cases is this — we stood for democracy in the Philippines. We have to stand for democracy in Nicaragua and throughout Central America and in our own hemisphere."
"We can ignore the fraudulent elections (Nicaraguan President Daniel) Ortega held, we can ignore the repression and we can ignore the subversion, terrorism and drug-trafficking," Reagan said. "But if we ignore it in Nicaragua and don't deal with it now, when will we deal with it? I maintain we have to deal with it now."
United Press International
Earlier in the week Reagan proposed that $70 million in military aid and $30 million in humanitarian aid be given to the Contras. Congress refused last year to give the rebels anything but non-lethal aid.
Speakes said Reagan was not comparing new Philippines President Corazon Aquino with the Contras.
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University Daily Kansan
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3
News Briefs
Hearing scheduled on downtown study
Milton Allen Sr., city attorney, said yesterday that he expected a hearing to be scheduled for 3 p.m. Tuesday regarding the controversy over a study of downtown properties.
City commissioners were served with restraining orders on Tuesday to prevent them from hiring a consultant to do a study to determine whether the "footprint" of the downtown mall was slum and blight.
E. R. Zook, a retired Lawrence businessman, sought the restraining order. He and his attorney, Ernest Riling, would not comment yesterday on the case. Zook did say, however, that he did not own property downtown.
The city could condemn and buy the land needed for a proposed downtown mall if the property was designated slum and blight.
A deputy of the clerk of the Douglas County District Court could not confirm the hearing date late yesterday afternoon.
The order said the city "did illegally organize, structure and create the Urban Renewal Agency." The agency has recommended that the city hire Herrick, Feinstein of Overland Park to conduct the study for $16,000.
Fans to dress in Blue
the KU band has organized a Blues Brothers day for tomorrow's Jayhawk basketball game against Iowa State University.
Ron McCurdy, assistant professor of music-jazz and band instructor, said yesterday that the band was asking all students to dress like the Blues Brothers, a band made famous by comedians John Behsuhi and Dan Aykroyd. The game starts at 3:05 p.m.
ASK officer to resign
An award will be given by the music department to the two students with the best costumes, he said.
The Associated Students of Kansas director of legislative affairs, John Allen, will resign his position tomorrow.
Allen is leaving ASK in order to take the position of executive director for the National Student Roundtable.
The NSR represents more than 6 million college students across the country on issues of higher education.
Allen's duties with the NSR will include the financial management and general operations of the association.
Professor to speak
Ivan Szeleny, a professor of sociology at the University of Wisconsin, will speak about the history of the class system at 3:30 p.m. today in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union.
The speech is titled "Theories of the New Class - A Critique," and will combine a history of the idea of the new class with the idea of knowledge as the basis of domination in Western capitalist societies. Szeleny is the author of "The Intellectuals on the Road to Class Power," which studies the class structure of Eastern European countries.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with a high around 40 and northwest winds 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be clear and cold with a low in the low- to mid-20s. Tomorrow will be almost sunny and warmer with a high in the low- to mid-50s.
Artists sing about joys of creation
Tonight, Lawrence's small community theatre will harbor its talent. its treasures and its hopes of showing the community what women can create.
By Monique O'Donnell
From staff and wire reports.
Staff writer
About 10 women artists will read their poems, display artwork, dance and sing in "She Creates." The performance will begin at 8 tonight at the Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St. Tickets are $4 at the door.
Aplysia Snyder, Colorado Springs, Colo., graduate student and coordinator of the event, said she hoped the performance would be the first step in bringing women artists in Lawrence together.
During yesterday's rehearsal, Full Circle, a quartet, played some folk songs while other women leafed through poetry they had written. Tunes from the dulcimer, autoharp, viola, mandolin and flute echoed softly in the background. The atmosphere was very warm and soothing, Snyder said as she glanced at the program.
"It's a collage of various works by all the people here," she said.
Lorraine Millbern, an Olathe senior who will read some of her poetry at the performance, said it was a showcase for some of the talent found among women in the area.
"The experience is best described as rejoicing rather than militant feminism," Millbern said. "By no means are we trying to exclude men from attending this."
She said the group didn't want to give the impression that it didn't like men by putting on an all-woman performance. But the main concern was to portray women's feelings about birth, love and economic independence.
Some poetry written and read by Jane Hoskinson of McLouth describes what giving birth is like from a midwife's perspective. Hoskinson said she tried to relate how intelligent women's and babies' bodies were.
100
Murphy roof repair to resume
By Hiram Williams Special to the Kansan
Almost two years after the scheduled completion of Murphy Hall roof repairs, stacks of building material remain on the roof and in a nearby fenced area.
Stacks of building materials remain on the roof of Murphy Hall more than a year after the retiring project was to be completed. The company contracted to do the work, Vincent Roofing, went bankrupt two years ago.
Fair Roofing Co., a Wichita company hired to repair and retile Murphy's roof, went bankrupt two years ago and left behind the unused materials. Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations, said recently.
The project, which should have been completed by Oct. 1984, now is handled locally, Porter said.
Weather permitting, Everly Roofing and Heating Inc., 2200 E. 23rd St., and R.D. Anderson of Topeka should start repairs in early March, said Jim Modig, associate director of facilities planning. The repairs should be completed in early summer.
Vincent Roofing of Topeka retailed the entire roof in October 1983. But company representatives recommended brick and seal repairs to protect the roof, Modig said.
Fair Roofing was hired in May 1984 to do the brick repairs and
partial reroofing. Everything was completed but the stage loft and the cooling tower roof.
After further inspection of the cooling tower roof, facilities operations decided the roof needed to be
replaced. And facilities planning decided the deteriorated steel around the tower had made it dangerous.
The decision was made to replace both and Fair Roofing
received the contract. After replacing the tower and steel, Fair Roofing ceased work without warning.
KU gets more funds from militarv
By Lori Polson
Staff writer
The University of Kansas is just one of many schools receiving increasing amounts of military financing for research projects, according to a recently released report.
The report by the American Friends Service Committee,"Uncle Sam Goes to School",indicates that more than 230 state and private colleges and universities have military-sponsored contracts.
The American Friends Service Committee is a branch of the Religious Society of Friends, commonly known as the Quakers.
The report stated that military spending on academic research projects reached more than $1 billion in 1984.
Carolyn Cross, director of KU's office of research support and grants administration, said yesterday that the University received about $2 million in research funds from U.S. military sources in fiscal year 1985.
"We're not asking for more money," she said. "The government determines how much money they put in certain funds for research.
Although the University has received grants from the military for several years, the amount of research money has increased in the past few years, she said.
then the researcher applies for a grant from that department.
"In the past few years, they have increased the amount of military research money."
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration invested the largest amount in KU research projects during 1985. NASA spent over $1 million on 24 different projects. These projects included some work for the space shuttle program.
The U.S. Army spent about $500,000 on nine research projects, the U.S. Navy spent a little more than $200,000 on two projects, the U.S. Air Force spent about $100,000 on four projects and the U.S. Department of Defense spent almost $200,000 on a single project.
The faculty members who do research determine which fund the grant money comes from, Cross said. If a researcher is interested in an area that the military will finance,
In December, Congress allocated $2 million to the University to conduct neurotoxin research. The money will be funneled through the Army, which will supervise the research on
the Lawrence campus and at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Tom Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, is working on a research project sponsored by the U.S. Office of Naval Research. He and Ronald Bass, associate professor of physics and astronomy, received a $60,000 grant for their research, he said.
Armstrong said he could not tell whether the military was increasing the amount of grant money it gave to colleges.
Staff writer
Shankel to switch jobs again
"We work through the research support office," he said. "I really don't have much in the way of direct contact with the people who give the grants. But our contract is new, and that represents an increase."
Bv Lori Polson
On July 1, Del Shankel will once again be a professor of microbiology.
But he always goes back.
He has been the executive vice chancellor. He was once the associate dean and then acting dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. He even sat behind the chancellor's desk in Strong Hall for a year.
Since 1989, Shankel has been the man the University of Kansas seems to turn to when it needs someone to fill in for a while. He now is the acting vice chancellor for academic affairs, replacing Deanell Tacha, who became a judge for the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Shankel's wife, Carol, managing editor of publicity for the Spencer Museum of Art, said it was hard for him to choose between the different jobs he had at the University.
"He always likes whatever he's doing." she said.
Shankel agrees that he has a hard time deciding between administration and teaching.
"Part of my problem is that I enjoy everything," Shankel said. "I've enjoyed everything I've done in the University."
Davis said he enjoyed working with Shankel because of Shankel's enthusiasm for teaching.
In addition to filling in for Tacha, Shankel is teaching an honors course in Western Civilization and a Biology 104 class.
Michael Davis, dean of the School of Law, has taught Western Civilization with Shankel for about 11 years.
And he does a lot.
"Teaching is one of the things he does that he enjoys the very most," Davis said. "There is no question that if he wanted a major administrative position, he could have one.
"But after serving in so many important capacities, he always seems ready to return to the quiet life of teaching and research."
But Shankel's life at the University has been anything but quiet.
During 1980-81, Shankel served as the chancellor of the University after Archie Dykes resigned. He took the job knowing the acting chancellor would not be considered for the permanent position.
"There were times when I wondered if that might not have been a mistake on my part," Shankel said. "But I am happy where I am."
He said he was offered a chancellor's position soon after that at another university, but he turned it down to remain in Kansas.
At the time, Paretsky was chairman of the microbiology department. He had been authorized to look for a new microbiology professor when he attended the annual meeting of the American Society of Microbiologists.
David Paretsky, professor of microbiology, helped bring Shankel to Kansas in 1959.
"I asked around at the convention and met this young man who was just gettin his Ph.D.," he said.
But Paretsky had other motives
Paretsky said he thought teaching came naturally to Shankel.
when he convinced the University to hire Shankel.
"Del is committed intellectually," he said. "He simply is one of those guys who likes teaching students.
"Teaching undergraduates is a visible expression of his commitment to teaching."
Students seem to agree. Shankel is one of five candidates for the Mortar Board Outstanding Educator Award this year.
Simon Kuo, Lawrence graduate student, works with Shankel in his laboratory and is one of Shankel's former students.
"I think he is an excellent teacher," Kuo said. "He's probably busier than anyone else on campus, but he always makes time for his students."
PETER L. HENRY
When he is not teaching or working in Strong Hall, Shankel can probably be found in a research lab.
Terry Burkart/KANSAN
Last spring he was involved in a controversial research project with James Akagi, professor of microbiology.
Del Shankel, acting chancellor for student affairs.
Akagi and Shankel received a grant from Culture Farms, Inc. in January 1985. They did quality control work and research on homegrown cultures bought by the company from consumers.
In fact, in 1980 Shankel resigned from the position of executive vice chancellor, a position he had held since 1974, so he could continue his research work, he said.
The company received a cease-and-desist order issued by the state securities commission. The commission accused the company of operating a "pyramid scheme." The firm was later dissolved.
"We were approached with the idea by a member of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce." Shankel
said. "We talked to a representative of Culture Farms, and it sounded like it would work.
"I still think the idea is an interesting idea."
two one knows what's in the future for Shankel, whether it be administration or teaching. Shankel said he didn't even know.
"I don't have any plans, although I would like to continue my research."
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University Daily Kansar
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, Feb. 28, 1986.
Communication gap
Speaking ability is one of the most crucial qualities a teacher must have.
Any student who has struggled through a difficult course knows that a teacher's ability to communicate information is vital. When the teacher has only adequate English-speaking skills, a tough course becomes a nightmare.
Although non-native English speakers already must pass a spoken English test to work as a GTA, some with poor speaking ability still are found at the front of classrooms.
The current test, which is a general speaking proficiency exam available to all KU applicants, has been criticized as being too short and not adequately testing the ability to lecture.
A petition recently passed by Student Senate may dispel some of the nightmares. The plan calls for stricter language testing of graduate teaching assistants who speak English as a second language.
