INSIDE
PETER MORRIS
Adjoining angles
Veterans and former protesters are united by Lshaped war memorial dedicated to Vietnam dead and missing.
Story, page 3
A tight ship
Ten crew members work overtime at Shawnee Lake to prepare for national rowing competition this weekend in Syracuse. N.Y.
Story, page 14
OUTSIDE
The forecast
Today. . Partly cloudy, showers possible, high 80s.
Tonight. . Mostly cloudy, chance rain, low 67.
Tomorrow. . Partly sunny, showers possible, high 82.
Weekend. . Little rain expected, highs 85-90, lows 60s.
Details. page 3
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY
June 4, 1986
Vol.96, No. 147
(USPS 650-640)
AT&T strike goes on as mediators step in
By Dana Spoor
Staff writer
Rrrinngggg. Rrrinngggg
Rrrinngggg.
This may be the sound all callers hear when they try to dial a long-distance call with the help of an operator, according to one strike
"All customers are going to see long-distance calls with operator assistance affected," said Roberta Roberta, director for the Kansas City, Mo. Area, city.
The Communication Workers union at American Telephone & Telegraph Co. went on strike Sunday morning after workers and employers could not settle on a contract. Long-distance calls from Lawrence are handled by operators in Topeka or Kansas City, and Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. handles local calls.
Federal mediators have been brought into the talks, Brown said. Striking employees still have hopes for an agreement.
"It is very encouraging to us to know discussions are still going on," she said. "It will last as long as it has to accomplish what it must."
AT&T is now handing operations with management personnel. Local service is not affected yet, according
to Brown, but businesses may have some problems.
Operator delays lasted about seven seconds Sunday and about 12 seconds Monday. Tom Landers, an AT&T employee, said the company he did not know of any complaints.
Although AT&T operators don't work in Lawrence, technicians work out of garages in the city. Businesses
'it will last as long as it has to to ac-complish what it must.'
—Roberta Brown Strike Director
that use these garages will see the effects of the work stoppage sooner.
The striking workers have three main areas they are concerned with: security clauses, wage packages and benefit packages.
"Security clauses need to be better recognized and protected," Brown said.
Strikers are not happy with the present benefit package either. According to Brown, the workers have
fought long and hard for the benefits they have, and AT&T wants them to either lose, or absorb, the costs of those benefits.
In response to the strike, AT&T is offering an 8 percent wage-hike over three years, with no cost of living adjustment. The company also wants to provide payments, but will is willing to repay them if it receives payment and a higher wage-hike.
The Communication Workers union will not accept this offer, Brown said. The union wants to keep an incentive plan at the plants.
The employees have made the money for the company, she said, and they are entitled to some of it through a wage package.
Workers are not happy with the strike. Brown said.
"Our people don't want this," she said. "When you don't have money coming in you get nervous, but the people feel very strongly about the fact that these issues must be discussed.
"The remarkable thing is that they have got, without a doubt, the most loyal, dedicated employees that they could find anywhere."
The Associated Press and United Press International supplied some information for this story.
SAE's suspension cloud lined with silver ending
By Kristi Schroeder
Staff writer
A KU fraternity has taken a negative suspension and turned it in to a positive experience. As a result, the university is the University of Kansas good standing.
The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, 1301 W. Campus Road, was reinstated when the final year of a suspension was dropped in mid-May.
The house was suspended for violations of University regulations, and the University kept the violations confidential because they dealt with disciplinary matters. But a former president of the house said yesterday that the charges stemmed from a hazing incident that occurred in April 1985.
The members of the house found they had a lot to gain from the experience, said Jim O'Donnell, Overland Park senior, whose term as president ended at about the same time that the house was reinstated.
"The suspension was the best thing that could have happened," O'Donnell said. "I woke a lot of people up."
Under the suspension, the house was not allowed to participate in any University activities or the Inter-American Council's formal rush activities.
The house also was omitted from University publications, including the student directory, Ann Eversole, director of the Organization and Activities Center said
The house was placed under the direction of an alumni commission that was co-chaired by Edward Frizzel. The commission worked with the house to implement changes that would get the house recognized again as a registered University organization, said Frizzel.
"We put them on a track that was 'astest in getting them reinstated,'" he said.
O'Donnell said the house instituted stricter grade policies that changed the grade-point-average requirement for pledges from 2.2 to 2.5. Actives were required to maintain a GPA of 2.5 to remain in good standing with
The house was reinstated sooner than University officials had expected, but Frizzell said the house had been closed during its first year of suspension.
The fraternity also banned alcohol from the house and revised its pledge program to eliminate hazing. he said. The change in the program helped better feeling in the house and less division between activities and sledges.
"Everyone started taking classes a lot more seriously," he said.
Doug Urich, Overland Park junior and member of the house, said the suspension and changes were effected by the overall brotherhood of the house.
Not only were relations improved
within the house, O'Donnell and Frizell said, but they also improved between the house members and the alumni commission.
"It was an unfortunate experience that effected the alums as well as the boys," Frizel said.
The alumni commission will continue to work with the house members even after the commission no longer holds the charter, he said. The faculty is permission from the national fraternity to operate a local chapter.
The alumni commission has not met since the reinstatement of the house, so no decisions have been made regarding changes in the current policies, he said.
The ban on alcohol and the grade policies probably also won't change, O'Donnell said, but the decision is up to the alumni association.
Frizzell said any changes in the alcohol ban would be made in compliance with Kansas state liquor laws.
O'Donnell said the commission also still had the power to have people moved out of the house for grades or misconduct.
"The alumni commission will remain in effect, and the charter will remain in our custody for probably another year," he said.
But regardless of what the commission decides, the house can now take part in University activities.
THE BIRDIE
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
Along for the ride
Casey-Jack Kitos, 2, hitches a ride down New Hampshire Street with his father, Pete Kitos, 1123 Oregon St. The Kitos were enjoying the nice weather yesterday.
2 arrested on charge of murder
By Judy Scott
Staff writer
Two Lawrence men were arrested Monday night and charged with second-degree murder in connection with the shooting that occurred early Saturday morning in Centennial lawrence police said yesterday.
Curtis White, 1306 Tennessee St., and Sherman Tollerton, 810 Lawrence Ave., were arrested and charged with the second-degree murder of Russell Gensler, 1408 W. Third St. But Tolbert was charged with the killing and abetting, said Jim Flory. Dallas County district attorney.
State theory means that Tolbert is charged with being an accompice to the person who actually committed the murder. Flory said. But Tolbert has been charged with second-degree injury under the state theory charge.
The minimum sentence for second-degree murder is 5 to 15 years and the maximum sentence is 20 years to life.
During the arraignment yesterday morning, the preliminary hearings were scheduled for June 9. Flory said. The judge at the hearing must decide whether a felony has been committed and whether there is enough evidence for the men to stand trial.
Both men were jailed on $100,000 bond, Flory said, and counsel has been appointed by the state.
Fliary said a dispute arose between two different groups, but said he would not comment on whether it was a racial dispute.
"The case developed to a point where we felt probable cause to file charges." he said.
By Sunday, law enforcement officials had recovered two weapons from Clinton Lake. The Douglas County underwater diving squad and gangland and the police not but these weapons not concluding evidence in the arrests, Floyd said.
Gensler was shot once in the left cheek at close range by a small caliber weapon in the lower north parking lot of Centenial Park.
"But we obviously feel they are related in some respect," he said.
See HOMICIDE, p. 5, col. 4
Senate fills Brown's vacancy
By Karen Schmidt
Staff writer
The resignation of Amy Brown as vice president of the student body and the transition of Kris Kurenbach into that office is the largest problem facing the Student Senate now, David Body, said recently.
"Senate is going through a lot of changes. Right now we need to portray continuity and unity. This is difficult with the transition," Epstein said. "But we are going ahead with projects, and I think this will be seen as a minor blip in the future of Senate."
Brown resigned when she decided
to accept a position as a copy editor with the Argus Leader, a Sioux Falls, S. Dak, newspaper, instead of going to school at the University of Kansas.
Kris Kurtenbach, Associated Students of Kansas campus director and off-campus senator, was a unanimous choice to replace Brown. She was chosen in an emergency session on May 16th to be the Executive Committee on May 16.
Brown said, "It was a Student Senate commitment versus a real life commitment. It was an opportunity dropped up. I did not think I would turn it up.
the fall looked less attractive as the summer approached, she said. After one or two years of working as a jour- ncelor in school, she might consider law school.
If she does return to KU, she said, she probably would not become involved in Senate again.
The idea of going to law school in
"I don't think I'd come back to it, but I may find out it's so much in my blood that I'll get involved again," she said.
Kurtenbach said she regretted the way she became vice president, but she would try to make the transition a smooth one.
A. C. Meyer
See BROWN, p. 5, col. 1
Shauna Nortier/KANSAH
Secretary of State Jack Brier
Brier extols wealth of freedom in U.S.
By Ann Henry Staff writer
Brier, who spoke to about 800 members of the American Legion Boys' State of Kansas in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall, out that the freedoms Americans have often are taken for granted
Secretary of State Jack Brier said last night that the greatest freedom Americans possess is the freedom of choice.
See Boys' State p. 83
"A couple of years ago when I visited the Soviet Union, I realized just how lucky we are." Brier said. "The people there don't have health insurance, and people don't participate in government. Here you are the government."
American Legion, teaches high school seniors-to-be about state government, from local elections to the gubernatorial election.
"Boys' State, as well as girls' State, are two of the finest citizenship programs I've ever been associated with." Brier said. "Here the kids spend a week learning about government."
Boys' State, sponsored by the
"In government, often there are no right or wrong answers. This session shows them how to deal with the situation and the problems they'll have to deal in later life."
Brier also related stories about the visits he made to El Salvador and the Philippines to observe their elections.
"I saw miles of people line up at 5 a.m. to vote," he said. "I was so amazed to see these people, who didn't have a chance at all, care
about their government enough to vote."
Those attending Boys' State have the ability to make their own choices, Brier said, but these choices come with a price to pay.
Brier also said he had seen one unfortunate thing come from his experience in politics — too much empathy. He was placed on winning and losing.
"The price you need to pay is one single word that you're learning this week: participation," he said. "I've been fortunate enough to see those
"Babe Ruth didn't have the best eyes in the world, yet he was never afraid to swing." he said. "All of you may have had misfortunes, may have lost at something, but all of you are here because you are winners. There isn't a person in here who can't make a contribution."
Though the secretary of state is also a Republican candidate for governor, he kept politics out of his speech.
who have no liberty, and I've been fortunate enough to see the small price we pay for ours. All it takes is a little careing."
But after the program he said he would publicly announce on Thursday that Harlan Priddle, an agricultural businessman from Hays, would be his running mate for the office of lieutenant governor.
Two more speakers will conclude this week's Boys' State session. Attorney General Robert Stephan will speak today and Governor John Carlin will give his presentation Thursday. Both programs will begin at 7:30 p.m. in Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Wednesday, June 4, 1986
News Briefs Chernobyl count hits 25; Soviet TV shows patients
MOSCOW — The death toll from the Chernobyl nuclear accident rose to 25 yesterday, and Soviet television went inside a Moscow hospital and interventional and balding patients suffering from radiation sickness.
The nightly television news program "Vremya" also said a decision had been made to return about 280 families evacuated from around the nuclear power station. A newspaper said they would live on boats anchored in the nearby Pripaty River once two of the plant's four reactors go back into service in October.
Television news showed the first footage of surviving victims of the nuclear accident — firemen who had lost their hair as a result of high doses of radiation they received fighting the fire that erupted at the reactor
Army-led efforts to clean up the nuclear accident area include entombing the damaged reactor in concrete to contain radiation from its smoldering core and providing safety measures to prepare for the October deadline for renewed service.
The explosion and fire at the plant, near the Ukrainian capital of Kiev, spewed a radioactive cloud that spread from the western Soviet Union to other European countries, the United States and parts of Asia.
Dispute arises over London fire
LONDON — One of London's most spectacular fires ever destroyed a giant warehouse belonging to news baron Rupert Murdoch yesterday and sparked a war between his company and fired print workers.
Bruce Matthews, managing director of Murdoch's News International parent company, blamed the damage, estimated at $9 million, on sabotage by printers who Murdoch fired four months ago.
Union leader Brenda Dean condemned the accusation as "absolutely disgraceful." Other unionists who have manned picket lines outside Murdoch's high-rise mall in central London have gested the company itself may have started the fire.
Police said only that they were treating the blaze as "suspicious" and that they were questioning witnesses claiming to have seen "something being thrown into the building" by two men who fled on foot.
Matthews announced a $75,000 reward for information leading to capture of the suspected arsonists and said he also received an anonymous threat by telephone yesterday.
He said the caller boasted that the warehouse fire was "very well organized" and said "that I would be the next to burn." Matthews he interpreted this as a threat to burn another print plant.
Murdock dismissed some 5,500 print workers in January in a dispute over their refusal to adopt new technology and accept staff cuts. In the months since, many of the employees have been with police and tried to block newspaper shipments.
Shuttle report nearing release
WASHINGTON — The Rogers Commission report, which traces the space shuttle Challenger disaster to a long history of NASA management decisions, will be presented to President Reagan Friday and released to the public Monday, commission sources said yesterday.
The commission has painted a sobering picture of a space agency struggling to maintain an overly ambitious launch schedule with limited resources, and is now waking up to the internal awareness of major booster rocket problems.
The Washington Post quoted one source as saying that the families of the seven astronauts killed in the Jan. 28 disaster probably would think the report didn't
The commission sources said the report's formal presentation to the president Friday would meet the deadline he set when he established the commission and former Secretary of State William Rogers to head it.
go far enough but that NASA was "going to scream bloody murder."
But the sources said the report would not be released to the public until Monday. Rogers is expected to hold a news conference Monday to discuss the report's findings.
NASA officials said the space agency already was examining ways to allow astronauts to escape from a damaged shuttle during flight, but experts say survival would be small in another booster rocket failure.
Bonner returns to exile in Gorky
MOSCOW — Yelena left Lemosk last night on the overnight train to the closed city of Gorky, saying she was very happy to be going back to her husband. Andrei Sakarov, who is living there in enforced exile.
Bonner, 63, told Western reporters at Moscow's Yaroslavsky railway station that she felt much better than before she went to the West six months ago for medical treatment.
She said earlier that she expected Sakharov, 1975 Nobel Peace Prize winner, to meet her at the station in Gorky, 250 miles east of Moscow, if the KGB granted him permission.
Sakharov, 65, was exiled to Gorky in January 1890,
and Bonner was confined to Gorky in August 1894 after
his release.
After speaking briefly with reporters at the train station, Bonner asked them to leave to permit her to say something.
"I don't want to think about this, or that, or about Gorbachev," she said of Soviet leader Mikhail S.
Bonner told old Western reporters earlier in her Moscow apartment that she hoped to return to the Soviet
capital by June 15 to collect baggage she sent as cargo from the West.
"I hope they will agree to let me," she said. "I want to see my husband and to rest a bit. If I'm not back here by the 15th then they haven't let me come. That's exact."
Bonner underwent heart surgery and visited relatives in the United States, then stopped in several West European countries on her way back to the Soviet Union.
No spy deal offered, Pelton says
Pelton said, however, that during an interrogation before his arrest last November, he thought the FBI was trying to cut a deal with him in return for details he allegedly gave the Russians about interception of Soviet communications by the National Security Agency.
BALTIMORE — Ronald W. Pelton, testifying for the second day at his espionage trial, acknowledged yesterday that FBI agents never told him they wanted him to work as a double agent against the Soviet KGB.
Pelton, who worked as an NSA technician for 14 years before he resigned in 1979, faces life imprisonment if convicted of charges that he sold secrets to the KGB intelligence service from 1980 to 1985.
Pelton was the only witness for the defense, which rested its case after he stepped down. Both sides are scheduled to present closing arguments *the* morning, and the case should go to the jury later today.
On the stand, Pelton acknowledged that he told FBI agents he had entered the Soviet Embassy on Jan. 15, 1980, that he had undergone extensive debriefings by Russian agents in Vienna, Austria, in 1980 and 1983 and that he collected $25,000 from the Soviets for the information.
Defense attorney Fred Warren Bennett is trying to convince the jury that the FBI tricked Pelton into the confession by interrogating him for more than five hours before advising him of his rights and arresting him, and also that the suspect was under the influence of alcohol and drugs for some of the questioning.
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
Former chancellor to be on stock board
W. Clarke Wescoe, a former University of Kamasan chancellor, is scheduled to be elected to the board of directors of the New York Stock Exchange at a meeting tomorrow.
From 1851 to 1960, Wescoe served as dean of the University of Kansas Medical Center. He was chancellor from 1960 to 1969.
Wescow, 66, was nominated in March to be one of 24 members on the board. He recently retired as officer of the Sterling Drum Co.
Textiles to be shown
As a member of the board, Wescoe would be a part of the policy-making group for the stock exchange, setting rules and regulations for the group that the Securities Exchange Commission must approve. The term would last for two years.
"The Great Cover-up," an exhibition of 19th-century textiles from around the world, will be on display beginning Sunday until July 27 in the Kress Gallery of the Spencer Museum of Art.
The works displayed in the exhibition were selected by Janet Dreling, museum registrar, from a museum's permanent collection
Kashmir shawls, Oriental rugs,
navajo blankets, Qing dynasty
Chinese silk robes and American
coverllets will be on display.
Most of the objects are not on view often because of their size, fragility and sensitivity to light. Some of the works only have been considered collectibles since the early part of the 20th century.
Profs get fellowships
Professors G. Douglas Atkins and Rex Martin have been appointed as Hall Research Fellows for the 1968-87 school year, according to the Hall Center for the Humanities.
The fellships were established this year to further significant scholarship by the KU humanities faculty. Fellows get a year off from normal teaching to concentrate on a major scholarly project. Atkins has been a member of the University of English since 1969. He is well-known for his work on 17th and 18th-century English literature.
Martin has been a member of the department of philosophy since 1973, as served as a core faculty member for two seminars in the humanities.
Design award wins
David Neville, Wichita junior and theatre major, won first prize in the 1986 National Scene Design Contest for Undergraduates. Wichita State University sponsored the contest.
Neville won for his design for "Twelve Angry Men," which was staged at KU in October. Neville received a cash prize, and his design will be in the traveling exhibition of winning designs.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of rain in the afternoon. The high will be in the lower 80s with southerly winds at 10 to 15 mph. Tonight has a 40 percent chance of rain, and the low should be in the mid- to upper 60s. Thursday will be partly sunny with a high around 80 and a 30 percent chance of rain. The extended forecast for Friday through Sunday calls for little or no precipitation and highs around 85 to 90 and the lows in the mid-60s.
From staff and wire reports.
Vietnam Memorial honors University's lost warriors
The memories of being carried on his father's shoulders during anti-war rallies are vivid for Greg Mikkelson.
By Judy Scott
Staff writer
But when he attended the May 25 dedication of the KU Vietnam Memorial, he stood by his father's side to honor the dead.
"The memorial doesn't honor or glorify war. It honors those who fought and died." Mikelson said.
The dedication of the KU memorial, at the intersection of West Campus Road and Memorial Drive, was in recognition of the 55 KU students who died or are missing in action from the Vietnam War.
Gerald Mikkelsen, Greg's father and professor of Soviet and East European Studies, said that although he was opposed to the war, he attended the dedication to pay respect to his brother. Gerald Mikkelsen was a captain in the Army Reserves during the 1960s and marched in anti-war rallies in Wisconsin.
The memorial has been officially dedicated, but the work on its completion continues, according to Tom Berger, chairman of the Vietnam Memorial Committee and a Navy veteran. The landscaping and installation of sidewalks and possible lighting are scheduled for the summer.
At the memorial's dedication, Berger emphasized that the memorial did not represent a war. He said the men who fought in the Vietnam War.
"The message of this memorial is not whether the war was right or wrong." Berger said. "It's most important message must always read, 'Here we remember the price they paid.'"
More than 200 people, from as far away as Massachusetts, Texas and California, gathered to honor 46 men who were killed and nine who are considered missing in action or prisoners of war.
The memorial is the only freestanding Vietnam memorial on a non-military college campus, Berger said, and is made of cottonwood
In addition to the names, the 65-foot, L-shaped memorial has the inscription, "Lest we forget the sacrifice and sacrifice of our fellow students."
The committee began the memorial project in the fall of 1983 and planned to place the memorial in the Chandler Courtyard of the Burge Building because of cost and artistic pavilion with the Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
limestone from Kansas.
The final design of the memorial was developed by Greg Wade, landscape architect for facilities planning; Stephan Grabow, professor of architecture and urban design; Doran Abel, a graduate of the school of architecture and urban design; and Berger.
Funds for the $40,000 memorial were raised by donations, including $10,000 from Student Senate.
The featured speaker at the dedication was Lt. Col. Hugh L. Mills Jr., of Leavenworth, an army helicopter pilot who received 104 medals in Vietnamese. Mills flew more than 1,000 missions in Vietnam and was shot down 16 times.
Many controversies surrounding the Vietnam War still exist, Mills said, including his own belief that American soldiers are still alive in Southeast Asia. But the dedication honored the soldiers, not the war.
"Sacrifice is the essence of this memorial weekend," he said. "From the horrors of an endless war, the warriors have come home. With the consenade of this shine in their memory, they have finally come home."
Chancelor Gene A. Budig, who spoke at the ceremony, said the memorial was a lasting honor to the memory of the late former permanent reminder of their sacrifice
After the ceremony ended, the bell in the Memorial Campanile ran 55 times — once for each name engraved on the memorial.
SALUTE
Jackson Armbrister, 2219 Marvonne Road, salutes during the playing of taps at the dedication of the KU Vietnam Memorial, while his sister, Pattie Armbrister, 1821 Maple Lane, holds flowers. Jackson Armbrister was a member of the 366th Combat Support Group in the U.S. Air Force during the Vietnam War.
City votes to table summit proposal
Staff writer
By Brenda Flory
The resolution called for President Reagan and the Soviet embassy to send representatives to Lawrence to talk with concerned citizens and officials about improving relations between the two superpowers.
The Lawrence City Commission voted unanimously not to take any action on a resolution calling for a referendum on the draft treaty and the Soviet Union in Lawrence.
Lawrence is being considered as a possible site for the 1986 summit meeting by the Intergovernmental Affairs Office, said Bob Swan, 2014 Stratford Ct. one of the organizers of the summit resolution.
Commissioner David Longhurst
said that a Lawrence summit would be an extraordinary event and that leaders have to know that the conference peace starts with the general public.
But Commissioner Ernest Angioi said that although he believed in peace, the city should not get involved in U.S. foreign policy.
If a summit were to be held in Lawrence, Angino said, the Soviet Union would be taking advantage of the city.
But Swan said it was important for citizens to show that they were serious about peace.
Swan, the founder of Athletes United for Peace, was active in bringing the Soviet athletes to the Kansas Relays in 1983 and was involved
in bringing three Soviet World War II veterans to Lawrence in April.
The Summit proposal was important, Swan said, because the Soviet government takes resolutions more seriously than the U.S. government. The solutions mean something to he said. "It means we're serious,"
The proposed summit in Lawrence has received positive responses from mayors in other cities and state officials. Attorney General Bob Stephan wrote a letter to President Reagan that said, "I have never seen a city more concerned and interested in the peace process, and I encourage you to consider Lawrence for a 1986 U.S. Soviet summit."
state, Douglas Wright, mayor of
Tampa, and Ward Lloyd, mayor of
Garden City, have each expressed
their support in letters to Longhurst.
But because a unanimous decision could not be reached by the city commission, the commission felt no ac- tion to best the best response to the resolution.
Mayor Sandra Praeger said the resolution would not be a mandated city policy without a unanimous vote by the commissioners.
But Praeger said that she would not rule out the possibility of writing an individual letter and that she would write in issue with Swan as soon as possible.
After the meeting, Longhurst said he was dissapointed, but the issue
should be settled by a unanimous vote or by no vote at all.
"I will continue to promote the things I believe in," he said.
Longhurst also said that Andrei Parastezaev, first secretary at the Soviet Embassy in Washington, would be coming to Lawrence in June to discuss the possible summit meeting.
After the commission meeting, Swan said the summit idea began three years ago with the visit of the Russian athletes. About 3 months ago the Intergovernmental Affairs Office discussed the idea with their inquiries into a possible summit meeting in Kansas.
"Gorbachev visiting Kansas would mean a lot," Swan said.
Move to add light to Ninth gets support
Staff writer
By Rachelle Worrall Staff writing
After area residents rallied to make the city aware of the need for pedestrian safety, the Lawrence Traffic Safety Commission issued a Monday night that a traffic light at Ninth and Maine streets was necessary.
The issue was prompted by the death of Brendon Doerr, a Pickney Elementary School fourth-grader, who was killed April 22 after he was hit by a wrestound car at the intersection of Alabama streets. It will go to the Lawrence City Commission for approval in about three weeks.
Linda Backus, 841 Alabama St., said yesterday that she and her band Robert helped organize a petition from area residents after the accident. The petition stated their concerns about pedestrian safety on Ninth Street, which has no stops between Iowa and Mississippi streets.
If the city commission approves the light, it probably would not be installed by the time school begins next semester. Terse Gardner, city engineer.
"Ninth Street is a real problem and there isn't just one solution." Backus said. "This light is a response to one problem." It is a crisis-management light."
John Hoyt, 830 Alabama St., said area residents had proposed a traffic light because they thought it was the most realistic solution financially. He also an underground tunnel would be preferable, it would be too expensive.
"We didn't have any hope for the best situation," he said.
A $10,000 study of traffic on Ninth Street was proposed, but has not been approved by the city commission. Tim Miller, chairman of the seven-member traffic commission, said residents probably would need to petition more in order for the study to be approved.
by the city's inaction on the need for safe crossing on Ninth Street.
"You don't know how disappointing it is to find there isn't anybody out there studying what is going on," she said. "I thought that somebody, somewhere who knows about traffic was studying this issue."
Gardner said that only a small study was done to decide whether a traffic light on Ninth Street was necessary. A street must meet at least one of eight criteria before traffic can be controlled.
Ninth Street met one of the criteria in terms of traffic counts and number of vehicles per hour, Gardner said. Although the study was done after
graduation and before KU's summer term, it still indicated traffic control was needed.
Gardner said a light would cost about $15,000 and an underground tunnel would cost more than $150,000.
The light that was approved by the traffic commission would stay green until a vehicle from Maine Street have a pedestrian cross-walk button.
Backus said the light was necessary to make the crossing safe.
"I'm not living in a war zone," she said. "People are getting hurt."
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4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Wednesday, June 4, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Half better than whole
Chancellor Gene A. Budig has requested that the Board of Regents decrease his raise in pay for next year. The Regents had planned to give him a 5.2 percent raise, more than double the 2.5 percent raise the Legislature allotted to faculty members. In a letter to the Regents last week, Budig asked the Regents to limit his raise to 2.5 percent, too.
Good for Budig.
The state's economy is stagnant and government revenues are falling short of expectations again and again. Students are facing another round of tuition hikes this fall. KU faculty members, like other state employees, have been told there is little money for pay raises. Whatever Budig's reasons were, it was the right thing to do.
Some have suggested that Budig asked for the smaller raise, which would increase his salary to $88,400, to avoid the notority of becoming the first university president in Kansas to be paid more than $100,000. That motive seems unlikely. The raise was offered legitimately and openly. Congress and the state legislature have at times sneakily approved their own pay raises in terrible economic times. Those are the cases that provoke outrage. The public reaction to Budig's raise, in the long run, would have been nil.
The reaction among KU faculty members, however, might have been resentful and
longlasting. The Regents said they thought Budig deserved the 5.2 percent raise because he had done a good job. Were faculty members to assume that they had done only half as well as they should have?
In his letter to the Regents, Budig said the administrative officers at KU should be there at all times as was during this difficult period.
Did Budig want equal treatment out of loyalty to the faculty? Or did he want to preserve a close relationship with the faculty out of interest of his own administrative career? Only Budig knows the answer.
In either case, the result is the same: better faculty/administration relations than there would have been had Budig accepted a pay raise twice as big as his faculty's. In declining the Regent's offer, Budig was doing the good job for which they wanted to reward him.
Last week Regent Frank Becker, El Dorado, said, "We have to take care of our top administrators or we will lose them to other institutions."
But the problem doesn't end there. Budig knew that the Regent's offer presented the potential for antagonism because the faculty hasn't been getting salary increases that are competitive with other universities.
Budig's real job is to make the Regents and the Legislature take care of the University's top faculty members.
A reconciliation
The University of Kansas, a hotbed of protest against the Vietnam War 15 years ago, now has a memorial to the KU students who died or are missing in action in the war.
The memorial is similar to the national Vietnam Veteran Memorial in Washington, D.C.
— two low walls that run not parallel and separated, but together to form an open angle. Etched in one wall are the names.
ciliation. It seems fitting that a symbol of reconciliation for Kansans should be here where the confrontations were angriest and the divisions deepest.
We hope the KU memorial can evoke the same emotions that made the national memorial a symbol of reco-
Now, when quiet reflection seems possible, perhaps each side — the people who believed in the war and the people who protested against it — can see some merit in the other side. The men who are remembered in the names on the wall made a great and terrible sacrifice. And perhaps the wall has fewer names on it because students spoke out against the war.
Social Security failing
We must pull our heads out of the sand and demand changes in Social Security. The system we support increasingly takes money from the poor to give to the rich, and it will drive either itself or taxpayers to insolvency.
Those who pay Social Security taxes today aren't investing in their own retirement; they are paying, barely, for the benefits of people already on Social Security.
The burden on wage earners will grow heavier. The percentage of our population over 60 years of age is growing. People are living longer and collecting benefits for more years.
In the meantime, it is political suicide for a politician to suggest change. In fact, Congress is preparing a 2 percent cost-of-living increase in
Social Security payments in this election year, during which the Consumer Price Index so far has decreased 2.3 percent.
But many of the 37 million people who will get the cost-of-living increase, if it is passed, are not on small, fixed incomes. Senior citizens no longer make up the poorest segment of our society. The poorest people in our nation are children. Many of them belong to single parents who, if employed, will have to pay higher Social Security taxes.
To restore viability and fairness to the system, Social Security must be limited to the elderly who need money. Our politicians aren't going to make the necessary changes until we take a look around and tell them to.
News staff
Cindy McCurry...Editor
Kady McMaster...Managing editor
Shawn Aday...Editorial editor
Grant Butler...Campus manager
Sawan O'Malley...Sports editor
Shauna Norfleet...Photo editor
Susanne Shaw...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
David Nixon...Business/production manager
Beverly Kasten...Retail sales manager
Denise Stephens...Campus sales/bio sales manager
Charlotte Carter...Self-led manager
John Oberzan...Sales and marketing adviser
Letters 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 be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom. 111 Strauß-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawen, Kan. 66045, dailies during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday, during the first week of school. 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.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Strauffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kanu, 66045.
SAIT II
Women panicking over slim pickings
There can be no doubt that this country is facing a grave new domestic crisis. It's on the cover of Newsweek magazine and on the front page of The Wall Street Journal. Even that most intellectual of publications, People magazine, has taken note.
The crisis came to light when a scholarly study revealed that white, college-educated women who are still married and have a percent chance of getting hitched.
He may be right. I sometimes
As Pete Axhelm, the sportswriter, points out, you can look in the personals and never find an ad that sounds like this:
"Rich, wittery and beautiful career woman — craves baked, cigars-smoking sportswriter who enjoys hanging out until closing time in smoky saloons, picking up large inquiries about her work or videoting day trips to ra寇racks."
How did this come about? Some say it's the fault of modern Yuppie females. They are too choosy.
At 35, only one out of 20 will ever marry. If they don't make it by 40, they can just about forget it.
YEAR
Mike Royko Chicago Tribune
Those who blame the females for their own plight also say that Yuppie materialism is at fault. The females, they say, were so busy with their careers and buying their own condos and Japanese cars they didn't notice
As Slats Grobnik put it: "If my old lady had been that fussy, she'd still be living with her ma and pa and working at the Jewel, instead of having to get help from me and doing my laundry while I'm sitting here here this beating you with"
glance at the personalis and they always say things like:“Single, professional woman, 32, wants to meet single, professional man, 32 to 39%”, tall, handsome, humorous, youthful mature, energetic, sensitive, open, caring, who enjoys long walks on beaches, art, music, Woody Allen movies, cross-country skiing, scuba diving, tennis, gourmet dining, Sundays at the zoo, world travel, cats, foreign sports cars, and restoring old mansions. No smokers, drinkers or bowlers need reply.”
hate the young men at the health club
were being snatched off by those who
were more alert.
Chicago Tribune
But whatever the causes are, the study has reportedly brought panic to millions of women. They are now an important ground for any eligible warm body.
At the same time, it has brought joy to Yuppie men who now find themselves in even greater demand.
As one Yuppie man told me "This is terrific. I don't even have to pretend that I'm open and caret anmore."
Even nerds, wimps, fatties, baldies and geezers are being seen in a new light.
"I went into a singles bar the other day," "a life-long nerd related, 'and an attractive Yuppie female said to me, 'Do you like skating at Aspen?' I said, 'No, I collect stamps.' She said, 'God, that's erotic.'
But the experts say that even if the previously unwanted pool of males is tapped, the crisis will not be eased. There just aren't enough unmarried males, especially with so many men now holding hands.
So how is this nation to avoid a future filled with biddles who have only their cats for company?
The only sensible solution that I see
is some form of polygamy.
I'm not saying that men should set up households with two, three or four wives, living together. That's not practical. Too much squabbling over who uses the bathroom first. It might be a woman, but it also makes the man and cut into his golfing time.
the room and carry this gobble-sack.
But some form of time sharing, as is done with vacation retreats, might work.
A man might be married to two women and spend alternate weeks with each of them. That's probably as much time as many men now spend with their wives, if you consider the demands of watching TV, having a couple after work and not talking after arguments.
It would probably lead to more stable marriages and less divorce since a couple would be assured of regularly having a week apart to cool down from whatever they have been fighting about.
I mentioned my idea to a female, age 32, professional, who likes long walks on the beach, skiing. Woody Tucker, a former travel Sundays at the zoo, etc.
She said: "I think you are a jerk. Huh! With that attitude, she'd bet her get used to her cats.
LaRouche makes farce of U.S. politics
Lyndon LaRouche. If the name doesn't ring a bell, it should. He and his followers are on the fringe of lunacy, but victories in primary races this year have brought them to national attention.
LaRouche would be ludicrous if he didn't have enough support to make him frightening. Although he used to be on the far political left, LaRouche moved to the far right in the early 1970s and continued national Democratic Policy Committee. He and his followers have uniquely warped views.
LaRouche also has named our common enemy as the "Zionist-British organism" which must be destroyed so that humanity might live. He has called for the immediate elimination of Jewish influence in business, government and labor. He wants to establish a prosecutor's office to try Jews for treason. His branch organizations have been connected to the Klu Klux Klan and other radical groups.
LaRouche has charged that Henry Kissinger, Daavid Rockefeller, the International Monetary Fund, the FBI and others have cooperated with Queen Elizabeth II of England to spur world holocaust through drug addiction, global famine, the ubonic plague, and the willful and systematic destruction of the human mind.
Ion Gregor
Staff Columnist
'When the LaRouches of our nation win, we lose more than political battles.'
It is clear that LaRoche and his ideas are lunatic and potentially harmful. Nevertheless, LaRoche has found substantial support. He has even made himself a prime time, network television for his wacky plays; his party has run
According to LaRouche, correct military policy has always centered on viewing warfare as the work of God. He has framed his own military doctrine which combines atomic, bacteriological and chemical attack against targets of up to 180 million and 180 million U.S. citizens would die in the initial exchange.
Hitler would be proud.
n hundreds of candidates for municipal and state offices, and through air solicitation, he has grossed as much as $60,000 a day.
His National Democratic Policy Committee won two shocking victories in Illinois; the Democratic governor and secretary of state.
One of the victors, Janice Hart, said, "Moscow is trembling in their boots."
In Ohio, LaRoche follower Don Scott ran against Sen. John Glenn for the Democratic nomination and got all of 13 percent of the vote. Twelve other LaRoche followers lost in Ohio and were also running the same in North Carolina and Texas.
In Indiana, Jill Long, an unknown,
faced a LaRoche follower who
enjoyed top billing on the ballot. Long
won 74 percent of the vote.
The victories in Illinois were flukes. In highly publicized primaries in Ohio, Indiana, Texas and North Carolina, the only LaRoche followers who won ran uncontested.
We are the ones who should be trembling.
The spokesman for the Democratic National Committee, Terry Michael.
Although the situation in Illinois was a rare occurrence, it should not have happened at all and the blame can be shared by everyone. Perhaps it has taught us a needed lesson in voting responsibility.
said that LaRouche had "zeroed out." LaRouche followers are, of course, investigating the possibility of fraud.
It seems as if LaRouche's true colors have finally been exposed, however late. When the LArouches of our nation win, we lose more than money and battles. We lose the dignity and respectability of our political system.
Although we have come to expect some bungling and disorganization in the Democratic Party, we are not accustomed to the near disastrous results that occurred in Illinois. The Illinois fiasco was due mostly to the inaction and unconcerned attitude of the party leaders. If such fanatic ideologies are to be thrust to the forefront of local, state and federal races, it is the job of the voter to become informed about the fanatic fringe. And the job of the political leadership to point out the danger before the situation becomes desperate.
Mailbox
Phone rates debated
Please allow me to set the record straight in response to a recent editorial in the University Daily Kansan.
Contray to the assertions in the editorial, in the past two years AT&T has lowered its long distance prices by 11 percent. On April 24, AT&T filed a proposal for another decrease of 11.4 percent of daytime and evening rates, to be effective June 1. Prices for night and weekend calling would be reduced 2.7 percent, which will
AT&T's request to change the nightweekend discount to 55 percent came just prior to this latest request to lower prices. That request was rejected by the Federal Communications Commission for a technical reason. Remember, our current phone number is if you phone who call during that time will still see a decrease in the price.
drop the discount to 56 percent for that time period. The 40 percent discount for evening calls would remain the same.
The need to change the discount
is simple. If our current request is approved by the FCC, AT&T will have lowered its daily timeprice by 20.5 percent since Jan. 1, 1984. Taking an additional 60 percent off that amount would be unprofitable. In today's competitive long distance market, AT&T has every incentive to keep its prices low, but it is illegal for us to offer services for less than what it costs to provide them.
would show that we are not one of the most profitable companies in the country.
Finally, our profits are regulated at both the state and local level. Comparisons of our net profits with many other companies
The one thing I agree with in the editorial is that the customer can chalk one up. When we reduce prices for the third time on June 1, our customers will be seeing an increase of $10 per cent since Jan. 1, 1984. That certainly is giving the customer a break.
W. W. Schultz
W.W. Schultz
AT&T district manager
Toneka
Wednesday, June 4, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Brown
Continued from p. 1
"Amy was so well-respected in Senate that I think the hardest thing will be trying to follow in her footsteps," she said.
David Ambler, vice竞聘 for student affairs, said Brown's absence from the Senate was unfortunate.
"I hate to see her terminate her position in the middle of the term." Ambler said "Fortunately, the appointment of Kris is a good one."
Epstein said that although he was disappointed with Brown's resignation, he was confident that the transition from Brown to Kurtenbach wouldn't be difficult.
"I wanted the same ideology, the same overall type of individual as Amy for my vice president. Kris is that type," he said.
Epstein said the transition would be complicated by the move of the Senate offices from the Kansas Union to the Burge Union.
"This is the first time in the last 15 years we have lost a chief executive from Student Senate," he said. "We have to deal with the reality, we have to be cautious. With the Union
move, it's been one huge crisis after the next."
Todd Cohen, student senator, said that he expected an initial difference in the running of Senate.
"Kris definitely has a different style, but I don't know what effect that will have on Senate," he said. "The vice president does set the tone. By fail everybody should be used to the change."
Kurtenbach, who will be vice president until November, when the next Senate term begins, said she would not run at that time.
Ma) Ron Olin, of the Lawrence police, said that 10 to 12 investigators are continuing work on the case.
Homicide
Continued from p. 1
"As of (Monday) night," he said yesterday, "we still had 75 different leads and over 50 interviews to conduct."
Flory said many witnesses still needed to be interviewed and the investigation would continue.
"We are not ruling out the possibility of other charges being filed," Flory said.
Two children die in fire
ULYSSES — Two children died early yesterday morning in a house fire at a Ulysses home.
The Grant County sheriff's office identified the victims as Billy Calver, 7, and his brother James Calver, 1.
police officers responded to a call at 6:14 a.m. to find the house engulfed in heavy smoke and flame. Officer David Seymour broke a window to rescue Victoria Culver, aged 2 or 3, and taken her to
a hospital, the sheriff's office said.
capital, the sheriff's office said. The children's parents, Jim and Connie Culver, had been in the house, but were able to escape. The children were presented rescue of the two boys. Their bodies were recovered by the Grant County Fire Department rescue squad using air packs.
The interior of the house was heavily damaged, a sheriff's spokesman said. The cause of the blaze was under investigation.
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6
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, June 4, 1986
School of Fine Arts selects dean
By Dana Spoor
Staff writer
Peter Thompson will be using a pen to sign his name instead of a paint brush when he takes over as dean of Fine Arts on July 1.
Thompson will replace James Moeser, who is resigning after 11 years as dean to become a full professor at KU. Thompson will leave a full position as a professor of art to take over as dean.
over as dean.
He said the dean's job would not reflect the real reason he was at the University, but it had its good points.
"It involves a lot of talking to people, which is the good nart of it," he said.
Thompson said he was at the University to teach and to interact with people. Taking over the role of dean will be a change for him, since he will have to leave behind most of his teaching time.
A 15-member search committee, made up of faculty and staff, began looking for a replacement in mid-February.
Thompson said his appointment as dean was controversial among some of the faculty, because he was the first dean the school has had from outside the music field. Yet, he said, there is controversy
in any situation of this kind.
in any situation in this book. Jay Gates, director of the Spencer Museum of Art and member of the search committee, said that Thompson's being from the department of art and not from the department of music and dance was not an issue.
"There were a number of decisions to be made in a selection of this type and he was the best overall choice." Gates said.
choice, Glates said. "I can't imagine that Peter being an artist would be a problem. In fact, he is a person who is very interested in music."
Thompson was the chairman of the department of painting and sculpture from 1989 to 1975. From 1975 to 1980, Thompson was associate dean of the School of Fine Arts.
Since 1982, he has represented the school on the University Core Curriculum Committee, a group that considers whether all students at KU should have to complete certain core course requirements.
Thompson said that while the ideas of the school's deen were important, it was important to remember that the deen is a religion.
have input for future decisions.
“Important decisions need to be decided by the faculty as a whole, no the dean,” he said. “I don't want to lead and have no one follow.”
One of the concerns of the school is a possible new performing arts center, Thompson said, but it was only speculation so far.
"I have no idea when it will be completed." Thompson said. "It has been agreed upon as a definite need and that is as far as it goes."
The money for the center would have to come from private funds, he said. And the decision to build would have to come from the Chancellor's office because of the mammoth size of the project.
Thompson said he would like to see more KU students and people in the Lawrence area attend programs presented by the school. Attendance at the events is low for a school as large as the
te said that he had been working with the idea of a fine arts requirement being added to the core curriculum of all KU students. This would be an attempt to get the students more involved in the effort.
arts program.
If such a plan were approved, KU would be the first university he knows of to have such a program. he said.
Not only will he have to give up his full-time teaching position, Thompson also will have to give up his other love — painting — for a while.
"Quitting is a snap."
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Blight report may open doors to proposed shopping center
By Karen Schmidt
Staff writer
Still Winner
The 600 block of downtown Lawrence — the site for a proposed shopping mall — qualifies as blighted, according to a slum-and-blight study ordered by the city.
If the Lawrence City Commission accepts the study, which was released last week, the city will be allowed to lease land for the land needed to a proposed mail.
The area involved, known as the "footprint," includes the buildings between Sixth and Seventh streets and between Kentucky Street and the alley east of Massachusetts Street.
Zacharias said he knew of six to 12 nationally-known full-line department stores that were interested but not yet committed.
The mall is being planned by Jacobs, Visconi and Jacobs of Cleveland, and Town Center Venture Corp. of Lawrence.
Sandra Praeger, Lawrence mayor,
said. "We still have hurdles to overcome before a shopping center is built."
The study found substantial deterioration in structures, violations of fire and building codes and an inadequate street layout in the city.
There would be a city-wide vote on whether condemnation should proceed before any action is taken by the commission, Praeger said.
Once department stores join the mall project, the next step will be for the city to apply for an Urban Development Action Grant, she said. To make the project viable the city would have to extend roads, sewers and public utilities and relocate utilities and businesses.
Zacharias said that there were
KWALITY COMICS
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COMIC BOOKS® GAMES
11.1.1 Newborn births 841.72.98
to level an area and start over."
to leav an area and sit there. Several buildings along the 600 brick structures Street, including Adams' are structurally sound he said.
Gary Adams, owner of Woodstoves, 615 Massachusetts St., which is in the footprint area, said if there must be a shopping mall, it should be consistent with the rest of downtown.
some sound structures in the designated area that would have to be condemned along with the blighted ones. The owners of the sound buildings would be compensated by the city.
"There's an intimate charm to downtown Lawrence, and I'd like to see that atmosphere retained by the company. It's a dollar to dollar, a developer's idea is often
"It seems ridiculous to take down perfectly good buildings to make this glass-and-metal mall." Adams said. "They should take out the blighted ones and salvage the rest. I know that's not as easy, and maybe more expensive, but it's a shame to throw away what we've got."
The two-month study found seven out of 10 conditions of blight under the state tax-increment financing statute.
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SUA films are open to KU students, faculty, staff and their fellow students. For other information contact Student Union, Activities, the Kansas Union, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045 | (933) 864-3477
SUMMER 1986
JUNE
Wed. 4 The Graduate
Fri. 6 Trading Places
PH. 6 Thinking About Mon. 9 The Glenn Miller Story
(8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium)
Wed. 11 Guess Who's Coming to Dinner
Wed. 11 Guess Who's Coming to Dinner
Wed. 11 Guess Who
Fri. 13 Woodstock
Mon. 16 The Odd Couple
Wed.18 Fail Safe
Wed. 18 Pall Mall
Fri. 20 Kentucky Fried Movie
Mon. 23 Easy Rider
Wed. 25 Breaking Away
Mon. 30 Time Bandits
JULY
Wed. 2 Tender Mercles
Wed. 7 Fenton Institute
Mon. 7 The China Syndrome
Mon. 7 The China Syndrome
Wed. 9 Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
Fri. 11 Fast Times at Ridgemont High
Mon. 14 The Hotel New Hampshire
Wed. 16 The African Queen
Wed. 18 The Life of Brian Fri. 18
Mon. 21 Airplane
Mon. 24 Airplane
Wed. 23 Thoroughly Modern Millile
Pick up summer calendars at SUA Office Level 4, Kansas Union
1
4
UK ISRAEL
Tremor rattles northwest Kansas
United Press International
NICODEMUS — An earthquake registering 3.0 on the Richter scale jogged parts of northwest Kansas late Sunday, marking the strongest quake in Kansas in seven years, the Kansas Geological Survey reported yesterday.
The tremor occurred at 11:04 p.m. Sunday and was centered near the small town of Nicodemus, about 40 miles northwest of Hays, said survey geophysist Don Steeples.
"Most of the people who felt the Nicodemus quake only report feeling the ground move and hearing windows and doors rattle," Steeples said.
No damage was reported. Normally, quakes must register at least 3.5 on the Richter scale to cause damage in populated areas. Steeples said that the tremor was the largest in Kansas since 1979, when a quake measuring 3.1 shuddered through the north central Kansas town of Haddam.
The Hill City Police Department received about 25 reports from people who felt the quake, said Police Chief Andy Anderson. Hill City is located about 11 miles north of Nicodemus.
"If you were walking, you wouldn't have felt it," said Anderson. "A lot of people the next morning wanted to know what had happened. Some of them told me it felt like a big truck going by."
Steeples said that about 20 small tremors a year in northern Kansas and southern Nebraska have been detected since 1977, when a network of seismographs was established in eastern Kansas and Nebraska.
The quakes are caused by small faults that occasionally move along the Central Kansas Uplift, an underground ridge of rock that runs from Barton and Ellis counties in central Kansas northwest toward Nebraska.
There is no evidence, Steeples said, to show the fault movement could cause a major earthquake capable of causing property damage and injury.
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8
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, June 4, 1986
'Staters'study government
By Kristi Schroeder Staff writer
Almost 800 high school students are learning the value of participation and involvement in government this week while attending the American Legion Boys' State of Kansas at the University of Kansas.
The participants, who have completed their junior year of high school, learn about state government during the weeklong session. They are assigned to live in nine mock counties set up in KU residence halls and are divided into two political parties. The candidates for each Mock elections are conducted for state government positions, including mayor and governor.
The staters also will choose two representatives to send to Boys' Nation, held later in the summer in Washington, D.C. A representative to Boys' Nation can be a statter who is active part in the week's activities.
Rob Brown, Smith Center represent, said he came to Boys' State to learn more about government. Before being chosen, he interviewed with an American Legion Post committee in Smith Center, and gave a brief speech on what wanted to come to Boys' State.
Not all the participants had to apply and complete an interview to get to Boys State. Some were chosen by the district's high grades or school participation.
Mike Walberg, Shawnee representative, said he was chosen because of his grades.
The young men are not the only ones spending seven days studying the state political systems. The boys are counselled by former staters and are advised by members of the Legion Posts from all over the state.
Dino Spigarelli, an adviser from the American Legion Post in Frontenac, has been involved in Boys' State for 23 years. He also served nine years as a counselor at Boy's Nation.
Spigarelli explained why he and others returned each year to Boys' State.
"We love kids," he said. "And it is one of the finest programs in the country."
Spigarelli, who has a town named after him in Boys' State this year, said he was proud that both his son and his girl were taken part in Boys' and Girls' states.
Prosecutor to take post on Monday
By a Kansan reporter
A new Lawrence city prosecutor has been hired and is scheduled to take office on Monday.
"we felt as if we were coming back home," said Gerard Little, an attorney who replaces Mike Glover. Little lived in Lawrence when he was a student, and his wife is from nearby Eudora.
Glover, who left the position May 16 for a job in Denver, had been city prosecutor for 5½ years, said Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager.
For two years before that, he was the city attorney and prosecutor in Garden City, Kan.
Little, who is originally from Kansas City, received a bachelor's degree in personnel administration from the University of Kansas in 1975, a master's degree in public administration from KU in 1978, and a law degree Washubam University School of Law in 1982.
Little will earn a salary of $23,600 as the new prosecutor.
Spigarelli's involvement with youths extends beyond Boys' State, where he acts as political adviser with the mock senators during council sessions. He is also the superintendent of schools in Frontegac.
"Just to see the kids succeed, see the endeavors they participate in, makes it worthwhile," he said.
Spigarelli said a typical Boys' State day started around 6:30 a.m. Calisthenics are at 7 a.m., and the lights are out at 10:30 or 11 p.m.
"They're active all the time," he said.
The boys do receive free recreation time from 3 to 4:30 p.m. This time is usually spent playing softball or basketball. Participation in these activities is just as important as inclusion in the political caucuses, Brown said.
During the day the participants work on their campaigns and learn about the government process by actually being a part of it.
Walberg was not sure what to expect when he arrived on campus, but he said he soon learned that participants had to get involved.
10
Suzy Mast/KANSAN
Participants in the American Legion Boys' State of Kansas play volleyball in front of Lewis Hall. The members are at KU until Friday to learn about state government.
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Wednesday, June 4, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
9
Brier seeks cut in campaign costs
United Press International
TOPEKA — Secretary of State Jack Brier on Monday called for a $350,000 spending limit for himself and each of the six other candidates seeking the Republican nomination for governor.
In a letter sent Saturday to the other candidates, Brier suggested that any money raised in excess of the proposed limit could be used to help finance the Republican candidate for the November general election.
Brier said Democrat Tom Docking, who so far is unopposed for his party's gubernatorial nomination, has not had to make the large expenditures the Republican candidates支付. Brier said it would be better to have the resources the Republican party would have the resources to do battle later.
Each candidate was asked to respond to the request by Wednesday. Brier said he would comply with the
voluntary limit if each of the other candidates did so.
Brier said he has heard stories o extravagant spending by Republican candidates to overcome the problem of name recognition.
Pat Ranson, campaign chairman for Republican gubernatorial candidate Robert Brown who has claimed a problem of知识 cognition criticized Brier's request.
Ranson said it would be a logical request if all of the candidates had equal name recognition among voters. However, unlike Brier, Jones has not been in the political spotlight the past eight years — the length of time Brier has been secretary of state, she said.
Ranson said Jones, chairman of the executive committee of the Coleman Co. in Wichita, has relied heavily on television advertising to get name recognition. She accused Brier of being self serving in requesting candidates limit thier spending.
A spokesman for Republican gubernatorial hopeful Gene Bickell declined comment on Brier's letter in the wake of a reported costly purchase of television commercial time in the Wichita area.
The Pittsburg GOP contender is chairman of National Pizza Co., which owns about 150 Pizza Hut francesises around the world. Bicknell, who also claims a problem of name recognition, has estimated the primary election would cost him between $250,000 and $400,000.