Under the Student Senate
proposal, GTAs would present a mock lecture to a group of faculty and students. This would allow them to be evaluated on precisely the language skills they would be using.
Many foreign graduate students teach in departments that have difficult courses in the first place, and their speech may be an easy target for students seeking scapegoats.
Such a test would be an improvement in weeding out teachers who truly cannot be understood in the classroom, but it probably would not eliminate student complaints.
Even the best native English speaker may not be able to clearly communicate material to a class, but some students may unfairly blame their foreign GTAs when they fail to grasp tough concepts.
Stricter requirements could ease some legitimate frustrations, but a panacea should not be expected.
The Legislature is considering a bill that is a good step in the right direction and could stand to be copied by several other institutions throughout the state and country.
Good first step
A bill sitting in the House Committee on Education would provide Kansas State Scholars in five-year programs with continued financial assistance through their final year of college.
Kansas State Scholars are now given four-year scholarships of $1,000 annually to attend Regents schools.
The proposed change was requested by the Associated Students of Kansas to help students in education, engineering and architectural programs at the University of Kansas and Kansas State University.
The chairman of the program said he didn't expect much opposition to the bill. That probably is because most of his committee members realize the change is a good idea.
The trend toward students taking five years or more to earn their degrees has been well documented, and most scholarships and grants run out after four years.
ASK correctly saw a need for an alteration in the State Scholars program and has made a move to achieve it.
The bill should be held as an example and other organizations that provide grants and loans to students also would do well to make amends for five-year programs.
Confusing policy
President Reagan's proposed U.S. aid to Angolan rebels is plagued with ironies.
The U.S. policy toward Angola is confusing and riddled with contradictions.
That company, which helps pump Angola's oil, employs 700 people, 150 of whom are Americans.
The aid simply would finance a group that in the past has attacked U.S. companies operating in Angola and has promised to continue to do so in the future.
Most of that aid would be used by the rebels against the largest oil company operating in Angola, the Cabinda Gulf Oil Company, a subsidiary of Chevron.
Recently, the Reagan administration announced that it had decided to provide covert aid in the form of anti-aircraft and anti-tank missiles to UNITA, a group of Angolan freedom fighters led by Jonas Savimbi. The amount of the covert aid is about $15 million.
In the last five years, the U.S. Export-Import Bank approved three loans for Angolan oil and gas projects. Those loans were approved by the National Security Council, which judged the loans to be consistent with U.S. national interests.
Although the government of Angola is Marxist and is heavily supported by the Soviet Union and Cuba, the United States is Angola's largest trading partner.
Almost 95 percent of Angola's oil productions are sold to Western countries, and half of Gulf's productions are sent to U.S. refineries.
Amid calls for U.S. companies to get out of Angola, the Congressional Research Service in November recommended that U.S. companies not withdraw from Angola because it might pave the way for heavier penetration from the Soviets.
Just exactly what is the U.S. policy toward Angola?
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Most not interested in Reggie's sex life
So I thought it was a bit presumptuous of the publicity man to use the words "speaks out" in the context of how a baseball player says he does it.
From time to time, I make note of the alarming tendency of many well known public figures to babble about their private lives. I call this the People Magazine Syndrome, for which there is no known medical cure except tearing their tongues out, which is illegal, although it shouldn't be.
You'll see headlines that say "Governor Speaks Out On Tax Hike," or "President Speaks Out On Philippine Vote," or "Medical Chief Speaks Out On Malpractice Suits."
The most recent example of this affliction is Reggie Jackson, the wealthy baseball player and hot dog.
A publicity man for a magazine sent me a news release announcing that in the current issue of the magazine "Reggie Jackson Speaks Out On His Sex Life."
What first caught my eye were the words "speaks out."
This term is not uncommon in the writing of news. But usually it's reserved for when someone of importance takes a stand on a grave issue in which there is assumed to be considerable public interest.
B. C.
Mike Royko
Chicago Tribune
Chicago Tribune
The key phrase there is "people think." Obviously, Jackson believes that a considerable segment of the American people has given thought to his sex life.
And that widespread curiosity is probably what persuaded him that the time finally had come for him to speak out.
The magazine's publicity man went on to quote Jackson as saying, "I'm active sexually, but not as much as people think."
when he does it, and with whom he does it.
It's true that some men do discuss their sex lives, although not as entertainingly as their golf scores. But you'll seldom hear someone in a bar or locker room say, "Hey, guys, listen, because I'm going to speak on what happened Friday night after I hit on this good-looking . . ."
Such disclosures could be more accurately described as bragging, lying, fantasizing or BSing; but not "speaking out."
The human brain is an incredible organ. In any given day, even the dumbest of us will have thousands of thoughts, impressions, images, memories.
A young woman said, "I am afraid not. I've always been a Cubs fan. Do
But as hard as I racked my brain, I couldn't recall even once thinking about Reggie Jackson's sexual activities.
Another's indignant reply was, "Of course not. Why should I bother? Does that palooka ever think about my sex life? I have my needs, too, you know."
Out of curiosity, I asked the first 30 people I spoke to if they had ever thought of Jackson's sex life, and if so, what they had thought of it.
A man of the Yuppie persuasion said, "No, is there something unusual about it? I mean, does he wear his uniform and fielder's mitt?"
The responses to my informal survey might have a depressing effect on Jackson's ego.
A middle-aged man said, "To be honest, no, I have never given it any thought. But then, I don't watch much TV."
you want to ask me about Ryne Sandberg?"
A middle-aged woman said, "I'm sorry, but I haven't paid attention. I really try to keep up with current events, but there are only so many hours in the day."
Not even one of 30 people surveyed could remember ever having even a fragment of a thought about Jackson's sex life.
Of course, this survey was taken in Chicago. So I suppose it's possible that in Southern California, where Jackson has been playing baseball for several years, people might have been thinking about his sex life.
But knowing Southern California that's unlikely, unless Jackson's been doing it while surfing or hang gliding.
So, it appears that if Jackson's motive for speaking out was to correct "what people think" about his sex life, there was no need. He might as well have zipped his lip, or his trousers, or whatever.
And if his sex life has gone the way of his hitting, then he shouldn't have been wasting his time talking to a magazine writer anyway.
Maybe a therapist.
Computerized gadgets taken too far
Will the car of the future have a mini-microwave oven so you can have a piping-hot breakfast on the way to work? How about a computerized psychoanalyst programmed to probe your inner motivations as you tool along the freeways of life?
Ridiculous? Absurd, you say?
Nothing is ridiculous anymore at the junction where automobile meets computer. They have come this far already. The coded "keyless entry unit" will preset each driver's comfort and convenience settings.
Can a mini-microwave be far behind?
The right question to ask about all
In ordinary English, that means if two or more people drive the same car, neither has to fiddle with the seats or the mirror anymore. The instant you unlock the door with your coded non-key, more like a credit card, the computer goes into action. The seat adjusts to your preference, ditto the mirrors and the steering wheel. To top it off, the radio goes immediately to your favorite station.
Robert C.
Maynard
Oakland Tribune
this is why. The answer is simple, say automotive engineers on both sides of the Pacific. And it's the same answer the mountaineer gave to the question of why he wanted to climb Mount Everest. Because it's there.
The automotive industry thinks people will want fancy gadgets because the computer makes it possible to have them. As one engineer put it, since we have computers in cars anyway, why not make them do more and more things? Even things we are perfectly able to do for ourselves are possible for a computer.
Every time I hear about computer flash and dazzie, I think how much preferable things are plain and simple. My favorite example is something close to me, my personal computer. Two of the reasons I love
my computer are its simplicity and, generally speaking, its reliability.
Those are not accidental qualities. Compaq, the company that makes my favorite machine, set out to be, if I may invent a word, undazzling. Compaq wanted the company and its products to be as exciting as a bowl of tapioca pudding.
In an era when the charismatic leader was the rage of Silicon Valley, Compaq started with the notion of the low-key team approach. It didn't pretend to an iota of originality. It made a copy of the IBM personal computer. But what a copy
The first year, they sold $111 million worth of them and a half billion dollars worth just last year. After just four years in business, Compaq is "the hottest start-up in American history," according to Inc. magazine.
magazine.
All that by being basically dull.
There's no mini-microwave in my PC. I would be surprised if Compaq adds a bell or a whistle to its line of merchandise.
Compap has added a new line of smaller and lighter machines, but Wall Street analysts surprised no one in the most common adjective they used to describe the development. You guessed it: Simple. The next most common? Solid.
The automakers have something to learn from the Compaq story. In fact, I think there is a lesson here for business in general. New technology tempts us to make the ordinarily simple complicated because the microchip can perform so many functions simultaneously.
Often the result is products that can do so many things they wind up doing nothing particularly well. When I sit down at my computer, I know exactly what it's going to do—most of the time. Similarly, when I get into a car, I don't need a solid-state seat adjustment. I want reliable, efficient, safe performance.
That goal would attract more respect and customer loyalty than all sorts of gadgets, including a mini-microwave oven.
TV a quieting influence in Philippines
Never before in the relatively short history of television news has a revolution been waged almost entirely before the cameras.
And if there is a lesson in the hour-by-hour coverage of the Philippine election, the military mutiny and the White House maneuvering to persuade Ferdinand Marcos to resign, perhaps it is that when events are open to the world, violence can be held to a minimum.
In the past, fraud and oppression, calumny and violence were played out in private, with television getting only a glimpse of the action.
In recent weeks, the relatively bloodless upheaval was not only covered live from the Philippines but, even more significantly, from network television studios in Washington and New York, where Marcos, Corazon Aquino, Chairman Richard Lugar of the Senate Foreign
Ira R. Allen
United Press International
relations Committee and just about everybody but the Chattanooga shoeshine boy was interviewed. They were not only giving opinions, but sending: messages, and, in some cases, announcing policy.
It is no wonder, then, that the only real violence in the revolution came during battles for Philippine television stations.
Domestically, the White House image-makers choose which announcements and which news briefings should be televised. The ones that would send Marcos a message were available for coverage, the ones on other important subjects were not
Deputy press secretary Larry
Television's performance in the Philippine crisis also humbled President Reagan in a way.
Speakes, who is often locked behind his office door and unavailable to reporters, called wire services and networks from his home at 5:36 a.m. Monday and then showed up at work in time to be interviewed live on all three network morning news shows to say that Marcos should step down.
Reagan has had a long affinity for right-wing dictators and has always said he prefers "quiet diplomacy" in moving autocrats toward reform. But with pictures of the vote fraud and reporting from the scene, U.S. popular opinion mobilized so quickly that members of Congress marched into the Oval Office and told the president that Marcos had to go.
Then the "Great Communicator" miscommunication during his Feb. 11 news conference, stunning observers of the election by declaring that
fraud and violence may have occurred on both sides. It took four days for him to correct the statement, but his original remarks had been seen immediately as contradicting the television pictures from the Philippines.
Only weeks before, Reagan had succumbed to diplomatic and political pressure to help ease Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier out as president-for-life of Haiti — again due in no small part to television coverage of rioting.
Last year, television pictures created a whirlwind of public and political opinion that forced Reagan to modify his support of the South African government.
But South Africa has faded from public consciousness at least partly because the government there had the sense to ban foreign television cameras from the scenes of most of the turmoll.
Friday, Feb. 28, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Endowment
Continued from p.1
scholarships, schools in the University, construction or any number of places in the University.
Davis said the investment program involved two types of funds — expendable and non-expendable. Expendable contributions to the Endowment Association can be spent entirely.
Non-expendable funds are set up so only their interest can be spent by the Endowment Association, he said.
"We have every intention that those funds will be here forever."
Davis said. They are invested largely in common stocks.
On non-expendable funds, the Endowment Association works with a group of money managers who have extensive experience with investments, Davis said.
"We manage the fund but hire them to do the day-to-day buying and selling," he said.
invests expendable funds, Davis said.
KU's Endowment Association is unique among endowment associations at other universities because it
"We put most of them in high quality bond funds," he said.