Other announced GOP candidates include House Speaker Mike Hayden of Atwood, Wichita State University instructor Barbara Pomeroy of Meriden businessman Bill McDonald and Andover attorney Richard Peckham.
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10
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, June 4. 1986
New center to house clinics
By Evan Walter
Construction of a $12 million center for human development to be located east of Haworth Hall will begin by late fall or early winter, according to Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning.
The four-story building, which Wiechert said would take two years to build, will house research areas, clinics, academic offices and classrooms. The departments of human development and family life; special education; speech-language-hearing; sciences and disorders; radio-tel television-film; the KU Bureau of Child Research; and the KU Gerontology Center also will be housed in the center.
The center will serve as a research facility for faculty, a training area for students and a clinic for children, the elderly and the disabled.
Lawrence Feth, chairman of the department of speech-language-hearing; sciences and disorders, said. "The center is designed to pull a lot of the departments scattered off campuses, all into one building."
Wiechert said the idea behind the project was to build a center that
"The purpose is to get all of these departments together in a space callet a 'center'." Wiechert said.
"Some are in buildings that don't have good space. Some are in old houses that the University owns."
would focus on the needs of people from various age groups, especially those with disabilities.
The idea of such a center has existed for about 10 years, he said. Detailed plans, however, weren't realized until the money became available.
Seven campus buildings east of Haworth will be demolished to make room for the 127,000 square-foot structure.
KU officials haven't chosen a name for the center yet. One suggestion was that it be named after Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., who has contributed a lot of effort and support to the project. Wiechert said.
"He has been very instrumental in getting federal funding for the project," he said. "He is the primary person on federal funding."
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KU on Wheels Proudly Presents "Summer Routes '86"
24th & Ridge Court
Leave 25th & Melrose (Gate House, Apt) to Campus On the hour First bus 7:00 a.m.. Last bus 6:00 p.m.
Leave 24th & Ridge Court to Campus and Downtown
5 minutes past hour
First Bus 7:05 a.m. Last bus 6:05 p.m.
Leave Oliver Hall to Campus and Downtown 10 minutes past hour First bus 7:10 a.m.. Last bus 6:10 p.m.
Leave Union to 9th & Massachusetts (Downtown)
25 minutes past hour
First bus 7:25 a.m.. Last bus 6:25 p.m.
Leave 9th and Massachusetts to Campus and 24th and Ridge Court 30 minutes past hour First bus 7:30 a.m.. Last bus 5:30 p.m.
Leave Union to 24th & Ridge Court via Malls Shopping Center 40 minutes past hour First bus 7: 40 a.m., Last bus 5: 40 p. r.
Leave 23rd & Louisiana to Campus and Downtown
50 minutes past hour
First bus 6:50 a.m., Last bus 5:50 p.m.
Subsidized by Student Senate All Rides 50¢ No Passes
K
Meadowbrook / Trailridge
Leave Meadowbrook to Campus
5 minutes past hour
First bus 7:05 a.m.. Last bus 5:05 p.m.
Leave Union to Meadowbrook
55 minutes past bour
First bus 6:55 a.m., Last bus 4:55 p.m.
Leave Iowa and Harvard to Campus
10 Minutes past hour
First bus 7:10 a.m.. Last bus 5:10 p.m.
Leave 9th and Avalon to Campus
13 minutes past hour
First bus 7:13 a.m., Last bus 5:13 a.m.
Leave West Hills Apts to Campus
18 minutes past hour
First bus 7:18 a.m.. Last bus 5:18 p.m.
Leave Union to Trailridge Apts,
Frontier, and Mesa Way
25 minutes past hour
First bus 7:25 a.m.. Last bus 5:25 p.m.
Leave 7th and Michigan to Trailridge Apts 30 minutes past hour First bus 7:30 a.m. Last bus 5:30 p.m
Leave Frontier and Mesa Way to Campus 40 minutes past hour First bus 7:40, Last bus 5:40 p.m.
Leave Trailridge Apts to Campus
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First bus 7:43 a.m.. Last bus 5:43 p.m.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 1986-87 CONCERT & CHAMBER, MUSIC SERIES
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Concert Series
American Bullet Comedy October 9, 1988; 6 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Collage Radio Orchestra with Andre Michel Schub
November 5, 1986; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
James Galway
James Gathay
December 11, 1986; 8 p.m.
Hoch Audit
Franz Liszt
Franz Lichtz
Chamber Orchestra
February 19, 1987; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
Mercer Cunningham
Dance Company
March 25, 1987; 8 p.m.
Hoch Audiordium
New York City Opera
in Madiana Butterfly
April 1, 1987, 1: 8pm.
Hoe Auditorium
Chamber Music Series
Mark Paskanos and Friends
September 28, 1986,
3:30 p.m.
Crafton-Peyer Theatre
Cleveland Quartet with Emanuel Ax
October 25, 1986, 8 p.m.
Crafton-Perrey Theatre
King's Singer
November 19, 1986; 8 p.m.
Plymouth Congregational
Church
Juilliard String Quartet
February 1, 1987; 3:30 p.m.
Crafton-Priory Theatre
Empire Brass Quintet
March 8, 1987; 8 p.m.
Crafton-Pre剧院
Kronos Quartet
April 12, 1987; 8 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
University Arts Festival Event
Gathe Theatre's Candida
February 8, 1987; 3:30 p.m.
Crafton Theatre
The Arts
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT: MURPHY HALL
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i
/
Wednesday; June 4, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
11
Climate is healthy for investments in Kansas by Far East, Carlin says
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Gov. John Carlin returned to Kansas yesterday from a three-week trip to the Far East and said Japanese investors were ripe for the picking, and Kansas looked pretty attractive to them.
Carlin and a 46-member trade delegation leave May 13 for Hong Kong, where the group stayed until May 18. From there, they traveled to the capital of the People's Republic of China. Peking is now called Beijing.
While in Beijing, the group met with mainland China's national government officials and business leaders.
The next four days were spent in the Henan province, an agricultural area in China similar to Kansas. The team will take up its trip with two days in Houloula.
Minutes after getting off his plane at a north Korea airport, Carlin already was talking about a possible return to Japan or China before he leaves office next January. The governor said he would consider such a trip because the climate for hurrying investment is so good.
"Japan looks extremely good for investment here in Kansas," Carlin said. "Everywhere we went they said
our timing was good. They want to spread that investment around. They know it's better for them, both economically and politically."
Carlin said that several factors lead Japanese investors to look favorably upon Kansas, such as the rising value of the yen. He also mentioned a government policy in a trade bill that passed Congress that adds "incentive for Japan to work very hard in bringing more investment here and for working on the trade issue."
The governor said Martha Collins, governor of Kentucky, traveled to Japan four times last year before she planted a lucrative Toyota assembly plant.
In addition to Carlin and members of his staff, the entourage included state economic development officials, state Board of Agriculture officials and four state legislators: Sens. Richard Gannon, D-Doogall, and Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge; and Reps. Donald Mainey, D-Topeka, and David Heinemann, R-Garden City.
The trip, which cost about $72,000, was Carlin's third to the Far East in his eight years as governor. He went to China in 1979 and returned in 1984.
The trips have resulted in Kansas'
developing an official "sister state" relationship with the Henan Province and the signing of trade agreements.
The most visible benefit reaped by the previous trips was the participation by Henan Province in the 1904 Kansas State Fair. It was the first foreign country had set up a booth and participated in the annual event.
On the last trip, Carlin signed a letter of intent on behalf of Kansas to expand and formalize the state's business relationship with a conglomerate of Far East companies called C.P. Group, which has 21 offices in 12 countries in Asia and Eurone.
Carlin said that at the time there was potential for business ventures centering on Kansas *experiences in processing, production and milling*
The governor also signed a statement reaffirming Kansas' sister states tie with the Henan Province with Gov. He Zhukang, Carlin said he hoped to see an expansion of education and cultural exchanges between Kansas and Henan. He marked the anniversary of the relationship by establishing an exchange program for students in the two states.
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12
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, June 4, 1986
Kansas' serious-crime rate rises in three months of '86
United Press International
TOPEKA — Property crimes in Kansas increased by 16.7 percent in the first quarter of 1986, and violent crimes increased 2.2 percent, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation said Monday.
The KBI's crime statistics, issued quarterly, revealed an overall increase of 15.5 percent in the first three months of the year.
The agency said all property crimes — burglary, larceny and motor vehicle theft — increased 16.7 percent during January, February and March 1986, compared to the same period in 1985. The agency showed the largest single increase in percent followed by motor vehicle thefts, which increased 22.9 percent.
Although violent crimes showed a slight increase during the first quarter of 1896, the KBI said only robbery and aggravated robbery increased. Those increases — robbery 4.1 percent, from 468 to 485, and aggravated robbery 2.1 percent, from 1,260 to 1,280 — were of
fset by decreases in murders of 10 percent, from 30 to 27, and rape of 7 percent, from 149 to 148.
Motor vehicle thefts increased from 1,167 to 1,434 and burglary increased from 5,608 to 7,288. The amount increased from 14,352 to 15,961.
Arsons reported to the state increased 58.3 percent, from 163 for January-March 1985 to 253 for that same period in 1986. However, the value of property damaged by arson rose from 92 million in 1985 to $1.33 million.
The figures were compiled by the KBI from reports by about 260 local law enforcement agencies for January-March 1986.
All four metropolitan counties reported an increase of crime with Shawnee leading the way with a 44.9 percent jump. Shawnee reported a 238.3 percent jump in burglary and a 70.9 percent increase in motor vehicle thefts. All violent crimes increased by only 7.9 percent, while property crimes increased 48.5 percent.
Johnson County marked the second highest increase among the four metropolitan counties with an
increase of 28.9 percent overall crime, offset by an 80 percent decrease in murders from 5 to 1.
The county's total property crimes increased 33.2 percent from 2,385 to 3,176.
Wyandotte County. recorded an increase of 23.7 percent in overall crime and a 133 percent increase in murders from 3 to 7.
Sedgwick County recorded a marginal increase in overall crime of 9.9 percent and a decrease of 25 percent in murders. All violent property increased 1.2 percent, while property crimes increased 10.6 percent.
Of cities with populations of 10,000 or more, McPhrison reported the biggest increase in crime, 102.9 percent, followed by Coffeyville, 62.7 percent; Arkansas City, 56.6 percent; Prairie City, 51.1 percent; Hays, 51.1 percent; and Shawnee 50.4 percent.
Pittsburg was the city with the largest decrease in crime, 43.7 percent, followed by Newton; 42.3 percent; Derby, 10.5 percent; Salina, 9.7 percent; and Ottawa, 4.4 percent.
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1
Wednesday, June 4, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
13
Royals Report
Compiled by Dawn O'Malley Sports Editor
Royals 4, Milwaukee 1
Bret Saberhagen won his first game since May 2 and broke his three-game losing streak as the Royals beat the Brewers 4-1 last night at Milwaukee's County Stadium.
Steve Balboni went 2-for-4 with a home run and RBI double.
Milwaukee 7, Royals 2
The Milwaukee Brewers snapped the Royals four-game winning streak Monday night with a 7-2 victory.
The winning pitcher, Ted Higaera, allowed the Royals nine hits and three walks. Milwaukee collected 12 hits.
Kansas City's Danny Jackson went three and one-third innings and gave nine rups on eight hits.
gave up four runs on fire in this.
The Royals came within two runs in the fifth at 4-2. Steve Balboni hit his eighth home run of the year. Darryl Motley followed with a single and sored on Lonnie Smith's sacrifice fly to right.
Kansas City 5, Texas 3
George Brett hit his 280th career home run and 1,000th RBI to help the Royals to a 5-3 victory over the Texas Rangers at Royals Stadium on Sunday night.
Brett got his hit in the eighth inning off Mitch Williams. It sailed over the center-field barrier, a 410-foot shot.
hat the club had been at. 580. Kansas City's Charlie Leibrandt won his first game in five starts since April 29.
Royals 8, Texas 1
Frank White drove in two runs Saturday, helping the Royals past the Texas Rangers at Royals Stadium.
The Rangers played without Pete Inescaviglia, Larry Parrish, Gary Ward and Dian Slaughter because of injuries.
...d also Bid Staught because of injuries.
The Rangers were run came on a fifth-inning home run by second baseman Toby Harrah.
Kansas City's winning pitcher Mark Gubicza struck out three and walked three in six innings. The only hit he gave up was Harrab's homer. The Royals put the game away in the sixth with four runs aided by two errors.
Royals 12, Texas 2
Rudy Law paced the Royals in a 12-2 rout Friday night over the Texas Rangers at Royals Stadium. The win snapped the Royals three-game losing streak and put them within two games of the first-place Rangers.
George Brett hit two-run single in the fourth and Steve Balboni hit a home run in the seventh.
The Royals' 12 runs came on 11 hits and three Ranger errors.
The Royals 12 runs came on 11 hits and the N.Y. Rangers' Gary Ward was hit by Dennis Leonard's pitch in the first inning, and Pete Incaviglia twisted his ankle while striking out in the fifth.
On Deck
Royals vs. Milwaukee
1:35 p.m. at County Stadium
Royals vs. Minnesota
Royals vs. Minnesota
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Saturday
Royals vs. Minnesota
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Saturday
Royals vs. Minnesota
7:05 p.m.at Royals Stadium
Sunday
Royals vs. Minnesota 1:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Tuesday
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Standings American League
East Division
W L Pct. GB
Boston 35 15 16.70
New York 31 19 16.20
Baltimore 29 19 16.04
Milwaukee 25 24 510 $1/2$
Detroit 23 24 489 $1/2$
Toronto 25 27 481 11
Cleveland 24 26 480 11
West Division
| | W L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Texas | 26 | 24 .520 | - |
| California | 25 | 25 .500 | 1 |
| Kansas City | 25 | 25 .500 | 1 |
| Oakland | 24 | 27 .471 | 21% |
| Chicago | 19 | 30 .481 | 21% |
| Minnesota | 19 | 32 .373 | 71% |
| Seattle | 19 | 32 .373 | 71% |
Includes games through last night
Men's track team sends five to NCAA
The KU men's track team sent five of its top athletes to Indianaapolis yesterday to compete in the National Association outdoor championships.
By Kristi Schroeder
Chris Bohann, Scott Huffman, Ray Mitchell, Sharriff Hazim, and Ron Bahm will compete in preliminary rounds today to qualify for the finals of their field events on Friday.
"All five guys are ranked," Rick Attic, assistant manager's track coach, said recently. "I expect them all to do fairly well. I feel the competition is more important than how they compete that particular day. We try to get in and compete well at the big meets and not worry about it. We have to be hurt. We let the performances take care of themselves."
"With a big meet, rankings really don't matter. At this point, we are trying to maintain technique and are doing little visually.
During this outdoor season, Huffman consistently has been vaulted between 17-foot-9 and 18-0.
Huffman said he hoped to finish in the top three. However, he said he would settle for second place because Doug Fraley from fresno State seems to be the best season's indoor Championships at Oklahoma City.
"Scott has been doing well," Attig said, "especially the things he had accomplished mechanically."
Huffman will encounter tough competition not only from opposing
Hazim and Mitchell also have the advantage of competing against each other. Mitchell said jumping against him helped he made him more helpful.
Bohan said he would be happy to finish among the top six in the pole vault but he thinks his teammates experience will help Huffman.
American beats Vilas
Mitchell said many jumpers fell in the same best mark category as he did, but he considered himself to be a shadow jumper. He has the ability to come from behind and make his presence known, he said.
"There are a lot of pretty good jumpers in the collegiate field," Mitchell said.
Men Track
athletes but also from his teammate, Bohanan.
Vilas, who powered through four and five-sets to win his last two matches, made the South African-born Kriek work for his wins. Vilas saved three match points by Kriek in the ninth game of the fourth set.
Hazim said that it would be to his advantage to compete against his teammate because he is familiar with Mitchell's form and style. He said he was also gluon wasn't the team going to the championships.
But he said that if he did better than his previous personal best of 26.3-3a, he would be a top finisher.
knocked out the top-seeded pair, Ken Flach and Robert Seguso of the United States. 6-2, 6-1.
"The ultimate is the NCAAs," Hazim said. "The sharing of the experience makes it that much more. If you got the talent, you've got it," he said.
KU pole vaulter Scott Huffman concentrates on his approach. Huffman was practicing Monday at Memorial Stadium for the National Collegiate Athletic Association Outdoor Championships.
10
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
Rovals select Jackson in fourth round
The exhausted players rushed to the net and hugged when the match was over.
Kriek, overcoming the unforced errors which had plagued his game in the early going, clinched the win with a forehand volley to the corner of
United Press International
NEW YORK — Jeff King, a power-hitting third baseman who school records for home runs and RBA at Arkansas, was selected No. 1 overall by the Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday in baseball's amateur-free agent list. He played in the National Football League draft, was ignored until the fourth round.
Although only the first-round picks were officially released Monday, the commissioner's office confirmed that they had been sent to City Royals in the fourth round.
PARIS — Johan Kriek of the United States fought off Argentine veteran Guilermo Villero yesterday to move into the semifinals of the French Open with a marathon 3-6, 7-6 (8), 7-6 (7), 5-7 (7) 3-1 win.
Jackson, the Heisman Trophy winner from Auburn, was the No. 1 selection in April's NFL draft by the Tampa Bay Bucaneers.
Jackson hit, 401 with 17 homers and 43 RBI for Auburn in 1985, but missed most of this season because he was disqualified by the Southeastern Conference for accepting an airline ticket from the Caveeaners.
United Press International
It was Vilas' 15th straight French Open appearance. Kriek was playing for just the first time since 1979.
King, of Colorado Springs, Colo.
was rated the No. 1 prospect by
Baseball America magazine. He hit
369 with 17 homers and 67 RBI for
Arkansas this season and at 204 RBI
during his three years at Arkansas
In men's doubles yesterday,
Australian Paul McNamee and
Switzerland's Heinz Gunthardt
Angels draft LHS player
Also chosen in the first round was shortstop Gary Sheffield of Hillsborough High School in Tampa, Fla., the nephew of New York Mets
Kriek, the 13th seed, traded shots with No. 12 Vilas for three hours, 49 minutes on Center Court.
Even though Stevens is not as fast as Royals center fielder Willie Wilson, Harrod said, he has more speed than he is credited with.
head baseball coach, said. "He's got tremendous ability. To make it in the pros, I say you have to have one of two things, hit with power and have speed. Lee hits with power."
"You might see him play right field for the Angels," Harrod said. "I anticipate seeing him out in two or three years down the road."
Stevens must now decide whether or not to accept the Angels offer. He signed a letter of apology from Kansas and play for the Razorbucks.
By Dawn O'Malley Sports editor
Eight years ago, Dewain Lee Stevens was playing little league baseball. Now after being the 22nd player picked by the California Angels in the first round of the major league amateur free-agent draft Monday, he someday may play along side his idols.
"I was shocked." Stevens said yesterday. "I was in a daze; I felt weird. "I was ready to blow up."
Two sons of former major leaguers, outfielders Derrick May and Lee May Jr., also were grabbed in the first round. Derrick May, the son of former outfielder Dave May, was picked nuth by the Chicago Cubs. Lee May Jr., the son of the man in question, was taken on 21 by the Met.
ace pitcher Dwight Gooden, who was chosen No. 6 by Milwaukee.
The Cleveland Indians selected
arc-hander Greg Swindell of Texas with the second pick. The San Francisco Giants used the third pick on third baseman Matt Williams of Nevada-Las Vegas. Georgia Tech right-handler Kevin Brown was selected fourth by the Texas Rangers. The Atlanta Braves then chose Kent Mercker, a left-hander from Dublin High in Ohio.
Philadelphia chose right-hander Brad Brink of The University of
Rod Carew retires from baseball
United Press International
ANAHEIM HILLS, Calif. — Rod Carew, who collected seven batting titles and 3,663 hits during his 19-year career, announced his retirement Monday after spending more than six years seeking a major-league contract
Carew, 40, spent his entire career in the American League, first with Minnesota and the last seven years with California.
became a free agent Nov. 12.
The smooth-swinging first baseman batted 280 with 124 hits, two homers and 39 RBI in 1985, but was not re-signed by California. He
At a news conference at his home Monday, Carew said he received an offer in March to become the Boston Red Sox's minor-league hitting instructor. He also was offered a job as a baseball trainer at the San Francisco Giants last week.
"I spoke to Mr. Rosen (Al, the Giants' general manager) and he feels I can help lead them to a division title," said Carew. flanked by his wife and three daughters, "I made a statement that Carew 'Carew will not be playing baseball."
Carew, a left-handed hitter with little power but a superb ability to hit to
all fields, was named an All Star 15 times, 12 as a starter. As a member of the Twins, he was selected Most Valuable Player in 1977.
The final selections of the round were: Lee May by the Mets; Lawrence High (Kan.) outfieldder Lee Stevens by California; Florida State second-baseman Luis Rene Alice by Sta. Louis; Don Luogo High (Cal.) shortstop Anthony Wayne Clemens by Kansas City; James Bennett high (Md.) outfieldder Terrence Carr by California; and Jackson State outfieldder Earl Sanders by Toronto.
Carew played in the AL Championship Series with Minnesota in 1969 and 1970 and with the Angels in 1979 and 1982. But he hit just 220 in the postseason and never reached the World Series.
the next 10 picks in order were: Ball State outfielder Tom Howard by San Diego, South Florida catcher Scott Hendom or Oakland; Hanford High (Calif.) right-hander Ryan Bowan by Boston; outfielder Greg McMurray of Brockton High (Mass.) by Boston; Hogan High (Calif.) outfielder Keen Dean by Montreal; South Carolina right-hander Roberto Hernandez by California; Prairieland High (Texas) outfielder Brad Scudder by CinemaLite (Crooklet High (Texas)) catcher Philip Clark by Detroit; Loudon High (Tenn.) outfielder Michael White (Los Angeles); and Northwestern left-hander Gardner Hall by the White Sox.
Southern California seventh and Seattle followed with shortstop Pat Lennon of Whitehill High in North Carolina. The Minnesota Twins closed out the 10 by selecting right-hander Derek Parks.
"That's the only thing I feel that missed," he said. "All the things that I've done have been great. To get into the World Series, you have to be a team player. I think that over the last 19 years, I've done my part."
By a Kansan sports writer
Stanclift gets award as top softball coach
Kansas head softball coach Bob Stancht recently was named the National Collegiate Midwest Coach of the Year.
Stanclair coached the Jayhawks to a 44-16 record and a sixth-place regular-season national ranking. He learned of his honor last week.
"A few have heard about it," Stancliff said. "A lot of nice things have been said as a result. It is some reward for being at it 11 years and putting forth a conscientious effort."
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14
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Wednesday, June 4, 1986
ANISON
ANS
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
Batter Up
Nine-year-old Tommy Wiles, son of Steve and Carolyn Wiles, 1619 W. 28th St., concentrates on his swing. He practiced Monday at Memorial Stadium during KU baseball coach Marty Pattin's camp for young baseball players. The camp will last the rest of this week.
For the past three weeks in the morning's early hours, several members of the Kansas crew team have roused themselves out of the confined of their beds to travel to or practice on Lake Shawnee.
Bv Dawn O'Mallev
Kansas crew travels to nationals
Sports editor
The eight men and two women were preparing for the Inter-college Rowing Association Men's On Lake Ondaga at Syracuse, N.Y.
"It was my opinion that we would go to the IRA." Cliff Elliott, head men's crew coach and recently, "I'll make sure I make it to the crew champions final."
"It is the highlight of the year." Mark Studderan, Topека sophomore, said. "This is what we work for all the time. We have had other regatta that we have concentrated on. This is back of our minds for a long time."
Kansas' two male-freshmen four-boats are entered in the regatta that will be coxwained by two women. This is the first time since 1881 a crew has been sent to Syracuse for the regatta.
Elliott said he hadn't sent a team in past years because he didn't feel the teams would be competitive against other teams. This year, Elliot said, he expects his first team to finish in the top six.
Crew
The boats race on a 2,000-meter course, and the competition will run over three days. The winners of the race advance to the championship race.
"We have been working twice each day for the past three weeks," Studacher said. "This is the first time in a four together. It is harder to balance and set up and keep our body in position (bloat). It takes a lot of concentration."
Kevin Tracy, Overland Park sophomore, will be the stroker for the Kansas first-boat.
"I'm stroking, so a lot of the
responsibility falls on me," Tracy said. "Everybody has to be doing the same thing. Everything is moving at once. If anybody is off, it will mess up. It is really tense and stressful on the racing days."
At the opposite end of Tracy will sit Dana Krapp, Wichita sophomore. She will coxswain the men's first boat.
"This is a big regatta," Knapp said. "The competition is a lot greater there. There are going to some big schools that take rowing very competitively. It's not that we don't take crew seriously, but they look at it much more serious. Our first boat will be competitive also."
Boston keeps series lead
United Press International
HOUSTON — Larry Bird hit a three-point shot from the top of the circle with 2:26 left, giving Boston the lead for good as the Celtics pulled within one victory of their 16th NBA title with a 106-103 victory over the Houston Rockets last night.
The Celtics, traditional powers in the National Basketball Association, will take a 3-1 lead in
the best-of-seven championship series into the fifth game at The Summit tomorrow night.
After Bird gave Boston a 104-101 lead with his three-point bomb, only two baskets were *scores* in the remainder of the game. Rodney McCray scored on a rebound with 2:04 left to make it 104-103.
Bird scored only seven of his 21 points in the second half. Dennis Johnson and Robert Parish led. Boston with 22 points each.
WEDNESDAY
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FOR RENT
BEDRINGHAM PLACE come enjoy Lawrence's newest and finest apartment community. Offer luxury 2 bedroom beds, all with the convex wall design. Located in Newport. Now leasing for immediate or next Fall ocpancy. For your private stopping shop by 2410 Terrace or Eldgingham or 814-3444 or
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Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sure you have a copy of this guide. For exam preparation, use New Analysis of Western Civilization available now on the Cruser. The Jayhawk Bookstore, 1015 W. 36th St., New York, NY 10024.
22 Wants. Wholesale price. Levis 50's, 50s, 60s slacks and shorts, short sleeve bottom down and knit shirts (med; large). Call JEFF at 785156.
HELP WANTED
HISTORICAL PHOTOGRAPHER - Part 1
6 months of actual experience in architecture
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work required. Fax #804-8462. Deadline
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Female to prepare dinner, light evening and night
hours; schedule varies. 749-0288
Girl needed for light housekeeping Mondays and Wednesdays from 11:30 to 5:10 p.m. 643-3306.
University of Kansas, Lawrence Campus
Kansas Bar Membership. Those who will take the July 1809 Kansas bar examination are welcome to meet with Kansas bar professionals in暑某 legal problem, willingness to handle litigation, and interest in helping educate university students. For complete position description, write abilities. For completion position description, write abilities. For Students, University of Kansas, 148 Burge (Satellite) Student University, Lawrence Kansas. One available June 18 or as soon thereafter as possible. One available August 1, 1986, or as soon thereafter as possible. Resume, a writing sample and names, addresses and phone numbers three references must be included.
PERSONAL
BUS PERSONAL
Tell me. there are any affectionate single men in Lawrence?. Nice looking that by no matter紧凑ly beautiful, somewhat but not terribly nice, friendship with relationship potential). like good conversation, Prairie Home Company, eating with friends. We would like to write **More** P.O. Box 1234. Would we like to other? Write **P.O. Box 1234**.
OARE YOU FTT0' Lawrence Athletics. M WF 30-5 p.m. Laurence School of Ballet. Athlets & Veron.
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841-0264.
BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE Celebrating our 4th Anniversary
Register for a $25 gift certificate
927 Massachusetts 841/2451
Mon. Sat. 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Register for a $25 gift certificate
Enroll now in Midwest Driving School. Receive driver's license in three weeks without parcel testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided. 841-7749
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early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
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area; call Area for appointment
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ON RESERVE AT KINKO'S.
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Make a reservation for your students this term.
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dodeling, theatrical and artists portfolio. Slides
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49-1611.
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SCIENCE FICTION, Comic book, Simulation & Role Playing Games Kwality Comics, 1111 MASS 843-7259
Thousands of R A R B albums - 82 or less. Also lossy items, Tats & Sun only on 10 m to 5 a.m. Quintillis 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or trade all styles music.
SERVICES OFFERED
Black and White film processing, contact sheets,
and enlargements. Push and Pull processing also
available. THE PICTURE WORKS. 13th and
Haskell. 834-0470.
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1101 Mass
Suite 201
749-0117
Experienced English tutor for foreign students
Zubeyd 749-7602
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
Used cameras and photographic equipment bought, sold, and traded. THE PICTURE WORKS, 13th and Haskell, 8430470
MAT TUTOR - Bob Moehans holds A. M in a math from K, M where U02, 102, 116, and I28 were among the course he taught. He began tutoring professors at the University of California, and statistics he for 40 min. session! Call 843-5022.
Same day Ekatchrome/E-6 slide processing
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THE PICTURE WORKS. 1st and haskh. 843-609
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1-100 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing, Judy, 842-7945 or Lisa,
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A-4 professional typing: Term papers, Theses.
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24-Hour Typing, 11th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus.
Best quality and fastest service. B41 5006.
DISERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS
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TRANSSCRIPT also; standard cassette tape
843-8077
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16
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 4, 1986
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1
INSIDE
NILE CRUISES
Time travel
Travel posters that depict changes in attitudes about tourism to go on display next week at Spencer Museum of Art.
Story, page 6
Comanche's bandages come off after the horse survives battle with water. He will be back on display tomorrow at the Natural History Museum
Back in the saddle
Story, page 3
OUTSIDE
The forecast
Today... Partly cloudy, high 77.
Tonight... Cloudy, lows around 60s.
Tomorrow... Partly cloudy, highs around 80
Weekend... Mild, highs in the middle 80s, lows in the low 60s. Little or no chance of rain.
details, page 3
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY
June 11, 1986
Vol.96, No. 148
(USPS 650-640)
Two students to vie for House seat
By Kristi Schroeder Staff writer
Two KU students have filed for the 2nd District Republican nomination for Congress, heating up the August primary that will decide who faces the incumbent, Democrat Jim Slattery, in November.
Stan Eckert, Lawrence graduate student, filed yesterday, and Phill Kline, second-year law student, filed Monday, filing deadline was yesterday.
Eckert said he didn't have any qualms about running against another KU student, and his decision to run was planned as long ago as
February, although he filed right before noon.
"I planned to file in that last hour." Eckert said. "And many people within the party were aware of my plans."
hut what Eckert had not planned on was any opposition in the primary. Eckert said he was shocked to learn that Kline was running, because Kline had not given any indication that he would run.
But Eckert said he expected a very aggressive primary race.
Eckert — a candidate in the 1984 Republican primary as well — said that if he ran against Slattery, he
would not let the campaign become, the single-issue campaign it had been in the past.
in the past.
"He's a one-issue candidate and politician," he said. "And that one issue is the deficit."
porent than the defense.
But Slattery brings every issue back to the nation's deficit, he said.
The central theme of Eckert's campaign is to take the power of the few and the wealthy and put it into
the hands of the many. One-issue politicians like Slattery make Washington unacceptable and unaccountable he said.
expert is a graduate student working on his master's in international law and relations. But he said that two years' experience as a representative would be worth putting his educational plans on hold.
Kline paid the $751 filing fee with a cheek from the state Republican Party. Although he wasn't wealthy, Kline said, he had enough political and financial support to defeat Slattery in November.
Kline depicted Slattery as a two-
sited politician who said one thing and did another.
"There are two sides to Jim Slater, "Lark said. "There is the Jim Slatter that comes back to Kansas, sits down with you, talks to you about your concerns and problems, and asks you going to do for you in Washington."
"Then there is the Jim Slattery that goes back to Washington and does something entirely different."
Kline, like Eckert, said it was time for true representation in Washington.
See Congress, p. 5, col. 1
Chiefs add KU flavor to football
By Joseph DiNitto Staff writer
Staff writer
KU football fans who follow the Kansas City Chiefs will see a different look on the sidelines of Arrowhead Stadium this fall, and the show will have a strong Jayhawk flavor to it.
Nine former KU cheerleaders are part of the Chiefs' plans to set a trend in cheerleading in the National Football League. The organization has dumped the glitter and sex appeal of the forward, that will emphasize wholesomeness and fan participation.
"We definitely won't be out there in go-go boots and ballet tops." Sy Byram, Overland Park senior and member of the new cheerleading squad at the University. "They are concerned with us appearing completely wholesome."
This spring the Chiefs decided to change their cheerleading image, according to Donna Scott, administrative assistant and game production coordinator. The move is designed to encourage players more involved in cheering (or the game) instead of just watching the game.
"This will be a first in the NFL." Scott said. "The Chieffes were mainly a dance group, along the lines of the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders. We'll be the first team to have real cheerleading, and not just the crowd will find it more entertaining we'll be offering young athletes."
In addition to the former KU cheerleaders, the Chiefs hired new KU head cheerleading coach James Speed to coach the squad. Speed helped guide the University of Oklahoma two national cheerleading titles.
After the cheerleaders were selected, they signed loyalty agreements with the Chiefs. Those rules forbid squad members from drinking, smoking, chewing gum and other activities or at functions for the organization.
Scott said the Chiefs wanted cheerleaders who would serve as good public relations representatives for the organization
Personal grooming also will be regulated. A cheerleader's hair may not fall over the face, and fingernails must be trimmed to a certain length. Former KU cheerleader Jeff Davis, a coach at Baylor, and members would be paid $50 per game, plus $4 an hour for practice sessions. But the money wasn't what appealed to him most about professional cheerleading.
"I's a good way to continue doing something you like, even on a part-time basis," Davis said. "I guess its the involvement of belonging to a team."
The seven other cheerleaders were chosen are Jenny Ziegler, Lawrence junior; Michon Quick, Lawrence junior; Genee Johnson, Salina sophomore; Kenny Twiggs, senior; Kim Twiggs, brandyview sophomore; Roger Nelson, Overland Park senior; and Rick Inglis, Overland Park senior.
"I hope it will give people in Lawrence and KU tie to Kansas City and the Chiefs, when they come down and look down and see some of KU there."
UNC Dan Ruehl
U.S. trade discussed at seminar
Helping hand
Jeff Custin, a coach at the Larry Brown Basketball Camp, goes over a play with Jeff Dillavou, Blue Valley High School sophomore
The United States must not deal with world trade by resorting to protectionism, Wayne Angell, a member of the Reserve Board, said yesterday.
"The greatest danger the world faces today is that protectionist policy would become the order of the day," said Angell, who received a master's degree and a doctorate in law from the University of Kansas.
By Evan Walter Staff writer
Angell spoke to about 400 people at the 47th annual Bank Management Clinic held in Woodruff Auditorium.
The clinic began Monday morning and will end today at noon.
Angell said that U.S. protectionist policies would only enhance protectionist sentiments abroad and the result would be price instability.
resnash the powers of the marketplace offer better solutions to the problems of the trade imbalance than protectionist policies, said Angell. The Federal Reserve Board, which controls the money supply in the United States, is aware of these forces, he said.
Angell said protectionism in the United States also presented a serious threat to American agriculture.
"I think the president will vet any attempts at protectionist legislation," Angell said. "The president's policies, such as to presound and rique to override."
In his speech on Monday, Duke talked about the new political era of President Reagan.
See Bankers, p. 5, col. 2
"Passing protectionist legislator would reduce the amount of U.S. dollars earned by countries around the world," he said. "As world trade falls, the money earned from world trade would fall, and people will buy less of what they buy most of — food. No other industry would be more damaged by protectionism than agriculture."
Moeser to lead Penn State art program
By Karen Schmidt
Staff writer
Start Writer
The dean of fine arts at the University of Kansas will soon be in charge of all programs in arts and architecture at Pennsylvania State University.
Starting July 21, James Moeser, who has served as dean of fine arts for 11 years at University KU, will become dean and executive director of University Arts Services at Penn State in University Park, Pa.
Moeser will oversee all arts programs — the schools of Music and Visual Arts, and the departments of art history, theatre, architecture and
landscape architecture. At KU, he is responsible for departments of visual arts, music and dance, but does not have a hand in theatre or architecture.
"The principal attraction of the position is the unified state of the arts," he said Monday. "The university has strong programs in science and they want to bring the arts up to the science level."
Don Schaid, associate dean of fine arts, said, "Moeser has been a valued member of the community and KU since the 1960s. We hate to see him go, but he is looking to his own professional advancement and
Don Scheid
Moeser has been a valued member of the community and KU since the 1960s. We hate to see him go.
associate dean of fine arts
Moeser also must resign as
organist and chair director at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. He said he probably does not do the same in Pennsylvania.
"It will be a matter of time before I think about another church position," he said. "With a new setting, I will take a stake on the additional responsibility."
new challenges."
He will, however, continue as an active concert artist. Moes plan to perform as an organist this October in Freiburg, West Germany.
Moeser has performed internationally throughout his tenure and produced about 80 programs in the
Moeser originally announced his resignation as dean in February 1985, but agreed to stay in the position until July 1986 while KU looked for his replacement. Before he accepted his new position, Moeser taught to full-time teaching as the first Carl and Ruth Althaus distinguished professor of organ
Peter Thompson, professor of painting, will replace Moeser as dean July 1. A search for a new Althaus professor will begin this fall. Moeser said.
Tenants bid farewell to Eldridge House
Bv Brenda Flory
radio series, "The Art of the Organist," a show in which he narrated and performed major works.
Staff writer
But renovation beginning July 1 will convert the Eldridge House back into a hotel.
For the past 15 years, the building has been the home for restaurants, bars and the people who live in the apartments upstairs.
Sur Wick, Moorhead has lived in the Eldridge House for more than two years, but now he doesn't know where he is going to live.
When the Eldridge House, 701 Massachusetts St., closed its doors as a hotel on that building in 1970, many of them at that the building would never be a hotel again.
Robert Phillips, general partner of the Eldridge House Investors and owner of two Lawrence real estate
"I think the first thing that I'm going to do is cry a lot," Moorhead said.
companies, decided to change the building back into a hotel after receiving many requests for accommodation big events such as football games.
Phillips and his partners, Dale and Edd Miller, who have owned the Eldridge House for four years, had originally planned to use the building
"After 15 years we still received calls for room reservations," Phillips said Friday.
As the date of renovation nears, the moving boxes are piling up in the tenants' apartments.
The residents received notices that they were to be out of the Eldridge House by July 1, Phillips said. Most of the residents have already moved
"I would have preferred to stay here," said Bernadine Cooper, 74. "I
like the convenience of living downtown."
Cooper said she had lived in the Eldridge building for more than five years. She and four others intend to move to the Malls Ole English Village apartments, 2411 Louisiana St.
Although she is not excited about leaving, Cooper said, she wished Phillus the best.
I impute the case.
"Anything he can do to improve himself or the town is great," she said.
In March, there were about 20
lived there.
"I think it has done something for me to live with both young and old," Brune said.
Another resident, Icle Brune, 63, said that living in the Eldridge House had been beneficial for her because both students and senior citizens had
students and 16 other people, including senior citizens, who occupied the third, fourth and fifth floors, Phillips said.
through.
Every night Brune had a "happy hour" at her apartment, she said. Some drank liquor and some drank soda pop. It was a time when people got to know each other.
"When I first came here, two years after my husband's death, I thought I would never leave," she said. "I thought I would live and die here."
She would miss the downtown area because of the convenience of having a bank, post office and library nearby, she said.
Brune, who has lived in the Eldridge House for more than 11 years, said she often had recommended the place to her friends.
Brune also is moving to Malls Olde
Brune said she liked the apartments because she didn't have a car and they were close to shopping centers. But she isn't sad that she has
english Village. Brune said she is largely responsible for getting the others to move there.
"I feel it's important to live with young and old, and many students do live there," she said.
"For the past three years they have not been keeping up the place," she said.
She said she was looking forward to the advantages of a more modern apartment, such as a garbage disposal and a dishwasher.
"I even have a balcony so I can watch 'em swim," she said.
---
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
News Briefs
Nicaraguan rebels free eight German volunteers
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Contras, U.S.backed Nicaraguan rebels, released eight West German volunteer workers late yesterday after holding them in the jungle for 25 days, a Nicaragua official said.
Information Minister Manuel Espinoza, in a nationwide radio broadcast, said 15 Nicaraguan peasants were killed.
The group was released in the remote town of Presillitas, 100 miles east of the capital and not far from Laredo.
The Germans, four men and four women, were kidnapped from a project where they were building
Espinosa did not give details of how the release was carried out, nor did he comment on the condition of the
Rival blacks battle in S. Africa
CROSSROADS, South Africa — Hundreds of shanties were burned yesterday during the second day of a battle between rival blacks that is laying waste to this squandid squatters' cause. Rose to 14 and two more were left homeless.
about 20,000 people in less than a month between conservative vigilantes and militant "comrades" in Crossroads, a sprawling shanty town 12
miles east of Cape Town that the government has been trying to build dolloze for years.
Men fought in a cold, winter rain with guns, axes, iron bars, and rocks. Police said seven people were killed.
Many of the people attacked this time were among about 30,000 people who lost their homes in previous fighting and had taken refuge in tents, churches and community halls.
Nicaragua-aid debate continues
WASHINGTON — House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, under pressure from the White House and GOP leaders, said yesterday a showdown on military aid to Afghanistan was coming. The president and insisted President Reagan still could not win.
Calling the issue "a question of conscience and heart," O'Neill said sentiment in the House had not changed since the $100 million aid request was rejected in March.
"The president still doesn't have the votes," he said. "The policy of the White House is wrong."
The White House, echoing the sentiments of House Republican leader Robert Michel and assistant GOP leader Trent Lott, insisted there has been movement toward the president's position since the last vote.
"We are anxious to vote," said Larry Speakes, White House spokesman.
Congress starts shuttle inquiry
WASHINGTON — Congress opened its own investigation of the shuttle program yesterday and the chairman of the Rogers Commission said he saw no proof. The agency prosecution resulting from the Challenger accident.
But William Rogers, commission chairman, said it was not beyond the realm of possibility that some amateur could win.
"It doesn't seem to me prosecution would be successful of anyone in this tragic accident," Rogers said in reply to questioning from members of the House Science and Technology Committee.
Rogers, accompanied by Vice Chairman Neil Armstrong and Alton Keel, commission staff director, said the panel's 266-page report pinpointed the cause of the attack on the long history of managerial errors that led to it.
House hears testimony on Deaver
WASHINGTON -- Members of a House subcommittee criticized former White House counsel Fred Fielding yesterday for discussing a job with presidential aide Michael Deaver's lobbying firm while Fielding's office was looking into Deaver's business activities.
The House subcommittee on oversight and investigations met privately for three hours to hear testimony from Fielding about his discussion with an official of Deaver's multimillion-dollar company concerning a possible job when he left the administration.
"I get the impression that some people skipped Common Sense 101 back in school," Ron Wyden, D.Ore., said after the hearing. "The office of the president should not appear to be up for sale."
Deaver, President Reagan's former deputy chief of staff, left the government last year to start a lobbying
NOW files suit against pro-lifers
WASHINGTON — The president of the National Organization for Women said yesterday that the group had filed a class-action suit in federal court against three leading abortion foes to force an end to a "nationwide criminal conspiracy" that was threatening abortion clinics across the country.
In announcing the suit, filed Monday in federal court in Wilmington, Del., NOW President Eleanor Smeal said the legal action was an attempt to focus attention on a national problem of harassment and often violent intimidation at abortion clinics. The suit cites two men and one woman, as well as two anti-abortion groups.
The suit was filmed the same day a large pipe bomb ripped a 10-foot hole in the front of a Wichita clinic. Police said they would question anti-abortion activists who often picketed the site.
From Kansan wires.
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The Golden Fleece by A. R. Gurney and the Harmiliness of Tobacco by Anton B. 8:00 p.m., mighty Y. T. & J. 1986, Waworth Recruit Hall Swarthout Recruit Hall
The 1940's Radio Hour written by Walton Jones
Based on an idea by Watson Jones and Carroll,
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Joseph P. Harris, Ira Bermstein and
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July 11, 12, 13, 18 & 19, 1986
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Tickets on sale June 9 in the Murphy Hall Box Office
For reservations, call 913/864-3982
VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations
Released by The University of Kansas Theatre
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Wednesday, June 11, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
Assistance center offers reading class
The Student Assistance Center will present a three-session course on reading-skill improvement.
There will be six hours of instruction over three days — June 17, June 24 and July 1. Classes will run from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Those interested should register and pay the $15 materials fee by 5 p.m. June 18 at 121 Strong Hall.
and pay the $15 materials by b. p. June 16 at 121 Strong Hall. The classes will concentrate on speed, efficiency, concentration and comprehension — from skimming to study reading.
KU gets 4-star rating
The third edition of the "Selective Guide to Colleges," edited by the education editor of the New York Times, gave the University of Kansas four out of a possible five in three evaluation categories — academics, social activities and overall quality of life.
The four-star ratings, the same University received in the two previous issues, placed KU among the top eight public schools in the nation that cost an annual average of $4,000 or less.
Out of 84 institutions evaluated in the guide, only seven were rated higher than KU. No other Big Ten school received such a high rating.
School accredited
The School of Journalism at the University of Kansas received the maximum six-year accreditation for all sequences.
An accrediting team visited the school in November. The accreditation was approved by the accrediting committee of the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications in March and accepted at the council's April 20 meeting.
The report said, "This exemplary program deserves its reputation as one of the best in the United States."
KU libraries cited
A. ulation of holdings in university research libraries that was published recently by the "Chronic of Higher Education" ranked the KU libraries among the best in the nation.
The rankings were based on the number of volumes in the Universities' collections in 1984-85. The rankings listed research libraries in the United States and Canada. KU's main libraries rank 18th among U.S. state and state-related libraries and 31st among universities 106 public and private universities in both countries.
The report said the University's libraries had 2,463,748 volumes in 1964-85, which includes the 87,046 volumes acquired that year.
The libraries also held more than 29,000 serials that year and spent more than $3.1 million on library materials.
The KU library holding is the only one in the central United States listed in the top third of the rankings.
Weather
The forecast calls for partly cloudy to cloudy skies today with highs in the middle to upper 70s. Winds will be out of the west at 20-20 miles an hour. Partly cloudy skies also are expected for tonight and tomorrow. Lows tonight are expected to be around 60. Highs tomorrow should be in the low to middle 80s.
Thursday will again be partly cloudy with highs around 80. Little or no rain is expected through the middle of June, lows in the low 60s.
From staff and wire reports.
KU keeping tabs on parking lots
By Joseph DiNitto
Even if it is the summer semester and a student's pet canary is loose in Fraser Hall, he shouldn't expect any breaks on campus parking privileges
Employees at KU Parking Services didn't buy that excuse from one student. Most of the parking regulations that apply in the spring and fall semesters go for the summer also. Yet with all the inconveniences of many students, continue to rely on the automobile to get to campus.
Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking services, said Monday that more than 200 automobile, motorcycle and moped permits had been sold this summer. Combined with the number of yearly permits already issued, thousands of parkers could be pressing for space in the limited number of stalls near campus.
Hultine said parking services had sold more dollars worth of student parking permits this summer than in previous years.
"in fact, we ran out of the actual yellow stickers, so we had to start islaming temporary stickers instead. We had to scan the late pretty closely now."
Parking services is patrolling all lots for violations, even though the force is understaffed because of vacations, she said. There are eight full-time officers and 10 student assistants watching the lots.
Normally, there are about 25 student employees during the spring and fail. But Hulme said potential violators shouldn't underestimate
"It's possible that some loading zones might not be patrolled quite as frequently," Huline said. "It's even doubtful that officers are going to out of their way to find you. But if it's a restricted zone and you don't have the proper permit, you'll get a ticket."
Students who don't own their own vehicles may be finding it a little more difficult to get around during the summer semester. Buses are available, but routes and times are restricted.
Duane Ogle, general manager of the Lawrence Bus Co., said the company was contracted by Student Senate to run three routes, from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. during weekdays. Two bus runs route to Meadowbrook Apartments, 15th and Crestline streets, Trailridge Apartments, 2500 W. Sixth St., and the apartments near 24th Street and Ridge Court.
WORLD WRESTLING CHAMPIONSHIP
The world wrestling championship was a highly competitive event that brought together the finest wrestlers from around the globe. The competition featured some of the most successful wrestlers in history, including Robert L. "Bob" Watson and Johnny Borg.
Robert L. "Bob" Watson was a legendary wrestler who won the world championship in 1985. He was known for his incredible skill and dedication to the sport. Watson was also a member of the United States Wrestling Association (USWA).
Johnny Borg was another highly accomplished wrestler. He won the world championship in 2004 and was known for his exceptional technique and unstoppable spirit. Borg was also a member of the United States Wrestling Association (USWA).
Cool it
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
tim Bell, Lau's Summit, Mo., senior, and Dave Walker, St. Louis, Mo., senior, keep cool while basking in the sun. The two lau out westernday afternoon at the Delta Chi fraternity, 1245 West Campus Road.
Comanche back under saddle again
By DeAnn Thomas
Staff writer
After surviving the Battle of Little Big Horn, Comanche has survived another battle — against water and shrinking skin.
Since most of the work on Comanche has been completed, Tom Swearingen, director of exhibits at the Museum of Natural History, said Monday that the horse would be sad and back to normal by tomorrow.
Comanche has been completely refurbished after a bizarre flood at the Museum of Natural History last summer, when he souked and bursting at the seams.
On the floor above the Comanche exhibit, on a frozen African rhea, a large, orange lake bird, like a snake. The lake is the sink hit and turned on the water.
piled in clogged the drain, causing the sink to overflow. The water satricated the floor and fell on the Comanche exhibit — drenching it.
Because of the water, the horse's skin shrank, and its clay stuffing swelled.
The plastic that the bird was wrap-
Comanche had been needing
'There is a silver lining. Comanche's fit as a fiddle.'
Philip Humphrey
Natural History Museum
restoration for years, said Sweiringen, who did most of the horse's restoration, and the water damage gave him the opportunity to repair
the horse.
Philip Humphrey, director of the museum, said Comanie was a very old horse that had been prepared by his brother Dyche in the early 19th century.
Dyche used a dry salt method to treat the skin. Humphrey said, but the museum has had problems preserving the horse's flesh. The museum has a climate control system to preserve its animals, but the old clay in Comanche was hardened and crumbled.
Don McDermott, a taxidermist from Eudora, said Sweirden did a remarkable job with the skin. He said Swearenring took a lot of time wrapping and soaking the mount's skin so it would not fall anark.
"It's not a job I would have liked," McDermott said.
Swearingen said Comanche was left on display while the work was being. done. The hide-stretching and restretching, stitch replacement and leg restuffing took nearly three months.
Several preventive measures have been taken to insure the exhibit's longevity. A tent has been discreetly placed above the lights in the Comanie display. If another flood occurs, the tent can be placed side of the horse. Swearing reinforced.
Swearinger also said he used a different type of clay that wouldn't expand or crumble to restuff Comanec, making the exhibit more stable in humid conditions. The clay is better for painting than acrylic and can tcolor the exhibit.
Humphrey said Swearingen consulted the Smithsonian about refurbishing the 95-year-old horse.
"There is a silver lining," Humphrey said of the water damage "Comanche's fit as a fiddle."
Request filed to build local ski resort
S.KINGTUCK
By Kristi Schroeder Staff writer
Although summer is the time of year that you yell, "Surf's up." plans are being made to bring the beach with nonshaking skis to the Lawrence area.
John Emerson, a lawrence attorney, filed a request in May for a conditional-use permit from the Douglas County/Lawrence Planning Commission for Fred Lutz, owner of Mount Blue, situated four miles north of the mountain. ThePermit would allow the development of a ski resort on the mountain.
Plans for the resort include four skiing trails and two lifts on the 60-acre area. The summit of Mount Kailua, located in French name Mont Hien, is 230 feet.
Lutz leased the north face of the mountain to Marcus McCloud, a developer from Colorado, who Lutz said had a lot of experience with ski resort construction. The north face of the mountain was used to minimize meltdown. Lutz said.
Although Lutz is not involved with financing or construction of the resort, he and his two sisters own the 750 acres that surround Mount Blue.
McCloud could not be reached for comment.
McCloud's company, the KC Ski Company, wanted to have the resort opened by this winter.
Diane Mullens, city planner, said
The company is going through the preliminary procedures now to get approval to proceed with work on the resort, she said. The staff of the planning commission prepares information regarding the proposed site and any possible problems that may be associated with the site.
The staff's report will be presented at the planning commission meeting June 25. The planning commission's Board of County Commissioners.
A three-week waiting period will then go into action, Mullens said. The commission will wait for any protests from residents near the site, business owners or any other concerned citizens during the first two weeks.
"So far we haven't had any problems," Mullens said. "It looks pretty good."
One technical problem the company faces is getting a flood-plain development permit, Mullens said. The company wants to use the Wakarua flood plain which is the overflow area of the Wakarusa
The plain would be used to pump water up the mountain to make snow if Mother Nature doesn't provide enough for good skiing.
Grant money to fund study of drug flow
Staff writer
By Evan Walter
Officials from the University of Kansas and the Upjohn Co. have collaborated and agreed upon a multimillion-dollar grant from the U.S. Department of Defense.
The grant will fund research by the School of Pharmacy on improving methods of drug delivery.
The company, which is based in Kalamazoo, Mich., is an international producer of pharmaceutical and agricultural commodities.
"The discussions about this research have gone on for a year or more," said Howard Mossberg, dean of pharmacy.
Ronald Borchardt, Summerfield distinguished professor and chairman of the department of pharmaceutical chemistry, has known the people at Upjohn on a consultant basis, Mossberg said. Borchardt will be the director of the studies and will be assisted by Ken Auds, assistant professor of pharmaceutical chemistry.
The research will try to improve delivery of drugs through cell membranes, Audus said. Two main areas the research would concentrate on are drug flow from the blood to the brain and drug flow across the skin.
"The research involves setting up some culture-system models." Audus said "Some model bodies will work together to bring drug through the bloodstreams.
"Other models will characterize the skin and determine how we can better deliver drugs across the skin."
Mossberg said the goal of the program would be to develop a highly specific drug-drug delivery system that is delivered in a pimpant manner.
Upjohn announced the collaboration on May 27, said James Shamp, public relations associate for Upjohn.
"Dr. Borchardt is pre-eminent in the field," said Shamp, "and our scientists chose to work with the KU staff."
About 10 doctoral and postdoctoral students will be supported by the grant. Sharma is the number of Shamaira that could be conducted was open-ended.
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4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Wednesday, June 11. 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Grants are better earned
The University of Kansas gained one valuable research grant last week and lost another. The University was fortunate in both cases.
The other grant would have come to KU for the wrong reasons. Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole and a few other senators proposed in an amendment that $80.6 million for defense research be assigned to 11 universities, KU among them. The amendment would have bypassed the appropriate channel for awarding research grants.
KU gained its grant with Upjohn Co. of Kalamazoo, Mich., for the right reasons. The grant, worth several million dollars, will go to the pharmaceutical chemistry department. A spokesman for Upjohn said his company chose KU because of the quality of the pharmaceutical department and the reputation of its chairman, Ronald Borchardt, Summerfield distinguished professor.
KU won the Upjohn grant by developing a top-quality program staffed by top-quality people.
Backers of the amendment
said it was warranted because grants were awarded disproportionately to elite individuals with overblown reputations.
The amendment was killed by the Senate last week. We, as members of this University and as citizens of this nation, are better off without it.
And stopping arbitrary grants to universities may someday benefit KU.
Like most pork-barrel legislation, this amendment would have hurt the nation by sending money where it wouldn't have done the most good for all.
The amendment was pork-barrel politics, an attempt to grab some money for the home folks who could be expected to show their appreciation eventually in the voting booth.
Our University is building its reputation. The grant from Upjohn is evidence. Future Senate majority leaders may decide that KU's reputation is overblown and that KU is getting more money than it deserves.
Lawrence foreign policy
If so, such pork-barrel legislation will be less likely to pass because this one didn't.
Ernest Angino, Lawrence city commissioner, did the right thing last week in refusing to sign the commission resolution that would have promoted a U.S.-Soviet summit meeting in Lawrence.
It was OK for the city's government to offer Lawrence as the site for a possible meeting between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The city has already done that twice.
date to conduct city business, not a mandate to represent the citizens of Lawrence on foreign affairs.
The cacophony of special interests in Washington is too disruptive already. Lawrence doesn't need to add its voice.
But lobbying the federal government to hold a summit meeting should be beyond the scope of city government. When the commissioners were elected, they received a man-
The citizens of Lawrence are represented by their own votes in national elections, by Congress and by any special interest group they wish to join.
As Angino said, cities should not have foreign policies.
More important than anything else, they have the constitutional right to free speech and free assembly. That is enough.
Election name game
Name recognition is the hot, new concept in election politics.
Prospective candidates for Congress or statewide offices don't dare declare themselves candidates until a poll tells them how widely recognized their names are. Those who conduct political polls and those who report political polls continually try to gauge which candidates have the most recognition.
But more and more of us are declaring ourselves independent of either political party. Most of us still don't bother to learn as much as we should
The emphasis on name recognition has risen as the old emphasis on political parties has declined. Most U.S. citizens have never known enough about candidates to make intelligent choices. They used to compensate for their lack of knowledge by voting the party ticket.
about political candidates, so we vote for personalities.
In fact, political scientists say that most voters just pick the name that's most familiar to them. Hence the victories of LaRouche candidates in Illinois — perhaps because their names sounded more American than the names of the other candidates.
There are other effects of the phenomenon of name recognition: incumbents, who already have it, are more likely to win elections; and challengers, who usually don't have it, must spend a lot of money to get it.
Also, candidates and their campaign consultants are more likely to give us slick commercials that emphasize personal qualities and downplay issues and party ideologies.
Name recognition may be the hot item for political candidates, but voters should throw some cold water on it.
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GOD
MARK NEGRECHDOW
PAT ROBERSON
GOD
GOP
PAT ROBERSON
Stephan should account for the cash
We can almost see them sitting there in the inner sanctum of the attorney general's office, Bob Stephen and his closest political advisers, on that day when they decided to go for another four years in office.
"Won't we have a credibility problem?" says Stephan. "After all, it was just last fall when we promised to retire from public life if people would stop asking about the blackouts and get away with a 180-degree stin now."
"People have short memories," says adviser Huey.
"And since the Legislature has gone home, we won't have to worry about lying to any investigating committee or the election," says adver Dewey.
"We won't have a credibility problem," chimes in Louie. "The press will."
"Yeah," says Huey. "We won't run against Dennis Moore. We'll run against the press, go for the sympathy vote."
Thus we got statements like this from Stephan, the attorney general of Kansas, when reporters renewed a lawsuit against him for $24,000 in hush money came from:
"It isn't a problem with me, and that's all I'm concerned about."
You'll recall what the reporters were asking about: Stephan settled a politically embarrassing lawsuit last year by paying $24,000 to his former wife, the lawyer who accused sexual harassment. Two private lawyers — Vermiller Miller of Wichita, a
It was a black-bag job,... the kind of cash-stuffed into-envelopes affair that brought down ... the presidency of Richard Nixon.
former attorney general, and Bob Storey of Topeka, a former state senator — delivered the money in untraceable, unauditable cash.
lack McNeely
Although not illegal, the money-
running skirted normal procedures
for seating lawyers against public
litigation have been abolished
ladies and gentlemen, the kind of
Staff Columnist
cash-stuffed into-envelopes affair that brought down the administration of former Gov. Robert Docking, to mention the presidency of Richard
But from Stephan, the highest law enforcement officer in Kansas, running now for a third four-year term, we get an assertion that the only Kansas concerned about how he danced on the edge of legitality to run cash up the street is the Army trumpke. are "some editorial writers around the state and a few reporters."
If that's true, then a lot more people than we imagined are working as editorial writers and reporters in this state.
This isn't just bad government. It's bad politics.
By claiming to be a victim of the dirty-laundry boys, those hounds in the press corps, Stephan is ignoring the advice of Harry Truman. Don't they come out every day, and they come out every day, and you don't. That axiom of politics has been
expressed another way: Don't pick fights with people who buy their ink by the barrel.
Let's hope for a lot of ink on this topic before the election in November. Maybe a lot of ink can shed a little light.
And let's have an accounting — now — of where all that money came from. We should demand an accounting for the same reasons we make politicians disclose who finances their election campaigns.
And by an accounting, we don't mean simply a press release showing a list of names with dollar signs after them. We mean documents — photocopies of receipts for cash, bank records, telephone logs, whatever documentary evidence exists — that consist of thousands of dollars in cash actually came from the people Stephan identifies as the sources.
And let's have, at the least, an apology from Stephan, an admission that black job jobs are below the average. We expect from our elected officials.
Perhaps we can get all that. It beats lynching the reporters.
Media watchdog is blind to the right
It's one thing to make a prize jackass of yourself in the privacy of your own home, on the job or before a role, for example of us do it if a one time or another.
It's something else to do it in front of an audience of millions of strangers.
So I almost felt sorry for Reevd Irine when he recently showed up on network television and put his foot in his mouth all the way to the knee.
Irvine, a retired federal bureaucrat, runs something that calls itself Accuracy in Media
When Irvine's turn at the microphone came, he was almost
Members of the audience were invited to step up to a microphone and question the panel, which was comprised of people, people, and members of government.
As a professional media watchdog, he was in the studio audience when Ted Koppel and ABC put on a special show that highlighted television controversies involving television.
Mike Royko Chicago Tribune
quivering with indignation. He's the kind of guy who always seems to be indignant about something.
In this instance, he was upset with a Soviet journalist who was part of the panel.
Irvine shirly accused the Soviet journalist, who makes frequent TV appearances, of habitually telling lies. "Whoppers," he called them.
Irvine was approaching full bluster, which he does quickly. But Kopper interrupted him long enough to ask if he could describe the big lie, the great whip-
In fact, Irvine said, the Soviet journalist had told a big whopper only moments ago on that very show.
per, that the Soviet journalist had just told.
Irvine stood there at the microphone blinking. A sheepish look oozed across his face.
And he finally said: "Uh, it slips my mind."
Some advocate of accuracy.
But it wasn't really surprising. When it comes to accuracy, Irvine's Accuracy in Media doesn't have much of a track record.
The name itself is an example of mislabeling. What it should be called is something like Right-Wingers for More Right-Wing Opinions in Media.
That's really what it amounts to. For years, Irvine and his organization have been trying to persuade people that it exists simply to en-
hold the view of us, primarily the networks and major papers — to be free of political bias.
But just about everything it does makes clear that what it wants is more right-wing bias in news coverage.
I THINK WELL USE THIS PLACE ON
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to bear Irvine tell it, the nation's press is in the clutches of its lullers. It seems to have escaped his notice that the majority of the most widely syndicated columnists are conservatives and that the vast majority of U.S. newspapers habitually endorse Republican candidates for president.
What Irvine and Accuracy in Media see are Soviet clones behind the news desks.
He's even said there is considerable circumstantial evidence that the Russian secret service, the MI6, held a mole in the hierarchy of ABC news.
When ABC asked him to give them the evidence so they could find this Soviet agent, he declined.
Perhaps that, too, slipped his mind.
After watching Irwin on TV, he called the Accuracy in Media headquarters in Washington, D.C., hoping to ask Irwin whether he felt as goofy as his host. I also wondered whether he was amphibious on his head at parties.
He wasn't there, but one of his aides said she could speak for him.
So we asked her whether they had ever criticized a conservative newsman with the gusto that they have shown in going after people like David Brinkley. Or even without the gusto, Maybe just a mild rebuke?
She sniffed: "Are there any conser vatives on TV news?"
Any conservatives? What a question. How about George Willel? He's all over television. He's also the most influential political columnist in the United States, as well as a big buddy of President Reagan.
Yes, she said, Accuracy in Media had indeed criticized George Will. For what?
"His ties. Oh, (laughter) those ties he wears! He should buy some new ones."
That's pretty rough stuff, but George Will has a thick hide and can take it.
Anyway, we never did reach Irvine, but we'll be looking for him on TV.
Maybe "Saturday Night Live" will ask him to be a guest host. They can use the laughs.
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Congress
Continued from p. 1
Kline, who was the president of College Republicans in the spring semester of this year, is seeking his first political office. He is presently working with the Stinson, Mag and Fuzzell law firm in Kansas City, Mo.
Brad Smoot, chairman of the Douglas County Republican Committee, said his organization would stand behind the primary winner in his race against Slattery. The members of the committee could support either Eckert or Kline in the primary, but most of the central committee would support the Republican candidate in the general election in November.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
Bankers
Continued from p. 1
"Political fashions change the way clothing fashions do." Duke said. "Reagan is causing us to look less at Washington and more at state and local governments for our salvation."
The political process is characterized by change and inconsistencies, Duke said. When he went to Washington in 1857, he was told that Sen. John Kennedy didn't become president.
He was later told that neither Jimmy Carter nor Reagan stood a chance.
Butz said the American agriculture industry was not dead, despite recent troubles in the farm economy.
"There is still a rainbow in agriculture," Butz said. "And we've done agriculture a disservice by badmouthing the industry."
"Nearly one/half of American farmers don't have debts. Why don't we read about them in the paper?"
Butz said that agriculture was too important an industry to collapse and that the present economic problems weren't unique to farming.
Economic recovery is in the future for American farming, he said, and now is a good time to invest because prices are down.
“In the next third of a century, we're going to add two/thirds to the population and we're going to feed them some way,” he said.
The University of Kansas enrolled 190 more students for the 1966 summer session than it enrolled last year. The university, KU officials announced Friday.
Summer enrollment figures up in Lawrence and at Med Center
Total enrollment for the first day was 8,797, compared with last year's total of 8,607.
"There were no surprises in our first-day enrollment figures." Chancellor Gene A. Budg said last week that the "we anticipated a stable situation."
"Our continued strength in enrollment underscores student confidence in the University of Kansas and its
academic programs. We are encouraged."
The official summer enrollment figures will not be available until the last day of classes, July 25.
The 1985 official total was 9,269.745 at the Lawrence campus and 1,524 at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
First-day figures for the Lawrence campus this year are 7,273, compared with 7,103 in 1985. At the Med College, students enrolled are enrolled, an increase of 20
David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the enrollment figures reflected individual student needs.
"I think it reflects a combination of students trying to make up classes, finishes degrees and make up transfer courses," he said.
Ambler said it was difficult to predict summer enrollment. Fall enrollment figures rely more on population, but summer enrollment varies by variety of factors, such as transfer students and what classes are offered
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Arts/Entertainment
University Daily Kansan
100
Spencer galleries display art from across globe
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
By Karen Schmidt
Staff writer
Students unable to travel because of summer classes may want to sail or take the train to exotic lands via museum of art Travel-poster exhibit
"Going in Style: Travel Posters from the 1920s and 1930s," opens Sunday in the White Gallery of the museum and ends July 27.
Bold graphics and intense hues evolved from earlier, sophisticated artwork that beckoned travelers to the slopes of Lucerne, the temples of Siam and other exotic places, said Kelly Ebeling, Ada, Okla., graduate student and curatorial intern at the museum.
"The travel posters and their evolution reflect a transition period in tourism from the elite, wealthy to the working class World War I middle class," she said.
The posters, sponsored by railway companies, ship lines and travel agencies, evolved from early timetable maps and texts, which usually were not visually enticing, Ebeling said.
From the turn of the century to the 1920s, posters displayed highly detailed, realistic illustrations and often incorporated drab maps, which made them difficult to read from a distance. she said.
This changed in the late 1920s and early 1930s as tourism companies became more competitive and began to use illustrators than illustrators, for poster designs.
"Big, bold lettering developed to grab more attention," Eebeling said. The posters became more effective when she was able to motivate the viewer to travel."
One poster, which promoted Algerian tourism, used the image of a camel in the desert and the cactus in the desert. The Islamic, "to lure potential travelers."
"The posters serve as historical documents revealing society's changing concept of travel." Ebeling said, "The elite traveler during the 1920s had the Victorian view that travel was fashionable and enlightening. After World War I, the middle class, with restricted money and time, took less exotic, recreational holidays."
The travel companies stopped concentrating their artwork on the elite's jaws to Greece for enlightenment and turned to illustrations of tennis courts and ski resorts for the middle class, she said.
Tourism increased so much after World War I that travel companies began converting army trucks into traveling motor-coaches for tours.
One development that resulted from the change of traveler to middle class was the monumentalizing of images. These motifs, such as the camel for Algeria and the American Indian for the United States, served as symbols that would easily catch a viewer's eye, she said.
The acquisition of the posters remains a mystery, Eebing said. They have never been researched by the museum staff or displayed before.
A public reception for the exhibit will be Sunday in the museum central court. Delores Ringer, assistant professor of theatre and media arts, will give a lecture, "Costumes and Actors" for the Grand Tour "at 3 m."
Ebeling will conduct the White Gallery tour
NILE
CRUISES
ANGLO-AMERICAN NILE & TOURIST C.
CAIRO-
GENERAL AGENTS: AMERICAN EXPRESS-COY.
source: Spencer Museum of Art
An Egyptian sailor entices tourists to cruise the Nile in a poster on display at the Spencer Museum of Art until July 27. The poster is part of an exhibit called "Going in Style: Travel Posters from the 1920s and 1930s."
Fragile museum cover-ups brought out into the open
Staff writer
By Karen Schmidt
This month's exhibit at the Spencer Museum of Art is a cover-up in more ways than one.
Not only were the items in some way or another used initially as covers, they also rarely leave their coverings in museum storage.
"The Great Cover-Up," an exhibit of intricate textiles from the United States, India and China, will be on display at the museum until July 27.
The items on exhibit include 19th-century American quilts, wall hangings and coverlets, Indian veil cloths, 19th-century Navajo rugs and a warrior jacket which was probably used as a theatrical costume.
Janet Dreling, museum registrar and organizer of the exhibit, said many of the works had never been dislolued in the museum before.
"Because the textiles are relatively fragile and susceptible to light damage, even under the best circumstances they don't get out much," she said.
Driling said she was not a texile expert but wanted to get the pieces on display. The quilt exhibits the work of people use people could relate to them more.
"In general, people enjoy these exhibitions because often they have some textiles of their own that they want to display from their grandmother," she said.
a museum possesses 175 to 200 American quilts but because of space limitations, all could not be included in the museum's technically executed quilts were
those done by Rose Kretsinger of Emporia.
Dreiling said Kretsinger graduated from the Chicago Institute of Art with a design degree between 1905 and 1910 — a feat for a woman at that period. Education may have influenced her observations on quilt patterns and colors.
Some of the most exotic, as well as fragile, pieces on exhibit are from China and India.
A Chinese dragon robe from the late Tung-chi period (1862-1872) or early Kuang-hsi period (1875-1905) was probably used by a high-ranking judge. Dragons are intricately embroidered into the overall pattern which includes gold and silver thread.
Shawls and rugs from the Kashmir region of India dating around the 17th century sometimes use swirling paisley patterns. Signatures of the craftsmans are often found in the form that looks like work that look like random threads.
One of the most unique items of the exhibit is a quilt done in 1840-43.
"This quilt is not technically beautiful like Rose's are, but it's an incredible quilt," she said. "You're to going find many like it."
Wells' quiltwork includes three-dimensional "applied pieces" of Adam and Eve, an exotically humid flowers and fruit. Each piece therefore have to be stuffed which Dressel said was a lengthy process.
Among the quilts exhibited are examples of 20th century "Log Cabin" quilts. Crafted with a block pattern, these quilts characteristically have a red or yellow square center and light and dark halves.
Bells are ringing on Mount Oread
40-ton carillon chimes a light note
By Ann Henry Staff writer
When carillons were developed in Belgium in the late 15th century, their music was either simple notes or familiar melodies before the hourly bells of church and town hall towers.
Today, this same music not only reminds the University of Kansas and the Lawrence community of that bread with an entertainment aspect.
The summer recital series, which is sponsored by the KU department of music and dance, runs through Ju-Ju Harbor Beach during evening (all and spring semesters).
Albert Gerken, University carillonneur, and Mark Holmberg, assistant university carillonneur, offer free recitals on the Memorial Camellia's Memorial Carillon on Sundays at 3 p.m. and Wednesdays at 8 p.m.
It is hard to tell how many people actually come to the Campanile to listen to the recitals, he said. Most probably just happen on to them.
Gerken, who has been KU's carillonneur since 1963, said the carillonnec recitals were started by the famous carillonneur, Ronald Barres.
"Usually the attendance is slim." Gerken said. "It varies from week to week depending on the weather or if anything else is going on. I feel that many people probably just listen from where they live or work."
The first level of the Campanile, which is open to the public, features a table with two columns and carlson's 33 bells, the notes each bell plays and the names of the people
who donated money for the bells. The entire carillon cost about $80,000 when it was installed in 1951.
A piano also is in this room so the calliannuers are able to transcribe music to fit the carillon.
Gerken said transcribing was mainly an effort to write something that would sound good on the bells.
"Transcription is where you transcribe a piece for various modes of treatment," he said.
"Much of the music we use is writem especially for a carillon. But we also use many classical and folk rhymes, which are lyrics, that require transcription."
Gerken said he often spent as many as 20 hours a week in the carillon's practice room teaching students.
A locked door on the first level opens to the narrow, spiraling staircase which leads to the 40-ton instrument.
The instrument is situated between two windows which overlook Memorial Stadium. The bronze bells provide the carillon's ceiling
of a piano, there are wooden batons on the carillon. When these bars are pushed by a fist or a flattened palm, they are struck and moved, making the bell's actual sound.
"The largest bell weighs 7 tons," Gerken said, "while the smallest weights only 10 pounds."
Because most of the bells are large, playing the instrument takes great physical exertion. he said. The carillon has a keyboard like a piano.
"The bells with the lowest sounds are the heaviest," Gerken said, "and they offer the most resistance when depressed. The instrument's foot pedals, when depressed, are also used to swing the clappers. Usually the instrument is designed to pretty tired. The instrument does take quite a bit of physical effort."
When the instrument's bars and foot pedals are pushed, levers wired to the bell's clappers are triggered — causing them to strike the walls of
In addition to playing and teaching,
Gerken performs all the maintenance on the carillon, which he required more and more of his time.
"The good thing about this instrument is that after it leaves the factory it never has to be tuned," he said. "But, after 35 years of regular playing with no major overhaul ever having been done, the repairs and maintenance are becoming more and more time consuming.
the bells
"We're hoping to overhaul the instrument soon, but it will cost somewhere around $20,000, and it will increase diversity to come up with the money."
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
But instead of the small ivory keys
Above, above the Memorial Carillon room hang bells of all sizes. Various catwalks provide easy access for maintenance and tourists willing to make the climb. Right, Albert Gerken rehearsed Monday on a practice carillon for his next performance at 8 p.m. today. The practice carillon is in the campanile but can be heard only in its room.
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- Furniture
- Sporting Goods
- Electronics
(We also handle most FOREIGN AUTOMOBILES)
For Appointments Call: 841-0445 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
COMPUTERIZED
BUYING NETWORK, INC.
Serving Students & Faculty since 1954
Member of the Kansas Chamber of Commerce
---
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
7
Dean loses bid to lead group
by a Kansan reporter
The dean of social welfare lost her bid for the presidency of the National Association of Social Workers.
Patricia Ewalt, who has been dean of the school since 1983, was notified Thursday that she would not be the new president of the 100,000-member national lobbying organization.
"I am disappointed," Edith Black, associate dean of social
welfare. said.
welfare, said. Suzanne Peck, a social worker in private practice in California, was elected president of NASW.
"California has a very large chapter," Black said. "If people voted by geographical lines, the results go to that person's advantage."
Ewalt has been the organization's national secretary and has helped develop policy for the NASW who has been the NASW representative to the World
Health Organization of the United Nations and has been on the editorial board of NASW's publication "Social Work."
In Washington, NASW develops social policy and sets standards for social practice and reforms in social welfare, Ewalt said. The group is actively engaged in influencing legislative policy.
"Each state has its own chapter of the association," Ewalt said. "Most of the faculty in the department are members of NASW."
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Corner of 23rd & Iowa 841-0094
Register this Thursday night for sailing classes. Be a club member for a summer of fun & sailing!
See our boat display on campus Wednesday.
The KU Sail Club has the boats.
COME TO OUR MEETING THURSDAY-7p.m.
Jayhawk Room Kansas Union
LEARN TO SAIL!
Anniversary Sale!!
SPECTRUM
OPTICAL
841-1113
4E7th
COUPON MUST
BE PRESENTED
w/PURCHASE
Offer good thru
July 15
5th Anniversary Sale!!
20% OFF ALL Prescription Eyewear
20% OFF ALL SUNGLASSES
FRAMES & LENSES COMPLETE
as low as $39
FREE ADJUSTMENTS
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
841-1113
4E7th
Downtown Lawrence
COUPON MUST BE PRESENTED w/PURCHASE
Offer good thru July 15
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
KU
Sailing
Club
QUALITY AUDIO/VIDEO
YAMAHA
Receiver Sale
YAMAHA
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KIEF'S
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AUDIO—VIDEO shop
25th & IOWA LAWRENCE, KS. (913) 842-181
KIEF'S
GRAMOPHONE
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25th & IOWA LAWRENCE, KS. (913) 842-184
RODNEY
DANGERFIELD
BACK TO SCHOOL
A PAPER CLIP Production. An ALAN METTTER Film BUDYNE DANGEREED" "BACK TO SCHOOL."
APARTMENTS
RODNEY DANGERFELD "BACK TO SCHOOL"
SALLY KELLERMAN BURT YUNG KEITH GORDON BEAURAU ROBERT DOWNEY,JR. SAM KISON
and NED BATTY *Dean Martin* by DANNY ELLENMAN Executive Producer ESTELLE ENDLER MICHAEL ENDLER HAROLD RAMIS
Produced by CHUCK RUSSELL Scrambled by STEVEN KAMPANM & WILL PORTER and PETER TOROKEI & HAROLD RAMIS
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PG-13 PARENTS STRONGLY CAUTIONED
Cake by Dylan
STOCKHOLDER ALLOWANCE AVAILABLE ON MCA RECORDS AND CARACTERS
Registration starts Friday, June 13, at theatres everywhere.
8
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
Campus/Area
TV30 goes off the air to improve its format
By Dana Spoor
Staff writer
Broadcast students at the University of Kansas who hope to see some of their work get on the air may be in need of a special time to turn on the television.
TV 30, 3211 Clinton Parkway Court,
went off the air May 30 for program
and format changes.
Max Utsler, chairman of the radiovite sequence in the School of Journalism, said the school was now looking for opportunities for airing the students' work.
Internships are still open to students, but he said they were not the best way for students to get training.
"Students don't really come alive until they do it for real." Utsler said. "The problem with internships is the company won't get your hands on the equipment."
Internships may be the only way students will get real training, however, because nobody is quite sure how to do it and resume service responses, he said.
"They hold all the cards," he said of Low Power Technology Inc. — TV 30's owner.
Usler said he was looking at other stations in the area that would allow students to work on assignments and air their work.
Tienne Halbert, promotional sales manager at TV 30 and a 1986 KU graduate in broadcast journalism, will be asked when she would be working again.
"I am relaxing and just waiting to see what is going to happen," she said.
The company compensated the employees, but Halbert said she was not allowed to give any details.
Utsler said he was not worried because many of the broadcast students wouldn't go into the news side of the business. Instead, many will go into the corporate side, which includes making video tapes that companies use to train employees or promotional work for campaigns.
"News is probably not the place where most of our students will end up," Utsler said.
60¢
a game weekdays
until 6:00 p.m.
JAYBOWL
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60¢
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until 6:00 p.m.
level one
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HOURS
Monday 12 to 6
Tuesday-Friday 10 to 6
Saturday 10 to 4
Closed Sunday
HONDA
1540 E. 33 STREET
LAWRENCE, KANBAIS 08044 843-3333
WE KNOW WHY YOU RIDE
R.
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*** Fuel injected cars slightly higher
---
Get your car in shape for summer. Our special deals make it the perfect time to bring your car in for the tune up it deserves.
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Includes all Japanese Imports
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7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Monday-Friday
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1116 W. 23rd
842-2191
V54
---
$15.00 *
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841-3268
WE KNOW WHY YOU RIDE
FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY June 13, June 14, June 15
BUY ONE BIG DELUXE BURGER GET A SECOND ONE FREE!
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*pre-cooked weight
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
9
Candidates at Girls' State hold rally before election
By a Kansan reporter
A campaign rally for all positions in government, from governor to county commissioner, was held last night in Tempel Hill by participants in the 44th annual Legion Sunflower Girl's State.
After elections today, each winner will perform the duties of her office for the remainder of the week.
The 511 participants in Girls' State will be seniors in high school next year. They have been divided into two political organizations the Republicans and the Nationalists that represent eight "counties."
The camp teaches state government through participation, said Dorothy Malone, the official hostess for the camp. This is important because the camp environment is not emphasized in schools. Leois Iceogle, director of elections, said, "Girls who have gone to the camp can almost teach the American Government course they are forced to take in their senior year."
Ienogle, who has been in the program for more than 18 years, said that in earlier years there were no women interested in government.
"I hope to see one of the girls become governor." Icenogle said.
Jodi Breckenridge, last year's governor, said her complaint was that only 511 girls could attend. But she said the American Legion was talking about wearing
"Hopefully we'll be as big as Boys' State some day."
The girls who became members of the camp were selected by an American Legion staff. They either wrote essays or letters, were interviewed or were recompiled by a teacher or guidance counselor.
--the men's shop • 629 massachusetts • lowrance, lonson 60440 • 843-5755
ULTIMATE
Hair & Skin Care Centre
$30.00 PERMS
Includes Cut—thru June Please mention coupon when making appointment.
"We Don't Style Hair We Design Hair"
--the men's shop • 629 massachusetts • lowrance, lonson 60440 • 843-5755
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1008 E 12TH
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Headmasters.
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COPYING
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PIZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W.23rd
HOUSE OF USHER
838 MASSACHUSETTS TELEPHONE 842-3610
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE
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Quantity Discounts up to 40%
24 x 36 copies, as low as... $1.50
PIZZA SHUTTLE
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Use these Coupons or ask for our TWO-FER Special
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842-1212
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NO COUPONS ON TWO-FERS
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842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
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PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
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--the men's shop • 629 massachusetts • lowrance, lonson 60440 • 843-5755
--the men's shop • 629 massachusetts • lowrance, lonson 60440 • 843-5755
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Any Double Pizza
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
PIZZA SHUTTLE
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TELL THE TOWN-CALL THE KANSAN 864-4358
WHITENIGHTS
A clothing store exclusively for men. We're sure you'll agree that our summer stock is terrific. Cool, comfortable cottons...richly textured silks...blends of linens. Tailored clothing and great looking sportswear to freshen your summer.
Stop in...
4
Fathers' Day • June 15
WHITENIGHTS
---
[Image of a person with short blonde hair, wearing large black sunglasses and a wide-brimmed black bracelet. The hand is raised to their forehead, palm facing upward.]
2 for 1 SALE
Buy one pair of eyeglasses, and get a spare pair free!
Choose two pair of frames from our vast selection and have your prescription filled in the type lenses you prefer. You only pay the full price for the most expensive pair. This ad also offers a second, more affordable other optical promotion. Some restrictions apply to designer eyewear. SALE ENDS. June 23.
HUTTON 842-5208 OPENAL CO. 742 Mass.
Mon-Fri. 10-6
Sat. 10-2
THE Palace
Cards & Gifts
"Not the usual hogwash"
in FATHER'S DAY
cards and gifts!
Mon-Sat 9:30 to 5:30 · Thursday until 8:30
843-1099 · in Downtown · 8th and Mass
J. C. W. P. Y.
THE BEST THINGS IN LIFE ARE FREE.
Staplers, paper cutters, hole punches, tape, white-out, glue sticks, paper clips and a large well organized workspace are yours for the asking. And copies are a steal, too.
kinko's
Open early. Open late. Open weekends.
904 VERMONT
843-8019
12th & INDIANA 23rd & IOWA
841-6177 749-5392
SUA FILMS
All films at 7:00 p.m. in Woodruff $1.50
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner
CANADA'S FIRST WORLD CHAMPION OF HISTORY
TONIGHT! Woodruff Aud., 7:00 p.m.
FILM AWARDS
Woodstock
FRIDAY, JUNE 13th
The Odd Couple
Jack Lennon Walter Matthews
Paul Smiths Odi Couple
MONDAY, JUNE 16th
10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
Citizens seek a vote on city firearm law
Campus/Area
By Rachelle Worral Staff writer
Lawrence citizens petitioning to eliminate an ordinance regulating the sale of handguns may be taking a shot in the dark.
John Barrett, petition organizer,
said Sunday that he hoped the petition
would be completed by early July.
At last count, he had half of the
approximately 2,400 petition signatures
before bringing the ordinance to a public vote.
"The longer we wait, I think, the more people seem to forget about it," he said. "But if it comes up for elec- tion, it's better that it won't make any difference."
The ordinance, which was passed by the Lawrence City Commission in late March, requires firearms dealers to forward an information card about the handgun purchaser to the Lawrence Chief of Police. The officer who requires the purchaser to wait 24 hours before receiving the handgun.
Barrett and other anti-gun control supporters might not be able to change the ordinance once the petition is presented to the commission because it might be an addendum to the ordinance, said Vera Mercer, city clerk.
By Kansas law, an administrative ordinance can be changed by a special election even after an adenalelection been presented to the City Commission.
The city is unsure if the handgun ordinance is an administrative ordinance, Mercer said. Administrative ordinances are hard to define, so the city attorney will work with the city to determine the ordinance is an administrative one.
The city attorney will settle the question after the petition is presented to the commission.
"It seems to me a little ironic that we had that shooting incident in Centenium Park," Barrett said. "The officer was charged with diminished dunce was supposed to prevent."
But David Longhust, city commissioner, said, "I think the shooting incident in Centennial Park, if held, would handle handguns warrant control."
Russell Gensler, 1408 W. Third St., was killed in Centennial Park on May 31. He was shot at close range with a small caliber pistol.
Although it is difficult to measure the effectiveness of the handgun ordinance, Longhurst said, he is pleased with it.
"It's on the books and I'm glad it's there," he said.
Longhurst said it was difficult to determine the effect of the ordinance on Lawrence gun dealers. One dealer told him that the ordinance had affected sales overwhelmingly, but had been affected little or not at all.
The Lawrence Pawn and Shooters Supply, 718 New Hampshire St., would not comment, and the owner of the Gun Runner, 3038 Tomahawk Drive, could not be reached for comment. JPL Gun Shop has moved from Lawrence since the ordinance was passed.
Longhurst said he assumed that no convicted felon had purchased a handgun, or that anyone had purchased a handgun from a dealer for an emotional reason since the ordinance had been passed.
Barrrett said he objected to the ordinance partially because Lawrence had not had many handgun incidents. He admitted to turning names over to the police.
"I object a lot more strongly to that the 72-hour waiting period," he said. "Part of it is the philosophical question involved. In America, you're supposed to be presumed innocent until proven guilty."
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843-PLUG *B04 N.H.
Lawrence, Kansas
1 Block N. of Union Delivery Daily
624 W. 12th 11-2
Open 10-10 Mon.-Sat. 5-10
841-3268
yello sub
Expanded Menu
Coming Soon!
the biggest & best sandwich in town
Vegetarian
Meatball
Italian
Ham & Cheese
Californian
Yello Sub
Turkey
Reuben
Turkey Club
Creamy Club
Hoagie
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Tuna
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Mega Roast Beef
4 Cheese Melt
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BQB Combo
All subs are built on foot long, whole wheat buns that are baked from scratch everyday. All subs are made to order and oven-toasted, not microwaved.
50¢ OFF Any 6" or 12" Sub
yello
valid through
6/15/86
841-3268
sub
1 coupon/person
1 sub/coupon
624 W. 12th
BEFORE YOU BUY.
--your warm weather friend!
--your warm weather friend!
DATE: SUMMER
TIME: 8:00pm
** THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS **
*STUDENT SCHEDULE FOR SUMMER 1986*
456789 Partysuy, Crazy, A.
DATE DEPT. CRS
TUES FUN 333
WED PARTY 444
THURS ZANY 555
FRI NUTTY 666
SAT LUCKY 777
920 Massachusetts
Lawrence, KS
842-2700
TITLE
COMEDY SHOP
PREMIUM NIGHT
DAQUIRI NIGHT
TGIF
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HRS TIME
2.0 10:00pm
7.0 8pm-3am
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Hours:
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Thur 9:30:80
Sun.12-5
Y=ar Round
Mary
Father's Day. A tradition at Mister Guy...for the discriminating children of great dads... Exclusively from Mister Guy of Lawrence... for men and women...
MINSKY'S PIZZA...
BEER SPECIALS
32 oz. BEER...$1.00 MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY
$1.00 Pitcher Refills TUESDAY AND THURSDAY
Dine-in or carry out our original pizza
$3.00
OFF
Large 2 topping
pizza
THE ORIGINAL
Minsky's
PIZZA
842-0154
expires 6/25/86
$2.00
OFF
Medium 2 topping
pizza
THE ORIGINAL
Minsky's
PIZZA
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expires 6/25/86
$1.00
OFF
Small 2 topping
pizza
THE ORIGINAL
Minsky's
PIZZA
842-0154
expires 6/25/86
2228 IOWA
Minsky's
PIZZA
1
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
11
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
Crew works at removal of asbestos
By Kristi Schroeder
Staff writer
While a Wichita company faces a $500 fine for the improper removal of asbestos at the University of Kansas, workers continue to rid the Lawrence campus of the hazardous material, facilities operations said Monday.
"IAs people in the University community discover and bring to our attention problems, we initiate paperwork to inspect it." Tom Anderson.
"We take care of it," he said. "We seal it, cover it, remove it and replace the insulation materials with other materials."
Apostesbis is a fire-proofing material which is thought to cause cancer, chronic lung inflammation or other infections. Fibers are lodged in the lungs.
Some asbestos removal is being done on the Lawrence campus now, Adderson said. Those removals are being done by a specially trained University abatement crew - not through contract labor. The workers are by the university's small scale and are needed on a daily basis.
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, the basic guidelines used for the removal are giving the workers protective suits and air masks to wear during removal, wetting the material before filtration, preventing the release fibers into the air and isolating the work area.
on May 19, B&T Removal of Wichita was fined by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment for violating its removal regulations. The company was fired for incompletely containing asbestos on its building. The company also destroyed the asbestos, said Bail Moody, a spokesman for KDHE.
Anderson declined comment on the BAT fine and said the University was longer involved in the case.
Anderson said the only increase in asbestos removal in the summer would be in an area that is highly used by students.
The safe removal of asbestos from the University is aided by more sophisticated techniques and education of workers, Anderson said.
"We're learning more everyday," he said. "We're better equipped now than we were three months ago, and three months ago we were better equipped than three months before that."
Including:
HAIR AFFAIR LAWRENCE'S OWN FULL SERVICE SALON 20% OFF ON ALL SERVICES
- perms
- haircuts
- nails
Old Town Square 9th & Illinois
843-3034
SAVE
YOUR MONEY,
CLIP A COUPON!
SUMMER
SALE
25%
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SPORTSWEAR
- Country Suburban
- Jantzen
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- Panther
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DRESSES
- Brenner
Brenner Jellis Melissa Lane
SWIMWEAR NIGHTWEAR
Open M-F 9:30:5:30
Thurs. 9:30:8:30
Sun. 12:30:5:00
Jay SHOPPE 835 MASS.
RECREATION SERVICES SUMMER INTRAMURAL PROGRAM 1986
SOFTBALL LEAGUES
LEAGUES Slow-Pitch Mens' and Womens' Co-Rec
SOMBIA LAGUES
Plav begins Mon, June 16th
MANAGERS' MEETING
Tony Gowan Fast Pitch
MANAGERS' MEETING
Wed. June 11, 202 Robinson, 6 p.m.
Wed. June 11, 202 Robinson, 6 p.m.
Wed. June 11, 202 Robinson, 7 p.m.
SUMMER SOFTBALL OFFICIALS MEETING
Thursday, June 12, 202 Robinson, 6 p.m.
FREE SUMMER AEROBICS CLASS
Wed. June 11
North Gym, Robinson, 5:30 p.m.
Fee $10.00 for classes beginning Mon. June 16-July 23 MW 5:30-6:30
SUMMER TENNIS TOURNEY
FREE SUMMER
AQUA-AEROBICS CLASS
Thurs. June 12
Singles-Sun. June 29, 1:00 p.m.
Entry Deadline: June 26
Doubles/Mixed-
Sun. June 13, 1:00 p.m.
Entry Deadline: July 10
Robinson Pools, 5:30 p.m.
Classes held:
Tues/Thurs 5:30-6:15 p.m.
Tues/Thurs 6:15-7:00 p.m.
Fee $10.00 for classes, June 17-July 24
SUMMER
RACQUETBALL TOURNEY
Singles-Sun. June 22, 2:30 p.m.
Entry Deadline:
Thurs. June 19, 5 p.m.
3-on-3 Basketball and Sand Volleyball June 17-July 1 Sign-up at 208 Robinson until Thurs. June 12, 5:00 p.m. Call 864-3546 for more information.
ALL SUMMER INTRAMURAL PROGRAMS ARE FREE (EXCEPT FOR AEROBICS/AQUA-AEROBICS)
INDIVIDUALS MUST HAVE VALID KU ID'S TO PARTICIPATE
OUSES OF FACULTY-STAFF-STUDENTS MAY PARTICIPATE ON SPOUSE CO-REC TEAMS
SUNRISE FITNESS Monday-Friday
6:15 a.m.-8:00 a.m.
6:30 a.m.-8:00 p.m.
Swimming Weight-Lifting
ams program is free and open to the entire Lawrence Community. There will be no Aerobic Dance or jogging during summer; these programs will begin in the Fall.
ROBINSON CENTER
HOURS:
June 2-July 25
Facility:
Mon-Fri.
Sat & Sun
Swimming:
Weight Room.
Sat & Sun.
Mon-Fri. Fac-Staff Swim
Mon-Fri. Sunrise
Mon-Fri. Rec Swim
Sat & Sun. Rec Swim
Mon-Fri. Sunrise Fitness
Mon-Fri. Rec
Sat & Sun. Rec.
6:00 a.m.-8:30 p.m.
2:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m.
11:30-12:50
6:15-8:00 a.m.
5:00-8:00 p.m.
2:30-8:00 p.m.
6:30-8:00 p.m.
5:00-8:30 p.m.
2:00-8:30 p.m.
Facilities/Programs closed July 4 VALID KU ID'S NEEDED FOR ENTRANCE INTO ROBINSON EXCEPT FOR SUNRISE FITNESS
The Mad Hatter and Bullwinkles are open for the Summer and ready to PARTY ! New Low Prices... All Summer Long
The Mad Hatter features
• Thursdays-50¢ draws
50¢ shots and well shots
• Friday and Sat.-$1.50 well drinks
OPEN 8 til?
OPEN 8 til Midnight
BULLWINKLES features Monday thru Wed.- $2.00 pitchers
The Mad Hatter
700 New Hampshire
842-9402
Bullwinkles
1344 Tennessee
843-9726
The Only Apartments On The Hill
1603 W. 15th
Right On Campus!
·Furnished or Unfurnished Rooms
·Individual Leases
·FREE Cablevision
·All Utilities Paid
·On Bus Route
·As little as $119 a month
·Covered Parking
Jayhawker Towers 843-4993
12
University Daily Kansan
Wednesdav. June 11. 1986
Tardy sewage project irks city commission
By a Kansan reporter
Frustrations mounted at last night's Lawrence City Commission meeting over delays in the laying of 24th Street and 29th streets in West Lawrence.
The Wilson Construction Co. was chosen by the commission last November to complete the Lawrence催收人 Project within 100 work days
By yesterday, 67 percent of the work days had been used, yet only 40 percent of the work was completed. Williams, director of public works.
Jeff Wilson, president of Wilson Construction, said at the meeting that the project was at least two months behind schedule. It was the new projected finishing date.
Campus/Area
"If October 1 is your guess, you've got problems — big problems." Ernest Angio, city commissioner, said. "I think you're dreaming if you think you're going to get done by October 1."
The project bid was $653,138, but the company could be fined $175 a day — to come from the bid — for not meeting the 100-day limit. said Williams.
TAN FAST
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memberships
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New customers only
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TAN FAST
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any package of visits
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memberships
COMPLIMENTARY
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HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
New customers only
*$2 per tanning session
25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA * 841-6232
FAST EDDIE'S VIDEO
Summer Special
$1.99
MC
(except on 99c T)
located in the Old Town Square
843-6403
SAVE
Appearing Fri & Sat
Screamn Lee
and the Rocktones Don't miss Lawrence's favorite club act.
Live music every weekend
254 Draws Every Thursday $2 Cover * Take advantage before the law changes.
Cogburns 737 New Hampshire
THANKS, DAD!
Fathers are the unsung heroes of the world. Even when they do everything they're expected to do, hardly anyone notices. Not even you, most of the time. Well, that's what Father's Day is for—to Notice. "Thanks Dad."
P.K. POPPER 6 E.9th
6.90
Say "HAPPY FATHER'S DAY!" on a bag of P.K. POPPER popcorn.
Just $3.00 gives dad a 2% it.
Father's Day card filled with popcorn!
PIER 1
738 Mass.
Hammocks
Large $89.99 on sale $79.88
Small $79.99 on sale $69.88
Quantities Limited
Jayhawk Bookstore at the top of Naismith hill Your source for quality KU clothing and giftware.
Ben Franklin 805 Mass.
Sunflower Surplus
804 Mass. St.
Woolrich
Six Pocket
Shorts $15.00
Jayhawk Bookstore at the top of Naiismith hill Remember Father's Day with a Father's Day card and Bill Cosby's besteller, "Fatherhood"
805 Mass.
Chaise lounge, tube-wrapped steel frame, multi-positions,
$7.97.
Matching vinyl chair in summer colors, $6.47.
Arbuthnot's Hallmark Card and Gift Shop 23rd and Iowa 841-2160 Remember Dad on Father's Day with a card and gifts from Arbuthnot's.
University Daily Kansan
119 Flint Hall, KU
Have the Kansan delivered
to your Dad...
Annual subscription ...$35.00
Six-month subscription ...$18.00
Baskin-Robbins 935 Iowa & 1524 W. 23rd
FRAMEWOODS
935 Iowa & 1524 W. 23rd
Treat your Dad (or yourself) to the cool taste of Baskin-Robbins Ice Cream, now open at both locations until 10:30 p.m.
The Athlete's Foot
942 Mass. 841-6966
Give Dad something special from any of our extensive lines of sportswear!
in the Holiday Plaza at 25th and Iowa Your dad deserves the best, so get him a poster of the best: The 1985-86 FINAL FOUR poster commemorating the Kansas Jayhawk's bid for the top.
KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE SHOP
25th and Iowa
Just for Dad. 15% off all C.D.'s.
Choose from the largest selection of classical, rock, and instrumental discs in the area. Buy your purchase
FATHER'S DAY JUNE 15
BEAT YOUR BURGER
湖北
LET THE HOUSE OF HUPEI BEAT YOUR BURGER ROUTINE.
House of HUPEI
2907 W. 6th
843-8070
COME, TASTE THE ORIENT. We Offer KU a Refreshing Lunch and Dinner Alternative. Choose From Over 25 Meals.
湖北
Bring in this coupon and receive a FREE SOFT DRINK with your House of Hupei dinner 843-8070 Expires 7-11-86
SANCTUARY ONLY SPECIALS
"Clip this ad and put it where you're sure to see it!" -A.J.
SANCTUARY DAILY SPECIALS
SUNDAY:
MONDAY:
SUPER SCHOONERS $1.75 all day & all night
JOIN US FOR PRIME RIB SANDWICHES
ON THE PATIO
(lunch specials everyday)
TUESDAY: 10¢ DRAWS
$2.00 cover
WEDNESDAY: BAR DRINKS $1.00 no cover
THURSDAY: 50¢ PITCHERS
$1.00 cover
PRIME RIB SPECIAL $6.95 (10 oz. prime rib, potato & roll)
FRIDAY:
ALL YOU CAN EAT TACO BAR! $1.50
hard & soft shell tacos & taco salad
Best in town, 'cause you make it yourself!
4:30-6:30 p.m.
SATURDAY: GETT-A-CRAZEE KAMAKAZI $1.00
the
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CLIP & SAVE
1
1
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
13
K.C. wins in rain
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo — George Brett went 5-for-5 and Orge Jorta got four hits and drove in three runs, sparking an 18-hit attack last night that led the Kansas City Royals over Seattle Mariners 8-1 at Royals Stadium.
Brett, who had a double and four singles, had his fifth career five-hit game. He scored three runs and two doubles. Orta hit two doubles and two singles.
The win broke Seattle's seven-
game winning streak at Royals
Stadium dating back to Sept. 9, 1984.
The start of Tuesday night's game
was delayed one hour and 57 minutes
because of rain.
Kansas City reiliever Steve Farr, 42, inherited a bases-loaded situation with two outs in the fifth from rooker starter Scott Bankhead. Farr ended the inning by striking out Dane Tartabul.
Brett and Orta sandwiched doubles
around Frank White's RBI single in the sixth, increasing the Royals' lead to 9-5.
The Mariners got two runs off of rookie starter Scott Bankhead in the first. Harold Reynolds was hit by a pitch and John Moses singled him to second. The Mariners then executed a double steal. Alvin Davis drove in a run with a groundout and Jim Presley followed with an RB single.
Lonnie Smith singled in the Royals' first, stole second and scored on Brett's single. The Royals tied it 2-4 in the first round, doubled Steve Bajala's RBI single and Steve Bajala's RBI single.
Smith singled leading off the bottom of the third, stole second and scored on Rudy Law's single. Wilcox restarted starter Bill Swift and gave up a single to Brett and an RB1 single. A second flight to Fly gave the Royals a 5-4 lead.
Brett's leadoff single in the fifth was followed by an RBI double by Orta, who scored the Royals' seventh run on Jum Sundberg's single.
Royals Report
Compiled by Dawn O'Malley Sports Editor
On Deck
Today
Tomorrow
Royals vs. Seattle
Royals vs. Seattle
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Royals vs. California
9:35 p.m. at Anaheim Stadium
Shauna Norfeet/KANSAN
Royals vs. California
9:35 p.m. at Anaheim Stadium
Saturday
Royals vs. California
7:05 p.m. at Anaheim Stadium
Monday
Royals vs. California
Monday
Boyals vs. Oakland
Royals vs. California 1:35 p.m. at Anaheim Stadium
Tuesday
9:35 p.m. at Oakland Coliseum
Royals vs. Oakland
7:35 p.m. at Oakland Coliseum
Standings American League
East Division
W L Pct. GB
Boston 38 19 .667
Baltimore 33 22 .600 4
New York 34 23 .596 4
Milwaukee 30 26 .536 $7_{1/2}$
Cleveland 28 28 .500 $9_{1/2}$
Toronto 28 30 .483 $10_{1/2}$
Detroit 25 29 .493 $11_{1/2}$
score. Henderson was charged with a four-base error in the third inning of Monday night's game. Seattle won the game 5-3.
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Texas 32 25 461.
Kansas City 29 28 509 3
California 28 29 491 4
Chicago 24 32 429 7½
Oakland 34 32 424 8
Minnesota 23 35 397 9
Seattle 23 38 356 12
Includes games through last night
American League
American Delray
New York 6, Oakland
7 Boston 4, Oakland
8 Boston 4, Toronto 3
Texas 14, Minnesota 10
Milwaukee 6, Baltimore 3
Kansas City 9, Seattle 5
Last night's results
Kansas City's Rudy Law slides safely into home as Seattle catcher Bob Kearney can only wait for a throw. Law had hit a routine hit that Seattle right fielder Dave Henderson dropped, letting Law come all the way around to
National League
New York 8, Philadelphia 4
Pittsburgh 6, Chicago 4
Montreal 4, St. Louis 2
Houston 12, San Diego 1
Los Angeles 1, Cincinnati 0
San Francisco 3, Atlanta 0
Royals 7
By Kristi Schroeder
Kansas head men's track coach Bob Timmons said his team's showing at the National College Athletic Association Outdoor Track and Field championships June 2-7 at the Utah State was a learning experience.
Timmons said Monday that the team could only learn from their disappointing performances and look
Men Track
to an even better season next year.
"J don't think it a complete loss."
Timmons said. "It will help us build for next year."
Pole vaulters Scott Huffman and Chris Bobanan and long jumpers Ray Mitchell and Sharrier Hazim failed to qualify on Friday's finals in their events. Javelin thrower Ron Bahm placed seven with a throw of 228 feet 1/2 inches the finals, but his throw fell below his personal best of 240 feet.
Timmons said that although Bahm did not throw particularly well, he did make the All-America team. In order to make the All-America team, an athlete must finish in the top eight.
Timmons said his athletes just weren't up enough for the meet.
Pressure beats track star
"They seemed to be kind of down"
he said. "They were flat. This is the
Last weekend's National College Athletic Association track and field championships in Indianaaploia marked the finale of the tournament season. It also was the end of Katherine Ormsby's track career.
Ormsey, a North Carolina State junior from Rockingham, N.C., quit in the middle of the 10,000-meter race she was running at the NCAA meet. She ran about one block to the New York bridge and jumped onto the flood plane of the White River. Ormsey was left with wounds that remained in the surgical intensive-care unit at Wishard Memorial Hospital in Indianapolis.
Police have listed the incident as an attempted suicide, but others are trying to rationalize the accident themselves.
"It is very unfortunate that it had to happen," the Carla Coffey, Kansas women, said on Monday. "But I don't think it is related to just track and
field. Each person has a way of coping with stress. But to the point of attempting to commit suicide, I have never had an athlete do it.
Coffey said she kept an open- door policy for her athletes. She wants them to come to her to talk.
"We always sit down and are always reminding them, academics are first, track and field is second." Coffey said. "Having a happy balance is very important. I think this is an incident that just happened. They (athletes) put more pressure on themselves because they want to succeed."
Kansas distance runner Melissa Satterfield said she had felt depressed after a poor performance.
"I've felt that way, you want to crawl into a hole," she said. "I think I put pressure on myself to run well. I do what I think I can do. I have certain goals. You always want to beat someone. If I do badly, I think I do better the next meet."
toughest outdoor meet of the season, and you have to be up."
Although it shouldn't have man,
that he peaked at the Big Eight, Huff-
man said, it was hard for him to
be able to see new weeks later and
to peak again.