Expendable funds are managed internally by the investments and finance department.
"We make the investment decisions, then use bond dealers to do the actual buying and selling," Davis said.
Investment staff members meet three times a year with an Endowment Association finance committee.
ASK
Student enters plea of not guilty to charges of KU sticker forgery
By Brian Whepley
Brown also said she heard some good ideas at the hearing about how to improve KU's involvement in the organization.
One suggestion made at the hearing concerned a campus autonomy program.
A KU student pleaded not guilty yesterday to charges that he forged and sold football stickers intended for use only by KU student athletes.
Associate District Judge Michael J. Malone set a court date of March 24 for Shelleda's jury trial.
Lonnie Shelleda, Plains senior, pleaded not guilty to two charges of forgery and to one count of inducing an official action.
spokesman for KU police, said the department received a tip that football passes had been sold while it was conducting an investigation of forged season basketball tickets. The two cases were unrelated, Longaker said.
An informant told police the name of a student who was selling the stickers, she said. Their investigation found that the student had bought 10 stickers from a second student.
Shelleda, 22, was arrested Nov. 22 after a KU police investigation concluded stickers had been forged and sold.
"KU is one of the top 10 law schools in the Midwest. Washburn is not," she said. "How could the state split the money on the programs?" It would force ASK to take a stance."
Continued from p. 1
The stickers, when affixed to student identification cards, allow student athletes to attend football games for free.
became a Regents school.
The Buckley amendment, a federal law, prohibits university police from releasing the names of student crime victims or students arrested by the department.
The second student had seen the stickers about halfway through the 1984 football season and decided to make some money by forging
Lt. Jeanne Longaker,
president, said after the meeting that even though she and David Epstein, student body president, were concerned about KU's representation in the organization, she respected von Ende's opinion about remaining in ASK.
Amy Brown, student body vice
them, Longaker said. Three days before the 1985 football season, the second student received a call from the first student.
The first student had heard that the second student was selling tickets, Longaker said. The second student did not know how the first student got his name.
The first student agreed to pay $100 for the passes. When he picked up the stickers he paid $50 and agreed to pay $50 later, she said. The first student has not been charged in the case.
The first student, who bought the 10 stickers, decided he could make money on his own and forged 200 additional stickers. The first student sold five of the stickers for $10 each, Longaker said. The rest of the stickers were thrown away.
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6
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Friday, Feb. 28, 1986
Bill calls for inspections, permits for park rides
By Abbie Jones
Staff writer
TOPEKA — Thrill seekers who flock to amusement parks need the protection of a Kansas Senate bill drafted to improve the safety of rides, the author of the bill said yesterday.
State Sen. Eugene Anderson, D-Wichita, said the bill would require the secretary of human resources to issue permits and to inspect all amusement rides at least once a year before they can be operated.
'The intent of the bill is to try to ensure the safety of the public, who spend $2 million a year supporting this industry," Anderson said.
In the last 13 years, about 90 people have died from amusement ride accidents across the country, he said.
The bill also would establish a seven-member advisory committee which would consist of amusement ride manufacturers and owners, a representative of insurance underwriters, a professional engineer and members of the public. Anderson said the committee would work with
the secretary to establish park policies.
A hearing on the bill is scheduled for Tuesday.
Jerry Boyles, owner of Joyland Amusement Park in Topeka, said he supported the safety that the bill promoted but said it might be added bureauracry.
"Naturally we are interested in safety, safety is our business." Boyles said. "Any bad publicity from people being hurt on rides hurts business."
But he also said the bill might be
unnecessary because companies that insure the amusement parks in Kansas made satisfactory inspections at least once during the season.
No one has died at Joyland in the 33 years the park has operated, Boyles said.
One woman had caught her hair on a go-cart and another caught her hair in the Ferris wheel in the 1970s, but recently the worst accident was a woman who broke her leg after slipping on the sidewalk.
"There are not any ride safety laws, probably because it's been
pretty well regulated," Boyles said.
Another provision of the bill requires any operator of a ride to obtain $100,000 of liability insurance, a bond of the same amount or another
security approved by the advisory board. Anyone who fails to meet any of the bill's requirements is liable for no more than a $1,000 fine.
Boyles said Joyland carried $1 million of liability insurance.
On the Record
A television set and telephone, valued together at $430, were stolen between 2 a.m. and 7:15 a.m. Wednesday from a Jayhawker Towers apartment, KU police said.
A press, office equipment, offset camera and other printing supplies, valued together at $8,300, were stolen Tuesday from a business in the 1100 block of East 21st Street, police said.
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Friday, Feb. 28, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
7
SenEx OKs faculty discipline plan
By Leslie Hirschbach
Staff writer
The University Senate Executive Committee came one step closer yesterday to ironing out the wrinkles in faculty disciplinary procedures.
SenEx approved changes in disciplinary procedures that Sidney Shapiro, chairman of the committee, said he hoped would make the University consistent on the rare occasions when faculty must be punished.
Faculty now can be charged with two types of misconduct, each with its own set of disciplinary procedures, Shapiro said.
part, he said.
One of the most important changes, he said, was
"The problem is that you can't tell the two
wrong" he said.
the appointment of Faculty Executive Committee to decide which set of procedures would be used
Shapiro said SenEx could have established one set of procedures for all types of misconduct but the University then would have to treat minor misconduct and serious misconduct in the same manner.
When faculty are charged with minor misconduct, or academic misconduct, Shapiro said, the problem usually can be solved without a hearing.
That, he said, would burden disciplinary committees with minor issues.
More serious charges of proscribed conduct, such as sexual harrassment, often involve a more lengthy investigation.
SenEx also placed the FacEx Committee in
charge of appointing a fact-finding committee to investigate some cases of misconduct.
That committee, Shapiro said, will be helpful because it will be able to decide whether there was good cause for the charges and possibly eliminate the need for a tricognitely lengthy hearing.
Shapiro said the changes now would be sent to University Council for final approval.
SenEx also decided to keep the results of a disciplinary hearing secret from all but the person who filed the complaint, the faculty member and the committee in charge of the hearing.
If the changes are approved, Shapiro said, all of the disciplinary rules will be moved into the Senate Rules and Regulations. Some of those rules now are found in the Faculty Code of Conduct.
Leaders ponder shorter Senate terms
In order to help the change, one Senate session would either have to remain in office for an extended session of 18 months or a shortened session of six months, he said.
Epstein said he would not be in favor of the present Senate pursuing an extended term.
Coalition would not be ending its session in April because it hadn't had time to achieve its campaign goals.
Amy Brown, student body vice president, said the Common Sense
Brown said the decision might be left to the 1987 senators.
By Piper Scholfield
Student Senate elections should be moved from November to April, David Epstein, student body president, said sidestavard.
"This job isn't as much fun as I thought it would be," he said.
Epstein said it was obvious to him after he took office that the Senate terms should run from April to April.
Epstein said the change would coordinate Senate elections with the elections of other organizations, such as the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation and University Senate Executive Committee.
It was difficult to work with other organizations because Senate terms didn't coincide, he said.
before the Senate in September to lengthen the previous Senate's term, but it had been viewed as a political move by the incumbent coalition and was not passed.
"September was too late to make the proposal. People were already starting to campaign for the next election," he said.
Epstein said a bill was brought
Eupstein said he might try to pass legislation to shorten the next term to six months.
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8
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Superhero leads fight against energy waste
By Peggy Kramer Staff writer
Friday, Feb. 28, 1986
Who was that masked woman? It was Captain Energy, peeking through a canary yellow mask and swirling a bright red cap.
Captain Energy, alias Betty Rhodes, didn't leave a silver bullet or gallop away on a white horse. Instead she leaped on table tops and weaved between diners in some of the hall cafeterias while screaming energy-saving tips.
Rhodes, Prairie Village junior and a resident assistant at Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall, played the role of Captain Energy as a way to inform students that it was Energy Awareness Week at the residence halls.
Rhodes and her two sidekicks roamed the cafeterias of McCollum, Hashinger, Templin and Joseph R. Pearson halls Wednesday night.
"Save water, take showers together," she shouted. "If you save energy, Captain Energy will reward you."
Rhodes and her assistants visited Oliver and Ellsworth halls Tuesday and GSP-Corbin on Monday. Rhodes' assistants were Sue Carley, House Springs, Mo., senior and resident assistant at GSP-Corbin and Lisa Westling, assistant residence director at GSP-Corbin.
Rhodes said the costume had been used in the past but she didn't know who originated the idea of using the Captain Energy symbol.
Simmons is the chairman of the energy committee which coordinated projects for the week. Residence hall staff members also were on the committee.
"By compacting everything into one week, we thought we could encourage more people to conserve energy," Simmons said. "We are trying to educate people and make them more aware of ways to save energy."
This year, Energy Conservation Month was replaced with Energy Awareness Week, Pat Simmons, residence hall director at JR, said.
Hall staff members were encouraged to participate Wednesday night in a semi-blackout by turning out the lights in the main lobbies and hallways between 6 p.m. and 6:15 p.m., Simmons said.
Steamed foods were served in the hall cafeterias Tuesday night in an effort to reduce energy consumption by not using the ovens, he said.
Energy Conservation Month has been recognized at the University for the last four years, Simmons said. Previously there were monthlong contests for reducing utility bills in each hall.
The office of student housing gave monetary rewards to the hall that reduced its monthly utility bills the most as compared with the year before, he said.
There is a wider variety of activities that could be planned by concentrating on one week of energy awareness.
A free film, "Educating Rita," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
On Campus
KU Sword and Shield Club will meet for a video party featuring "The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai" at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the Hashinger Hall gourmet kitchen.
KUHSA will sponsor a discussion about a play. "The Picnic Project: A Deconstructive Performance," at 9:15 p.m. today in the Skilton Lounge of Murphy Hall. The play will be presented at 8 p.m. in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre of Murphy Hall.
The KU Modern Arnis Club will meet at 5 p.m. tomorrow in the Combative Arts Room of Robinson Center.
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Sports
Friday, Feb. 28, 1986
University Daily Kansan
9
3 seniors to play final game at Allen Field House
By Matt Tidwell
By Matt Tidwell Sports writer
Kansas out to avenge lone conference loss in regular season finale
n Kansas beats Iowa State tomorrow and No. 1 Duke loses against North Carolina, the Jayhawks could find themselves firmly planted in the top spot in the polls next week.
IowaState
Iowa State
Men's Basketball
18-8 (Big 8; 9-4)
3:05 p.m. tomorrow
(20AM) (channels 9 and 27)
at Lawrence
But Kansas coach Larry Brown said that with approaching tournament pressure already on the Jayhawks, being No.1 really could put the heat on Kansas.
"There's a lot of pressure being number one," Brown said. "But everybody's in sudden death right now. I think it would be a positive thing for our program and it would be positive for our conference."
and with good reason.
What Brown and the Jayhawks really are concerned with now however, is tomorrow's battle with the Cyclones at Allen Field House
Iowa State is the only conference team to have beaten Kansas. Iowa State defeated the Jayhawks 77-74 on Jan. 28 at Ames. The last thing the Jayhawks want is to be upset by the Cyclones and their head coach Johnny Orr, who owns a conference-best 6-6 record against Kansas.
The Jayhawks also want their three seniors — Calvin Thompson, Greg Drilling and Ron Kellogg — to be winners in their last game at the field house.
Thompson said the Cyclones had given him fits during his four years.
KANSAS
30
The Cyclones are 18-8 overall and 9-4 in the Big Eight. Kansas is 27-3 and 12-1.
Brown said the Cyclones, who clinched second place in the Big Eight, matched up better than
most opponents against Kansas.
"They've got great quickness in spots that are difficult for us to handle," Brown said. "Their offense allows them to use that quickness and exploit our weaknesses."
Dreiling said two Cyclones, guard Jeff Hornacek and center Sam Hill, had been consistent trouble makers for Kansas.