“It's a real long season,” Huffman said. “And we had to get so pumped up for the Big Eight.”
For Huffman the biggest disappointment was that the height of the winning vault is 18 feet3/4 inch, his jump was at the Big Eight was higher.
The women's team was represented by Denise Buchanan. She placed ninth in the shot-put with a distance of 51 feet.
"I was pretty calm the first day," Buchanan said. "I was lucky to be there. I was going to go out and see. I didn't put a lot of pressure on it."
Buchanan had been picked to finish 12th, but finished better than expected. She was disappointed that she didn't make the All-America team.
"That's the one thing I wanted to do this season," she said.
"I would like to think people that did get the top eight are very good at what they do. I would really like to get up there with them. It is just a matter of who can throw the best at the right time."
OUT OF PRINT.
For those hard-to find publications such as out-of-paper books, legal anthologies and scholarly) journal reprints. Kinkos's Copyright Permissions and Reprints Service will help you to get in touch with the specific educational information you need.
kinko's
904 VERMONT 843-8019 12th & INDIANA 841-6177
ENTIRE STOCK
Computerark
SERVICE • KNOWLEDGE • EDUCATION
20-60% OFF!
2 DAYS ONLY
June 13 f. 14 10:5:30
Memory Upgrades
15% off with KU student ID
memory upgrades
on most P.C. compatibles
Call for an appointment
Computerark
Corner of 23rd & Iowa 841-0094
EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE WILL BE ON SALE.
Collections
Gift Store
No credit cards. Does not pertain to holds, special orders, or layaways.
843-7333
Pools, Tennis and Basketball Courts
2500 W. 6th
723 Mass. St.
- Studios
SUMMER LEASES AVAILABLE
- Apartments
TRAILRIDGE
Nabil's Restaurant
intimate dining and fine continental cuisine
with
a 10% discount on Sunday nights with a KUID
9th & Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping
Center
Nabil's
Open 11 a.m. 2 p.m.
5 p.m. 10 p.m.
Students & Faculty make the difference
For parties of 5 or more, please call for reservations 841-7226
- Townhouses
Fuji.
June is FUJI month at RICK'S!
WOW What a deal. Buy any FUJI during June and receive $50 off your order.
air pump
water bottles & case
water bottles
RICK'S BIKE SHOP is the area's largest FUJI dealer, specializing in full service and professional advice. We stock over 500 bicycles for all levels of involvement in our sport, from entry level to pro equipment. It's worth the drive!
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 841-6642
903 N. 2nd 7 to 6 M-F 8 to 4 Sat. 842-2922 "Our Business is Batteries"
LAWRENCE BATTERYCo.
MARINE &RV
70 AH 400 CCA...35.48
85 AH 525 CCA...40.67
RV and Trolling
BOAT STARTING
80 AH. 43.27
105 AH. 51.05
AUTOMOTIVE SALE
Batteries
4 YR. 440 AMP ... 35.95
3 YR. 400 AMP... 31.95
5 YR. 525 AMP...39.95
5 YR. SUPER 650 AMP . . . 49.95
W/X TO Fit Most Cars and Lt. Trucks
Ten Minute Free Installation - Free System Check
MOTORCYCLE BATTERIES
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* RUGGED CONSTRUCTION
* SIZES TO FIT MOST POPULAR ALL TERRAIN VEHICLES
MOTORCYCLE
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SAVE UP TO $10
1
14
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
KU crew races into spotlight
By a Kansan sports writer
*people living east of the mississippi River might envision Kansas as a land of scorching sun and dry wheat in the Mississippi River, or boat in unison on the Kansas River.*
The Kansas men's crew team dispelled those impressions with their performance at the intercollegiate lacrosse game in Jalapa, June 7-8 at Syracuse, New York.
"We got a few remarks and weird looks," Mark Staudacher, Topeka sophomore, said. "But after our first meeting, people started turning their heads."
This was the Jayhawks' first appearance at the regatta since 1981. Kansas entered two freshman-four boats — one of the boats was borrowed from the Kansas Basket team to use. Kansas only owns one four — man boat.
Crew
'We got a few remarks and weird looks. But after our first boat got into the finals people started turning their heads.'
Mark Staudacher,
Topeka sophomore
prised we made it to the finals. We had to beat some good crews to make it."
"We had been there one time before," Cliff Elliott, head Kansas coach, said Monday. "There were a lot of surprised looks." (competing crews) "know what to expect. Quite a few crews were sur-
The Kansas A boat finished sixth in the finals of the freshman-four with a time of 7 minutes 15 seconds.
"By the last day they were realizing we do have a good crew," Staudacher said.
Staudacher said that the Navy crew coach said that the Jayhawks came all the way from Kansas and were doing fairly well.
In the preliminary heats, both Kansas teams lost their heats. In the second chance race, the Kansas B team gave Princeton a close 2,000-meter race. Princeton pulled away to beat Princeton in the second year, Princeton won the overall title.
Then in the petite finals, the Kansas B freshman finished ahead of Northeastern to capture fifth place out of six boats.
Askew coming to KU
By Brenda Flory
Sports writer
Vincent Askew, former starting forward for Memphis State, announced last week he would transfer to Kansas this fall. He will be eligible to play for KU after sitting out the 1966-87 season.
"I chose Kansas because of the togetherness of the team." Askew said yesterday in a telephone interview Brown in Brown I couldn't make a mistake.
Doug Vance, sports information director at KU, said yesterday that he could not comment on Askew's future role with the Jawhayes.
But Gary Hunter, KU assistant athletic director, said Askew would have to sit out the 1986-47 season if he enrolled at KU. After sitting in this
Call today...
coming season, the 6-foot-6 forward will have two years of eligibility left.
Askew said, "It will be difficult to sit out a season. I figure it will help me to get strong and get ahead. It will also help the team will be on there playing."
KANSAN 864-4358
Sell tomorrow
Askew received his release two weeks ago, said Mike Finn, sports information director at Memphis State.
Kansas forward Danny Manning has decided to withdraw from the United States men's team that will compete in the World Championships in Spain, the University announced yesterday.
Dick O'Connan, assistant sports information director at KU, said Manning would not play because of recurring soreness in his left knee.
Manning backs out The Associated Press
Memphis State was placed on probation for two years by the National Collegiate Athletic Association and barred from any appearance in the 1987 basketball tournament because he Grant overpayments to athletes.
Manning strained the knee this past April while playing basketball.
The Associated Press
THE STRONG HOME
SAC
A 4N 20K
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED (Six hours of instruction.)
Tuesdays, June 17, 24, and July 1
1:00 to 3:00 p.m.
Register and pay $15 materials fee at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
Class size limited.
LEADING EDGE MODEL "D" ™
△
$1495
Total MS-DOS System
20 mb System - $1895
COMPUTER OUTLET
connection at
843-PLUG • 804 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kanas
*Registered Leading Edge Inc.*
$ ^{\text{TM}} $ Registered Leading Edge, Inc
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
Late nite bite? Open 'til 2 am Daily!
1618 West 23rd
COMPLETE
SUMMER
$6900 MEMBERSHIP
4 MONTHS FREE
- Exclusively for Women • 74 Classes Weekly • RHYTHMIC AEROBICS / 4 Levels • Body Toning Classes • Certified Instructors • Air Conditioned Facility • Weight Lifting • Sauna • Whirlpool • Dressing & Shower Facilities • Tanning Option • Open 7 Days a Week
WITH
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FAUZI SELLAMI'S
AGENCY
Malls Shopping Center
(913)749-5197
Auto - Fiat - Life - Farm - Commercial
601 Kasold
Westridge Shopping Ctr.
"Sporty things for sporty people"
Mon. Sat. 9-5, 30th, Thu. 18:30
843-4040
francis
sporting goods, inc.
604-518-791 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas 63070
STUDENT GROUPS:
MORE CHEESE!
MORE
10%
At Domino's we pizza. We think there's nothing better than a piping hot, golden delicious pizza, loaded with real dairy fresh cheese. That's why we re putting even more melt-in-your-mouth cheese on every pizza we make. 15% more.
Limited Delivery Area.
Our Drivers Carry Less Than $10.00
Lawrence
So the next time you say cheese, say Domino's Pizza. And get a mouthwatering made-to-order pizza—now with 15% more cheese—delivered to your door in 30 minutes or less.
Lawrence
841-8002
832 Iowa Street
841-7900 1445 W.23rd Street
OPEN FOR LUNCH!
Hours:
11 am - 1 am Sun. - Thurs.
11 am - 2 am Fri. & Sat.
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Coke
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for ONLY `5.49`!
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Limited delivery area.
One offer per day.
Good only at listed locations
Express. July 15, 1986
Name
Address 16005:DPE-024
$999 DEAL
BUILD YOUR OWN PIZZA!
Give it 16 with your choice of toppings and four cans of Coke* for ONLY $9.99
DOMINO PIZZA
Limited delivery area.
One offer per order
Good only at listed locations
Expires. July 15, 1986
Name
Address 16005 DPE-024
SAVE 28% WHEN YOU ADVERTISE IN THE KANSAN
It's once
It's once
It's more!
once more!
Saturday only, June 14
Just 22 years ago the first home owned and home operated Vista Restaurant opened its doors in Manhattan and began serving our delicious ¼lb. all beef Vistaburgers fixed just the way our customers liked them...For only 35¢.
We're still home owned and home operated and we still fix our food just the way you like it.
And this weekend, to celebrate our 22nd anniversary, Vistaburgers are still 35¢,
just like in 1964. Stop by from 10.50 am to closing. It's '64 once more at Vista Restaurant.
35¢
Vistaburger
Limit 5
No phone orders
Cheese, lettuce, tomato & bacon extra
Proud to serve:
Harwood's Meat
Butter Krust Buns
Vista RESTAURANTS
Manhattan, Topeka, Lawrence
Emporia, Great Bend
1527 West 6th
more!
1
}
2022
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
University Daily Kansan
15
Classified Ads
The University Daily
The University Daily
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words
0-15
16-20
21-25
For every 5 words add
...
AD DEADLINES
*Classified Display* $4.40
*per column inch*
*per column inch*
Classified Display $4.40 per column
Classified Display advertisements can be formatted and use more than six inches deep. Classified display advertisements can be displayed display advertisements accept for logos, images, or text.
only earned rate discount.
* Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
- Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount.
POLICIES
- No refunds on case-waiting or pre-paid classified advertising
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Word items can be advertised FREE for a period not exceeding three days. Those who can be placed at a station by call use the kennedy logo (804-834-7656) or AMTA.
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in IBOB FACE count as 3 words
* Deadline in 4 days - 2 working days prior to
y 3-Days 4-5 Days
0 3.75 5.25
1 4.25 6.00
2 4.75 6.75
3 40$ 75$
ANNOUNCEMENTS
until credit has been established.
Teachments are not provided for classified or
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only.
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of an advertisement.
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement.
- No refunks on cancellation of one-paid classified
- Bind box ads - please add a $4 service charge
• Hints must accompany all classifi admas mitted
- Tear sheets are not provided for classified or displayed display advertisements.
**IMPROVE YOUR READING COMPLEXEN-**
For more than 40 years, I have been instructors of instruction. Tuesdays June 17, 24 and
July 1, 100 to 3:00 p.m. Materials fee $1.50 per student.
Southern Hall, 800 W. 6th Street, Reston, VA 20036.
Ball Hall, 800 W. 6th Street, Reston, VA 20036. Class size limited.
PINECREST
FOR RENT
or 3, 2 or 1 bedroom apil or duplexes, summer no apt. 845-1601; Evenings 841-1232
no apt. 845-1601; Evenings 841-1232
apartment, furnished, to campus, all utilities paid, no lease required, available today. No
lease required, available today. No
COME TAKE A LOOK!
Under New Ownership &
OPEN DAILY
1-5 P.M.
Management
- All new carpeting, cabinets and windows
Cable paid
Pinecrest
749-2022
K.U. Students & Faculty-
reserve your home for next
semester! Furnished studios.
studies, labs, libraries,
locations. all close to K.U. stop
BEDDINGHAM PLACE come enjoy Lawrence's finest and best apartment community. Offer luxury 2 bedroom beds with all the conveniences you desire, new furnishings. Now leaving for immediate or next Fall occupancy. For your private showing stop by 8th Terrace and Edgingham or call 841-644-4444.
Hanover Place
14th & Mass.-841-1212
Sundance
7th & Florida-841-5255
Tangglewood
10th & Arkansas-749-2415
All designed with you in mind!
MASTERCRAFT MANAGEMENT
--no pets.
Excellent location. Two bedroom apartment in two-floor, carpet, C.A. low utilities, $757 June and July; two-story, hardwood floor, FREE RENTAL, ASSISTANCE. Valley Kawit Malt. one of Lawrence's largest resections in guaiac wood, bedroom six, duplexes, and townhouses. bedroom nine, open houses. Contact 841-6906 to solve your house.
AVALON APTS.
9th & Avalon
FREE
MICROWAVE
for a
12 month lease
signed before
June 30, 1986
Summer or Fall
1 or 2 bedroom close to schools and shopping. A/C laundry, dishwasher.
Call
841-5797
appointment
--any package of visits
1986 Berkeley FLATS
843-2116
11th & Mississippi
NOW LEASING
- Over 40 New Units
- Great location
- Walk Anywhere
- Laundry facilities
- Furnished Units Available
- On KU Bus Route 10 and 12 MONTH LEASES AVAILABLE 1123 Indiana Furnished by Thompson Crawley
Thompson Crawley
'toom for Rent in Private Home. Separate entrances. Laundry and kitchen privileges. Prefer room at 194-195 unless except Tues & Thurs. Room on for bed in the 1:16 mile from Home. Call 749-195-10
HILLVIEW APTS
1 & 2 bedroom apts. beginning at $250. Water paid, laundry, on bus route, near shopping. 841-5797.
Summer Discounts
...
Sleeping rooms next to campus, for summer session or
no pets. No pets. 843-160).
Summit and Fall openings at Sunflower House, a student cooperative. Private rooms, good rates. 749-8071 Summer and Fall openings at Sunflower House, a student cooperative. Private rooms, good rates. 749-8071
2-Br. Apts. for KU students
Jayhawker Towers
ON CAMPUS
FOR SALE
- For 2, 3 or 4 persons
* Individual Contract Option
* 10 Month Leases
* All Utilities Paid
* Limited Access Doors
* Academic Resource Center
* Air Conditioned
* Swimming Pool
* On Bus Line
* Free Cable TV
* Laundry Facilities
* Furnished or Unfurnished
Western Civilization Notes. *Now on Sale!* Make sense to use them 1. As study guide 2. For class analysis 3. For case study 4. Analysis of Western Civilization **available now at Town Creek, The Jayhawk Bookstore**
1800 Honda CB7501. Excellent condition. 7900 miles. $1,200. Call 843-0863.
Honda Superport 1951 740F 16K $1000.
Negotiable 842.7147 1147.
***
Apply Now for Fall/Spring
Washington County 697742
Comic Books, Playbooks, Paintings, etc. Max's
Openices Open 11-5 Tuesday-Fri, Sat & Sun 10-5 8-11
New Hampshire
COMIC BOOKS, Science Fiction, Games at Kwality College, 1111 MASS. 843-7298
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
Ford Mercaville. 1975 788 with A/C. Block heater.
$600 negotiable. 942-741 747 evening
MASTERCRAFT offers completely furnished 1, 2,
and 3 bedroom apartments all near campus. Call
841-1212, 841-5255, 749-2415.
JAMS JAMS JAMS. Sunflower has Jams from Pandau Found, Big Dogs, Mr. Wishaw, First Aid, Ripide and Mistral. Bring in this and get 10% of any pair of Jams. Sunflower 844 Mass.
Hardwood table and benches, best offer, Call
Chris, 749-2553
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U repair):
Delinquent tax property. Repossessions. Call
805-497-4000 Ext. 8/9758 for current reel note.
GOVNEMENT JOBS $16,000 $28,200 Now
Hirer, Call 655-422-6000
Size 22 Wash. Wholesale price: Leila. £51.95. Kitchen dresas slacks and shorts, short sleeve button down and kint skirts (med., large). Call JEFF at 740-7516.
University of Kansas men and women's gold seiko watch. Gold face with seal. Brand new $100 each. @ only $20 for both or best offer. Call 216-333-4060
LOST/FOUND
HELP WANTED
LOST: Small Chow/Lasa mutt: "Buster" Campus area. Imported to child. Please call 841-8973 after six or 864-332 days.
Computer student to assist with home programs. 749-0298
ARCHITECTUREAL PHOTOGRAPHER - Part time. 6 months of actual experience in architectural photography including extensive dark room lighting and studio lighting. 80% completion. June 17, 2016 EOAE AAA
Female adult, weekdays a.m. 8:30, 12:30 and/or
evenings to 9:10, no experience required. 749.0888.
Female to prepare dinner, light evening and night
*sirls*, schedule varies. 749.0888.
Graduate Assistant Half Time: Office of Student Financial Aid seeks candidates to assist with Guaranteed Assets to interview applicants for KU (University of Kansas) resource person for other programs on and off campus. Require qualifications. Strong computer pressure, admission to graduate programs, knowledge of KU, understanding data processing, experience with financial aid. Detail required KU $33 Slimmonth; Starting date July 1; 1986 or as an agreeable submittal letter of application, which should be sent by mail to KU, p. 16 June, 1986 to: jeff Womack, Associate Direct at St. Louis Law, Lawrence, KG 6604-1250.
SOCIAL WORKER II. The Youth Center at Attenborough accepts applications through June 27, 2018. Students must have a degree in social work or, bachelors degree with a major in work and two years of experience in the field of social work in the state of Kansas. Starting salary: $1877. Position requires: Joe Nickell, Personnel Of 931-362-4000.
Student Systems Programmer I Office of Information Systems. Deadline: 5:00 p.m., June 17, 2016. Participate in coding, maintenance and other related tasks as necessary to assist systems support. Graduate Certifications Qualification. Completion of six hours (or equivalent) of programming courses in a college course offered by the school, currently enrolled (or will enroll in the school, currently unemployed in) at the University of Kansas, Mann, Office of Information Systems, Computer Center. University of Kansas, Lawrence KS.
University of Kansas, Lawrence Lawn. Legal Services for Students office. Requirements. Kansas Law Memberhip. Those who will take the Juvenile Law Office should have an interest in applying. Preferences: experience in handling consumer legal problems, willingness to handle issues that involve discrimination and/or students about their legal rights and responsibilities. For positions description, write position description for Students office. University of Kansas, 148 Burge (Stateline) Student Union, Lawrence, Kansas One available June 18 or as soon thereafter as possible. One available August 1, 1985, or as soon thereafter as possible. One available June 18 or as soon thereafter as possible. One available August 1, 1985, or as soon thereafter as possible. One available June 18
PERSONAL
Tell me. there are any affectionate single men in Lawrence? Nice looking but by no means beautiful, beautifully not but terribly sweet, deeply passionate, friendly with relationship-potential. like a good conversation, Prairie House Companion, eating breakfast with friends. would like we would like another. Write "P" Box P. 1234.
C
BUS. PERSONAL
A YOU FEE LAWRENCE Aerodrome M-W-F 5:30
FIRST CLASS FLIGHT. Calfee Theather 841-694-0264.
Enroll now in Midwest Driving School. Receive
until completion, upon successful completion, transpor-
tational license, or permit.
Weekly Beer Special
PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
GREENS
June 11-17
LOSE WEIGHT NOW! Fun, easy, safe, no drugs,
all natural, natural nutrition. No starvation, inexpensive (913) 236-4190 K.C. Kansas
Modeling, theatrical and art portfolios. Slides or prints. High-quality. low-pieces. Swells 749-1611.
Stroh's 15pk. $5.28
Old Style 12pk. $4.21
Bud Light 12pk. $5.46
Wiedemann 12pk. $3.75
Stroh's Light 15pk. $5.28
SAY IT ON A SHIRT! Custom silk-screen printing. T-shirts, jerseys and caps. SHIRTART by Swells 794-1611.
50%
DISCOVER THE
VERSATILE
FUTON I
henon BEDDING
$10.00 OFF
new peekers
OFF
Try Us-You'll Love Us
of visits
--memberships
CUT OR
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
25th & Iowa 841-6232
Help reduce stress & MAKE-SUMMER school more rewarding by taking a yoga class. $1 discount on any class with student 1. D Call 842-4191 or stop by Yoga Midwest, 1073 Mass.
941. 9443
Beat the summer heat with windsurfing!
-
Mistral and O'Brien sailboats from $590.00 to $1395.00 Mistral Mali $895.00 O'Brien Competitor $495.00 Full line of accessories from Da Nang O'Nell, O'Nell, Windlite, Tibande and Yakine
Windsurfing lessons offered every weekend.
B.I.G. Certified School course cost $600.00
SUNFLOWER
8C4 MASSACHUSETTS
DOWNLOAN LAWYER
Rent-19° Color T.V. $28.98 a month Curtis
Mathes 147 W. 32rd 842.5751 Mon - Sat 9:30-
00:00 Sun - 1:55
BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE
Summer Merchandise including: skirts, dresses, blouses.
including: skirts, dresses, blouses and Hawaiian shirts, Glass jewelery and
Hawaiian shirts, Glass jewelery and Victorian items also in stock
Victoria items also in stock
927 Mass. 841-2451
Mon - Sat, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
SCIENCE FICTION, Comic book, Simulation & Role Playing Games. Kwaiity Comics, 1111 MASS, 842-729
---
THE SUMMER
CYCLING SEASON
IS HERE!
ATBs-Touring Commuting-Racing
Bianchi-Fat Chance
Complete line of cycling accessories and a full selection of bike clothing, tents, sleeping bags, bikes, etc. and other equipment for touring.
Black and White film processing, contact sheets,
and engravements. Path and Pull processing also available. THE PICTURE WORKS. 13th and
skell. 834 0470
Full service bike shop upstairs: tune-ups $19.95 overhauls $35.00
SUNFLOWER
8C4 MASSACHUSETTS
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
Thousands of R & R Albums - 92 or less. Also collector items, Sat & Sun only. Sat 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Quantilly 11 New Hampshire Buy, Sell, or trade all styles music.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course, fine portraits. Swells College. 749-1611.
SERVICES OFFERED
TYPING
24-Hour Typing, 11th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus
Best quality and fastest service. 841-5006
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing and editing. IBM OS/6. 9, 5-M. Same day service available. 844 Illinois, 843-6618
A-4 professional typing: Term papers, Theses,
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Using IBM
Wheelwriter 5. Reasonable. 842.3246.
Experienced English tutor for foreign students.
Zubedy 749-7602
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing, Jody, 842-7945 or Lia, 842-8032.
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAFFER -- Typing Service.
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape.
843-8877
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
HARPER
LAWYER
1101 Mass.
Suite 201
DISTRIBUTERS / THESES / LAW PAPERS /
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY Service available on shorter student papers (up to 30 pages) for Mommy's Mummy's 48-398 p. 9 on p.m.).
TYPING: PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resume M.A. S.M. Dorel, 841-6254.
QUALITY TYPING. Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected.
Call 849-2744
Used cameras and photographic equipment bought, sold and traded. THE PICTURE WORKS. 13th and Haskell. 834-0470
749-0117
Same day, Ekstrathon/E-6 side processing,
Push and Pull processing also available. THE PICTURE WORKS: 13th and Haskell 834-6709
Used cameras, and photographic equipment
Cover letter, resumes, and papers.
WRITING LIFELINE. 841-3469.
Hakenson 25/hours typing, IBM word processing.
Lymn 841; 5594.
THE WORDPODCAT. Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing 843-3147
TOP-NOTH SERVICES professional word processing 843-3147 (thesis, letters, quality printing, etc.) 843-0062
MATHTUT TROUP - Bob Wiles holds an M.A. in math from K.U. where Bob 1025, 1026, and 123 were among the course he taught. He began tutoring professionally in 1979 and often elementary education courses. His institution 181-980 327. StanfordDent Kit Tutoring Service. All Calls. Ben Derna at 842-1055.
EXPERIENCED TYPINT. Term papers, theses.
IBM Correcting Selective. I will correct spelling.
Phone 843-8544, Mrs. Wright.
WANTED
Female roomate, household duties in exchange for free rent and utilities, on bus route, 749-0288
Get Something Going!
Cash.
And carry.
Lunch 11:00 2:30 Dinner 4:30 10:00 CATHAY
Cash on shopping convenience without ever leaving home, and carry savings one day. Many classified aids are placed by every store on valuation to you. Take advantage of quality merchandise at an affordable price with the benefit of shopping at home-read classified.
10
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
RESTAURANT Specialists in Chinese Cuisine closed on Tuesdays
Holiday Plaza 842-4976
Now Leasing
1 Block from KU Bus Route Studios
Don't Be Left Behind CedarApts a great place to live
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom)
call Pat today 843-1116
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 1986-87
CONCERT & CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES
Franz Liszt
TTINERARY
Concert Series
DESTINATION
A WORLD OF ENTERTAINMENT
American Bullet Comedy
October 9, 1986; 8 p.m.
Hoch Audium
Cotubes Radio Orchestra with André Michel Schuh November 5, 1986; 8 p.m. Hao Auditorium
James Galway
December 11, 1986; 8 p.m.
Hoch Audium
Public House
Chamber Orchestra
February 19, 1987; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
Merce Cunningham
Dance Company
March 25, 1987; 8 p.m.
Houston Auditorium
New York City Opera
in Madama Butterfly
April 1, 1887; 4 m.
Hoch Auditorium
Chamber Music Series
Mark Poskanov and Friends
September 28, 1986;
3:30 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Cleveland Quartet with Emanuel Ax
October 25, 1986: 8 p.m.
Crafton-Pierre Theatre
King's Singers
November 19, 1986; 8 p.m.
Plymouth Congregational
Church
Juillard String Quartet
February 1, 1987; 3:30 p.m.
Crafton-Perfect Theatre
Empire Brass Quintet
March 8, 1987; 8 p.m.
Crafton-Prey Theatre
Kronos Quartet
April 12, 1987; 8 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
The Arts
University Arts Festival Event
Guthrie Theater's Candida
February 8, 1987; 3:30 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT: MURPHY HALL
BOX OFFICE! 913-864-3982
16
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 11, 1986
Dillons FOOD STORES
NOW THRU JUNE 17,1986...
DOUBLE COUPONS!
DILLONS DOUBLE YOUR SAVINGS ON ALL MANUFACTURER'S "CENTS OFF" COUPONS UP TO AND INCLUDING 50¢ IN VALUE.
IN
Michelob Beer
Regular, Light or
"New" Classic Dark
$269
6 Pack 12 oz.
Non-Returnable
Bottles
Food Club
LIGHT TUNA
save 30¢
Food Club
Light Meat
Tuna
BONUS
SPECIAL!
49¢
Packed In
Water or Oil,
6.5 oz. Can
Save 30C
Food Club
Light Meat
Tuna
49¢
BONUS SPECIAL!
Packed In Water or Oil,
6.5 oz. Can
Dillon
Incredible Hunk
Cheese
$299
24 oz.
Mild Cheddar or Marbled Cheddar
Save $1.00
Dillon
Incredible Hunk
Cheese
BONUS
SPECIAL!
$299
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Marbled Cheddar
Irish Oatmeal
Bread
Save 79C
Buy One At Reg.
Price & Get One
20 oz. Loaf
FREE
BONUS SPECIAL!
Donald Duck
100% Pure Frozen
Orange Juice
BONUS
SPECIAL!
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38c
12 oz.
Can
Golden Ripe
Bananas
BONUS Special!
LB. 25¢
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LB.
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Shank Portion
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I Portion Ham
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FRESH EGGS LARGE Food Club U.S.D.A. Grade 'A' Large Eggs BONUS SPECIAL! 59¢ Save 24C Dozen
KNELDI
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STARTING AT $9.29
AVAILABLE ONLY AT THE
1740 MASSACHUSETTS STORE
(Available Only In Stores With Salad Bars.)
Salad Bar... Take home a fresh salad tonight! Make it right in the store at our new selfservice Salad Bar. We have over 40 ingredients to choose from, Including 6 different salad dressings.
Dillons
FOOD STORES
Prices
Effective
June 11 -
17, 1986.
Limit
Rights
Reserved.
FATHER'S Special
DAY
EXOTIC TROPICAL
ANTHURIUM
ARRANGEMENT
BONUS Special 1
$899
INSIDE
CHORAL COUNTRY
Happy campers
Music is a serious, but fun subject for 300 junior high students attending the Midwestern Music Camp.
Story, page 6
KU woman has a lot of weight on her shoulders as she gets in shape for USA Body Building Championship in Texas.
Heavy waiting
Story, page 13
OUTSIDE The forecast
Today. . . Partly cloudy, highs in the 90s.
Tonight. . . Partly cloudy, lows in the upper 60s.
Tomorrow. . . 20 percent chance of afternoon showers,
highs around 90
Weekend. . Highs in the upper 80s, lows 65-70. Little or no chance of rain.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 3
WEDNESDAY
June 18, 1986
Vol.96, No. 149
(USPS 650-640)
Chief Justice Warren Burger retires
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Reagan announced yesterday the retirement of Warren E. Burger as chief justice of the United States and said he would nominate Justice William Rehquist to succeed Burger and become the 16th man to head the Supreme Court.
The president said Burger informed him three weeks ago that he had decided to retire after 17 years as chief justice to devote full time to his work as chairman of the commission that will lead the nation's celebration of the 200th anniversary of the Constitution in 1989.
Upon Rehnquist's confirmation by the Senate, Reagan said, he will nominate federal appeals court Judge Antonio Scalia to the Supreme Court, preserving a conservative majority on the high court.
Prof says Court won't change
If confirmed, Scalia would be the first American of Italian descent to serve on the court. He also would be the youngest member of the present
Burger is 78, Rehnquist 61 and Scalia.50
By James Larson Special to the Kansan
The changes caused by the retirement of Chief Justice Warren Burger in the makeup of the Supreme Court are going to be few, according to a KU professor of law.
Francis Heller, the professor, who specializes in constitutional law, said the implications of Burger's retirement and what he did to keep his prestigious position were the same thing: "Really, nothing."
At a national press conference yesterday. President Reagan
named Associate Justice William H. Rehquist to replace Burger. Burger had served for 17 years and was recommissioned by former President Nixon.
"Burger and Rehnquist have almost always been on the same side of the issues," Heller said.
court, which in November, without Burger's retirement, would have become the oldest Supreme Court in history.
Heller said that Rehqumist might produce more solid majorities instead of the often splintered decisions handed down by Burger.
Rehquist's replacement on the court, Antonin Scalia, is a member of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and has been told that said Scalia would probably vote
the same as Burger.
Sealia's conservative opinions, along with those of Associate Justice Sandra Dray O'Connor and Rehnquist, would continue to balance the more liberal stands of Associate Justices Thurgood Marshall, William J. Brennan Jr. and Harry A. Blackburn, he said.
Burger, Heller said, was inclined to discuss basic issues of law whereas Rehqunit is interested in intellectual matters.
Phillip Kissam, professor of law,
said Burger's decision to retire was not surprising considering Burger was 78 years old.
With five of its members over 77, the court's average age today is 74.
Scalia is regarded as even more conservative than Burger, who is regarded as second only to Rehnquist
in his politically conservative views.
in his politically conservative views. On the issue of abortion, Burger's rule was an odd choice, as the judge's court position favoring a woman is right to end her pregnancy.
Burger was one of four court
With Burger's departure and Scalia's arrival, the court's average age would be 71.
members who last week voiced reservations about the court's landmark 1972 decision legalizing abortions. The court's solid votes behind that 1972 ruling.
Scalia is a Roman Catholic and the father of nine children. A White House official who participated in the review of candidates for the post said that although he was familiar with a number of Scalia's decisions, he did not know whether Scalia ever participated in an abortion case.
Burger's retirement could produce one significant change in life at the Supreme Court — television cameras and other electronic coverage might be allowed. Burger is vehemently opposed to such coverage.
Rehnquist refused to say yesterday whether he would like to change that, but electronic news coverage of the judicial process has spread through many state and local courts in recent years.
City may discuss no-smoking issue
Burger's letter of resignation makes his retirement effective July 10, which is expected to fall a short distance for the court ends its current session.
Staff writer
By Rachelle Worrall
The Lawrence City Commission may be gearing up to jump on the smoking-ordinance bandwagon that is now traveling through Kansas.
The issue may appear on the city commission agenda this summer, Angino said.
During last week's city commission meeting, Ernest Angio, city commissioner, said it was time to examine the possibility of passing a city ordinance that would ban smoking in public buildings.
"I don't think this is a No.1 priority that I have. It's just a growing concern," he said.
Topeka passed an ordinance prohibiting smoking in public places and restrooms. In buildings that allow smoking, signs must be posted to designate smoking and nonsmoking areas.
Overland Park passed an ordinance prohibiting smoking in shopping malls. Elizabeth McLaury, secretary at the environmental health office at Overland Park City Hall, said the Overland Park ordinance was basically the same as individual store policies had been in the past, except that it was now a law on paper.
Kansas City, Mo., passed a smoking ordinance that will go into effect July 9. The ordinance prohibits smoking in public places, public buildings and office buildings, unless designated by a smoking sign, Ruby McGee, attorney, and Operations Committee secretary, said from Kansas City.
Howard Hill, city commissioner,
said neither KU nor the county would
be affected by an ordinance that
restricted smoking.
"Essentially a ban on smoking on the job would affect only city
employees in city offices." Hill said.
employees in city offices, "ruff said. Sandra Wicks, University Senate Executive Committee administrative assistant, said it was possible that the University smoking policy would be reviewed if the city commission passed an ordinance restricting smoking.
The University policy states that smoking is not permitted in auditoriums or classrooms when classes are in session.
"We don't have to, but generally there's some effort to be consistent," said Wicks.
Either the University Council or the executive vice chancellor would review the smoking policy, she said.
Bob Richeson, manager of food services at the Kansas and Burge unions, said that after the Kansas Union was remodeled, smoking areas might be designated. He said he might conduct a survey to deter smoking.
Fred McElhienne, director of residential programs, said, "We're about a sten ahead of some people."
A proclamation from the Army chief of staff, signed by Gen. John A. Wickham Jr. and John O. Marsh Jr., secretary of the Army, states the need for the end of tobacco use. They state it would be of benefit to soldiers' health and physical performances.
Students in residential halls can state whether they want a roommate that does not smoke, he said. Unless students are smoking, smoking will not be restricted
Even if KU doesn't become more restrictive in its smoking policy, the trend to restrict smoking was made with the support of the U.S. Army.
Hill said, "I think a lot of these issues get popular around the country."
Former University of Kansas basketball players Ron Kellogg and Calvin Thompson watched the NBA Draft yester day in Head Coach Larry Brown's office in Parrot Athletic Center.
3 Javhawks chosen in draft
By Dawn O'Malley
After many years of devoting their lives to basketball, three former Kansas athletes have a shot at play in the National Basketball Association.
Sports editor
See related story
Yesterday, Greg Dreiling, Ron Kellogg and Calvin Thompson were drafted into the pro ranks. Dreiling was chosen in the second round, the 8th player overall, by the Indiana Pacers. Later in the second round, Kellogg was drafted by the Atlanta Huskies Angela Lakers. In the fourth round, Thompson was picked by the New York Knicks.
"It's easier, I think, for kids Greg's "it's easier to get pickied earlier." Larry Brown, head men's basketball coach, said yesterday. "He's afraid to
work hard. He has to continue to improve and hopefully he will."
Dreiling waited in New York to bear whether he had been drafted and was unable to be reached for a scholarship. He was Big Eight Conference player chosen.
However, before draft day, Deiling said he was confident he would be a high draft pick.
"I think I have the body to compete," he said. "I think I one of the biggest in size and strength. I have the best potential. The best years are ahead."
at the end of the regular season,
the 7-foot-1 center led the Jahawks in
rebounding with 6.9 rebounds a game
and he averaged 11.8 points a game.
In the two seasons Dreiling
hit 96 blocked shots, he had a total
of 96 blocked shots.
Thompson and Kellogg stayed in Lawrence to wait for their phone calls. They watched the first round of
"I know they will make it," Brown said. "They are not afraid to work hard. They love to play. They are both great shooters."
Kellogg was chosen by the Atlanta Hawks in the second round, but was later traced to the Los Angeles team for Notre Dame's Ken Barlow.
"It is probably one of the best things that has happened to me," Kellogg said. "Then I was traded to the Lakers. I am leaving Sunday to
See Draft, p. 5, col. 1
S. Africa fills minds of 2 at KU
Staff writer
By Kristi Schroeder
Thoughts of home and the violence that has become part of that home filled the minds of two KU students Monday as they commemorated a murder.
Monday marked the 100th anniversary of the march in Soweto, South Africa, which started a 10-month period of roiting that resulted in the deaths of 575 people. Soweto is a black township of 1.5 million situated outside of Johannesburg, South Africa.
The violence erupted June 16, 1976, when schoolchildren joined a march to protest mandatory use of the language of the white Afrikaner minority. A 13-year-old boy was killed during a demonstration months brought nationwide violence.
Raymond Hlangu, Durban, South Africa, senior, said yesterday that the commemoration of the anniversary made the people of South Africa continue the spirit of the struggle. The various gatherings that were held would continue to unify the people, he said.
Hiangu said the ban on news coverage was not fair to the people outside of the country. He did not know exactly what had been happening in the country since President Piether Bitter hailed a state of emergency Thursday and banned reporters from entering Soweto.
The government called the nationwide emergency in anticipation of rioting by blacks.
The number of deaths reported since the emergency was called is 31. A government spokesman reported that 21 blacks were killed by other gunmen during a shooting but by security police, and three were shot by a car bomb in Durban.
But Hlangu said there was no proof that the government figures were right.
He said he was glad the people did not take to the streets and confront the police.
"The police are always waiting." he said. "Past experience is that the demonstrators get shot at by the police."
Hlangu said news coverage of the commemoration helped make other people more aware of the situation in South Africa. The people in the country who had never gone on strike could see the others taking part and ask themselves why the boycotters were doing it, he said. They would question the underlying cause for unrising
If they can read more about it they will know more. Hlangu said. "They will answer the question themselves see the unifying factor." Hlangu said.
Nana Ngobese, Durban, South Africa, graduate student, said the situation in her homeland was appalling. She could not contact her relatives Monday, but phone lines have since been reconnected.
"It's like a pot boiling at 1000 degrees Fahrenheit," she said.
Eventually, the lid will blow up. United Press International supplied some information for this story.
Cow-tippers never cry over spilled milk
K. WILSON
1904
By Piper Schofield Special to the Kansas
They were free from the stresses that plague most of us. A cow never had to worry about establishing credit or maintaining a sanguen. They chewed cud and got milked. That's what being a cow was all about.
Cows used to have a rather easy life.
Cow-tippers now lurk in the fields, and the cows are getting nervous. Cow-tippers move in the dark of night and knock napping cows over.
Cow-tipping is a trend not quite as visible as the loud-colored shorts seen everywhere. Tired of the ordinary nighttime entertainments, cow-tippers say they are in search of something different.
Mark Pusateri, Topeka sophomore, is a cow-tipper. Pusateri
Livestock made laughing stock
said that cow-tipping was an easy sport to become involved in because it required no preparation or special equipment.
Pusateri said that when he wanted to tip a cow, he simply looked for a dark field with a good selection of sleeping bovines. Then he approached the targeted cow as quietly as possible.
Once the cow-tippers have gotten close to the slumbering beef, they run full-force and throw themselves into the pit. They knock it over on its side, Paddy. Wade
At least that's how it's supposed to happen. Pusateri admitted that he hadn't tipped a cow himself, but he knew friends who had.
"I've never been able to push one over," Pusateri said. "I try to sneak up on those suckers, and they just run away."
"If you plan for it, you never end up
Clark Massad, Oklahoma City sophomore, said he was also a cow-tipper.
Massad said one advantage of cow-tipping over other entertainments was that a cow-tipping expedition would be able to constantly be everything in cow-tipping.
If Fusarieri were driving around in the daytime and happened to see a field with cows, he said, he would try to remember the field so he would know where to find cows when he needed them.
Bill Sheehy, Ft. Leavenworth
Junior, said he had thought cow-
tipping was a myth, like snake hun-
ger, out with some cow-
tipping friends.
A wise cow-tipper should try to pick out a target that is not too large and looks as if it couldn't move very quickly. The farmer always an easy task in the dark.
going," Massad said.
"It's important to make sure they're asleep," Sheehy said. "Some of them sleep standing up they're so stupid."
1
Sheehy said he and his companions had, on one occasion, unwisely selected a cow that was only pretending to sleep.
"It didn't do too much. Scared the hell out of us though," he said. "It
See Cows, p. 5, col. 2
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Wednesday, June 18, 1986
News Briefs
Tentative contract deal may end AT&T walkout
WASHINGTON – American Telephone & Telegraph Co. and the striking Communications Workers of America agreed on a tentative national contract that would allow the company to its bitter three-week walkout could end this weekend.
Despite the tentative deal, however, the strike will continue while bargaining continues in New Jersey on essentially "local" issues involving AT&T's six corporate divisions.
Morton Bahr, CWA President said, "At a time when workers in other industries have been forced to accept contractual givebacks, this tentative contract is significant in that it requires no concessions of CWA members."
AT&T & TWS wager offer remains the same as before the strike — an 8 percent increase over three years. The company would pay an additional 2 percent in the first year, 3 percent in the second and 3 percent in the third.
Excedrin maker requests recall
AUBURN, Wash. — Bristol-Myers, the maker of Extra-Strength Excedrin capsules, asked stores nationwide to stop selling the product yesterday. Authorities here confirmed the presence of cyanide in capsules found in the home of a woman who died of cyanide poisoning.
A relative found Sue Snow, 40, a bank manager, collared in her home June 11. She died later that day at a
There were 56 capsules left inside a 60-capsule Excedrin bottle found near where Snow collapsed, said Christopher Rezendes, assistant director of investigations for the Seattle office of the Food and Drug Administration.
Several of the remaining capsules contained significant amounts of cvianne. Rezesed said.
All Extra-Strength Excedrin capsules were pulled from about 50 stores in the Auburn area south of Seattle after Mayor Bob Roegner declared a public emergency Monday.
Shuttle engineer cites confusion
WASHINGTON — The Morton Thiolok engineer who objected to launching Challenger in record cold weather said yesterday that the NASA document that set temperatures for shuttle booster rockets was "lousy" and failed to clearly say in what weather orbiters could fly.
Allan McDonald said he and Thiolok officials interpreted the NASA document as saying the minimum flight temperature for the solid fueled boosters was 40 degrees. NASA has said it was 31 degrees.
It was 36 degrees when Challenger was launched Jan. 28, Charles Locke, Thiokl's chairman and chief executive officer, said yesterday the booster rocket captured in flight may have been as cold as 10 degrees.
"I think the specification for this motor is a loous one," McDonald told the House Science and Law Committee. The second week of a congressional probe into the decisions that set the stage for the fatal shuttle explosion.
Singer Kate Smith dies at age 79
RALEIGH, N.C. — Singer Kate Smith, whose stirring rendition of "God bless America" made her a patriotic heroine who inspired $600 million in World
War II bond sales, died yesterday at the age of 79. Smith died of respiratory arrest in the Raleigh Community Hospital shortly after she was brought to the emergency room, hospital spokesman Michael Lessey said.
War II bond sales, died yesterday at the age of 79.
President Reagan, who co-starred with Smith in the 1945 movie "This Is The Army," said yesterday that "all America loved her and she loved America."
Smith, who had been in poor health recently, underwent two major operations this year. She had surgery for breast cancer and doctors amputated her right leg because of circulatory complications from diabetes.
Israel denies U.S. spy operation
WASHINGTON — Israel Justice Minister Yitzhak Modal denied yesterday that his nation conducted operations in the United States beyond "a one-time involvement in an American civilian Navy analyst."
After Jonathan Jay Pollard's guilty plea to selling secrets to Israel, U.S. officials, declining to be named publicly, said Israeli espionage in the United States are more extensive than Israel has acknowledged.
But Modai denied those allegations.
"Not only are they lies, they are completely un-founded," he said.
Pollard, 31, a civilian counter-terrorist analyst for the Navy, confessed to selling secrets to Israel from 1984 to his arrest last November. His wife, Anne Gillibray, was also killed in the attack of unauthorized possession of classified documents.
Two investors get special tax cut
WASHINGTON — The Senate yesterday voted special tax cuts of $1 million each for two wealthy investors who own a mine in Colorado as the first state to pass a passage of an overhaul federal income tax system.
"This is such a far-out amendment, such a special-privilege amendment, that it should be withdrawn," Metzenbaum said. But Sen. William Armstrong, R-Cole., who convinced colleagues on the Finance Committee to insert the tax break into the bill, called the dispute a fundamental question of justice.
By a vote of 68-31, the Senate rejected an amendment by Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, that would have eliminated the provision from the tax bill. The only beneficiaries of the amendment, Metzenbaum said, are two partners in Cimarron Coal Co. He said their names were not available.
Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore., chief author of the bill, and Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole voted for the special tax break.
Reagan meets leader of Uruguay
WASHINGTON — President Reagan praised President Julio Maria Sanguenetti yesterday for the return of democracy in Uruguay and, in a warning to his critics, called the days of dictatorships – right or left – are numbered.
Sanguinetti, whose November 1984 election marked the end of twelve years of military rule, was welcomed to the White House with full honors as a symbol of and an expression of unprecedented expansion of democracy in the Americas.
From Kansan wires.
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University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
3
News Briefs
Self-inflicted wound kills Lawrence man
a 20-year-old Lawrence man died last night from a self-inflicted gunshot to the head, Lawrence police reported last night.
The department received a call at 7:43 p.m. to investigate a body in a parking lot in the 1800 block of Massachusetts Street, according to officer Rex Lane. The police were notified of the death by the Douglas County Ambulance Service, 1839 Massachusetts St.
The officers reported that Cedric V. Frazier had apparently selected the parking lot randomly, Lane said. Police said several witnesses saw Frazier pull into the parking lot and get out of his car.
When they heard the gunshot, they turned and saw Frazier. Lane said the shot was fired from a shotgun.
KU grad wins grant
A University of Kansas graduate student was named the recipient of the Eisenhower Roberts Graduate Fellowship last week.
Karen Hunt Exon, Topeka
graduate student, will receive a
$10,000 grant for the 1986-87
academic year from the
Eisenhower World Affairs
Institute.
Exon received her bachelor's degree in social studies in 1975 and her master's degree in history in 1982, both from KU. A candidate for a Ph.D. in political science. Exon received her doctoral dissertation now.
The grant comes from the estate of Clifford Roberts, a friend of former President Eisenhower. It was established last October.
Mikkelson-Lee resigns
Ruth Mikkelsen-Loe, associate director of residential affairs, is leaving her position at KU to become the director of residential affairs at Baker University effective July 1.
Mikkelson-Lee has been the associate director for eight years at KU.
"While I have enjoyed my job at KU, I am looking forward to a new challenge," Mikkelson Lee said. Mikkelson Lee said that she would have more responsibilities at KU because it is a smaller school.
"I hope to be able to provide quality care for fewer students," Mikkelson Lee said. "I hope to provide a more personal touch."
Work blocks traffic
The eastbound lane of Sumsidey Avenue in front of the Computer Center will be closed this morning while telecommunications lines are installed. Elizabeth Friesek said telecommunications department.
Eastbound traffic will be allowed to pass, but only the westbound lane will be open, she said.
The hours of the installation, which will continue until Friday, are from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
More construction will interrupt parking in front of Robinson Center on Sunnyside Avenue from June 23 to July 4, she said.
Weather
The forecast calls for partly cloudy skies today. Highs will be in the upper 80s to lower 90s.
Tonight skies will be partly cloudy with lows of 60 to 70. Partly cloudy again tomorrow with a slight chance of thunderstorms. Highs should be in the upper 80s to middle 90s.
The official first day of summer, Saturday, should continue to be hot with no significant rainfall expected. Through the weekend, highs will be in the high 80s to low 90s, lows in the high 60s.
From staff and wire reports.
Negligence breeds blight in Oread
Drafts blow through the ill-fitting windows; plaster on the ceilings cracks; and rotting wooden porches creak and sway as they are stepped
By Judy Scott
Special to the Kansan
These are common conditions in an area beginning in the 1100 block between Louisiana and Kentucky streets and stretching to the 1400 block of both streets. It is a common source of complaints to the Lawrence housing authority. Mangue Swarts, minimum housing and environmental inspector.
Warsts said her office received an average of two complaints a week concerning this area. But the office and property in the area are not yet able to get it in shape.
Glen McGonigle, 928 Avalon Road, owns several places in the Oread neighborhood in which students and retired faculty live.
"If you're right beside a house that's not taken care of, it's bound to have a detrimental effect on your property," he said.
"We had one place where the neighbor didn't take care of their place, and so we just bought it. Now it's being completely redone."
Not all the houses in this area are dilapidated, however. Several of them show the care that owners have put into them, said Paula Naughtin, coordinator of the Oread Neighborhood Association, 1310 Loulou.
siana ST. The association works to clean up the neighborhoods between Arkansas and Massachusetts streets and from Ninth to 17th streets.
Moggie said people seemed to work harder now to improve the older houses. He said he also thought the new apartment buildings in the neighborhood could spur others to take better care of their property-
The problem with the area is its proximity to campus, Naughtin said. Students are willing to pay cheap rental rates to live near campus, even if their residence is not in perfect shape.
swarts said she tried to be flexible when working with the owners but she monitored the repairs carefully. If the problems with the houses were not corrected within the allotted time span, they would have been fixed. It then would become the responsibility of the people living in the house to find a new place to live.
"There is no advantage to the landlord fixing them up," she said. "When the house falls apart, he can sell the lot to a developer."
Eugene Ross, Leavenworth junior, said he and some of his friends decided to rent part of a house on Tennessee Street last fall.
One of the doors in the house was locked when the house was shown, Ross said. But when he and his friends returned to the house after signing the contract, they managed to get into the room.
"The room was soaked from a leaky ceiling," he said. "The plaster on the walls was cracked. The floor was buckled, and it was roach-infested. We had to lie to the owner to break our contract."
When the city inspector is called, a number of paths can be taken, depending on the condition of the house. Swarts said.
Naughtin said, "We think it is ridiculous that people are able to milk their prospects that way."
She said she would usually give the owner one to two weeks to begin repairs and up to 30 days to complete the repairs. It is rare, but possible, that a house will be vacant when she first visits it.
If the house were vacated, the owner would still own the house, but no people could live there, she said. The owner is told to pay to get it
Although some houses and apartments in the Oread neighborhood might be uncomfortable to live in, they are attracted to the location and the rent.
Barry Breitung, Naperville, Ill. graduate student, lives in an area near some run-down houses.
"My house is the best place II've lived in Lawrence," he said. "But some of these houses around here are really awful."
Breitung said those houses usually had very cheap rent, which attracts students.
5 6
9
10
KAYLEN KING
I.R.S. stalks tardy student loans
By Dana Spoor Staff writer
Staff writer
College students who neglect or forget to pay back their student loans may be surprised when they start paying the tax refund and it never shows up.
The Internal Revenue Service has started withholding tax refunds from former students who have defaulted on their student loans. The IRS pays as much of the loan as possible out of the refund
The loans that have been returned to the federal government as uncollectable are the loans that will be
affected, Jerry Rogers, director of student financial aid, said yesterday
"Personally, I don't see how this could affect us," Rogers said.
This procedure is part of a two-year pilot program initiated by Congress, according to a Department of Education employee. When the two years are up, you will look at the success of the program to determine whether it will continue.
The IRS may withhold refunds for one more year because of defaulted loans. State universities send names to the IRS. S. attorney's office for prosecution.
Since 1976, $120 million in loans have not been paid. The federal government has collected less than $20 million of the total amount. The state of Kansas has $1.4 million worth of defaulted loans.
Since January, the state of Kansas had withdrawn 2,518 refunds, amounting to $1.3 million. The IRS withholds the entire amount of the refund or the total amount due on the loan, whichever is less.
Marvin Burns, member of the Board of Regents, said KU would not receive any of the money directly when the government began collection processes.
"When the University collects money, it gets loaned back out," Burns said.
When the government collects on defaulted loans, the money goes into a fund and is awarded to needy institutions. If the loan is a National Direct Student Loan, however, then the money goes to the U. Treasury.
The Kansas University Endowment Association is not affected by the decision, because the money for their loans comes from donations and is not backed by the government, Iris Jones, student loans director, said.
Outbreak spurs call for measle vaccine
Staff writer
By Dana Spoor Staff writer
Students may receive a free vaccination at Watkins Hospital.
Students who received a measles vaccination before their first birthday or who were born between 1963 and 1967 have been advised by the Lawrence Douglas County Health Department to get vaccinated.
detected in Newton, the last one in March
Ninety-eight cases of measles have been reported in Kansas this year, compared with one case last year and five cases in 1984. The cause of the outbreak is hard to pin down, Ann Ailor, head nurse of the communicable diseases section at the department, said yesterday.
"Some of the kids were not immunized, but you can't say exactly what caused it," she said.
The first case was reported in Newton in January. There were 46 more measles cases
Topeka was also hit with the measles. Topeka West, High School reported 18 cases of measles.