"With the way Hill's played against us, I'm sure he enjoys playing us," Dreiling said. "I think Hornacek is one of the most under-rated players in the league. He's a very smart player, and I think he's the key to their program."
Brown said he never thought when he inherited the three seniors from former head coach Ted Owens that they would play such a
large role in Kansas' success.
"I think people now realize what contribution they've made to our program," Brown said. "I think a lot of people will be sorry to see them go, including me, and I never thought I'd say that with some of the problems I had with them early on.
"I've seen so much improvement on their part, and their attitude had been so good. I think the most important thing is that they're building a strong foundation for the future."
Iowa State
KANSAS 41
Ren Kellogg
Probable Starters
Greg Dreiling
F 11 Ron Virgil (6-4)
F 44 Jeff Grayer (6-5)
C 34 Sam Hill (6-9)
G 3 Gary Thompkins (6-3)
G 14 Jeff Hornabek (6-3)
Kansas
F 25 Danny Manning (6-11)
F 44 Ron Kellogg (6-5)
C 30 Greg Drelling (7-1)
G 35 Calvin Thompson (6-6)
G 23 Cedric Hunger (6-0)
Jake
Ron Kellogg
Calvin Thompson
Coleman ineligible
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — An NCAA committee ruled yesterday that Norris Coleman, Kansas State's high-scoring 24-year-old freshman, had not met the minimum high school requirements needed to play basketball. The school immediately declared him ineligible.
Norris Coleman
In a news release, Kansas State's sports information office said the decision stated that Coleman was "not a '2.00' qualifier when he graduated in 1979 from Paxon High School" in Jacksonville, Fla.
Kansas State officials said the decision was made by the five-person Administrative Committee. Coleman, who has averaged more than 20 points and eight rebounds a game, will not play in any of the Wildcats' remaining games.
"Therefore, Kansas State has declared Coleman ineligible for practice or further participation in the current 1985-86 season," the school said. "According to the Council, Coleman's eight-semester grade point average, which was provided to Kansas State by Paxon High School, was not consistent with the general procedures which were used by Paxon in
1979 to determine a student's eligibility to receive financial aid and to participate under NCAA rules at a Division I institution.
"Since Coleman's graduation, the rules for determining grade point averages of Paxon High School graduates allow for an eight-semester grade point to be used," the school said.
An investigator told The Associated Press earlier that the issue focused on whether Coleman could use ninth-grade work in figuring his high school grade point average. Without the ninth-grade work, his GPA fell below a 2.00, which was the NCAA requirement at the time.
Questions over Coleman's high school grade point average first were raised by KOMU-TV, a Columbia, Mo., television station.
His eligibility also has been questioned by the Kansas City Times, which said that the 5-foot-8 Coleman was in the Army for almost six years and that he played organized basketball in the service for parts of four calendar years. K-State Athletic Director Larry Travis has denied those allegations.
Coleman enrolled at K-State last fall after serving for almost six years in the Army. Coleman and the school said at the time that he was 22 years old and had spent four years in the Army. K-State since has confirmed Coleman's age as 24.
Bradley goes to 29-1; Kentucky wins by two
PEORIA, Ill. -- Hersey Hawkins scored 13 points last night as ninth-ranked Bradley tied a Missouri Valley Conference record by going undefeated in conference play, beating Indiana State 71-51.
The victory lifted Bradley to 29-1 overall and 16-0 in the MVC, tying the mark set by Larry Bird's Indiana State team of 1979 for best conference record. The decision extended the country's longest winning streak to 20 games.
From Kansan wires
The Sycamores fell to 4-11 in the conference and 10-16 overall.
Donald Powell had 12 points, while Mike Williams and Len Bertolini each had 10 points for the Braves. John Williams had 23 points for the Sycamores.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Kenny Walker scored 32 points, as fifth-ranked Kentucky held off Tennessee for a 62-60 Southeastern Conference basketball victory last night.
Kentucky 62, Tennessee 60
The victory broke a seven-year los
ing streak for Kentucky on Tennessee's homecourt and improved the Wildcats' record to 25-3 overall, 16-1 in the SEC. Tennessee fell to 12-14 and 5-12.
Georgeia Tech, 22-4 overall and 10-3 in the league, received 13 points and seven rebounds from Tom Hammonds. The Yellow Jackets shot 56 percent from the field. For N.C. State, 18-10 and 7-7, Washburn scored 20 points and Charles Shackleford added 10.
ATLANTA — Mark Price, John Salley and Duane Ferrell each scored 14 points last night to send fourth-ranked Georgia Tech to a 69-57 triumph. over 18th-ranked North Carolina State in an Atlantic Coast Conference game.
Memphis State 63. New Orleans 52
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Senior forward Baskerville Holmes scored 17 points in his final home-court game last night to lead the sevent-ranked Memphis State Tigers to a 63-52 victory over New Orleans.
Georgia Tech 69. N.C. State 57
KU looks to improve standings
By Jim Suhr Sports writer
The Kansas men's and women's track teams hope to improve upon their sixth and fourth place conference finishes of last season when they compete in the Big
Track
Eight Indoor championships today and tomorrow in Lincoln, Neb.
The meet will also be the final opportunity for the Jayhawks to qualify for the NCAA Indoor Championship meet on March 14-15 in Oklahoma City.
Bob Timmons, KU men's head coach, and Carla Coffey, KU women's head coach, said yesterday that they hoped to defy a Big Eight coaches' poll released earlier in the week predicting their teams would place sixth and seventh. Both Timmons and Coffey said their teams had realistic goals of placing within the top four.
"We are aware we are not a conference contender." Timmons said of a team he predicted could finish as high as third. "We just want to place as high as we can."
Timmons said Kansas had competed against every Big Eight team, except Oklahoma, at some point during this season and had won those meets, but his team had been at full-strength while the others he faced may not have been.
Timmons and Coffey said the fight for the meet championship would be between host Nebraska and Iowa State, the defending champion. Kansas has won 17 conference titles since 1958 but hasn't won since 1983.
Timmons, currently in his 22nd season as Kansas' head coach, said the Jayhawks couldn't be more ready.
Kansas' final team outcome might depend heavily on Kansas' strengths in the field events,
Other Jayhawks expected to place include long jumpers Sharrieff Hazm and Ray Mitchell, triple jumpers David Bond and Johnny Brackins, hurdlers Courtney Hawkins and Craig Branstrom and middle-distance runner John Creighton.
On the women's side, Coffey said she selected only 16 athletes who she felt would place for Kansas. Coffey said the Jayhawks were anxious to compete in a meet they had looked forward to for a long time.
specifically in the pole vault.
Kansas' strength, like the men's team, also is in the field events. Best bets for the Jayhawks include shot putter Denise Buchanan, who has thrown nearly five feet more than her nearest competitor; Kansas distance runner Shaula Hatcher; and pentathletes Ann O'Connor, Rosie Wadman, Jaci Tyma, Cindy Panowicz, Colen Ricbert and Andrea Schwartz.
Pattin to field experienced team
Bv Jim Suhr
Sports writer
"We have everything to gain this
Pattin said Kansas' depth, combined with his team's positive preseason attitude and physical conditioning in Anschutz Sports Pavilion, had made him optimistic.
Pattin said Kansas' depth, with at least two people at every position, would come from the mixture of 19 newcomers and an experienced nucleus of five returning starters and 12 lettermen. Kansas had a 19-30-1 overall record last season and finished seventh in the Big Eight at 5-17.
Weather permitting, Kansas head baseball coach Marty Pattin will field what he called the deepest Jayhawk team he has had in a 1 p.m. season-opening doubleheader today against Missouri Southern at Quigley Field.
season", Pattin said. "There is room for a lot of improvement, and I really think we have a chance to surprise some people."
Pattin said the Jayhawks had to prove themselves early in the season against non-conference opponents such as Missouri Southern — a team that finished last season with a 33-25 record, an NAIA District 16 championship and second place in the NAIA regional playoffs.
"We're out to show we're dedicated to winning," he said.
Key to Kansas' success this season is the Jayhawks' ability to play solid defense, pitch effectively and play aggressive offense while looking to make things happen.
starters include Gary Lang, a second team All-Big Eight selection at short-stop last season. Lang batted .301 and had a .935 fielding percentage.
Kansas also returns all of its starting outfielders, including Mike Ingram in left, Hugh Stanfield in center and John Hart in right. Stanfield was second on the team last season in both batting average .(383) and fielding percentage .(966).
The Jayhawks, who Pattin said could finish in the top four of the conference, will be led offensively by five returning starters. Those
Starting pitchers for Kansas today, Pattin said, would be Steve Purdy, a Northeastern Oklahoma Junior College transfer, and Kansas veteran Paul Henry.
After today's game, the Jayhawks will play at home against Baker at 1 p.m. Sunday and against William Jewell in a doubleheader at 1 p.m. Monday before traveling to Texas for its annual spring trip.
Explosion rocks Brewer's locker room
United Press International
CHANDLER, Ariz. — Milwaukee Brewers Manager George Bamberger was sitting at his locker room desk with General Manager Harry Dalton, plotting the first full-scale workout of spring training, when he was blown out of his chair by a gas explosion yesterday.
Bamberger and Dalton rushed to the aid of two of their coaches who were engulfed in flames and a plumber who had been working on a space heater in the adjacent coaches' locker room.
The blast, which literally raised
the roof of the Brewers' new training facility, occupied by the team for only four days, sent coaches Tony Muser, Herb Starburt and Larry Haney to hospitals, along with the plumber, Jeff Sutton, 21, Mesa, Ariz.
The only players injured were pitcher Bill Wegman, and catcher Bill Schroeder, 27, who received minor burns as they walked up a ramp connecting the coaches' and players' locker rooms, which are about 30 feet apart.
"This bolt of fire came through the room. it knocked me clear out of my chair, about 10 feet, and it knocked
He said Muser's shirt was burned off his back.
Bamberger said he also grabbed Haney and, "When I rubbed down his arms, I probably rubbed his skin off."
Larry Haney 20 feet. His arms were on fire and the workman's hair and clothes were on fire. Harry Dalton beat on him trying to get the fire out and I got him out of there."
"Then I began thinking we were very, very lucky," he said. "We came out of this smelling like a rose because nobody got killed. We got real luck."
Jayhawks add twist for finale
Sports writer
By Dawn O'Malley
Sports writer
The Kansas women's basketball team has a few tricks up its sleeves to surprise the Iowa State Cyclones in tomorrow's game at Allen Field House. Kansas head coach Marian Washington said yesterday.
Iowa State
Women's Basketball
19.7, Big 8- 8.5)
12:15 o.m. tomorrow
(0F1E) j. Lawrence
Iowa State
Although Washington would not elaborate on her game strategy, she said her team had shown more patience on offense and initiative on defense in recent games.
"We have good momentum going," Washington said. "Now we need a good team effort to win."
The Jayhawks go into tomorrow's game with a two-game winning streak. They improved their Big Eight record to 8-5 and 17-9 overall, after beating Oklahoma, 77-72, Wednesday at Norman to sweep the season series with the Sooners. The victory clined the Sooners' chances to clinch the conference title outright.
However, the Jayhawks are tied for second in the conference with the Cyclones and the Missouri Tigers. The Cyclones are 8-5, 19-7.
however, if the team loses, it would end in fifth place and play the loser of tomorrow's Colorado-Missouri game on the road.
A Kansas victory would assure the Jayhawks of a third-place conference finish and a home game March 5 in the first round of the Big Eight Tournament against Kansas State.
In the last game between the Jayhawks and the Cyclones at Ames, the Cyclones won 68-60 in overtime.
The is the last regular season home game for Kansas senior forward Vickie Adkins.