Ailor said that since March there hadn't been any cases reported, but there was still some risk.
any cases reported, but there was one other case. "The highest risk group now are the high school kids and college kids who may not have gotten the right kind of vaccination," she said.
The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, from the Department of Health and Human Services, said the measles vaccine is indicated for all persons born in 1957 or after who lack documentation of receipt of live measles vaccine.
After the report of measles at Topeka West, Ailor had all records in Lawrence junior high and high schools audited. All students who needed the vaccination were told to get one.
Lawrence Magee, chief of staff at Watkins, said she wasn't any legal action the university could take.
"In the past, several years back, you had to get the measles vaccination before you could graduate, but it didn't work," he said.
KU students' records are checked when students as in freshman, said Lymn Heller, staff nurse.
"All we can do as professionals is tell them that it is a vaccination they should have but there is no enforcement in the University," she said.
Heller said a parent orientation was held each fall which stressed the importance of the vaccination then.
Fate of campus bar still to be decided
By Rachelle Worral Staff writer
The fate of the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St., is undetermined even after the Lawrence City Commission last night rezoned the plot where the bar is situated.
The five-member commission also voted to accept the proposal from the Lawrence Traffic Safety Commission for the installation of a traffic light at Ninth and Maine streets.
within 200 feet of the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
The Rock Chalk Bar was rezoned from RD, residential dormitory, to C-1, commercial. Although the rezoning will not change the existing use of the bar, said Price Banks, city planner, it could alter the site's future use if the building were destroyed.
A Kansas law was passed in 1966 making the sale of alcoholic beverages within 200 feet of a religious buildings illegal, and the Rock Chalk is situated
A grandfather clause enabled the continued sale of cereal malt beverages in the bar because it was in existence at the time the law was passed, Banks said.
Under the RD zoning, if the building were destroyed and rebuilt, a bar could no longer be opened.
Lida Martin, Rt. 2, Baldwin, said she had planned to buy the bar if she were able to make improvements to the building and operate a restaurant.
"My plans are to make it into a nice restaurant." Martin said, "it would really add to the University's reputation."
Banks said a restaurant could be rebuilt on the site if the building were destroyed under the C-1 zoning.
Charles Kincaid, owner of the building, said, "I was always worried some geek would torch it some night."
Any expansions made to the existing building would have to be approved by the city commission, said Sandra Praeger, Lawrence mayor.
The decision to put a traffic light at Ninth and Maine streets was the result of the April 22 death of 10-year-old Brendon Doerr, who was fatally in-front of the intersection at the intersections of Ninth and Alabama streets.
The traffic safety commission determined a light was necessary at the intersection at its June 2 meeting.
Terese Gardner, city engineer, said a study of the intersection showed a need for traffic control. George Williams, director of public works, said the right wight would not be installed for about six months.
City panel to discuss gay bias
Staff writer
By Rachelle Worrall
A seven-member committee was formed at Monday night's Lawrence Human Relations Commission meeting to determine whether discrimination against homosexuals or public accommodations and housing.
Two KU students, Robert Lynch,
president of the Gay and Lesbian Services
of Kansas, and Kevin Elliott,
president of the Gay and Lesbian
Political Caucus, are members of the
committee.
"If someone begins to file a complaint because a minister had refused to marry two men, or two women, I can see us having some problems," Rehelo Samuel, executive director of commission, said Monday night.
"We need to be very specific and have those guidelines and not get into a whole lot of other complaints."
Committee members cannot publish information about a company that allegedly discriminates against homosexuals. Samuel said Comune officials must identify plants filed against them are now cloaked under a city ordinance.
"All we're wanting is to be treated like any other group of individuals."
Lynch said, "At least it's a start. At least they're willing to recognize that ves, there may be a concern here.
Sex discrimination policy now prevents only gender discrimination and has nothing to do with sexual orientation, he said. If a homosexual person is married or of sexual preference, that person would have no legal course of action.
"I hope this isn't turned into a real emotional issue." Lynch said.
Other committee members are Rob Rerrison, director of the KU Office of Affirmative Action; Vernell Spearman, director of the KU Office of Minority Affairs; Marcia Epstein, director of Headquarters, 1419 Massachusetts St.; Jay Johnson, coordinator of Peace House, and Robert Shelton, chairman of the KU department of religious studies.
Samuel said he also did not want individuals to become emotional over the study, due at the end of August.
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University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Wednesday, June 18, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Students need help now
Lt. Gov. Tom Docking, the democratic candidate for governor, suggested Saturday that the state start a savings plan to help parents save money to send their children to college.
The money deposited would be free of tax, like an IRA. The state would invest the money and keep track of the earned interest on each family's account. However, the Internal Revenue Service may mix the tax-free part of the plan.
The idea is fine, especially for 15 years down the road. But more immediate ideas are needed. The cost of education is rising now. And student assistance from the federal government is decreasing now.
Kansas' state universities, in a period of little or no inflation, will raise tuition by 5 percent this fall and raise it again next fall by 3 percent.
The Senate is trying to reduce the amount of money for student loan and grant programs next year by $2 billion. The Senate's cut doesn't include the money that Gramm-Rudman would strip from federal student-assistance programs.
Also, Docking's plan would benefit families that have money to invest. But cuts in student assistance are mostly hurting those families that don't have money. The proportion of minority students in universities is already dropping nationwide.
Let's have some more ideas.
KU needs smoking rules
Ernest Angino, Lawrence city commissioner, has proposed that Lawrence adopt a smoking ordinance. That's great. Smoke should be the smoker's problem — nobody else's.
KU's smoking rules were last revised more than 10 years ago. They prohibit smoking in classrooms, but that's about all. In fact, the Handbook for Faculty and Unclassified Staff allows smoking in offices, hallways, restrooms and public eating areas, except when they are carpeted.
And while Lawrence is at it, following the lead of Topeka, Kansas City, Mo., and other communities that recently have adopted smoking ordinances, the University of Kansas should examine its smoking rules as well.
Smoking rules that give more consideration to rugs than to lungs are outdated, especially in light of studies that have indicated the possibility that secondhand
smoke is harmful.
Campus hallways outside classrooms are favorite places for smokers to congregate and cloud the air as they wait for classes.
Everyday, everywhere, people breathe smoke either because of politeness or out of deference to their bosses. They need specific rules to keep smoke out of their air, not vague admonitions that smokers should respect the rights of non-smokers.
Any non-smoker who has stood in the Wescoe food line on a busy day in a fall or spring semester, surrounded by tables of smokers, has been inconvenienced at the least.
Public dining areas have no smoking sections, but in several cases these are very small. The no-smoking section of the cafeteria in Wescoe Hall is limited to one-quarter of the floor space, and is shoved off to the far end, away from the food lines.
An abortion election
Headlines said last week that legalized abortion was reaffirmed by the Supreme Court. Almost simultaneously, an abortion clinic was bombed in Wichita.
The decision might have been reaffirmed; the issue is anything but settled.
Before his resignation, Chief Justice Warren Burger was part of that conservative movement. He sided with the court's majority in 1973, but switched to the minority last week and called for a reexamination of Roe vs. Wade.
Burger's absence won't change the court's stand on abortion. The new associate justice appointed by Reagan
Neither is the Supreme Court settled. Its members seem to be moving to the right on abortion even though polls indicate most U.S. citizens prefer that abortions remain legal. The Supreme Court voted 5-4 last week, much closer than the 7-2 vote on Roe vs. Wade, which legalized abortion nationwide in 1973.
will stand against legalized abortion, perhaps more strongly than Burger.
But future appointments will begin to shift the court's 5-4 balance, and more appointments are very likely soon. Four of the five justices upholding legalized abortion are about 80 years old. They are determined to stay on the job until Reagan is gone. But if another conservative president is elected in 1988, time may prove insurmountable for the justices.
So, even though the Supreme Court is supposed to be above politics, extraordinary influence over the court may be a prize of the 1988 election.
Reagan was elected twice by a coalition that included a lot of people who disagreed with the Moral Majority on social issues. They voted for him because their pocketbooks seemed more important. But in 1988, those people who want abortion to remain legal must vote accordingly.
News staff
News staff
Clindy McCurry...Editor
Kady McMaster...Managing editor
Amy Avery...Editorial editor
Grant Butler...Campus manager
Dawn O'Mailley...Sport editor
Shauna Nortiefel...Photo editor
Susanne Shaw...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
David Nickon...Business/production manager
Beverly Kastens...Retail sales manager
Diane Stephens...Campus sales/back to school manager
Richard Mozzan...Classified manager
John Oberzan...Sales and management
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 200 words. The
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War memorial evokes painful lessons
My peaceful morning walk to campus was disrupted the other day by the sight of the Vietnam Memorial. The campus was saddened. Then I felt indignation.
Standing silently in front of the memorial I read through the names of KU students who either died or are missing in action. Fifty-five names are engraved in the stone, along with the inscription, "Lest We Forget The Courage, Honor And Sacrifice Of Our Fellow Students..."
I asked myself: why did these young men sacrifice their lives on distant soil? I could not think of anything positive that emanated from the war. Therein lay my indignation.
U. S. involvement, from early support of French imperialism in Indochina in the early 1950s to the recent war in Vietnam, was bankrupt of any moral rationale,
The primary U.S. goal for Indochina was to install and preserve a democratic government in South Vietnam. This ambitious effort was
Christian Colbert
Staff Columnist
R
fueled by an inordinate fear of communism — a result of the McCarthy era. In addition, U.S. policymakers were invertebrate in the belief that it was in our national interest to democratize the world.
It was with arrogance that our policymakers tried to impose pseudo-democratic values upon South Vietnam. They didn't even have the wisdom to first check and see if U.S. democracy was in order. It wasn't, of course. Our system had and still has many shortcomings — among them are sexism, racism, poverty. But our policymakers entertained thoughts of an infallible United States capable of herculean foreign policy tasks.
leaders would not turn back. Presidents and generals lied and withheld information about the state of the war. U.S. citizens were told by top officials that we would prevail over communist aggression and that there was light at the end of the tunnel.
These abjectly false evaluations misled many Americans into giving support to the war. When later informed of the truth, however, U.S. citizens protested and opposed the war in droves.
If there is one beacon of hope from the Vietnam experience it is that when informed of the truth, U.S. citizens overwhelming chose to stop war. And to them, the war memorial on campus should be dedicated.
The memorial on campus and others like it are important because they may help this country overcome its collective amnesia about the lessons of the Vietnam War. Youth today, for example, react to the use
of military force with Rambo-like zeal. Ronald Reagan's overblown rhetoric, critically aimed at Nicaragua, is leading this country closer to a direct military conflict. Reagan's rhetoric also is engendering a renewal of arrogance about the international role of the United States, a shameful arrogance that is cloaked in patriotism.
In the United States there are many things to be proud of, but it is paramount that the leaders of this nation realize its limitations.
To those of you who disagree with me — we still harbor a military appetite, who blindly follow Reagan's distortions and who still view the United States as an infallible, unlimited power. I invite you to study the 55 students on campus and ponder the 55 students were lost in a hollow cause. Then think of the $8,000 U.S. troops who perished with them.
WHAT DID SHE SAY?
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Reagan tough on terrorists,with care
President Reagan has supposedly taken a tough line on terrorism. The U.S. attack on Libya was to be a signal to the rest of the world that Uncle Sam would not tolerate nations that export terrorism.
The Reagan administration, however, is reluctant to point a finger, let alone weapons, at Syrian President Hafez Assad, although it is mounting that Syria has sponsored terrorist attacks against the West.
There is little doubt that Syria is heavily involved in supplying aid and training to terrorists. Terrorism sponsored by Syria drove the U.S. Marines out of Lebanon, killing nearly 300 in the bombing of a barracks.
The men who opened fire on innocent civilians in the Rome and Vienna airports, killing 15, were from Damasicus and were trained in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley. Syria controls the Bekaa Valley.
Jon Gregor Staff Columnist
The bomb that exploded in a West Berlin nightclub, killing two people and injuring 204, allegedly was supplied by Syria.
The man who sent his pregnant girlfriend, unknowingly carrying a bomb, aboard an EI AJ jet in London, was equipped and aided by Syrians.
In spite of the mounting evidence, in no harsh accusations have been thrown at Syria. Reagan's hard line exists only for nations that are politically isolated. Need some examples? Libya, Libya and Libya.
Syria would be a much tougher target than Libya. Syria's armed
forces are larger, better equipped and better trained. Damascus has considerable clash in the Arab world. Any lasting settlement in the Middle East among the Palestinianists, Israelis and Lebanese would have to be a major challenge for Syria's most important, Syria has a close relationship with the Soviet Union.
Also, there are at least four U.S. citizens being held hostage in Lebanon. Probably the only hope for their release is through Syrian intervention with the Islamic fundamentalists holding them.
If push came to show against the Syrians, there aren't any tempting, terrorist-related targets along Syrius's coastline as there were in Iraq. These would have to target U.S. planes would have to far盟 on over strong defenses.
Peagan's hard line on terrorism was supposed to punish anyone who sponsored it. But Syria is a more formidable opponent than even Reagan is willing to take on.
Meanwhile, Western Europe must be taking note of our reluctance to smite Syria. The Reagan administration criticized the reluctance of our allies to help strike back against Libya militarily or even with economic sanctions. Europe was more worried about its business relations with Libya than about terrorism, it was said.
But the United States has been just as unwilling to tangle with Syria, seemingly for a similar reason. The conflict would not be in our best interests. Syria is too close to Lebanon and Israel. Syria is too close to moderate Arab leaders and their Persian Gulf oil fields. And Syria, diplomatically, is too close to the Soviet Union.
So don't hold your breath waiting for Reagan to call Assad the mad dog of the Middle East.
Good deeds turn into boring columns
I tried to be as tactful as possible when the nice busban lady called and said she was chairperson of a fund-raising dinner for a worthy cause and wanted me to write about it.
"There is a really wonderful human interest story here that I'm sure you would like to write about," she said.
And what is the story?
"There is a computer company that has donated a personal computer for our organization to use. It will help us in our record-keeping and things like that. We're going to show the computer at the dinner."
P
Well, that's very nice, I'm sure.
"Then you'll write a column about it?"
Mike Royko
Chicago Tribune
I'm afraid not
"Why not?"
That's kind of you, but as I said, my column schedule is booked up. So I'd never be able to get it written in time for your dinner.
"Oh, your column gets a lot more exposure."
"How far ahead do you schedule
column?"
"Then there's no problem. The dinner isn't for six more weeks." I see.
Oh, days and daves.
"So it's perfect. You have enough time, and when you write the column, it'll help us sell more tickets."
Uh. I'm afraid there's another problem. I don't write about things like that.
"Like what?"
I have difficulty making them sound interesting. It's a skill I've never been able to develop.
Worthy causes "Why not?"
"Oh, you have a way with words I'm sure you can do it."
No, really, I can't do it. You see,
it's just not the kind of thing I write
about.
"I don't understand what you mean."
Well, I'm not sure that the majority of readers would find the subject interesting.
Let me see if I can phrase it another way. A dinner for a worthy
Take my word for it. I know
"I don't believe that."
cause may be worthy, and it is interesting to the people who are involved in the worthy cause, but it is more interesting to interest to those who aren't involved.
"How do you know? You can't read people's minds."
"Well, maybe if you'd write about something like my dinner you'd get a surprise."
"I'll tell you how I know. I go to movies. There has never been a hit movie about a dinner for a worthy cause. Hit movies are about murder, war, sex, intrigue, giant sharks and creatures from other planets. Nor is there a book about a dinner for a worthy cause. Best-sellers are about murder, infidelity, perversion, greed, lust, hatred or how to make big money in real estate or have a more shapely body. And I watch TV. There has never been a high rating for a dinner for a worthy cause. The cops are for home runs, comedians and who shot some louse in Dallas.
No. I knew a columnist once who took to writing about worthy causes. He filled his space each day with news of dinners, luncheons, committees and good-hearted souls such as yourself.
"See?"
See what?
"If he did it, why can't you?"
Because the last time I saw him, he was asking people on the street if they could spare him a few coins for a bus. That's where such columns lead.
"I don't believe that."
I didn't make the world, I just live here. And the fact is that while most people believe in, and give to, worthy things they want to read about them. They find it buoyant.
It's true. And the poor wore vowel
that if he ever got a second
chance, he'd never let a kind or
decent word pass his keyboard.
"Look, why don't we have lunch and I'll give you more information and maybe you can find a way."
accept you pass his keyboard
"That's a terrible attitude!"
I have to admire your persistence. Yes, there is a way I can write about it.
"You can? Wonderful "
Yes, If, when the computer is plugged in at your dinner, it electrifies the person demonstrating it. Or if it displays diagrams on the screen, or It if turns out to be stolen goods. Or if it explodes and burns yourself. Or you are having your dinner. Any of these and you will national publicity.
"Maybe I will call my suburban owner."
I knew you had a kind heart.
---
---
Wednesday, June 18, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Draft
Continued from p.1
go to rookie camp."
It came as no surprise to Kellogg when he was picked late in the second round because he was told he probably would be picked then.
"Coach Brown helped me tremen-
ously," he said, "I have a lot of
talent. I think I am a pretty good
package."
With his teammates drafted into the NBA, only Thompson was left. He waited until late in the fourth round before it was picked by the New York Knicks.
"I think it is great," he said. "I have been waiting for this chance. This is a dream come true. I will just have to go out and play my best."
Cows
Continued from p. 1
Sheehy said he and four friends finally did manage to tip over a cow and it made a resounding smash when it hit the ground.
"We weren't in any condition to worry about whether or not it hurt the cow," he said.
The cow-tippers themselves could be in peril if they wandered into the pasture of an unruly cow. Bird said that a can can be mean and unpredictable.
Don Bird, a Farm Bureau insurance agent, said a cow could possibly break one of its legs from being tipped over. A pregnant cow could suffer internal damage or lose the calf, he said.
"Maybe I'm getting out of touch now, but I've never even heard of people trying to tip cows over," he said.
"But I'd be more worried about getting caught by the farmer, if I were them," he said.
District Attorney Jim Flory said that cow-tipping could be considered animal abuse, depending on whether the animal was injured and how the injury occurred.
Causing injury to a domestic animal would be a class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in jail. Flair said.
"But I thought most cows slept lying down, maybe they just nap stan
According to Stephanie Quincy, iola sophomore, women should not feel shy about giving cott-ipping a try.
Quincy said she and her friends usually tipped cows on weekend nights.
ding up," he said.
"They're so funny," she said.
Her friends honestly tried to tip over the cows, she said, but that they usually woke the animals with their laugter.
If cow-tipping sounds too rugged for the milder-mannered cow sportsman, there are cow wars to partake in. Quincy said cow-warring did not enjoy the same widespread popularity as cow-tipping.
Local bank to finance Eldridge restoration
The Lawrence National Bank will finance the $2 million in industrial revenue bonds needed to reconvert the Eldridge House, 701 Massachusetts St., into a hotel, warehouse, and Lawrence developer, said Friday.
An Overland Park bank agreed to finance only $1.5 million of the bonds, but no other bank would accept the remaining $500,000. Phillips said
The renovation will begin July 1 and is scheduled to be completed
by Dec. 31, Phillips said. Workers will restore the lobby and Crystal Room and construct 48 suites on the third, fourth and fifth floors.
The top three floors of the Eldridge were converted into apartments in the early 1970s. The owners have not yet relocated, he said.
Phillips said Nancy Longhurst would be general manager of the hotel. Longhurst was an executive assistant and director of sales at the hotel. Holdome, 200 McDonald Drive, for the past four and a half years.
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Arts/Entertainment
University Daily Kansan
NON
Wednesday, June 18, 1986
Serious musicians are happy campers
By DeAnn Thomas
Staff writer
1. Jardine
2. In the Land of Mistletoe
Charlie Brackett, 13, Kansas City, Kan., sings in the Blue Choir, which will give a concert Saturday morning.
The commotion began when several junior high school boys raced into the lobby of Oliver Hall toward their music camp counselor.
"A kid sprayed his deodorant in the air and lit it with his bic and now he caught the curtains on fire!" yelled one of the boys.
Sean Abel grinned at the boys in disbelief as they anxiously waited to see whether he would run up to the seventh floor and check out their story. Abel has attended the University of Kansas Midwestern Music program for five years, but the first year as a resident assistant at the camp
"Monday morning, one of the boys came down to the cafeteria and told me the air conditioner in his room was on fire," Abel said. "The boys sprayed the room with powder towel wanted to intermur my breakfast."
But kidding aside, Abel said, the boys are serious about music.
Abel pointed at Jeff Purcell, who announced the curtain fire. His name had been an easy one to learn, Abel said.
"Purcell is a good percussionist.
He's serious about being good, but he does like to be soofy." Abel said.
Three hundred sixth- to ninth-
grade musicians arrived Monday for
the Midwestern Music Camp, which
was founded at KU in 1936.
Although fun is a big part of the camp, the students are expected to attend a total of six hours of rehearsal each day. Band students attend a three-hour band rehearsal and a four-hour choir rehearsal. Band choral students attend two three-hour choir sessions. Rehearsals for each instrument section and private
music lessons are also in the curriculum.
Melinda LaRue, resident assistant for the junior high girls, said she respected any student who decided to attend the camp. She has attended the full four weeks of music camp for the last three years.
"The average kid won't subject himself to over an hour of playing his instrument," LaRue said. "When a student decides to attend camp, he knows he is going to play his instructor every day and he's going to improve."
LaRue said the camp conductors, who are guest conductors and KU faculty, were more demanding than regular school conductors. The campers expect to be subjected to criticism during the camp courses.
"It takes discipline on the student's part when he enters the camp," LaRue said.
The students who participate in the program are serious about music and willing to take on the discipline, she said.
"They are just one step up the ladder. They are more serious than the kids who don't come to camp," LaRue said.
David Bushouse, professor of music and director of the music camp for the past decade, said students were more difficult to teach than older students.
" they're in a state of cha-
their voices are changing, their feelings are changing, they take it as a chance of person to teach the junior hurln age," he said.
Bushouse said the camp staff members were good with the students.
Thomas Stidham, assistant director of bands, and John Grashel.
associate professor of music education, are teaching the bands this week. Pam Bushouse and Connie Haverkamp, both choral conductors at junior high schools, are teaching choir.
The students have been divided into two groups, red and blue. One conductor takes red and the other blue
for the week. Both groups will present a band and choral concert at 10 a.m. Saturday in Hoch Auditorium.
There is no orchestra to teach in the first week of the music program. But Bushouse said that next year, orchestra would be included in the first week to accommodate more students.
A
Heidi Schram, 14, Topeka; Lori Denton, 14, Nebraska City, Neb; and Jeanne McCready, 14, Prairie Village, rehearse the flute part for a
Amy Rhoads/KANSAN
midwestern Music Camp concert. The concert will be 10 a.m. Saturday at Hoch Auditorium.
Local company films PBS children's show
"Reading Rainbow," a Public Broadcasting Service's children's show, is gearing up for its fourth season on the air with the help of a local film-production company and a former KU student.
By DeAnn Thomas
Centron Corporation Inc., 1621 W. Ninth St,创建 the animation used in PBS's "Reading Rainbow", thanks to a computer program designed by Roger Holden, the former student.
Star writer
"People always talk about 'The Day After' and 'Nice Girls Don't Explode' being filmed in Lawrence," Holden said Monday. "But parts of 'Reading Rainbow' have been made in Lawrence for three years now."
This season's episodes of the program, which tries to interest children in reading books, will begin Monday.
Holden's computer program speeds up the traditional animation process, making the work less time-consuming and less costly. In 1982, Holden's team made a low bid for "Reading Rainbow" and sold it MPEG 5's deadlines.
Holden was a computer student at the University of Kansas in 1981 when he began work on the 1year project for Centron.
Chuck Warner, vice president of operation at Centron, said the company created the animated movement and edited the animation together with the narration sent from PBS in New York. Usually the broadcast contained no more than 11 minutes of animation from the story.
Instead of purchasing expensive animation equipment, Centron was able to spend $4,000 on a homecomputer system and use Holden's program. Holden invented the program for Centron in his free time in exchange for the technical rights to the computer system there.
Holden said he was happy that the television program chose books on the forefront of social issues.
Celebrities such as Bill Cosby, Lily Tomlin and Gilda Radner have their voices for narration of the books on "Reading Rainbow." The program is hosted by actor LeVar Burton.
Dolezal said, "Centron is grateful for Holden's program. It has enabled us to get to do the work for 'Reading' by the required deadlines."
"The kids were familiar with the video and the book, so they were interested in how the work was done." Dolezal said.
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Holden, now president of the Kansas Film Institute and his own company, Holden Gentry Systems Inc., holds the world's largest saved Centron more than $50,000.
Doleza showed the dozen or more children how he had to cut the pictures out of the book being animated and set them on clear, cells or frames. He told them that a background had to be painted.
Now, when Loren Dolezal, Centron's animation photographer, needs to make a frame in the tedium process of animation filming, he just types a command into the computer and a camera automatically moves the illustrated page, creating the illusion of movement in the characters.
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When the program began, Dolezal said, he set up a demonstration at the bookstore to show how the animation was done. He took samples of the art work done by Centron artists Oscar Rojas and Rick Notesheet.
Warner said the computer program had put the company in a visible position to compete with other animated-film producers for bids.
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Though he wasn't sure how much money Holden's program had saved or made for Centron, Warner said, the program could cut the cost of animation production by 35 percent to 60 percent.
"I feel proud that 'Reading Rainbow' produced an animated feature for children on the starving conditions in Africa before 'We are the world' came out. "Holden said.
Mary Williams, of Adventure A Bookstore, 836 Massachusetts St., said the sales of children's books were on track. The books were read on PPS that day.
Albert Gerken, University carillonneur, will give a free carillon recital at p.m. today at Campanile II Memorial Carillon.
*Student Union Activities will show the film 'Fail Safe' at 7 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Tickets are $1.50.
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Some local bookstores order the books that PBS selects for the program. The books are kept on a special display so adults and children can pick out the books they hear about on "Reading Rainbow."
Friday
Sights and sounds
*Student Union Activities will show the film "Kentucky Fried Movie" at 7 p.m. in woodruff Hall, Kansas University. Tickets are $1.50.
"A free film, "A Chorus Line," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, an accomodated homemade ice cream will be served.
The Midwestern Music Camp jazz recital will be at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the lobby of Oliver Hall
Mark Holmberg, assistant University carillonneur, will give a free carillon recital at 3 p.m. at Campanile's Memorial Carillon.
Sunday
The Midwestern Music Camp concert will be at 10 a.m. in Hoch Auditorium. It is free and open to the public.
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The Midwestern Music Camp piano recital will be at 9:30 a.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall of Murphy Hall.
Saturday
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Wednesday, June 18, 1986
University Daily Kansan
7
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University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, June 18, 1986
Lippincott renovation to be finished in June
By Bill Raynolds
By Bill Haynholds Special to the Kansas
For the past three months, visitors and workers at Lippincott Hall have had to trek across Jayhawk Boulevard to use the restrooms in Praser Hall because of innovation project in Lippincott.
Dusty, decrepit toilers, a cobweb-encrusted radiator, a water heater, copper pipes, and a half-full bag of gypsum plaster in the only two restrooms in Lippincott, which are in the basement.
"It has been very inconvenient for everyone in this building," Carol Clifford, secretary to the director of the Applied English Center, said yesterday from her office in Lippincott.
The renovation, scheduled to be finished June 20, was necessary to comply with federal and state laws concerning accessibility for the
handicapped, said Jim Modig, associate director of facilities planning.
“Our goal is to create a barrier-free restroom facility.” Modig said. “We intend to put in new fixes, increase stall widths and door widths.”
Modig the renovation had been slowed by a delay in the delivery of sinks, toilets and toilet tubs. The materials they would arrive any day.
Teftf & Donaldson Contractors Inc. of Topeka are working on the renovation at a cost of $43,972. Modig said state law required acceptance of the lowest construction bid.
Tefft Donaldson received permission to begin work on the renovation February 20, Modig said. At a preconstruction meeting in April, the contractor estimated that the renovation would take six weeks.
Organizations hindered by crowded office space
By Brenda Flory
The renovation of the Kansas Union has brought a new set of concerns for student organizations, health body president, said Monday.
Staff writer
Because of the Union renovation, which is scheduled to begin in January, several student organization have moved to the Burge Union.
"I see a lot of potential problems," Epstein said. "Organizations can't remain alive and active without a nesting place."
He said the organizations had planned to move into the Party Room, in the basement of the Burge Union, sometime this summer. But he has learned the room won't be ready by September.
"The situation would be all right for this summer, but come this fall, student organizations are a major deal." Epstein said.
Epstein said many of the temporary offices were separated by tape only. He said the offices had no
private space, some had little or no room for telephones or files and some had no place to sit down.
"I'm opposed to the whole way it has been handled." Epstein said. "If money is the problem, they should be given priority and they decided to renovate the Union."
Ruth Litchwardt, spokesman for Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said her group's services would be hindered next year.
"We handle a lot of confidential material," Lichardt said. "Many people who want to talk to us might believe, because we don't have the privacy."
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Wednesday, June 18, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
9
Epstein hails new Senate VP
By Brenda Flory
Staff writer
It's difficult to fill someone else's shoes, but Kris Krurtenberg, new Student Senate vice president, seems to have the right size feet, David Epstein, student body president, said Monday.
Kurtenbach, former Associated Students of Kansas campus director and off-campus senator, was chosen to replace Amy Brown in an emergency session of the Student Executive Committee on May 18.
Brown resigned when she decided to accept a position as a copy editor with the Argus Leader, a Sioux Falls, Mo. school of going before law at KU.
"At first I was nervous about taking the position." Kurtenbach said. "I didn't know how people would look
at it "
"I've gotten a lot of good support," she said.
But Kurtenbach said she was getting used to her new position.
Epstein said that because he was not living in Lawrence this summer, Kurtenbach had an opportunity to learn the lrops.
Epstein is attending classes this summer at the University of Missouri at Kansas City. He said this was the best time for Kurtenbach to because it would give her time to get adjusted to some of the pressures.
"I'm letting her be in charge of the office," Epstein said.
"She is going to be bombarded with information," Epstein said. "I know it will be difficult for her, but I'm not expecting that many problems."
Epstein said Kurtenbach was a
"She does not beat around the bush," he said. "In the long run, she is the best type of person to have in an argument because she tells it like it is."
hardworking, honest and straightforward person.
Kurttenbach will be a senior next year. In addition to an English degree, she is working toward a journalism in public relations and marketing.
"My ultimate goal is to get into book publishing," she said. The majority of the people that get involved with student government are studying law or political science. Kuritani had also recently motivated but that she saw her new responsibility as part of the college experience.
Kurtenbach said she was working on the programs that already had
been implemented by the Student
Senate. She said she was still going
through a transition period and prob-
ably would not bring in any new
ideas to the Senate until meeting
began in the fall.
The guide is basically an expanded syllabus, she said. The Senate hopes to have it available during enrollment for next spring.
She is now concentrating on compiling the "Course Source," in/depth courses to courses and their assignments, and down on the number of add/drops.
Other programs keeping Kurten-bach busy include campus lighting to be installed this summer, the hotline for students to give their opinions of Senate matters and the "tipsy taxi" service, which provides free taxi rides from Lawrence bars on weekends, Kurtenbach said.
Mall may give job market a lift
By Rachelle Worrall
Staff writer
Although Lawrence's job rate has been projected by some to slow from its current pace, David Longhurst, city commissioner, said last week that he would help put Lawrence on a positive economic spiral.
Longhurst said the mall's construction costs would be $20 million to $30 million. Although the boost in construction jobs would be temporary, the increase to 400 permanent, lower-paying jobs created.
playing jobs created. The jobs generated by the mall would not necessarily expand the job market, Longhurst said.
"There would be some trade-off if you created 400 jobs," he said. "Some jobs would be taken from the busier areas."
"But it would certainly have an economic benefit. It would also have a psychological benefit."
It lends to the impression that Lawrence is healthy, growing and viable. "
Although the Lawrence job market appears healthy, Rehelio Samuel, executive director of the Lawrence Human Relations Commission, said, Lawrence's unemployment rate, as determined by the Kansas Department of Human Resources, is too low.
Ed Mills, manager of the Job Service Center, 833 Ohio St., said the April unemployment rate in Lawrence was 3.2 percent, about 1,200 unemployed.
When the May and June statistics are out, the unemployment rate increases to about 4 or 4.5 percent. Mills said. The increase is typical when there is flux of graduating students into the job market.
Samuel said, "I think it's ridiculous, but they can only report the figures they have. That figure is low, very low.
"I know for a fact that many of these people don't go to the employment office and haven't for me."
The final decision to build the mall rests on the acceptance of a slum-and-bight study that was ordered by the city. The study will be discussed at a meeting June 23.
The study qualifies the 600 block between Kentucky and Massachusetts streets as blighted. If the city accepts the study, it will have the opportunity to ademn the buildings and buy the land in the area.
Gary Toebben, vice president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said, "I think the construction of a downtown shopping mall would have a positive impact on the entire downtown area."
The Downtown Lawrence Association board of directors issued a statement in support of a mail development and said it would favor efforts by the commission to accelerate economic development.
TOUR
Kick 'em
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
Ed Brunt, a third-degree black belt, demonstrates a sidekick to top-ranking student James Frink. Brunt and Frink are part of the Law Enforcement Tae Kwon Do Association that meets weekly at South Park.
A. S. Golmohan
Engineering dean settles into Lawrence
Dan Ruettimann/KANSAN
By Evan Walter
Carl E. Locke, dean of engineering
Staff writer
After four and $\frac{1}{2}$ months of commuting weekly between jobs at the University of Kansas and the University of Oklahoma in Norman, Oka, the new dean of engineering has settled into Lawrence.
Carl Locke, the new dean, began working half-time at KU in January and became a full-time dean in the middle of May.
finished things to do at Norman."
"He was the dean from January to May, but he was only part-time at KU and part-time at OU." said Don Green. Conger Gates distinguished himself as a professor of engineering and chairman. "When we selected him, he still had some un-
At the University of Oklahoma, Locke was the director of the School of Chemical Engineering and the College of Medicine in the College of Engineering.
"I didn't know / for sure if I wanted to be dean," Locke said. "I didn't even know if I wanted to come to KU. But I was impressed with the faculty and the students, even with the city of Lawrence.
"I hope to be here the rest of my working life," Looke said, "but in a job like this, you never know how long or what opportunities will come up."
"Ten months ago I would have been stunned if someone told me I'd
be dean in Lawrence."
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Locke is from Fort Worth, Texas. He earned all of his degrees from the University of Texas at Austin. He received his bachelor of science degree in 1958, his master's degree in 1969 and his Ph.D. in 1972.
Locke began his teaching career at the University of Oklahoma in 1973. For the past six years, he has worked as director of chemical engineering
Locke said that last August, some KU engineering faculty members asked him to apply for the open position of professor, and he was reviewed in November, he was selected.
During his first few months here, Locke worked at OU with graduate students and finished other projects there.
"I didn't pick KU. They in a sense picked me," he said "Deaneil Tacha (then the vice chancellor of
academic affairs) convinced me to come here half-time, so I went back and forth."
"I feel great," Green said. "I've known him a long time. I was on an advisory board at OU, and I was familiar with his work there."
Selecting a new dean from more than 50 applicants took about 15 months. Green said.
He has known Locke since 1962, when both he worked for the Continental Oil Co. in Ponca City, Okla.
Although Lawrence hasn't always been on his agenda, Locke said, after
being here and meeting the people he was satisfied.
"I've been very pleased with what I've seen," he said. "I've been impressed with the faculty and their accomplishments. I'm impressed with their attitudes and approaches to things."
"My plans are to try to lead the school by deciding with the faculty what our goals are going to be," he says, "and then they decide where we want to go."
Although Locke didn't have any major changes planned for the school, he said, he would try to find ways to make goals he and the faculty had in mind.
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RICK'S BIKE SHOP
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We're taking serious fun here *the SPECIALIZED ROCKHOPPER!* Remember the balloon-tire, upright bicycle of yesterday? Now take away half the weight and Effort. The go anywhere, do anything Rockhopper can do, leaving you always with an ear-to-ear grin. Whether you're negotiating city potholes or washboard backboards, the Rockhopper can be treated in ways you never treat a civilized road bike. You will find the Rockhopper's array of components and features on your bicycle. Shimano De Ore XT components, Shimano De Ore XT components, uni-crown forks—and much more] Rick's Bike Shop is the area's exclusive Rockhopper deal.
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10
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, June 18, 1986
KU bus program reported healthy in spite of setback
By DeAnn Thomas Staff writer
Steve McMurry may be slow in repaying the University of Kansas the $27,000 he embebled from bus funds, but KU on Wheels is doing an even, Charles Bryan, director of the bus program, said yesterday.
McMurry, former director of KU on Wheels, has paid $800 toward the debt since he was released from prison in December 1984. In his parole agreement, McMurry agreed to pay $200 a month to KU.
Tim Henderson, Student Senate treasurer, said yesterday that KU on Wheels had received only $120.
Henderson said he didn't know why payment had not been received, but that it was probably still tied up in the bureaucracy.
John Patterson, comptroller for
According to Douglas County District Court records, McMurray has missed several payments. He made two full payments this year.
the University, said he didn't think the Senate records were updated vet.
"KU on Wheels is financially sound, he said."
Bryan said he does not think about the lost money.
"It's behind us now," Bryan said. "KU on Wheels is very busy with the Secure Cab and Lift Van programs for students."
The discovery of McMurry's embezzlement initiated the first stringent bookkeeping policies for Bryan Henderson said he was keeping the official set of books, and Bryan had his own set of books.
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2500 W. 6th
A look of anger; then a dollar pulled from a pocket or wallet; a lick of the envelope's flap; and a deposit into a little yellow box. This scene takes place many times a day in downtown Lawrence.
Parking fines provide revenue
The fine is $1 if paid within the first 24 hours; after that it is $2. If the ticket is not paid within 15 days, the fine is $8. After 15 days the ticket is sent to the court for prosecution and the fine is $8.
By Kristi Schroeder
When a person fails to appear in court, the judge decides on the amount of the bond and fine, and a judgment is entered against the offender. The usual fine is $13.
The department sends the out-of-state violators a notice, he said, and most of the people send in the $13 stipulation that cannot prosecute across state lines.
The proposed 1986 expenditures for the fund are $219,000. Van Saun said.
The proposed generated revenue for the meters is $41,019 and for the over-fees fines, $50,000. The additional money earned in by other departments, she said.
Administrative L.T. Lyle Sutton said the strict purpose of his department was parking control and meter citations. He has three female officers who live in the area and in the time tots. They usually end up ticketing from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Staff writer
A typical workday for the control officers involves walking up and around the office space, checking in and checking out a time lot before business. The three guests had
The figures for the 1984 year were
$80,117.58 from the meters and
$31,555.55 from parking fees, Van Saum
tax, and The 1985 figures were not
available.
The city's parking-control officers issue 300 to 400 tickets a day to shopers, residents and employees of the downtown area. The control officers work to keep the parking spaces in the stores accessible to shoppers.
The revenue generated by the tickets and the meters is handled through the city's finance department. Debbie Van Saun, assistant director of finance, said the revenue was put into an operating fund for maintaining the parking spaces and lots.
out 409 tickets Friday and 465 on Saturday, Sutton said.
he said.
Vikki Hitt is one of the control officers who patrols the street looking for the familiar red "time expired" flag. She said that she didn't have many problems with people becoming upset at receiving a ticket.
"Most everyone is accepting," she said. "Only a few people get angry with us."
The officer can void a ticket if the person catches the office writing the ticket. Otherwise, Hilt said, she could not force it to coincide with the same car as she wanted to.
Hitt said if someone got really irate, she would send that person to Sutton at the police department.
Hitt said she could ticket the cars in the two-hour time lots every two hours.
"It's up to us to decide who and when to ticket," she said.
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Our Drivers Carry Less Than $10.00
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Wednesday, June 18, 1986
University Daily Kansan
11
Campus/Area
Program aids young minority students
By Evan Walter Staff writer
Twenty minority high school students from Kansas City, Mo., who are high academic achievers, are invited to participate in a series of students at the University of Kansas.
The highschool students are sponsored by INROADS, a nationwide non-profit organization that offers high school students a chance to take college-level introductory English, math, business and engineering courses, said Florence Boldridge, director of SCORMEBE, the Student Council for Recruiting, Motivating and Educating Black Engineers.
INROADS, which is privately financed by several major corporations, such as Mobil Oil Corp., Union Carbide Corp., ARMCO Inc. and the First American Corp., has two main components — collegiate and pre-collegiate programs. The program at KU, in the schools of Engineering and Business, is pre-collegiate and brings 20 students to Lawrence.
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"The students are in classes all morning long," Boldridge said. "They have at least three hours of instruction in addition to a computer-skills class."
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All the students participating in the program are between their junior and senior years. They take English composition; algebra (Math 101) or calculus (Math 201); and financial accounting or Introduction to Engineering. One of the
students this summer is enrolled in Calculus II, Boldridge said.
The students go on field trips to local business plants, Boldridge said. This summer the engineering students will visit TRW, an oil-well cable division in Lawrence, and American Telephone & Telegraph co., in Kansas City, Mo. The business students will visit Peat, Marwick, Mitchell co., an accounting firm in Kansas City, Mo., and Hallmark
Cards in Lawrence.
INROADS was founded in 1970 in Chicago to train minority students with promising abilities to enter the corporate world.
Students from the Kansas City area attend KU, in addition to Rockhill College, Kansas City, Mo. Students from University of Missouri at Kansas City
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ##
STUDENT SCHEDULE FOR SUMMER 1986
DATE: SUMMER
TIME: 8:00pm
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TOTAL 30,0 (TUFF SCHEDULE)
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12
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 18, 1986
Talks halted as police, city dispute future wage hikes
Campus/Area
By Dana Spoor Staff writer
Lawrence police officers, city officials and a federal mediator met yesterday in an attempt to iron-out an incident, but no agreement was reached.
Both sides agreed to break for the day and resume talks on Monday, David Reavis, chairman of the board of officers Association, said yesterday.
Both sides must agree on a contract and have it ready to go by Aug. 3 for budgetary reasons, he said. If an agreement is not reached with the federal mediator, there will be a hearing in Lawrence City Commission meeting.
There are six areas that need to be worked on: salaries in 1988; shift deferential pay; court-time pay; payment of dependent health plans; longevity; and a second-year appeal process.
Officers with different areas of
skills receive a higher wage. They now receive a 2.5 percent wage increase for skills such as teaching in English and for receiving higher education
"We are placing greater value on skills and encouraging them," he said. "For example, emergency medical training, we feel, is very important and it has a greater value of 5 percent."
The court-time pay disagreement, which determines how much officers get paid for court appearances, is no longer a major issue, Reavis said.
The two groups have decided to work on a two-year agreement, instead of the original one-year agreement. The biggest area of debate is salaries, said Ray Hummert, city employees relations director.
The two sides have agreed upon a wage increase of 4.5 percent in 1987. The city has asked the police to wait, but the police are asking for a 4 per raise for that year.
It's time for...
6 7 8pm 9 10 11 12
Half Price For KU Students
Kansas Summer Theatre`86
The Golden Fleece by A. R. Gurney and The Harmfulness of Tobacco by Anton
The 1940's Radio Hour written by Walters Jones
Chelsea
8:00 p.m. nightly
June 26, 27 & 28, 1986
Swarthout Rectal Hall
Based on an idea by Walton Jones and Carol Lees, as originally presented by the Ensemble Company and Yale Academy, the program is developed by the Arena Stage in
Washington, D.C. Broadway production presented by Jujamycin Productions. Joseph P. Harris, Ira Bernstein and Roger Bennett 8:00 p.m. July 11, 12, 13, 18 & 19, 1986 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale June 9 in the Murphy Hall Box Office
For reservations, call 913-8644 3982
VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations
reserved by The University of Kansas
Theatre
20% OFF
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Thanks to you (our loyal customers) we have OUTGROWN our old building and have moved to a larger facility at: 1120 E.23rd
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Leon's Bug Barn
1120 E. 23rd
Open M-F 8-5 and Sat. 10-4
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SUA FILMS
All films at 7:00 p.m. in Woodruff $1.50
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Nabil's Restaurant
Nabil's Restaurant
intimate dining and fine continental cuisine.
with
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9th & Iowa
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For parties of 5 or more, please call for reservations 841-7226
Nabil's
For parties of 5 or more, please call for reservations 841-7226
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 1986-87 CONCERT & CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES
TTINERARY
Concert Series
Cologne Radio Orchestra with Andre Michel Schuh November 5, 1986; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
American Ballet Comedy
October 9, 1986; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
James Galway
December 11, 1986; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
Franz Listzi
Chamber Orchestra
February 19, 1987; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
New York City Opera
in Madama Butterfly
April 1, 1987; 8 p.m.
Hoolock Auditorium
Mercer Cunningham Dance Company March 25, 1987; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
Chamber Music Series
Mark Peaskau and Friends
September 28, 1986;
3:30 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Cleveland Quartet with Emmeline Ax
October 25, 1986. 8 p.m.
Crafton Theater
King's Singer
November 19, 1986; 8 p.m.
Plymouth Congregational
Church
Jailbird String Quartet
February 1, 1987; 3:30 p.m.
Crafton-Prayer Theatre
Empire Brass Quinter
March 8, 1987; 8 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Kronos Quartet
April 12, 1987; 8 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
University Arts Festival Event
Guthre Theater's Candida
February 8, 1987; 3: 20 p.m.
Craftion-Praire Theatre
The Arts
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT: MURPHY HALL
BOX OFFICE! 913-864-3982
INVENTORY SCHEDULE
Kansas Union Store—Closed June 23-25
Burge Union Store—Closed June 25-27
Oread Bookstore—Closed June 25-27
KU
KUBookstores
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I
Wednesday, June 18, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
13
Royals Report
Compiled by Dawn O'Malley Sports Editor
Royals 3. Oakland 2
Rudy Law hit an 111-inch double to the Royals its 3-2 victory over the Oakland A's Monday night at Oakland Coliseum.
Willie Wilson led off the 12th inning with a single off Joe Rijo. Then Angel Salazar struck out. When Wolfe stole second and Law hit his double.
Oakland scored its second run in the bottom of the 11th on a sacrifice fly by Jose Canseco.
Bud Black, 4-4, and Dan Quisenberry, pitched the two inings after rookie Scott Bankhead drew a four-hitter in nine innings, walking none
Royals 6, California 5
Dan Quisenberry retired two men consecutively with bases loaded in the eighth inning to earn his fifth save and a Royals win over California 6-5 this past Sunday at Anaheim Stadium.
Cinches, and pinch hitter Reggie Jackson got a hit that forced in a run in the fourth, Frank White got his eighth home run.
Starting pitcher Charlie Leibrandt fell into trouble in the eighth after Dick Schiffoel and Brian Downing each hit singles. Leibrandt was replaced by Steve Farr, who took over with a 6-2 lead. Farr walked Doug DeCinces, and pinch hitter Reggie Jackson got a hit that injured in a run.
California 6. Rovals 5
An eighth-inning home run by Doug DeCaires lifted California to a 6-5 victory over the Royals Saturday at Anahiel Stadium.
In the seventh innning, Iroda manager Dick Howser was ejected from the game after arguing with home place umpire, Rich Garcia, who ruled that Ruppert Jones had been struck by a pitch from Dennis Leonard. The umpire was sent off for striking three runs. Buddy Biancaanal and Lonnie Smith hit solo home runs.
Royals 10, California 2
Simon lasted only three and a half innings, but it was long enough for the Royals to get eight runs in their eventuating 10-2 win over California in the second round.
The attack intensified with Willie Wilson's RBI double in the fourth innning and Lonnie Smith's two RBIs, one of which was a home run. Brett Saberhagen, 4-6, pitched a shutout until the seventen when Brian Downing got a solo home run. Bud Black replaced him in the eighth. Black allowed a run on Reggie Jackson's single and Jack Howell's triple.
California 3, Royals 2
California pitcher Mike Witt, 7-4, held the Royals hitless through the first five innings to elevate the California Angels to a 3-2 victory over the Royals Thursday at Anaheim Stadium.
Witt finished the game allowing six hits and striking out nine. Witt's victory was jeopardized in the eighth after the Royals got a run. Witt played the play came from California first baseman Walt Jewner, who fielded a grounder and tohome to play to throw out slow-moving Lonnie Smith.
Royals starter Danny Jackson, 2-4, allowed five hits while striking out eight.
Seattle 12. Rovals 2
The Seattle Mariners stretched their winning streak at Royals Stadium to seven with the 12-2 victory over the Royals last Wednesday.
Charlie Leibrandt was the unfortunate pitcher for the Royals. But white
masters won his teammates committed four errors, not counting a dropped ball飞。
Seattle's John Moses drove in three runs and had three hits.
On Deck
Royals vs. Oakland
No name.
2:15 p.m. at Oakland Coliseum
Fridav
Royals vs. California
Saturday
Royals vs. California
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Saturday
7:05 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Sunday
Monday
Royals vs. California
1:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Monday
Royals vs. Oakland
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Tuesday
Royals vs. Oakland
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Last night
American League
Toronto 2, Milwaukee 1
Kansas City 2, Oakland 1
Boston 7, New York 6
Seattle 5, Cleveland 2
Charlotte 4, San Diego 3
Minnesota 4, Chicago 1
California 4, Texas 0
National League
Philadelphia 11, Chicago 8
Montreal 4, New York 2
St. Louis 7, Pittsburgh 1
Cincinnati 5, Houston 4
Atlanta 4, Los Angeles 3
San Diego 8, San Francisco 5
Standings
East Division
W L Pct. GB
Boston 42 21 .667 —
New York 37 27 .578 $_{1/2}$
Baltimore 37 27 .565 $_{1/2}$
Milwaukee 32 30 .516 $_{1/2}$
Toronto 33 22 .508 $_{1/2}$
Cleveland 30 31 .492 11
Detroit 30 31 .492 11
West Division
| | W L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Texas | 34 29 | .540 | — |
| California | 33 31 | .516 | $1\frac{1}{2}$ |
| Kansas City | 33 31 | .516 | $1\frac{1}{2}$ |
| Oakland | 27 38 | .415 | 8 |
| Minnesota | 26 37 | .413 | 8 |
| Chicago | 25 37 | .403 | $8\frac{1}{2}$ |
| Seattle | 25 36 | .400 | 9 |
Includes games through last night
East Division
National League
W 4 L Pct. GB
New York 14 7.721 —
Montreal 33 27 550 10½
Philadelphia 33 27 483 10½
Boston 26 35 437 10½
Chicago 26 36 419 18½
Pittsburgh 26 35 406 19½
Malone averaged 23.8 points and 11.8 rebounds last season. An injured
West Division
W L Pct. Pct. GB -
Houston 35 27 465.
San Francisco 35 27 465. 2½
Atlanta 32 30 516.
San Diego 32 30 492.
Los Angeles 31 33 484. 5
Cincinnati 25 35 417. 9
"The coaches have been holding me back from playing my game." Malone, a three-time Most Valuable Player, said in Houston, his home. "I know I could play better than I played last year."
Malone goes to Bullets
Includes games through last night
HOUSTON — Nine-time all-star center Moses Malone, traded yesterday by Philadelphia to its Atlantic Division rivals, the Washington Bullets, said he is happy to leave the team as he felt stifled by the catching staff.
The 76ers traded the 6-10-foot-10 Malone, 31, and 6-4 forward Karyn Catleye to Washington for 6-10 cester Jef Rolland and 6-9 forward Cliff Robinson in a deal that was an underdog before the start of the NBA draft.
The Associated Press
eye socket suffered near the end of the regular season is still healing, according to Malone, who missed the last seven games of the regular season and the playoffs in which the 76ers were eliminated in the Eastern Conference semifinals by the Milwaukee Bucks.
"I think the situation will be much better in Washington than in Philadelphia," Malone said. He said he was looking forward to playing in the Bolts in Washington because he would have another center taller than him.
Malone, who signed a six-year, $13 million contract with 76ers four years ago, said he had not wanted to stay in Philadelphia too long and anticipated being traded. Philadelphia officials had expected to have a difficult time reaching a new contract agreement with Malone and he said he thought finances played a part in the 76ers decision.
Royals continue their winning streak
Jackson, 3-4, bested Oakland rookie Bill Mooneyham, 1-1, who allowed only six hits over seven and nine shots in his second major-league start
The Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. — Danny Jackson pitched a seven-hitter over eight innings, and personal four-game losing streak and giving the Royals a 2-1 victory over the Oakland A's yesterday.
Jackson walked four and struck out five before giving way to Dan Quisenberry in the ninth inning. He earned his seventh save of the season.
The last pitch thrown by Jackson was hit about 380 feet, but Royals center fielder, Lynn Jones caught the ball.
The A's loaded the bases with two out in the bottom of the ninth on a fielder's choice, single and error, but Quisenberry got Jose Canseco to ground back to the mount to end the game.
"It was just a bad pitch," Jackson said after the game. "But Lynn made a good catch."
Mooneyham allowed one hit over the first three innings and retired the first two batters in the fourth before
Moneymey tried to pick off Orta at first and wildly threw an error allowing Orta to advance to second. Frank White followed with a single, returned to second and continued to second on second baseman Tony Phillips 'throwing error'
Jorge Orta singled off his glove to start a two-run rally.
Steve Balboni drove in White with a single to left to give the Royals a 2o lead. It was Balboni's 21st RBI in his last 19 games.
White's hit, which gave him a team-leading 36 RBs, was a blooper into right field one pitch after Mooneyham and catcher Mickey Tet-
The A's scored in the fifth with a two-out rally of their own. Alfredo Griffin bounced a single over third base, advanced to second on Tetel and scored and scored when Phillip bloomed a single into right field.
tleton thought they had a strike out. White had checked his swing on the pitch in question.
In the bottom of the eighth, Donnie Hill singled and advanced to third on a hit by Causeco with one. Dave Kingman followed with a grounder to second at the plate, then out at the plate. Jackson hit Stan Javier with a pitch to load the bases.
Basketball revenues growing
By Brenda Flory
Sports writer
Although the excitement of last year's basketball season has passed, KU basketball is still jumping with business this summer.
All three major television networks are asking for television coverage of next year's basketball games, and more teams are interested in playing KU, Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, said.
Hunter's led the major television networks, CBS, ABC and NBC, showed a lot of interest in KU basketball. A minimum of five games will be played this season and he said he couldn't comment on the games that will be televised until the
All-sports tickets are selling each day by the hundreds, Diana Wehmeyer, ticket manager, said yesterday.
"I think our athletic success has enabled people to be more aware of KU's academic and athletic reputation," Hunter said.
networks did.
Additionally, ESPN and USA television networks contacted Hunter about possible spots, but he said they were still on the negotiating table.
This year KU picked up games with Miami, Notre Dame, North Carolina St. Louis,ville, and another game on the road, announced at a later date, Hunter said.
As of yesterday, Wethmeyer said 1,500 all/sports tickets had been sold. At this time last year only 160 season tickets had been sold, but she at the increase to the fact that fliers were in the mail earlier this year.
Susan Wachter, assistant athletic director in charge of business, said the total KU men's basketball revenue for the 1985-86 season was $1 million, $130,000 more than what was actually budgeted. This was a w
The flier reminds people that buying a season ticket guarantees them a seat at basketball games.
$160,000 increase from the previous season.
Wachter said the estimated basketball revenue for the upcoming season is $1,460,000. The all/sports ticket price has increased by $10 and game tickets have increased by 50 cents for the general public this year.
More revenue was brought in this year because all the home games were sold out, Wachter said. The concession stands at Allen Field House bought in more money from the larger crowds.
Richard Konzem, assistant athletic director in charge of the William's Fund, said a lot of factors, like the economic situation, are involved in bringing in revenue for KU athletics, not just men's basketball.
Konzem said the William's Fund recorded its largest annual revenue of approximately $2,251,000 this year, an increase of 14 percent from last year. Donations totaled $25,200, an increase of $89,000 from March 1985.
Bell's attorney to file motion
United Press International
WICHTHA — An attorney for Kansas City Chiefs defensive end Mike Bell said he would file a motion this week seeking a new trial for Bell, who was convicted last week on cocaine charges.
Attorney Michael Wilson said his motion would challenge a decision by Judge Wesley Brown of the U.S. District Court on the first day of the court to allow as evidence conversations other than those involving the Bells.
receive cocaine he later sold to the Bells.
That decision allowed the government to introduce conversations between its key witness, Coleman Lockett, and two other alleged drug traffickers. Adams and Adams. In the conversations, Lockett was arranging to meet with Adams to
Wilson also said he would challenge what he contended was improper rebuttal evidence by a former Wichita police officer who testified against Mike Bell and his twin brother, Mark, on at least two occasions.
Mike Bell was convicted of two felony counts of using a telephone to try to buy cocaine and one misdemeanor count of attempting to possess cocaine. Mark Bell was convicted of one felony count of using a telephone to buy cocaine and one misdemeanor count of attempting to possess cocaine.
Wilson said he did not know whether he would appeal the verdict in the Bells' trial. He also said he did not think the motion was consider the motion for a new trial.
Player acquitted
It took the five woman, one man jury two and a half hours to acquit John Williams of two counts of sports bribery and three counts of criminal conspiracy to commiss sports bribery.
Williams, a second-round draft pick of the Cleveland Cavaliers last year, was accused of scheming with eight others to shave off the team's dominance against Southern Mississippi and Memphis State in February 1985.
Defense attorney Michael Green hugged Williams when the verdict was read.
Williams' mother, wife, son, and leukemia-stricken high school coach, Tommy Wall, were present in the courtroom.
Disc team takes third
a trial last August ended in a mistrial.
By a Kansan sports writer
Despite the sun's rays beating upon them, the Kansas Knuckleheads, a team of Ultimate FRISIBEE disc players, weathered heat and thirst to place third at the 1966 Ultimate Texas Shootout in Dallas this past Saturday and Sunday.
Twelve teams participated in the two-day tournament.
On the first day of the tournament, the Kansas team won two of their three games. The Knucklebones were formed from a team of two Lawrence teams, the Horror/Zomails and the SubHumans.
The Knuckleheads lost their first game 13-2 to the eventual champions, Texas Heat.
"Texas Heat pretty much dominated the tournament," Chris Yoeder, Wichita senior, said. "He capitalized on our turnovers."
After losing their first game, Kansas came back to beat the Clear Lake International Throwdown and Ultimate Til You Puke teams.
The Ultimate games lasted up to two hours apiece. To combat the high temperatures the players had to wear protective suits the sun when they weren't playing.
Sports writer
On the second day of the tournament, the Knuckleheads came from behind to beat the Ether Bunnies from Austin, Texas, Kansas on fifth at hallway but reeled off unanswered points to win 15-13.
"It was 95 degrees and the ground was hard." Joel Ashmore, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said. "I was a bummer. We put ice on our necks and main arteries and drank tons of water."
By Kristi Schroeder
KU student bulking up
The phrase pumping iron often evokes images of burly men covered with sweat lifting 200 pound weights. What it may not bring to mind is a blind-haired, blue-eyed KU woman training for a body building contest.
Sandy Eisenbart, Goodland senior,
will be competing in the 1966 USA
Body Building Championships at
Beaumont, Texas, July 18-19.
1980
Eisenbart, who is 5-8 feet $^2$ and 140 pounds, competes in the heavyweight or tall division. The different meets place the competitors into either championship classes. The USA championships contest separate contests by weight class.
This past April, Eisenbart won in the tall class at the Junior USA Body Building Championships.
Body builder Sandy Eisenbart concentrates on perfecting her form at Junkyard's Ymyn & Nautilus Center, 535 Gateway Drive. She was working out in preparation for the USA Body Building Championships at Rearwood, Texas, July 18-19.
The USA championships will follow a set format for competition. Eisenbart is required to do 90 seconds of free posing. Free posing allows contestants to choose stances that best represent the form. In the past free posing was done under the rules have changed. Now it must be done without the aid of music.
The contestants then come out in small groups and are required to go through compulsory poses. Eight mandatory poses can be chosen by the judges, they also have the option of requiring any other poses.
Eisenbart said the judges could make the body builders hold the poses for as long as they wanted. The judges also can pull the contestants back on on the stage at any time to do more compulsions.
Before the judges call her out on stage, Eisenbard said she tries to imagine being in front of the crowd. This helps her calm her nerves.
"You've got your mind on one thing," she said. "You have to get mentally pumped up."
On the final night of competition,
the winners in each weight class are
brought out on stage to pose for 90
seconds. The show is done mainly to
make money for the promoters.
Eisenbart said.
"It gets wild." Eisenbart said. "Everyone tries to do better than the person next to them."
The contestants all try to outdo one another, she said. This gives the contestants a chance to show off their strong points. But Eisenbart said it wasn't just the strong points that the judges were looking for.
“It’s not your strong points, it’s your weaknesses that they watch for,” Eisenbart said.
Symmetry, when the triceps, biceps, abdominals and other muscles are in proportion, is Eisenbart's strong point. Eisenbart said women, in general, had less developed calf muscles than men and this was an area she needed to work on.
But after four years of competition, Eisenbart is going to take some time off.
"Right now I'm tired," Eisenbart said. "I'm taking a year to train, eat and get fat."
During her break from competition, Eisenbart said she would concentrate on gaining 10 pounds that will be converted into muscle.
"The bigger you are, the better you're gonna be," she said.
Eisenbant said this weight gain will improve her chances of winning future competitions because she is well-versed in most to most other women body builders
Even though Eisenbart wants to gain weight, she is conscious of the need to keep her body trim for competition.
The stress that comes with dieting can also cause problems, but Eisenbart has learned to deal with any
At the beginning of June, Eisenbart started dieting for the USA championships. Her diet consists of vegetables, grains, noodles, fruits and vitamin and protein supplements. Eisenbart said she took supplements to get the protein she needed.
Someone else who understands is Eisenbart's work partner, Julie Brown, Hutchison senior. Brown met Eisenbart last September, and they have been working out together for the past month.
grumpiness that comes with lack of food.
"If I feel myself getting upset, i lock myself in the bathroom," she said. "My roommate is really good about it. She understands."
"I think she has a real good chance," Brown said. "She has terrific symmetry and a lot of quality muscles."
Brown plans to travel to Texas to support Eisenbart in the crowd and Eisenbart's parents will probably be in the crowd too.
"They love it," Eisenbart said.
"They follow me to every contest."
1
14
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Wednesday, June 18, 1986
Daugherty top of the '86 class
United Press International
Players selected in first round of NBA draft yesterday, listed in order of selection with team that drafted them. (x-underclassman, pgp-points per game, rpg-rebounds per game, apg-assists per game.)
1. Brad Daugherty, Cleveland
Center, 7-0, 245, North Carolina, 20.2 ppg, 9.8 rpg, UPI second-tteam AllAmerica, Strengths / Good low-post offensive player, fundamentally strong defender and rebounder, makes few mistakes. Weaknesses / Not a great athlete or versatile questioned. 2. Leen Bias, Boston
Maryland, 6-8, 210, Maryland, 23.2
ppg, 6.8 rpg, UPI first-team All-America. Strengths / Great athlete who can score inside or outside, accustomed to playing as focus of offense. Weaknesses / poor fundamental defense, played primarily zone in college.
3. Chris Washburn, Golden State
- University, Golden State
Center, 125, 254, 17.6
6.7 pg, 7.8 lb / Powerful body and good shooting touch around basket / especially from baseline.
Exceptional athlete who runs the court well. Weaknesses / Should be much better offensive rebounder, to develop inside offensive moves.
4. Chuck Person, Indiana
forward, 6.8, 215, Auburn, 21.5
ppg. 7.9 rpg. Strengths / Deadly long-range jumper when hitting, good athlete and strong rebound.
Weaknesses / Streaky shooter, fades out of offence at times, reluctant to drive to basket.
5. Kenny Walker, New York
Forward. 6-8, 195, Kentucky. 20 ppg. 7.7 rpg. UPI firstteam All-America. Strengths / Plays hard, great leaper, strong defensive player. Weaknesses / Outside shooting suspect, balhandling in open court questioned.
6. x-William Bedford. Phoenix
Center, 7-0, 255, Memphis State.
17.3 ppg, 9 rpg. Strengths / Runs court well, good athlete and shot blocker, nice touch around basket.
Weaknesses / Limited shooting range, needs to develop offensive game with back to basket, needs to gain weight and work on man-to-man defense after relying heavily on zones.
7. Rov Tarpley, Dallas
Forward-center, 6-10, 230. Michigan, 15.9 ppp, 9.1 rpg. Strengths / Athletic and a strong rebounder who could play power forward in NBA. soft shoottouch, good shot blocker. Weaknesses / Needs to work
on moves with back to basket, inconsistent.
8. Ron Harper, Cleveland
Guard-Forward, 67, 205, Miami (Ohio). 24.4 ppg, 11.7 rpg, UPI second-team All-America. Strengths / Outstanding athlete, strong all-round game, can score from inside or outside. Weaknesses / Played in small-time college program.
9. Brad Sellers, Chicago
Center, 6-11, 212. Ohio State, 19.8
pp. 12.3. Strengths / Complete
offensive game: can shoot, handle
the ball and run the court.
Tosses / Inconsistency, lack of
intensity at long, not tough enough
for size.
10. Johnny Dawkins, San Antonio
10. John Dawkins, San Antonio Guard, 6-2, 165, Kulse, 20.2 p. 38, apg. UPI first team All-America game, 6-2, 165, Kulse, can leap over bigger players to get off uncontested shots and hits boards, quick hands on defense. Loves to play in pressure situations. Weaknesses / Size makes him a point guard but abilities are that of shooting guard, so son of defensive control. John Salley, Detroit
Forward, 7- 231, Georgia Tech,
13.1 gp, 6.7 rpg, Strengths / Runs
court well, excellent athlete, good
shooter in cool to basket. Excep-
ter
tional passing big man. Weaknesses / No range on jump shot, tendency to disappear from offense, appears to lack intensity at times. Should grab more rebounds. / John Williams. Washington
12. x-John Williams, Washington
12 k-700m Vulcan / Vulcaniser
14 k-800m Ft. State / Fortress
15.8g 4.5r Strength / Strong
inside player with good shooting
touch around basket, excellent
rebounding body. Can handle the ball
in the open court. Weaknesses / inconsistency, played only two years in
college, limited shooting range.
The next 11 draft choices are 13. New Jersey, Dwayne Washington, g. Syracuse. 14. Portland, Walter Berry, f. St. John's. 15. Udall, Dell Curry, g. Virginia Tech. 16. Denver (from Dallas), Maurice Martin, g. St. Joseph's (Penn). 17. Sacramento (from Detroit), Harold Pressley, f. Villanova. 18. Denver, Mark Alarie, f. Duke 19. Atlanta, Bill Thompson, g. Duke 20. Alabama, Johnson, f. Alabama 21. Washington (from Philadelphia), Anthony Jones, g. Nevada-Las VEGs. 22. Milwaukee, Scott Skills, g. Michigan State. 23. Los Angeles, Ken Barlow, f. Notre Dame. 24. Portland (from Boston via LA Clippers). Arvidas Sabonis, f. Soviet Union.
BODY BEAUTIFUL
for men only
Perm, Cut, Style $30
Regularly a $50 value. Expires June 28, 1986
Barber stylist and cosmetologists bringing to you the best in style
Walk in or call
THE HAIR STATION
1119 Massachusetts
841-6599
© Liberty is a trademark of Sebastian International.
(1) 789-382-8100, Sebastian International, Inc., Rowland Hills, CA 91405.
60% OFF
1603 W. 15th
Right On Campus!
·Furnished or
Unfurnished Rooms
·Individual Leases
·FREE Cablevision
·All Utilities Paid
·On Bus Route
·As little as
$119 a month
Jayhawker Towers
843-4993
ALL SELECTED STYLES
928 Massachusetts
The Only Apartments On The Hill
Open Sun. 1-5 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30 Thurs. 10-8:30
benetton
United Colors of benetton.
Rise to the top.
You're a nuclear-trained officer. It goes beyond specialIt's elite! And your statusreflects a job that demandsyour best. Proving yourskills at the heart of today'snuclear-powered Navy.Over half of America'snuclear reactors are in theNavy.-That adds up to moreyears of experience withreactors than any company.
in the world, and it meansworking with the mostsophisticated training andequipment anywhere.There's no boot campCollege graduates get OfficerCandidate School leadershiptraining, and a year ofgraduate-level training in theNavy Nuclear Power School.The rewards are topnotch.too. Generous bonuses uponcommissioning and also uponcompletion of nuclear training.Sign up while still in collegeand you could be earning$1,000 a month right now.
Be one of the mostaccompanied professionals in achallenging field. Lead theadventure as an officer inthe Nuclear Navy. Contactyour Navy Officer Recruiteror call 1-800-327-NAVY.
1
Wednesday, June 18, 1986
15
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days
0-15 2.60 3.75 5.25
10-20 2.90 4.25 6.00
22-29 3.20 4.75 6.75
For every 5 words add: 30¹ 50³ 75⁴
AD DEADLINES
University Daily Kansan
Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues allowed in classified display advertisements except for logos of well-known brands.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Classified Ads
bund items can be advertised FREE charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ad can be placed in the Kansas business office at 864-4358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Research Project on Sexual Harassment of
Women in the Workplace, who have been
received sexual harassment at work,
indefensible immunity. Involved Minn. app-
proved research. For more information, call
(612) 495-7030.
1.2% or 3 bed room apts or duplexes, summer
no pets, no pets, 843-1601. Evenings, A11-3232.
FOR RENT
£2.99 earned rain discount
* Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
Summer or Fall
FREE
MICROWAVE
POLICIES
no pets.
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established.
AVALON APTS.
9th & Avalon
1 or 2 bedroom,
close to schools
and shopping, A/C,
laundry, dishwasher,
no pets.
841-5797 for
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
Call
12 month lease signed before June 30, 1986
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only
- Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD FACE as 3 words
* Deadline at 4 p.m. --- 2 working days prior to
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
Blind ads ads=please add a 84 service charge.
Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed
advertising
Blind box ads -please add a $4 service charge.
correct insertion of any advertisement
* No refuills on cancellation of pre-paid classified
1 Bedroom Basement Apartment for rent, furnished in a private home close to campus, on the second floor. 250 sf. Available June 14, private entrance. $215 per month, bursary of $87.50 per 5 p.m.
KU. Students & Faculty... reserve
the room. Furnished studios,
1,2,3 & 4 brats. Many great
locations, all close to KU. stop
Attractive 2 BH book C/A 1800 block Main. Walk to K.U. J., No pets. Npts. 843-865
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Hanover Place
14th & Mason-841-1212
Sundance
7th & Florida-841-5255
Tangleweed
10th & Macmillan-99-2415
All designed with you in mind!
MASTERCRAFT MANAGEMENT
842-4455
Excellent location. Two bedroom apartment in fourplex, Carp. C.A., low utilities $275 June & July, $265 August at 1314 Oku Call 841-4242.
FREE RENTAL WARRANTY. Kaw Valley Mgt. Office, 2060 East Fremont Ave. 1, 2 and 3 affriced housing. Offering studios, 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms. apts. duplexes and townhouses.
Available now or next Fall. Watch for our Spring offering. Contact 841-4248 to solve your housing needs.
EDINGHAM PLACE come enjoy Lawrence's newest and finest apartment community. Offering luxury 2 bedroom baths with all the convenience you need, now leading for immediate or next Fall occupancy. For your private showing by 8th Terrace and Edingham or call 841-7444 or
VILLAGE SQUARE
Room for Rent in Private Home. Separate entrance. Laundry and kitchen privileges. Prefer shower room. Call 749-1635 evening except Tues & Thurs. Room for on the hill at 1/4 mile from Union Street.
Spacious e... Laundry facility
Waterline Wall
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Jayhawker Towers
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts. for KU students
- For 2, 3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- 10 Month Leases
- 10 Month Leases
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors
- Academic Resource Center
- All Conditioned
- Swimming Pool
- Free Cable TV
- On Bus Line
- Free Cable TV
- Laundry Facilities
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Apply Now for Fall/Spring
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
Sleeping rooms next to campus, for summer session or winter. No pets. 843-1601.
PINECREST
Under New Ownership & Management
COME TAKE A LOOK!
- All new carpeting, cabinets and windows
* Cable paid
1/2 block to bus route very energy efficient
Pinecrest
789-2222
summer and Fall openings at Sunflower House, a student cooperative. Private rooms, good rates. 89/67. Summer and Fall openings at Sunflower House, a student cooperative. Private rooms, good rates. 74/67
ASTERCRAFT offers completely furnished 1, 2,
3 and 3 bedroom apartments all near campus. Call
412.1212, 841-525, 749-2415.
THE RAINBOW HOUSE is seeking female applicants to join our co-ed cooperative living situation. Lower your expenses, raise your community standards, out the benefit of the cooperative housing, 843-707-2690.
...
1 & 2 bedroom apts. beginning at $250. Water paid, laundry, on bus route, near shopping. 841-5797.
Summer Discounts
...
FOR SALE
Wanted: Non-smoking female roommate for 2
bear apartment. $132.50/mo. — 1/2 utilities.
Near campus. Available Aue: 1.41-4585.
GREENTREE
1726 Ohio
- 10 months old
- available now or Aug. 1
1 bd./studios
- $350 per month
- GE appliances includes washer/dryer
- GE appliances
2 BEDROOM SPECIAL
$40 under fund for my 1981 week cept. C2p, 2 pe.
arm fm cam i.cm 10,1 m. 85.35 J. Wayne Mayo-
dale 843-3833, night & weekend 843-125 or 842-986.
7 Honda D1C MOTcycle Good condition. New
Motorcycle
COMIC BOOKS, Science Fiction, Games at
Kwality Coats, 1111 MASS, 843-7292
Call 842-2532
Comic Books, Playbies, Penthouses, etc. Max's
Comic. Conn. 11:5 Tue.-Fri., Sat. & Sun 10-5.81
New Haven Harbor
Ford Maverick, 1953 78R with A/C. Block heater
600cc available, 842 7147, evaporator.
Hiring Call 610-825-2344 10:00am
Hardwood table and benches, best offer, Call
Chris, 749-2553
$600 negotiable, 942-7147 evening.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U. repair).
Dallington tax property Renovations. Call
Delinquent tax property Repositions, Call 805-657-4000 Ext. H7658 for current rep list.
GOVERNMENT JOBS, $16,940-3290; Now
- fully equipped kitchens
* individual central heat
- laundry facilities
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sense to them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class. 3) For analysis of western civilization. 4) Analysis of western civilization' available now at Town Crier, The Jaywalker bookstore.
1900 Ioda CB37501 Motorcycle. Excellent condition.
790 miles. $1,200. Call 843-0683
JAMS JAMS JAMS. Sunflower has Jams from Paradise Found, Dog big. Dogs, Mr. Wainstead, First Aid, Ripest and Mistral. Bring it on this ad and get 19% of any pair of Jams. Surnumber 804 Mass.
University of Kannas men and women, gold-skein watches. Gold face with seal. Brand new $100 each. $0.20 only for both or best offer. Call 216-333-4000.
- swimming pool
Honda Supersport. 1981 740F 16K $1000.
Negotiable 842-7147 meals.
cable T.V.
AUTO SALES
72 Super Beatle, Sun Roof, good engine, low mileage. Good tires: 841-8602.
- 10 & 12 month leases available
LOST/FOUND
available
Size 32 Waltz. Wholesale prices. Levi's 501s, 606s,
dress slacks and skirts, short-sleeve shirt button down
and knit shirts (med., large). Call JEFF at
749-7518.
2040 Heatherwood Drive
- KUJ bus route
LOST: Small Chow/Lasa mutt; "Buster" Campus area. Important to child. Please call 841-8927 after 841-8924 or 841-8324 during weekends.
HELP WANTED
Coordinator of Field Experiences. The K.U. field experience for the teacher education program. Applicants must be eligible for a Kansas teaching certificate, understand and support english and math skills, complete interpersonal and communication skills, pass an English language test, and preferred candidate will have taught in public schools and have public school administrative duties. Preferred position description Martina Hersh, 117
Computer student, familiar with Lotus, to assist with home programs. 749-0288.
First United Methodist Church, Lawrence, Kansas, has a position available, full or part time, for a director of Christian Education. Application form online at www.kmdchurch.org. Vermont, Kansas, Kansas, 914-441-7600
EXTENSION ASSISTANT. The University of Kentucky is offering an Extension Assistant. This is a professional position for an assistant manager of the Business Operations department, and provides support for the management, marketing and onsite coordination of public works. The Incumbent provides support for the management, marketing and onsite coordination of public works. The Extension Assistant is based on the Lawrence campus and has some required work in the Kaukauna area. The candidate must have occurred, however, overnight travel in rare. Other requirements include the design, construction and management of mails listing, arranging meeting space and other logistical necessary for assistance in the selection, preparation and production of classroom materials, and prepare materials for classroom presentations with public business programs. Masters accredited college or university in appropriate field of study (e.g., business, nursing, or Baccalaureate degree plus appropriate experience). Annual salary $14,250 to 17,250 daily. Must be received by July 1, 1986. Deadline: Must be received by July 1, 1986. For complete position description, contact Suzanne Kuo at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045
Female adult, weekdays a.m. 8:30-12:30 or and
evenings 9 to 11, no experience required, 749.6288.
Female to prepare dinner, light evening and night
hours, schedule varies, 749.6288.
JANTTOR for pre-school, about 11/2 - 2 hours per
night. Must have experience and references call
841-2232 for interview.
KS UNIV Theatre and Media Arts teaches two (2) temporary ('non-tenuire') Assistant Professors to students in theatre, art and media professors. Masters or bachelor's w 1 with 3 years professional experience plus 2 years teaching required. Bachelor's degree in history/biology preferred. Salary $20-200. Send resume, letter, and names of 3 references to Karen Lawrence, 317 Murphy Hall, University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 64008. $(813) 643-388 or karen Lawrence.
GRADUATE ASSISTANT: 1/2 time position in the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. Req. Master's degree or graduate student at the University of Kansas, Fall 1996. Experience in programming, public speaking and working with women essential to women's center activities. Women's Center, 844-3522. Position available July 1, 1996. Submit letter of application, resume, and cover letter for admission. Visit ballaar Ballast, Associate Dean of Student Life and Coordinator. Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 844-3522. Experience in Kansas, Lawrence, KS 6004 EOE/AA
Wanted: Nanny, Young, professional, Christian and social skills to care for our two preadopted age children. Readiness and salary. Applicants must love children and have experience. Must be full time. August 1st
Law student needs patient, creative babysitter.
842-8706.
Male looking for female who likes, champagne,
bubble baths, kite flying, Bloody Mary
breakfasts. Reply to G.S.
PERSONAL
Looking for female to live in our home and work in exchange for rent. Sec./Bookkeeping skills preferred; will do to do odd jobs. 814-414-4
Tell me ... there are any affectionate singles men who aren't beautiful, somewhat beautiful, somewhat not terribly (or slightly beautiful), somewhat (not terribly) yr female grade 20, seeks caring man for them, conversational, conversant, Prairie Home Companion, easy vlogger burrito at Tin Pan Alley, and laughing with his friends. (NORBK WHY DID YOU QUIT LUX)
*reference*: Wishing to do 60 days job: 941-4144
Professional couple needs nany in our house with children, marketing, tutoring and carpooling for our family of 7 young children. Pleasant schedule between your classes. Experience in childcare and character references required, as well as a work experience in childcare or dependency and responsibility Call after 8:30 p.m for appt interview: Mr. MrsHuayi 843-3114 SOCIAL WORK II The Young Center at Atrium University 843-3114 for Social Work II *qualities* master degree in social work, or bachschool degree with social work in must be licensed to practice social work in the state of Kansas. Starting salary: $1877 for House Assistant Jaeanne Picknick, Personnel Office 931-507-4500
Chillers - Sorry to put our friendships through the proverbial winger last weekend. You are the best friends anyone could ask for. Nix
Female who requests presence of one dog who loves puddles and one guy who is rich. Must be available Jan 31 for a renter vouch!
ARE YOU FIT! *Lawrence Aerobica. M-W F 5-30*
pm. Lawrence School of Ballet. Bb & Wvern.
"IRST CLASS FLASE. Catheton Thompson 841-0194
BUS.PERSONAL
GREENS
J. Patrick - April 21 - that's two perfect months Only three more days!! Be prepared! I love you! The "Wife".
PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
Weekly Beer Special
June 18-24
Stroh's 15pk. $5.28
Old Style 12pk. $4.21
Bud Light $5.46
Wiedemann $3.75
Stroh's Light 15pk. $5.28
Eroll now in Midwest Driving School: Receive driver's license in three weeks without parcel testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided, 841-7749.
---
Rent-19" Color T.V. $28.98 a month Curtis
Mathes. 1447 W. 23rd. 842-5751. Mon.-Sat. 9:30-
noon. Sun. 1:5
THE SUMMER CYCLING SEASON IS HERE!
ATBs-Touring Commuting-Racing
Bianchi—Fat Chance
Complete line of cycling accessories and a full selection of bike clothing, sleeping bags, tents, and other equipment for touring.
Full service
bike shop upstairs:
tune-ups $19.95
overhauls $35.00
SUNFLOWER
8C4 MASSACHUSETTS
DOWNOWN LAWRENCE
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course, fine portraits, Swells Studio, 749-1611.
The Car Boutique
World Class
Motoring Accessories
Alloy Wheels Tires
Spoilers, Shocks,
Car Care Products
T-Shirts & Jackets
Steering Wheels
Car & Seat Covers
Helmets, etc., etc.
2201-F W. 25th St.
In the Business World behind Food-4-Less.
KLZR
106 DAY
---
LOSE WEIGHT NOW! Fun, easy, safe, no drugs,
all natural, nutritional. No starvation, in-
tervenious (931-288-4190 C.K. Kansas
COMPLIMENTARY $1.06
DAY TRIAL (new)
Mistral and O'Brien sailboards
from $950.00 to $1395.00
Mistral Maul $895.00
O'Brien Competitor $895.00
Full line of accessories from
Kine, Fleetwood, Mistral, O'Nill,
andline, Thule and Yakimie.
KLZR
SUMMER $10.06
MEMBERSHIP
Beat the summer heat with windsurfing!
25th & Iowa 841-6232
reduced non-member packages available offer good until June 28, 1986
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
LASE WEIGHT NOW. I've lost 16 lb, in 3 weeks.
You can lose 12.9 lb, with a safe nutritious herbal products as seen on TV. For more information call 843-6600.
Windsurfing lessons offered every weekend.
B.I.G. Certified School cost $60.00
SUNFLOWER
8C4 MASSACHUSETTS
TOWNHOUSE LAWRENCE
Automatic Transmission Specialists
12 month/12,000 mile guarantee
Modeling, theatrical and artists portfolios. Slides or prints. High-quality, low-prices. Swells 749-1611.
A-1 AUTOMOTIVE 1501 West 6th
Free towing & estimates
842-0865
SAY IT ON A SHIRT! Custom silk screen printing. Tailors, jerseys and caps. SHIRTART by Swell. 749-1611.
SCIENCE FICTION, Comic book, Simulation & Role Playing Games, Kwality Comics, 1111 MASS, a87.799
REWARD
BODY SPORT
RED VELCRO
BAR PUMPER
BLUE BODY
info leading to recovery of liver
4-door 1979 Honda Accord, DGS
7647 stole from parking lot behind
home. Fatal crash on 8 p.m.
June 12 and noon June 13.
TRAFFIC TICKET? Talk your way out of it.
Special report. Call 805-687-6000 Ext. TT-1090 for information.
BINGHEN
BEAPPING
DISCOVER THE
VERGATILE
FUTONI
FUTON BED
841. 9443
BEAST 7TH DOWNTOWN
Thousands of R & B A rentals - $2 or less. Also collect items,店 S and sun only 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Quintnlets 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or trade all music styles.
SERVICES OFFERED
Black and White film processing, contact sheets,
and enlargements. Push and Pail processing also available. THE PICTURE WORKS. 18th and Haskell. 843-0470
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-5710.
Same day Ektachrome/E-6 slide processing,
Push and Pull processing also available. THE PICTURE WORKS. 12th and Haskell 843-0470.
HARPER
LAWYER
1101Mass.
Suite 201 749-0123
KANSAN
Used cameras and photographic equipment bought, sold, and traded THE PICTURE WORKS. 13th and Haskell. 843-0470.
Sunflower Driving School will prepare you, within two weeks upon successful course completion, to get your driver's license, without patal testing. Provide special summer discounts: 841-216-311.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing, Judy, 842-7945 or Lisa, 842-9023.
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
TYPING
Y
A.1 professional typing: Term papers, Theses,
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Using IBM
Wheelbarrow 5. Reasonable. 842-3246.
24-Hour Typing. 11th semester in Lawrence.
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus.
Best quality and fastest service. B41-5006
DISTRIBUTIONS, THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
DISSERTATIONS, Editing and Graphics,
ONE-DAY SERVICE available on short student papers (up to 30 min),
Mommy's Notes, Mommy's Notes 48-3278
to 9 p.m. on Friday.
MATH TUITOR. Bob Mears holds an M.A. in Math from K.U. where W.102, 101, 116 and 123 were among the courses he taught. He began tutoring professionally in 1875 and often tutored elementary students. He served on Class II, 818-950 StantonDixon Tutoring Services. All Callen Dennis at 843-1055.
Classified
Heading: ___
Absolutely Your Type: Word processing, typing and editing. IBM OS/8.5, 9.5, M-F 'Same day service available. IBM Illus. 840, 641-648
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard secretary, Smith Corona, pica type. Call Nancy 811-129.
CLASSIFIEDS
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE TYPE— Typing Service.
TRANSCRIPT also; standard cassette tape.
843-8877.
Write ad here:
GOOD IMPRESSIONS. Professional Typing/Word Processing; Papers, Dissertations, Resumes, Spelling/punctuation corrected 841-407.
Cover letters, resumes, and papers.
WRITING LIFELINE 841-3469
QUALITY TYPING. Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected.
Call 842-2744
WORDS TO GO-Typing Service: Dissertations,
Term Papers, Books, Correspondence, WP
429-3452
Hakenson 25/hour typing. IBM word processing
Lynn 841-5094
TYPING PLUS. assistance with composition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
dissertations M.S. papers, letters, applications.
Resumes Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, theses.
IBM Correcting Selectric. I will correct spelling.
843 6504, Mike Wright.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. 843-5062
THE WORDOCTORS - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147.
WANTED
Female room, household dining in exchange for free rent and utilities, on bus line, 749-6288. Need Roommates for 3 Bedroom House. NCARH贷额 132.00月息 / 1Utilities $44.00
Wanted: Housemate for 3 bedroom. Graduate student and non-smoker preferred. Convenience location. 145/mo -ります. Available July 1. 842-0038.
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16
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 18, 1986
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1
INSIDE
It's a drag
Racers are disappointed about planned close of Lawrence dragstrip. The strip, west of town, has been open for 29 years.
Story, page 6
KU student wins area boardsailing contest on a rough, windy Clinton Lake last weekend.
Surf's up
Story, page 13
1
OUTSIDE
The forecast
Todav. . Partly cloudy, high 88.
Today... Partly cloudy, high 80.
Tonight... Partly cloudy, may rain, lows around 70s.
Tomorrow... Partly sunny, chance for thunderstorms,
highs around 90.
Weekend. . Thundershowers, highs in the lower 90s,
lows around 70.
Details, page 3
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY
June 25, 1986
Vol.96, No. 150
(USPS 650-640)
KUAC amends drug-testing policy
By Brenda Flory
Staff writer
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation's drug-testing policy is being amended for the fall, Gary Ames, athletic director, said last week.
KU has had a drug-testing policy for two and a half years. Hunter said. The original drug-testing policy called for athletes to be tested randomly.
"We implemented the program back then not because we had a drug problem, but because we wanted to prevent what could be a potential problem." Hunter said "Drugs are among the athletes and to the program."
The Maryland state medical examiner announced yesterday that Len Bias, former University of Maryland basketball star who was
the No. 2 pick in the NBA draft, died of cocaine intoxication last Thursday.
he said he hoped KU's drug policy had prevented, and would continue to prevent, such accidents, but tragedies such as the death of Blas Bias may have tried the drug only once — on the night of his death.
The change in KU's program was decided in January, but will take effect in August. Hunter said.
Next year, each athlete will be tested a minimum of two times during the playing season, he said. An athlete may be tested more than twice, but not any less, and may be subjected to a random test as well. This includes any sport under the jurisdiction of the KUAC.
Susan Wachter, assistant athletic
director in charge of business, said that $71.06 was spent on drug-testing last year. The funds came from the conference and gate receipts, but next year money for drug-testing will come from the training-room budget. She said that she would not know next year's budget estimates until July.
Other details, such as a better method of randomly selecting athletes, will be worked out later this summer. Hunter said.
"We feel we have a sound policy," Hunter said.
Lynn Bott, director of sports medicine, said the chief substances looked for were cocaine, amphipramines, anabolic substances (drug) and THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), which is found in marijuana.
"I feel it's a societal problem and
not an athletic problem," he said. "But it's the athlete who is in the limelight.
"Bias' death was a tragic situation. There is still a lot of things we don't know about drugs and what they can do to our system."
KU's drug testing involves a urinalysis, Bott said. The sample goes to a company where it is analyzed.
Bott said the company felt its technology was sophisticated enough to tell whether an athlete was attempting to hide any drug-use.
If an athlete tests positive for a drug, that athlete is asked to seek professional counseling. Bott said.
"Our policy is to assist an athlete with a problem." he said.
About four weeks later, the athlete is tested again. This gives the athlete
another chance by allowing the body enough time to rid itself of any drugs. Bott said.
If the second test is positive, the athlete seeks additional counseling and is suspended for play for 14 days. Bott said.
At the end of the 14 days, a third test is given. If this test is positive, the athlete is suspended for the rest of the season. The decision to cut financial aid on the basis of drug testing or by the individual coaches, he said.
Hunter said the idea behind the policy wasn't punishment, but instead to assist athletes with any problems they might be having.
Bott said he could not comment on whether there had ever been a positive finding because of an athlete's rights to privacy.
Changing weather slows wheat harvest
WHEELMETER WESTERN
Farmers say sparse crop causes loss
By Rachelle Worrall
The rains finally came, but Sunday's downpour was too late to help this summer's wheat crop.
Lindquist said that farmers didn't mind the rain slowing the wheat harvest because it was needed for their other crops.
Rain delayed this summer's unfuiltrable harvest. Farmers must now wait for the wheat to dry before they can finish the harvest, Jack Lindquist, agricultural agent for the county Extension office, said Monday.
"They couldn't care less about the wheat if they could get some rain on their other crows," he said.
Eniqn Donaldson, a Kansas farmer, inspects his wheat crop. Donaldson, along with other farmers, is unhappy about this year's harvest.
Low acreage yields and poor grain quality have hit farmers at the same time wheat prices are the lowest they've been in several years. Morris said, when he saw $2.47 a bushel, compared with both $3.25 and $3.25 a bushel last year.
The farmers played by nature's rules from the beginning. Lack of rain in the spring combined with wet planting conditions in the fall contributed to a sparse wheat crop this summer, said Howard Morris, an agronomy specialist at Coop Association's grain elevator at 26th Street and Moodie Road.
A good weight is 60 pounds a bushel, Morris said. This harvest has weights running from 42 to 58 pounds and the rain will further reduce the weight.
A wheat crop gives farmers additional income in the summer.
The lowest yields have been 5.5 bushels an acre, and the highest have been 42 bushels an acre, he said. But, generally, yields of 30 bushels an acre were the highest for this season. Last year, yields were about 50 to
"They're not even half that now," he said.
Farmers with low acreage yields probably won't get enough money to cover the expenses incurred in growing the wheat, Morris said.
"I'd say the guy with the 10-bushel acrel acred didn't get his money back," he said, "I figure it takes about 22
Last year, yields were about 50 to 60 bushels an acre, Morris said.
Epstein said that David Amberl, vice chancellor for student affairs, told him on Monday that contractor bidding would begin by mid-July.
bushels (an acre) just to break even."
University to take bids on lighting
Construction of a new lighting system on campus is scheduled to begin this summer, David Epstein, president of the student body, said.
"On wheat, it's awfully hard to make money when the prices are so
low," he said. "I guess some income is better than none."
The average cost to produce a bushel of wheat is about $4, Lindquist said.
By Brenda Flory
He said the campus lighting issue had been on many previous Senate agendas.
About 9,000 acres of wheat will be harvested in the Lawrence area this year, said LindQindt, which is about a 60 percent decrease from last year.
"This is an exciting time to see this project finally blossom," Epstein said. "It just happened that people who were involved in the project during my administration."
Greg Wade, landscape architect for KU, said the cost of this part of the project would be about $100,000. The number of new lights needed to replace the old lights on campus would be less or equal to the present number because the new ones would cast more light with fewer fixtures.
The first phase of lightning will start from the Chi Omega Fountain at the intersection of Jayhawk Boulevard and extend to Bailey Hall, he said.
Epstein said the Senate passed a bill in April that allocated $25,000 from the Unallocated Account. The Board of Regents gave $25,000 and the University gave $50,000 to the project.
"I didn't feel it was right to make the students pay for such a project because the students paying for it wouldn't benefit from benefit it." - Epstein
He said that safety was the key reason Senate supported the project.
"Iimagine walking on campus at night and feel safe," Epstein said.
night after seeing sale, Specialist Kris Kurtenbach, vice president of the student body, said student protection was a Senate responsibility.
"Basic needs, such as safety, should be met at a university like KU." Kurtenbach said.
There was a survey done by Ronald Helms, professor of architectural engineering, the year before Epstein became president which aid there was a direct correlation between a lack of lighting and high crime.
"I consider one rage to be too much," Epstein said. "If we can link lack of lighting with crime, there is a correlation."
James Denney, director of the KU police department, said additional lighting probably would help decrease campus crime, but that it was hard to tell whether crime would increase just because of better lighting.
Ambler said last week that he hoped the first phase of the project would be completed by the time students came back in the fall.
New drinking laws changing old ways
By Dana Spoor
Staff writer
On July 1, the legal drinking age in Kansas will creep even higher, and, by 187, people will have to be 21 with no alcohol or any alcoholic beverages.
This change has affected many areas, including local bars and residence halls at the University of Kansas.
Almost two years ago the legal age for buying or consuming cereal malt beverages in Kansas was 18. Last week, in Kentucky, the law changed on July 1, it will rise to 20
This rise is part of a three-year process to get the drinking age up to 21 for all alcoholic beverages, including beer with a 3.2 percent alcohol content.
"It certainly changed the way they (students) spent the money they are allocated through their social funds," Fred McElhenei, director of residence halls, said. "Cereal meal grounds are allowed in the halls by the grounds."
If a student is found with any
A note is made of the incident, but the penalties for being caught a second time have not been ironed out. The police claim that he has been caught twice with alcohol.
alcoholic beverage in the residence halls, that student is asked to pour it out.
"There is definitely an impact," said Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St. "Sales are down 20 percent."
Coghurns, 737 New Hampshire St. hasn't noted a difference in its sales since the change.
"I don't feel we have had any huge problems," he said. "The incoming freshman don't have any tradition to live up to."
"We just got the bar a while ago," said Brett Mosiman, co-owner of Cogburns, "so we haven't noticed a
See Drinking, p. 5, col. 1
UCLA UNIVERSITY DANIEL KRANJAN
2013
Rise in drinking age causes identity crises
Staff writer
Bv Dana Spoor
It may seem to be a harmless and easy prank, but its consequences can be staggering.
Using falsified, borrowed or fake identification to enter a drinking establishment is a felony, a felony punishable by up to one year in jail, or a fine of no more than $1,000 or a combination of both.
Not only is it illegal to use fake IDs, it is also illegal for a minor to consume alcohol in the establishment
"All the ABC (Alcoholic Beverage Control) is worried about did in a fact a minor or non-member contact on the premises," Johnson said.
"I have shoeboxes full of them." Johnson said. Inside of those shoeboxes there are expired club identification cards and taxidermied identification cards.
Yet, hundreds of minors use fake IDs every day, Harrison "Ace" Johnson Jr., owner of the Sanctuary, 1401 W. 7th st., said Monday.
But some other Lawrence tavern
4.
owners and liquor retailers do not think fake IDs are a big problem.
The drinking age law states that a person must have been 19 before July 1, 1985, in order to drink beer with a 3.2 percent alcohol content.
"The people just turn around and leave," Diane Bulliegh, manager of the E-Z Shop, 955 E.3rd St., said. "You didn't have a problem at this store."
On July 1, the drinking age will be raised to 20, 21 is the legal age to purchase all other liquor.
There are some customers using fake IDs, but not a lot, said John Christie. Hays senior, an employee at Bowlkill's Pub. 1344 Tennessee ST.
"It is a slight problem," he said.
"The IDs are normally expired or it doesn't look anything like them."
But some IDs do work, and minors continue to use them despite the charges that could be brought against them.
"It was a friend's," Janet Knollenberg, Wichita senior, said.
See IDs, p. 5, col. 4
INSIDE
It's a drag
Racers are disappointed about planned close of Lawrence dragstrip. The strip, west of town has been open for 29 years.
Story, page 6
Surf's up
KU student wins area boardsailing contest on a rough, windy Clinton Lake last weekend.
Story, page 13
1200
OUTSIDE The forecast
Today...Partly cloudy, high 88
Today.. Partly cloudy, high 80.
Tonight.. Partly cloudy, may rain, lows around 70s.
Tomorrow.. Partly sunny, chance for thunderstorms,
highs around 90
Weekend. . Thundershowers, highs in the lower 90s,
lows on 70.
Details, page 3
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY
WEDNESDAY
June 25, 1986
Vol.96, No. 150
(USPS 650-640)
KUAC amends drug-testing policv
By Brenda Flory Staff writer
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation's drug-testing policy is being amended for the fall, Gary Lammond, athletic director, said last week.
KU has had a drug-testing policy for two and a half years. Hunter said. The original drug-testing policy called for athletes to be tested randomly.
"We implemented the program back then not because we had a drug problem, but because we wanted to prevent what could be a potential problem." Hunter said "Drugs are one of the athletes and to the program."
The Maryland state medical examiner announced yesterday that Len Bias, former University of Maryland basketball star who was
the No. 2 pick in the NBA draft, died of cocaine intoxication last Thursday.
He said he hoped KU's drug policy had prevented, and would continue to prevent, such accidents, but tragedies such as the death of Bias were not easy to prove. He drug-associated once — on the night of his death.
the change in KU's program was decided in January, but will take effect in August. Hunter said.
Next year, each athlete will be tested a minimum of two times during the playing season, he said. An athlete may be tested more than twice, but not any less, and may be subjected to a random test as well. This includes any sport under the jurisdiction of the KUAC.
Susan Wachter, assistant athletic
director in charge of business, said that $17.100 was spent on drug-testing last year. The funds came from the conference and gate receipts, but next year money for drug-testing will come from the training-room budget. She said that she would now know next year's budget estimates until July.
Other details, such as a better method of randomly selecting athletes, will be worked out later this summer. Hunter said.
"We feel we have a sound policy," Hunter said.
Lynn Bott, director of sports medicine, said the chief substances looked for were cocaine, amphetamines, amoxicillate steroids (a drug) and THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), which is found in marijuana.
"I feel it's a societal problem and
not an athletic problem," he said.
"But it's the athlete who is in the limelight.
"Bia's death was a tragic situation. There is still a lot of things we don't know about drugs and what they can do to our system."
KU's drug testing involves a urinalysis. Bott said. The sample goes to a company where it is analyzed.
Bott said the company felt its technology was sophisticated enough to tell whether an athlete was attempting to hide any drug-use.
If an athlete tests positive for a drug, that athlete is asked to seek professional counseling. Bott said.
"Our policy is to assist an athlete with a problem," he said.
About four weeks later, the athlete is tested again. This gives the athlete
another chance by allowing the body enough time to rid itself of any drugs, Bott said.
If the second test is positive, the athlete seeks additional counseling and is suspended from play for 14 days. Bott said.
At the end of the 14 days, a third test is given. If this test is positive, the athlete is suspended for the rest of the season. The decision to cut testing is made by the basis of drug testing is made by the individual coaches, he said.
Hunter said the idea behind the policy wasn't punishment, but instead to assist athletes with any problems they might be having.
Bott said he could not comment on whether there had ever been a positive finding because of an athlete's rights to privacy.
Changing weather slows wheat harvest Farmers say
Changi Farmers say sparse crop causes loss
WHEAT METER WORKS
By Rachelle Worrall
The rains finally came, but Sunday's downpour was too late to help this summer's wheat crop.
Rain delayed this summer's unfuhrful harvest. Farmers must now wait for the wheat to dry before they can finish the harvest, Jack Lindquist, agricultural agent for the University Extension office, said Monday.
Lindquist said that farmers didn't mind the rain slowing the wheat harvest because it was needed for their other crops.
"They couldn't care less about the wheat if they could get some rain on their other crops," he said.
The farmers played by nature's rules from the beginning. Lack of rain in the spring combined with wet planting conditions in the fall contributed to a sparse wheat crop this summer, said Howard Morris, an associate professor at Cooper's Gap Association's grain elevator at 21st Street and Moodie Road.
a Kansas farmer inspects his wheat crop. Donaldson, along with other farmers, is unhappy about this year's harvest.
Low acreage yields and poor grain quality have hit farmers at the same time wheat prices are the lowest they've been in several years. Morris's wheat is now $2.47 a bushel, compared last year to $3.25 a bushel last year.
The lowest yields have been 5.5 bushels an acre, and the highest have been 42 bushels an acre, he said. But, even though it was warmer, the wheat were the highest for this season.
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
A good weight is 60 pounds a bushel, Morris said. This harvest has weights running from 42 to 58 pounds and 17 to 24 inches in rain will further reduce the weight.
Last year, yields were about 50 to bushels an acre, Morris said.
"They're not even half that now,' he said.
A wheat crop gives farmers additional income in the summer.
Farmers with low acreage yields probably won't get enough money to cover the expenses incurred in growing the wheat. Morris said.
"I'd say the guy with the 10-bushel acrel acre didn't get his money back," he said. "I figure it takes about 22
University to take bids on lighting
bushels (an acre) just to break even."
The average cost to produce a bushel of wheat is about $4. Lindquist said.
"On wheat, it's awfully hard to make money when the prices are so
low," he said. "I guess some income is better than none."
Construction of a new lighting system on campus is scheduled to begin this summer. David Epstein, president of the student body, said
Epstein said that David Ambler, vice censor for student affairs, told him on Monday that contractor bidding would begin by mid-July.
About 9,000 acres of wheat will be harvested in the Lawrence area this year, said Lindquist, which is about a 60 percent decrease from last year.
by brenda fiory
Staff writer
He said the campus lighting issue had been on many previous Senate agendas.
Greg Wade, landscape architect for KU, said the cost of this part of the project would be about $100,000. The number of new lights needed to replace the old lights on campus would be less or equal to the present number because the new ones would cast more light with fewer fixtures.
The first phase of lighting will start from the Chi Omega Fountain at the intersection of Jayhawk Boulevard and extend to Bailey Hall, he said.
"This is an exciting time to see this project finally blossom," Epstein said. "It just happened that people were working on the project during my administration."
Epstein said the Senate passed a bill in April that allocated $25,000 from the Unallocated Account. The Board of Regents gave $25,000 and the University gave $50,000 to the project.
"I didn't feel it was right to make the students pay for such a project because the students paying for it would not be able to benefit from it." Epsilon said.
"Iimagine walking on campus at night and feeling safe." Enstein said.
might be needing
Kris Kurtchenbach, vice president of the student body, said student protection was a Senate responsibility.
He said that safety was the key reason Senate supported the project. Imagine walking on campus at
"Basic needs, such as safety, should be met at a university like KU." Kurtenbach said.
There was a survey done by Ronald Helms, professor of architectural engineering, the year before Epstein became president which aid there was a direct correlation between a lack of lighting and high crime.
"I consider one rape to be too much," Epstein said. "If we can link lack of lighting with crime, there is a correlation."
James Denney, director of the KU police department, said additional lighting probably would help decrease campus crime, but that it was hard to tell whether crime would increase just because of better lighting.
Ambler said last week that he hoped the first phase of the project would be completed by the time students came back in the fall.
New drinking laws changing old ways
By Dana Spoor
On July 1, the legal drinking age in Kansas will creep even higher, and, by 187, people will have to be 21 to buy any alcoholic beverages.
Staff writer
This change has affected many areas, including local bars and residence halls at the University of Kansas.
Almost two years ago the legal age for buying or consuming ceral malt beverages in Kansas was 18. Last year, the legal age for buying or consuming ceral malt beverages on July 1, it will rise to 20
This rise is part of a three-year process to get the drinking age up to 21 for all alcohol beverages, including beer, with a 3.2 percent alcohol content.
"It certainly changed the way they (students) spent the money they are allocated through their social funds," Fred McElhenie, director of Food Bank, said. "Cereal man beverages aren't allowed in the halls or on the grounds."
If a student is found with any
A note is made of the incident, but the penalties for being caught a second time have not been ironed out yet, he said, because no one has been charged.
alcoholic beverage in the residence halls, that student is asked to pour it out.
It is definitely an impact," said Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St. "Sales are down 20 percent."
Some taverns have been hurt by the loss of the 18- and 19-year-old drinkers. Sales have decreased due to the high alcohol legally permitted to drink 3.2 beer
"I don't feel we have had any huge problems." he said. "The incoming freshman don't have any tradition to live up to."
Cogburns, 737 New Hampshire St. hasn't noted a difference in its sales since the change.
"We just got the bar a while ago," said Brett Mosiman, co-owner of Cogburns, "so we haven't noticed a
university of pennsylvania
See Drinking, p. 5, col. 1
Rise in drinking age causes identity crises
It may seem to be a harmless and easy prank, but its consequences can be staggering.
Using falsified, borrowed or fake identification to enter a drinking establishment is a felony, a felony punishable by up to one year in jail, or a fine of no more than $1,000 or a combination of both.
Yet, hundreds of minors use fake IDs every day, Harrison "Ace" Johnson Jr., owner of the Sanctuary, 1401 W. 7th st., said Monday.
By Dana Spoor
Not only is it illegal to use fake IDs, it is also illegal for a minor to consume alcohol in the establishment.
"I have shoeboxes full of them," Johnson said. Inside of those shoeboxes there are expired clutch cases and identification cases are marked identification cards.