Probable Starters
lowa State
F 22 Monica Missel (5-11)
F 11 Sandy Haltner (5-9)
C 45 Stephanie Smith (6-1)
G 12 Jane Lobenstein (5-7)
G 24 Etta Burns (5-7)
Kansas
F 33 Lisa Dougherty (5-8)
F 25 Vickie Adkins (6-1)
C 40 Kelly Jennings (6-5)
G 24 Evelte Ott (5-7)
G 30 Toni Webb (5-8)
1
10
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Friday, Feb. 28, 1986
Sports Briefs
Jayhawks to hold benefit for charity
The Kansas men's basketball team will conduct a benefit for Special Olympics at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium.
Proceeds from the $1 admission charge will go to the Special Olympics.
The Jayhawks will conduct drills and warm-ups. They also will scrimmage and sign autographs
Tod Leiweke, of Leiweke and Company, the Kansas basketball promoter and event coordinator.
said students were being encouraged to attend the benefit.
Game rescheduled
Because of inclement weather, yesterday's Kansas-Johnson County Community College softball game was postponed until 3 p.m. today at Jayhawk Field.
Rugby team on road
The KU rubgy team will play its second game of the season tomorrow against Pittsburg State at Pittsburg.
The KU varsity game begins at 1:30 p.m. The senior reserve team will play at 3 p.m.
The varsity team won its first game last week against the Oklahoma Sooners in Norman. The senior reserve队 suffered a loss to the Sooners to drop its record to 0-1.
Suspect names Chief
WICHTA — Court documents revealed that a suspect in last November's federal cocaine investigation told Wichita police that he had sold cocaine to Kansas City Chiefs defensive end Mike Bell and his twin brother, Mark.
The Wichita Eagle-Beacon reported yesterday that the suspect, Coleman Lockett, gave
the statement to detectives Nov. 4. Sixteen days later, Lockett, the Bells and 28 others were charged at the end of a yearlong investigation into illegal gambling and cocaine trafficking.
Mark Bell was not with a professional football team when arrested last fall. Mike Bell, who was drafted by the Chiefs in 1979, was arrested at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo.
Both Bells were charged with using a telephone to aid the distribution of cocaine and attempting to possess cocaine.
From staff and wire reports
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Sports
Friday, Feb. 28, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Motley hopes extra practice earns him job
Fro
in Kansan wires
FORT MYERS, Fla. — Outfieldder Davryl Motley did not have to report to the Kansas City Royals' camp until today, but he has been working out for a week with the pitches and catchers.
Notley, who hit .222 last year,
reported early voluntarily, paying
his cown living expenses, including
hot hotel bills, for seven davs.
His batting average last year dropped 62 points from 1984, when he hit .258 as a starter. This season he will
be competing for the starting right job with left-handed hitter Pat Sheridan. The two could also platoon in fight.
Spring Training
Chicago White Sox
SARASOTA, Fla. — Bobby Thigpen, an outfielder at Mississippi State, again stopped Chicago White Sox batters in training camp yesterday with overpowering pitches.
Be and Tony Menendez, another hard-throwing right-hander, are the most impressive newcomers according to Spx brass.
Operations Vice President Ken Harrellson called Menendez, who had a 13-4 record and 2.74 earned run average last season, "a sleeper to make this team."
The team's 1984 first-round draft choice, Menendez struck out 235 batters in 120 innings in his senior year at Miami's Hialeah High School.
Thippen was 2-3 last summer at Niagara Falls, a rookie team, with a 1.72 ERA and 74 strikeouts in 52 innings. He was an occasional reliever at Mississippi State.
New York Mets
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Pitching continued to dominate the spring training camp of the New York Mets on Thursday and no pitcher impressed manager Dave Johnson more than veteran Bruce Berenyi, who threw practice for about 15 minutes.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
TADIUM BARBER SHOP
1033 Mass. Downtown
ALL HAIRCUTS $6
Quality Haircuts at
Reasonable Prices
No appl. necessary. Closed on Moms.
BELLE'S
SPIRIT SHIRTS
Custom Silkscreen Printing
T-shirts, sweats, and party favors.
Huge selection! Wholesale prices!
Call your KU rep, Tom Bell,
at 842-0977 or 749-3758.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
A STEVEN
SHIELBERG FILM
The Color Purple
Fri. *4:00 Daily 7:00-9:45 Sat. & Sun.
*1:00 *4:00
WARSTON
E. R. H.
pretty in pink
JAMES RUSSELL
Daily 7:30 to 9:30
1:00 to 5:00
Sat-Sun 2:30 to 6:00
DOWN AND OUT IN
REVERE WELLS
Daily *5:00 7:30 9:30 Sat & Sun *2:30
ENEMY
CHEMISTRY
613-254-8000
www.enemychemistry.com
HILLCREST 2
DENNIS
QUAD
LOUIS JR.
BENGY
Daily 4:30 7:20 9:35 Sat-Sun 7:21 9
JULI CREST 3 10TH AND JUNE 2ND
R
HITCHER
Daily *4:45 7:25 9:40 Set-Sun *2:40
CINEMA 1
2157 AND 10WA
TELEPHONE 824-6400
GOLDIE HAWK
WOLFCHE
Fri 6:08 Daily 7:35 9:35
Fri *5:05 Daily 7:25 9:35
Sat & Sun *2:55 *5:05
When you think you're found the right man,
Bally Flatty* James Garner
Murphy's Romance
Fri 5:00 Daily 7:20 9:30
Sat 8:00 Sun 8:00
*Rargain Show
EASTERN UNION
Jayhawks to face WSU in pivotal tennis match
By James Larson Sports writer
The KU men's and women's tennis teams will be in action tonight. The men's team will take on Wichita State while the women's team travels to Illinois where they will face Illinois and Southern Illinois-Edwardsville.
Head coach Scott Perelman said Wednesday that the Wichita State match would be an emotional one
Sports writer
Tennis
"It will be our biggest match so far this year. For us to get into the NCAA tournament, we must be able to beat them." he said.
since the Jayhawks beat them 5-4 in their last three meetings.
The match between Kansas' Mike Wolf and Wichita State's Jeremi Grubi will be one of the highlights of the match. WSU head tennis coach Rex Coad said Wolf definitely was the favorite but the match could go either way.
"Jeremi (Grubi) has been playing extremely well, but he'll have to play his best against Wolf," he said.
Perelman said the Illinois
women's tennis team would be tough because it was very well coached and improving all the time.
Illinois head coach Mary Trednick said she was anxious to play Kansas.
"We're really looking forward to this and we're ready to play," she said.
Perelman also praised Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, the team the KU women play tomorrow, calling them the best team in Division 2. Perelman said the Jayhawks beat them in their last meeting so they were eager for a rematch.
"My main concern is that we continue to improve as a team, especially in doubles play," he said about the coming matches.
The men's team is taking a 4-1 record into the Wichita State match. The women's team is going to Illinois with a perfect record of 7-0.
The men's team will host Southern Illinois-Carbondale on Sunday and Southwest Missouri State on Tuesday. Then both the men's and women's team will spend spring break on the road playing a series of matches in the Los Angeles area.
OFFICER OPPORTUNITES AVAILABLE NOW!
Call 913-841-1821
Marines We're looking for a few good men.
KU Basketball KU vs. IOWA STATE
Live Broadcast
HLZR106
2:35 p.m. Saturday
Soonsored By
Mrs. Winners Jayhawk Bookstore Owens Flowers Gammons Ellena Ford Moto-Photo Douglas County Bank
Douglas County Bank
or
The Leading Edge Model D PC-compatible computer will sell at $1495, offer four slots, up to #40K memory, double flowy drives, graphics capability built in and monochrome or RGB monitor output on the system board.
LAWRENCE, KS-Faculty,
students and the business community
have been flocking to a new IBM-compatible computer—the
Leading Edge Model "D". This remarkable PC is perhaps the "hottest" sellingPC in town.
Leading Edge Model D: Takes Lawrence by Storm
The Leading Edge Model "D" includes either a word processor or a data base manager. Usually this offer means that you get the old version of some now-unpopular program. Quite the contrary here. You may choose from Leading Edge's own highly rated word processor or their powerful Nutshell data manager.
Inside, the Leading Edge is well thought out. The main board can accommodate a full 640K. It has full size expansion slots and is socketsed for the 8087 chip. It even has a 130 power supply to support this machine growth. To prove its reliability, the Model 'D' comes with a full 15 month warranty.
Best of all, the Model "D" includes a high resolution (720 X 350) monitor with graphics capability. Most PCs would require an additional $495 board to achieve this combination. And if this weren't enough, the unit has a built-in color board as well if ever you want to use an RGB monitor.
Sold locally by Computer Outlet,
804 New Hampshire Street, the Model "D" has been built with the best features of many of its competitors. It comes standard with 2 disk drives, 25KK, parallel and serial ports, plenty of expansion slots, DOS 2.1 and even a clock/calendar.
Oh, yes, all this is just $1495—almost exactly half the cost of a comparably equipped IBM XT. The hard drive model is $1895.
The Leading Edge® Model "D"" Personal Computer,
$1495. Complete.
Help Prevent Birth Defects The Nation's Number One Child Health Problem.
LEADING EDGE
♂ ♀
BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO Service & Maintenance 545 Minnesota 842-4320
She's up early every morning
To see if the boys are still yawning
Breakfast, lunch and dinner she prepares
Questions, objections and suggestions
March of Dimes BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION
COMPUTER OUTLET
Your computer connection at IBM N.H. or IBM N.H.
LEADING EDGE is a registered trademark of Leading Edge Products, Inc. IBM is a registered trademark of International Business Machine Corporation. HERCULES is a trademark of Hercules Computer Technology.
There is a very sweet lady
Who lives in Old Montana Street
She tells me she's sixty-nine.
But I still insist she's thirty-five
Three times a day she provides
Food and drinks beyond compare
You better be careful and not complain
Or else you'll land up in a drain
Our very own kitchen her domain
pots and pans on every plain
she sweeps and wipes every terrain
the boys be blamed for any stains
Like a mother to each and every one of us
Every word she utter serves a purpose
There's no doubt she's the greatest
someone who works with more
precious cues.
This space contributed by the publisher.
1 never fail to see her smile
Even when she is, but a hundred mile
1 never fail to remember her name
For it stands out with a torchling flame
Can you guess who this lady is?
And please, please don't you ever miss
Coz she's ever quite so sensitive
That to the exit door I am positive
Guess Who She Is
Harriet-Your cab is here!
Games People Play
Rock Chalk Revue
Hoch Auditorium
Feb. 27, 28, and March 1
Tony Soon and Your Acacians
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
Minsky's
DELIVERS
At Minsky's you get pizza with generous toppings, special sauces, fresh ingredients and real dairy cheeses all cooked up on your choice of four kinds of crusts... AND WE DELIVER.
842-0154
We have a NEW MENU! Come in and check it out
V84
Minimum Grade
2228 Iowa
WHAT A DEAL!
LARGE 2 topping pizza and 1 liter of COKE for $8.50!
104
THE ORIGINAL
Minsky's
PIZZA
---
842-0154
2228 Iowa
STUDENT TEACHING MANDATORY MEETING
WHEN: TUESDAY, MARCH 4,1986 3:30 p.m.
FOR: All Students in the School of Education who plan to Student Teach during the 1986-87 School Year.
WHERE: JAYHAWK ROOM, KANSAS UNION
If you are planning to student teach during the 1986-87 school year, YOU MUST ATTEND THIS MEETING.
1984
Ms. Elaine Satin Shirts 14.99
REPEAT OF A SELLOUT!
Choose from a beautiful new assortment of satin sleep shirts in several styles.
Available in many colors.
Sizes P-S-M-L.
If. not specially purchased would be $25 to $33.
Lingerie-2nd Floor.
Weavers
Lawrence's Department Store For 128 Years. 9th and Massachusetts
12
University Daily Kansan
Classified Ads
The University Daily
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
Friday, Feb. 28, 1986
Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks
0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25 8.25
16-20 3.20 4.25 6.00 9.30
21-25 3.20 4.75 6.00 10.50
For every 5 words add: 30$ 40$ 75$ 105$
AD DEADLINES
POLICIES
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
new column inch
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 displays. No overprints allowed in classified display ads.
- Words in ALE CAPS count as 2 words.
* Words in BOLD FACE count as 3 words.
* Deadline in 4 p.m. — 2 working days prior to
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Classified display and no bulk count limits may only earned sale discount
Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to publication of advertising
- No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
only
* No responsibility is assumed for more than one in-
dication of any accident event.
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advances until credit has been established.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENT
is can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. There
- Classified display advertisements.
- Classified display ads do not count towards mon.
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement or classified information.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only
Announcing Lawrence's newest record store. As about our guaranteed back, inack, inlace, l1tap, 2max, UDXL 2 C-9$9, $0.50, Last chance. Records 99
- Blind bids ad-hoc please add a 4+ service charge
* Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed
Assessment Course Instructors (4) teach high school students in summer session. Degree and secondary experience required. Dermont Supervisor (1) coordinate dermal staff and live in dorm. Assistant Teacher (1) teaches students required. Dermont Assistants (4) live in dorm and supervise high school students. Dermont Tutor (2) instructs Special Projects (1) design curriculum for high school graduates and teachers. Doctorest, post-secondary education cultures required. Deadline March 14, 1986, 5:00 p.m. complete job description available at Upward Bound, 604 Ballway Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, 60895. (913) 864-3415. Director, Upward Bound, 604 Ballway Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, 60895. (913) 864-3415.
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
Rent-1't Color T W $2,88 amonth. Smilty's TV,
W 3rd; d422, 842-7531. Mestown's TV,
W 3rd; d422, 842-7531.
Days on the slopes and nights in the hot tubs will be over, but Greek Week '86 will just be starting.
March 17-23
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $98.
Smitty's it, 147 W. 2nd. 824-8731. Mon.-Sat.
7 a.m. - 5 p.m.
SOCER COACHING: Positions available
for Soccer Coaches, Volunteers,
h/week, 8 weeks. KU students may apply for
his practicum credit. For info contact Kaw
B. Soccer Association, Mary Loveland,
820-9233
Attention Sophomores. Owl Society is now accepting applications! Minimum overall GPA of 3.0. Applications in Rm. 403 Kansas Union. Applications and current transcript due the March 7 at 5 p.m.
200 Professional Headhunters are waiting to see your resume.
PRIVATE PLACEMENT
SERVICE
ALL DISCIPLINES
Call Ken Wilson 841-1085 or 842-5752
ENTERTAINMENT
Spring Break Sweep Off-Party! Wednesday; March 5, Cogburn's presents CBS recording art of the Elwis Brothers. $3 cover. I don't miss this show! Tired of DJ .S. Bring your party to life with live, music! Rock-n-roll music for the FAN-TASTIX. Now looking special rates for the FAN-TASTIX-3943-JIM.
Get Published: SF and Fantasy magazine accept submissions. Subscribe to *Express* or the limited supplies of *telling*, sleeping bags, coolers, etc. Make reservations now! Discovery Level Burger Union, phone 516-379-2400.
AUDITIONS
"Fiddler On The Roof " When: Sun. Mar. 2
Mon. Mar. 3
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Place: Lawrence Community Theatre 1501 New Hampshire
No prepared audition pieces necessary.
We are particularly looking for men.
NIGHT LIFE MOBILE J DANCE MUSIC. A mixture of new-rock with the classics. A professional sound system, compressed light system. A portable DJ setup. PHASE FOUR D.J. SERVICE would like to provide the music for your next party. We use a 1200 watt sound system that can fill, any size room and accommodate outdoor parties too. Units are available in New York and Salina. U814-943 or (913) 877-8448.
FOR RENT
Available for sublease, furnished apartment 2 blocks from campus. 1 bedroom, 2 beds, really neat and newly remodeled. Call 842-6519 and we can assist.
First come, first served, only a few twentail. At 20 wishing, on KU bus route, between Gibson's and Walmart. You'll find our room, gas heated units with carpet, drapes, and appliances. We pay heat and cold water, you choose options, foot care, extra bath or balcony. Call (866) 349-1475.
Furnished one bedroom apartment near Univer-
sity of Miami. Most utilities off with street
parking, per pet. 1900 sq ft.
Are you tired of living in a dorm? Come and live at Berkley Park.Vacancies available now and this summer. Plan ahead, lease now for next fall. 845-2116.
Applications are now available for the 1986/87 Fall and Spring Semesters.
Space is limited! SO APPLY TODAY!
Call or come by for a tour.
NAISMITH
HALL
1800 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, Ks. 6644
(913) 843-8559
LEASE NOW FOR FALL: (with or without sum-
mage of materials for a fire or a bath)
basement, garage, carpet, deck
hookup, ice maker, Energy efficient; low utilities;
refrigerator; dishwasher; electric appliances
appreciate $40/mo. negative, 843-736-736
Newly remodeled new 1 bdrm apt. 22$ plus low utilities plus deposit. Leave nds 31. 311. Insu-
New two bedroom apartment, Aspen West. No pets, $230.00 per month, 794-1288.
SUBLEASE1 EXIT B 1 SR DANCE ACE Furnished,
B 249-821 (Venice) mid-May through July
B 424-821 (Venice)
Share large 3 BR Kit / 1/2 rent is $189.00. No utili
Dll 416 848 1405 - 841 100 900
Studio apartment one block from campus. No pets. $173.00 per month. 749-1288.
Sublease available for Summer. Contemporary 2
BR furnished apartment, AC, carpet, 1/2 bath.
Near campus and down town. Call 842-5503 or
841-1212.
TRAILRIDGE Now leasing for Summer & Fall. Studios-large, cheerful, large closet, small closets. 18-hour kitchen prep. APARTMENTS-1,2, & 3 bedrooms, appliances include dishwashers, in laundry, gas heat & refrigerators. $26/month.
fireplaces, car port, w/d w hook up, app storage,
pipe, 1/2 to 1/2 inch. Excellent maintenance services,
3 swimming pools, tennis, basketball,
close to shopping, 20 block to Centennial Park, on
parking lot.
new fender telecarrier electric guitar; Dean Mackey 20k Ampl. Cry baby flex pedal; Neesany cords $500. Neg. 381-9243 Ask for Janet.
**MASTERCRAFT offers completely furnished 1,**
2 or 3-bedroom apartment all new. Call
(617) 854-3200.
FOR SALE
1600 Camero, red sun, AM/FM cassette,
57.400 miles, good condition. #4308 Call Craig
A Zenith, 19 inch, color TV. Used for one year
200. 2 chests of drawers, both $70. A dressing table, $40. A bed and 3 mattresses, all $160. A accum cleaner, $49. Call 749 4283.
3 man dome tent with rain fly. Factory recordi-
only $30. Everything but ice, 6th & ear-
nies.
1925 Schumann Mountain Bike-Relase transportation with very few miles. Call 824-6898 after 2 p.m.
19 inch portable television in vivid, dazzling color.
1230 Early evening's best. 811-8864.
Baseball cards and sports natalogue. Buy, Sell
and Trade. D's Baseball card. Open 12 M-5 M.
Saturday, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
This 200 watty Kentwood Amplifier will make everyone dance $225, or the AKA1 programmable timer $75, linear tracking and lighted 20 band equalizer $200, turntable $110. You will have full control of your stereo.
Big Cio box-box-synthesizer $199. Raleigh record bicycle 10 mi *192*. Techinere turtleable, linear tracking, programmable plus carriage $149. IBM jpcr plus software $559-81-2399.
Comic Books. Penguin, Penthouse, etc. Mac's
Comic Book. 15 a.m. Tue-Fri, Sat & Sun 10:35-8:31
841-7614
B. C. Bich Warlock Bass with case, 2 Ludwig Harper Cymbal Sounds, P450 sits and ride socks, 300 socks, 250 socks, 150 socks, 80 socks, 60 socks, 50 socks, 40 socks, 30 socks, 20 socks, 10 socks, 8 socks, 7 socks, 6 socks, 5 socks, 4 socks, 3 socks, 2 socks, 1 sock, 0 socks
Cash immediately for automobile exhaust catalytic converters. We pick up and pay cash.
Big assortment of men's clothes. Like new, reasonable. Sizes 30-36, skirts, coat,ed, jeans, shorts, dresses.
Oxford Executive computer, 2 drives, 198K memory and Epson dot-matrix printer. $1500 worth of software including MediaMaster (reads), writes, formatts IBM), Wordmaster, Superacre, SuperLaptop, etc. No special software to negotiate. Call Jack at 913-794-5537 workdays or 814-6340 on 6 weekends.
For Sale: 1981 Schwim Lecture, lot of extras.
great shape, $150. Call after fifti- 841-667-
CANNONDLEA SR-300 FRAME and fork. 58 cm.
bottom bracket, front DENAILER, and
SHIPTS included. Call 864-6611 or 749-4818
after 6 n.m.
For Sale Black 1982 Fontacre Trans-Am Im-
pulse AE 450i air conditioned, 600 stere w/ tape. 298-2410,
722-2153 Topica.
Golf Sking! New Bower med. jacket/jake @bib bib or best offer. Also sweater/gggen
Mant sell, Eagle AMC 1861, a four drive, two dofm, FM radio, air-condition, wine-colored. 32,000 miles, in excellent condition, $3900. Call 749-4838.
Quantaray. Auto. Lens. 85-210 mm/F3.9.
Macro/Zoom. $00 best for 841-807.
NIKKOR 50 mm 1.8, 86% Access 35-70, 3.5M
Nikon mount $90. Buck 843-8523
USED STEREO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Receivers from £90, turnaround time 1-4 weeks.
Battery operated box and car stereo, all completely reconditioned and warranted. Lawrence Custom Radio, #14 W. 23rd St.
South-Cornia portable electric/cartridge ribbon
twicker writer $c$, best $c$ or 814.967.857
Western Civilization Notes. On sale! Make men sense to use them. 1) An study guide. 2) For class. 3) The History of Western Civilization. Analysis of Western Civilization. available now at Town Cries. The Jayhawk bookstores, and online.
AUTO SALES
1973 MG convertible. Get ready for spring and summer! Look good inside and out. Hours: 8AM to 5PM. $12,000.
1979 Toyota Corolla SR-5 liftback. One owner
Lada mids, but runs great. $1500 or best offer
Hull II. 4 cylinder, 4 speed, A/C/AM/FM
cassette, new tires and brakes. Very dependable,
sharp looking, good MPG. At 14th & Kentucky
7200, 749-048 after 6 pm.
1979 Honda Civic, spd, 80 mkz, gray tudor,
1979 Honda Civic, up, brake job. Excellent car.
Christian
1932 IBM 320i - Inlalic Blue AM-FM cassette amm
driver, automatic transmission. Call 933-491-6750.
Call 933-491-6750.
98 Impala engines, tire fine condition. Needs body work. Best offer 841-1005, ask for Rob.
55 WV Rabbit, rebuild-carb, new fuel pump; $675
81 Datsan, great engine, some rust, need
starter. 4096 OBO. Call Lake 844-8124/94-8980
**78 Mustang. Turbo, Silver/red, custom wheels &**
**Pilgrim tires. Slick. Call A48 392-8800.**
For Sale. 1976 Honda Civic, 4700, 841-3922, call
Sat. Wed. and nights..
76 FREEBIRD-Runs great, looks good, 24 mm,
18 mm, AM/FM, AMF电台, carcass $166.00
82-9684 82-9684
Moving Mint Sell. 1980 Olds Mobil Cultress station station wagon. $8 Silver. Full Option. Jumbo $780. Call Us
LOST/FOUND
RX-7189 excellent condition, new tires, far below book at $400. Mint; must sell. 823-966-996
Found: A rearmy in Strong Hall. Sometime in January, Call 864-3301.
LOST. Gold (pearl) bracelet. Great sentimential value. REWARD. Call 864-6803.
Lost: A postprior depressing German firms and their interrelations. May have been found last week by the British Army, to the German Dep., please call Chris 834-6456. Lost Levi jacket and gloves at Glauco's.