But some other Lawrence tavern
Staff writer
"the All CAB (Alcoholic Beverage Control) is worried about is did in fact a minor or non-member consume on the premises," Johnson
The drinking-age law states that a person must have been 19 before July 1, 1985, in order to drink beer with a 1.2 percent alcohol content.
"The people just turn around and leave," Diane Buleigh, manager of the E-Z Shop, 555 E. 23rd St., said. "You haven't had a problem at this store."
owners and liquor retailers do not think fake IDs are a big problem.
On July 1, the drinking age will be raised to 20; 21 is the legal age to purchase all other liquor.
There are some customers using take IDs, but not a lot, said John Christie, Hays senior, an employee at Bwilkley's Pub, 1344 Tennessee St.
"It is a slight problem," he said.
"The IDs are normally expired or it doesn't look anything like them."
But some IDs do work, and minors continue to use them despite the charges that could be brought against them.
"It was a friend's," Janet Knollenberg, Wichita senior, said.
See IDs, p. 5, col. 4
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
News Briefs
Alabama primary close amid election dispute
HIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Attorney General Charles Graddick, a Republican turned Democrat, narrowly defeated lt. Gov. Bill Baxley yesterday in the bitter runoff primary to succeed George Wallace.
The shoot-out for the Democratic nomination — tantamount to election in Alabama — erupted in turmoil in a primary day dispute over the right of Republicans to vote, leading to a reclection. The legal battle threatened to nullify the vote.
With 95.9 percent of the vote counted, Graddick, a law-and-order crime fighter who wanted to wipe the Capitol clean of all holdovers from the Wallace era, had 452,857, or 50.7 percent, while Baxley, seen by many as Wallace's heir apparent, had 440,725 votes, or 49.3 percent.
Baxley mounted a 17,000 vote-lead in his home base or to Mobile to overcharge Baxley's overwhelming debt.
In Alabama's lone Democratic congressional runoff, former court court judge Claude Harte defeated District Attorney Billy Hill. The Democrat seat is beaten in a rematch with who is running against Sen. Jeremiah Denton, R-Ala.
Dole mav seek vote on Manion
WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, heeding President Reagan's demand for quick action, said yesterday he might seek a vote later this week on Daniel Manion, a controversial appellate court nominee, whom Democratic foes say is unfit for the job.
Reagan is making the Manion test a test of his power to appoint judge who share his conservative views. He's also making sure the Supreme Court
adjourn later this week for the July 4 recess.
He said that he might bring up the Manion nomination yesterday and immediately move to bring the debate to a clear vote. He noted that he would not tomorrow but would test Manion's support.
If the Senate agrees to cut off debate — the motion requires a 60-vote majority — the Senate could reach a final vote on the nomination before leaving for the Independence Day recess.
Although a close vote is expected on Reagan's most controversial nomination to the federal judiciary, opponents express growing confidence they can defeat Manion.
Cvanide-tainted capsules found
Dole's strategy was keyed to the Senate's plans to adjourn this week for the July 4 recess.
federal appellate case and lacks the experience for the job.
Manion, 44, a South Bend, Ind., lawyer, was nominated in February to serve on the 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Justice.
SEATTLE — A fifth package of cyanide-laced non-prescription painkiller was found yesterday in the Seattle suburb where two poisoning deaths this month were linked to tainted Extra-Strength Excedrin
The Food and Drug Administration immediately warned residents of the Seattle area to avoid all over-the-counter drugs in capsule form.
the county of Iowa in Capitol Hill
Auburn Police Chief Jake Evans identified the product
as Anacin 3 from a Pay 'N Save Drugstore in the north
Auburn area.
Evans said the contents of the Anacin-3 bottle were tested by the FDA as part of a random check of capsule products still on the market because of two recent deaths, and tests "revealed the presence of craniotoxin."
Jack Wood, a spokesman for Whitehall Products of New York, which makes Anacinin3, said the company has no plans to use the product.
FDA spokeswoman Ellen Miller said the presence of cyanide in the bottle was detected by a fluoroscope examination, similar to an X-ray. She said the bottle was given to the FBI for chemical analysis.
area to quarantine its capsule products.
"The FDA is strongly warning people in the King County area, especially in the Auburn and Kent areas, to avoid the use of any over-the-counter medication in capsule form until further notice." Miller said.
House panel impeaches iudge
WASHINGTON — A House panel unanimously voted four articles of impeachment yesterday against U.S. District Judge Harry Claborne, the first convictedissoned federal judge to face such a proceeding.
The 15-member Judiciary panel with jurisdiction over federal courts agreed that Claiborne was guilty of misbehavior and misdemeanors for tax evasion in 1979 and 1980. The panel found his conviction warranted imputed to the office of office, failed to obey the Constitution and laws, and should hold the integrity of, and confidence in, the judiciary.
During opening remarks, subcommittee members said Claiborne was arrogant and brazen to remain in office and keep drawing pay, and should be removed.
"Judge Claiborne has engaged in misbehavior and therefore he should be impeached," Chairman Robert Kastenmeier, D-Wis, said.
Rep. Roman Mazzoli, D-Ky, said it was "ironic and outrageous" that Claiborne drew his $78,700 annual judicial salary "while sitting in the slammer in Alabama."
Claiborne, 68, hasn't served on the bench since his indictment three years ago. His refusal to resign, despite his 1984 conviction and imprisonment last month, prompts the union to move ahead with impeachment proceedings.
Rep calls for plane inspections
WASHINGTON — Charter airlines飞 U.S. troops around the world have more safety problems than other commercial airlines, and military inspectors warn them to be careful before each flight, a congressman said yesterday.
Rep. Charles Bennett, D-Fla., a member of the House Armed Services Committee pushing legislation to get military inspections of Pentagon charter flights, said 248 members of the elite 101st Airborne killed in a December charter crash might not have died had the military checked the DC-8 before takeoff.
Appearing with Bennett were the parents of two of the airborne soldiers killed in the Arrow Air crash
Bennett released the findings of a General Accounting Office investigation, based on 1984 Federal Aviation Administration inspections of 141 carriers, that showed charter carriers with military contracts had more severe safety problems that other commercial carriers.
Sandra McChessen of Dayton, Pa., whose son Kevin Fink was killed, said that despite the disaster in Gander, Newfoundland, problems continue with charter flights.
Security helped gunmen in siege
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Police yesterday defended their decision not to storm the jewelry store where a german hostages for 13 hours, explaining that the government securely made it "virtually impregnable."
The gunman executed two of his hostages inside the Van Cleef & Arpels store during Monday's daylong siege, and a third hostage was killed — apparently by a sheriff's deputy — as the suspect later tried to flee.
"The building was virtually impregnable. The security in place to protect against such things worked against us." Beverly Hills Police Chief Marvin Iannone told a news conference.
From Kansan wires.
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1
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
News Briefs
Mall action awaiting group's fiscal study
Eric Strauss, a planner and lawyer with an Overland Park consulting firm, met briefly with Lawrence city commissioners Monday afternoon to tell them that a "footprint of" a proposed lawsuits against Lawrence shopping mall qualified as blighted under state laws.
Commissioners postponed any formal action until the Urban Renewal Agency could study the possibility of being under the blight designation.
Declaring the area blighted would allow the city to condemn property in the 600 block of the Chevron at 4217 Park Avenue into an enclosed shopping mall.
The "footprint" runs from Sixth to Seventh streets and from Kentucky to Massachusetts streets. Although commissioners have already declared the area to be closed, they are porting the designation if it should come into question in future court cases.
Svmphony to play
The Denver Symphony Orchestra will replace the Cologne Radio Orchestra, which recently cancelled its 1986 American tour, as part of the University of Kansas Concert Series. The Denver Symphony will play at 8 p.m. Nov. 5 in Hoch Auditorium.
Andre-Michel Schub, who won the 1981 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, will be the featured piano solist with the New York Philharmonic ensemble, associate conductor of the Denver Symphony, will conduct.
Prof receives honor
Rue L. Cromwell, professor of psychiatry, pediatrics and psychology at the University of Rochester, N.Y., has been named the first M. Erik Wright distinguished professor of clinical psychology at the University of Kansas.
C. R. Snyder, professor of psychology and director of the KU clinical psychology program, said Cromwell had a strong reputation as a scholar, researcher and appointment is effective. Aug. 15.
Cromwell will bring his laboratory to KU so he can continue his research on schizophrenia - making the University one of the few U.S. institutions using his research method HISTOLOGY OF SCHIZOPHRENIA has been extensively supported by the National Institute for Mental Health and other grant agencies.
Prof national officer
William Scott, professor of English, was recently elected second vice president of the American Association of University Professors. Scott, who has been a member of the faculty since 1988, began serving his term June 17 to other new national officers.
Scott will help determine the association's policies and programs.
Weather
Today, the forecast calls for partly cloudy skies with temperatures in the upper 80s. Tonight, continued partly cloudy with a slight chance of thunderstorms. Lows will be around 70. Tomorrow will be partly sunny with a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms. Highs will be in the lower 90s. A 20 to 30 percent chance of rain is expected for this weekend. Highs will be in the upper 80s to lower 90s with lows around 70.
From staff and wire reports.
Professor's slayer awaiting sentence
By Dana Spoor
Sentencing is all that awaits the Kansas City. Mo, man who pleaded guilty to the second-degree murder of a university of Kansas professor.
Staff writer
Eugene Avis Jr. was originally charged with first-degree murder in the death of George Hixon, professor of design. But a plea-bargain agreement made by Avis' attorney and the Douglas County district attorney's office Monday morning charged his charge to second-degree murder.
Sentencing will be at 11:30 a.m. July 22.
'We think it is a just plea under the circumstances.'
Rick Trapp Douglas County assistant district attorney
During the next month, officers for court services will conduct a presentencing investigation to determine what sentencing recommendations will present to Douglas County District Judge James Paddock.
The plea bargain agreement included dropping the murder charges
The difference between second-degree murder and first-degree murder is that second-degree murder is done willfully and with intent to cause first-degree charge, the murder is premeditated and deliberate.
Second-degree murder is a Class B felony, which includes a minimum sentence of no less than five years imprisonment and no more than 20 years, and a maximum sentence of ten years imprisonment or five years imprisonment and no more than life.
from first-degree to second-degree and eliminating the charge of theft.
Evidence indicated that Hisxon was strangled and suffered blows to his body. His body was found in a cave on the West Lawrence condominium.
According to the original report, Hixson was thought to have been murdered on Nov. 22. There was also a video of the television set and stereo equipment.
"We think it is a just plea under the circumstances," said Rick Trapp, Douglas County assistant district attorney.
Trapp said the court-services officers would present their recommendation to Paddock at the sentencing.
"He is not bound to follow that," Trapp said.
Trapp would not say what recom mendation would be made.
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I will not let them disturb my peace. I will protect them from harm. I will be their friend and protector. I will always be with them. I will love them. I will cherish them. I will be their companion. I will be their confidant. I will be their friend. I will be their protector. I will be their friend and protector
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAM
Seven-year-old Scott Wisdom, son of Jeanette Wisdom, 1714 W. 22 St., patiency waits for butterflies and other flying insects. Scott, who hunted yesterday at the playground of Schwegler Elementary School, 2201 Ousdahl Road, has been collecting butterflies for more than a year.
Eerie vestiges of WWII still stand
By Karen Schmidt
Special to the Kansar
Special to the Kansar
Among a string of dilapidated buildings in the east Lawrence countryside are two buildings set apart by a feature - rusted bars on the windows.
The bars belong to an abandoned World War II prisoner-of-war camp that held about 300 German soldiers and were the source of the war's closing days in 1945.
Entangled in tall grass, crumbling and showing the effects of time, the buildings evoke a serene, yet eerie reminder of the past. At one time a ring of armed guards and lights surrounded by one-and-a-half acre traction 24 hours a day.
Park Hetzel Jr., Baldwin City, still
owns the POW camp site, which is near the intersection of 11th Street and Haskell Avenue. He said that because of security reasons, the government would only send about 10 prisoners to the camp at one time.
"Nobody in Lawrence ever really thought much about having German prisoners next door." Hetzel said. "There was no way for them to get away and no place for them to go. they were very dangerous and hard working, and the farmers were always pleased with them."
The shortage of manpower caused by the war hit the agriculture industry hard. For this reason, the W.J. Small Co., a Neodesha hay and grain company, became the prime contractor in a U.S. government program to help in the building the POW camps and bring in prisoners to help with the farming.
The prisoners would stay for two weeks, in which time they would work in the potato and pea fields and the garden. In the later days of time, they were normally
transported to other camps in Kansas, such as Concordia, Peabody, Ottawa and Hays, or to camps in Nebraska and Minnesota.
The Lawrence camp was built under Hezel's supervision by 10 prisoners from an Ottawa prison camp.
He said that communication with the soldiers was difficult at first because of the language barrier.
"I didn't talk German and they didn't talk English," he said. "But it didn't take long before we could work our way through what I wanted them to do."
The first load of prisoners sent to Lawrence were members of the German Afrika Korps under General Erwin Rommel, the "Desert Fox."
"Being under the Desert Fox you could be sure they were the pick of the German army," Hetzel said. "It didn't take them long to pick up on
The men slept in tents outside the two main buildings, which were used as a wash room, mess hall and guard quarters. The most soldiers staying in the camp at one time was 125, Hetzel said.
Crew wants depot as boathouse
Staff writer
By Brenda Flory
The University of Kansas crew team and the Lawrence Preservation Alliance have joined forces in an attempt to save the old Union Pacific Railroad depot at North Second and Perry streets.
Scott Long, captain of the crew team, said last week that in June 1983 the team proposed to Union Pacific that the depot be moved to the river.
side and converted into a boathouse
The team wants to move the depot to the south bank of the Kansas River near Seventh and New York streets. The team is now using an abandoned warehouse near City Hall for storage.
"I's a perfect building for us," Long said. The depot has a lot of storage space for boats.
He said he thought the team had a better chance of getting the depot by
LAWRENCE
working with the LPA.
Union Pacific closed its Lawrence agency in fall 1894. The dep's functions were replaced with computerized customer-service centers, John Bromley, Union Pacific spokesman, said.
"They're interested in preserving a historic building and, we're interested in getting a boathouse." Long said.
Instead of going through the depot, Lawrence customers dial a toll-free number to get the train service they need.
"We felt the building couldn't be used for anything else because it was too close to the tracks." Brunley said. "We should have a light should be demolished or moved."
The depot was declared a safety hazard because it was located near an sharp curve with heavy train traffic. Bromley said.
Darcy Chang/KANSAM
He said the groups had until June 1987 to raise the funds.
"If they don't raise the funds, we will probably tear down the building." Bromley said.
But he said he was optimistic that the groups would meet their goal.
In a joint venture in March, the crew team and the LPA created the Save the Depot Task Force, which consists of eight members.
citizens who are interested in preserving, historic buildings, said Betty Alderson, president of the organization.
Efforts by the city to get developers interested in relocating the building failed in the spring of 1984.
The LPA is composed of a group of
Union Pacific Railroad depot.
The task force is in the process of getting an advisory board and forming a fund-raising plan, said Craig Patterson, chairman of the task
"Actual action can't take place until we have funds." he said.
Bromley said that the railroad had donated the building and $10,000 to the groups. The demolition costs would have been about that amount, and the groups will receive the money when they show the railroad that they have the funds to complete the project.
The cost of the project is estimated at $500,000. The task force has more than $3,000. Patterson said.
He said the original plan for moving the building called for a piece/bypiece operation with the crew team as the main labor force.
The task force sought advice from a contractor in San Antonio, Texas, who had experience in moving depots. The plan now calls for the building to be moved in two sections, Patterson said.
Culture Farms to appeal case at circuit court
By Rachelle Worrall
Staff writer
The arguments are the result of an appeal by the attorneys for Culture Farms over the Culture Farms mall lawsuit, which was filed in U.S. District Court in Kansas City.
Oral arguments begin this morning in the Culture Farms Inc. mail-fraud case at the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver.
The arguments will be heard by a three-judge panel, Linda Bugg, a Denver court clerk, said in a telephone interview Monday.
Culture Farms and affiliated companies were ordered to shut down on June 10, 1985. Craig Stanciffe, attorney for the Kansas Securities Commission in Topeka, said yesterday.
Five of the 12 persons who were indicted September 12, 1985, have pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud, cloacite罪。
rine lengthy Culture Farm cases was first brought before the commission because of possible violation of the state's Securities Act on three counts, he said. The commission was to determine whether Culture Farms was an unregistered security agent to sell the securities and whether Culture Farms had committed securities fraud.
The commission found misrepresentation and a scheme to defraud customers with a Pyramid-Ponl媳, he said.
The case is now being tried on a federal level as a mail-fraud case, and only fraud must be proven, he said.
Two KU professors, Akagi, chairman of the microbiology department, and Delbert Shankel, professor of microbiology, received a grant in January, 1985, to do quality-control research on the cultures.
Both Akagi and Shankel have been out of town and were unable to be reached for comment.
Only the attorneys representing the prosecution and the defense were required to be at the oral arguments, Bugg said.
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4
University Daily Kansan
Opinion
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Registered beer
The verdict on Kansas's drinking age law came in this month, just short of the law's first birthday on Tuesday. The verdict was thumbs down, but the people who make and enforce our laws have refused to recognize it.
The verdict came from the mouth of the state's top liquor official, John Lamb, director of the Department of Revenue's Alcoholic Beverage Control division.
"There isn't a weekend that goes by that we're not out at a keg party." Lamb said, "and we're finding that 95 percent of the people at those parties are underage . . ."
We recall that the Associated Students of Kansas predicted just such consequences in hearings last year when the Kansas Legislature was preparing to raise the drinking age to 21. Of course, federal highway funds were at stake and that made the final vote a foregone conclusion. More young deaths on our roads were a possibility, but the loss of money was a certainty.
So the law was passed and the underage kids who no longer can drink in taverns are getting beer elsewhere. No surprise here, Mr. Lamb. And you can bet, Mr. Lamb, that keg parties big enough to draw
the attention of the ABC are only the foam on top.
In light of the keg parties, Mr. Lamb has made a proposal. Is it to let 18-year-olds back into taverns? No. Mr. Lamb has proposed that every keg of beer sold in Kansas be registered to the buyer.
The best place for the ABC to track down those registered beer cans will be along the roadside or in wrecked cars. Shawnee County Sheriff Ed Ritchie summed it up recently:
"It ited to be, these kids went to a tavern, and when they were getting shaky, the bartender shut them off," Ritche told the Topeka Capital Journal. "Now they're going out to keg parties in the country where there's nobody to shut them off, and once it gets dark nobody knows how much they're drinking, and they get into trouble."
Presumably, cases will be next. And then beer sellers will be saying, "Excuse me, sir, but I'll need your name, address, two pieces of ID and a signed statement of just exactly what you intend to do with this six-pack."
The lawmakers have sent you in the wrong direction, Mr. Lamb. Don't ask them to send you deeper.
Mailbox
Memorial not to war
As a Vietnam veteran who shares your (Christian Colbert's) indignation over the present U.S. foreign policy that advocates the indiscriminate use of American military force — our youth — to enforce blind arrogance, i sincerely appreciate your column (Kanese, June 18). In your case, the memorial has given you the power to do — not only raise your consciousness about the past, but to make you think about the present.
However, I do have a bone to pick with the person who chose the headline for your article, and because I do not know who that is, I hope you will pass along the following: the KU Vietnam Memorial is not, never has been and never will be a WAR memorial. It is, has been and will be a memorial to remember the courage, honor and sacrifice of those KU students who gave their lives in the war. We are also reminded and headlines such as those accompanying your column give the wrong impression.
If the person responsible for the headline had been with me in Chicago last weekend for the homecoming parade, he could clearly understand what I'm talking about.
Thomas Berger
Chairman, KU Vietnam Memorial
Committee
Cow story done badly
Of all the disgusting things I've seen in newspapers over the years, "Cow-tippers never cry over spilled milk" is the most offensive. I don't object to Kansas coverage of this activity, although I question the wisdom of placing it on the front page.
I do, however, object to the tone of the article. I was distinctly left with the impression that the writer, Piper Schofield, thought cow-tipping was amyusing. A paltry four inches of column space buried on page five
was devoted to the welfare of the tipped cows. Is cow-tipping something that the Kansan endorses?
Surely the Kansan has better sense than to print articles written in such bad taste. I sincerely hope that your audience will appreciate the increase in this so-called sport.
Loyola M. Caron
Research assistant, KU Space Technology Center
According to Bill Sheeley, quoted in the cow-tipping story (Kansas, June 18), "Some of them (cows) sleep standing up on their so are stupid." Well Bill, some of them (students) push keepings cows over they are so stund.
Stupidity is relative
You know, now that you mention it breaking a cow's leg or making a pregnant cow lose its calf sounds pretty exciting. How does one get started? Tell me, Pusateri, when you drive around looking for fields with cows in them, do you write the address down? Do you take notes as to how many cows are in the field? Do you keep files? Which breed do you buy? Does your owner everaken tickets? If not, this Stephenian Quincy sounds just about your speed. Just think, if you two were married, you could have a cow chip throwing party at your wedding reception. Pretty snappy.
What is wrong with people today? Are they so bored with life (or are they just boring?) that they have to do things like push over harmless animals for kicks? Or are they just stupid? I always though a college education was supposed to make one smarter. Obviously not.
The saddest aspect of this story is how cutesy a senior reporter from what is supposed to be one of the better journalism schools in the country has made this childish prank sound. Keep up the good work, Piper, and you'll have a job with the L.A. Times in no time.
Brian Courtney DeSoto senior
News staff
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Anti-abortionists spreading violence
The recent bombing of an abortion clinic in Wichita is merely one of hundreds that have occurred since 1981. The anti-abortion movement is responsible. With a threatening mentality, its members are determined to legislate morality by any means. In the name of God they are unarmed and untitled throughout the land. Sadly, this will continue until women in this country are forced to incubate fetuses against their will.
The bombing and burning of abortion clinics is only part of the antiabortion movement. Its members are also skilled at verbally and physically harassing women and doctors entering abortion clinics. This practice has led to many violent incidents.
"Fanatics have instituted a reign of terror against women nationwide," said Eleanor Smale, press director at the National Organization for Women.
The harassment is so bad in some
Christian Colbert
Staff nurse
areas of the country that women need male escorts to enter clinics.
The harassment is directly linked to top leaders of the anti-abortion movement. Anti-abortion leader Joseph Schedler was arrested for conspiracy in a disturbance at an abortion clinic and was top leader, Joan Andrews, is in jail in Florida for her anti-abortion activities.
When anti-abortion leaders aren't rejecting the democratic process by resorting to violence, they are making a mockery of the process. For example, they target candidates for defeat solely on the candidates' positions on abortion. Sen. Jake Garn, R-Uah, was dissuaded by this practice that he quit the anti-abortion group he had been involved in.
When all else fails, anti-abortionists invoke the name of God to strike down pro-choice advocates. In Los Angeles, a fanatical preacher is imploring his congregation, and anyone else, to pray for the death of Supreme Court Justice William Brennan, who has voted consistently in favor of legalized abortion. The preacher also tells his plane that carried the message: "Pray for death: baby killer Brennan."
The message originally read, "Pray for the death of baby-killer Brennan," but the pilot wouldn't fly until it was changed.
Coleman McCarthy, a columnist for the New York Times, accurately described the movement's members: "They are selectively franck about protecting life before but cancel all the tickets after that."
The anti-abortion movement is plagued by an irrational, hateful and intolerant mentality. Its members resolutely claim they are concerned about life, but, ironically, they contradict their claim with hatred and acts of violence. They make propaganda films about the silent screams of fetuses but ignore the screams of the 3,000 children born into poverty every day
President Reagan epitomizes the anti-abortion attitude. He speaks of his concern for life, but his miserable fate is partly attributable to grams that are vital for newborns.
Reagan's social spending policies are causing more and more babies to die in their first year of life. The children's Defense Fund says that infant mortality rates are rising or less prenatal care for poor women.
A close examination of the anti-abortion movement reveals that it is vitrous. If its impulses were channeled at reducing the suffering of women, then its members could truly claim to be concerned about life.
KU group aids prisoners worldwide
Suddenly your cell door opens and a crumpled postcard is tossed on the floor. Even if it isn't written in your language, you recognize the address, USA, and you realize that someone thousands of miles away is aware of your imprisonment. Someone is working for your freedom. You have new reason to hope.
Imagine being punched out of a car at 3 a.m., tied up and blindfolded, interrogated and tortured for reasons unknown to you and, finally, being thrown into a small, dark cell. Years pass and you still don't know why you're imprisoned. You aren't even sure if anyone knows where you are. Your hope of ever being free begins to die.
Such letters come from Amnesty International.
KING
J. D. B.
Amnesty International is a worldwide people's movement. It doesn't endorse any political, social or economic system. Instead, it works to abolish torture and the death penalty, to obtain free elections for prisoners and to free prisoners of conscience — everywhere.
Once the facts have been established, Amnesty distributes them to its members — more than
Prisoners of conscience are men, women and children who have not used or advocated violence but have been imprisoned because of their beliefs, color, sex, ethnic origin or language. In the prison world, a badly played a role in the release of almost 20,000 prisoners of conscience. It's hard to say how large a role Amnesty has played because most of the governments involved aren't open to investigation. Their decisions are unpredictable and unexplainable. However, Amnesty has been assured by prisoners and the authorities that the prisoners free them made a difference in prison conditions and in their eventual release.
Amnesty's strategy to free prisoners is simple and effective. It begins by investigating thoroughly all reports of human rights violations. The research department's staff of 150 gleams information from all over the world and takes great pains to insure that the information is valid. Inaccuracy in any of Amnesty's published reports has yet to be documented.
Bill Foreman
500,000 in more than 150 countries. Many of these members belong to community groups. Community groups "adopt" individual prisoners and work for their release as if they were members of those communities. The groups receive pictures and all the information available on their prisoners.
Guest columnist
Groups usually become emotionally attached to their prisoners. In the past, we in the Lawrence group have celebrated the birthdays of our adopted prisoners. We also have sent care packages to them every January. Every January we receive a thank-you card from the wife of a former prisoner in Czechoslovakia. She doesn't know
packages. She writes, "Thank you to the unkown senders."
"When the first 200 letters came the guards gave me back my clothes," reported Julio de Pena Valdez, a former prisoner of conscience of the Dominican Republic. "Then the next 200 letters came, and the prison director came to see me . . . The letters kept arriving, and the president called the prison and told them to let me go."
The letter or telegram is the official tool of Amnesty, and it works.
Amnesty's approach to freeing prisoners is an ingenious idea because it breaks down an over-dependence on the court and managesable pieces. A small group
So far, the Lawrence adoption group has worked to free three prisoners. All three have been released. Now we are waiting for a new assignment. Our efforts to gain the release of prisoners has meant tirelessly writing letters to anyone we thought would be in trouble. We've called for release — politicians, newspapers, prison officials . . .
Hope is symbolized by Amnesty's trademark, a lighted candle wrapped in barbed wire. a song by Peter Gabriel expresses Amnesty's hope. The song, which tells the story of seven black men killed by police in a South African deserthood center, goes like this:
of people in Lawrence cannot alleviate the suffering of thousands of innocent prisoners. However, it can help free a labor organizer in Czechoslovakia or a teacher in Paraguay. And if the group cannot free them, it will at least offer them hope.
'You can blow out a candle, but you can't blow out a fire.
Once the flames begin to catch
Amnesty needs more candles Please join the fire.
Foreman, a senior in philosophy and English, has been a member of the KU chapter of Annmoy Inter Service and served as its president last year.
I
》
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
From Page One
University Daily Kansan
5
Drinking
big change.
However, bars are closing all over the state, according to the Alcoholic Beverage Control Division.
"There are a lot of taverns closing," said John Lamb, director of the division. "Some have converted to private clubs.
"It is really too early to tell because there are several different factors."
However, he said, it is more noticeable in college towns, such as Lawrence, because there are more bars. There is no way to tell how many bars there are in terms of the boxes; the total number of taverns in the state is not known.
One factor unrelated to age that has caused some bar-closings was the raising of the federal excise tax on liquor in October. This has caused liquor prices to go up, which costs bar owners more money.
Yet, Lamb said, the sale of alcohol at bars has been fairly stable.
"They are down in some areas, slightly up in others," he said. "Some beer taverns have dropped 30 percent since 2015." Catered to 18 and 19-year-old people,"
Tavern sales may be dropping, but the number of alcohol-related fatalities has not dropped since the drinking age was raised, said Bruce Citizen's Director of Douglas County City Councils Committee on Alcoholism.
"Fatalities are up over the past year," he said, "But, I have no idea if that has anything to do with the drinking age. It is really too early to
The Kansas Department of Transportation, which has not released any figures for 1986, said aids and alcohol have decreased since 1984.
In 1984 there were 2,338 alcohol-related accidents for the 15 to 24-year-old age group. In 1965, there were 2,019 alcohol-related accidents.
This included 67 fatalities and 343 injuries in 1984, with 58 fatalities and 325 injuries in 1985.
Arrests also have increased since the drinking age was raised.
"There have been more arrests on our part," Lamb said. "The number of arrests in that age group has gone up 400 to 500 percent in the last year."
Arrests may be higher and sales of liquor may be lower, but that is not all that is changing.
When the drinking age changes to 21, taverns that serve only 3.2 beer will not be allowed to serve any other kind of alcohol unless the laws are changed or the businesses are rezoned, Wallace said.
But in November, Kansas residents will vote on the legalization of liquor by the drink. This would eliminate the use of membership cards for establishments that do oversee of their business in food sales.
Continued from p. 1
"The physical description was good. It was good enough to work."
IDs
The Sanctuary used one man as an example of what could happen when caught with a fake ID. Johnson said. The club is suing Ronald Smith, Overland Park senior, in small claims court for the $500 The Sanctuary was fined by the ABC for serving alcohol to a minor.
Smith entered the Sanctuary in April 1985 with false identification and was discovered by Lawrence Police. He lost the first case on Nov. 31. The Sanctuary is appealed against, but no court date has been set.
"It is time kids realize that they can be prosecuted." Johnson said.
Those who loaned fake IDs could also be punished by a jail term of not more than one year, or fined no more than $2,500 or a combination of both
Yet, Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., said there was more usage of fake IDs than borrowed IDs.
More than 80 percent of all IDs rejected at the Jayhawk Cafe are fake, Wallace said.
Making and selling fake IDs is punishable by not less than one year in prison or a fine of not more than $5,000 or a combination of both.
Fear of prosecution is exactly why Knollenberg quit using her ID.
"I quit because I will be 21 in July and because the penalties are so stiff," she said.
"All of my friends are older than am, and we wanted to go out as midnight. Not too many 19 bars off dancing and are open that late."
Christie said the crowd a Bullywinkle's often would include high school kids that tried to sneak in during the summer. The IDs were normally expired or did not resemble the students at all.
Employees at the Jayhawk Cafe collect fake IDs every night it is open. Wallace said.
"I have stacks this high back on my desk." Wallace said as he held his
hands about a foot off the counter.
"People pay up to $35 and $40 for these and we just put them in our pockets."
Before the drinking age was chang ed, Wallace said, he had not expérienced much of a problem.
"But once we got the drinking age increased, fake IDs increased," he said.
The bars are not the only places affected by fake IDs. The Burge and Kansas unions sell 3.2 beer. However, James Long, director of the unions, said they had not experienced any major problems.
"We check ID unless we know the person," he said.
Johnson said that fake IDs would continue to be a problem until something was done about their usage.
"Quite frankly, nothing is being done." Johnson said "in the next Legislature we will introduce a bill that would extremely dicitu to use fake IDs
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6
University Daily Kansan
Arts/Entertainment
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
Shows reveal emotions
By Rachelle Worrell
Staff writer
The Harmfulness of Tobacco and the Golden Flame, two one-act plays presented by the University of Kansas Theatre. Performances are at 8 a.m. tomorrow, Friday and Saturday in Swarthout Rectal Hall in Murphy Hall Office Box, 1205 North Murphy Hall Office Box, and $1.50 for KU students. $3 for the general public and $2 for senior citizens and other students.
The stage is desolate. The most important props are the emotions vented during the double bill of one-hour presentations led by the University of Kansas, Thesis.
"The Harmfulness of Tobacco," by Anton Chekov, and "The Golden Fleece," by A.R. Gurney, are directed by Ronald Wilson, chairman of department of theatre and media director of the University Theatre.
Although both plays are comedies, their underlying messages concern some of man's basic conflicts.
"The first is more about the man's confrontation in relation to his own life." Willis said. "The second play in particular provokes thought about the relationship between sexes in the modern world."
The one-member cast in "The Harmfulness of Tobacco," is Henry T. Hardy, played by Charles Neuringer, KU professor of psychology
Hardy is a rumped and stodgy man, frustrated by the control his wife has over his life. He finds himself giving a speech over the harmfulness of tobacco, but when he meets the president, auditorium to hear what he says, he bitterly expounds on what has become of his life.
There is no scenery, and the only prop is a podium. Hardy's 30-minute monologue reveals anguish and punishment over the outcome of his life.
Hardy says of his wife, "I'm afraid of her. When she looks at me, I'm terrified."
Once Hardy realizes his wife has arrived, he collects himself and makes a dignified exit.
"The Golden Fleece' will knock your socks off," Willis said.
The two cast members are Betty, played by Robin Ellis, and Bill, played by David Montee, who are husband and wife on stage and off. The other two students are graduate student, and Montee is a Bartlesville, Oka., doctoral student.
Betty and Bill mix the Greek myth of Jason and Medea and the golden fleece with their own stormy marriage.
They become involved with the marital conflict between Jason and Medea, two off-stage characters essential to the plot. Jason is leaving Medea for another woman, but finalizes his wife's marriage as his wife because of the golden fleece.
Betty and Bill have different ideas about what the golden fireie is. Betty believes it is the love for Meda, and the love is that it is Jason's love for his children.
The separation and marital struggle between Jason and Medea
"If those two big beautiful people can't make it, we're all in big trouble," said Betty.
parallels that of Betty and Bill. Their fights are both physical and verbal.
The play is enhanced by audience participation. Designated audience members have questions to ask Betty and Bill during their monologues.
A problem that Willis said might arise from the program listing audience members as cast members is that they may think it is alright for any audience member to say something.
The absence of scenery and props does not leave anything up to the audience's imagination. Willis said.
David Montee, Bartlesville, Okla., doctoral student, and Robin Ellis, Haslett, Mich., graduate student, right, portray Bill and Betty, a couple who try to show off the golden fleece and end up fighting in "The Golden Fleece."
Charles Neuringer, below, KU professor of psychology, portrays Henry T. Hardy, who finds himself giving more than just a speech on the effects of tobacco in "The Harmfulness of Tobacco."
AUTHORIZED USE ONLY FOR EDITING AND COMMENTARY PURPOSES. NO EDITING, COMMENTING OR SHOWN IN ANY OTHER WAY.
PETER WELCHER
Sights and sounds
Today
*Student Union Activities will show the film "Breaking Away" at 7 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas University. Tickets are $15.*
*Mark Holmberg, assistant University carillonier, will give a free carillon recorded at 8 o'clock at the Mercer Community.
Thursday
■ Kansas Summer Theatre's "The Golden Fleece" and "The Harmfulness of Tobacco" will be shown today, Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. All tickets are general admission and are on sale at Murphy Hall box office. Tickets are $1.50 for KU students, $2 for senior citizens and other students, and $3 for the public.
Friday
A free film, "Paris, Texas," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Popcorn and drinks will be served.
*Student Union Activities will show the film "Bachelor Party" in p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas University. Tickets are $1.50.
■ The Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory in 500 Lindley Hall will have a
free open house at 9 p.m. if the sky is clear. Call 864-3166 for information.
The Midwestern Music Camp Jazz recital will be at 7:30 p.m. in the lobby of Olive hall. Admission is free.
Saturday
The Midwestern Music Camp piano recital will be at 9:30 a.m. in Swarthout Recall Hall of Murphy Hall. It is free and open to the public.
The Midwestern Music Camp concert will be at 10 a.m. in Hoch Auditorium. It is free and open to the public.
Albert Gerken, University carillonneur, will give a free carillon recital at 3 p.m. at the Memorial Campanile.
Video specialty stores and other stores that sell and rent video cassette movies are found on almost every streetcourtern in Lawrence
Stores cater to video trend
By DeAnn Thomas Staff writer
Some store owners said last week that they thought they had the style, location and rates that would make them successful in the competitive market.
"Each store has its own personality." Jon Kay Murphy, owner of Adventureland Video, 925 Iowa St., said last week.
Murphy said she did not expect any problems from the growing video market because of the different applications and rental rates at each store.
Sunday
Murphy said that because her store was next to Hillier Theatres, 925 Iowa St. she selected movies according to the indications of the movie-giving customers.
"Sometimes stores that have 99 cent sales run out of the popular tapes." Murphy said. "But people can easily go to another video store."
"People go to the theater to see the movie and will come in to rent the movie so they can see it again," Murphy said.
Murphy said the video business also helped large families save money by renting a video rather than going to a theater.
"Sometimes a couple of members of the family will pay to see a show, and if they like it, will come here and rent it for the whole family to see." Murphy said. "There will always be a market for video tapes."
Several videotape store managers and the district manager of a local theater said they did not expect contact between taped and theater movies.
"I think the businesses complement each other." Murphy said.
Elden Harwood, district manager for Commonwealth Theatres, said videotapes stimulated interest in movies.
"People go to the theater to see what a movie is about and if they like it they will rent the video," Harwood said.
"The movie going public is no different now than it's ever been," he said. "If people are going to stay at home to see a movie on cable or videotape, they would have stayed at 'home anew.'"
"Videotate rental gives movie producers a new source of revenue and more money to make pictures," Harwood said.
Harwood said he did not see the theater losing any money.
Gary Mackender, manager of Liberty Hall Video, 646 Massachusetts Avenue, tape would be a long-term business because people would
always want to be entertained and to watch movies.
Mackender said he thought the videotape business would be long-lived, although the business was spreading itself too thin.
"Liberty won't be solely relying on videotapes," Mackender said.
Liberty Hall is one of several new video stores that opened in December. Mackender said that when Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., becomes a 5mm store, the video sales and rentals would be an accessory business to customers who come to see shows.
Mackendier said he planned to have a large market of videos ranging from classical literature, silent films or foreign language to current movies.
"Liberty is not like some stores that only sell the top 40 popular tapes." Mackender said, "I'd like to gear it for the use of KU faculty and students and toward educated audiences."
Mackender compared his store's selection to that of a library. He said he would like to have a selection that responds to a wide variety people.
But the Kansas Union Bookstore, which began selling videotapes in December, mainly offers the currently popular movies.
Racers to see end of days in fast lane
By Rachelle Worrall
Staff writer
A deafening rear explodes through the air. Two cars race down the dragstrip, their chrome fenders flashing
About 600 spectators and racers pack the Lawrence Drawgway every Saturday night. The strip, 1111 Dragstrip Road, is just northwest of 15th Street and Kasid Drive. The gates open at 4 p.m. on Sundays in late spring to early fall, said Delon Joseph, owner.
But after the last car speeds over the finish line in October, the dragway will close its gates forever, Joseph said.
"There's a lot neater tracks around, but there's a lot of nostalgia here," he said.
After 29 years of providing entertainment to motor sport enthusiasts, the dragway will be replaced by an industrial complex, he said.
The dragway is reminiscent of a family picnic by the lake, except the lake is replaced by loud and colorful cars. Coolers rest in the beds of the boat or in a covered fence that surrounds the dragstrip. A pl ayen stands by one car.
"There's never any trouble out here," Joseph said. "There're really a pretty good bunch of people that come out here. When this place goes, there's not going to be any track they can race at on a regular basis."
Errol Kampschroeder, Lecompton, said he had been coming to the dragway since 1859. He had to count the cars numbered of the cars he had raced
"I guess eight cars," he said. "It's something I've always enjoyed doing. When my younger son raced, we'd run three cars.
"I'll probably keep racing until I can't beat these young boys at the lights anymore. There are people that race down here, when this strip is closed, that will actually end their racing."
Dennis Wiley. Tonganoxie freshman, said, "I've been racing every since I got my driver's license."
Wiley races a 1970 Camaro in the Selectra division. He placed second at the June 14 race. Before Saturdays, he had said, "I'm going to win it all."
The dragstrap is an eighth of a mile long. Races are timed, and are not clocked by miles per hour, said Joseph. There are three divisions — Selectra, Street and Super Stock. Selectras are street cars, and the Streets are semi-professional racers, he said. Cars in the Super Stock division fall somewhere between the other two categories.
An average of 90 cars race each week, Joseph said. Most races race for the sport and competition since 1985, when he win back what they put into the car.
Kampschroeder said that it cost an average of $30 wear on the car for each run, and that drivers often spend over $2,000 on their cars.
"But they take it seriously, believe me." he said.
Joseph said he and his partner, Charlie Huff, purchased the track in 1979.
"It's profitable sometimes and sometimes it's not," Joseph said. "It'd probably do it anyway if it didn't make money because it does get old.
"Whether we've been a success at it, I don't know. I guess you'd have to gauge that by how many people are here."
Racing entrance fees are $20, ad mission to the pit area is $6.
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Wednesday, June 25, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
Group to discuss economy
By Evan Walter
A task force of officials from the University of Kansas will meet today at 4 p.m. in Strong Hall to discuss a six-month agenda addressing the economic problems confronting Kansans against Geno A. Budd said Monday.
"I'm concerned about the economic outlook for the state of Kansas," Budig said. "We have a troubled economy. There will be no meaningful development without the aggressive involvement of KU.
"The future of this state and its institutions is at stake."
A report to be issued by the task force will be submitted to the chancellor by the end of the year.
The task force will begin to consider the ways KU programs and research can contribute to the economic development of the state by compiling a list identifying viable ideas for economic development.
"There are many ways that KU
can be of assistance," Budig said.
"The task force will seek out those ways in precise terms. The subcommittees will seek the views of the faculty, staff and students on campus.
"They will also see views from people from the state at large. They will attempt to find ways KU can be more responsive."
The task force will be composed of 13 faculty and staff members from the University.
Frances D. Horowitz, vice chancellor of research, graduate studies and public service, was chosen by Budig to lead the task
"We have a statewide responsibility." Horowitz said.
At today's meeting, the members will discuss and plan the schedule for future meetings of the task force, Horowitz said. The members will also discuss the organization of subcommittees within the task force.
task force," Horowitz said. "There will be work groups outside of the task force. They probably will cover all the basic areas of the University."
'It's going to be a decision of the
KU business, engineering and computer science programs can obviously contribute to economic development, Budig said. But other departments, such as the fine arts and humanities, also have something to offer by making Kansas a more attractive place to live.
An economic development group has been in the planning stage for about three and a half months, Budig said.
"Our faculty are anxious to assist." he said.
Although the task force will have only 13 members, Horowitz said, they will allow outside help. "There will be plenty of room for anyone who wants to make a contribution, she said.
Budig said, "It would be my hope that other universities would establish similar organizations."
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University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
Tots splash and learn at KU
By DeAnn Thomas
Staff writer
Taking a break from their routine activities at the Hilltop Child Development Center, 3134 Jaiyah Blvd., Janet Stallard had her kindergarten and first-grade children put on their swimsuits and walk to the Chi Omega Fountain for a cool dip in the water.
Splashing in the fountain is just one of several activities that children at the center enjoy at the University of Kansas.
Joan Reiber, director of the center, and Elizabeth Goetz, director of the Child Development Laboratory Preschool in Haworth Hall and a professor of human development and child psychology, said Monday that she provided many sights and places for recreation and child education.
During the summer, 144 children, ranging in age from 15 months to 11 years, enroll at the center. The preschool enrolls about 140-30 to
5-year-olds. It doesn't offer a program for children in the first through fifth grades during the summer.
Inth grade learns
Children of all ages at the centers often tour or play at different places on campus.
"The acre of original prairie grass is just up the street from Haworth," Goetz said.
The preschoolers can observe Kansas history and different types of architecture, animals and plants during their walks on the campus, Goetz said.
The activities of the day-care centers revolve around a weekly theme. This week the 7 to 11-year-olds at Hillwill visit the Space Technology Center in Nichols Hall on West Campus.
"They made robots from foil, covered boxes and Styrofoam cups." Laurie Rothschild, Hilltop teacher, said. The robots were a project she used to prepare the children for the trip.
Classes at both centers may spend
a day at Potter Lake with a picnic lunch, observing the fish, ducks and plants as part of a nature theme.
As part of food and nutrition week, the 2- and 3-year-olds at Hilltop will visit the bakery at the Kansas Union this week to see how food is prepared.
The 4- to 6-year-olds visited the police department and post office.
Reiber said the children had visited the KU animal care unit for animal week and would visit Walkins Hospital during health and emergenc
The children at the preschool make many of the same trips. Both Goetz and Reiber said KU faculty were nice and helpful in arranging and performing the tours for the children. The children usually got treats such as cookies or fruit from the places they visited.
Goetz and Reiber said all the trips had to be preplanned. When the children tour the Museum of Natural History, it is usually to see a specific exhibit, such as the rocks or the snakes.
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sylvania has been delayed until mid- to late July.
Green said the estimated cost of the renovation was $156,000.
Green said his company was doing some work in the living room and study rooms of the house. But he said the work being done was minor and would not keep the house members from moving in.
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Laura Bulgen, Lawrence senior and a member of the sorority, said the women in the house were excited about the renovations and coming back to a new home in the fall.
May to give the house a more traditional look by using pillars. The renovation was planned as part of the general repair of the house.
"The inside was done last year," she said.
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Henovations at the Sigma Kappa sorority, 1325 West Campus Road, may not be completed by the Aug. 15 deadline, but house members will be able to move in on time, a house alumna said yesterday.
"The August 15th cutoff is going to be tight." Green said.
B. A. Green Construction Co., 1207 19th St. is doing the renovation on the house. Bob Green, president of the company, said a few people were coming in slowly, delaying progress on the renovation.
By Kristi Schroeder Staff writer
"Since the windows are all in and it's all outside work, the girls can live in the house," Croyle said. She said the renovation began in
Pat Crouley, president of Sigma Kappa's alumnae building corporation, said that she didn't think the work would be done by the 15th, but that this would not cause any back-to-school problems.
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LAWRENCE, KS—Faculty, students and the business community have been flocking to a new IBM-compatible computer model in the Red Hat Model D." This remarkable PC is perhaps the "hottest" sellage PC in town.
Sold locally by Computer Outlet, 804 New Hampshire Street, the Model D," has been many of its best for many of its competitors. It comes standard with 2 disk drives, 256K, parallel and serial ports, plenty of expansion slots, DOS 3.1 and even a cowl/carbon fiber "list 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 isn't built-in color board as well if you want to use an RGB monitor.
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Wednesday, June 25, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
9
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
1234567890
Splish-splash
Megan Ramsey, 10, daughter of Don and Grace Ramsey, 1109 West Hills Terr., Ashley Davis, 10, daughter of Mike and Jackie Davis, 1601 High Drive, and Jordan Lungstrum, 10, daughter of John and Linda Lungstrum, 1145 West Campus Road, splash each other while playing in the Chi Omega fountain at the intersection of Jayhawk Boulevard and West Campus Road. The irok kept cool last evening.
Sanctions get mixed reviews
By Evan Walter
Staff writer
The U.S. House of Representatives made a decision last week calling for the United States to levy economic sanctions against South Africa.
The sanctions would have to be approved by the Senate and passed by the president before they could be enforced.
Economic sanctions probably won't come in the near future, said Dwight Kiel, associate professor of political science.
"Even if the Senate puts in sanctions, I don't think they can override a presidential veto." Kiel said.
Although he favors sanctions against the government of South Africa, Kiel said, he wasn't optimistic that time still allowed for a peaceful resolution to that country's policy of apartheid.
"Sanctions aren't a cure-all," he said. "No matter what the U.S. does, it will hurt the blacks in South Africa. I think there's going to be a problem." If you look at it historically, the people usually in their rights through bloodshed.
Arthur Drayton, professor of African studies, said he supported sanctions, but the people of the United States need to be better-educated about the situation to concern them of the necessity of sanctions.
"A lot of people are truly ignorant of what is going on in South Africa," he said. "People tend to see governments as the keepers of law and order. The resisters they see as the violent ones.
"There is also the political situation. Botha's party is like any power anywhere else. They can be made vulnerable if the white South Africans saw them as a barrier to their safety."
This situation could result in either a coup or a more liberal regime, Dravton said.
"We must make it clear to South Africa that their conduct is an offense against humanity," he said.
Roy Laird, professor of political science and Soviet and East European studies, said that he'd supported the idea of nations. Canada and Japan applied
similar sanctions.
"I disfavor unilateral sanctions," he said. "The history of such matters shows that unilateral sanctions have little or no impact."
Unilateral sanctions would only force the South African government to conduct business in other markets, Laird said.
"The House does not have the responsibilities that the Senate has and shares with the president of conductive foreign policy.
"We don't get anything done, we've deprived our markets, and they turn to European markets," he said.
"The Senate will look at it more responsively, in terms of what can be done realistically — unilateral action vs. international cooperative action."
Summer is here and, once again,
hundreds of Douglas County
residents have made the trip to the
attic and knocked the cobwebs off the
old baseball glove because the
Lawrence Parks and Recreation
Department's Summer Softball
League is in full swing.
Burdett Loomis, chairman of the political science department and associate professor of political science, said he didn't support total sanctions but rather more targeted sanctions, such as cutting off bank loans.
Softball is in full swing
By James Larson Special to the Kansan
There aren't many excuses for not playing, because there are 239 teams in 22 leagues for men and women who have varying degrees of talent. There is even a Sunday league for anyone working the graveyard shift.
The league is divided into divisions A, B and C. Division A is for those players with the most skill. Each division is then broken up into numbered levels of skill, making AXI the for the best players in the league.
"I love to play, win or lose," Diana Beebe, 1312. W 2nd Terrace, said yesterday. Her team, Gill Agency, is in the top five for the division with the most teams, 60.
When Beasley Insurance, the second-team team, gets its shot at the No. 1 team, spirits will be high, but under control.
"It's always nice to heat the No. 1 team, but most of us are friends," Jeannene Loewenstein, 2406
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Two of five nuclear weapons protesters, who, before their trial, admitted they had damaged two Minuteman H missile batteries in federal Missouri, testified yesterday in federal court on their own behalf.
Kenneth Rippeaton, 23, Rock Island,
Ill., and John Volpe, 39, Davenport,
Iowa, took the island to defend their
camp at the aisle sites on Good Friday.
The government's final witness, a member of a special security unit of the U.S. Air Force who assessed his damage, finished his testimony at a hearing in Washington, where they are representing themselves, began to present their case.
2 protesters defend selves before court
The game between GII Agency and Beasley Insurance will not only be a showdown for first place, it will also determine who has to buy the beer.
On trial with them are Daria Bradley, 22, also of Davenport; Jean Gump, 58, Morton Grove, III; and Larry Morlan, 68, Ettenberg, Iowa.
The two teams will get together after the game, hailed as the Big Beer Challenge, for a party. The loser has to supply the refreshments.
Alabama St., said. "My boss is Gill's coach."
Bruce Andrews, a Lawrence park and recreation employee, organizes the baseball activities for the department. Andrews does the scheduling, hires officials and establishes the rules and regulations.
Andrews said this year was going well. The weather has been ideal, so there have been few rainouts. Injuries also have been few
Alan Swartz, 301, Wisconsin St. is in charge of the men who have the thankless job of deciding the close calls and keeping order when things go wrong.
"At times it's lonely," he said. "There is also a lot of pressure because you are expected to make mistakes, the crowd expects them to be made."
But Swarts said the Lawrence crowds were understanding.
"Usually it's just 'Play ball!' and away we go." he said.
ay we go, he said. But there are times when those not fond of a ruling get loud.
of a girl you know.
"You learn to ignore them unless they get too personal." Swarts said.
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ALL PIZZAS ARE NOT CREATED EQUAL.
We hold this truth to be self evident. That no other pizza in town can match up with Pizza Hut* pizza. Because nobody else makes the pie way we do. Starting with:
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From our Pizzaoz! Italian pie to our Super Supreme Pan Pizza. And everything in between. You get it high and the best freshmeats, vegetables and cheeses. All loaded up and cooked just right. It's the pizza that gives you more for your money.
But there's some things that money can't buy. One is:
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Clean, comfortable and convenient. It's the perfect place to bring the family, a date or a friend. For the perfect meal.
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it's all true. But don't just take our word for it. Come in and see us at Pizza Hut.
Pizza is a trademark of Pizza Hut, Inc. for its brand of Italian pie.
Pizza is available at 4 PM Monday through Friday and all day Saturday and Sunday.
And see for yourself why all pizzas are not created equal
LARGE PIZZA-MEDIUM PRICE
Get any large pizza or any large Prirazo®
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Available on Van and Thin 'i Cush' pizza and Prirazo® Italian pie,
Prirazo® is available Monday to Friday after 4 PM.
Coupons redeemable by all participating Pizza Hut restaurants in New York, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Livingston, Petit, Platte, Bay and Saltine counties, Missouri and Maine.
Please mention coupon when ordering.
Offer limited to one coupon per party per visit.
Pizza Hut! offer. Coupon good on regular menu prices July 13, 1986. Cash redemption thru May 20th.