Lost Leav jacket jean and gloves at Cogburn's
2/20/88. No questions asked. Rewald*: 842-999-6968
Personalized JC license plate stolen
replaceable, sentimental value, please return
843-1772
Wool Herringbone overcoat and red scarf Los
Angeles
BRUSH RANCH CAMP for boys located in mountains near Santa Fear N.E. now hiring male counselors who also instruct in one of the following: art, tenni, fishing, ropes, swimming (WSI) and tennis. Students must complete a 20-contact contact Congdon. 505-763-1741 or write P.O. Box 2450, Santa Fear N.E. 87940.
HELP WANTED
BRUSH RANCH CAMP for girls located in mountains near pearl Sea Ne'kua now hiring female instructors (singer, dancer, acting, drama, fencing, dance, music, swimming, wrestling, and WSDI and English riding). Poor weather conditions impaired views held by K.U. March 24, contact James Congdon 750-751-614 or write P.O. Box 240, San Diego.
Naismith Hall Resident Assistant 1986-1987
PERSONAL
Applications now available
call 843-8559 for additional information
CASH PAID DAILY. Our Pizza is now accepting applications to hire 10 drivers. If you are a self-motivated, high energy person, you could have your own vehicle for the company. We pay cash commissions on deliveries our drivers. Our drivers make $5-8 per hour and more. You must be 18 years or older, have a car, current driver's license and proof of insurance. Apply today at EOE. n/
Naismith front desk 8 a.m. • 5 p.m.
until Spring Break
SUMMER WORK/JOINSON COUNTY, RS. 69-hour work week required. Job requires door-to-door collection. Car and driver's license required. For interview 6, please contact Junk Katz. Mail resume to: Workforce Services, 1000 Madison Ave., Madison, Wisconsin 53704.
at
Hawaii, World! Call; Guide, Cassette,
Newservice! (1) 964-4444 X UKANSASCRUISE
Computing Services is seeking a half-time student
Computer Science major at FOCUS. Duties include becoming a FOCUS expert; design and deliver FOCUS training sessions for end users; write FOCUS documentation for end users; use FOCUS to conduct Qualifications: excellent oral and written communication skills; knowledgeable about computer systems; use of using mainframes and letter of application, resume, and three references to John Bucher, Computing Services, University of Kansas, at U.KansascruiSEX application deadline 3/17/08. U.K. Employer.
CRUENESHIP HIRINGI $850-4500 Carribbean,
CARRIBA (910) 8444-8444 U.K.ARUSCHANSEE
vice noires (910) 8444-8444 U.K.ARUSCHANSEE
GOVERNMENT JOBS, $1.040-$4.350/yr. New-
government jobs 605-857-6007. R9 for current
employees.
GOVMENTMER JOBS, $16.90 up $25.20 yr. Have
Hiring Call 1-877-685-600 ext. R7-854 for current
employees.
Two continuing student hour positions; book publisher seeks 2 students who type (60 plus) wpm & have previous office experience to assist in administration of curriculum qualifications; 20 hrs/week during semester, 20-40 hrs/week during summer. Complete application at University Press of Kansas, 929 Carroll Avenue, Kansas City, KS 64105.
AIRLINE HIRING BOOM! $149-$390,000
Stewardesses, Reservationist! Call for Guide,
Cassette, Newswire. (810) 944-7444 x UAW138.
MOBP part hours for full time for $400-$12000
weekly. Please refer to www.mobp.com for
growing co in, American history. We need
distributors in Lawrence area; training provided
by MOBP. For more information, call.
A RU student from far East Orient seeks a senior war or warm relations. Please reply to Neblih
WANTED: ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN for immediate full or part-time work in Overland Park area. 6 mo. experience necessary. Call (913) 409-8085.
Captain Energy says, "There are better ways to spend your money. Help conserve energy."
HAPPY BIRTHDAY KATII!! You're (a) super
happy birthday! I'm here at kU! 1000 xes!
From: 09/27/2013. From: 09/27/2013.
HIPP BIRTHDAY KATHY!! You're (a) super
happy. From the Ackermanns here at KU! 600!
From the Atkermanns.
Have a GREAT birthday Cedric! Love, Gayle
It's been real.
It's been fun.
But...
HEY ROBREN,
CAN WE
TALK!
J. S.
Jeff M. "Get your act together." Hefty, hefty, hefty's pal.
1. Ken your Pizza Party, overestimated my ability to play. I lost a game. Game. She defended me at courses 1 and 4 like my dad.
Mike the Pile-Our faces will get tan, our necks will stay white, seven more days until we romance in the night. Love, Your Breckenridge Snowbunny.
POINSTEA BEACH INN in the heart of the Fort
102-587-2507 strip STUDENT discount:
102-587-2507
BUS.PERSONAL
810-4360 WeeklyUp Mailing Circulars! Our guests! Surely interest rush self-addressed envelope Success, P.O. Box 470CEG, Woodstock, IL 60098
Jayhawker Towers
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts. for KU students
- For 2, 3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- 9 1/2 - Month Leases All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors
- Academic Resource Center
"CAMP COUNSELORS. M/P - Outstanding Slim and Trim Down Camps; Tennis, Dance, Slum Dance; Swimming Classes at the El Capitan plus. Separate girls' and boys' camps. 7 weeks. Cameron on on college Campuses at Mt. Vernon and San Francisco; California. Contact: Michelle Friedman, Director, 97 Heslert Dr. No Woodneer. N, Y 11813.
- Air Conditioned
- Air Conditioned Swimming Pool
- Swimming Pool
- On Bus Line
- Free Cable TV
- Laundry Facilities
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Apply Now for Fall/Spring
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
E enroll now in Lawrence Driving School! Receive driver's license in four weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided. 841-7740.
Spring Break?
Protect Your Skin!
Start Your Tan Now!
Tan Here In Lawrence!
Complimentary Day Membership*
Check Us Out-No Obligation
20% Off
We Guarantee lowest price, best service best tan
Members and Non-members Welcome
Blue Heron Futons
GAYLESBIAN? Need local information or want to meet others? Send a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to 'TRIANGLE TIMES, P o Box 8240, KOOM 64196'
100% Cotton & Foam Core Mattresser
547 Locust, N. Lawrence
Tues.-Sat. 12:5-30 p.m.
841-9443
Expanded Hours-Open 7 Days
8 Beds-Tan Daily, No Waiting
- $2 per tanning session
New customers only
841-2451 927 Mass. Thurs. iii 8
Barb's Vintage Rose
NEW ARRIVALS
Rhinestone jewelry
necklaces, bracelets
earrings-brooches
M-5-10-5 p.m.
927 Mass. Tr.
EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB 25th & Iowa 841-6232
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U. repair).
Call 805-697-4000.
GKC# for information.
GKC# for information.
FAX TELEPHONE
MENU HOT LINE
364-4567
The Union's recording
of the day's entrees & soups.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater area. Call for appointment 913-545-1040
Leo Weight! Gain Weight! or JJ Felt Great!
HERBAL NUTRITIONAL PROGRAM gives you
the tools you need to improve your diet,
demanding. Dr. recommended! 'It's safe & it
works' Call 919-829-4671. DuPree-F爷 & Assoc.
glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc., for an up-coming
event? & M F favors offer the best quality and
careers. Call 919-829-4671 for speedy and reliable design. You design it or it
is adapted artists. 291 W. 505 Behind Gelman
Rent-18" Color TV 42.98 $ a.m. smarthome's TV 3
Ward 2, 8rd. TV 7,371. Mesh Sat. 9:30 - Sun. 1:05 -
Sun. 2:45
FINE CIRCULAR STERLING NECKLACE
SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Pazonia Island, Daytona Beach, Fort Lasterdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island-Port Aransas from only 10 miles. Deluxe lodging, parties, goose bags, more. Hurry, call Sunchase Tours for more information and reservations toll free [800-321-5911] or contact a local Sunchase Tours operator. Visit our Spring break count, count on Sunchase.
Classified Heading
All ceramic jewelry in stock & other selected items
AFRICAN ADORNED
5 E. 21b 842-1376
HAND-MADE JEWELRY SALE!
Write ad here
GOVERNMENT SURPLUS* Raincovers, overalls,
field jackets, camouflage clothing, sleeping
bags, tents, camping gear, much more! St Mary
Surplus shops. 1-437-2734
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
SERVICES OFFERED
Thousands of K & R Albums — 20 or less. Also collector items. Sats & Sun only 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Quintilts 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all styles music.
Phone
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841.0716
BIRTHRIGHT—Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 943-842.
STOP MAKING SENSE! Becoming an EARRISHER from studying! Is your brain turning to LIQUID SKY GO HANNANAS FAGINING YOUR WINTER? Go GANNON! HUNGER for hot video, wrap up your CRAWING HAND and check us out. LIBERTY HALL VIDEO-your video alternative. No membership. Open 12:36, Mon.-Sat., 4-8 Sun. 66 Manus. 74-1912. The latest styles in face paint, nail art, dresses. Shop. TZer. 732. Mansu. 943-0611. Floral lace, painte lace, side falae back seams, dangle ankles, rose shimmers and many others. $2.50 to $41.00. Great Berkshire Hunting. 11:30-Mon. 8 p.m.
Rent' 19.0 Color $ T. $28.98 a month Curtis
Maths, 14 Ward W 212 B 67357 Sat; m 5:30
Sat; w 10:30
Dates to run
REUEMES-A professional resume拿员 can make job interviews. Let me write one for you!
MATH TUTOR - Bob Means holds an A. in Math from KU, where U.120, 102, 118 and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professionally in 1975 and often tutors elementary statistics 65 per 40 minute session - Call 843-9023.
NEED TO KILL W. I LISTEN! Lesbian/Gay Peer Counseling Completely confidential. Call 843-9023. KU Info 843-9024; or those phone numbers 841-2454.
1-15 words 1 Day $2.60 2-3 Days $3.75 4-5 Days $5.25 10 Days or 2 Weeks
For every 5 words added 30* $50* $75* $1.05
Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer-Flint Hat
Net a
Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Classified Display
1 col. × 1 inch = $4.40
THE FAR SIDE
BLOOM COUNTY
By GARY LARSON
DOCTOR
2.28
"You're gonna be OK, mister, but I can't say the same for your little buddy over there. ... The way I hear it, he's the one that mouthed off to them gunfighters in the first place."
by Berke Breathed
I'M SORRY, GLORIA...
I WANT OUT.
OUT... OUT... OUT.
RUN!
FACE. BIT, HAPPY. THRALL EYE,
EXCITING, GUFFY PHASE OF
OUR RELATIONSHIP IS PAST.
RIP I WANT I MUST FOR
this LONG-TERM STUFF.
I WAS BORN TO RUN, BABY
MY GOO GLORA...
I SUFFOCATING!
DO YOU REALIZE NOW
LONG WE'VE KNOWN
EACH OTHER?
BOOLEAN RELATIONSHIP
GASP!
ACK!
AIR!
HIK!
1
1
Friday, Feb. 28, 1986
University Daily Kansan
13
Classified Ads
TYPING
100 pages. No job too small or too large. Acceptable for affordable typing, Judy, 82-7945 or Lim, 82-7945.
3.1 Dependent. Accurate, Professional. WOID
4.1 Dependable. Accurate, professional. diaphores,
bibs, etc. Data Word 850.
24-Hour Typing: 10th semester in Lawrence
dissertations, papers. Close to campus.
Instructor's website: www.nebraska.edu/teaching/
professional typing. Term papers, Thesis.
HW professional typing. Using IBM Selectric
IH. Residence number 84-3246
ATPN MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS. Expected typic
type nearby. APA format experience.
A.L. SMITH TYPING/Dissertations, theses, term
phones. Phone 842-8657 after 5:30.
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing
editting HTML 6, 8.5-9.4, 8.9-10.4, Some data from
dictionary 84-104 84-105
A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality routines, papers, dissertations, etc. Rehabilitation rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850.
Accurate word processing, experienced.
7880manual Lauran 5-10 pm
Phone location: 222-659-2564
Age Wordprocessing. Accurate, affordable,
friendly. Proofreading, corrections. Resumes.
term paper sheets, dissertations. 24-hour
service available. One block from campus. 842-2576.
Alibaba Cloud Computer Services - Word Processor
Microsoft Word Document Processing
Wizard Document uploading, Free estimate
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAFFER— Typing Service.
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape.
843-8877
DISSERTATIONS, THESES/, LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY Service
available on shorter student pages (up to 38
p.m.) or Mommy's Typing, 9:30-9:37
before 9 p.m. please.
Dispersations, Theses, Term Papers. Over 15 yrs.
experience. Phone 492-831-05; after 5:30. Barr:
B.A., ENGLISH TYPING-TUTORING. Great
coverage, overnight service available.
Great writing quality.
GOOD IMPressions Typing: Spelling/punctuation errors corrected, reasonable rates. Caseset
Hickerson, 24-hour typing. IBM word processing.
Quick and reliable service. Lymn 814:5094.
Hakkendon, 24-hour typing. HM word processing.
Quick and reliable service. Lynn 4815.5984
Lel me handle your typing needs. - Told you of my Reasonable, Res�ateen, 16 years experience Call 543 3700.
Letter perfect papers and resumes. WRITING LINKED INF. 001,3490.
Sports
KWALITY COMICS
SCIENCE FICTION
COMIC BOOKS • GAMES
1111 Massachusetts 843-7239
health • free pregnancy tests
associates • abortion services/
counseling
• gynecology
• contraception
Overland Park, KS / 913-345-1400
QUALITY TYPING, Letters, themes, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spotted correct
1-4-1 TRIO WORD PROCESSING experienced,
CONSISTENT, reliable, trustable. Plus accepted,叫
down.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree, 841-6254.
THE WORLD DOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can have worldspelling? 943-3147
EXPERIENCE TYPIFY Term papers, thems
experience TYPIFY correct spelling
phone #859-9044. Mrs. Wright
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional wordpress
master, web design, themes, busses, letter
printing quality. #43-902-602
TYPING. Call 841-5804 evenings and weekends.
WANTED
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED for new apart
Room: 10am to 5pm, or for a m., 12:30 and part-time
P.m. 10am and 11:00, and weekdays. No exp. fax: 498-6088.
Female, nonenformer for spacious apt through May, renewal. WD to campus, tunn. $165.00
Female to take over contract at Naimim. 10 meal plan, 7750 negligible) at end semester.
Housemate in 5-bedroom house. Pets. Furnished.
but your own bedroom. $10 plus / utilities plus
$25 per night.
Male roommate needed: 101 Sunset, furnished,
washer, dryer, all bills paid, no pets; $175/mo.
Mature individual needed to provide companion-
ship and complete homemaking tasks for home-bound clients. Call Douglas County VNA 843 3738 EOE.
WANTED: Roosmanim to share cups. Two large
tables, one with a dishwasher, plenty of space, and I easy to get around.
I can drink and eat without fuss.
Wanted: 4 tickets to KUISG game. 841-1499
Wanted: Female roommate to share three
bedroom house. Very nice & clean neighborhood.
842-9738
Wanted: Female, non-smoking roommate to share a 3 bedroom apt for remainder of semester. $150.00/mo. plus 1/3 utilities. Call 749-4823. Keep trying.
Want to go skiing? We need 1+ couples to
conde in winter Park, spring break. Call
800-253-6748.
We buy your used audio equipment. Receivers, speakers, earphones and lawwrence materials are available at: bs-8251-031, bs-8251-041, bs-8251-051.
VCR w/2 movies-$9.66
(overnight Mon-Fri)
Store Hours:
Store Hours:
Mon-Sat: 9:30-9 /Sun: 1-5
SMITTY'S TV
1447 W 23rd 842-5751
...
yello sub
DELIVERS
841-3268
Drinking Myth of the Week
FOST RONG NELL
SCI
IN EAST JACKSON
721.5 STRONG HILL
SAC
91. 847-7051
ALL THAT PUBLICITY ABOUT DRINKING AND DRIVING IS...
True. At least half the fatal highway accidents involve drinking.
The Student Assistance Center
NEW PRODUCT
321 THE QUALITY PRINTER
Pie Chart
- Letter quality and draft speeds
* 218/72 cps
* Superb graphics at 180 x 180 dots per inch
Introductory Sale
$649
TOSHIBA IN ONE
LEADING EDGE
LEADING EDGE
COMPUTER
OUTLET
Your computer
connection at
843-PLUG + 804 N.H.
MICRO COMPUTER SEMINAR
Big Eight Room Kansas Union
Tues.,Mar. 4 7:30-9:00 p.m.
Learn How To Use A Computer To Achieve Greater Scholastic Reward
EZCOMP
O.
COMPUTER CENTER
HOLIDAY PLAZA
(913) 841-5715
MORE Stats, Power! IMPROVED File Handling, Reporting!
SPSS PC+
The Enhanced and Expanded Statistical Package for IBM PC/XTATs
SPSP-C++ combined with "informationization" and "formatting"
SPSP-C++ tables, "form the table" software available for a microcomputer
and "informationization" software which has high quality maximum
mathematics. At least two languages compatible with the
maintance veneers. And you should expect from a market
you should expect from a market that supports documentation
warehouse and documentation warehouse.
SPSS/PC+
Display manager & actor
File matching & merging
File transfer with popular
tools
Selective installation &
removal of procedures
Descriptive statistics
Multiple regression
ANOVA
Graph drawing
Flexible data transformation
Customized reports
SPSS/PC+ ADVANCED STATISTICS
MAMOW
Factor analysis
Cluster analysis
Discriminant analysis
Loglinear modeling
State & demand data
Multiple response dates
Presentation quality
Full range of percentages
Full range of percentages
This script includes the existing new capabilities we added to BFSPS.C.
For more information, contact our Department in Atlanta at 444. 816. 7530 or 712-258-9967.
444. M. Michigan Avenue
11th Street
712-258-9967
11th Street
IN EUROPE
SPP PSV Europe BW
Box 1015
4200 Aachen
chheim
Netherlands.
Phone +31 381036711
TWX 21019
VISA, MasterCard and American Express accepted.
SP-SS inc. PRODUCTIVITY RAISED TO THE HIGHEST POWER
www.spssinc.com
In addition to its power and productivity, SP-SS inc. also offers the following:
• Digital Signage solutions
• Inventory management software
• Project management software
• Construction management software
• Office automation software
• Building information modeling software
• Building analysis software
• Building planning software
• Building design software
• Building construction software
• Building maintenance software
• Building inspection software
• Building safety software
• Building security software
• Building monitoring software
• Building analytics software
• Building data analysis software
• Building reporting software
• Building visualization software
• Building presentation software
• Building visualization software
MIDTERM MADNESS
Choose any of our SPECIALS listed below, any day of the week!
No.1
We are offering all of our daily specials . . . every single day thru Friday, Feb.28th
No.1
16" 2 topping pizza — $5.99
& .25 draws (dine in only)
No.2
2 10” 2 topping pizzas
& 4 soft drinks — $7.99
It's any day of the week you want it to be at Checkers Pizza.
No.3 16”2 topping pizza &4 soft drinks — $7.99
No. 3
10" 2 topping pizza & 2 soft drinks — $4.99
No.5
2 16" 1 topping pizzas & a 6 pack of soft drinks $12.00
No.4
No. 6
16" 2 topping pizza — $5.99
& $1.50 Pitchers (dine in only)
No. 7
14" 2 topping pizza
& 4 soft drinks — $6.99
2214 Yale
OFFER EXPIRES 2-28-86
841-8010
Griffin leaves school; lawsuit still pending
CHECKERS
By a Kansan sports writer
Dane Griffin, one of the three Kansas football players who filed suit against the University last fall has dropped out of school, a clerk in the office of Records and Registration said yesterday.
Griffin, a linebacker for the KU football team, and two other players had filed suit Sept. 19 against Kansas.
Griffin, tailback Lynn Williams and offensive guard Doug Certainl had sued the University to regain their eligibility after they had beer declared academically ineligible by Kansas.
On Sept. 19, Larry McLain, a Johnson County District Court judge issued a restraining order that said Kansas not refuse to certify the players as eligible.
He added, however, that the suit by Griffin had not been dropped.
Both Williams and his attorney, J. Stewart McWilliams, were out of town and could not be reached for comment.
Griffin's attorney, Edward G. Collister, said Griffin got what he wanted with the restraining order.
Certain was removed from the suit Sept. 25 because winning the suit would not have allowed him to play during the football season.
NCAA lifts KU probation
By a Kansan sports writer
The probation, which became effective Nov. 21, 1983, prohibited the Jayhawks from playing on television
The National Collegiate Athletic Association has lifted this week the two-year probation sanctioned against the Kansas football program for alleged violations during the 1979-82 coaching tenure of Don Fambrough, KU Sports Information Director Doug Vance said yesterday.
and from appearing in post-season bowl games during the 1984 season. It did not include sanctions for the 1985 football season.
The Latin American Film Festival Presents
Among the 10 violations cited by the NCAA were references made by former assistant coaches under Fambrough of "a large amount of money and other benefits . . . that would reasonably lead a prospective athlete to believe that he was being offered these benefits if he would enroll at the University of Kansas."
One woman's story...A nation's destiny Spanish with English subtitles
WHEN THE MOUNTAINS TREMBLE
Friday, February 28
7:30 p.m.
Sunday, March 2
3:30 p.m.
Dyche Auditorium
Free and open to the public
TALK ABOUT GREAT TIMES!
Worlds of Fun
Oceans of Fun
We will be visiting your campus on Thurs. Mar. 6th to interview for summer jobs and internships.
Please contact your university Placement Office for additional information at 864-3624.
Be a part of the Excitement at Worlds Of Fun and Oceans of Fun!
Take advantage of the opportunity to meet over 2,000 new friends while entertaining over one million guests this season. Make this the summer to remember!
ON CAMPUS MARCH 4th Sign Up At Your Placement Office
START YOU CAREER WITH A LEADER IN RETAILING
Your college years have paid off. Now that it's time to plan your career, you should aim toward a company that's already a winner. It's time to learn from the best.
Richman Gordman is a successful chain of department stores throughout the Midwest. In twenty years of expansion, we've surpassed our own goals — at a rate of a new department store every two years.
That's the kind of growth you want for your career.
We want to give you the training you need to pursue merchandising, operations, customer service, management...a true career path that will lead to a challenging future.
Find out more about the challenges and diversity of a career with Richman Gordman. Your Placement Office will help you investigate our possibilities. After all, it's your future.
Richman Gordman
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F.
14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Feb. 28, 1986
PIZZA SHUTTLE Gives You A Break Before Spring Break!
PIZZA SHUTTLE 1601 W.23RD
842-1212
PIZZA
SHUTTLE
FAST N FREE
DELIVERY
HOURS
Mon.-Thurs. - 11a.m.-2a.m.
Fri.&Sat. - 11a.m.-3a.m.
Sunday - 11a.m.-1a.m.
WE ACCEPT CHECKS (25* Service Charge)
TOPPINGS
PEPPERONI
ITALIAN SAUSAGE
GROUND BEEF
HAM
ANCHOVIES
PINEAPPLE
EXTRA CHEESE
MUSHROOMS
ONIONS
GREEN PEPPERS
BLACK OLIVES
GREEN OLIVES
SLICED TOMATOES
JALAPENOS
16oz. Pepsis - 25$^{+}$!
SPECIAL OFFER 10 Days of TWOFERS
2—10 inch pizzas with 2 toppings on each & 2 16 oz. Pepsis
9. 50 VALUE
No Coupons Accepted
ONLY
Offer Good 2/28/86 thru 3/09/86
8. 00
(