Pizza Hut is a registered trademark of Pizza Hut, Inc. for its brand of Italian pizza.
Pizza Hut.
Pepperoni Personal Pan Pizza for only **$1.49**.
Or any Calizza Italian turnover for **$1.99**.
Personal Pan Pizza and Calzura® are available Monday three hours, 11:00 AM to 4:00 PM
on Tuesday through Friday at 4:00 PM.
13:30 AM to 1:00 PM an order for 24 hours. Company requests payment of $25,000 per day and payment of $500 per hour in compensations in accordance with the Payroll Policy, Park Bay and Baltimore Ministers; and any other required payments. Please contact
Please mention coupon when ordering. Offer
Please mention coupon when ordering. Offer limited to one coupon per order. Please join the Pizza House® offer. Coupon good or regular price means prices July 12, 1986. Cash redemption value is $1.50. Use coupon for all purchases of Pizza House. In its for brand of Italian turnover.
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10
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
City,police still working on contract
By a Kansan reporter
After the final day of deliberations with a federal mediator, Lawrence police officers and the city have not met to draft contract agreement for 1987 and 1988.
The two parties have settled on a partial agreement, which was sent to attorneys for the police officers and the city.
The police officers and city officials have until Friday to reach a final agreement, or the Lawrence C. Hammons hearing to examine both sides
"We have turned over the appeals processes to the attorneys to work out wording," David Reivis, an associate counsel for the association chairman, said yesterday.
Reavis will take the agreement as it stands now to the LPOA membership meeting tomorrow night.
United Press International
Kansas plant to leave state
HESSTON — State officials said yesterday that they were surprised by news that Hesston Corp. plans to move 100 employees to its Oregon, Ill., plant because of a reported shortage of skilled Kansas labor.
Schwartz said Mario Chessa, Heston president, was unavailable to speak with him yesterday, but was going to contact him today.
"We've met with them several times over the last two months and that was never discussed," Schwartz of Saheson's apparent inability to find appropriately skilled workers. "It'm surprised."
Jamie Schwartz, secretary of the Kansas Department of Economic Development, said he contacted the financially struggling company by email and about the transfer. Hesson Corp. produces farm and oil-field equipment.
Fred Scharer, Hesson executive vice president, said demands on the skilled work force by a number of firms in the region. Hesson with a shortage of trained
workers for production of its rear mounted and under-mounted mowers.
"They have worked such quantities of overtime in the first five to six months of this year and (company officials) have not been able to hire the skills that were required to keep them ahead of schedule," he said.
Chessa, contacted by a McPherson radio station, downplayed the transfer, saying it involved minor operations.
"Some of the company's growth will be made in Oregon, Illinois rather than in Hesston," he said. "We are not talking about reducing production jobs in Hesston at this stage."
Michael Swenson, press secretary to Gov. John Carlin, also expressed surprise when told of the Hesston move.
"That's certainly something we're going to get on," he said.
He called reports of Hesston's inability to find skilled workers unusual and said Carlin would be advised immediately of the company's
Heston recorded a nearly $14 million first-quarter loss this year, more than five times the loss recorded in the same period of 1985.
Nearly a year ago, Hesston moved its rear-mounted and under-mounted mower division in Illinois to its Heston plant in south-central Kansas, citing a need to cut overhead costs. At that time, the company mounted 90 jobs from its Oregon and Mount Carroll, IJ, plants to Heston.
Of those, 100 jobs will be transferred back to Oregon, company officials said.
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DESTINATION
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 1986-87
CONCERT & CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES
ITINERARY
Concert Series
American Bullet Comedy October 9, 1986; 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Columbia Radio Orchestra with André Michel Schubert November 5, 1986; 8 p.m.
Hoe Auditorium
James Galway
December 11, 1986; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
Franz Liszt Chamber Orchestra February 19, 1987; 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Mercer Cunningham Dance Company March 25, 1987; 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
New York City Opera
in Madama Butterfly
April 1, 1987; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
Chamber Music Series
Mark Paskouan and Friends
September 28, 1986
3:30 p.m.
Cratton-Prayer Theatre
Cleveland Quartet with Emanuel Ax
October 25, 1986; 8 p.m.
Crafton Prayer Theatre
King's Songs
November 19, 1986; 8 p.m.
Plymouth Congregational
Church
Julliard Stright Quartet
February 1, 1987; 3:30 p.m.
Crafton-Preston Theatre
Empire Brass Quintet
March 8, 1987; 8 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Kronos Quartet
April 12, 1987; 8 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
University Arts Festival Event
Gathre Theater's Candida February 8, 1987; 3:30 p.m. Craftion-Theatre Theatre
The Arts
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT: MURPHY HALL
BOX OFFICE! 913 864-3982
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
Nation/World
University Daily Kansan
11
Texas student suing fraternity for hazing
United Press International
DALLAS — A former University of Texas student, who claims he caught a near-fatal infection in a hazing incident, has filed a lawsuit against Apha Tau Omega fraternity.
In the suit, filed Monday in state district court in Dallas, Lee M. Roever of University Park seeks unspecified damages for injuries resulting from the initiation incident last January in which he and at least two dozen other pledges committed a number of offenses week, perform calisthenics, and were continually pelled with raw eggs.
Rever, then a UT freshman, cut his hand on a thorn when he tried to escape during the fifth day of "Hell Week." the suit says. The eggs provided a fertile medium for the growth of bacteria that resulted in a massive streptocic infection that left him hospitalized with a 106-degree fever, the suit contends.
"He damn near died," said Mike
Schmidt, Roever's lawyer. "He got the infection in his hand and developed a raging fever. To save them, they had to go in and operate."
Rever was forced to resign from the university because the infection forced him to miss so much work and it remains unpaid, he remains under a doctor's care.
The pledges were pelted with eggs for four days and prohibited from taking showers or changing clothes, and were allowed only to staple bounce baths from the same toilet. Other officials said eight other students also developed serious staph infections from the raw eggs.
Fraternity members also forced Reever to wear women's clothing and undergarments, taped his body with adhesive tape, forced him to listen to loud music for hours at a time, shocked him with an electric cattle prod and locked him in a closet and threw firecrackers under the door, the suit says.
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WASHINGTON — The Senate easily approved a historic tax-reform bill yesterday, virtually guaranteeing that, in this year, Congress would complete the most sweepive rewriting of the landmark tax code since World War II.
United Press International
Senate approves tax-reform bill
Passage of the bill by the Republican-led chamber came on an overwhelming 97-3 vote, with the three being all Democrats. The bill would limit the role of the House, which last year approved its own version of tax reform.
Both measures would curtail popular tax deductions and loopholes in return for the lowest tax rates in about a half century. The world would be less dependent on individual tax for lower individual taxes and take about 6 million poor people off the tax rolls.
The Senate bill would exchange the current 14 individual tax brackets in return for a two-rate scheme of 15 percent and 27 percent. The House measure, however, has a four-rate structure of 15 percent, 25 percent, 35 percent and 38 percent, along with a number of other major differences.
The Senate plan, piece together by Finance Committee Chairman Bob Packwood, R-Ore., revived the tax reform issue, which has suffered from its slow pace in the past year and appeared morbid less than two months ago.
The ability of the Senate to guide its measure through the floor seemed to almost guarantee that the conference committee would, perhaps by September, emerge with a compromise proposal to reform the nation's tax laws — an item President Reagan has made his top domestic
Fights can be expected not only on the tax rates that will be included in a final measure, but over sensitive deductions, such as those for individual retirement account contributions that would be mostly gutted by the Senate measure. They would be kept intact by the House.
rate included in the Senate bill.
priority.
However, there remain several key problems, including arguments that the Senate bill does not do enough for compliance. The measure is too tough on business.
Packwood said yesterday that he expected a conference with the House to join the best parts of both parties in a conversation about the past that he plans to hold firm to the
Although it is designed to be "revenue-neutral" — neither raising nor lowering government revenues over the next five years — the bill would hire business taxes by about $100 billion in that period and use that money for individual rate reductions. It would, however, cut the top corporate tax rate from 46 percent to 33 percent.
It would virtually tear apart often-abused tax shelters and enact a strong minimum tax to make sure the wealthy and corporations could not avoid taxes. But it also would gut some popular middle-class deductions, such as those for IRA contributions.
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University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
Reagan appeals for aid
United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, after being denied a House forum and being blackened by most of the television networks, made an 11th-hour appeal in an address yesterday from the Oval Office for support for his $100 million Nicaraguan reacquai- aid package. He told Congress, "I need your help."
The president, sounding extremely hoarse because of an allergy, said, "Every American has a stake in this struggle. Cen-sus must be vital to our own national security, and the Soviet Union knows it."
Reagan delayed his scheduled trip to Las Vegas, Nev., and California until midday yesterday in order to deliver the address and to lobby more members of Congress. The House vote on the aipackage is scheduled for Wednesday and the result is still in doubt.
Reagan said he was speaking for "the cause of freedom in Central American and national security in the United States."
Urging support for the contras, who seek to overthrow the Sandinista government. Reagan said, "We have been chosen to fight for their freedom.
Now we Americans must also choose."
In a surprise announcement, White House spokesman Larry Speakes told reporters that instead of sending a written message to Congress, Reagan would speak from the Oval Office and submit his message and a letter to House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, D-Mass., and all members of Congress.
He invited the major networks to televise the speech, which was scheduled for 11 a.m. CDT, but enthused them that he carried Reagan's address live.
The president picked up two more votes in his last-minute lobby effort yesterday. Rep. Carroll Hubbard, D.K., express disagreement with O'Neill for refusing to let Reagan address the House, emerged from a meeting with the president to announce that he and Rep. Richard Ray, D.Ga., were changing their votes.
Hubbard said he had been assured by the president that the leaders of the four democracies surrounding Nicaragua, at least privately, supported his government, was assured that the money, if approved, would have tighter strings on it than in the past to prevent theft.
Reagan said that he might be accused of "fear-mongering" and that such a danger to U.S. security would never come to pass.
"Perhaps it won't," he said in a warning to the House. "But in making your decision on my request for aid tomorrow, consider this: What are the consequences for our country if you are wrong?"
Acknowledging that there may have been abuses of American funding by the contras, Reagan said, "Even though some of those charges are Sandista propaganda, I believe such abuses have occurred in the past. And they are intolerable."
But Reagan said that as a condition of U.S. aid he would insist on civilian control over military forces; that no human-rights abuses be tolerated; that any unlawful activity should end and that American aid go only to those committed to democratic principles."
Reagan said that he supported a $300 million compromise-aid package for Central America, and also a type of new "Marshall Plan."
"I urge Congress to support $300 million in economic aid to the Central American democracies," he said.
United Press International
JOHANNESBURG — Two bombs exploded yesterday within a 25-minute period in central Johannesburg, destroying a snack bar packed with office workers and shattering windows in a hotel shop. Hospital sources said 22 people were injured.
P police said it was not immediately known what type of explosives were used in the blasts, which wrecked the snack bar filled with a lunch crowd and dried up after dry cleaning shop in the Presidential Inn about seven blocks away.
22 injured by bombs in S. Africa
"It was like an electric shock going through me," said office worker Mariet Goothuizen, who was in the hospital in May for blood and with their clothes torn."
No one immediately acknowledged responsibility for the attacks, which the government Bureau of Informa- tion corrobed as callous acts of terrorism.
"Police are still investigating the explosions. There is no clarity at this stage as to what kind of explosive devices were used," the bureau said.
Officials have blamed rebels of the outlawed African National Congress for at least 10 bombings that have killed at least 38 people and hundreds in the past six months.
A government statement said 18 people were injured, four seriously, in the explosion at the snack bar and
Hospital sources said 20 whites were treated after the first blast and two blacks were hurt in the second.
one was hurt in the bomb explosion outside the hotel.
In London, Lynda Chalker,
minister of state, opened talks
yesterday with ANC leader Oliver
Tambo in Britain's first high-level
war against ISIS. He said the
armed struggle against the government
of South Africa, where a two-year wave of racial unrest has left about 1,700 people dead.
In Pretoria, the information bureau said two blacks died Monday, increasing the death toll to 59 since a nationwide state of emergency was imposed June 12. One man was shot by a government official who was being questioned and another was shot by an unknown gunman, the government said.
The state of emergency gave police sweeping powers and clamped restrictions on the media.
Also yesterday, a spokesman for Stoffel Botha, home affairs minister, said that Israeli reporter Dan Sagir, correspondent for the Ha'aretz
The spokesman said Botha did not exspel Siag, but declined to renew his residence permit. Two other journalists, CBS cameraman Wim de Vos and Newsweek bureau chief Rick Manning, have been ordered to leave since the imposition of emergency rule.
In Cape Town, police ordered the eviction of black women and children from three sanctuaries in white areas, pushing to five the number of refugee centers facing criminal charges for harboring black people
Authorities last week gave the refugee centers a Monday deadline to expel the blacks — among an estimated 70,000 people who lost their homes in bloody battles between rival black groups at Crossroads, a squallish shanty that had accommodated about 100,000 people.
newspaper and for Radio Israel, was ordered to leave the country by Thursday.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
13
Oakland defeats KC
The Associated Press
KANAS CITY, Mo. - Eric Plunk and Steve Otiveros combined on a suit-hitter last night at Royals Stadium that carried Oakland to an 8-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals and enabled the A's to snap a club-record 15-game road losing club.
runk, 2-3, allowed three hits through $5^{th}$ innings. The rookie right-hander walked six and struck out six as the A's won a road game for the first time since May 23. Ontivers collected his fifth save.
The A's jumped on Bret Saberhagen, 48, for three runs in the third inning and two in the fourth.
Alfredo Griffin walked leading off the third and stole second. After Tony Phillips walked, Mike Davis doubled in for the last two seconds, brought in Phillips with an infield out
and Davis scored when Saberhagen balked.
Bruce Bochete singled leading off the fourth and went to second when Dusty Baker singed. Donnie Hill's fly ball let Bochete go to third and he scored on Griffin's grounder. Jerry Willard's single made it 5-0. Bochete doubled in the sixth and scored on a single by Willard.
After Frank White hit a sacrifice fly, Steve Balboni walked and Plunk was relieved by Ontiveros. Jim Sundberg signed to score Brett.
Lonnie Smith walked and went to second on Rudy Law's single in the Royals sixth. George Brett followed with his 16th. Plunk's wild pitch sent Smith home.
Davis doubled in the seventh and eventually scored on a sacrifice fly by Baker and the Royals scored in the eighth, and Davies doubled on doubles by Smith and Law.
Royals Report
Compiled by Dawn O'Malley Sports Editor
Rovals 6, Oakland 3
The Kansas City Royals handed the Oakland A's their fifth straight loss as the Royals defeated Oakland 6-3 in Monday night's game at Royals Stadium.
Stuartin.
Buddip Biancalana kept the sixth inning alive when he got his second inlet of the game, Willie Wille仁 followed with a single to load the bases, George Brett then hit a line drive for a double that scored Biancalana and Wilson.
The victory put the Royals one game above .500 at 35-34 and gave starter Danny Jackson a 1-4 record.
starter Danny Jackson II, hit four shots and three runs in the first six innings before being relieved by Steve Farr. Farr retired all nine batters he faced and earned his first save since May 19 in Texas.
Royals 7, California 4
Kansas City's Steve Halboni's 14th home run of the year was a three-run shot in the bottom of the second inning that sailed into the left field bleachers in Sunday's game against the California Angels at Royals Stadium to help the Royals win 7-4.
The Angels jumped ahead to a 2-0 lead in the first inning. But the Royals went ahead for good on Balboni's hit that scored George Brett, Jorge Orta.
Scott Bankhead received relief from Bud Black and Dan Quisenberry and got his third win of the season to boost his record to 3-0. Quisenberry got his eighth save, four of which have come in the Royals last four victories.
California 4, Royals 3
The California Angels stretched their winning streak to five with a 4-3 victory over Kansas City in Saturday's game at Royals Stadium.
tory over Klaus.
The Royals scored three runs on five hits in the first inning after an
three-run outburst.
Kansas City stranded a season-high 13 runners on base.The Royals had scoring chances in the final four innings but couldn't cash in on those opportunities.
On Deck
Today
Today
Royals vs. Oakland
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Tomorrow
Royals vs. Oakland
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Friday
Saturday
Royals vs. Minnesota
7:35 p.m. at Minnesota
Standings
Royals vs. Minnesota 7:35 p.m.at Minnesota
Royals vs. Minnesota
1:15 p.m. at Minnesota
East Division
Monday
W 4 L Pct. GB
Boston 44 26,638
New York 41 30,577 4
Baltimore 41 30,559 51
Milwaukee 36 32,529 71
Cleveland 36 32,515 71
Toronto 36 36,500 91
Detroit 32 35,478 11
Royals vs. Seattle 9:35 p.m.at Seattle
West Division
W 38 L. Pct. GB
Texas 38 32 .543 —
California 38 32 .543 —
Kansas City 35 35 .500 3
Chicago 29 40 .420 $1\frac{1}{2}$
Minnesota 29 41 .414 10
Oakland 29 43 .403 10
Seattle 29 44 .388 10
Last night's results
American League
Baltimore 2, Detroit 0
Toronto 8, Milwaukee 0
New York 8, Boston 1
Oakland 8, Kansas City 4
Minnesota 2, Chicago 1
California 12, Texas 3
Seattle 8, Cleveland 7
Includes games through last night
American League
Montreal 6, New York 2
Philadelphia 7, Chicago 6
St. Louis 5, Pittsburgh 2
Houston 8, Cincinnati 4
Los Angeles 6, Atlanta 2
San Diego 3, San Francisco 0
National League
TRAILER
Student sails to win at windsurfing event
Steve Smith, Kansas City, cuts through the waves at Clinton Lake Saturday during the competition in the 1986 Stroh's American Boarding Tour
Sun, surf and sailing are common elements of summer. These elements were evident at the 1966 Strob's American Boardships Tour at Clinton Lake this past weekend where about 100 windsurfers competed.
By Dawn O'Malley
Sports editor
Scott Randle, Wichita senior, and his younger brother, Steve, took top honors in the men's event. Scott Randle placed first in the men's division on Saturday, but he finished second behind Steve in Sunday's race.
bethina Steve Ivany, but I "expected myself to do well," Scott Randle said. "You can't afford to make mistakes."
to take his mistake.
Steve Randle capitalized on the mistakes his brother made in Sunday's race.
"I've never been to a slalom race before," Steve said. "I didn't know what to expect. I got lucky. I was at the right place at the right time."
Scott Randle said that he was not surprised by his brother's victory because his brother had a weight advantage and it also was his first slam race.
The races were divided into men's, women's and masters. This meet was one of 12 being held across the country this summer.
The overall winner in the women's division was Allison Smith, a member of the Kansas City Sailboard Association. Don Shipman, also of the Kansas City Sailboard Association, won the master's division.
"Windsurfing itself is one of the best sports," Scott Standle said. "It was on a good lake, the water was nice and warm."
George Paley, organizer of the event, said that people came from as far east as St. Louis and as far west as Hays to compete in the competition.
Eighty surfers competed on Saturday; only 35 surfers competed on Sunday.
"The wind was howling on Saturday and people like to race when it's windy," Paley said.
"This is the first major windsurfing event ever in the Midwest," he said. "There was a lot of built up energy."
Valesente's plan buoys players' grades
Paley said this was the most successful event in the Midwest. In competitions at Minneapolis and Milwaukee, 20-25 surfers participated, he said.
By Kristi Schroeder
Sports writer
Bob Valesente laid his cards on the table when he took over as head football player in December. He wanted to reduce the number of players who become academically ineligible in the fall
so far, Valesente's plan seems to be working.
This summer, 32 football players are on campus working to maintain their eligibility or making progress toward their degree to graduate on
Valesente said that anyone who hadn't maintained eligibility or whose eligibility was in doubt would not be issued pads when the team's mini-camp opened Aug. 15. He said the team had practiced to practice until his eligibility had been verified, he said. But Valesente is anticipating good news on Aug. 15.
"I'm not going to foresee any problems before any come up," Valesne said Monday. "It's up to players to keep up with their work."
According to Big Eight and the National Collegiate Athletic Association rules, eligibility is based on work completed before the first day of classes. So, if for some reason a player is not eligible Aug. 15, he has an additional 10 days to try to have his eligibility reinstated.
Valesente said that a support system had been set up and that Paul Busirk, the team's administrative assistant, manages the players' each day.
The support program includes a daily study table for individual players, tutoring in specific areas and three mandatory meetings.
and three minimally improved "The support program has improved considerably," Valesente said.
Buskirk has been with the department for three months. He helps to coordinate admission and enrollment for new recruits and works on maintaining player eligibility. He also works with the academic counseling department to monitor the progress of the players.
"And emphasis has been placed in the proper place."
"I've definitely seen a complete attitude improvement," he said. "We're trying to keep a handle on things."
buskirk said yesterday that the mood in the department was much more attuned to academics now than it was in the past.
During the summer, the players' professors are asked to give progress reports. Buskirk said. These reports were not being given to the player is doing well or poorly.
The study table is also provided for
these players who need additional structured study time, Buskirk said. The players check in each day and study for a specific amount of time.
Buskirk said the number of incomplete courses for the players was less in the spring semester than it had been in the past.
Rick Clayton, linebacker, takes part in a study table five days a week from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. He said he had been taking for takes classes this summer.
"I'm doing it to maintain eligibility, to raise my GPA and it gives me something to do," Clayton said.
Clayton said it would be easier for him to get a better grade during the summer than during the season, because he wouldn't have the added pressures and activities. He thought that instead of just lying around all
Two swimmers going to World Swim Trials
See Grades, p. 14, col. 1
By James Larson Special to the Kansar
While some students may have been sleeping late into the morning, two members of the Kansas swimteam were up early, working out for the World University Swimming Trials in Orlando, Fla., this
Glenn Trammel and Liz Duncan will represent Kansas at the Trials. Duncan will swim the 50-meter freestyle tomorrow and Trammel will swim the 100-meter backstroke Friday.
Trammer's time, 50.2 seconds, was fast enough to win a place in the backstroke competition at the trials, finishing the season, winning the 50-yard freestyle in 26.27.
Finishing first or second would mean an invitation to compete in the World University Games in Madrid, Spain. Aug. 11-21. The third-place winners will go to Moscow for the Goodwill Games in July.
swimming. But for now, Trammel is concentrating only on the trials.
"If I could make either team, it would be my highest achievement in swimming." Trammel said.
Lake right now, I've already imagined myself swimming the 100-meter backstroke at World
Before his race, Trammel said, he could be seen alone with his Walkman headset on listening to his favorite songs by The Cars, Billy Idol, Rush and U2 to prepare for the race.
Thus, he said, "I will swim through the race and I know how I should swim it, how I want to swim it."
Trammel listened to "Runner." Manfredmann's saintribute to the Olympic games, before breaking Kansas as a freshman, recorded as a freshman this past season.
At the Senior Nationals Meet, Tramnel broke the record of 51.19 set by Brad Coens in 1984. His time, 50.2, was good enough for a school record and qualified him for the trials.
Duncan began her freshman year as a walk-on and is one of three women's team captains. Taryn Hearrold. Her harrow are the two other captains.
After captain, Duncan said that she was confident about the meet, but that on any given day anything could happen depending on whoever was ready at the time of the race.
"She has de-iced a tremendous amount in three years," Kempf said. "She has become one of the better sprinters in the nation."
1936
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
Kansas swimmer Glenn Trammel relaxes against the pool wall while working out for the World University Swimming Trails in Orlando, Fla., this week. Trammel is scheduled to compete in the 100-meter backstroke
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14
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
Grades
Continued from p. 13
summer, he could pick up some hours.
Clayton praised the support system implemented by Valesente. He said that Valesente's emphasis on academics had improved the team and the football program.
"Coach Valente will turn this program around like no other coach in the past or in the future could," Clayton said.
Mike Orth, quarterback, is also
taking summer classes, although he doesn't have to use the study table.
Because Orth was redshirted last year, he spent the time picking up extra hours toward his degree in computer science. He don't have a problem with eligibility.
"I'm doing this to get six hours out of the way," he said.
But unlike Clayton, Orth said he thought it was harder to take classes during the summer. He said he'd rather be outside than inside studying for a test and the extra hours during the football season didn't bother him.
Orth also thought that Valeseste's crackdown on academics had helped the team. He said the continuance of the support system and the monitor of the players' academics might help would help the team in the falls.
"The closer you watch people, the less chance they have to slip," he said.
United Press International
Bo Jackson to play with Memphis Chicks
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Bo Jackson will begin his baseball career with the Memphis Chicks next week, team officials said yesterday.
Avron Fogelman, a Memphis businessman and co-owner of the Kansas City Royals, made the announcement from his office four days after Jackson said he would sign with the Royals.
"All along it's been the Royals' philosophy not to push players, and we think Double A is where Bo should be," said Royald, said at a news conference.
"We want to see him in the major league before Sept. 1."
Jackson will play his first game Monday night in Memphis against Columbus, Ga.
"Bo knows he needs some fine-tuning. He knows he needs some help. We hope while he's in Memphis he'll be able to get that fine-tuning." Bo will be in the lineup. We want to see him playing as soon as possible.
Fogelman said he was still surprised that the Royals were able to persuade Jackson to join the team and to begin in Memphis.
Jackson announced last week that
he was choosing baseball over football, ending a long period of speculation.
Jackson was in Kansas City yester-
day but was expected to arrive in
Memphis over the weekend.
George Lapides, Memphis Chicks president, said he expected a full crowd at Tim McCarver Stadium in Memphis for Jackson's first game.
The Chicks are averaging about 3,000 fans per home game, but Lapides said he hopes for a 200,000 attack mark by the end of the season.
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25TH & IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA * 841-6232
The next best thing to the tropics
Paradise Cafe and bakery
Mon-Sat. 6:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
Wed-Sat. 5:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m.
Sunday 8:00 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
5:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m.
728 Mass.
842-5199
I am not a fan of this style. I'll just provide a description.
The person is standing with their arms crossed. They are wearing a plaid blazer, a white shirt, and a tie. The blazer has a tartan pattern, while the shirt and tie are solid colors. The pants are plain dark blue.
Limited Stock No Refunds
SPRING & SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE!
From 8 til 10 a.m. Saturday...get an extra 10% off
Suits up to 33% off Shorts 20% & 33% off Sportcoats up to 33% off Ties & Belts 50% off Knit Shirts 20% & 40% off Jackets 33% off
Sweaters 50% off
Dress Trousers 10% & 33% off
Casual slacks $26.99 each
Sport Shirts 25% & 33% off
Patterned Dress Shirts $10.00 off
Robes PJ.'s Swimwear 25% off
Live 96 Hum DJ. noon til 3 Saturday...lots of prizes
WHITENIGHT'S
Register through Saturday for a free Cricketeer Blazer
SAVE!
GUY'S
Potato Chips
89¢
7 & 7.5 oz. bag
Reg., Bar-b-que, Waffle
BUSCH
Big Busch
Malt Brewing Co.
Rocky Mountain National Park
SAVE!
GUY'S Potato Chips
89¢
7 & 7.5 oz. bag
Reg., Bar-b-que, Waffle
from the meat dept.
Scott Buy Franks 55¢
12 oz pack
5 lb. Chub pack
ground beef lb. 88¢
Mrs. Wrights hot dog & hamburger buns
2 packs for 89¢
BUSCH
Busch Beer
$415
12 pack/12 oz cans
Soft & Pretty
bathroom tissues
99¢
4 roll pack
Limit 1 with
$10 purchase
Super Food Barn
1900 W. 23rd St.
BIG
2-liter sale
98¢
per 2-liter bottle
including
Class
Seafood
Shrimp lb. $399 Med. Shell-on Crab meat blend lb. $399
C
[Image of a watermelon cut into half.]
WHOLE WATERMELON $299 and up
Bing Cherries lb. 99 $ ^ { \circ } $
California Plums lb. 99 $ ^ { \circ } $
Peaches lb. 69 $ ^ { \circ } $
Ta
Coca-Cola
GLASSIC
Sprite
Caffeine Free
Cherry Coke
Coke
In the deli
—chicken livers and gizzards lb. $2^{29}
—visit the salad bar only lb. $1^{99}
PIZZAShin crust,made fresh daily
Classic Coke, Sprite,
Cherry Coke, Sunkist,
Diet Coke, Tab, Coke
and Diet Cherry Coke
$299 each
Canadian Bacon,
Pepperoni,
Hamburger,
Sausage
1
4
Wednesday, June 25,1986
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1.960
0-15 2.60
16-20 2.90
12-29 3.70
For every 5 words add 304
AD DEADLINES
Classified Display advertisements can be only one width wide and no more than six inches deep. $minimum depth is the inch. No revenues allowed to classified display advertisements left.
Wednesday ... Monday 4 p.m.
Classified Ads
- Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University Daily Kansas.
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance
- Classified display ads do not count towards mon
earned tax discount
ANNOUNCEMENTS
POLICIES
4-5 Days 4-5 Days
3.75 5.25
4.25 6.00
4.75 6.50
$50£ $50£
- Tentacles are not provided for classification or classified display advertisements.
- Blind lens ads - please add a $4 service charge
* Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University Dallas Kansan
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only
either earned rate discount
- Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
- fully equipped kitchens
* individual central heat
1,23 or 3 bedroom aisles or duplexes, summer
roads no aisle. 843-1601. Evenings 841-3323.
2 BEDROOM SPECIAL
only.
* No responsibility is assumed for more than one in
Research Project on Sexual Harassment of Students is seeking individual who have experienced sexual harassment and confidentiality injury. University of Minn. approved research. For more information contact Research Director, Susan R. Hollins.
- laundry facilities
- Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words
* Word sets in MIDDLE ACASE as 3 words
* Decline at 4 p.m. — 2 working days prior to publication
- swimming pool
COME TAKE A LOOK!
FOR RENT
lock to bus route very energy efficient
Rooms for rent on the hill, 1/10 miles from Union 180 to $125 call 842-5749.
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
extra storage
* KUJ bus route
no pets, #831-601). Evening 8:45 a.m.
1 bedroom Basement Apartment for rent. furnishings included. Free parking. All utilities paid, lease not necessary.
Juneteenth, private entrance. $215 per month.
PINECREST
Under New Ownership & Management
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
- No insertion of any advertisement
* No publication on cancellation of pre-maid classified
2040 Heatherwood Drive
843-4754
- overfunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
- overfunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Pinecrest
289-2022
Excellent location. Two bedroom apartment in
the heart of Auckland, 2170 King Street,
Jebus, J690, Auckland. Alf Ajall 0412. Ohio 842-482-482
FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE. Kaveri Valley Magee
Way of Lawrence. 505-381-6020. Office offering
offering studio, 1.2 and 3 bedroom apartments. deplays and townhouses for new home owners. Offer open houses. Contact 841-609 to solve your housing problems.
- Several 2 BR cars for all*
* All new carpeting, cabinets and windows*
* Cable paid*
* Best rates to trade
EDINGHAM PLACE come enjoy Lawrence's newest and finest apartment facility. Offering luxury 2 bedrooms and a clubhouse this Summer. Now leasing for innere or next fall occupancy. For your private show stop by bth and Edingham or Edingham at 814-5944 or 841-6000.
the weasel
AVALON APTS.
9th & Avalon
for a
12 month lease
signed before
June 30, 1986
FREE
MICROWAVE
for a
Summer or Fall
1 or 2 bedroom, close to schools and shopping, A/C, laundry, dishwasher
no pets.
appointment
OPEN DAILY
1-5 P.M.
K.U. Students & Faculty-
reserve your home or new-
location, 1,2,3, or 4 br apts. Many great
locations. all close to K.U. stop
Hanover Place
14th & Mason-841-1212
Sundance
7th & Florida-841-5255
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas-794-2415
All designed with you in mind! MASTERCRAFT MANAGEMENT
Sleeping rooms next to campus, for summer seasion or winter. No nets. 843-1601
GREENTREE 1726 Ohio
1 bd./studios
- available now or Aug. 1
- 10 months old
Summer and Fall openings at Sunflower House, a student cooperative. Private rooms, good rates. 149-067. Summer and Fall openings at Sunflower House, a student cooperative. Private rooms.
- GE appliances
- $350 per month
-evenings-
GE appliances includes washer/dryer
Call 842-2532
Attractive 2 BR house C/A. 1800 block Main. Walk to K,U,EFER. No pets. 843-8650
Jayhawker Towers
Room for Rent in Private Home. Separate entrance. Laundry and kitchen privileges. Prefer female KU GRAD Student, non-smoker. $1750. Call 749-1835 evenings except Tues & Thurs.
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts. for KU students
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
THE RAINBOW HOUSE is seeking female applicants to join our co-ed cooperative living situation. Lower your expenses, raise your consciousness. Check out the benefits of cooperative living.
- Individual Contract Option
- Apply Now for Fall/Spring
- Academic Resource Center
- Limited Access Doors
Wanted: Non-smoking female roommate for 28mbr apartment. B132.50/m² - 1/2 utilities.
Near campus. Available Age 1. 841-4585.
- Furnished or Unfurnished
1986 Berkeley FLATS
*mASTERCRAFT* offers completely furnished 1, 2,
and 3 bedroom apartments all near campus. Call
841-1212, 841-255, 749-2415.
- Swimming Pool
FOR SALE
- Laundry Facilities
- On Bus Line
* Free Cable TV
17. Grumman cause, excellent condition, includes paddles, carrying yoke, anchor, live vests. Price negotiable. Call Dr. Mennerick for 9 p.m.
840-403
- Over 40 New Units
- Great location Walk Anywhere
843-2116
NOW LEASING
1980 Honda CB716FV Motorcycle. Excellent condition.
790 miles. $1,200. Call 843-0863.
11th & Mississippi NOW LEASING
- Furnished Units
- Available
- Laundry facilities
K8 under刊 for my 1983 dept. CJ7, pp 2, uni am.fm-can. l. 410.961 mi. Mays Mayo-day 843-383, nights & weekends 843-125 or 843-296.
Thompson Crawley
On KU Bus Route 10 and 12 MONTH LEASES AVAILABLE 1123 Indiana Furnished by
The Car Boutique
74 Honda 368 CB Motorcycle. Good condition. New tires. New seal. Cam switch. Call 811-5670.
Can you buy Jeeps, Cars, 4 x 4's seized in drug raids for under $100.00? Call for facts today.
608.735.2940, Eyx. 5765
tire. New seat. Rum price: Call 687-580-3500.
COMIC BOOKS, Science Fiction, Games at Kwaiyalty Comics, 1111 MASS. 843-7239
The
Motorizing Accessories
Alloy Wheels
Tires
Spotlights, Shoose,
Car Care Products
T-Shirts & Jackets
Steering Wheels
Car & Seat Covers
Bras, Louvers
Fly Lights
Helmets, etc., etc.
2021-F W. 25th St. 749.543#
In the Business World
behind Food-4-Less
Comic Books, Playboys, Penthouses, etc; Max's Comics Open 11:5 Tue-Fri; Sat & Sun 10:5-8:11 New Hampshire
DESK - modern teak, pigeon holes, 120. $18 Hon.
Dodge Servicer Scooter, 945. 841. 7810
University of Kansas men and women, gold seiko watches. Gold face with seal. Brand new $100 each. only $20 for both or best offer. Call 216-333-4040.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040.83$23.90J. Now
Hiring, Call 805-688-6007 Ext. R-9758.
GOVERNMENT HOME from $1 (U repair).
Delinquent tax property. ResponsesCall:
805-687-9000 Exit. H/458 for current list.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $1,048-$2,900 r/w
JOB #SUMMER34.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sense to use them. As study guide. 21 for Class Maker. Analysis of Western Civilization *available now at Town Crier, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and*
Window Fan: Fits 25" to 36". Used approx. 1 mos.
Cost Wal-Mart $64.87. Will sell $30,843-7389
after 3:30 p.m.
AUTO SALES
Must sell 77 Pinto 63,500 miles, clean interior,
runs great. $800.00 negotiable. 841-6931.
Need sharp young people to help run expanding music business. No experience necessary. Will训. Full or part time. Excellent commissions. 1-800-265-5070 Attention 312
'76 FORD GRANADA. Good condition.
Everything is Ok except color faded. $750.
749-1351.
LOST/FOUND
LOST: Small Chow/Lasa mutt: "Buster" *Campus area*. Imported to child. Please call 841-8975 after six or 864-3523 days.
HELP WANTED
GRADUATE ASSISTANT: 1/2 time position in the Emily Tayler Women's Resource Center. Req. Master's degree and graduate student at the University of Kansas, Fall 1986. Experience in programming, public speaking, computer science. Complete job assignment available at the Women's Center. 844-3328. Position available 1/1, 1986. Submit letter of application, resume, and other required documents to baraal Ballard, Associate Dean of Student Life and Coordinator. Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. Req. Master's degree in Kawaii, Hawaii;KS 6950 EEO/AA
EXTENSION ASSISTANT. The University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education is seek a position for an assistant manager of the Business and Mass Communication Programs unit. The position involves a daytime marketing and on-site coordination of public courses and seminars administered by the unit. The program will be held in campus and has some required work in the Kansas City and Topawee schools. Travel路 travel to rare. Other duties include the design of brochures, preparations for programs, in addition to the incubation of new materials arranging meeting space and other logistical services needed for programs. In addition
high time graduate Assistant. The Organizations and Activities Center (OAC) takes 1/2 time Graduate Assistant to serve as Secretary to the OAC for a period of 6 months Qualifications. Enrollment as KU graduate student for Fall 1986. Knowledge of KU operations in the College of Business, noonons, and Clerical skills. Complete job announcement available at office 604-8480, telephone number: 516-376-1434. Application and resume to Amu Everso, Organization, Organizations and Activities Center, B160 Logo, Office 604-8480. Applicable deadline is July 1, 1986, EE/OA/
Bryan, Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
French student-would you be interested in helping with conversational French. Call Diane 749-1228
POSITION AVAILABLE. Student Assistant Half-time position available with federally funded research project. The student will conduct audiocassette tapes of interviews. Required experience includes the transcription of audiocassettes of interviews. Required experience with microcomputers (Wedstar helpful), the ability to work independently and on time, and the ability to develop guidelines Previous experience with transcription will be helpful. This is a 6 month appointment based on availability. Application, names of two references, and resume (if available) by July 7, 2016, to Kevin Reed, Dept. of Music.
GRADUATE EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Half Time. American Studies, an art historico-researcher and writer in the social sciences, holds a lot of responsibility, is variegated, and hard Duties include copy editing, general writing, manuscript preparation, editors, printer, managing editorial office; internships; teaching; coursework. An excellent beginning for those interested in careers in publishing and editing. Relevant coursework will be required for good writing style. Applicant must be accepted as a graduate student by a department of the university and should have an undergraduate field discipline. Salary: about $2600 for year round positions. Please send two credentials to: Professor Stuart Levine, Editor, 106 Weree University, Lawrence, Kansas 73051.
KS UNIV Theatre and Media Arts uses two (2) temporary (non-tenure) Assistant Professors to manage the students in their Master's or bachelor's with a 9 years professional experience plus 2 years teaching required. Students will receive a Bachelor's in history (beyer preferred). Salary is $20,200. Send resume, letter, and names of 3 referees. Resumes must be submitted to Ronald Wilkis, 317 Murphy Hall, University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 60448. (813) 843-3883 or ronald.wilkis@ksu.edu
SOCIAL WORK II. The Youth Center at ACHTON accepting applications through June 27, 2013. Apply online at achtongroup.com or degree in social work, or bachelor's degree with a major in social work and two years of experience working in the field. Send your resume to the state in office: Starting salary: $1677 monthly. Contact Jeanine Pickman, Personnel Manager, achtongroup.com.
Wanted: Nanny, Young, professional, Christian couple seeks full time live in town to care for their children. Applicants must have a Bachelor's and salary. Applications must love children and have experience. Must full time August 1st through September 30th.
PERSONAL
D Welcome to Larryville, city of excitement (because I'm here!)! T
(because I'm here!! ... T
Hey Baby! Happy Birthday! I love you with all
Hey Baby! **Happy Birthday!** I love you with an
my heart! Hugs and kisses. Aud.
**out:** If you have time to tutor this summer, call Randy, 842-1102.
URGENT Yany black man who looked at upstairs studio附 on corner of 22rd and Leon on evening of 6-8 please call 842-2110.
NORSK WYID IWID YOU QUIT! LUX.
BUS. PERSONAL
A AREY YOU FT' LAWRENCE Aerodrome M-W-F 3:20
A BREATH OF FLOW SCHOOL CALIFORNIA
FIRST CLASS FIRE. Colleen Cathrop 641-804-6544.
Enroll now in Midwest Driving School Receive
transportation upon successful completion, transpor-
tation upon successful completion
INITIAL passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization certificate, biography. (For portraits, visit Stella Studio. 784-6111)
LOSE WEIGHT NOW *Fem.* easy, safe, no drugs, all natural materials, natural inspiration, inexperienced. (Please see back.)
KLZR 106DAYS
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25th & Iowa 841-6232
LOSE WEIGHT NOW I lost 16 lbs in 3 wks. You can lose 129 lbs (no, with safe nitricious herbal products as seen on TV. For more information call 843 640).
Modeling, theatrical and artists portfolios. Slides or prints. High-quality, low-prices. Swells 749-1611.
SAY IT ON A SHIRT Custom silk-screen printing. T-shirts, jerseys and caps. SHIRTART by Swell. 749-1611.
HEON
BEUING
DISCOVER THE
VERSATILE
FUTONI
Futon Bed
841. 9443
TRAFFIC TICKET? Talk your way out of it.
Special report. Call 805-687-6000 Ext. TT 1000 for information
SCIENCE FICTION, Comic book, Simulation & Role Playing Games, Kwality Comics, 1111
MASS, 945-7238
Thousands of R & R albums – 82 or less. Also less equipment items. Sal & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Quantitans 811 New Hampshire, Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles
Black and White film processing, contact sheets,
and engravings. Push and Pull processing also available. THE PICTURE WORKS. 13th and Haskell, B4-0700.
DOWNTOWN
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
SERVICES OFFERED
Same day Ek汰chrome/E-6 slide processing.
Push and Pull processing also available. THE PICTURE WORKS 13th and Haskell 845-0470
Sunflower Driving School will prepare you, within two weeks upon successful course completion, to get your driver's license, without patent testing. Transportation provided. Special summer days.
WFILA VIDEOTAPE ANYTHING! Parties, Pro-
cessions, Weddings, Class Projects, etc.
Editing and Special Effects, call 841-4732 or
841-7807.
HARPER
Used cameras and photographic equipment bought, sold, and traded. THE PICTURE WORKS 13th and Haskell. 843 0475.
1101Mass.
Suite 201 749-0123
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
TYPING
MATH TUTOR : Bob Mears holds an M.A. in math from K.U. where 102, 116, 118 and 123 were among the courses he taught. He has also worked as a tutor elementary statistics . 55 min for 40 minute session! Call 843-9232.
MATH TUTOR : Bob Mears holds an M.A. in math from K.U. where 102, 116, 118 and 123 were among the courses he taught. He has also worked as a tutor elementary statistics . 55 min for 40 minute session! Call 843-9232.
curate and affordable typing, Judy. 842-7945
1,100 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing, Judy. 842-7945 or
1,100. 842-7945
1-1-4. TRIO WORDPROCESSING Experienced Conciencious. Reliable. Call 842-311 anytime.
24-Hour Typing, 11th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus.
Best quality and fastest service. 841-306.
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing and editing. IBM/OS-8/9, 5: M-F. Same day service available. 844 Illinois; 843-6618
A-1 professional typing. Term papers, Theses,
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Using IBM
Wheelwriter 5. Rasonable. 842.3246.
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAMFFER - Typeing Service
TRANSCRIPTION ack; standard cassette tape;
434-8877
GOOD IMPRESSIONS. Professional Typing/
Word/Pressing. Papers, Dissections,
Resumes, Spelling/punctuation corrected
481-4297
INSERTATION/ THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
TYING, Editing and Graphics. ONE DAY SERVICE
available on shorter student papers (up to
15 cal.) Call Kathy. Mummy's Typing. M-43787
University Daily Kansan
Hakenson 25/hours typing IBM word processing:
Lynn 841-5594
and papers
WRITING LIFEHIN, 8113469.
WRITING LIFEHIN, 8113469.
--a 10% discount on Sunday nights with a KUID
WORDS TO GO-Typing Service: Dissertations,
Term Papers, Books, Correspondence, WP
749-3452.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
Resume Have M.S. Degree 416-624
9th & Iowa Hillcrest Shopping
THE WORDDOCTORS - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? 843-3147
YPTING. We will型你 report's papers, paper's
ome finals or anything else to your specifications
t reasonable rates TRANSCRIPTION
NLIMITED 841-9621. Save this id!
Nabil's Restaurant
intimate dining and fine continental cuisine
WANTED
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing. etc. 843 5062
Female grad student seeking roommate for fall
312-328-7935
Need Roommates for 3 Bedroom House, NCAR Holdome. 132.90 month. 1/3 utilities. Call 842-5768 evenings.
Nabil's
Roommate wanted, Grad preferred, in 2 bd
(nookhouse, walk to KU, 185/mo - utilities.
841-8816
Wanted: Hostess for 8 dorm house-Graduate student and non-smoker preferred. Convenience location. 1450-mi/rots - Available July 1, 842-901a.
Lunch 11.2 weekdays
Dinner 5-10 Tues. Sat.
5:09 Mon & Fri
For parties of 5 or more, please call for reservations 841.7226
PASTED BATCH WITH 12 HOURS
842-0600
6th and Kaosol
Westridge Shopping Center
Students & Faculty make the difference
PIZZA Shoppe
DELIVERY SPECIAL!
$8.95
Additional Toppings Only 90 Cents Each.
- DINE-IN • CARRY OUT
- LIMITED DELIVERY
Two Topping King Size Pizza and 32 Oz. Pepsi-
UDK expires 09-01-86
Great Daily Specials
DAILY SPECIALS
Today
Thursday
Friday...Fried Chicken
Saturday...Chicken Fried Steak
Monday...Chopped Steak
Fresh Pork Tenderloin
with green peppers & onions
Will grow puppy Tuesday Meatloaf
Wednesday Baked Ham
Sirinoil, T-Bone or Shrimp with baked potato or French fries & salad
H
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL!
with baked potato or French fries & salad
$5.75
4-10 p.m.
Open Mon.-Sat 6:30 a.m.-11:30 p.m.
723 NORTH 2nd
3½ blocks north of the bridge
SERVICE QUALITY
DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
"COMPLETE SERVICE AND PARTS SALES"
"FOR MORE FOREIGN CARS"
CAR RENTALS
BOSCH AUTOMOTIVE
- vw
*SUBARU
- TOYOTA
- DATSUN
- VOLVO
- MG
- MAZDA
MAZDA HONDA
DON & MIKE GRAMMER-OWNERS
MasterCard
841-4833
1008 E. 12th.
VISA
16
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, June 25, 1986
City approves low-income housing plan
By Rachelle Worrall Staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission last night approved by a vote of 5-0 site plans from the Lawrence Housing Authority for 24 public-housing units in the East Lawrence Neighborhood.
The housing units will be for large, low-income families, said David Murrell, executive director of the Lawrence Housing Authority.
The authority received $1.4 million in federal funds for the project, he said, and rent in the project will be federally subsidized.
The zoning in the area is consistent with the planned residential development zoning, he said. The units would be clustered in a cul-desac on a 1.5 acre area, instead of set in rows like many housing projects.
"We know that this will be a very tight budget," Murrell said.
The units, which are scheduled to be completed in spring 1987, would be a mix of 3- and 4-bedroom duplexes. The team is working on the project is estimated at $894,433.
Residents in the neighborhood objected to the housing project at first, Murrell said, but were later convince-
Howard Hill, city commissioner, said he was concerned about financial problems faced by the housing authority, although he realized that due to the reliance on federal funds it made difficult to have long-term plans.
ed that it would be a well-maintained project.
The income generated from rents would help in the short term. But Murrell said future deficits would be because of maintenance costs.
faced with extinction, and I was worried what would happen to Lawrence's 600 families we've supported."
"I never know what's going to happen," Murrell said. "We were being
The commission also voted 5-0 to authorize the $66,000 engineering plan for the development of Wakarua Drive.
"We think this is a major arterial street and should be developed in that manner," said Buford Watson, city manager.
David Longhunt, city commissioner, said he was concerned that funds were not available to pave the street to a 48-foot width, and the
"You can pay now or you can pay later," said Ernest Anglo, city commissioner. "The next commission is going to pay a heck of a lot more."
street should first be paved to a 27-foot width and widened later when necessary.
The commission also voted 5-0 to accept the petition needed to correct a mistake made when the 11th Street fire was developed in February of 1984.
The benefit-district is already in existence, but was recently found to be illegal because of a technicality. A petition that had to be signed by the district officials benefited area was invalid, thus making the district invalid.
One of the signes of the petition was not the owner-of-record at the time he signed the petition. He did own his ownership until the following day.
Dean Burkhead, an attorney for residents who don't want to be in the district, said, "I don't think it's fair. I think its arbitrary, unreasonable.
Money, indecision spur dropout rate
By Evan Walter Staff writer
Every August, students return to the University to resume the academic life they left in May.
Over the summer, however, many students decide not to return to school. Others decide to leave school after the semester has begun.
The number of pre-enrol-
students who don't return to the
University of Kansas tends to be
larger in the fall semester than in the
spring. Greg Thompson, director of
spring records and registration,
said Friday
He said about 500 students pre-enrolled for fall seminars do not show up, compared with 150 to 200 return-enroll for spring and don't return.
"The highest number is always for fall semesters," he said. "The reason is that for fall we have the greatest leave-time. A lot can happen in four
In addition to the length of time between the spring and fall semesters, more students don't show up in the fall because of the ways in which they plan their education, Thompson said. Most students plan by academic year rather than by semester.
Students who withdraw from the University after the semester begins inconvenience the University more those who simply don't show up, he said.
"We cancel their enrollment soon enough to recover the classes," Thompson said. "There is no loss."
"For the student who goes to class for three weeks and then decides to drop, then it’s often too late for the space in that class to be recovered."
In addition to taking up class space, students who drop during a semester may cause a financial inconvenience to the University, he said.
"It depends on when they withdraw," said Robert Turvey, associate director of the Student Assistance Center. "If you withdraw, you risk losing your job or be a loss. For anyone who comes and doesn't stay, there is some loss."
Students considering withdrawal from the University during the semester often visit the center for making academic and career decisions.
"The highest percentage of them say it's because of money," Turvey said. "That's what they say, but it often sounds easy." It's easier to afford it.
"Lots of times there are issues we can help them with. Some want to transfer to other colleges, some would rather attend vocational schools, or they don't know what they need." I think that's the most common."
Thompson said the reasons why people who have pre-enrolled did not return in the fall usually came within one of three categories.
They may have decided not to come back to college at all, or to transfer to another college or university.
"Most people who decide to switch colleges do it between the spring and fall semesters," Thompson said.
Other students are academically ineligible to return because of the previous semester, he said.
Students who have pre-enrolled during the spring semester or during summer orientation meet a day before students who haven't pre-enrolled
If pre-enrolled students miss their assigned days, their names are dropped from class rosters, opening spaces for the other students.
Ex-students mind own businesses
By Bill Raynolds Special to the Kansar
Some people may envision the successful businessman as middle-aged, paucity and in pinstripes, but three others are businessmen, are breaking this mold
Ken Wallace had a dim view of the corporate world upon his graduation from the University of Kansas in 1986, so he decided to become his own boss.
"A hardcore discontent set in when I realized that at the end of the summer there was no going back to school," Wallace said yesterday. "And I didn't want to spend 45 years of my life putting on a throat-gagging tie every morning and facing a boss who'd never be satisfied with my work. There's not enough room for creativity in the corporate world."
Wallace began his business journey in 1974 when he bought the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St. At the time he had no previous business experience.
"I learned the business from the ground up from the previous owner," he said. "I never took a business as big as you know how to run a cash register."
Wallace said that he enjoyed self-employment because he faced many different duties and responsibilities on any given day, ranging from bookkeeping to artwork or advertisements to lobbying in the Kansas Legislature.
"Being self-employed has made me a well-grounded person," he said. "I've even learned a little about plumbing and electricity."
Despite problems caused by the raising of the drinking age in Kansas, Wallace said, he had an optimistic view of the future.
"There will always be a viable market for beer halls, especially in a college town." he said.
Beer halls have helped make so someone other than Wallace a succ
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Stewart said he and Compton also owned a Benton store in Manhattan and they plan to open two in Wichita in mid-September. One store would carry children's clothes, and the other would carry adult clothes.
Stewart said he was impressed with Benetton merchandise and that he became interested in owning his stores, which he opened in larger stores in Europe two years ago.
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"I'm a perfectionist and I spend a lot of money on clothes," he said.
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However, Compton had he got involved with one bad business venture. He said he bought farming equipment and sold it, but he could only sell it for $500 an acre.
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Just four years out of college, Doug Compton is no stranger to the Lawrence business scene. He owned Cobguns, 737 New Hamshire St., until last November, when he sold it to put more time into a Benetton clothing store, 928 Massachusetts St., which he co-owns with Dicer Stewart. Compton still owns the Mad Hat, a private club at 700 New Hampshire St., and Bullwinkle's, a tavern at 1344 Tennessee St.
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